against the mailbox because of its "ed, a good substantial thirty-eight, . go. Editorially Speaking: A THANKSGIVING EDITORIAL CHRIST IS THE ANSWER By F. Ww. MOOCK, Jr., Pastor St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, Shavertown. One of the outstanding tributes to the apostles is in Acts 4:13, “Now when they saw the boldness of Peter and John, and perceived that they were unlearned and ignorant men, they mar- veled; and they took knowledge of them, that they had been with Jesus.” of sinful men. Now they were “They had been with Jesus.” they had forsaken their Master and left Him to die at the hands Only a short time before dominated by the living spirit of the risen Lord and went forth eagerly to tell the story of His love. been an active persecutor of Christians, led the way. caused this change? Our text been with Jesus.” They were no ance. Peter, who had denied his Lord, and later Paul, who had What gives the answer. “They had longer bound by fear and i ign Now their lives were dedicated to the advance ot God's kingdom and they feared not the pomp, nor the scoffs, nor the threats of men. No prisons could hold them. Persecution and death were powerless to stop them from telling others of the saving power of God’s grace. Such, in brief, is a portrayal of those early Christian men. The divine power that drove the disciples out of the syna- gogues, away from their sacred city of Jerusalem, and into every corner of their known world, is our ears and listen to the Voice. are going forth ; there are those who are supporting our call of the Master, who throughout the world callidg us if we will only open There are those, heayfng the into mission fields churches with their gifts and talents and who have dedicated their lives and their possessions for the advancement of God's king- dom. And why, you may ask, do people do such things? What power has caused them to be absorbed in such an undertaking? There is only one answer—the same answer that the early dis- ciples would have made, the same answer that consecrated people are making today— "Christ is the answer.” In a world that needs Him so much, let it be your answer and mine. FROM. ur Darras Post MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION LE L/ PILLAR TO POST By Mgrs. T. M. B. Hicks, Jr. Remember that nice old lady who made out an order for five yards of silk in her cramped handwriting, and got a notice from the local freight station that her fifty-foot silo was in the shed, knocked down and waiting delivery ? There was a pleased letter from the mail-order house thanking her for her valued patronage and acknowledging receipt of the down payment for the silo. I used to think that this in- cident was a figment of somebody’s imagination, dreamed up strictly out of the head and lacking back ground. That was in the days be- fore the great pink-flannelette fracas. How anybody lives without a Sears Roebuck catalogue parked on the dining room table for easy reference is a mystery to me. It comes in handy for light reading while the potatoes are baki the results of sending in a are spectacular. That ten-p package, swathed in brown paper and girded with a substantial rope the equator, propped around bulk, is apt to contain almost any- thing, even at times the exact item you ordered. About a month ago I made out an order calling for five-yards of pink flannelette, sanforized, best quality, suitable for night-gear for the young, along with the inevit- able ten yards of brown corduroy for overalls. The brown paper package on this occasion dis- gorged the corduroy, but in place of the pink flannelette there was a small plaid wool skirt, size five. This laid the basis for a brisk correspondence. I suggested to the piece-goods department that the customer 'who had received the flannelette was doubtless as baffled at the substitution as I was, and though I felt pleased and flattered at the estimate of my size, I could make no practical use of the small wool skirt. I measured, I explain- and the skirt, though perhaps ade- quate for a collar, was all wool and therefore itchy. Please send five yards of flannelette, pink, sanfor- ized, best quality. Comes a wounded letter. We are sorry that you are dissatisfied with the goods as delivered, but we like to keep our customers happy. Our policy is to satisfy the customer. A letter from me. {Remember me? I'm the customer who or- dered five yards of pink flannelette and got a small wool skirt. Puh- lease send on the pink flannelette before you are fresh out of it and I have to take blue. The Christ- mas sewing calls for pink. Let's Letter from the concern. A tracer is at work, and results may be expected. . Response from me: “Five yards of pink flannelette or return check for same. Period.” At about this time, worn out with correspondence I shut up shop and made a trip to Charleston, leaving orders that all packages should be held at the post-office until my return. When I got back home late last week, the rural carrier staggered up the slope in a pouring rain, his back bowed under various bundles, among them two medium sized bundles, identical in size and shape. Each package contained five yards of pink flannelette. The first package expressed itself (Continued on page five) Prices of Feed Are On Decline Milk Production In State Also Drops Dairy feed prices—along with milk production—are on the de- pounds, down 15 cents from Sep- tember and 75 cents less than October 15, 1947, according to the State Department of Agriculture. Compared with a year earlier, the average price received by farmers for milk cows on October 15, at $235 per head, was $40 higher, but butter at 74 cents a pound was 3 cents lower; and milk at $5.70 per hundréd pounds wholesale was 40 cents higher. Inadequate rainfall and several nights of freezing temperatures during October caused pastures to be dry and grass short on No- vember 1. Winter feeding started earlier than usual on Pennsylcania farms and in northeastern coun- ties may result in some shortage in roughage next spring, the De- partment said. Some dairymen in The Back Mountain Area were hauling water for stock as water supplies remained low. Milk production on United States farms in October was estimated at 8.8 billion pounds, about 1 per cent below a year ago and smallest for the month since 1943. A new November 1 record was established when production aver- aged 17.2 pounds of milk per cow for the day, slightly above the previous high mark reached on the same date last year. During October the number of cows averaged 951,000 or 3,000 fewer than in the same month of 1947. Frank Edwards Is Guest On His 79th Birthday Frank Edwards celebrated his seventy ninth birthday anniversary with a number of relatives and friends Monday, November 15. Pre- sent were: Mr,/ “and Mrs. Harry Hirlinger of Hed Rock; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Swingle, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Keller, Miss Helen McCord of Shavertown; Audrey Williams, Phyllis and Meredith Williams, Mrs. Mary Bowman of Loyalville; Dr. and Mrs. L. C. Rummage of Nan- ticoke; Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bittenben- der of Plymouth; Mrs. Keziah Ed- wards and the guest of honor. Entertains Card Club Mrs. Victor Cross entertained members of her card club at her home on Bulford road last Wed- nesday evening. Present were: Mary Reese, Roberta Quaill, Betty Ide, Stella Bulford, Rita Cummings, Helen Antrim and the hostess. Vol. 58, No. 48 Library Adds Many New Books List of Titles Is Announced by Librarian Among more than 100 new books recently added to the shelves at Back Mountain Memorial Library are the folowing titles announced last week by Miss Mirjam Lath- rop, librarian. 2 Allen, Hervey, Toward Morning; Allen, Roses for» Every Garden; Berryman, Pioneer Preacher; Cham- berlain, Snare for Witches; Cronin, Shannon’s Way; Doner, Ravens- wood; Gilberg, Eskimo Doctor; God- den, A Candle for St. Jude; Hob- art, The Cleft Rock; Hogner, Sum- mer Roads to the Gaspe; Huggins, The Red Chair Waits; Howard, Sailmaker; Jenkins, We Gather To- gether; Kane, Bride of Fortune; Karr, Grace Livingston Hill, her story of her writings.; Nesbitt, White House Dairy, Maughn, Cat- alina; Noble, Woman With a Sword; Parkington, The Wash- bournes of Otterley; Partridge, Big Freeze; Platt, Our Flowering World; Schoonover, The Burnished Blade; Skinner, Cornelia Otis, Family Circle; Smith, Betty, Tomorrow will be Better; Smith, I Capture a Castle; Topp, Smile, Please; White's Political Dictionary; Wilder, Bright Feather; Woodbury, John Groff’s Mill; Wouk, The City Boy; New Children’s Books Bridges, True Zoo Stories; DeJong, Reurn to the Level Land; Dickson, Bramble Bush; Berry, Seven Beav- er Skins; Frost, Sleigh Bells for Windy Foot; Fish, Children’s Al- manac of Books and Holidays; Gould, Jane; Henry, Always Reddy; Henry, Benjamin West and his Cat Grimalkin; Johnson, Gay, A Shet- land Sheep Dog; Kerr, The Girl who ran for President; Lawson, Robbut, a Tale of Tails; Maney, It’s Fun to Make it Yourself; O'Neill, Picture Story of the Philippines; O’Brien, Margaret, My Diary; Pfeiffer, Cath- olic Picture Dictionary; Savery, Dark House on the Moss; Seamen, The Charlemonte Crest; Self, Rid- ing Simplified; Stevenson, Paul Revere, Boy of Old Boston; Vin- ton, Flying Ebony. No Bear Shot By Local Hunters * Three Cubs Killed On Dutch Mountain Bear season got off fo a good start last Monday with geveral-bear reported killed in the Division “B” area, but none by lgcal hunters. John Mazzanti, Plaj sville, killed a 400-pound bear inf thes Acinity of Effort Mountain, and one was reported killed on Game Land 57, at Dutch Mountain, near Red Rock. Carl C. Stainbrook, Division B Supervisor of the State Game Commission at Forty-Fort stated that 39 legal bear and 7 illegal bear (cubs) were killed up to last Thursday afternoon. Three of the cubs were killed on Game Land 57. They were with the mother bear, and when she es- caped, the hunters killed the cubs. The men are now being prose- cuted by the Game Commission. Mr. Stainbrook said, “The Game Commission has no sympathy for hunters who kill illegal game and after being caught say they didn’t know what they were shooting at. It is actions like this that cause so many human beings to be shot. The Commission will prosecute wio- lators to the full extent of the law. Discuss Purchase Of Resuscitators Dr. Henry M. Laing Fife Com- pany and Auxiliary will Mold a joint meeting tonight at th€ hose house to discuss thef p ase of a re- suscitator. Various demonstrations have been given by the Emerson and Stevenson companies on the oper- ation of resuscitators, and recog- nizin gthe need for equipment of this type in this area, the fire- men are making plans to obtain one. The cost of the unit will be $365. 50, including apparatus and tanks for working on two people at the same time. Definite action will be taken to- night on the purchase of the mach- ine, and also on the program to raise the necessary money. ‘Betty Jane FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1948 TOT 6 CENTS PER COPY It's A Problem In Engineering Two Back Mountain -collegians, Bob Henney, left, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Henney, Dallas Township, and Homer Middleton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Middleton, Leh- joring in electrical engineering and man, assist Wilkes College’s only girl engineering student, Mildred B. Baker, in ‘a laboratory problem. | Miss Baker and Middleton are ma- Forty Back Mountain Students Now Enrolled At Wilkes College . Forty students from the Back? Mountain region are currently en- rolled ig Wilkes College's largest studentf body in history. Inclided in the grofip are 12 members of the freshman class. The ‘e upperclassmen. eir college careers this Ster are Beryl A. Colwell, Ridge street, Bachelor of Arts; Earl C. Crispell, Noxen, Bachelor of Sci- ence in . biology; John W. Griffiths, Church street, Bachelor of Science in eommerce and finance; William G. Hart, Machell avenue, Bachelor of Science in chemistry; Mary Iva Lamoreaux, Trucksville, Bachelor of Arts in history; Richard F. Laux, West Main street, Trucksville; Ola Mae Montross, Dallas, Bachelor of Science in commerce and finance; William G. Nelson, Dallas, Bachelor of Science in commerce and finance; Robert F. Richards, Idetown, Bach- elor of Science in commerce and finance; John L. Ridall, Trucksville, Bachelor of Science in commerce and finance; and Henney and Mid- dleton. Upperclassmen include Ralph C. Antrim, Jr., Dallas, Bachelor of Science in biology; John F. Banks, Dallas, Bachelor of Science in civil engineering; William C. Beck, Shav- ertown, Bachelor of Science in chemical engineering; Gwen Ruth Clifford, Trucksville, Bachelor of Science in‘ commerce and finance; John M. Culp, Jr., Dallas, Bachelor of Science in education; Royal J. Culp, Dallas, Bachelor of Arts in English; David S. Davis, Trucksville, Bachelor of Science in chemistry; Carl H. DeWitt, Trucksville, Bach- elor of Science in commerce and finance; Paul F, DeWitt, Trucksville, Bachelor of Science in commerce and finance; Sheldon P. Fahringer, Trucksville, Bachelor of science in education; James F. Farrell, Shav- ertown, Bachelor of Science in com- merce and finance; John M. Fink, Shavertown, Bachelor of Science in commerce and finance; Charles D. Flack, Dallas, Bachelor of Science in commerce and finance; David D. Fritz, Noxen, Bachelor of Arts; Dar- rel. Lee Harding, Tunkhannock, Bachelor of Science in commerce and finance; Naomi Mae Hons, Shavertown, Bachelor of Science in business education; Albert L. Morse, Trucksville, Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics; John P. Nelson, Dal- las, Bachelor of Science in com- merce and finance; Samuel LeRoy Owens, Trucksville, Bachelor of Sci- ence in commerce and finance; Donald W. Perrego, Dallas, Bache- lor of Science in civil engineering; William H. Perry, Dallas, Bachelor of Science in physics; Thomas C. Phipps, Dallas, Bachelor of Arts in law; Mary Z. Porter, Shavertown, Bachelor of Arts in social studies; William F. Purcell, Trucksville, Bachelor of Science in biology; Rebennack, Dallas, Bachelor of Science in biology; Preston J. Sturdevant, Dallas, Bach- elor of Science in chemistry; Rob- ert W. Templin, Dallas, Bachelor of Science in chemistry. Coming Event— Dallas Chapter, O.E.S. will pre- sent a variety show in the Kings- ton Township High School Decem- ber 10. Henney is a mechanical engineering student. Wilkes College freshman class. Photo by Ace Hoffman. ‘Sons Guests Of Rotarians Coach Wolfson Talks On Sportsmanship Dallas Rotary Club conducted a father and son night last week at Irem Temple Country Club. Following the dinner, served in the main ballroom, an athletic pro- gram was presented under direc- tion of Don Clark. Mr. Clark intro- duced the speaker of the evening, Ben Wolfson, of Scranton, well known to sports fans, especially in the field of football. A former coach at Lafayette College, Mor- avian College and Catasauqua H. S., Mr. Wolfson is coach at Scran- ton School of Physical Education. He stressed the importance of a strong competitive spirit plus the character building traits which par- ticipation in sports can bring to young people. He related the war experiences of former athletes who were better fighting men because of their football, basketball or base- ball experience. Present were: Charles W. Lee, president of the Dallas Rotary Club; Don Clark, Dicky Clark, Ben Wolf- son, Donald J. Evans Jr., Terry S., Evans, Donald J. Evans, Dr. F. Budd Schooley, George B. Schooley, Sheldon Mosier, Allan Mosier, Har- old Titman, Billy Shaffer, Daniel R. Richards, Danny Richards Jr., Tommy Richardson, L. L. Richard- son, Robert Richardson, James W. Cross, James K. Cross, Theodore B. Common, Timothy Common, Char- les Brook, Dr. R. M. Bodycomb, Richard Bodycomb, Robert Body- comb, David S. Williams, Walter C. Williams, Paul Mulcey, A. N. Garinger, Robert Garris, Jack Yeis- ley, W. J. Yeisley, George F. Metz, Thomas F. Metz, Attorney Wil- liam A. Valentine, Oswald Griffiths, Meade J. McMillen, Floyd W. Chamberlain, Lee Culver, Raymond R. Hedden, Carl Hedden, Les War- hola, Don Ide, Dennis Ide, Warren S. Taylor, “Skipper” Drake, Ralph Hallock, Ralph Fitch, Jr., Donald Besecker, Bobby Besecker, James Besecker, Danny Robinhold, Dan G. Robinhold, David Jenkins and Ben Jenkins; Present also as guests of honor were the four coaches rep- resenting Dallas Township, Dallas Borough, Kingston Township, and Lehman township schools. They are: Thomas M. Edwards, Bernard Rockovich, Ted Szela and Anthony Marchakitis. Fractures Elbow Burton Roberts, 31, 24 School for the Glen Alden Coal Company, was admitted to Nanticoke State Hospital Tuesday morning with a fractured left elbow, suffered when he fell 40 feet from a telegraph pole. Mr. Roberts has been employed by Glen Alden since his discharge from the Marine Corps three years ago. Mr. Roberts is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Roberts, Main Street, i Dallas. CarOccupant | Hurtin Crash Hip Injured at Kingston ed for slight injuries Tuesday morn- ing at 12:50 at Nesbitt Memorial Hospital following a two-car colli- sion at the intersection of Wyoming avenue and Union street, Kingston. She was released following treat- ment. Mrs. Ruth Sheldon, avenue suffered a contusion of the of Pioneer right hip when a car driven by Robert J. Fiaski, 18, of 235 Welles street, Wilkes-Barre, crashed in- to the rear of the automobile in which she was a passenger with her husband, Howard M. Sheldon, aged 50, driver of the machine. Kingston police reported that both vehicles were traveling north on Wyoming avenue at the time of the accident. Sheldon slowed down for the light at Union street and when it turned green attempt- ed to turn left on union. When he did the Fiascki car crashed into the rear of ‘the Sheldon vehicle. Both cars suffered damages esti- mated at $200 each. House is Completed Within Ten Weeks The $100,000 home bulding pro- ject of Natona Mills is rapidly nearing completion. Douglas Kulp, that just ten; WwW Contractor, said s from the start sooMr.- and” Mrs. erbrook, formerly of Rhode Island, moved into their new home this week. The deer season opened early for Chief Fred Swanson of Har- vey’s Lake. Sunday morning persons going to services at Laketon Lutheran Church observed a deer swimming in the middle of the lake. As they watched they saw it get up on the shore in the far distance, then it re-enter the water and swim to a point near the Lawrence B. Jones property where it stag- gered up on shre and out on the highway. Loren Keller and. Joe McCaff- ery who were nearby, observed that it was exhausted—possibly chased by dogs and seriously in- street, Shavertown, an electrician | vestigate. .__~Tjured. They notified Chief Swan- son who came immediately to in- He had hardly arrived when the beautiful doe died. Chief Swanson’s investigation showed that the doe, which had probably been suckling a fawn, had been badly torn in the hind quarters by a high powered bullet that had entered its under side and come out near the base of the tail. Chief Swanson dressed the deer, hung it nearby and notified the State Game Commission, who are now investigating. Later the same day, Chief Swan- DALLAS A KINGSTON JACKSO MONRO All are members of the Trucksville aL A Trucksville woman was treat- BOX SCORE Back Mountain Highway Deaths and Serious accidents since V-J Day Killed 11 1 4 Hospitalized 2 1 20 TOW TO TOW TOWN TO 1 Tr 2 3 2 HIP 1 1 31 20 Deer Season Opens Monday Half Million Men Expected In Woods Seven A. M., Monday, Novesber 29 is “D” Day in Peacetime Pe! sylvania. D-Day, . however, will mean “Deer Day’—the opening of the annual deer season in Pennsyl- vania. Fretting and fussing officials of the State Game Commission, worrying as well they might be over the prospects of careless hunters shooting each other, pre- dict that upwards of half a million hunters will be a-field. Indications are good, one official said, that the kill this ‘year’ will be high in view of the good supply of deer now in forest and field. Last year, it was recalled, nim- rods slaughtered 31,474 bucks and 63,568 antlerless deer. The warning was. sounded to hunters that only bucks with two or more points to one antler may be shot legally, this season, with one deer per hunter and six per camp or hunting party of six or more. Commission spokesman expressed the hope that hunters would re- frain from road hunting which has been so prevalent the past several “years. This practice is especially true of the one-day hunters “who haven’t the stamina or desire to compete with more hardy, deter- mined hunters because of the dis- comfort or inconvenience to them- selves.” A deer must’ be tagged within one hour after it is killed and before it is transported from the place it was bagged. Hunters were urged to report to a Game Pro- tector the game law violations they observe or any illegally killed deer they find. Band Association Plans Card Party And Bake Sale Committee members were named for the card club and bake sale to be held in the near future at the meeting of Kingston Township's Band Association held in the High School Monday evening. Committee members are: Bernard Bush, Har- old Rose, Sam Davis, Harold Croom, John Dana, Mrs. Charles Perkins, Mrs. Henry Kahn, Mrs. Burdette Crane and Mrs. Elwood Dymond. Present at the meeting were: Mesdames George Davis, Henry Kahn, Richard Reese, Cedric Grif- fith, D. Culver, Burdette Crane, Algert Antonaitis, Charles Perkins, Elizabeth Billings, Albert Williams, John Dykeman; Harold Rose, Verus Weaver; Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Bush, Mr. and Mrs. Eric Vrheil, Mr. and Mrs. John Dana, Mr. and Mrs. James Dick, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Croom, Mr. and Mrs. Rich- ard Mathers, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Dy- mond, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Birth Next meeting will be held in the High School December 27. Swanson Accounts For Two Deer Week Ahead of Hunting Season son received a call from Rev. James Hilbert of Alderson Metho- dist Church, who said that he had injured a buck on the Alderson Buckwheat Hollow Road, near the Sterling Farm. He said the deer had jumped across the path of his automobile so abruptly that he had failed to notice it until the crash. The front end of Rev. Hilbert’s automobile was demolished. The damage amounted to about $200. The min- ister asked Fred to go at once to dispatch the wounded animal lying in the road. The Chief went to the spot but found no trace of the deer. He walked seventy yards off the road into neighboring fields but still found no evidence of the animal. distance in the underbrush, and found a majestic four point buck desperately crawling on the stumps of three broken legs to- ward the safety of Sterling Farm. Chief Swanson mercifully shot him. The buck had been a familiar sight in the vicinity of Sterling Farm for many months, coming out in the open pasture near the highway to feed. Then he heard a thrashing some ~~