ThE His writes Mr. Ball, “the White rr” “working draft.” in that wake up soon . . “Unless people along with this new effort.” tory that fall.” think the GOP must ‘buy’ the union leaders, and have old Wagner Act.” x x FROM The first frost was once the sig- nal for Mother to rummage in the moth chest for the long underwear and pin it to the line to air. Chil- dren postponed putting it on as ed wearing it, custom demanded that you went right on wearing it until the following May. It was not so hard to adjust that first morning, for the legs were snug and clung to the curves like an extra skin. The second morning the black ribbed stockings scuffed up the ankle sections, giving a dis- mal lumpy look to the finished en- semble. By the third morning the ankles had stretched to the point where no amount of overlapping could remedy the situation. Some mothers got around this by graft- ing a stirrup of elastic to the bot- tom, where it nested itself under the instep and rubbed a blister. All children wore black ribbed stockings, all children betrayed bulges and wrinkles beneath, and all stockings drooped dispiritedly from the supporting elastic side- ‘garters, which in turn dragged down the Ferris Waist. There were always two pairs of pants, and two petticoats. No little girl was completely clothed with- out wrestling with at least twelve buttons on her undergarments, a row up the back of her dress, and twelve on each shoe. These shoe buttons had to be cajoled into place by /means of a buttonhook, an item which disap- peared from the counters of the five and dime stores several decades ago. Black buttoned shoes, high ankled and with spring heels, com- pleted the misery of the school child. Step outside without rubbers, and you got hauled back with a hard look. The winter coat was buttoned in place, the felt hat perched on top of the braids with an elastic under the chin to hold it in place. Blondes were in luck. Mothers of blondes need not weigh the merits of black elastic to match the hair, or white elastic to match the skin. Mothers of brunettes tossed a coin, heads match the hair, tails match the neck. There was a terrific gap between the top of the coat collar and the bottom of the hat, a wind funnel which the long braids did little to plug. Winter, to the average school child, was a season when he either pricked with heat or shivered with cold. “Now don’t go in the drifts”, was the standard warning when a child skyrocketed out of the front door on his way to school. Drifts meant wet stockings and underwear, soppy shoes when the snow melted in the warmth of the classroom, with an aftermath of pneumonia. Present-day grandmothers reflect that they were born thirty years too soon when they see children gam- bolling in the snow, burrowing in and out of drifts, having themselves a marvelius time, and all without a thought of getting wet. The snow- suits can take it. Whoever invented them deserves a monument. Mrs. Karl Kuehn Is Hostess At Shower Mrs. Karl Kuehn, Church Street, entertained at a linen shower Wed- nesday night honoring Mrs. Helen Hart who will move to Rochester, N. Y,, next week. Present were Mrs. Gertrude Ford, Mrs. Frank Ferry, Mrs. Joseph Lavelle, Mrs. Stella Cummings, Mrs. Leslie Warhola, Mrs. Bernie Williamson, Mrs. Alice Stencil, Mrs. Earl Monk, Mrs. Charles Mayer, Mrs. Mary Haley, Mrs. F. Bud Schooley, Mrs. Minnie Brown, the guest of honor and the hostess. VOL. 63, No. 38 War Prisoner Returns From Korea Thursday Crowds Wait Hours To Shake Hands With Sgt. Vavrek SGT. JOHN F. VAVREK Sgt. John Vavrek, returning Ko- rean War prisoner, landed at Avoca Airport Thursday afternoon at 4. His mother, Mrs. Anna Vavrek, members of the immediate family, and a delegation from Daddow Isaacs Post American Legion, were at Avoca early in the morning, meeting plane after plane. Shivering crowds gathered at East Dallas Church for John’s for- mal welcome. Holding small flags, neighbors and friends waited out the hours, alert for the warning siren. At noon, acknowledging that he had missed his connections, the crowd dispersed. At 3:30 word was passed that an American Airliner was due from the west at 4 p.m. and the crowd reassembled. Dallas - Franklin Township Band was transported to the church. Stu- dents, planning to go en masse by bus, were dismissed at the usual time. Many made their own way to the meeting place, or accom- panied their parents. The white streamer bearing the lettering, Welcome Home Jack, was once more strung up across De- munds Road. The motorcade, now supplement- ed by cars picked up along the way and the Dallas Fire Company pumper, stopped at the church for welcoming ceremonies. Rev. Thomas Davis gave the in- vocation. Herman Kern led singing accom- panied by the band. Paul Shaver presented a life membership from the Daddow (Continued on Page Seven) More than 3,600 students are en- rolled in Back Mountain schools this fall. Largest enrollment is Dal- las Borough - Kingston Township jointure, with 1080. The school showing the largest gain is Gate of Heaven, which has this year added an eighth grade, and has a record first grade of sixty-five, largest in its history. ; Lehman-Jackson-Ross .... Lehman - Jackson - Ross has 901 students, 735 in the main building at Lehman. One hundred and sixty- six still scattered in one-room schoolhouses in Ross Township will go to the new elementary school in Sweet Valley in October. Cafeteria luncheons average 650 daily, as compared with 500 last year. Seventy-five more students are enrolled in the main building, with the two new grade rooms tak- ing the excess from the high school building. Two sections of all grades except third and fourth are in op- eration in the elementary section. Third and fourth have one room each, and one combined room. Ross Township teachers will when the new building is completed. Mrs. Anthony Curtis, Frisbie School, will teach first grade; Mrs. Dorothy LaBar, Hook School, the second; Mrs. Beatrice Cragle, Center, third; Myron Moss, Mooretown, fourth; Delbert Hines, Broadway, fifth, and Arthur Curtis, Mott, sixth. Lake-Noxen At Lake-Noxen, George Taylor, supervising principal, reports enroll- ment of 645, with 185 in the ele- mentary school at Noxen. Band practice started Thursday. There is no cafeteria at Lake-Noxen. Beaumont Monroe Township has a slight Ten Pages Committee members for the chest X-ray project of Wyoming Valley Tuberculosis Society to be con- ducted in the Back Mountain area next week and during early Octo- ber are here shown with the mo- bile equipment at Dallas Borough Schoo! where they gathered this week to make final preparations. In the door of the truck is Flor- ence Frantz, X-ray technician. First row, left to right: Mrs. Harry Ohlman, chairman, Mrs. Or- nan Lamb, co-chairman, Mrs. Ben Edwards, Mrs. James Spencer, Mrs. George Taylor, Mrs. George Kanarr, Mrs. Robert Milne, Mrs. Robert Bodycomb, Mrs. Thomas E. Cease, Mrs. L. L. Richardson, Mrs. David Pugh, Mrs. Edward Davis, Mrs. Thomas Brown, Mrs. Robert Ma- turi, Mrs. William Purcell. Second row, left to right: Miss Marion Elenchik, Mrs. J. G. Maza, Miss Carol Bostwick, Miss Norma Shaver, Mrs. Norti Berti, Mrs. Rob- ert Hale, Mrs. Donald D. Smith, Mrs. David Jenkins, Mrs. Carl Schreiner, Mrs. William Lee, Mrs. Charles Mahler. The mobile unit will be in the Back Mountain Area on the follow- ing dates: Trucksville Fire House, Septem- ber 21-22; Shavertown Fire House, September 23; Dallas Borough School, September 24-25; Dallas Township School, September 28-29; East Dallas Methodist Church, Sep- tember 30; Huntsville Christian Church, October 2; Lake-Noxen School, Laketon, October 5. Hours when X-rays will be taken are from 4 to 8 p.m. Those having the X-rays do not have to undress. There is a charge of fifty cents. Part of the cost of the project is derived from the sale of Christmas seals. Wennlund Establishes Dallas Roofing Company Leonard Wennlund has purchased the former Angele Guenta property on Memorial Highway and has es- tablished a new roofing firm under the name of Dallas Roofers. Formerly . of Edwardsville, Mr. Wennlund has had years of exper- ience in the roofing business on Long Island. He and Mrs. Wennlund have three boys: Donald, a paratrooper, and Ray and Tommy, students at Westmoreland High School. He will specialize in all types of new roofs and repairs, including caulking and repair of old chimneys. Twenty-Fifth Wedding Bnniversary Saturday Mr. and Mrs. Donald Evans will celebrate their twenty - fifth wed- ding anniversary on Saturday. They were married by Rev. W. L. Todd of the Presbyterian Church of Sunbury on September 19, 1928. Mrs. Evans is the former Arline Shannon of Lee Park. They have two children, Donald Jr., student at the University of Pennsylvania where his father also graduated, and Terry, student at Dallas Town- ship schools. drop in enrollment in the high-- school, a larger than usual first grade. Total student body is 233, eighty-six in grades 7-12, 46 in the high school proper. Cafeteria service under a staff of two, started on Monday. Charges are $1.00 per five- lunch week. Rates were upped last year because of the rising cost of meat. High school students are still accommodated at Beaumont build- ing, arrangements not having been fully completed to enter them at Tunkhannock, though jointure with that district is in the making, ac- cording to statement by William A. Austin, supervising principal. Dallas-Franklin Township Dallas - Franklin reports enroll- ment of 745, a gain of fifteen over last year’s figures. The total fluc- tuates from day to day as families return from vacation trips. Approx- imately eighty children are enrolled in the two first grades. Through the entire elementary school and most of the high school,two sections are necessary for each grade. Most of the children patronize the cafeteria, very few bringing their own lunches or going home at noon. Six mem- bers are on the cafeteria staff. Cafeteria charge per student is 90 cents per week for the first six grades, $1.00 for older students, more proportionately if a week's meals are not contracted for at the beginning of the week. Dallas Borough-Kingston Township Dallas Borough - Kingston Town- ship has an enrollment of 1080, compared with last year’s 1072. Ele- mentary schools, including kinder- garten, have 656, Westmoreland high school 424. Kindergarten en- rollment is 90, Dallas Borough 164, Shavertown 227, Trucksville 175. Cafeteria opened last Thursday. Farley Will Be PTA Speaker Dallas-Franklin To Welcome Sgt. Vavrek Dr. Eugene Farley, president of Wilkes College, will be the speaker at the first fall meeting of Dallas- Franklin Township Parent Teacher Association on Monday night, Sep- tember 28. Highlights of the program accord- ing to Charles Rinehimer, presi- dent, will include a presentation to Sgt. John Vavrek, recently returned Korean war prisoner, a former Dal- las Township student. Rev. William McLellan, pastor of Prince of Peace Church, will have charge of devotions. There will also be reports on the Scholarship Fund and the Dental Clinic. Teachers will be introduced to parents and the committee will be appointed for the annual Hal- lowe’en Dance. YWCA Drive Leaders Named By Chairman Mrs. A. D. Hutchison, Back Moun- tain chairman for the Y.W.C.A. drive being conducted this week and next, has announced these ma- jors: Mrs. Heary Peterson, Mrs. James Huston, Mrs. Leroy Brown, Mrs. Thomas Graham and Mrs. Wil- liam Lee. The drive which got off to a good start with a kick off dinner at the Y Tuesday night, has as its goal five hundred new members. Mrs. Fred Church, membership chairman for the valley, led the dinner meet- ing. Entertainment was furnished by a skit, showing how to get new members presented by Mrs. Hobart Jeter of Pioneer Avenue. Brace Made Registrar Isaac L. Brace has received a State appointment as Registrar of Vital Statistics for the seven muni- cipalities of the Back Mountain area. Margaret Belles, sister of Lake- Noxen’s high school principal, Rob- ert Belles, took third place in the Lions Club Lady of the Lake con- test Sunday afternoon. Donna Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Smith, was selected by the committee as Little Lady of the Lake, an honor accorded last year to Sue Dodd, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Dodd. Don Wilkinson won the Packard Clipper. Low temperatures prevailed, hold- down the crowd to less than 4,000, a contrast to Labor Day’s record turnout. Finals were run off in short order, with twenty-one girls finalists from the forty-six original- iy parading on Labor Day, trying to forget how cold they were in their scant bathing suits. Miss Belles is a junior in the high school, residing in Noxen. First place went to a professional model, Jean Lynn. Wilkes-Barre, second to Bernadine Melovitz, Larksville, a last year’s contestant. Harveys Lake Lions will realize approximately $3,500 from the an- nual event, a sum destined for its sight-saving and allied projects. One thousand tickets were sold, rental from chairs added materially to the fund, sponsors of contestants paid $10 apiece for the privilege, and programs brought additional a- mounts. Grace B. Daniels, Con O’Donnell, and Donald Wilkinson were judges for both semi-finals and finals. All entrants will be feted at the annual dinner dance, scheduled for September 30 at Irem Temple Coun- try Club. While walking with his wife Tuesday just at dusk along Cliffside Avenue in Trucksville, Henry Blank observed a small snake crossing the highway some distance ahead of them. He captured it alive with a stick and found that it was a cop- perhead. His wife hurriedly brought him a fruit jar from the house and there he imprisoned the reptile. Anyone desiring a live copper- head for observation or biological purposes may obtain it from Mr. Blank who will dispatch it in a day or two unless some one wants it. The copperhead is the fifth killed or captured in that region this sea- son. William White, a neighbor of Mr. Blank, has killed four in that area this summer. One was three feet long and three were four feet long. The most recent one was killed two weeks ago. Driving through a stop sign on Center Hill Road, a Dallas Township youth last week attempted to out- smart State Police who witnessed the violation. The youth turned right off upper Church Street onto Center Hill Road. as soon as he saw the police car. At Center Hill Road and Lake street he committed another effense run- his hurry to escape from the police. When he reached the vicinity of the Commonwealth Telephone Com- pany Building he drew his car to the curb, where several other cars were parkcd, turned off his lights and lay down on the floor of his machine. cowed. Given a hearing before Jus- tice-of-the-Peace James Besecker, he was fined $20. > The Dallas Post Telephone Numbers 4-5656 or 4-7676 Borough Gets $21,000 At Low Interest Rate Dallas Branch Lends Money To Buy Borough Building At 3 Percent Dallas Borough Council at a spec- ial meeting Wednesday night at Back Mountain Memorial Library Annex, voted “to accept the offer of Dallas Branch of Miners National Bank to lend the Borough $25,000 at three percent interest for the purchase of Oliver Motors property on Main Street as a Borough Build ing. > Council then passed a resolution to borrow only $21,000 of this am- ount. The balance of $4,000 will be paid out of the Borough's current revenues. The loan from Dallas nual installments over a ten-year period. Atty. Burt B. Lewis, Borough sol- icitor, reported having searched the title and that everything is in order for completion of the transaction. Borough president Joseph Mac- Veigh named Raymond Hedden chairman of the Building Commit- tee with all other members of Coun- cil serving as committee members. All Councilmen were present with and Warden Kunkle. It is expected that payment for the building wiil be made to Oliver Motors today and that the Borough will take possession within sixty days. Council authorized James Beseck- er, secretary, to sell its present. property on Mill Street to the high- est bidder. LEE M. WHITE A June graduate of the Penn State Technical Institute, 669 North Washington street, Wilkes-Barre, Lee M. White, of 17 Baldwin street, is employed as a senior draftsman ‘at the Scintilla Division of Bendix Aviation Corporation, Sidney, N. Y. Lee studied mechanical and pro- duction tool design at the Institute. He is a graduate of Dallas Township High School, and is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Niles White. The Technical Institute next Mon- day will begin its new two-year col- lege terminal programs in drafting and design technology and electrical technology, On September 28th, evening classes will start at the Wilkes- Barre school. The following subjects in the programs of industrial elec- tricity, mechanical and production tool design, building construction, tion ,direct current circuits, wiring and installations, tool design, strength of materials, engineering economics, drafting, legal aspects of contracting, vlan reading, problems of construction, television circuit analysis, algebra, trigonometry, bus- iness organization and manage- ment, accounting, advertising, sales- manship, retailing, personnel rela- tions, office methods and English composition. Classes are held three - hours nightly, Mondays and Thursdays. Resumes Teaching Col. Norman Smith, formerly of Huntsville, and more recently of Spring Lake Ranch, Cuttingsville, Vt., has been appointed instructor and athletic director of the Rectory School, Pomfert, Conn. Col. Smith was formerly athletic director at Wyoming Seminary. Dallas PTR To Meet Parent-Teacher Association of the Dallas Borough Elementary School will meet at the school auditorium, Monday night. Stewart Graham, in charge of school safety patrols, will be the speaker. 3 23 a