Battling a brush fire Dallas Post/Ed Campbell PAT ROSENTHAL k STAR SATELLITE TV 107 S. Main Road, Mountaintop OVER 130 CHANNELS MARCH SPECIALS YOUR COST *1680 PH. 474-5256 CTR Ry iy wim EEN Pat Rosenthal has been selected as chairman of Daffodil Days for the American Cancer Society in Luzerne County. A Dallas resident, Mrs. Rosenthal will coordinate the distribution of thousands of freshly cut daffodils shipped to Pennsyl- vania directly from the state of Washington. The daffodils will be available at various locations in the Back Mountain from March 18 through March 23. Mrs. Rosenthal is President of the Junior League of Wilkes-Barre, Past-President of the Wyoming Seminary Alumni Association, Board member of the Cancer Society and Wyoming Seminary alumni Association. She was recipi- ent of the 1983 Outstanding Young Woman of America Award, past president of the Bi-County Council on Child Abuse, and Vice-President of Temple Israel Sisterhood. The Pennsylvania State Lottery instituted ‘three important changes in the Pennsylvania Lotto and Big 4 games on Monday, March 4. ‘““New computer software will enable us to improve customer serv- ice through advanced purchasing of Lotto tickets,”” Nelson stated. In addition, Lotto will expand to three drawings a week. Starting March 4, Lotto will be drawn on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, immediately following The Daily Number drawing at 7 p.m. The Big 4 game will also offer three drawings each week. Big 4 will be drawn on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, immediately follow- ing The Daily Number drawing. ry The ACROSS 1. Undercover Cop 2. PUnch 8. Gouge 12. Celebes Ox 13. Swedish Coin 14. Stake 15. Asterisk 16. Spanish Aunt 17. Want 18. Thirsty 20. Pull 22. Fleming 24. Dust With Flour 28. Baby’s Garment 32. More Faithful 33. Blades 34. Soft Mass 36. Ship Pole 37. Scotish Pines 39. Light Quick Steps 41. Don————— 43. Farrow 44. Ins Ands ——— 46. French Summers 49. Fleshy Fruit 52. Claire or Balin 54. Sacred Image 56. ———— The Red 57. Snare 58. German King 59. Route 60. ——— Whiz 61. American Cartoonist DOWN 1. Was Not: Dialect . Porch . Thoroughfare . Pines For A Lost Love . Hasty Note Dry Awn . Park Officer’s Abode . United 10. Western Indian 11. Spread For Drying 19. Yelp 21. Linkletter 23. Recent 25. Swindle 26, Toothed Wheel 27. Sins 28. Plug 29. Purple———— 30. Therefore 31. Strike 36. Hoover———— 38. Man’s Name 40. Form A Knot 42. Cause Acute Pain 45. Large Knife 47. Outside: Prefix 48. Drunkards 50. Equal Rights Amendment 51. River Islet 53. Consumed 55. And Nor CRYPTOGRAM RVVAU UBOXE SV UTVC L STLS STVUB VOEFEHL STVDFTSU VQ TEU LOBH’S XBOZ HBC LQSBO LYY. PREVIOUS SOLUTION If my books didn’t sell, I think I'd be a bear trainer. I like to wrestle with bears. Ernest Hemingway a wa £7] | > 5 = 15°F yA7] / Ee | UZ. At [0 ON IY NEES (YY STANLEY APPLEGATE Stanley E. Applegate, 74, of RD Sweet Valley, died February 25 in Nesbitt Memorial Hospital, Kings- ton. Surviving are his wife, the foremr Helen Okonieski; son, Thomas, Lev- ittown; two grandchildren. Funeral services were held Feb- ruary 28 from the Clarke Piatt Funeral Home, Hunlock, with the Rev. Paul Kenyon of the Mooretown Assembly of God Church, Sweet Valley, officiating. Interment, Bethel Hill Cemetery, Sweet Valley. FLORENCE SCHOOLEY Mrs. Florence Turner Schooley, 78, of 150 Lake St., Dallas, died February 26 in Nesbitt Memorial Hospital, Kingston, following a pro- longed illness. Surviving are her husband, Dr. F. Budd Schooley; her son, George, St. Petersburg, Fla.; daughters, Mrs. Thomas Fetsko, Harveys Lake; Mrs. William Daw, St. Petersburg, Fla.; brothers, Clarence, Claude, Kenneth and Russell Turner, all of Noxen; sister, Mrs. Preston Mingus, Noxen; eight grandchildren; three great-grandchildren. Funeral was held from the Rich- ard H. Disque Funeral Home, Dallas, with the Rev. Robert L. Benson of the Dallas United Meth- odist Church officiating. Interment, Chapel Lawn Memorial Park, Dallas. RICHARD CR.0SS Richard A. Cross, £6, of RD 4, Dallas, Lehman Tovinship, died February 27 in Wilke:s-Barre Gen- eral Hospital. Surviving are his wife, the foremr Marion Hoover; brofther, Murl Jr., Candor, N.J.; sisters, Mrs. Marga- ret Harper, Apalachin, N.Y.; Mrs. Jean Frigo, Endicott, N.Y. 2 from the Curtis L. Swanson Funeral Home, Pikes Creek, with the Rev. Wayne Reese, pastor of the Victory Baptist Church, Lehman, officiating. Interrnient, Chapel Lawn Memorial Park, IDallas. HAL E. MORROW ~ Hal E. Morrow, formerly of Mountaintop, died February 14 in Warner Robins, Georgia, where he resided since 1969. He was preceeded in death by his father, Hal Morrow and brothers, Thomas Lee and Robert E. Surviving are his wife, Patricia; daughter, Robin Purvis, of Warner Robins, Georgia; son, Hal Morrow Jr., Acworth, Georgia; a brother, Allen, Harveys Lake; and his step- mother, Mildred Morrow, of Moun- taintop. Arrangements will be made by McCullough Funeral HOme with interment; in Magnola Park Ceme- tery, War‘ner Robins, Georgia. Dallas Post/George Poynton MONDAY 11 a.m. wr — _