The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, December 11, 1985, Image 18

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    Ne
Mon.-Fri. 9-5
Call
824-5717
PIANO-
ORGAN
INSTRUCTION
Home Or Studio
Beginners-
Professionals-
Teachers
TOP EDUCATOR
REASONABLE
CALL
824-0335
BERTHA’S
BARGAINS
6 FT. TOBOGGAN with
ped $30; 4 ft. skis with
inders $20; ski boots,
size 5, junior $20; ski
gloves, jr. size 7 $5. All
items in exc. cond. 696-
1986 anytime. 48-4-P
CHEST with four drawers
$30. Exc. cond. Call 288-
7270 after 5:30 p.m. 48-
4-
ASSORTED LIGHT FIX-
TURES. Chandeliers,
porch lights, track lights,
wall lights, $10 to "$35.
New. 825-2416, 48-4-P
2-14" SNOW TIRES ON
RIMS, good cond. $25.
Call 639-2376 after 1
TWO PROM GOWNS, lav-
ender & burgundy. Size
12, $35 each. Phone 675-
1557. 47-4-P
PLAID BROWN & WHITE
LONG COAT, size 12,
ood cond. $8; Brom-
eigh car coat, red, like
new, orig. cost $100, will
sett for $15, size 10. 696-
1661. 47-4-P
SKI OUTFIT-wil fit girls
size 12 to 14. Good cond.
675-0931. 47-4-P
TABLE, formica top, 4
swivel chairs. $50. Call
693-2291 or 693-2395. 46-
4-P
4-15" CHEVY RIMS $40.
333-4198 after 12 noon.
HELP WANTED
Part Time
Home Health Aide for
Home Health Agency.
Must have minimum of 2
years previous experi-
ence as a nurses aide or
Certificate of Completion
of approved Home
Health Aide trainin
course. Call 283-8323,
a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday
through Friday, E.O.E.
46-3-P
EXP. COUNTER &
PERSON, apply
person. Fetch's Foo
Store, 187 Wyoming
Ave., Wyoming. 48-1-P
At home persons. Work at
home, Earn top dollars
and or new windows.
Must have telephone.
Call 477-3630 or 1-457-
4533 for more informa-
tion. 48-4-P
WORK WANTED
Ill Iron Them!
I will do YOUR ironing in
MY home. Call 675-0205
after 7 p.m. 42-tfn-P
Elderly Care
Room, board & care for
elderly in my home. Also
day care. For informa-
tion call after 7 p.m. 477-
5444. 45-4-P
~ Remodeling
Interior, exterior, roofing,
siding, porches, panelin
etc. Small jobs o.k., 2
ye: exp. 477-3424, 46-12-
RN.'S Available
To cover 24 hours per
day, 7 days per week.
Nursing care in your
home. Exc. references.
Call 824-0805. 46-4-P
ll Clean It!
Housework wanted. Exc.
references. Call 696-2503
after 6 p.m. 48-4-P
Alterations
Highly skilled professional
seamstress works on any
type of garments for
men and women.
8-4P
SS OS SYS SN NY SOY OR LN
2.5 hp
0
=
®
J
SALE PRICE
$695
5 HP
1" SALE PRICE
EE ECE EN ET ex XY
Nh NN
Personal &
& Autos
& Lighted
. REAL ESTATE
* LOANS
Luzerne
824-7611
288-4235
BARBARA
VIVIAN
8 REALTOR- If
ASSOCIATE
FOR RENT TRUCKS RECREATIONAL AUTO AUTO
: i CHEVY, 84 CAMARO,
Wilkes-Barre Excellent Buy Truck Camper C H EV Y I 80 sports coupe, auto., p.s.,
Office, commercial, mer- Mercedes Benz, 1979, 1973 10% ft., side MONZA Bie, 1 fool, Custom ime
chantile space, up to 30,- Diesel, model 1113, entrance, fully self-con- $8200. Call 675-4162.
000 sq. ft. low rates, refrigerator, freezer and tained. Call Tes 5S p.m. 2 Door, radio, heat, rear : z
flexible terms, 1st floor dry capacity, 25,500 639-2935. 46-4-P window defroster, 4 new
space, loading docks,
broker protected 822-
1139. 31-26-p
GVW, power lift gate,
exc. cond. $13,500.00.
675-1413. 45-4-P
MOBILE HOME
Wilkes-Barre
Westside Apts.
N. River St. Efficiency
Apts., 1 and 2 bedrooms.
$185 to $300. Some utili-
ties furnished adults, no
pets, lease, sec., refer-
ences. 822-1139. 31-26-p
Professional Commercial
Space for rent, approxi-
mately 450 square feet,
will built to suit. Forty
Fort area, Call 288-8933.
31-tfn-P
Wilkes-Barre
Second floor, four rooms,
modern bath, off-street
parking, stove, refrigera-
tor, washer/dryer
hookup.Heat, hot water
included. $285 per
month. Available now.
Call 288-8933. 44-tfn-P
Home with 1% car
garage, sunporch, wood
urning stove, large
yard. Hunlock Creek
area. $350 plus utilities.
Call 201-225-1562 after 1
p.m. 48-4-P
REAL ESTATE
Government Homes from
$1 (U repair). Also delin-
quent tax property. Call
1-805-687-6000 Ext. GH
6026 for information. 46-
8-P
HUNLOCK CREEK AREA, 2
bdrm. remodeled home.
1%2 car garage, sun-
orch, large yard, wood
Por stove, full base-
ment & unfinished attic.
$37,900. Call 201-225-
1562 after 1:00 p.m.
Must Sell
464 Main St., Dallas.
Corner lot, 3 bedrooms,
2'4 baths, oil heat. Has
own well, good drinking
water. 696-1305. 48-1-P
FREE
FREE, Kittens. All female,
7 wks. old. 696-4719
after 5 p.m. 47-4-P
FREE, Kitten white with
tan-tipped ears and tail.
Litter trained. Friendly
and playful. Needs feline
companion. 7 wks. old
>. 48-4-P
Ford '76 Van
Customized. P.S., P.B., air
cond. $3500. Call 779-
5255. 48-4-P
‘81 FORD Courier, Sundan-
cer cap, road hugger
radials on Keystone
mags. AM-FM cassette
player, 4 cyl., 5 speed,
very good on gas. 60,000
miles. Body & engine
very good. Asking $3800.
Call 287-1574. 48-4-P
1983 MAZDA TRUCK B200,
5 speed, sun roof, AM-
box, sliding windows,
28,000 miles, $4995. Call
823-4354 after 4 p.m. 48-
84 Toyota
Lockout hubs, AM-FM
stereo, split window,
sunroof. Roll bar, brush
guard, 5 speed, custom
wheels and tires, low
miles. Serious inquiries
only. Call 288-7417 or
639-2107. 48-4-P
LOST & FOUND
LOST St. Bernard, male,
missing since Nov. 12.
Name is “Henry”, $50
reward. 675-2536. 45-4-P
FOUND silver weddin
band, with initials, date
9-29-84. About size 8,
found in vicinity of
Dallas Jr. High School.
675-0556. 45-4-P
LOST on Mooretown Rd.
Chocolate Labrador, 8
yrs. old. Answers to
name of Duke. Reward
offered 675-0120. 48-4-P
MOTORCYCLES
85 Yamaha
Tri-Moto 225DX. New
tires, helmet. Exc. cond.
$1250. Call 675-6366
after 3 p.m. 47-4-P
SPECIAL NOTE
Ho! Ho! Ho!
Have Santa send your
child his personalized
color letter plus gift.
Send $1.00, each child
to, Christmas-Easter Spe-
cialty-4, 259 Dana St.,
Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18702,
20..46-4-P
Near Shickshinny Lake
Custom mobile home set
up on one third acre. 2
Br., 1% baths. Private
well and septic.
enclosed porches. $17,-
000 negotiable. Call 333-
4183 after 5 p.m. or
leave message. 48-2-P
MISCELLANEOUS
50 PERCENT OFF!! Flash-
ing arrow signs $279!!
Lighted, non-arrow. $259.
Unlighted $199. Free let-
ters! See locally. 0)
423-0163, anytime. (800
628-2828, ext. 504. 48-1-J
INSTRUCTION
In Your Home
Guitar & bass instruction
in your home. Working
pro, experienced instruc-
tor. Kingston Township &
Dallas Township areas
only. Call Ray DelPriore,
654-1611 before 2 p.m.
48-1-P
EXPERIENCED PROFES-
SIONAL MUSIC INSTRUC-
TION. Lessons on guitar,
bass, violin, mandolin,
banjo, piano and organ.
Beginners to advanced.
Call 693-0119. 48-12-P
tires. Very good cond.
Asking $2100. Call 823-
8532. 48-4-P
CHEVY 7p
CAMARO COUPE
305 V-8, 4 new radials.
Good running cond. Left
rear needs work, $1,000.
Call 675-3393. 48-4-P
1975 PLYMOUTH ROAD-
RUNNER-fully equipped
w-sun roof. All new
radial tires. Good cond.
$1150. Call 477-5143. 48-
4-P
1973 BMW 2002A, dark
blue, AM-FM cassette.
Interior in exc. cond.
$1800. Call after 3 p.m.
825-9253, 48-4-P
Chevy 2,
Camaro 228
Auto., 26,000 miles, T
tops, air, tilt, cruise, PW,
PL, rear defroster, gold
w-black interior. Show-
room cond. Best offer
after $8700. Call 696-
4907 after noon. 48-4-P
MUSTANG, 81, One
owner, 4 speed, 6 cyl.,
rear louvers. American
racing wheels. Jenson
Kenwood. Looks sharp.
$3200 or best offer. Call
388-6121 after 5 p.m.
333-4247. 48-4-P
AUTO
Super Buy
‘72 Dodge Coronet, good
cond., p.s., no rust, win-
terized, 4 good tires.
639-5738. 45-4-P
85 Plymouth
Turismo Duster, 2.2
engine, 8,700 miles. Exc.
cond. asking $6.900. Call
675-4041 after.5 p.m. 48-
4-P
Ford '83 Thunder-
bird
Charcoal gray, 3.8 liter v-
6, auto., p.s., p.b., air.
AM-FM cassette, cruise,
tilt wheel, rear window
defroster. Velour inte-
rior. Very good cond.
Must sell! 639-1441 after
6 p.m. 48-4-P
HONDA CIVIC - 1979.
Good cond. $1300. Call
477-3655. 48-4-P
Toyota 80 Cres
sida
4 dr., 6 cyl, auto, a-c, all
luxury options, low mile-
age. Replacement cost
now at $19,000. Must
sell. $5395 or best offer.
696-3923. 48-4-P
Dodge 77 Maxi
Van
B200, 318 auto., p-s, p-b,
body good, runs great.
New shocks and new 6
ply tires, $2000. Call 675-
6330. 47-4-P
Buick 78 Regal
Coupe
Se ua Sy whe.
wheel covers, rear
defogger, vinyl top. Not
000 mi. Exc. fond. $3000
frm. Call 69-2086. 47-4
ANIMALS
Stables
T & G Stables. Harris Hill
Rd., Trucksville. Fee for
boarding, $60. per
month. Call 696-4943 or
283-1179. 38-tfn-P
THE
829-7888
DALLAS POST
CALL
US AND WE'LL
YOU COME INTO
AT 675-5211
Dallas
OUR
OR
va.
WANTED
WANTED FREE--Piano
bench wanted free for
non-profit nursing home.
Contact Marilyn Gregor-
ski at the Meadows
Nursing Center, 675-
8600, ext. 115. 45-4-P
TRAVEL
TRAINS
ENGLAND IN APRIL,
$617.00. Limited space,
more information call
639-1828 ask for Becky
or 823-5382. Ask for
Odette. 48-4-P
LIONEL TRAINS bought,
sold, and repaired. Large
selection 2p old Lionel
trains and plasticville
buildings. Call 824-1004
or stop by, 46 Burke St.,
Plains. 46-5-P
A total of $33.9 mil-
lion in inflation divi-
dend checks are
being mailed this
weekend to reach
420,300 households in
early December,
Revnue Secretary
Jim Scheiner
announced.
“Benefits paid out
through this and
other Pennsylvania
Lottery funded pro-
grams now exceed
$2.2 billion,” Scheiner
said. “Inflation divi-
dend benefits alone
have totaled nearly
$264 million. House-
holds find these
checks of up to $125
each particularly
The Centurion Jay-
cees sponsor many
educational programs
for inmates at the
State Correctional
Institution at Dallas.
For several years
now the organization,
through its education
committee, has made
it possible for inter-
ested inmates to
study for their college
degrees. Two col-
leges, Luzerne County
Community College
and College Miseri-
cordia, are presently
offering courses at
the prison. Other pro-
grams include train-
ing in leadership and
public speaking.
Courses are held peri-
odically in first aid
and cardiopulmonary
resuscitation. But
o
useful to offset winter
expenses, including
heating costs.”
For the past three
years, Pennsylvania
has had the nation’s
largest and most
profitable lottery and
it is the only lottery
to target profits to
senior citizen pro-
grams.
“This year, the
Pennsylvania Lottery
made a higher profit
than total profits over
its first seven years
of operations,” Schei-
ner noted. ‘This ena-
bles Pennsylvania to
spend more money on
benefits per senior
citizen than any other
aviation ground
school tops the list as
the organization’s
‘most unusual educa-
tional undertaking.
During the six
years that the Jay-
cees have sponsored
aviation ground
school, more than 200
inmates have partici-
pated in the program.
Charles VanWinkle,
the inmate at Dallas
responsible for initiat-
ing the aviation pro-
gram, explained that
inmates enroll for a
variety of reasons.
“Some of our stu-
dents have aspera-
tions of obtaining a
private pilot’s license.
Of course, that is the
whic hour progrard. is
Inflation dividends
of $30 to $125 are sent
automatically to
those households
which qualify for the
propoerty tax-rent
rebate program. The
household income
limit for the program
is currently $11,999,
bit it will increase to
$15,000 for claims to
be filed in 1986.
Those who qualify
are 65 or older,
widows and widowers
age 50 or older and
the disabled age 18 or
older. Applicants who
have a problem with
a claim can call the
special toll-free tele-
may get involved
simply for the knowl-
edge to be gained by
going through the
program. In addition
to covering the princi-
ples of flight and the
federal aviation regu-
lations, the program
navigation and
meteorologyh. These
latter two subjects
may come in handy
even if a graduate of
the program later
decides not to become
a pilot. Weather, for
instance, affects all of
us.”
But VanWinkle,
himself a certified
flight instructor who
teaches. many of the
classes, stresses that
phone line 1-800-SR-
CLAIM (1-800-772-
5246).
Inflation dividends
were first distributed
in 1979. Other pro-
grams funded by
Pennsylvania Lottery
sales are property
tax-rent rebates,
county aging pro-
grams, nursing home
aid, free mass transit
and shared rides, and
reduced driver regis-
tration fees. The
newest program,
PACE, provides $4
co-pay prescriptions
for those age 65 or
older, with incomes
under $15,000 married
or $12,000 single.
geared toward pre-
paring graduates to
become pilots.
“At the end of the
program, students
are given the stan-
dard federal exami-
nation. This is the
same examination
student pilots must
take on the street. It's
comprehensive of
everything we cover
in the classroom.
Those who pass the
examination, which is
extremely difficult,
can take genuine
pride in their accom-
plishment.”
The program has
received widespread
support from the
prison administra-
tion.
A
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