The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, January 23, 1985, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Monk IS
appointed
manager
Earl “Monk has: been named
Towanda district manager for Com-
monwealth Telephone Company, a
subsidiary of Commonwealth Tele-
phone Enterprises, Inc. Arthur
Bowen, Commonwealth Telephone’s
northern division manager, said
that Monk will supervise and coordi-
nate construction, installation and
repair crews in the company’s 1,274-
square mile area of Bradford and
Sullivan counties.
Monk, who joined Commonwealth
Telephone in May 1977, has held a
number of staff and operations posi-
tions. Most recently he was installa-
tion, repair and construction super-
visor in the Clarks Summit district.
Prior to that assignment, Monk was
project supervisor for the installa-
tion of a new telephone business
system at Kutztown University,
Kutztown.
A graduate of Wilkes College,
Monk holds a bachelor of science
degree in mathematics. In addition,
Monk has completed graduate work
at Rutgers University. A native of
the Back Mountain area, he will be
relocating to the Towanda area.
Commonwealth Telephone Enter-
prises is a diversified communica-
tions company providing telephone,
business communications and cable
television services. Commonwealth
Telphone, which\comprises its larg-
est group, serves a 5,300 square
mile, 19-county area of eastern
Pennsylvania from 76 central
offices. It employes state-of-the art
equipment incorporating fiber optic
and digital communications technol-
ogy. Commonwealth Telephone
Enterprises’s operating revenues
and sales for 1983 were $97.9 mil-
lion.
The Lake View Cemetery Associa-
tion (Kitchen Cemetery) met on
January 5, at the Alderson Method-
ist Church to set up an organization
with the help of Attorney John
0’Conner. With a majority of the
Board of Directors present an elec-
tion of officers was held for a two
year term.
Officers are: President-Gary
Smith; Vice President-Richard
Stine; Secretary-Treasurer-Judy
Gramley; Board of Directors are:
Gary Smith, Judy Gramley, Rich-
ard Stine, Doris Kitchen, Elsie
Raugh, Carson Gramley Jr. and
Kenneth Thomas Sr. Notification of
Burial, Judy Gramley, Gary Smith
or Richard Stine; Historical Back-
ground Committees-(Lower section)
Joseph Raugh, Elsie Raugh,; Walter
* Pregnancy Terminations fo
14 weeks
* Contidential Counseling
* One Visit
Office of
Salomon Epstein, M.D.
607-772-8757
Binghamton Plaza
Raugh and Mary Garrity, (Upper
section) Jeanne Thomas, Jane Car-
penter, Ken Thomas Sr., and Carson
Gramley Jr.
The next stated meeting is to be
May 4, 1985, at the Alderson Meth-
odist Church at 2 p.m. The first
Saturday of May of every year is to
be set aside as the annual meeting
of the association.
Books on sale
At a recent meeting of the Cru-
sade Committee of the Wyoming
Valley Unit of the American Cancer
Society, Leonard Falcone
announced that the Diner’s Club
restaurant coupon book has been
one of the most successful projects
undertaken by the local unit.
A limited number of books are
still available at the A.C.S. office,
825-7763. The cost is $30. And they
are valid until August 1. Back
Mountain volunteers involved with
this project are Carol Eyet, Distri-
bution Chairman and Leonard Fal-
cone, Diner’s Club chairman. Dottie
Henry is Crusade Chairman.
In a meeting of the Dallas Town-
ship Supervisors held Tuesday, Jan.
15, a contract for a new police
cruiser was awarded to Howard
“Duke” Issacs, Route 309 in Trucks-
ville.
Issacs will furnish the new 1985
Grand Fury at a net cost of $9,807,
which will include a trade in price
for a 1982 Plymouth car. The car
itself will include the basic accesso-
ries, but no air conditioning; as that
would have raised the purchasing
cost another $673.00.
In other matters, Ecumenical
Enterprises asked the zoning board
to rezone the area on which they
plan to build 40 additional apart-
ments (in the Meadows Senior Citi-
zens Complex), to an R-3, residen-
tial listing. The area is: currently
zoned as both S-1 (suburban) and B-
3 (business).
The supervisors discussed the pos-
sibility of fining business and resi-
dences for ‘false alarms’ which
require police time to investigate;
this due to the many false burlary
alarms of the past few months. The
fines would range from $10 and $50.
No formal motion was pronounced,
however.
A meeting concerning the take-
over of Fallbrook Avenue by the
township for maintenance purposes
will be held on Thursday, February
5, at 7:30 p.m. and will be open to
the residents of the five homes
located on Fallbrook Avenue as well
as to the general public. Supervisor
Frank Wagner stated that should
the road be taken over by Kingston
Township, it will not be paved.
— PAMELA AARON
The youngest. legion of sales
people is about to take to the
streets. The Girl Scouts are coming.
It is Girl Scout Cookie Time and the
Girl Scouts in your neighborhood
will be coming around to sell you
the perennial favorites.
Penn’s Woods Girl Scouts will join
with 2,240,000 other Girls Scouts
across the country, to bring you
these delicious treats. ‘And while
they fill your orders, the girls are
learning their first lessons about
selling, record keeping, handling
money and they are also earning
the money that supports their troop
activities.
Officially the Penn’s Woods Girl
Scout Council Annual Cookie Sale is
underway. Girl Scouts throughout
the six county jurisdiction of the
Council will be taking orders until
January 25. Deliver of cookies is
slated for May 1-15.
A new cookie, called ‘‘chocollage’’
headlines this year’s sale. It is a
cookie crunch with a unique misture
of chocolate and caramel. It joins
last year’s new cookie, Coconut
Creme Sandwiches and the tradi-
tional Scot Teas, Thin Mints, Peanut
Butter Hoedowns, peanut butter
sandwich Savannahs, and Golden
Yangles, a snack cracker made
with cheddar cheese that is also
great with soup. Price of the cookies
are $2.00 per box.
‘Mrs. Betty Hensley, General
Cookie Sale Chairperson, points out
that Girl Scout cookies are made
with only natural ingredients, freeze
well and are called for in a number
of delicious recipes. Such tempting
desserts as Minted ‘Brownie Pie,
Apple-Raisin Brown Betty and
Savannah Toffee Torte all include
Girl Scout cookie products.
Public support of the annual Girl
Scout cookie sale enables Penn’s
Woods Council to provide camping
opportunities to Girl Scouts at a
lower cost. In addition, the sales
assist in the maintenance of the
council’s troop camp facility in
Hobbie, Camp Joy Lo and the coun-
cil’s main outdoor facility, Camp
Louise, located near Berwick. Girl
Scout cookie sales also strengthen
the development of council plans
and further advance the overall Girl
Scout program in each of the areas
of Penn’s Woods Council.
Volunteers and Girl Scouts are
attempting to reach all segments of
the community with this annual
cookie sale. Persons interested in
ordering Girl Scout cookies may
contact the Penn’s Woods Council
office at 10 S. Sherman Street,
Wilkes-Barre, 829-2631, where they
will be referred to a troop in their
neighborhood.
Neighborhood chairpersons. also
welcome orders and inquiries.
are: Helen Richardson, Kingston;
Cyndi Williams, Forty Fort; Nancy
Stark and Jennie Metzgar, Shaver-
town; Mary Smith, West Wyoming.
$9.79
3 PIECE
# CHICKEN DINNER
gc 3 Pieces of the Colonel's Original
Recipe or Extra Crispy Chicken, Mashed
Fresh Baked Buttermilk Buscuit for only
Bl $2.79 (plus tax). Reg. Value $3.32. Coupons
good for Combination white/dark orders
i only. OFFER EXPIRES: March 3,1985
I Limit 4 Dinners per coupon.
Kentucky Fried Chicken ,
(This coupon good only at Kentucky Fried
Chicken stores listed in this ad )
DANIEL HOLDREDGE
Post.
Maplewood Drive areas.
and Machell Avenue areas. ,
Rosenn, Jenkins & Greenwald, a
local law firm, announced recently
that former Congressman Frank
Harrison will be affiliated with the
firm as Special Counsel.
Harrison completed his term in
the 98th Congress in December as a
Member of the House of Represent-
atives from the 11th District of
Pennsylvania. Until his departure
for Washington in 1983, Attorney
Harrison was affiliated with
Rosenn, Jenkins & Greenwald, from
1969 through 1982. i
As’ a member of ‘the 98th Con-
gress, he served on the Committees
on Education and Labor, the Com-
mittee on Veterans Affairs, and was
appointed as a member of the
I-%
Rhea”
Chicken
9 PIECE
THRIFT BOX
Get 9 Pieces of the Colonel's Original
Recipe or Extra Crispy for only $5.69 (plus
tax). Reg. Value %.60. Coupons good for
combination white/dark orders only. OFFER
EXPIRES: March 3, 1985
Kentucky Fried Chicken
Chicken sores bated 4s th ad)
United States Delegation to the 1984
Conference of the Inter-Parliamen-
tary Union at Geneva, Switzerland.
Attorney Harrison holds an A.B.
degree from King’s College, and an
LL.B. from The Harvard Law
School. Following graduation, he
engaged in the private practice of
law and served as a lecturer in the
Department of Government at Col-
lege Misericordia. At various times
he served also as a lecturer in the
Department of Government and
Politics at King’s College; as an
instructor at the University of
Maryland, and the College Exten-
sion Program at Kunsan Air Force
Base in Korea.
SR nn Tn EEN
15 PIECE
CARRIE PACK
1H
Recipe or Extra Crispy for only $9.49 (plus
tax) Reg. Value #11.10. Coupons good for
combination white/dark orders only. OFFER
EXPIRES: March 3, 1985
pr