a I A I TRO ws I A TTT pm ’ firms. MCCULLOCH and Homelite Chain Saws. Sales and Ser- vice. A.F. Walters. Phone 675- 1869. 48-tf-c REMINGTON CHAIN saws, sales and service. Saw chains machines sharpened. Call 639- 5030 or 639-1794. 9-tf-c GO-CART 5 horsepower, good condition. $65. For informa- tion call 474-9081 and ask for John. 34-tf-f MILTON APPLES, Harold Brace, 03 nge, Call 333-4236. ge 35-2-¢ MEMORIAL SHRINE CEME- TERY lots. Crest lawn and Maple lawn. Reasonable. Phone 675-0862 or write Box 4, Lehman, Pa. a : 35-3-¢ BARLETT PEARS for sale Call 333-4191 : , 36-a2-c 1972 PLYMOUTH FURY, Air, excellent condition Telephone 824-8992 for appointment. 36-1-c 1972 CHEVY CAPRICE, fully equipped, air-conditioning, excellent condition.’ Call’ 675- 2286 for appointment. 36-1-c DALLAS AREA, 3 bedroom brick rangher on. large lot. Patio, reation room and many extras. Reply: P.O. Box 165, Dallas, Pa. 18612 36-1-c 1966 BUICK SPECIAL Sdn. 4 door, 8 cyl, p.s. p.b. Automatic Trans. One owner. Reasonable. Call 696-2835 36-1-p $4,400 ANNUALLY, growing Ginseng Root for us. Fall planting. Send $2.00 (refund- able) for seeds and in- structions. GC Herbs; Sears- port. Maine 04974. 34-3-p GENTLEMAN FOR general maintenance and lawn care. Carpenter Nursing Home, Dallas. Call 639-1885 or 639- 5560. 24-tf-c TREE SERVICE—tree and stump removal, trimming, feeding, lot clearing. Also 75 ft. crane for hire. Dave Brown, R.D. 1, Tunkhannock, - Pa. Phone 836-4144 or 836-1255. 19-19-¢ SERVICES BOOKKEEPING: FEDERAL _ State and Local; Tax returns, small businessmen. Walter A. Zell, 639-1861. 24-tf-c CELLER & GARAGES Cleaned $11 per load - Refuse, 75 cents per week-Bushes small trees cut. Phone 696-1294 36-4-Cc DOLL CLOTHES made on or- der for all fashion dolls—very reasonable. Call 823-4741. 34-4-¢ FOR RENT ROOM BY WEEK or month, air conditioning, electric heat. Copper Kettle Motel, Tel. 298- 2250. 30-tf-c THREE ROOMS and bath - Private entrance. Heat and * hot-water Furnished. Adults - no pets. Security required. 696-3159 36-1-p WANTED COMPLETE HOUSEHOLD contents and estates, oriental rugs, paintings, jewelry, sil- ver, antiques, cut glass and so forth. Reply Box 22, c-0 Dallas Post, Dallas. 33-tf-c 2 AXLE TRAILER for inboard 17 foot boat. Prefer manufac- turers unit but will consider homemade. Call 945-3707. 35-2-¢ WHOM TO CALL HELP WANTED RN OR LPN. 11-7 shift also nurses’ aid. Call 639-1885 or 639-5560). CLEANING LADY 1 day week- ly. Sutton Road. Shavertown. Call 696-1404. BOY OVER 16 to work in Anti- que shop and do some lawn work. Reply Box 22, ¢c-o Dallas Post, Dallas. 33-tf-c RN OR LPN by exam, parttime, 3-11 shift. Carpenter Nursing © Home, Dallas. Call 639-1885 or ACT NOW SELL TOYS & Gifts Party Plan. Work now til ~ Christmas. Highest Com- | missions. Call or write “SANTA’ s Parties, Avon, Conn. 06001. Phone 1 (203) 673- 36-4-¢ MAN COMPANION 24 ours, very little to do leferences - Phone 288-1695 IAT WOULD YOU like to buy cannot afford? Change n e position now. Only $5.00 sociation Fee. We train . Phone 836-3735 36-2-p TREES REMOVED, hauled away Call Jack Husband, 333- 4928. PONDS & LAKES—TIt costs only 88c to clear weeds from 1000 sq. ft. of water 3 ft. deep and only 9c to clear it of algae. SEE US. Gay-Murray Com- pany. OLD COMIC BOOKS (pre 1960) sought by collector. Send list, titles, numbers, years, condi- tion. Prompt reply, generous offer. P. M. Zubritzky, 1209 Broadway, McKees Rocks, Pa. 15136. 34-3-p ADVERTISING U.S. CIVIL SERVICE TESTS! Men-women 18 and over. High starting pay. Secure jobs. Short hours. Advancement. - Pension. Thousands of jobs open. Preparatory training as long as required. Experience usually unnecessary. Grammar school sufficient for many jobs. FREE in- formation on jobs, salaries, requirements. Write TODAY giving name and address Lincoln Service, Pekin, PA-59- 1P, Illinois, 61554. LEGAL NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE GIVEN to Einory Steele, his Heirs, Executors, Administrators and Assigns, that on August 16, 1973, David D. Hoover and Helen C. Hoover, his wife, commenced an Action to Quiet Title against you filed to No. 6074 of 1973 in the Office of the Prothonotary of Luzerne County, which you are required to defend. The land in- volved is situate partly in the Township of Hunlock and the balance in the Township of Ross, Luzerne County, Pennsyl- vania, bounded and described as follows, to wit: + BEGINNING at an iron pin on the easterly line of County Highway L. R. 40061, on the extension of the line of land now or formerly belonging to W. Yockavich; THENCE along land now or formerly belonging to W. Yockavich, and the land of Peter Finley North eighty six (86) degrees East twenty five hundred and seventy four (2574) feet more or less to the Lehman Township Line; THENCE South thirty (30) degrees East five hundred and twenty eight (528) along the Lehman Township Line and land now or formerly belong- ing to Donald G. Lewis, to an iron pin; THENCE South eighty six (86) degrees West three thousand ‘and twenty nine (3029) feet more or less along land now or formerly belonging to Corine Leoni, to an iron pin in the easterly line of said county road; THENCE along the easterly line “of said county road, North thirty degrees and thirty one minutes (30 de- grees 31’) East two hundred and sixty five and five tenths (265.5) feet to a point; THENCE along the easterly line of said county road, North eleven degrees and fifty eight minutes (11 de- grees 58’) East two hundred and sixty six (266.0) feet to the point of beginning. Par- cel contains thirty (30) ac- res, more or less. You are notified to plead to the above action and related Complaint within twenty (20) days from service thereof. “Hearing on said action will be held September 28, 1973, at 10:00 o'clock a.m. in the Luzerne County Court House at which time a decree may be entered ordering that you be forever barred from asserting any right. lien, title or interest in the land inconsistent with the in- terest or claim of the Plaintiffs set forth in their Complaint, un- less you take such action as the Order directs within’ thirty (30) days thereafter. CHARLES D. LEMMOND, JR., ESQUIRE 1400 United Penn Bank Building Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 34-3-c LEGAL Sealed proposals will be re- ceived by the supervisors of Monroe Township. Wyoming County. until 7:30 p.m. E.S.D.T. on Monday. September 10th for the following: 2,640 tons more or less of modified gravel. Proposal forms and instruc- tions to bidders may be obtain- ed from Arlene Traver, Secre- tary. Box 166. R.D. 5, Tunkhan- nock. Pa. 18657. The materials specified here- in meet the standard specifica- tions of the Pennsylvania De- partment of Transportation. All proposals must be upon the forms furnished by the under- signed. Supervisors reserve the right to reject any or all propo- sals. Signed. Arlene Traver Secretary 35-2-¢ LEGAL NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that Articles of Incor- poration were filed with and ap- proved by the Department of State on August 3, 1973, for the purpose of obtaining a Certifi- cate of Incorporation of a Busi- ness Corporation having the name of Wyoming Valley Medi- cal Equipment Corp. organized under the provisions of the Pennsylvania Business Corpor- ation Law. The purposes of the corporation are to engage in the sale and rental of hospital equipment and supplies and to do any lawful act concerning any or all lawful business for which corporations may be in- corporated under the Business Corporation Law. ROSENN, JENKINS & GREENWALD 100 Blue Cross Building Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania Most people would agree that proper medical care and good health go hand in hand. And they would also agree that the right to emergency treatment and professional attention is the right of every citizen. "Yel, latest statistics from the Pennsylvania Health Depart- ment indicate that there are at least 100 areas in the common- wealth that should be declared “medically deprived”, that is, areas where the ratio between doctor and population is one for every 5,000 people or worse. And that’s the stimulus for le- gislation introduced in the House by State Reps. Charles Paul Hammock, D-Philadelphia and K. Leroy Irvis, D-Alle- gheny. The measure calls for a special program of state loans and other incentives to create needed. new medical facilities and special physician teams to staff them in problem areas, es- pecially the inner city and rural sections of the state. “Right now in Pennsylvania, there are at least 500,000 people who ‘are not getting anywhere near adequate medical care,” says Rep. Hammock, chief sponsor. of the bill. ‘Medical officials across the country tell us that the optimum doctor-per-population ratio should be one doctor for every 700 persons. The average is one doctor for every 1,000 persons. Yet. 500.000 Pennsylvanians live in areas where the ratio is one doctor for every 5,000 or higher. In some cases, the ratio reaches such drastic propor- tions that there is only one ac- tive doctor for every 10,000 people. and even where ratios are lower, many of the people in these deprived areas are forced to travel sometimes as much as an hour to get medical assis- tance.” Specifically, the bill calls for the following provisions: That the Pennsylvania De- partment of Health undertake an exhaustive study in conjunc- tion with the Pennsylvania Medical Society, the Pennsyl- vania Osteopathic Medical So- ciety.” local county health groups groups to identify all medically deprived areas within the com- monwealth. That the commonwealth be authorized through the Depart- ment of Health to issue long term loans of up to 80 percent of cost for the construction and equipping of special medical facilities in medically deprived areas. as long as the loans do not exceed $100,000 for any one facility. That special health care cor- porations be established in me- dically deprived areas to take over the new state-aided medi- cal facilities and oversee their operations where public health services are not available. That the state establish a spe- cial incentive program so that at least two physicians, and eventually a minimum of four physicians, be available to staff the new facilites on a 24-hour-a- day. seven-day-a-week basis. And that a special state ad- visory board be created, com- posed of a cross section of the medical profession. to approve and authorize loans for new medical facilities and to re- gulate the design and location of such facilities. “The first step is to set up the facilities in areas of need, and this is what our long-term, no- interest loan system is structur- ed to do.” says Mr. Hammock. “Through this plan we would be able to provide limited monies to help with such things as con- struction or conversion of exist- ing buildings. rents, and supple- mental income. Through the creation of the special advisory hoard we will give the state con- trol over where the loans are going and how the money is to be used. “The second priority is to get physicians to statf the new fac- ilities. Basically. this would be done through the communities themselves. “Our goal is to install a plan for enticing physicians into me- dically deficient areas. notes Mr. Irvis. co-sponsor of the bill. “This would be done by setting up a schedule that would pro- vide a kind of ‘time-off’ on a periodic basis.” The bill specifies that after three years of continuous ser- vice. physicians working in me- dically deprived areas would be enttitled to three months of sub- sidized residency in a service or hospital of his choice in order to develop and expand his parti- cular interests. In a similar ps uous service, the physician would be permitted to pursue independent goals for a three- year period, again subsidized in part by the health care corpora- tions. The measure stipulates how- ever that none of the state aided medical facilities can be attach- ed to hospitals or other large health delivery systems. “The need is in deprived areas,” Mr. Irvis says. ‘‘And while hospitals are located on the fringes of many of our inner cily areas, we don’t want to just add another hospital addition. We want to cut down the amount of time it takes for our citizens to get medical attention. We want to bring medical care to them through a statewide net- work of emergency care facil- ities in areas of need.” The advisory board, to be known as the Medical Facilities Advisory Board, would consist of the Secretary of Health and 17 other members to be appoint- ed by the Governor for four year terms. Commenting generally, Mr. Hammock notes: ‘‘Health, with food, shelter, and clothing, is basic to human existence. With the progress we've made in so many areas, one thing we should certainly master is the ability to provide adequate medical service to every indivi- dual. Our legislation will at least force people, especially le- gislators, to look at the problem directly and confront the press- ing need for our solution.” Freshmen entering the Wilkes-Barre Campus of Penn State will be introduced to a new program in freshman composi- tion, designed to improve their writing skills. Prof. G. G. Gregory, assistant professor of English, explained that all freshmen who were not rated superior in the English placement test were required to take English 1, composition and rhetoric, and English 3, the writing of ideas; and the more advanced students entered English 2, the expression of ideas. Under the revised system, al- though exempted from English 1, superior students will find English 1 a different course, Prof. Gregory explained. The first five weeks of the freshman composition program will deal with an intensive examination of the paragraph before essay writing is studied. The former English 1 course had no general examination; the new program will have two. A mid-term test will determine the students’ basic abilities in syntax, punctuation, usage, grammar, and style, as well as ability to analyze paragraphs. Students failing this test will be recommended to the English Department Writing Clinic which will include various diag- nostic tests to enable the cam- pus to offer specific help for specific problems and these tests will be available at any point in the term’s program of study to students with pro- blems. Students will be required to write an essay for their final ex- am. Their work, however, will not be graded by their class in- structors, but by anonymous graders, who will not only serve to provide a strong department consensus of what comprises Save for the Future—To your children, summer is forever. But you know how fast the seasons go. How fast the young grow. Why not plan for your child’s tomorrow before tomorrow is here? United State Savings Bonds can really set things up—for college, for a wedding—for whatever the future holds. Start today. Join the payroll savings plan where you work. It’s a simple, easy way to save and it’s safe. with E-Vap i o o | Reduce safe & fast i GoBese Tablets & Swater pills Walgreen Dallas Stapinski Agency Drug, [——————————————————————— WATER SYSTEMS WATER PUMP REPAIRS SALES AND SERVICE Larks—Piping—Switches Anything Related To Pumps and Water Systems R.W. WEIDNER & SONS Centermoreland 333-4548 acceptable writing but will also help to train students to write for themselves instead of slant- ing their writing to what they believe will please their instruc- tor. Essays will be graded on a pass-fail basis. The redesigned program has been developed ‘under the gui- dance of a committee including members of the Department of English at University Park and the Commonwealth Campuses, graduate assistants, and repre- sentatives of the Division of In- structional Services. Members of the faculty who will teach the newly designed program at the local campus are Prof. Gregory, Prof. Walter L. Royall, H.C. Neuhaus, and Marian Boyle. Antlerless Licenses To Be Issued Soon Anterless deer license appli- cations will be accepted from Pennsylvania resident hunters beginning Sept. 17, under rules and regulations adopted by the Game Commission. Under the Game Law, county treasurers are designated as the issuing agents for anterless licenses. The Game’ Law provides that anterless deer licenses‘shall be issued without restriction or regard to the county residence of the Penn- sylvania applicant.” Some county treasurers will accept applications for the anterless licenses by mail only; some will accept applications over the counter only; some will accept applications either way. It is important that each hunter who plans to apply for an anter- less license check with the of- fice of the treasurer in the county in which he wishes to hunt to determine how ap- plications are being accepted. In Luzerne and Wyoming counties they are by mail only. SHOE REPAIR | NOW OPEN A iMcCRORY'S v Shopping Center ng Valley Mall C1' ay Shopping Center MS] A Friendly, Confidential, Understanding Service, PHONE 288-4535 FAIRWAE FINANCE CORP., LUZERNE 510 N. Main St., Taylor 346-7514 Cucumbers-5¢ ea. $2.00 !. Onions-20c Lb. Pick Your Own—Tomatoes !'- String Beans $3.00 Bu. HPN AANAA NLL Page 17 Lend a Hand — And a Home If your family cares about the world and its people... If you live in a Commumiy that shares that concern. Then let a student from another culture understand you and your life better. Invite an AFS scholar into your home. AMERICAN FIELD SERVICE INTERNATIONAL SCHOLARSHIPS 313 East 43rd St., New York, New York 10017 CROSSWORD ~ ~ ~ By A. C. Gordon) DE ES EE S16 17 Ie 9 Q tn lr} 2 26 39 [3a 33 38 qa jy3 47 vg 49 So Si Sa $3 S4 - Compass 6 ~ Either direction (abb.) 7 -...8ea - Land measure 8 - Closely united ACROSS 49 - German "A" 9 = To enclose 1 - Home chores 50 - Houseplant within walls 9 - Unwelcome house- 51 - Dines 11 - Parched hold guest 53 - Vegetable (pl.) 12 - Formulas 10 - Field of conflict 54 - Home interior 14 - Football 12 - Film of oxidation decorative position (abb.) 13 - Skill material 16 - Destructive 15 - Grime insect 17 - Before DOWN 18.= The beginning 18 - Flower 1 - Article of of "Aurora 20 - Bind clothing 19 - Muddy groove 2) - College degree 2 - Preposition 22 - Mends 22 - A couple 3 - Pronoun 24 - To harass 23 - To subject to 4 - Period of 26 - Quite small friction time 25 - To unite 25. - Man of medicine 5 = Exudes 30 - To prove (abb.) moisture 32 - Blenders 26 - Admonish Je Forget GUA YE 34 - Make out 27 - Food dish Last W e k's Answer 35 Gram 29 - Scan closely 36 - Horse of a 31h colon certain color 33 - More level 37 - Consume 36 - Prepare again 43 - Animal's stomach 45 - Speech defect for publication 38 - Yes, in Mexico 39 - Snow skimmer 46 - To char 40 - Grain 48 - Greek letter 41 - Xenon (chem.) 50 - A gratuity 42 - U.S. Tar Heel” 52 - South Latitude state (abb.) (abb.) 44 - Brilliance of 53 - Very softly in success music (abb.) RAIN GUTTER WORK ALC OA CUTTERS&DOWN SPOUTS $2 PER FOOT INSTALLED JOSEPH & EDWARD WACHS PHONE 388-6719 FALLS. PENNA. George’s Auto Service R.D. 4, Dallas Idetown SEWLR ESTIMA. TES Rugales Homes ¢ ii after 6 p.m. 675-0094 or 696-2913 AHHH WH WPAN “Come to the Hut for” ® BUSINESS CARDS ® RUBBER STAMPS ® PHOTO COPIES ® MAGNETIC VEHICLE SIGNS ® DESK NAME PLATES Remember the Hut is your center for wedding invitations Stop in or Call Dallas Shopping Center Route 309, Dallas 675-5677 NPIL er —
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers