The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, March 07, 1952, Image 1

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O Lord div
Who for o
We come
v
A LENTEN PRAYER
Mrs. Fredric W. Anderson
e, most righteous, loving Master
r sins so many trials did bear,
gain this holy Lenten season
To dedicate our souls unto Thy care.
O draw us closer, Lord, in sweet communion
Look do
O help us,
in with mercy from Thy throne above
ord, who yet so often falter
To find a [greater strength, a cleansing love.
: O teach Ws, Lord, to spread among Thy peoples
The wordis of truth for which Thou bled and died,
That we fa
ay live and love on earth as brothers
With seeds of scorn plucked out and cast aside.
. Show us§ O Lord, how great can be the reaping
From o
Show
Can
ake our hearts so
e small deed, so easy to perform, :
8, O Lord, how kindliness, not malice
glad, so light, so warm.
0 Lord of Hosts, at this Thy Lenten season
As angals once the stone did roll away,
So ma
With
we come on Resurrection morning
rer hearts within Thy house to pray.
FON.
PILLAR
By Mrs. T. M.
There's a book hot off the press that explains what editors of rural
{
TO POST
B. Hicks, Jr.
weeklies do with their spare time—if any. For editors of weekly news-
papers, for people who have always dreamed of buying a small weekly
newspaper and settling down to take it easy, and for people who just
like to read weekly newspapers, Jane Mcllvaine’s “It Happens Every
Thursday” will be illuminating.
Mr. and Mrs. Robinson Mcllvaine®
are running a rural weekly, the
Archive, in Downingtown, Pennsyl-
vania, In Mrs. Mcllvaine’s non-
existent spare time (ask any rural
editor) she writes books for child-
ren which win the Junior Literary
Guild Award, articles for the Sat-
urday Evening Post, and now a
book on how it all happened and
why it keeps on happening.
“If you're built with a cast-iron
stomach,” explains Mrs. Mcllvaine,
“a punching bag constitution, and
the ability to stay,on your feet
eighteen hours a day, any other
job seems dull by comparison.
Starting from scratch, the two
Mcllvaines bought what * looked
like a dead horse, applied artificial
respiration to the Archive, and
groomed it for the races,
It's been racing ever since.
Any rural editor can match the
crazy things that happened to the
Axchive, but few editors can write
about them with such verve.
What editor hasn't yearned to
tell off a non-communicative citizen
in just such glaring headlines as
appeared in the Archive after the
owner of a mew business opined
that it was “nobody's damn busi-
ness” what was going on, and re-
fused an interview?
The headlines came out:
OWNER OF NEW PLANT SAYS
IT'S NOBODY'S DAMN BUSINESS
WHAT HE IS DOING.
Then there is the reaction of the
obituary - advertising - news -
social editor when confronted by
an overstuffed matron breathing
fire because her publicity didn’t
get into. the paper exactly as she
had written it. =
It's all in the day's work when
the linotype gets struck by light-
ning, the roof caves in on the press,
and the editor backs into a pair
of hot hornets, typing for the next
two days from a standing position.
Nothing fazes the Mcllvaines.
They have built circulation for
their now thriving newspaper by
a variety of clever dodges. One of
the ideas that causes folks to
sandbag the mailman for the
Thursday morning copy, is publi-
cation of a picture dug out of the
archives of the Archive. The first
person who identifies the picture
gets a prize. The picture of one
mystery house is run every New
Years with a $50 reward for iden-
tification.
Those cuts came out of a tray of
buried liabilities. The Mcllvaines
brushed off the dust and trapped
the family of mice, saying to them-
selves, “Hurray, here's one bunch
of cuts we don’t have to pay for’,
and turned the liabilities into
assets.
The paper has come a long way
since those first days when it was
printed at Media, and distributed
from the rear end of a bucking
x LS
De were the days when Mrs.
McIlvaine, anticipating a Blessed
Event, doggedly walked the streets
in search of advertising until pru-
dence dictated that she either
carry a basket or lay off for the
n. '
Surahe tells of her husband's run-
in with the Government, which took
a dim view of the Archive's prac-
tice of rounding up the young szem-
r folding sessions, an -
BD both Mr. and Mrs. Mec-
Ilvaine pay themselves salaries out
of a dwindling bank account.
This survey was complicated by
the circumstance that subscribers
stopped the Mcllvaine’s on the
street to pay for subscriptions and
classified ads, and that both mem-
bers of the team had a tough time
keeping their take separated into
its proper pigeonholes. The pockets
kept getting mixed.
But the investigation spawned an
article for the Saturday Evening
Post which brought home the bacon
in a big way, and just in time to
avert financial embarrassment.
~
There's. a chapter devoted to
letters to and from the editor,
featuring a vanishing Floogie Flop-
ears who galloped through a brisk
appeared otherwise in print.
Mrs. Mcllvaine winds up by say-
ing that running a country news-
paper is like being on a raft. Your
usually it’s hot.
But, she says, it hasn't sunk yet.
After Bob Bachman read the
book he stuck it in his overcoat
pocket.
“Now’”’, he announced, on his
way out the door and home for
lunch, “I have some ammunition.
I shall teke this home to my wife
and next time she asks me why I
don’t get in until midnight, I shall
point out chapter and line.”
Morris Picks Aid.
OA
a
Louis Yavner
LOUIS YAVNER, former New York
City Commissioner of Investiga-
tion, has been named by Newbold
Morris as his “chief of staff” in
the current probe of corruption in
the federal government. At pres-
ent, Yavner is assistant to Rudolph
Halley, president of the New York
City Council. ® (Internatinnal}
Bible Church
Revival Starts
Monday evening, March 10, starts
services at the Shavertown Bible
Church. Evangelist Joseph Arnett
will be the preacher. He is a mem-
ber of the advisory board of the
Mid-West Missionary and - Bible
| Institute, St. Louis, Missouri. Mr.
Arnett will be dealing with such
subjects as, how to build a (Christian
home, develop spiritual growth in
young people, and world conditions
in the light of Bible prophecy.
There are seven churches cooper-
ating in these services, and they
will hiave charge of the musical pro-
gram. The following program has
been arranged for the first ‘week:
Monday, - Rev. Bob Matthews,
Wilkes-Barre Gospel Center;
Tuesday, - Daniel Redka, soloist,
Plymouth Baptist ‘Church;
Thursday, - Rev. Carl Brandon,
Eaton Baptist (Church, director of
Sunday morning over (Station. WILK.
Rev. Russell Edmondson, pastor
of the Shavertown Bible Church,
announces that these services are
being conducted for the benefit of
the Back Mountain area, and that
the public is cordially invited. There
will be services every evening at
7:45 p. m. with the exception of
Saturdays.
interchange of letters but never
feet are always in the water and
a three week series of evangelistic
the ‘Sunshine Hour heard every |
Tae Darras Post
MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION
DA
VOL. 62, No. 10
Workers Named
For Red Cross
Fund Campaign
Mrs. Harry Ohlman
And Mrs. H. S. Haycox
Are Co-chairmen
Mrs. Harry Ohlman and Mrs.
Harris Haycox, co-chairmen of the
Red Cross campaign for the Back
Mountain Area have announced their
captains, co-captains and workers.
The campaign which opens Friday
will last for the month of March.
‘Dallas Borough: Mrs. Milford
Shaver, captain, Mrs. Lloyd Kear, co-
captain; workers, Mesdames Louise
Colwell, Bud Schooley, Z. E. Gar-
inger, Edgar Brace, Clifford Ide
Fred Drake, Ray ‘Casterline, Arthur
Ross, A. /G. Rutherford, D. M.
. Graves, Philip Gould, Robert Body-
'cOmb, C. J. LaBar, Fred Wilkins,
Donald Davis, Harold Titman, Leslie
Barstow, Herbert Griesing, Walter
| Black, L. L. Richardson, Harold
{ Smith, Dan ®Robinhold, Raymon
'Hedden, Samuel Ashley, Robert
Lewis, Norti Berti, Edward Keller
and Harold Brobst,
Franklin Township, captain Mrs.
Byron Kester; workers, Mesdames
Wesley Harris, IChiarles Parrish, Rus-
sell Lewis, Dan Dymond, Robert
Snyder, Mary Emmanuel, Harold
Brace, Richard Berlew, Henry Phil-
lips,
Jackson Township, captain, Mrs.
{Earl Balliet; Mesdames Betty Thomp-
son, Anna Olinatz, Jane Wagner,
Hayden Phillips, William McdLean
and Mary Laskowski.
Lehman Township, captain, Mrs.
Ornan Lamb, co-captain, Mrs.
Charles Nuss; Mesdames, Ella Lewis,
A. M. Major, David Pugh, James
Davenport, C. R. Mulligan, Clinton
Ide, John Humphrey, Robert Scott,
| Harry Edwards.
i Lake Township, captain, Mrs.
Harold Payne; Mesdames Robert
| Scott, Cletus Holcomb, Louis Rogers
Jr., George Taylor, Ben Banks,
Emerson Schmaltz, William Deets,
Jack Zorzi, Roy Tyson, Herman
Hier, James Garey, Calvin McHose,
Carrie Rood, James Davenport; Miss
Pauline Davis,
Trucksville, captain, Mrs. Joseph
Blazes, co-captain, Samuel Miller;
Mesdames James Hutchison, Sarah
Strauffer, Samuel Miller, Howard
Wiener Jr., Thomas Shelbourne,
Sheldon Bennett, Ralph Sands, Rose
Unger, F. Hemenway, John Landis,
L. E. Jordan, Bert Olson; Miss
Loretta Olver.
{Shavertown, captain, Mrs. Byron
Creasy, co-captain, Mrs. Thomas
Graham; workers, Mesdames, Earl
Tremayne, Betty Lamoraux, George
Parker, Bud Hirleman, James Ed-
wards, ‘Calvin Hall, Gordon Edwards,
Clarence Woodruff, Ralph Davis,
George Jacobs, Charles Roberts,
Gerald (Stout, Fred Eck, Gilbert
Austin, Lewis Underwood.
! Dallas Township, captain, Mrs.
Fred ‘Kiefer; Mesdames, Donald
| Evans, Herbert Smith, Raymond
Kuhnert, M. M. Eckert, Fred Houli-
han, Benjamin Edwards, E. C. Mac-
Gowen, Charles Flack, R. E. Neale,
Robert Evans, Stanley Davies,
‘Thomas Robinson, Robert Hale,
Robert Elston, Stefan Hellersperk,
W. B. Allen, Melvin Estey, Herman
Thomas, Paul Mulcey, David Wil-
liams; Misses Mary Weir, Myra
Carlin, Agnes Gregson, Frank Park-
hurst, Warren Stanton.
Trucksville )
Mrs. Donald Miller, Mrs. Ronald
Woolcock, and Mrs. Albert Blase,
Shavertown
Mrs. Clyde Brace, Mrs. W. H.
Bonn, Mrs. W. H Bond, Mrs. Hil-
| bert Stark, and Mrs. Catherine New-
Woman's Club
Donates Piano
"Lovely New Spinet
In Library Annex
The Beautiful new spinet piano
which was installed in the main
meeting room of the Library Annex
on [Friday, is the gift of Dallas
Woman's Club. The Woman’s Club
has expressed itself as willing to
share use of the piano with any
responsible adult organization, but
requests that this privilege be con-
fined to adults.
A felt cover has been ordered to
keep the finish in good condition.
The piano, a Lester, was purchased
from Lizdas Piano Company, which
made price concessions.
Mrs. Charles W. Lee and Mrs.
Fred Howell made final selection,
after all possibilities had been
screened by a committee consisting
of Henry Peterson, Mrs. Maude
Baker, accompanist for the Chorale
group, and Mrs. H, 'W. Smith, chair-
man of the house committee.
FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 1952
Dallas-Franklin
Schools Advance
Luncheon Prices
Has Been 15 Cents
Since Opening Of
Program In 1944
Prices for cafeteria school lunches
at Dallas-Franklin Township Schools
will be revised upward, beginning
Monday noon. [Elementary school
children, grades 1-6, will pay 90
cents per week, or 20 cents for a
| single day; High school students
$1.00 per week, or 25 cents a single
day; teachers, 80 cents per day.
Prices for students have been 15
cents per day.
Raymond = Kuhnert, Supervising
Principal, in discussing the decision
made by the joint board at Tuesday
night's meeting, says that a number
of causes have contributed to the
necessity for raising prices.
Since establishment of the cafe-
teria in 1944, there has been no
revision upwards, in the face of
mounting cost of both food and
labor.
For the first two years, all pota-
toes, between six and seven tons a
year, were supplied from surplus
food without cost. Last year, all but
3,700 pounds were purchased from
cafeteria funds, at $1.00 per bushel.
This year, the full quantity has been
purchased at $2.25 per bushel.
Cost of milk has risen appreciably.
Labor costs are up.
National School Lunch Program
allows nine cents per lunch as re-
imbursement.
Without drastic reduction of both
quantity and quality, the cafeteria
will continue to go deeper into the
red, unless prices are raised. ‘A sink-
ing fund, built up over the first two
or three years when prices were
lower and surplus commodities in
good supply, has been steadily eaten
away.
M. Kuhnent states that plenty of
surplus pea-beans for baking and
soups have been received: that
cheese and dried milk have been
provided from surplus; and that up
until the present week there have
been enough apples. ‘At this point,
he says, the apples are exhausted,
and fruit will have to be purchased.
Every possible measure of econ-
omy has been taken with food pur-
chased at wholesale and in institu-
tional pack. Nothing is wasted.
A second action of the joint board,
relating to the cafeteria, is appoint-
ment of Mrs. Stella Lancio as mana-
ger. Mr. Kuhnert is purchasing
agent,
Thirty-Eight
Enroll In
Music Groups
Township Adopts
Plan To Provide
Future Bandsmen
Thirty-eight students from grades
four to nine have begun instrumen-
tal lessons at Dallas Township
Schools. The instruction, given in
regularly scheduled classes, is in-
tended to furnish future members
of the Junior and Senior Bands.
Under the setup the school will
have three instrumental groups: be-
ginners, grades four through six;
Junior Band of junior high school
students, and (Senior Band, grades
nine through twelve.
A list of students in the beginner
and junior groups, instructed by
Reese E. Pelton, music instructor,
are:
Clarinets—Sylvia Trewern, Charles
Lasher, Arthur Ellum, Fred Gansel,
Louis Macnick, Geraldine Goodman,
Lois Carey, Barbara Florek, Melvina
Moss, Sandy Simms, Grace Bach-
man, Priscilla Martin, Rosalie Mar-
tin, Audrey Race, Donald Hopkins,
Carol Wagner;
Trumpets—Connie Veitch, Jerry
Wilson, John Fulmer, Barry Baird,
Jerry Lancio, Keith Hilbert, Donna
Brown, Clark Lewis, Karen Klisch,
Betty ‘Harris, Edward Barnes, Linda
Carey; :
Trombones—Paul Balshaw, David
Roberts, Jimmy Altemus, Elwood
Misson, George Clemow;
Baritone—Sandra Baird;
French Horn—Carol Fitzgerald;
Alto Horns — Barbara Hilgert,
Florence Hilgert, Esther Layaou,
Louise Nemic;
Bell-Lyres— Barbara Phillips,
Nancy Tinklebaugh, Francette
Wheatcroft, Nancy Kreischer, Caro-
lyn Dickson;
Bass Horn—Robert Anderson;
Flute—Stefan Hellersperk;
{Saxophones—Louis Katchko, Glo-
ria Sutton;
Drums—Barry Landmesser, Thom-
as Mitchell,
8 Cents
SS
WHERE ARE THE ROBINS?
THE ANNUAL ROBIN COUNT
SHOULD BE UNDER WAY
By the first week in March
the local robin-count is usually
well under way, but this year
those harbingers of spring seem
reluctant to leave their southern
feeding grounds.
Frank Jackson says a few sad
specimens have wintered not
too far away, but these robins
do not count.
The robin-count takes into
consideration only those fat and
sassy specimens that had brains
enough to go south for the
winter, and mow should be
coming back, well-fed and ready
for nesting.
=]
Students To Compete
InF orensic Contests
Students from Westmoreland who
will compete in Luzerne County Fo-
rensic Contests include Barbara
Dana, Rosemary Bukeavich, David
Vann, Nancy Dymond, Louise Kann,
and Shirley Drake.
Barbara Dana, junior, will give a
serious declamation; Rosemary Bu-
keavich, sophomore, a humorous
study, at West Wyoming High
School March 11, 1:30 p.m.
David Vann, sophomore, and
Nancy Dymond, junior, will compete
at Forty Fort March 12, 1:30, with
an original oration and a Shake-
speare reading.
Louise Kann, senior, will give a
poetry reading at Plains, March 13,
at 2, and a piano solo at Westmore-
land March 11 at 1:30.
Shirley Drake, junior, will give a
soprano solo at Dallas-Franklin
Township, March 13, 1:30.
Westmoreland Team
Plays In Tournament
Westmoreland Boys Basketball
Team will participate in the Blooms-
burg Basketball Tournament at
Bloomsburg State Teachers College
again this year.
The team will play its first game
on Saturday, March 8, 1952 at 9
in the State l'eachers College Gym-
nasium against Tremont High
School.
Edward Trumbower
Marks 83d Birthday
Edward Trumbower, Shavertown,
celebrated his eighty-third birth-
day with a family dinner at the
home on Belford Street Sunday
afternoon.
‘Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Trumbower, Jr. Shavertown; Mr.
and Mrs. John Milton and son Ord,
Lehman; Mrs. and Mrs. Ord Trum-
bower and son Douglas, Dallas; and
Mrs. Earl Craig, Dallas.
Decorations were carried out in
pink and white, with a large cake
crowded with candles.
Mr. Trumbower, long time resi-
dent of Pikes Creek, has lived in
Shavertown for twenty-five years.
Five years ago he retired from
eighteen years of supervision of
Pennsylvania (State roads. In his
earlier days he was a first class
craftsman at blacksmithing.
Chorus.
Shirley Drake To Sing
In All-State Chorus
Shirley Drake, Westmoreland jun-
ior, will sing in the All-State Chorus
at Meyers High School, Wilkes-
Barre, March 21 and 22, and in the
chorus in Philadelphia March 23.
Shirley qualified at Montrose in
the Northeastern District February
21, 22 and 23 with sixty-five schools
represented. Barbara Dana also
qualified, but only one representa-
per Copy— Ten Pages
$30,000 Fire House
Back Mountain Highway Deaths and
DALLAS
KINGSTON TOWNSHIP
"ROSS TOWNSHIP
BOX SCORE
Serious Accidents Since V-J Day
Hospitalized Killed
10 13
5
1
42
TOWNSH
Jackson Firemen Will Build
At Chase 3
NEPA To Hold
Annual Meeting
Opens Monday At 10
In Tunkhannock
Northeastern Pennsylvania Arti-
ficial Breeding Cooperative Asso-
ciation will hold its seventh annual
meeting in the NEPA building,
Tunkhannock, Monday at 10 AM.
The parent cooperative of ten
locals in northeastern Pennsylvania,
says James Hutchison, Luzerne
County Agricultural Extension
Agent, keeps fifty bulls on hand,
supplying sire service for Holstein,
Guernsey, Jersey and Ayreshire
breeds. Also available are three
Angus bulls for dairymen who may
wish to raise beef cattle from their
own milch stock.
In the past year, Jim says, 75,-
000 animals have been bred artifi-
cially. Reports show that with in-
troduction of pure-bred strains,
dairy production in Northeastern
Pennsylcania is on the upswing.
Albert E. Madigan, Towanda, is
president; John Henning, Tunk-
hannock, secretary-treasurer; Wil-
liam S. Schafer, manager.
Bulls, housed in individual pens,
are groomed daily and kept in tip-
top condition, a procedure which
goes far toward gentling them.
Kiwanis, YMCA, Plan
School Career Day
Counselors of Back Mountain
YMCA Hi-Y and Tri-Hi-Y clubs met
with Dallas Kiwanis officers and
YMCA officials Tuesday evening to
plan Career Day for all Back Moun-
tain high schools. Outstanding sue-
cess of Career Day at Dallas Bor-
ough high school last year has led
to decision to include all schools.
This year's program will make it
possible for “over 350 students to
investigate and discuss vocational
and professional opportunities with
experts in their field. Approxi-
mately thirty men and women will
be on hand to counsel students.
An outstanding speaker will give
the kick-off address, followed by
discussion groups.
Planning committee includes:
Thomas Jenkins and Bernard
Rockovich, Westmoreland; Margaret
Porter and William Snyder, Leh-
man- Jackson; Robert Thomas, Dal-
las-Franklin; David Davis and Millie
Garinger, Lake - Noxen; Kenneth
Rice, William Wright, and Harold
Smith, Kiwanis Club; Lewis Le-
Grand, John Donovan, and Charles
W. Royce, Back Mountain YMCA.
Sutton To Manage
Easter-Egg Hunt
Osage Lodge 100F 712, Lehman,
has appointed Lanceford Sutton to
make arrangements for an Easter-
egg hunt for students of first to
sixth grades in Lehman-Jackson
schools. Mr. Sutton will be assisted
by Edward Strobel, fourth grade
teacher from Georgetown, experi-
enced in recreation work for children
from activities in ‘the Settlement
House.
League Meeting Tonight
Back Mountain Church League
will hold a meeting at 7:30 at the
Dallas Post to determine the finan-
cial status of the league and to
arrange the annual playoffs. Tug
Wyant, league president, will pre-
tive may compete in the State
contest.
The dead fox that Harry Decker
and Russell Parsons delivered to
the Dallas Post last Friday measured
forty inches and was definitely not
rabid. It had retreated under a
pile of lumber at Huntsville and was
lying low until Harry dug it out and
Russell shot it.
Peggy Decker came along for the
ride.
The dead fox attracted a lot of
attention on Lehman avenue, with
Russ Honeywell driving up to give
it the once-over and everybody
stopping to have a look
Earlier that same morning, a dog
dragged a dead fox down out of a
field into George Knarr’s yard in
Shavertown. The report came to
the Post through a variety of
sources, including Evans Drugstore.
Ruth Deal, Fernbrook, saw what
she believed to be fox tracks in her
own yard in Fernbrook Friday
morning. She now carries a club.
~
A fox was sighted in Harold Tit-|
side. All managers are requested to
be present. 5
Dead Foxes, Live Foxes, Sick Foxes,
Well Foxes, Still Reported In Area
man’s back yard on Lake Street
Friday night when floodlights were
turned on to light up the bird feed-
er with its baited rat-trap. Seems
rats have been stealing the bird
feed, so every night Harold sets a
rat-trap in the feeder, taking it out
before going to bed for fear of
catching a chickadee at breakfast.
The fox froze momentarily in the
dazzling light, then vanished. Later
in the evening a fox tried to get
into the chicken coop at the War-
dan Farm.
The program for fox eradication
goes on, with Game Wardens bait-
ing the fringes of the rabies area
with poisoned crows. Many dead
skunks -are reported, apparently
poisoned.
The question most frequently
voiced by subscribers to the Dallas
Post is, “Where do all those crows
come from, and how do the game
wardens kill them ?*
$30,000 Fire House at Chase Cor-
ners on ground donated by Harold
Bertram were approved by Jackson
Township Volunteer Fire Depart-
ment at a meeting Monday night at
the home of Louis Wilcox, presi-
dent.
The Department authorized tne
Building Committee to solicit bids
so that construction can get under
way by April 1st with!occupancy to
take place about August 1.
ing with finished basement. Overall
size to be 48 by 102 feet; concrete
block construction, with Rilco circle
truss roof. : :
The front right interior of the
Fire Department meetings and the
front left will be the garage for the
Department’s two pieces of fire
fifghting apparatus.
Directly behind these two rooms
will be a large, 46 by 46, assembly
room with maple floor which can
be used for dinners, dances and
of the assembly room will be a 20
by 36 kitchen equipped with all
modern facilities and separated
can be served cafeteria style. ;
For the present, the basement
will also house a hot water furnace.
Jackson Fire Department was
organized January 30, 1948 and
paid for more than $10,000 worth of
partment is debt free and has
$4,387.38 in its building fund. This
has been augmented recently by a
gift of $5,500 toward the buildin
fund. :
the township to discuss the build-
ing program and to obtain further
contributions.
made for an oyster supper to be
on March 22. Dennis Bonning Sr,
on the committee,
Atty. Jonothan Valentine was
appointed solicitor of the Depart-
ment.
The next meeting will be held at
the home of Walter Coolbaugh on
March 17. a
Attending were: Louis Wilcox,
Edward Jeffery, Harold Bertram,
James Roushey, Melvin Wagner,
John Fielding, George Lang, Wes-
ley Lamoreaux, Paul Snyder, Wal-
ter Coolbaugh, Robert Culp, Edgar
Lashford, Dennis Bonning, Sr., and
Atty. Jonathan Valentine.
Work Starts
On New Store
Garinger To Sell
Soft Ice Cream
Arthur Garinger and his brother-
in-law John Beagle of Bloomsburg
are erecting a new Tastee-Freeze
soft ice ‘cream store on Mr. Gar-
inger’s property along Memorial
Drive at Fernbrook.
The new store will be of concrete
block, modernistic construction with
a four foot overhanging roof and
will be finished in stucco. Tt will be
16 x 22 feet. Masonry work is being
done by Earl Johnson of Beaumont.
Completion is expected shortly
after April 1.
The store will be equipped with
two of the latest designed ice cream
manufacturing machines,
[Ample parking space will be pro-
vided.
The building formerly occupied by
Mr. (Garinger for an ice cream store,
has been sold to Wilfred Ide, Loyal-
ville orchardist, who will have it
transported to Loyalville where he
expects to sell apples, apple pro-
ducts, and home made apple pie,
a la mode, with home made ice
cream.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Ide have de-
veloped a reputation for delicious
apples and apple products.
Lehman-Jackson PTA
To See Film On Cancer
Lehman - Jackson PTA members
will see two movies, one for men
and one for women, Monday eve-
ning at 8, Dr. Emanuel Stephens
will show, and Dr. A. A. Mascali
discuss—the movie on cancer.
Plans will be made for the “Gay
Nineties Review,” scheduled for the
near future z
Rummage Sale
Jackson Volunteer Fire Company
Auxiliary will sponsor a rummage
sale in the Lare Building March 10,
11, 12 Rummage can be sent to
Mrs. Lewis Wilcox, Mrs. Ben Bon-
ning, Mrs. Edward Kropp or Mrs.
Harold Bertram. r
Plans. for the construction of a
Plans call for a one story build-
building will house a large room for
community gatherings. To the rear
from the assembly room by a par-
tition and counters so that meals
will be used for drying hose, and.
since that time has purchased and.
apparatus and equipment. The De--
Within a few weeks a solicitation
committee will visit every home in
At Monday’s meeting plans were
held at Jackson Methodist Church
Paul Snyder and Robert Culp are