i | ? 70 7 2 2. 44 3" /e 7 5 V, 2 / 25 |2¢ 2 J 3 / 2 a 5 Z 7 \7& 3.7 “0 42. 23 ¥¥ 7s #7 #5 77 so ls 2) (53 7 ry | Z | ~ 7 ! 0 v ACROSS DOWN 1. Minute Particle 1. Prepositions 5. Overhead Railways 2. Mexican Treat 8. Hollywood Party 3. Danish Monies 12. Scarlett’s Home 4. Parade Feature 13. Costello 5. Shade Tree 14. Spindle 6. Circular Turn 15. Wound Mark 7. Medicinal Shrub 16. Film Mr. —————— 8. Parade Feature 17. Football Group 9. Cutting Tool 18. Formerly 10. Hearst Kidnappers 20. Samoan Town Pago 11. Finished Edge a EP L- 19. Consume 22. Casual Occurance 21. Fuel 24. Sincere 23. A Nixon 28. Musical Program 25. Mend 32. Not Fresh 26. French Islands 33. Asian Country 27. Fender Bender 34. Golfer’s Gadget 28. Kids 36. Brown bird 29. Latin: He was 37. Freight Boat 30. Actress Williams 39. Opposite to 31 Meadow 41. Horse's Home : 35. Self 43. Hockey Great 4 38. Moose 44. Liken To i 40. Exist 46. Man’s Name p ; ; 42. Marine Duck 49. Epidermis : ; : 45. Roman Fiddler 52. Lair ; 47. Post 54. Merit 48. Whal 56. Animal Group Ayhale 57. Before 49. Feminine Pronoun 58. Pilaf Ingredient 50. Coral Island 59. Detectives for Short 51. Anger 60. Happy Days Howard 52. Skin Growth 61. Sudden Blow 54. Fiber Knot CE Wl 7 ul, 2 oc 4 Bf | AA ioe 7 [1 L 9) ao AEE A | A z First Eastern Bank has: announced that a selection of Fidel- ity mutual funds are now available ~ to investors through the bank’s Dis- count Brokerage Department, Cars to have rear lights now more cars on the highway this fall sporting an additional safety feature — an eye-level rear brake light that will reduce the danger of rear-end collisions. Transportation Secretary Eliza- beth hanford Dole, who has made safety her number one priority, said, ‘‘We expect to cut the number of rear-end collisions significantly, eliminate some 40,000 injuries and save annually an estimated $434 million in property damages once all vehicles on the road are equipped with the third lamp.” Cars manufactured after Sept. 1, 1985, will be required to have the new rear stop lamp, which will supplement the two lower - brake lights. The regulation requires the third stop lamp to be mounted on the centerline of a vehicle, between the trunk and the top of the roof, either inside or outside the rear window. ARiomet Tir SL ALLASC[0ST > (USPS 147-780) An independent newspaper pub- lished each Wednesday by Penna- print, Inc. from Route 309 - 415 Plaza, P.0. Box 366, Dallas, Pa. under the act of March 3, 1889. Subscription rates are $12 per year in Pennsylvania and $14 per year out of state. Subscriptions must be paid in advance. {Newsstand rate is 25 cents per copy. é Fidelity Investments is one of America’s largest, most successful, privately-owned investment man- agement organizations. The five funds now available through First Eastern Discount Brokerage are: Fidelity Magellan fund, Fidelity Mercury Fund, Fidelity Select Port- folios, Fiedlity Equity-Income Fund, 3nd Fidelity Tax-Exempt Market rust. The addition of Fidelity mutual funds compliments First Eastern’s existing full line of discount broker- age services. First Eastern Dis- count Brokerge provides clients with an online entry system to transmit buy or sell ordes on stocks, bonds, equity and index options, and provides margin trading. In addition, clients can obtain up- to-the-minute stock, bond and option quotes as well as market and invest- ment research information. First Eastern Bank’s Discount Brokerage Department, a part of the Investment Department, remains the only full service dis- count brokerage opertion in north- eastern Pennsylvania. SQUARE DANCE STARTING SOON — EVERY SAT. NITE Watch for opening date. Entertainment As Usual! Max Evans — Caller George Thomas Group Collins’ Store & Auction Center 10th & Mulberry Sts., Berwick 759-9393 By JOHN F. KILDUFF Staff Writer There is a new concept in health care invading the Back Mountain area. Actually, it is not exactly an entirely “new concept”, it is an old idea returning after a quarter of a century of sick leave. The new concept? In-home Health Care, offered by the newly opened “House Calls,” in-home health care agency located in the Dallas Cor- ners Building, Dallas. House Calls opened its doors this past January in an effort to “bridge the gap’ between the time a patient leaves a hospital and the time the patient is home-bound during recu- peration. “It is not an entirely new idea of health care,” said Registered Nurse Pamela Morgantini, who is also House Calls’ Director of Profes- sional Services. ‘In-Home health BERNARD GROBLEWSKI Bernard Groblewski, 97, of Crest- view Drive, Dallas, died September 16 in Mercy Hospital, Wilkes-Barre, where he had been a patient. Surviving are his wife, the former Anna Walukiewicz, two sons; 14 grandchildren; 7 great-grandchil- dren. 4 Private funeral services were held at the convenience of the family. TYYNE ANDERSON Mrs. Tyyne M. Anderson, of RD 1, Noxen (Beaumont), died September 17 in Wilkes-Barre General Hospi- tal. Surviving are her husband, Johan- nes P. Anderson; daughter, Mrs. Alisa M. Nulton, Beaumont; one granddaughter, Suzanne. Funeral was held September 20 from the Nulton Funeral Home, Beaumont, with the Rev. Athisayam Victor, pastor of St. Luke’s Lutheran Church, officiating. Inter- ment, Beaumont Cemetery. JOHN BROWN SR. John P. Brown Sr., 66, a retired Army master sergeant, of Box 149, RD 1, Harveys Lake, died Septem- Medical Center, Plains Township, following a lengthy illness. Surviving are his wife, the former Mary Kaschenbach, with whom he celebrated 49 years of marriage in December 1984; daughter, Mrs. Charles Perez, Wilkes-Barre; sons, John P. Jr., Blakeslee; David, Wilkes-Barre; five grandchildren and one great-granddaughter; brothers, George, Bethlehem; Robert, Dallas. Funeral services were conducted September 18 from the. E. Blake Collins Funeral Home, Wilkes- Barre, with services conducted by the REv. Andrew Pillarella, pastor of Trinity United Presbyterian Church. Interment, Oak Lawn Cem- etery, Hanover Township. MEDORA SCHEFF Mrs. Medora B. Scheff, 73, of the Hillside Personal Care Center, Dallas, died September 16. Surviving are her daughter, Mrs. Susan Farr, Centermoreland; sister, Mrs. Frances Kramer, Dundee; two grandsons. Funeral services were held Sep- tember 20 in the Centermoreland United Methodist Church, with the Rev. Paul Towers officiating. LESTER BENNINGER Lester Benninger, 94, RD 2, Har- veys Lake, died September 20 in Leader West Rehabilitation Center, Kingston. Surviving are his daughters, Mrs. Sarah Johnson, Harveys Lake, with whom he resided; Mrs. Arline Moyer, Penn Argyle; Mrs. Audrey Patti, Winston-Salem, N.C.; son, William, Reno, Nevada; seven grandchildren; nine great-grand- children; sister, Mrs. Elsie Norris, Waverly, N.Y. Funeral services were held Sep- tember 24 from the Nulton Funeral Home, Beaumont, with the Rev. James Shillabeer, pastor of the Trucksville United Methodist Church, officiating. Interment, Warden Cemetery, Dallas. KENNETH AUSTIN Kenneth Austin, 78, of Harveys Lake, died September 21 in Carpen- ter Nursing Home, Dallas. Surviving are his wife, the former Anna Felter; son, Charles, Harveys care has been around for about 70 years.” According to Morgantini, the idea of medical personnel visiting a patient at his or her home, following a hospital stay, evolved many dec- ades ago. “The idea evolved from visiting nurses of 20 to 25 years ago,” Morgantini, a 1977 nursing graduate of Luzerne County Community Col- lege, said. “Those visiting nurses did everything they could for a patient.” House Calls currently offers in- home services including skilled nursing, physical therapy, speech therapy, respiratory therapy, nutri- tional counseling, blood testing, EKG’s, arterial blood gases testing and X-ray services. All services are covered by Medicare, Medicaid, Workman’s compensation and any other private insurance a patient may have. Lake; daughter, Mrs. Marjorie Smith, Yardley; six grandchildren; two great-grandchildren; brother, Fred Austin, Forty Fort; sisters, Leonora Haydon, Forty Fort; Mrs. Marjorie Leuthold, Bowie, Md. Funeral services were held Sep- tember 24 from the Frederick Funeral Home, Forty Fort, with the Rev. Pegg Ainslie Richards officiat- ing. Interment, Denison Cemetery, Forty Fort. GARY MITCHELL Gary Mitchell, RD 1, Dallas, Kunkle, died September 21 at his home. Surviving are his mother, Eunice Smith Mitchell; his wife, Deborah; sons, Gary Jr., and Larry, both of Tunkhannock; daughters, Colene and Christine, both of Dallas; broth- ers, Ronald Hess, Middletown; David Mitchell, RD 1, Dallas; sister, Mrs. Gloria Chmiola, Harris- burg. Funeral services will be held today at 11 a.m. from the Nulton Funeral Home, Beaumont, with the Rev. Pegg A. Richards, pastor of the Kunkle United Methodist Church, officiating. Interment will be in Chapel Lawn Memorial Park, Dallas. LAURA JOHNSON Mrs. Laura Johnson, 70, of Shawnese, Harveys Lake, died Sep- tember 21 in Leader West Nursing Center, Kingston. Surviving is her son, Donald, Har- veys Lake. Funeral services were held Sept- meber 24 from the Richard H. Disque Funeral Home, Dallas, with the Rev. Michael Shambora, pastor of the Idetown United Methodist Church, officiating. Interment, Ide- town Cemetery. } NICHOLAS DOWNES Nicholas Garfield Downes, 76, of 67 Sunset Drive, RD 4, died Septem- ber 20 at the Wilkes-Barre General Hospital. Surviving are his wife, the former Helen Thier; a sister, Mrs. Floren Corse, Ashby, Mass. He was pre- ceded in death by a brother, Mar- shall and a sister, Miss Emily Downes. Funeral services were held Sep- tember 23 from the Edwards and Russin Funeral Home, Edwards- ville, with The Very Rev. Vladimer Petorak, pastor of the Holy Resur- rectional Russian Orthodox Cathe- dral, Wilkes-Barre, and the Rev. Andrew Pillarella, pastor of the Trinity United Presyberian Church, Dallas, officiating. Interment, Fern Knoll Burial Park, Dallas. PATRICK BILBOW JR. Patrick Joseph Bilbow Jr., 57, of Lakeside Drive, Harveys Lake, died suddenly September 19 at Nesbitt Memorial Hospital, Kingston, where he was taken after being stricken ill at home. Surviving are his wife, the former Joan Burba; sons, Patrick III, Robert and Mark and daughter, Gloria, all at home; sisters, Mrs. Catherine Wheeler, Missouri; Mrs. Ann Marie Watchulonis, Shaver- town; brother, Edward, Sterling, Va.; nieces and nephews. Funeral services were conducted September 23 from the McLaughlin Funeral Home, Kingston, with a mass of Christian Burial in St. Ignatius Chapel, Kingston. Inter- ment, Holy Trinity Cemetery, Bear Creek. PAMELA MORGANTINI One of the main reasons for the need of In-Home care has been the recent implementation of Diagnostic Related Groups (DRGs) by hospi- tals locally and around the country. DRGs essentially categorize hos- pital patients into general diagnos- tic groups, which stipulate the number of days a patient is permit- ted to remain in a hospital. Under the DRG system a patient is often times released from the hospital even though they may need addi- tional care. That is where ‘House Calls” comes in to help. “Many times patients are dis- charged from hospitals before they should be,”” said Morgantini. ‘“‘Today’s patients are sicker when they leave hospitals than they should be.” “It is a real shame as to what is happening to the elderly in this country right now,”” Morgantini said. “I really love the elderly and my work and that is why I try to do what I can in this business.” Morgantini said House Calls is not an alternative to physicians but rather is a suppliment to their care. “We are not replacing the physi- cian. We are bridging the gap,” Morgantini said. For _example, Morgantini explained, there could be a home- bound patient in the middle of the winter season who is in need of an insulin injection. Instead of a patient attempting to brave the cold and slippery roads to get to a hospital, House Calls could send a nurse to the patient’s home to administer the injection. “We try to look at the whole patient to determine their needs,” Morgantini said. “We (House Calls) sometimes go out on a limb for the patient. We try to meet every patient need we can.” According to Morgantini, the DRG system has warranted the In-Home health care system and most people don’t realize how frightening being home-bound can be. “When a patient is released from a hosptial and he or she is not ready to go, they are often overwhelmed,” said Morgantini. “We must realize that someday that patient (who is released early) could be you. And that is why we are here,” Morgan- tini continued. ‘We are trying to make a difference in the psycho- social home health care area. We try to make the adjustment from leaving a hospital to living at home, a little easier for the patient.” Morgantini said a patient desiring House Calls’ services must be con- sidered ‘‘Home-bound.”” Home- bound patients are those who suffer from illnesses which impair their ability to get to a physicians office or a hospital when they need to. House Calls employees about 20 medical personnel who are on-call on a 24-hour-a-day basis. House Calls is open Monday thru Friday from 9 am. to 5 p.m. and is available after hours through their answering service. Full Service Pumpkin Pies Pastries st a —g— mR SE, Zenith 19’ Portable Color TV Set Magnavox AM/FM Stereo Radio with Separate Speakers, Turntable, and Tape Player Microwave Oven Quasar VCR Cuisinart Food Processor 2 — 10-Speed Bicycles — Boys’ and/or Girls’ 50 Pieces of Nylon Tuck-Away Compact Luggage Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday: 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. Thursday and Friday: 10 A.M. to 8 P.M. Member F.D.I.C. ®