The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, December 28, 1971, Image 11

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    ~ FOR SALE
f —
FIREPLACE LOGS. Delivered
and stacked. $20. Firewood
‘Farm. Phone 696-2313 after 6
p.m. :
\ 39-tf-c
FOR SALE—Sewing Machine,
1971 Deluxe Model. Will
sacrifice. Call 654-7675.
34-tf-c
i
USED BOOKKEEPING
‘machine. Burroughs Sen-
simatic F 1200. Perfect
condition. Call 675-5211 in’
Dallas.
43-10-p
FOR SALE or FOR RENT
signs jh 25 cents each at The
Dall Post, Abington
Journal, Mountaintop Eagle.
51-tf-p
NE ROUND oak table top. Old
wicker baby carriage. Very
ood condition but no wheels.
ill take best offer. 675-1005.
\ 52-1-p
"OR SALE or For Rent signs.
\ .25 cents each at The Dallas
Post.
52-tf-p
WHOM TO CALL
HAVING A HARD TIME get-
ting evervthing together
befoié the Holiday? Do you
have a lot of people you would
like to send greetings to, but
can’t find all the time needed ?
Well your worries are over! I
will personally write or type
all your envelopes in time for
Christmas. All organizationa,
companies and individuals.
Call 675-4456 after 6:00 p.m.
for further discussion.
EFFECTIVE as of December
7th, White’s Appliance &
Furniture will be open from 9
a.m. till 8 p.m. every night for
your shopping convenience.
48-tf-c
FUELS OILS, Atlantic Pro-
ducts. Meter service to insure
you accuracy. Montross Oil
Co., 16 Slocum Street, Forty-
Fort. Call 287-2361 or 639-5389.
40-tfc
BOYD R. WHITE. Boyd’s one
and only location. Union and
Tener Sts., Luzerne, will be
open Friday evenings. Other
evenings by appointment.
494£-71
off: SAFE and fast with
o Bese Tablets and E-Vap
“water pills” Stapinski Wal-
f ree,
| 52-6-p
SULATORS. Good selection
of old glass or porcelain. Will
‘buy or trade also. 675-1005.
52-1-p
HELP WANTED
MALE AND FEMALE: Area
representative for human
relations agency. Duties will
entail contacting and
organizing low income
families into groups for
community action purposes.
Assist individuals in obtaining
community services. Arrange
meet@s to determine in-
terest and needs of residents.
Interview ‘low income
FY Individual should
havifexperience in public
contact with a strong desire to
work with people of different
backgrounds. Individual will
work in rural and suburban
areas. High school graduate
preferred. Car essential.
Salary, $47.50 plus, depending
on experience. Submit reply
to Commission on Economic
§ Opportunity, 211 S. Main St.,
Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
call 825-8571. Equal
portunity employer.
18701 or
Op-
51-1-c
i Lr, by examination. Morgus
Convalescent home. Call 639-
1810.
~ SA§ESMAN WANTED Male or
Female, need 2 persons to sell
pianos and organs, must play
keyboard instruments. Profit
sharing and retirement in-
cluded. Call Mr. Widman-
Fulton Piano — Organ Co.,
287-3121 or 342-0574.
WANTED
BACK-DATED issues of Yan-
kee Magazines. 675-1005.
52-1-p
: wi HM TO CALL :
MONK PLUMBING & Heating,
675-1323. Gas, oil, electric,
coal Installations. No down
payment. Five years to pay.
47-tf-c
FOR RENT
3 ROOM apartment for rent.
Shavertown. All utilities furn-
ished, except gas. Call 675-
0267.
3 YEAR old fawn male boxer
answers to name of Kniff. Re-
ward. Shavertown area. Call
Bigler 675-3884.
52-1-¢
EL
LEGAL
EE re,
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that Letters Testamentary in
the Estate of HERBERT W.
COOPER, late of the Township
of Kingston, Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, have been grant-
ed to NORMAN COOPER, No.
17 Robbins Road, Trucksville,
Pa. Creditors are notified to
make known their claims and
those indebted to the estate to
make payment to said Executor
or to his attorney.
B.B. LEWIS, Atty.
39 Woodlawn Ave.
Dallas, Pa. 18612
51-3-¢
LEGAL
Eli
Notice is hereby given that
the Zoning and Hearing Board
of the Dallas Township Plan-
ning Commission, will hold a
Public Hearing at 7:30 p.m. on
Monday Night Jan. 17, 1972 in
the Dallas Township Municipal
Building, to consider the appli-
cation of John Bigger, of 743
Walnut St, Luzerne, Pa. to place
a Trailer on his Lots 95 & 96 on
Garbutt Ave. This is contrary to
ELECTRICAL work at reason-
able rates. No job too small.
Phone 696-2330.
~ BACK MOUNTAIN Area.
Modern sanitation service.
Rubbish and garbage re-
moval. Commercial and resi-
dential. Reasonable rates.
‘Phone 639-5859.
3 16-tfc
| Pass fe word on low,
low prices
at
Section 6-231 of the Zoning Law.
FRED E. DODSON
Zoning Officer
52-1-¢
‘of Wellington Avenue
CARPENTERY WORK
Electrical
Plumbing
Well installation and repairs
Jd. & F. REPAIR
SERVICES INC.,
Lake, Pa.
Call between 8:00—4:30 829-0400
After 5:00 p.m.
[ne Charge for estimates
P.O. Box 676, Harveys
639-1780]
Jugs Slack Rack
MOTOR FIX
“LIONEL: AMERICAN
FLYER
TRAINS & ACCES.
~ Bought, Sold, Repaired
| All makes vacuum cleaners,
| Small Appliances, Radios, &
‘Tools Repaired.
HAL'S ELECTRIC
675-1580
SNOWMOBILE
SERVICE
REPAIR & OVERNAUL OF ALL
POPULAR BRANDS. FULLLINE
OF PARTS AND ACCESSORIES.
: Snow
Has Been Ordered!
Mave your machine checked New at.
- MOTOR FIX
32 S$. ML. Blvd. Mt. Top, Pa.
' TPh. 474-6661 or §
_ Center St. Shavertown :
LEGAL
1971-3 ;
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
BOROUGH OF DALLAS AC-
CEPTING A PORTION OF
WELLINGTON OR
WHEELINGTON AVENUE
The Mayor and Council of the
Borough of Dallas enact and
ordain as follows:
SECTION 1. That portion of
Wellington or Wheelington
Avenue, as more particularly
described herein, and as so
described in a certain Indenture
from Weis Markets Inc. to
Borough of Dallas dated July 27,
1970, and about to be recorded,
is hereby accepted as a public
street of the borough:
“BEGINNING at a point, said
point being four hundred fifty-
one and fifty-two one hun-
dredths (451.52) feet from the
south line of Woodlawn
Cemetery and on the westerly
side of right of way line of
Wellington Avenue or
Wheelington Avenue;
THENCE, from said point
South 59 degrees 28’ West for a
distance of one hundred ninety-
eight and fifty hundredths
(198.50) feet to a point. Said
point being on the easterly side
of Leg. Route 177 (rt. 118 and
415);
THENCE, from said point
and along a chord of a curve
having a radius of eighteen
hundred eighty and eight one
hundredths (1880.08) feet and
along the highway right of way
South 44 degrees 07’ East for a
distance of iifty and seventy-
: four one hundredths (50.74) feet
to a point. Said point being on a
corner of a lot now or formerly
owned by Weis Markets, Inc.,
grantor herein;
THENCE, from said point
North 59 degrees 28’ East for a
distance of one hundred eighty-
six and nine tenths (186.9) feet
to a point on the westerly right
of way line of Wellington
Avenue or Wheelington
Avenue;
THENCE, from said point
and along the right of way line
or
Wheelington Avenue North 30
degrees 42’ West for a distance
of fifty (60) feet back to the
place of beginning. Enclosing
approximately twenty-two one
hundredths (.22) acres.”
SECTION 2. This ordinance
shall become effective thirty
(30) days from the enactment
hereof.
ENACTED AND ORDAINED
at a regular meeting of the
Dallas Borough Council held
December 21, 1971.
GEORGE H. THOMAS
V.P President of Council
ATTEST:
RALPH GARRIS
Secretary
Approved this 21 day of
December, 1971.
STEPHEN F. HARTMAN JR.
Mayor
52-1-c
Dallas Man Sails
Aboard Southwind
PO 2.C Edmund L. Kyttle, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Steve Kyttle,
RD 2, Dallas, has sailed for the
South Pole aboard the Coast
Guard Icebreaker Southwind.
The ship will pass through the
Panama Canal and visit ports in
Chile before continuing south to
resupply Antarctica’s Palmer
Station. They will spend four
months conducting scientific
surveys at the South Pole before
returning to their home port in
Baltimore, Md., in April.
Fresh pears hot? Sure!
They're a great accompani-
ment for pork and poultry. Just
cut and core the pears; then
broil them. No need to peel
them—the skin is thin and
tender. Serve pears often.
LOANS to WOMEN]
A Friendly, Sonfiaentiat, Understanding
Service. PHONE
288-4535
FAIRWAX FINANCE CORP. LUZERNE
COMPLETE
FOR SMALL BUSINESSES
Weekly - Monthly - Quarterly - Yearly
PAYROLL TAXES
INCOME TAXES
288-2703 or Write
P. O. Box 575, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18702
Since 1960
[BOOKEEPING SERVICE
I'm glad | went to
Jane’s
Slack Rack
THE DALLAS POST, DEC. 28, 1971
page 11
Obituaries
GRACE IDE
Seventy-year old Grace P. Ide
of Dallas RD 4, Lehman
Township, died Dec. 22 at her
home.
A native of Luzerne, she was a
member of the Lehman United
Methodist Church, charter
member of its Woman's Society
of Christian Service, and was
active in the Auxiliary to the
Lehman Fire Company. She
taught in the Sunday School of
the church for 40 years.
Mrs. Ide is survived by her
widower, Leonard H.; son,
Leonard H. Jr., Dallas RD;
daughter, Mrs. Wilson Cease,
Hunlock Creek; five grand-
children; sisters, Mrs. Lansford
Norris, Trucksville; Margaret
Case, Clay, N.Y.
The funeral was held Friday
from the Bronson Funeral
Home, Sweet Valley, with the
Rev. Fred Whipple, pastor of
Lehman Methodist United
Methodist Church, and the Rev.
Kenneth O’Neill, retired
minister, officiating. Burial was
in Idetown Cemetery.
T. RAY WILLIAMS
T. Ray Williams, personnel
manager and store superin-
tendent of The Hub, died Dec. 22
in Wilkes-Barre General
Hospital. A resident of 336 High-
land Ave., Trucksville, he was
56.
Born March 30, 1915 in Wilkes-
Barre, he was a member of the
First United Methodist Church,
where he was bass soloist for 25
years. He was also a member of
Kingston Lodge 395 F&AM, and
sang with Orpheus Glee Club
and Orpheus Choral Society for
35 years. He served with the
Army in Europe during World
War II.
He is survived by his widow,
the former Betty Pauling, son,
Raye; mother, Martha J.
Williams; brother, Donald M.;
a sister, Margaret J., Wilkes-
Barre. The funeral was held
Friday morning from the
Harold C. Snowdon Funeral
Home, Wilkes-Barre, with the
Rev. James A. Wert officiating.
Burial was in Denison
Cemetery, Swoyersville.
WALTER E. KYTTLE
Walter E. Kyttle of Outlet,
Dallas RD 4, died Christmas
Day in Wilkes-Barre General
Hospital. He was 86.
Born in Ross Township, he
was a carpenter by trade and
had lived in Dallas 59 years.
Survivors include his widow,
the former Addie Lamoreaux;
sons, Lewis, Hunlock Creek;
Howard, Luzerne; daughters,
Glorinda Gensel, Harveys
Lake; Glendoris Scilanski,
Dallas RD; nine grandchildren
and 10 great-children; brother,
Earl. and sister, Myrtle
Rosencrans, Sweet Valley.
The funeral was held Tuesday
afternoon from the Bronson
Funcral Home, Sweet Valley,
with the Rev. Fred Whipple,
pastor of the Lehman United
Methodist Church, officiating.
The burial was in Maple Grove
Cemetery.
ROBIN METHOT
Robin Methot, a former
resident of Shavertown, died
Christmas Night at her home at
52 Clover St., South Burlington,
Vi. She was 18.
Born in Wilkes-Barre Sept. 11,
1953, she was the daughter of
Robert J. and Jane D. Dettmore
Mecthot. She attended schools at
Dallas and graduated from
South Burlington High School in
June. She was a communicant
of St. John Vianney Roman
Catholic Church.
In addition to her parents, she
is survived by brothers,
Richard. Piscataway, N.J.;
David, Robert Jr., and sister,
Jane, at home; maternal
grandmother, Mrs. William
Dettmore, Edwardsville;
paternal grandmother, Mrs.
J.C. Methot, Groveton, N.H.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday morning at 10 in St.
John Vianney Church, South
Burlington. Interment will be in
the family plot in Resurrection
Park Cemetery.
JOSHUA BRYANT
Joshua E. Bryant Sr., for 35
years the owner and operator of
Bryant's Bicycle Shop in
Kingston, died Friday night in
Nesbitt Memorial Hospital. A
resident of Box 75-A, Harveys
Lake. he was 67.
Born in Edwardsville Dec. 16,
1904. he was a member of Ed-
wardsville Memorial
Congregational Church, Ed-
wardsville.
Survivors include his widow,
the former Marguerite Jones;
son. Joshua E. Jr., Harveys
Lake; daughter, Betty Jones,
Pocono | Pines; | a’ sister,
Margaret Allen, and brother,
Malcolm, Wilkes-Barre; five
grandchildren and two great-
grandchildren.
The funeral was held Tuesday
from the Blight Funeral Home,
Kingston, with the Rev. Alan C.
Hipkiss officiating. Interment
was in Chapel Lawn Memorial
Park. Dallas.
RAOUL GODBOUT
Raoul Edouard Godbout of
RD 1, Dallas, and formerly of
San Fernando, Calif., died
Saturday in Leader Nursing
Center, Kingston.
A native of Almer, Quebec,
Canada, he was educated in
Canadian schools and operated
a drug store at San Fernando
for 52 years. He moved to this
areca 15 months ago.
The funeral was held from the
Richard H. Disque Funeral
Home. Dallas. Burial was in
Mission Cemetery. San Fer-
nando.
My Typewriter Talks
Once in awhile I happen
across someone to whom I am
introduced by name, and get a
surprised look from the
stranger who exclaims: “Oh, I
always read your column in the
Dallas Post: I've always
wanted to see what you looked
like!” It happened just last
Sunday when I was being in-
troduced to a relative of one
who had recently died at Valley
Crest. This was in a funeral
home over in the heights section
of Wilkes-Barre. My thoughts
were far from the Dallas Post at
the time.
But, as can be expected from
my vanity, I was pleased to
meet this discerning soul who
reads things of such taste.
And I began to look around for
a subject suitable for use in this
column at this time of year. No
matter what time of year it is all
kinds of memories get kicked up
from the odds and ends of things
around my desk. Once in awhile
I even get to see something of
the actual top of my desk which
could arouse memories. Such as
that I inherited it from a brother
of mine who died about 50 years
ago. And it was given to him by
descendants of an uncle of mine
who used to teach in Pine Street
school in Binghamton. An
evangelistic minister who was
visiting me at one time
remembered that uncle as the
principal of Pine Street School
and at one time had summoned
him to his office and turned him
proper side up across his desk
and paddled him soundly!
I calculate roughly the desk
must be about 100 years old.
And it doesn’t get any younger.
It is usually covered with things
that ought to be classified,
catalogued and placed in proper
compartments somewhere. I
would never find them then! It
always has to have space for my
Royal portable—the kind that
talks for me!
Standing on top of a small
filing cabinet at the back of my
desk are things I want to lay in
sight just until I can get to doing
something else with them; in
other words they are things on
their way out. Maybe my
current church envelopes after
they have been marked and had
checks tucked in them are on
their way to church. The Thing
that does the catching of things
is called Mullah’s
Holder. It is a beautiful piece of
wood, in fact looks like two
pieces of wood hinged together
to fold flat or stand up to hold a
book. Fact about it is that it was
hand-carved in the Orient as a
rack to support the Moslem’s
Koran’
Holy Book, the Koran. It is
carved from a single piece of
Shesham wood. No nails nor
hinges in its construction. By
some secret craftmanship the
two leaves are never separated
but simply unfold to stand as a
support and yet can be
collapsed to lie flat, and yet not
come apart. It is beautiful
wood, beautiful hand carving by
obscure artist somewhere. Must
have taken a long, long time in a
society where time is nothing to
make pass swiftly!
I used tolike to carve, too, but
there was no artistry about my
work with a sharp pocket knife.
I had an excellent place to do
that kind of carving, for I had an
un-proved idea that I could
build a cabin in the woods fit to
stay over night in. A few miles
out of Great Bend up Randolph
Street toward Blatchley we
acquired a piece of woodland
where so many ferns were
growing that we named it
Fernside. At that time I was
studying ferns and could.
identify about 14 varieties by
name in the immediate vicinity
of the cabin I was to build.
Actually I framed and built
such a cabin. I am not boasting,
just stating facts! And an an-
cient half-breed Indian wat-
ched, and even taught my late
wife Ruth to mortise floor joists,
and even made this pronounce-
ment: ‘Yuh can’t learn most
women nothin’. But your wife
does better than my second wife
did at carpentering.” But that
was about her! About me he
said, (for he was told I was a
preacher!) “Ef yew can’t
preach no better 'n yew can
carpenter I'd never wanta hear
y’uh preach!’’ And he never did,
for I think he could not hear me
when I did preach his funeral
sermon!
But I was going to tell what a
wonderful place that was to do
wood carving, I mean, whit-
tling. For there were cracks a
half inch wide between all floor
boards. At lamp light time I
by the Rev.
Charles H. Gilbert
would sit in our ‘‘parlor’’ by the
table and whittle to my heart’s
content. For in the morning
Ruth could sweep the room
cross-wise of the floor boards
and most of the sweepings
would go through the cracks!
In my desk drawer there are a
couple of wooden paper-knives
or letter openers. They do good
service in folding my Jots from
Dot papers, smoothing the
creases down. One I recently
noted has the name of the kind
of wood carved on it, Mulberry.
The other one has Fernside
chipped in it, and is made of
yellow bireh, perhaps a root
from such a tree. The root
material in itself is a lovely
mellow yellow and is quite hard.
On the floor by the outside door
is a door-stop of that same
yellow birch root. I made it
originally to be one of a pair of
sturdy book-ends, but never
could find a matching piece of
the root. So it has to do solitary
duty as a door stop.
There is another paper knife
in my drawer that I did not
carve but which came to me as
a souvenir from Israel and has
two Hebrew words carved on
the handle, reading from right
to left the words are pronoun-
ced, ‘‘yehee ohr’’—‘let there be
Light”, (Gen. 1:3).
Still another paper knife is not
from wood but from brass with
an antique kind of treatment. It
has stamped on it: ‘“Made in
Israel.” Still another beautiful
paper knife, especially handy
for the business of folding
papers, is also made of brass,
and is stamped Lebanon! There
seems never any conflict going
on in my drawer between these
different countries! I was in-
terested to read in the National
Geographic Magazine for April
1958 a description of the design
on this Lebanon paper knife of
mine as follows: ‘Haddad’s
nightingale pattern: horn
handles are trimmed with brass
and inlaid with silver and dyed
camel bone.”
oy
Available ~~ *
Models 5-6-11
- VETERANS!
Approved VA
2 Financing Arranged...
No Down Payment
12 Years to Pay
‘DEER HEAD MOBILE HOMES
1 Sales & Service Inc.
Dallas Hwy. (Next to A&P) 675-0298
Oak Hill
by Bridgette Correale 639-5759
We watched out, we didn’t
pout, we didn’t shout and Santa
did come. This year he arrived
by jet propulsion and lowered
hy retro rockets. (That’s what
one Air Force Sergeant told
me.) The weather was so
beautiful, I thought Santa would
cancel Christmas and substitute
Easter. When Jolly St. Nick
landed at our home, he missed
the lawn and landed in our
living room, at least thet’s what
it looks like.
A farewell luncheon was held
in honor of Fran Elly at the
Angelicola’s home, Dec. 22. En-
joying the warm hospitality
were: Gerri Bartz, Eileen
Batka., Bridgette Correale,
Temple U. To Offer
Teacher Ed. Courses
Temple University’s off-
campus division will present
four courses for teachers in two
locations in Wilkes-Barre
during the coming semester.
Registration for all of the
courses will be at the first class
session during the week of Jan.
17.
At the E. L. Meyers High
School an industrial education
course in shop organization and
management will meet Thur-
sdays at 7 p.m. A class in
vitalizing instruction in trade
and industrial education will
meet at 4:15 p.m. Thursdays. A
course in public relations in
vocational education is
scheduled for 5 p.m. Tuesdays.
A general education course in
the changing perspectives in the
humanities will be taught on the
Wilkes College Campus
Saturdays at 9 a.m.
Information on any of the
college credit programs may be
obtained through the director,
Off-Campus Division, Temple
University, Philadelphia, 19122,
or by calling 787-7265 (area code
215).
Dallas Odd Fellows
Observe Christmas
The Dallas Independent
Order of Odd Fellows held a
Christmas party Dec. 16 at the
lodge hall.
Guest speaker was the Rev.
Douglas Akers, pastor of Dallas
United Methodist Church.
Gifts were presented to the
ladies. Attending were: Mr. and
Mrs. Cletas Sweezy, Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Jewell, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul La Bar, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Roth, Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Ellsworth, Vera Coates,
William Rineman, Clifford Ide,
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Roushey.
<<
Fran Elly, Joyce Hrabowski,
and Kay Johnson.
Belated birthday greetings to
slim’ Kay Johnson who
celebrated her birthday Dec. 23.
Kay is momentarily expecting
her second child.
The . Schleichs—Rudy,
Johanna, Lisa, Kathy,
Christian, Lauri and Maria
enjoyed the Christmas holiday
with Grandma Gradie in Buf-
falo. N.Y.
Congratulations to Maryann
and Jack Cleary and to Kay and
Noel Johnson who celebrated
their wedding anniversary,
Dec. 23.
Marge and Vince Angelicola. -
hosted a Christmas open house
Thursday evening at their home
on Hilltop Drive. Several neigh-
bors enjoyed the festivities and
were in no shape to help Santa
the following evening.
The Gesmundos—Mary and
Jack, enjoyed the holiday with
{heir daughter, Maryann Regal
and family in Towanda.
Yolanda and Fred Tomaselli
entertained Grace and Dem
Zadera and family and Joseph
La Colla all of Brooklyn,
N.Y.Enjoying the holidays at
the Correales were Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Valenti of South-
hampton, N.Y. and Philip
Valenti of Fayettville, N.C.
Mrs. Valenti is the mother of
Vince Correale.
There are many good things
about Oak Hill residents (of
course. there are some bad
things too. but they don’t count)
and one of them is that when
there is an emergency, you can
always count on them. During
the recent blackout, neighbors
were telephoning each other to
ask if they needed the use of
their gas stoves or to come over
to keep warm. It is a nice
fecling to live with people like
that. Even during that un-
mentionable snow storm
Thanksgiving, families were
sharing their holiday meal. Oak
Hill is a nice place to live—not
only to visit.
Cub Pack 241 celebrated the
Christmas season by decorating
the tree at Lehman Center,
singing carols to guests at
Maple Hill Nursing Home, and
enjoying a party attended by
Santa at the Lehman Methodist
Church.
- With the coming New Year
festivities, where people tend to
drink out the old year and drink
in the new, please keep in mind
that the new year will not be
very happy should you be the
cause of an accident. Besides—
the life you save may be mine!
Happy. Healthy, and Holy New
Year.
I'm Jane ..
Come and Visit at
Jane's Slack Rack
| Easy Living
Detroiter
In A Mobile Home |
"New Moon Valiant
. And Other Mukes
- Also parts, aluminum awnings, & accessories”
BRYANT’S MOBILE HOMES
DALLAS, PA. 18612
PHONE 675-2447 i
EARN EXTRA
BOYS
AND
GIRLS!
OUR 21 OTHER NEWS
CARRIERS
CHOICE OF AREAS AVAILABLE IN
SHAVERTOWN-TRUCKSVILLE
FERNBROOK-EAST DALLAS
IT’S EASY TO SELL
“PEOPLE
READ GOOD NEWSPAPERS
FIRST”
CALL US AT 675-5211
MONEY LIKE]