For the best IN DRY CLEANING ~ THINK “w| HECK H. L. 4256 Men's Shirts Laundered Get Ready For That “BIG |ONE” 9 | oon April 15th YOUR 1952 FISHING LICENSE IS WAITING FOR YOU AT EVANS. $2.10 Have You Tried New KOLYNOS | TOOTHPASTE With | Chlorophyll © | NATURE'S Minty Flavor oe TAKE A TIP GET EVANS PINK TIP COLD CAPSULES 49¢ DUPONT NYLONS 51 Gauge C {5 Denier 08 : ist Quality Headquarters For EASTER CANDY and GIFTS EVANS DRUG STORE "The Rexall Store SHAVERTOWN Phone 222 Hale Garey, 73, Dies In Hospital Funeral Scheduled Monday At 2 Hale Garey, 73, resident of Shav- ertown for the past thirty-five years, but native of Lehman, passed away Thursday, 2 a.m. at General Hospital, where he had been ad- mitted critically ill on Wednesday. Mr. Garey had suffered a heart attack the week before Christmas and had been a patient at Nesbitt Hospital for five weeks. Though allowed to come home, he had never improved. He had retired from the trucking business some years previously. His parents were the late Lewis and Edmere Garey. His wife, the former Audrey Ide, died in 1931. Two sons, Willard, Shavertown, and James, Baltimore and Harveys Lake, survive. Also three grand- children, Richard, Peter, and Mary Beth; and a brother Arthur, Wilkes- Barre. Funeral services will be conducted Monday at 2 from Howard Wool- bert Funeral Home, Rev. Robert D. Yost officiating, Burial will follow in the family plot at Idetown. STORE TALK Spring has sprung, and caught most of us napping. 7 vari- eties of peas are showing in our Seed Department, but only 3 local people planted on “St. Patrick’s Day.” Check up for your favorite varieties when ready to plant—we have seeds that grow. It’s school time for the shop force. ARMSTRONG’S LINO- LEUM SCHOOL claims “PAUL” for 2 weeks, while “JOHN” and “TONY” are get- ting instruction on machinery and automatic heating devices. Factory-trained mechanics serve you better—that’s us. Our Spring Catalog will soon hit the mail with all the new items you'll want for garden and lawn. Use it as your shop- ping guide, but better yet, visit us and see this bright new merchandise. Remington's latest rifle — the new Model 760 - Slide Action 30-06 is here. We stock pistols too—in fact, you name it—we have it, in the gun line. Spring Specials at our Sports Counter. A 50 yard NYLON LINE Free—with any casting reel purchased before April 15th. Also Bamboo Trout Rods at 4.95 Trout Baskets at 1.95 Don’t neglect fishing —it keeps you young STANFORDS FIELD SEEDS, LIME and FERTILIZERS — and your favorite lines of Ma- chinery are here for your con- venience. while our selection is complete in ALLIS - CHALMERS, OLI- VER and NEW HOLLAND. We Service What We Sell. Gay-Murray Co., Inc. TUNKHANNOCK, PA. PHONE 5050 For Your Dancing Pleasure Fun and Frolic for All HUNTSVILLE ROAD — DALLAS “CEE OREO CATR CER ERO REE EEE SEERA ER, DALLAS AMERICAN LEGION NOW APPEARING Saturday & Sunday Nights | Jay Peck’s Band Vocals by DIANNE BERNARD Why not visit us. Principal Hunts With Students Conducts Fishing Trips To Canada WILLIAM A. AUSTIN Know Your Neighbor Don’t let that William ‘A. fool ‘you. He's still Arch Austin, all 230 pounds of him, and tall enough and broad enough of beam to carry the pound- age without losing the proportions that made him a four-letter man at Bloomsburg. ‘With Arch, it was a toss-up whether to go in for Physical Edu- cation preeminently, or just coach on the side while pursuing his favorite studies in science. He could have been a professional golfer and he's a past-master at skiing, but jit was in football, base- ball, basketball and track that he earned his letters. Mr. Austin, [Supervising Principal ‘of Monroe Township schools, is an educator who considers education as three-dimensional, not confined to the class-room. [Solid citizenship is his goal, with courses tailored to the demands of a rural community. It is in the interest of fostering citizenship, freely translated as good sportsmanship, that he sponsors the annual vacation trip to (Canada for the older boys in Beaumont school. After graduation, the expedition gets under way for a two weeks fishing jaunt, unencumbered by good clothes, fancy fixings, or the female of the species. Straight north they drive, towing a boat trailer bearing a fourteen- foot runabout with outboard motor, a twelve-foot canoe, and a rubber boat. The cars are loaded with equipment for roughing it, with enough dried milk and eggs and other staples to reduce the high cost of vacationing, Arch says it can be done for a dollar a daly, with fish for the main- stay of the meals. Any boy from fourteen up who can raise the price is eligible to go, and graduate students nostalgic for their former school and associates, are welcome. The annual fishing trip has been going on for a long time, ever since it. With the end of World War II, the June trek was resumed. The destination is Long Lake, Ontario. Usually the housing is cabins, though one ‘year the boys camped on an island. That year the campers reported that they got aw- fully tired of dried eggs and milk, but ‘that they certainly kept down expenses, This year the expedition will be postponed until later in the summer, on account of a projected tour of the country, in the course of which Mr. and Mrs. ‘Austin expect to cover a reat deal of territory. If they follow accepted tradition, they will write it all up and ‘publish it on the installment plan in the Dallas Post, The trip is in the mature of an antidote for the time Arch took his wife to Canada, and bunked lin a moose-hunter’s cabin. Mrs. Arch woke up in the middle of the might with a sensation of movement in her bed. “Arch ”, she hissed, “what’s wrong with the bed ?” “Nothing’s wrong,” he grunted sleepily, “g'wan back to sleep.” Mrs. Arch subsided. In the morning she looked up toward a rafter, and ‘there , frisk- ing along the logs, one after another, were dozens of little deer-mice. And in the bed, deep beneath the covers, ‘was the evidence. All the big boys around Beaumont know how to handle guns. Each year school is dismissed for the first day of the deer season, and the principal guides a party into the woods for a day of hunting. Mr. Austin says that principles of good sportsmanship learned in the woods will stand by boys ‘when they are men. The ski-lift at Traver's Park is one of his pet projects. This year there have been only two weeks of favorable weather for skiing, but one week providentially came during the Christmas vacation, anfl the ski-lift | was busy hoisting students to the’ summit, Mr. Austin has (been principal at Beaumont since 1932, a teacher there for four years previous to that. World War II interrupted, with 1940, though ‘the war years cut into | THE POST, FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1952 PAGE FIVE . ———————————————D THESE WOMEN! By d’Alessd Es wm SAR ax y 3 . “He really isn’t such a bad guy until you get to know him!” PURCELL OIL SERVICE FUEL OIL Dallas 9001-R-16 SHOP Pometoy’s PURCELL OIL SERVICE FUEL OIL Dallas 9001-R-16 1 Parents Reject Purple Heart Arthur Brown Returns Symbol Of Sacrifice Brioken-hearted parents of Corp. Frederick Brown, killed in Korean action November 2, have returned to headquarters the Order of the Purple Heart and an engraved scroll, awarded ito their son posthumously. Mr. and Mrs. ‘Arthur Brown, Dal- las, claim that they want mo part of an award for ia death which they hold was due to a blunder in placing an untrained man in the forefront of the battle. Corp. Brown was trained for the heavy artillery at Fort (Sill, Okla- Works, and subsequently in charge of personnel for the remaining ‘two and a half years. Back again as supervising princi- pai, Mr. Austin varies his admini- strative post by teaching physics and chemistry in alternating years, also biology and science on the same plan of rotation. And of course there is always a team ‘to coach. . It’s the principal's coaching that makes the bigger boys invincible at baseball during the fishing ex- pedition. Parham, Canada, the chal- lengers, can .always mop up the Beaumont boys at softball, but when the switch is made to hardball, they cave. Biology is his favorite subject, and the one he would teach by pre- ference . He took ‘three summers of biology at ‘Susquehanna to add a fourth wear of work and a degree of BS to the three-year course at Bloomsburg. He obtained a Masters degree at Pennsylvania [State in Educational Administration, It was while he was vice president of the Dramatic Club at Bloomsburg that he met the future Mrs. Austin, then Oce Beryl Williams of Edwards- ville. She tried out for a part, and made a conquest. They were married in 1924. Ms. Austin, in addition to teaching alongside her husband in Beaumont School, takes time to write a snappy local column for the Dallas Post. Arch goes dredging up ‘the bottom of Bowman's Creek every once in a while, in company of Chuck Reiff, head of Biology Department at Wilkes. On one of these occasions the two of them stirred up an enor- mous brown trout, fit partner to the one which is mounted at Travers Park. The pair made a futile grab for it, but it eluded them. Arch says you can’t beat the brown trout in Bowmans Creek, even if most of them do get away. Mr. (Austin’s experience during the war years laid the foundation for charter membership and secretary- ship of Tri“County Personnel Direc- tors Association of which Dr. Eugene Farley President of Wilkes, was also a charter member. Mr. Austin is a past president of Wyoming [County Teachers A'ssocia- tion; past district deputy of Odd Fellows for Wyoming County; chair- Fellows for Wyoming County; chair- man of local unit of the ‘Salvation Army; manager of the Beaumont Baseball Club; was chairman of fuel rationing during the war. He is a Mason, member of Blooms- burg Consistory and the Mystic Shrine. : Vital statistics show ‘that he was born in Beaumont, and that his mother, Adelaide Ryman Austin, 89, is the oldest living member of the Richard Ryman family. Arch waszeducated at Beaumont for the first three years of high school, transferring to Wilkes-Barre for the senior year. Upon the death of his father, he ran the farm as well as teaching school. His brother, E. Ray Austin, is supervising principal of Laurel Run School. He thas a sister, Mrs. C. D. Eggleston, who lives at Vernon. There are no children, but all the principal operating a turret the | Inthe at the Wilkes-Barre Carriage school «children in Beaumont belong peculiarly to the Austins, | homa, receiving almost five months of intensive training, He had had absolutely no training in the use of a rifle. Arrived in Korea October 8, with expectation of preliminary training in use of small arms and infantry | tactics, he was rushed into battle without sufficient experience to en- able him to hold his own against the enemy. Mrs. Brown says that if he had met death in his own outfit, the 967th Armored Field Artillery, hand- ling one of the big guns with which he was familiar, the family would have taken the death as a tragedy, but not a needless sacrifice of a teen-age boy. Fred passed his nine- teenth birthday on the transport enroute to this death. Will Open Next Thursday Dallas Outdoor Theatre Dallas Outdoor Theatre will open’ for the season on Thursday March : 27 with “Bird of Paradise” as the: featured attraction. Among the many innovations for the season will be la mew soft ice cream machine with a capacity for 400 cones per hour. | Verne Groff, manager, also an- nounces an improvement in pictures with ‘much later and better produc- tions scheduled. ' There are no changes in admission. Children un- SEE WHAT YOU SAVE Come in now and talk over with us the special, money-saving deal you can get on this handsome Austin. UP TO ~ Miles per gal.! America’s most popular. car . . . |" way ahead of the field for ECON- OMY . .. QUALITY . .. PER- 3 FORMANCE! Foi : KUNKLE GARAGE DANIEL MEEKER, owner © Kunkle, Pa. Phone 458-R-13 der 12 will be admitted free. Be HERE’S A HOT ONE up WHEN YOU BUY... 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