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Lebanon Daily News from Lebanon, Pennsylvania • Page 2

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Lebanon, Pennsylvania
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Page 2 Lebanon Daily News, Lebanon, Saturday, September 12, 1970 Harry K. Frymyer I Mrs. Wilbur Shipp Harry K. Frymyer, 79, 330 Main Akron, died Thursday night at the Ephrata Community Hospital. He had been admitted to the hospital Monday.

Born in West Earl Township, Lancaster County, he was a son of the late Jacob and Martha S. Kiehl Frymyer. plasterer until his He was a retirement several years ago. He last worked several years at the Miller-Hess Shoe Akron. He was a member of the Norka Hunting Club, which he served as secretary; the Ephrata VFW Post 3376; the Reamstown Athletic Association and the Akron Fire Co.

He was formerly chief of the Akron Fire Co. Survivors Include a sister, Gertrude wife of Harvey H. Smith, with whom he resided in Akron; and two brothers, Calvin, Lititz, and Jacob, Camp Hill. hundreds of government Mrs. Mary E.

Shipp, 432 E. Maple Cleona, died Friday noon in the Good Samaritan Hospital- She was 48. Born in Woodstock, she was a daughter of Clara Cook Markley of Woodstock and the late Edward Markley. She was employed by the Hershey Foods Corp. and had been a member of Hill United Church of Christ, Cleona, and the Ladies Bible Class of the Sunday School Heavily armed there.

In addition to her mother, she is survived by her husband, Wilbur F. Shipp; one daughter, Miss Linda Shipp of Alexandria, two sons, Jerry of Annville, and Larry of Bellegrove; two grandchildren. One sister, Mrs. Ralph Coff- Evacuate All Aboard Before Destroying Jets (Continued From storm had made life aboard the three planes even more unbearable before they were taken to the Jordanian capital. As the passengers arrived in Amman they were engulfed by airline representatives, newsmen, guerrillas and Red Cross officials.

guerrillas rode in some of the buses, driven by Jordanian army soldiers. However the guerrillas appeared to be in control of the situation with the Jordanian To Handle Inquiries Lebanon County Chapter American National Red Cross on Friday evening received a communique from CROSS in Washington, B.C., regarding the efforts of the International Red Cross on behalf of the hostages held by Arab guerrillas on the Jordanian desert. Miss Marion R. Foster, local chapter executive director, reported the communi- que reads as follows: "International Committee Red Cross advises it will accept for handling brief messages and inquiries from immediate families or close relatives of hostages held as a result of hijacking in Jordan. ICRC will make every reasonable effort to handle inquiries." various guerrilla groups, aiv Mrs, Nora Bomberger Mrs.

Nora B. Peiffer Bomberger, Cedar Haven, formerly of 431 N. Sixth died Friday in Cedar Haven. She was 88. Born in Lancaster County, she was a daughter of the late Jacob and Mary Berger Peiffer.

She was a member of Covenant Methodist Church, the auxiliary of the Lebanon County Firemen's Association, the Lincoln Republican Club, the Lebanon County Republican Women, and the auxiliary of the Retired Employes Club of Lebanon. Surviving are a son, Edgar A. Bomberger, Long Beach, two grandsons, Earl, i 1- adelphia, and Arthur, Lancaster, and three great-grandchildren. man, Vienna, and five brothers, Theodore Markley, Front Royal, James Markley, Annviile; Joseph Markley, Middletown, John Markley, Stevens City, and Wayne Markley, Edinburg, also survive. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY STATISTICS Funeral Notices PASSED AWAY Lebanon on Sept.

11, 1970. Nora B. nee Peiffer widow of Abraham G. Bomberger of Cedar Haven, formerly of 431 N. 4tti St.

Aged 88 years. Funeral on Tuesday morning at 10:30 o'clock from the Rohland Funeral Home, 5th 8, Cumberland Sts. Interment at Eben eier Cemetery. Relatives and friends are Invited to attend. NO VIEWING.

Edgar G. Johnson Edgar- G. Johnson, 77, 2315 Overlook Drive, Aston, died unexpectedly in his home Friday afternoon. His first wife was the former Dorothy Holsberg of Hershey, who died in August, 1959. A native of Sweden, he was a retired mechanic for the Philadelphia Chewing Gum a member of St.

Timothy Lutheran Church, Aston, and the IOOF in Springfield, Mass. Surviving are his second wife, Ann Field Johnson; two stepdaughters, Dorothy, wife of Robert Lox, Aston, and Kaye, wife of Raymond Aiello, Plymouth Valley, and six grandchildren. FUNERALS Miss Annie Lenfz Funeral services were held this afternoon for Miss Annie H. Lentz, Lebanon RD 2, in the Rohland Funeral Home. The Revs.

Paul M. Bashore and Ammon B. Meyer, both the Fredericksburg Church of the Brethren, officiated with burial, in Wolf's Union Cemetery. Bearers were Roy Hetrick, Mervin Lentz, Robert Lentz. Paul Nolt, Kenneth Blatt and James Rebman.

Lev! Waltz William W. Baker William W. Baker, 18 Linda Lane, Lebanon, and recently of the Alpine Nursing Home, died this morning in the Harrisburg Hospital at the age of 79. He was the husband of the late Helen M. Furey Baker.

Born in New Jersey, he was a son of the late Harry and Elizabeth Johnson Baker. He was a retired employe of the former Bon Ton store in Lebanon. During World War he was employed by the Army Ordinance Corp. Surviving are two sons, William W. Lebanon, and Robert Greenbelt, a daughter, Miss Dorothy H.

Baker, Lebanon; and two grandchildren. government unwilling to pro- mke further clashes after the wo weeks of government- guerrilla fighting that a guerril- a newspaper said killed 148 arsons and xvounded 521. TWA passenger Mrs. Viola lorowitz, of Brooklyn, N.Y., vhose husband is a rabbi in the United States, arrived looking extremely pale and carrying ler nine-month-old son Mordecai, who had survived on emolina, a paste made of wheat flour. Restricted to a kosher diet, Mrs.

Horotiwz ate mainly fruit an unleavened Arab need all the passengers would be transferred to Amman. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP)i which carried out the hijackings and whose forces are guarding the planes, originally objected to the PLO statement, but later said they would go along with it. In a statement issued today, the central Mercury Drops To 46 Degrees During Night Sweaters and light jackets were needed this morning as some chilly temperatures hit the area. Although it's still officially summer, this morning seemed more like an October November morning. Some county residents discovered frost on their cars around a.m.

The temperature during the night dropped to 46 but it was not the coolest night of the summer. Sept. 1 the mercury had dropped to 45. By 8 a.m. the temperature had warmed only to 49.

Fair Sunday The low tonight is expected to be in the mid 50's. Sunday will be fair with high temperatures 75 to 80. The outlook for Monday is partly cloudy with a chance of showers. Statistics for the 24-hour period ending 8 a.m. today are: Bomb Jungles Near S.

Viet Combat Base OUR ONLY WORLD of committee evacuation of of the the PLO said passengers (Continued From the first American combat By Roger Caras, unit to face the Communists in battle in Vietnam. Spokesmen said the 1st Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, which also saw service in World War II and Korea, was in a "standdown" area preparing for withdrawal. The battalion moved ashore at Chu Lai, 335 miles northeast of Saigon, on Aug. 14, 1965, and four days later began operation "Starlight," first U.S. offensive A TEST CASE FOR MANKIND On June 20th, 1970, Governor Nelson Rockefeller signed into law the Mason Act.

It was to become law on September 1st. The Mason Act would have banned the sale in New York State of all crocodillian skins that crocodile, alligator, caiman and the skins of tiger, leopard, cheetah, vicuna, red wolf, jaguar, ocelot, margay and puma. Some species would be banned as of September 1st, 1970 and some a year later. It was a milestone law having world-wide ramifications in the desperate effort to preserve what little is left'of the world's wildlife. The signing by Governor Rockefeller was hailed by conservationists everywhere.

The law was challenged. The Attorney General of New York the war. also announced Funeral services were belt this morning for Levi Waltz, 43' Freeman in the Rohland Funeral Home. The Rev. Jacob R.

Weaver pastor of First Evangelical Congregational Church, f- ficiated with burial in the Quentin Cemetery. Bearers were William Dietz Donald Dietz, Kenneth Dietz, Robert Glassford, Terry Glassford, and Charles Glassford. and pea, 'We were treated very well," she said. "We didn't have cosher food, but we have not jeen hungry. They treated iveryone the same way.

"All the men were taken away in batches, and we don't know where they are now. The second. night six men were taken away. Then yesterday 72 men and two boys were taken away. We don't know where they are now.

At the TWA reception desk, Mrs. Sara Raab of Trenton, N.J., was close to tears as she told how the guerrillas took her 17-year-old son off the plane Thursday last time she saw him. She arrived with her four other children, Saron, Naomi, 8, Tikua and Moshe, 14. "They woke David up by flashlight," she said. "He left without anything, without my identification, in his shirt and no coat or -anything.

They took him along with the other men on the plane. They said we should not worry, but I don't know what's going to happen. "You don't really argue with them when they have these big guns with them. If I had not been a light sleeper I would not would begin "in earnest" this morning and all of them were expected to be in Amman by noon EDT. Meanwhile, International High Low Average (8 below norm) Temperature at 8 a.m.

the three-man Red Cross team 74 46 60 Sunset tonight Sunrise tomorrow 7:22 m. 6:46 a.m. High, Sept. 11, 1969 75 Low, Sept. 11, 1969 45 continued its negotiations for the release of all the passengers and the planes.

There was some confusion whether they were working against a 10 p.m. EDT deadline set by the guerrillas. Originally, the guerrillas had set a 10 p.m. EDT Wednesday deadline for blowing up the planes and possibly the passengers extended it for 72 hours. In Washington, the State Department said it had received ford from the International Red Cross in Geneva that the guerrillas had lifted the deadline.

But spokesman for in the Amman a PFLP said the deadline still was in effect. The planes have been loaded with dynamite and Friday the guerrillas attached detonators. Red Cross officials said all the guerrillas have to do is push a button and the multi-million dollar airplanes and anybody aboard them will be blown up. Issue Was Same Elmer E. Kreiser Elmer E.

Kreiser, Jonestown RD 2, died at his home Friday evening. He was 77. A son of the late Isaac and Susanne Kreiser, he was a member of Lemberger's United Methodist Church, Indiantown Gap. In addition to his wife, Nora Swavely Kreiser, he is survived by a brother, William Kreiser, Annviile, and one sister, Sarah, wife of Peter Kohr, Jonestown RD 2. heard take Ium In Loving Memory of Lawrence L.

Steify Who Passed Away September 12, 1969 Sadly Mined by Daughter Virginia Family In Loving Memory of Lawrence Steffy Who Died One Year Ago Today "Now Enoch walked with Gad: and he was not." Genesis 5:24 For God took him from this troubled spot-. Was It like that with you that day When you walked on and left me here to stay. fairer there than here by far For here we see no morning star. And yet, ond yet never eon forget. Wlff, Sadly Missed by Daughters and Grandchildren Myerstown Girl Suffers injuries In Crash Friday A Myerstown girl suffered a number of face and body injuries, none apparently of a serious nature, in a two-car crash Friday on Route 422 be- Front for tween Myerstown and Womels- Palestine dorf.

Treated at the Good Samaritan Hospital following the accident was Miss Susan J. Fuhrman, 19, 223 E. Main Myerstown. At the time of the accident she was en route to Reading where she Is employed by the American Bank and Trust Company. According to the hospital report Miss Fuhrman suffered the loss of two teeth, a cut of the left elbow that required three stitches, bruises of the mouth, a cut of the lower lip and bruises and abrasions of both knees.

John Laub, Womelsdorf RD 1, was listed as the driver of the other car. Both drivers were reportedly alone at the time of the accident and both cars were listed as demolished. Damage to the Fuhrman car was estimated at $1,000 and to the Laub vehicle at about $800. away. "I just heard his name and I woke up to see if.

it was him. They were asking him to go although he is still only a child. But in this part of the world 17 is not a child any more. "I want to ask the Red Cross whether I 'should leave or whether it would be safe for me to stay. I would prefer to stay here to wait for David when he comes out to give him moral support." Arab guerrillas said today they were evacuating all remaining hostages aboard three dynamite-laden jetliners sitting in a Jordanian desert airfield.

The first group of passengers already was being brought to Amman and the rest would follow shortly, they said. A spokesman for the Popular the Liberation of (PFLP) said in Amman some of the passengers left the three -aircraft at 3 a.m. EDT. The group was believed to include some 20 British youngsters on the three planes TWA 707, a Swissair DCS and a British Overseas Airways Corp. (BOAC) VC10.

Although all passengers will be taken from the airplane, the spokesman said, the Israeli passengers probably would be taken to a secret, site where they will be kept under guard until the guerrilla demands for release of an undetermined number of Arabs in Israeli jails is met. The PFLP also is asking for the release of seven comrades Rock Festival, Panthers Put Shafer in Dilemma By LARRY MARGASAK HARRISBURG (AP) Constitutionally, a Philadelphia rock festival cancelled last month and a convention of militants held in that city last weekend involved the same i sue: right of free expression. Pragmatically, they were different, which is why Governor Raymond P. Shafer wanted to ban the concert but permitted the convention to be held. Shafer's practical position was this: the festival, and thousands of rock fans who would have coverged on racially tense South Philadelphia would stay home.

Ban the convention, and the groups involved would hold their sessions on the streets of Philadelphia. In a constitutional sense Shafer lost his argument on the rock festival, since the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld School Dedication Date Is Set By Pine Grove Board PINE GROVE, Sept. 12 The date for the laying of the cornerstone and the dedication of the new Middle School was decided at the regular meeting of the Pine Grove Area School Board Thursday evening ia the business office in the Pine Grove Elementary School. Frederick Maurer presided during the session which was attended by eight directors and several school administrators.

The dedication will take place the afternoon of Nov. 1, at two. The program will be announced as soon as plans are completed. A number of athletic coaches were appointed and the list will be announced as soon as they accept their respective duties. The supply committee, Joseph Manbeck, chairman, was instructed to purchase two cash registers for the cafeteria of the campaign of Spokesmen withdrawal of two companies of venors) the 1st Marine Reconnaissance Reptile Squadron.

The moves will further reduce U.S. strength in Vietnam by 1,400 men. Under the "Phase Four" redeployment program of President Nixon, U.S. troop strength will stand at 384,000 men on Oct. 16.

Peak American strength in the war zone was 543,400 men on April 30, 1969. The Naval accident, which was not caused by Communist fire, happened Friday afternoon. The destroyer was firing in support of Australian troops conducting operation "Massey Harris" in Phuoc Tuy province southeast of Saigon. The ship was operating in the South China Sea about 66 miles east- southeast of Saigon. The injured, all in the forward five-inch, gun mount, were rushed by medical evacuation helicopter to the 1st Australian Field Hospital.

Victims' names were withheld pending notification of next to kin. A. E. Nettleton Co. of Syracuse, manufacturer of men's shoes, was the principal i i Friends of the court in the suit (all listed as plaintiff-inter- were J.

Products Fox, Association, The vessel was steaming towards the Subic Bay Navy base in the Philippines and was expected to arrive there Sunday, the Navy said. In Saigon, five civilians were injured early today when terrorists detonated a 4-1-2 pound plastic charge in a residential area of Cholon, police said. Two of the victims were in serious condition. The U.S. Command reported Sibley, Lindsay Curr Company (a division Associated Dry Goods Corporation) and the New York State Council of Retail Merchants.

On August 25th, six days before the law would have gone into effect, Judge Francis A. Moran of the Supreme Court, County of Onondaga, declared the law unconstitutional. There are unusual elements in the challenge to the law arid in the decision that wiped it off the books. First, the A. E.

Nettleton Company claimed in its suit that alligator shoes accounted for 15 per cent of their total sales or about $500,000 a year. When I spoke with Mr. Carl Easier, treasurer of A. E. Nettleton, he told me his company was all for the conservation of endangered species.

I asked him bow he could be for conservation of endangered species and sell $500,000 worth of American alligator shoes a year. He then said they get their skins from South America. When I pointed out that there are no alligators in South America, he said that they don't sell alligator shoes. (South America has a related animal known as the caiman which Mr.EasIer referred to as a crocodile. The alligator is found only in the United States and China).

The decision to throw the State, Louis J. Lefkowitz 'and the Solicitor General, Ruth K. Toch, will make that decision. Why not help them make up their minds? You can write to them in Albany. This might be now or never for what is left of the world's wildlife.

Truly, this law might be the turning point. Vietnam Veteran Plans To Aitend University Middle School after competitive bids. securing that a Skyhawk Marine jet was Corps A4 shot down the the promoters' event. right to stage Miss Mary Shronk, King of Prussia, was elected a first grade teacher. She is a graduate of Upper Merion High School and the West Chester Teachers' College in June 1970.

She did her practice teaching in the first grade of the Paoli schools. Mrs. Joseph Manbeck was elected a secretary to serve in the office of the Tremont Elementary School. She will be paid on an hourly rate of $1.60. A number of treasurers were named to serve for the activity funds in the various schools as follows: Mrs.

Joseph Manbeck Tremont Elementary School; Mrs. Lorraine K. Boyer, Pine Grove Middle School; Mrs. Betty J. Barr, Pine Grove Area High School and Miss Carolyn J.

Allar, Pine Grove Elementary School. Approval was given for a contract with Penn State University for an outdoor educational program for in- service day on Oct.19. Mrs. Kathryn Derr and Mrs. Friday morning about 370 miles north of Saigon.

The pilot was missing in action. In Cambodia, a military spokesman said a Communist land mine blew up and cut a strategic road between Phnom Penh and Saigon. The mine exploded on Route 1, 32 miles south, of Phnom Penh, and- left the road impassable. To the north, Cambodian troops engaged in their biggest offensive, were meet their first expected resistance the 80-mile drive to the city of Thorn. Konipong Thorn had been under Communist seige for 60 days iuntil Cambodian forces came in by way of the river to break through.

The Cambodian ground force moving toward Kompong Thorn rested Friday while U.S. jets and Cambodian T28s pounded the suspected force of 200 to 300 Viet Cong. It was the first U.S. air strike of the six-day-old Cambodian move towards Kom- pong Thorn. field in Germany indications passengers WHAT YOUTH SEEK FRANKFORT, Ky.

(AP) The Kentucky membership Switzerland, and Britain West and are will the non-Isreli be allowed to of leave Jordan once those seven are turned free. Of the 414 passengers aboard, 178, mostly women and children, already have been allowed to go to Amman, escaping what the Red Cross termined "inhuman conditions" aboard the the White House Conference Youth Council says discussions with 10,000 youngsters indicate what they seek most are better teachers, more public recreation facilities control. and better pollution FUNK We desire to thank neighbors and friends for the kindness and sympathy shown us during our recent bereavement in the illness and death of Mrs. Rosa M. Funk.

We also wish to extend our thanks for the beautiful floral tributes and sympathy cards. The Children airliners. The sair planes TWA were and Swis- hijackcd Sunday and the BOAC plane Wednesday. The sanitary conditions and the lack of food and has The promoters themselves cancelled it, citing lack of cooperation by local officials and an exhorbitant $115,000 rental fee set by the city for John F. Kennedy Stadium.

Shafer himself admitted the constitutional similarity of the two events in a letter to Rep. William G. Piper, R-Berks, who asked that the festival be banned. "The question of a convention for dissidents and a rock festival for the young is, in many ways, the same question," Shafer wrote. "Both issues highlight a growing, dangerous alienation in America.

We, substantially in the majority, see pampered kids and opportunistic militants, deliberately aggressively thirsting for violence. They see greed and hypocrisy and injustice. "This polarization does threaten our unity, and it must be moderated if we are to escape continued, even escalated, violence in this nation." The governor, however, quickly added: Mason Act out referred to the claim that irreparable financial damage would be done through the "unwarranted confiscation of property." The Mason Act did not provide for the confiscation of property legally acquired and any skins acquired prior to the September 1st date would automatically be acknowledged as legal. In my opinion, Judge Moran's decision bad because it was based on It could do really irreparable harm to the already disastrous world wildlife situation. But all is not lost.

The Supreme Court is the lowest of the higher courts in New York. Next up is the Appellate Division and. then the Court of Appeals. Since a constitutional matter is involved, the Appellate Division can be skipped. If the decision is appealed, it can go directly to the Court of Appeals and then, of course, on to Washington.

What must be done? Simple. It must be appealed. Will it be? No one seems to know. The 1st Lt. 3.

Terry Tryon, 24, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob A. Tryon, Rehrersburg, has recently returned from a tour of active duty in Vietnam, and has received his honorable discharge from active duly In the United States Army. He received an ROTC Commission from the University of Oklahoma and completed training at Officers Training Schools, Ft.

Gordon, and Fort Devens, prior to going to Vietnam on Sept. 12, 1969. Lt. Tryon was stationed with the 8th Radio Research Field Station and the 101st Airborne Division (Mobile) throughout Vietnam. A graduate of the Bethel High School in 1964, he entered the "U.S.

Arm following his ROTC graduation from the University of Oklahoma, in 1968. Lt. Tyron's present plans are to tour Europe and in January of 1971 attend Graduate School at Sain Houston State University, Huntsville, Texas. LEBANOH DAILY NEWS publiVted daily excipt Sundays by Lebanon News Publishing S. tlh md Poplar Lebanon, 17042.

Second clou pottage paid Lebanon, Pa. Mildred Jones both of Tremont, will be employed three days a week as school nurses. It was announced that Maurice Edward Gonzalez, Mexico, has enrolled as a student in the Pine Grove Area High School. He is a Rotary Club exchange student and residing during the school year with Mr. and Mrs.

Martin Daubert, who are his present hosts, and Mr. and Mrs. Clark Snyder. J. Wallace, a teacher in the Middle School, was granted a leave of absence without pay to serve a tour of duty with the military.

The Cheryl Ann. salary of Cleaver Miss was Missing Realtor May Be Held By Rent Radicals BERKELEY, Calif. Missing realtor Jack Setzer may have been the victim of a kidnaping by the rent-strike radicals he fought so bitterly, according to police. Setzer, 43, has not been seen since he telephoned his wife in Lafayethe Wednesday night and told her he was headed home. An anonymous caller telephoned police the next morning to say "we got the Berkeley Board of Realtors and now we have their president." But Berkely police officers, while admitting they are investigating the possibility of kidnaping, characterize the disappearance officially as only a "suspicious circumstance case." "We really don't know what YOU MAY NEVER HAVE TO REMEMBER IT adjusted to $6,300.

Various items were discussed and referred to the proper committee. It was announced that the enrollment for Friday will be the official figure to be sent to the County School office from which place, it will be referred this is about," officer Richard said Berkeley Berger. "If it water aboard the planes made life miserable for the "The government of this Com- passengers. Three groups of those Amman have been allowed leave the country, 22 Thursday, (56 who flew in to on to Cyprus Friday, and 21 who flew to Beirut today. The group that arrived in Beirut mostly were of Indian nationality, airline officials said.

They were continuing on to Nicosia, Cyprus, where they would pick up a regularly scheduled flight to London. The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), a central coordinating group for the monwealth has the constitutionally imposed duty to maintain order and prevent violence. Where violence is reasonably to the Pennsylvania State Department of Public Instruction. The board members decided to meet again with the Pine Grove Town Council relative to the surface water on School Street. Bills approved for payment were: General fund, were a kidnaping, you think the captors would have called back or something." Setzer was president of the Berkeley Board of Realtors last year when anti-landlord groups organized demonstrations and protests against rents in this city contains the University of California, a large ghetto area and hundreds of "street people." predictable, it must be prevented.

The State must not wait until confrontation escalates beyond control we must use all available machinery to stop or defuse that confrontation. "This principle was in the the controlling Commonwealth's recent opposition to a scheduled rock festival. It should continue to be a dominant consideration." ESEA, Title 1, cafeteria fund, $3808.83 $1080.42. and The annual rental for the three buildings, Pine Grove Area High School, the Middle School and the addition to the Pine Grove Elementary Building, amounting to $393,681.48, is included in the bills from the general fund. The balance is $176,421.29.

Approval was given for short term loans for current bills and payroll. Over Million Americans Have Thyroid Problem NEW YORK (AP) A million or more Americans now receive treatment for thyroid deficiency, or hypothyroidism. Some have serious medical conditions such as cretinism or goiter, but most are listless, experiencing weight gains, have scaliness of the skin, a decreased heart or reduced sexual drive. detected hypothyroidism has also been linked to heart attacks and blood clots in women taking birth control pills. Many families do not concern themselves with the qualifications of a funeral director before the need arises.

When it does, we suggest you keep in mind this long, recognized symbol of competence and responsibility. It is the Pyramid symbol that denotes affiliation with National Selected Morticians. NSM is an international society of funeral directors dedicated to highest standards of funeral service. Affiliation is by invitation only. Rohland's is Lebanon's only funeral firm selected for NSM affiliation.

It is the area's only firm pledged to NSM's exacting Code of Good Practice which is your assurance of complete responsibility and satisfaction. When you are asked for your recommendation, remember the NSM symbol and what it stands for. Then you can recommend with confidence. Rohland Funeral Home 5th Cumberland; Sits. 272-6674' NATIONAL SELECTED MORTICIANS MEMBER BY INVITATION R.

W. KRUM,.

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