PAGE TWO Laskowski Conducts Last Rites ~ For Old Grey Mares Of Dallas Rendering Works Has Operated In Jackson 33 Years; Could Even Handle An Elephant Not many people are willing to pay anything for dead horses. Bernard G. Laskowski of Jackson knew of a few who would . . . and that’s | But how it happened that he went into what he calls the “rendering business” “some 33 years ago. To be specific, Mr. Laskowski . . . or “Barney” as most people call DALLAS POST COMMUNITY BUILDING EDITION Former Center | 1 |S Vi | 1 i | him . . . is the husky gentleman who can be seen carting dead horses, cows | and other miscellaneous livestock in an interesting state of demise about | the Dallas countryside almost any . day. What he does with the mon- strous cadavers is quaint and fasci- nating, and takes place in an obscure little building back in the woods of Jackson Township. 3 Barney calls it rendering. What it amounts to, in a few words, is the process of placing a dead horse . or dead anything, for that mat- ter, in the open end of one of Rube Goldberg’s better inventions and then waiting for things to happen. After Mr. Laskowski finishes with it, that dead horse may eventually go into Farmer Brown's pig pen . . . or into the cake of scented soap in your bathroom. 2 The whole business of rendering, as a matter of fact, is very simple. It all begins with an advertisement in The Post: ‘Dead stock removed free of charge. Call Dallas 433-R-9. Laskowski Rendering Works.” Bar- ney calls that the opening wedge. He used to advertise by means of blotters and cards, but now his weekly ad in The Post, together with the reputation he has been building up over the past thirty years or so, is enough to put his business before the public. As soon as he gets a call from a grieving farmer, Barney sends his strapping son, Elmer, out to the be- reaved with the massive Laskowski hearse . . . which is nothing more or less than a large open backed truck . . . to bring the dead animal into the plant. In the loft on top of the rendering BUYERS REALTOR SERVING GREATER DALLAS FOR OVER 20 YEARS WITH HUNDREDS OF SATISFIED HARRY F. GOERINGER FOR YOUR NEW HOME | HARRY F. GOERINGER Second National Bank, Wilkes-Barre. Dial 3-7151 INSURANCE than the famous old Raub Hotel. Meyers took out a tavern license. No Dallas institution was ever more renowned throughout Pennsylvania Of Hospitality It was founded in 1837 when Jacob works, the animal is skinned, neatly dissected or quartered and dumped into the top of a large vat . . . three- -and-a-half by seven feet in dimen- sions . . . in which the actual render- ing takes place. Steam from an at- tached boiler is pumped into the vat under 60 pounds pressure, and the mangled remains of the animal are stewed under those conditions for two-and-a-half to three-and-a-half hours . . . or for as long as it takes to create the proper emulsified state. Barney says you learn the proper cooking time by experience; when the process is completed. When the stewing is done, Mr. Laskowski and Elmer go down into the main department of the render- ing works and ‘draw’ the vat. This consists of taking off all excess water a 1,000-pound horse | may give off as many as forty | bucketstull . . . and then draining _out the fat, which is transferred into two large grease vats hard aport the rendering vessel. After the drawing of the vat, a vent in its bottom is opened, and the ‘cooked horse or cow meat is pressed out onto the floor with huge plungers wielded from the loft. Into the maw of a large press it goes, neatly arrayed on burlap pressing cloths, and all excess moisture is squeezed out. The pressed material . . . which looks something like caked sawdust and has a rich, full odor which is apt to bother any one but a good rendering man just a trifle . . . is pitchforked into a shed adjoining the rendering works, where it is per- mitted to sit awhile to ripen. 77 door. Highway. A NEW Service Station Serves A NEW Highway Although our building has a new face we're really old friends to the motorists on the Harvey's Lake Over seven years of constant service has brought a host of consistent customers to our Now with the advent of the new highways we have improved our facilities to better serve the increased traffic that will be heading this way. We appreciate your past patronage and invite you to avail yourself of our new services. N | ROSS WILLIAMS Proprietor AtoZ ) ————— SERVICE i. PRESS 2. TOL HARVEY’S LAKE HIG CAR WASHING 3. BATTERY SERVICE 4. TIRES 5. SPARK PLUG SERVICE L GATE SERVICE STATION URE LUBRICATION AND TUBES HWAY \ any. good rendering man khows just| | When it is good and ready for the | final process to the discerning eyes of Barney and Elmer, it is dumped | into a drier—a huge, squat kettle affair, something like a washing ma- chine and kneaded by an agitator for a'good half an hour until it has been pulverized into a fine dust-like preparation. And then, says Barney, all it needs is a customer. Pigs like it as a tasty side dish, and crops thrive under it. The Laskowskis make it up for farmers in 100-pound bags . or any size the purchaser wants | . and sell it throughout this dis- | trict. But the real money in rendering] lies not in offal dust, but in ihe grease and hides, says Barney. The grease is cooked and drained a num- ber of times in order to draw off excess water, and then packed in old 400-pound oil drums. Mr. Las- kowski makes two or three ship- ments of 25 barrels a year to dif- ferent soap companies in Philadel- phia, and among his best customers down that way are the Charles Young Soap Company and Jacob Sterns, a broker in that line. The revenue from the grease sales are the real back-log of his business. Whenever he has four or five hides prepared a man from Scran- ton comes and buys them up, and in a year’s time that adds up to a pretty good sideline. Never Rendered An Elephant Between Mr. Laskowski and his son . . . who is the official manager of the works . . . they render more than 100 dead animals a year, which means that the plant has seen some 4,000 cadavers come and go since it was fir@ opened back in ’07. Most of the business is divided be- tween horses and cows, but the Las- kowskis have rendered a number of mules, pigs and sheep, too, at one time or another. They have never gone to work or a dead elephant, though, although two have been rendered in this part of the State in recent years. Elephants, ex- plains Barney, come under a special category; because of their size they must be delivered at the rendering plant by their owners, and because their skin is so tough, no self-re- specting renderer will take the job without additional recompense. They average about 12 animals a month, and have already rendered two this week. When the Post re- porter made his way out to their plant, one horse had just been made ready for the cooking .. . and the old gray mare weren't what she used to be, as the reporter could easily see by peering down into the rendering vat. Neither Barney nor his son smoke or drink, and otherwise lead pure and straightforward lives, but whether that is characteristic of renderers, Barney didn’t say. Mr. Laskowski, who was 64 years old last week-end is extremely ro- bust and active . . he can still render a dead horse as well as he could when he first started, and maybe even better . . . was born and raised in Nanticoke, as was his wife, Johanna. He used to be a butcher by trade, and learned all about ren- dering from his boss, who dabbled in it on the side. It looked like pleasant and lucrative employment, so when Barney moved out to Jack- son Township in 1907 he built and outfitted his rendering works right off the bat and has been at it ever since. He says that the death rate among the livestock hereabout has been very satisfying. Cows die mostly from nail punctures in their stomachs and milk fever, while horses generally succumb from colic or senility . . . but however death over takes them, most of them gen- erally find their way out to Jack- son via the Laskowski hearse. Because his rendering isn’t steady enough to keep him busy all the time, Barney has a few other enter- prises on the side. For one thing he runs a dance hall during the winter just across the road from his home . . . which is located just off the Nanticoke-Huntsville highway . . . and averages 100 customers Sunday nights. And on his farm .. .“Fairview” by name. . . he raises both veal calves and apples, selling both in season. He has four children, Theodore, who teaches in the Jackson Town- ship School; Bernard, who is a quali- fied linoleum layer and works out of McGroarty’s in Wilkes-Barre; Elmer, the youngest boy, who man- ages the plant for his father; and a daughter, Mrs. Olive Skok. We're Proud To Be Just A Cog... Just a single unit in the local and national pano- rama of progress which is unfolding day by day. Even a cog is necessary to the smooth running efficiency of a machine, community or nation. We’re proud of our bank because its growth is based on your confidence and we have earnestly endeavored to merit it in ever increasing measure by improv- ing our facilities to keep pace with the constant growth of the community we serve. As fine new highways broaden the Dallas horizons, we hope to maintain this institution as an all important cog in the wheels of Back Mountain progress and ex- pansion. INVEST in DEFENSE BONDS for NATIONAL DEFENSE You invest in America, when you buy Defense Bonds! For your own program of saving: as ideal gifts to newlyweds, and young people observing birthdays—a United States Defense Bond is a patriotic and far-sighted token of “congratulations.” Part of our service to the Government, is the sale of Defense Bonds to you. Come in for full details today. Small Loans Savings Deposit Boxes FIRST NATIONAL BANK of DALLAS Checking Accounts OFFICERS DIRECTORS C. A. Frantz, W. R. Neely R. L. Brickel W. B. Jeter President Vice President 3 A. C. Devens Sterling Machell Sterling Machell, : Cashier C. A. Frantz W. R. Neely Vice President P retlorick J Lok H. H. Hill Clifford Space No Account too Small to Secure Our Careful Attention oy v x