The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, November 19, 1954, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    VOL. 64, No. 47
>
The Dallas Post
Telephone Numbers
4-5656 or 4-7676
words, the family is coming
home for Thanksgiving, such
at that.
She is going to sit in the middle
of a solid row of children, grand-
children and great grandchildren,
and Jimmie Kozemchak is going to
take a picture of her with one of
her God-children on her lap. *
The sleeping arrangements are
all figured out, by dint of mentally
shifting one set of infants to an-
other room, and having a reshuffle
all the way along the line. The
dormitory has been rearranged. If
some infant falls off the top bunk,
he can do himself no damage,
though he may temporarily smoth-
er the infant in the trundle bed
beneath. There will not be enough
bare floor to break an arm or a
leg. Exit from the boys’ dormitory
will be strictly by hop-skip-and-
jump or leapfrogging the bunks.
Grandma is the only guest who
will get a room strictly to herself,
but it won’t last beyond daylight.
Grandma is immensely popular with
the small fry, who go leaping into
Rabbit and the Tar Baby, Little
Black Sambo and Epaminondas.
That's why Grandma rates the bed
with the strongest springs and the
sturdiest slats.
. At a conservative estimate it is
going to take three medium sized
turkeys, to insure an adequate sup-
ply of drumsticks. In the case of a
turkey, if the victim doesn’t see
the knife applied to trim up a
wing, the shaft makes a very ac-
ceptable drumstick, just as tooth-
some as the genuine article and
much easier to chew. If I call it a
drumstick, it’s a drumstick. See?
It looks like a bushel of potatoes,
and certainly three gallons of apple-
sauce. An acre of hot biscuits will
be about right, and a caldron of
Gravy. We'll leave out the turnips
on plenty of stuffing.
Pumpkin pie, naturally,
doubtless a keg of cookies.
The accent will be on plain and
filling food. They can all add the
frills when they go home again.
It’s an odd thing about men. The
less they have to do over a holi-
day, the more they need susten-
ance, There are always at least
three of them in the kitchen, open-
ing the oven to get a whiff of the
turkey, and in constant need of
just one more cup of coffee to keep
body and soul together until dinner
is served.
Looks like a good Thanksgiving.
and
Six Kingston Township
Servicemen Use Ballot
Luzerne County election returns
show that six Kingston Township
boys in military service used the
special military ballots in the recent
election. The men were: John Cot-
tle, Air Force; Thomas E. Garrah;
Bruce Griffiths, Army; James A.
Martin, Navy; Robert Oney, Army;
Allan Slaff, Navy. One split his
ballot, and the other five voted
straight Republican.
Dallas Borough has no record of
having received any military bal-
lots.
North Carolinians Come
Here To Get Small Game
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Edwards,
Druid Hills, entertained here for
the first week of the small game
season, Mr. and Mrs. W. Clyde Ed-
wards, Raleigh, N. C., Thomas
Teague and Richard Edwards of
Siler City, N. C. Next week Mr.
Edwards accompanied by Fish Com-
missioner Paul Bittenbender and
Donald Southerland of Kingston
will go to North Carolina to shoot
turkey on Thanksgiving Day.
Parents Visit Schools
On Veterans’ Day
Veterans Day saw 302 parents
signing the register at Dallas Bor-
ough-Kingston Township schools.
Many who visited failed to sign.
Many fathers, released from busi-
ness by the holiday, were able for
the first time to visit classrooms
where their children were being
taught.
The kindergarten entertained
thirty-three visitors; Dallas Elemen-
tary, 108; Shavertown Elementary,
twenty-six; Trucksville, sixty; West-
moreland High School, seventy-five.
Get Wild Turkey
Three Harveys Lake men, Dick
‘Williams, Myron Williams and Al
Shaffer obtained a wild turkey
while hunting in the vicinity of
Isabelle Huston
Reviews Books
Story Hour Will
Start December 4
Nominating committee for De-
cember election was appointed by
Mrs. H. W. Smith, president, at
Wednesday's meeting of the Book
Club in the Library Annex. Mrs.
Fred Howell is chairman, assisted
by Mrs. Gerald Stout and Mrs. Felix
Weber.
Mrs. Herman Thomas, Mrs. H. E.
Mrs. James Huston and
Mrs. Ames Campbell will handle
Christmas decorations for the An-
nex.
The Story Hour was announced
as starting December 4, 10:30 to
11:30, to run for three weeks to
determine demand. If there is suf-
ficient response from children, it
will continue after the Christmas
holidays.
Miss Isabelle Huston, Hoyt Lib-
rarian, reviewed ‘Love is Eternal,”
and other recent books on Abraham
Lincoln and Mary Todd Lincoln,
which gave a different slant on the
Civil War President’s marriage than
ordinarily obtained from literature.
Mrs. Mitchell Jenkins and Mrs.
‘Earl Tremayne poured at a table
with a fruit cornucopia centerpiece
for Mesdames Preston J. Sturde-
vant, Harold Titman, Gerald Stout,
Harry Swepston, Mae Townend,
John C. Phillips, Norwood Brader,
Thomas Hillyer, Herman C. Tho-
mas, H. E. Colsten, E. L. Evenson,
Warren. Unger, Ward Jacquish,
John Veraon, W. &. Newbe:ry, Rob-
ert M. Scott, Arthur Kuschke, Fred
B. Howell, J. H. Godtfring, Dana
Crump. :
Russell W. Frantz, Lewis Le-
Grand, H. W. Peterson, Z. E. Gar-
inger, George C. Gregson, Charles
B. Gates, William Lamb, Paul Gross,
George H. Montgomery, Homer
Moyer, Edwin Norcross, Edgar
Brace, Arthur H. Ross, H. W. Smith,
W. B. Jeter, C. N. Booth, Roscoe B.
Smith, Misses Frances Dorrance,
Miriam Lathrop, Marie Spencer,
Margaret Spencer, and Isabelle
Huston. f
Mrs. Pollock Is
Critically Hurt
Mrs. Harry Pollock, about 35, of
Chase Road, Trucksville R. D., is
in critical condition at Nesbitt Me-
morial Hospital where she was tak-
en last Friday after she drove her
automobile into a tree to avoid hit-
ting a deer. She was within a short
distance of her home after shop-
ping in Dallas when the deer leaped
across the highway.
She was treated by Dr. A. A.
Mascali and admitted to Nesbitt
Hospital where eighteen stitches
were required in her chin. She lost
several teeth and suffered a crushed
chest. i
Her husband is a Wyoming Val-
ley dress manufacturer.
Wins At Syracuse
Kash Dowd’s White Rock of
Coolyn Hills won the terrier group
at Syracuse on Sunday. He was
shown by John Roberts.
Firemen To Meet
There will be an important meet-
ing of Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire
Company at the Fire House on
Monday night.
Dallas-Franklin
Has Green Light
For Addition
Harrisburg OK's
Plans For Shop,
Four Classrooms
Dallas-Franklin Township schools
a four classroom and shop additio
on Tuesday, when Raymond Kuh
nert, supervising principal, E. S.
Teter, Luzerne County Superinten-
dent of Schools, Wesley Davies, as-
the day in Harrisburg.
Conference with L. H. Snady,
School Building Division, Depart-
ment of Education, cleared the way
for setting plans in motion. A pre-
liminary sketch executed by Robert
Eyerman was inspected and ap-
proved. He will draw up a tenta-
tive plan for further approval,
which when approved will open
the field for bids on erection.
If no complications develop, Mr.
Kuhnert hopes that ground can be
broken in ‘March, with expectation
that the addition will be ready for
use in September.
No basement is contemplated.
The addition as planned is one-
story, with concrete mat founda-
tion. A classroom will be reserved
for agriculture, with three extra
classrooms designed to take the
pressure off the present high school
facilities, leaving room for expan-
sion of the grade school. A section
of the cafeteria had to be taken
for classroom use this year.
The structure will cost under
$60,000.
Man Is Found
Dead In Auto
Wandall Died Of
Natural Causes
A Ross Township man, Orvil
Wandall, about 45, was found dead
yesterday morning seated in the
front of his automobile at the foot
of Trumbower Hill near Green Val-
ley School at Mooretown.
Discovery was made by Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Sorber of Outlet, who
noted Wandall’s blue appearance as
they drove past his parked car and
thought he might be having a heart
attack.
They called to Dana Lord, road
supervisor, and the three on inves-
tigation found the man had appar-
ently been dead for several hours.
Mrs. Sorber then went to a neigh-
bor’s and notified Harveys Lake Po-
lice who summoned Dr. Harry Brown
of Lehman.
In the meantime the neighbor
mentioned the incident to several
others living nearby who walked
down the road to investigate. Among
them was Mrs. John Edwards of
Mooretown who identified the dead
man as her son by a previous mar-
riage.
Dr. Brown said death had prob-
ably taken place Wednesday night
of natural causes. From the loca-
tion of the car it appeared he had
tried to make Trumbower Hill and
then allowed the car to drift back
several feet to the side road.
The body was removed to Bron-
son's Funeral Home at Sweet
Valley.
Y Board To Meet
Monthly board meeting of Back
Mountain Branch Town and Coun-
try YMCA Board of Management
will be held on Monday, November
22, at the Central YMCA in Wilkes-
Barre at 12 noon.
All Board members are urged to
be present.
Ideas for Christmas giving will
be plentiful at the annual Christmas
Bazaar at Dallas Methodist Church
tomorrow evening. There will be fun
for children at the fish-pond, super-
vised by Mrs. Frances Quaill. Try
your luck at the Surprise Package
booth run by Mrs. Sterling Machell
and her committee. The White Ele-
phant table may have just what
you have been looking for. Mrs. Wil-
liam Baker, Sr., will help with your
selection. .
Baked Goods will include all kinds
of home prepared food, offered by
Mrs. S. Davies and Mrs. Edward
Brace. Jams and jellies are under
management of Mrs. Sheldon Mosier,
A
candies offered by the Couples Club,
home-made nuts and popcorn by
Mrs. Eugene Fiske.
Mrs. Ames Campbell and the Dur-
bin (Class committee wil: have aprons
for sale. Many lovely articles will
be shown in the Hand-Work shop
under Mrs. David Evans. Mrs. Zel
Garinger and her committee offer
beautiful sturdy plants in the
Green-Thumb booth. Christmas
wrappings are at th: Young Girls’
booth, chairman Mrs. Raymond
Elston.
And, chicken and waffles and Vir-
ginia ham, the main attractions
among the home-cooked food at the
cafeteria supper, supervised by Mrs.
Raymond Kuhnert.
brute instantly.
Photo by Kozemchak
Eight Guernseys shown by Ray-
mond Goeringer of Lake Louise
Farm took seven top honors at the
Royal Canadian Winter Fair in Tor-
onto this week.
The Lake Louise Guernseys were
only one of two American herds
entered this year at the show. The
other was the Pabst Blue Ribbon
herd of Holsteins from Wisconsin.
Lake Louise captured first prize
senior calf; second prize senior calf;
first prize, junior yearling, third
prize junior yearling; first prize
junior get of sire; second prize two
year old and junior champion
female.
The Lake Louise Guernseys were
trucked to Toronto last week and
will remain for the balance of this
week in charge of Stewart De Graw
and Edward Husted.
Mr. and Mrs. Goeringer and Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Rice went up for
Exhibition on Sunday and returned
home on Wednesday night.
The Toronto Fair has twenty-
eight acres under roof where beef,
horses, pigs and sheep are ‘shown.
The main barn is five times the
size of the barn at the Pennsyl-
vania State Farm Show.
In years past Hillside, Orchard
and Hayfield Farms have been ex-
hibitors and prize winners at the
big Toronto Exposition. The famous
Hayfield Clydesdales carried off
many honors there.
Wounded Buck
Dies In Lake
Cars Line Bank
To See Struggle
A 140 pound three-point buck,
wounded by a stray shot out of
deer season, floundered into Hunts-
ville Reservoir Saturday noon,
swam febly across the deep ex-
panse near the dam until it reached
shallow water and died on the
bank. Mr. and Mrs. Hanford Eck-
man, driving to town, noted motor-
ists pulled up along the Huntsville-
Dallas road, stopped to see what
was going on, and saw the buck
collapse in shallow water with his
head on shore. :
Deputy game warden Samuel
Spencer, owner of Lehman Golf
Course, was summoned by care-
taker George Rogers. to take charge
of the animal. Mr. Spencer report-
ed to his superior in the Game
Commission, John Behel of Wilkes-
Barre, and took the buck home for
immediate dressing. It was taken
to the Children’s Home at Pittston.
Mr. Spencer reports that it was
a beautiful deer, sleek and fat,
practically bled out from the gun-
shot wound in the haunch before
it died, so entirely suitable for
food.
Lake Blaze Extinguished
Daniel C. Roberts Fire Company
extinguished a blaze in a partition
at the home of Verne Kitchen on
Ruggles Road shortly after 11 a.m.
Monday. The fire had been started
by a heating stove.
Agent On Vacation
John Allen, Ashley, Lehigh Val-
ley Relief Agent is substituting for
Harold Borton, Dallas Station
Agent, who is on three weeks va-
cation.
PTA Meeting
Dallas Franklin Township Parent
Teacher Association will meet Mon-
day night at 8 p.m. when Robert
Wallace will be the speaker. Par-
ents will confer with teachers be-
fore the meeting.
Missing Girl
Home Again
Community Is
Much Relieved
Carolyn Davis is home again in
Trucksville, greatly relieving the
community mind as well as that of
her immediate family. She and her
mother, Mrs. Alice Davis, Grove
Street, landed at Avoca airport Fri-
day morning at 8, after an unevent-
ful trip from Miami.
‘Carolyn, 14, disappointed in her
dream of joining the WAC, will take
up her education again in February,
having missed a large part of the
first semester at Wyoming Semi-
nary.
Mrs. Davis flew to Miami Novem-
ber 8 to make contact with her
daughter at the YWCA, where she
had been staying since arrival from
Newark, where she earned money
enough as a waitress to make the
Florida trip. She had been missing
since August 15, but it had been
established that she left home in
order to take a job. In spite of the
conviction that foul play did not
enter into the picture, Township
and State Police bent every effort
toward locating her.
Westmoreland
Is Accredited
By Association
Action Follows
Evaluation Study
Late In March
Westmoreland High School was
placed on the list of accredited
schools this week, by the Commis-
sion of Secondary Schools which
met in Harrisburg Monday and
Tuesday. This action was the direct
outcome of an Evaluation Study
made late in March, in which every
phase of school life was made the
subject of painstaking research by
qualified experts in education from
schools throughout Pennsylvania.
W. Frank Trimble, principal, re-
ceived this letter on Monday:
Dear Mr. Trimble:
“At its meeting on November 8
and 9, 1954, the Commission on
Secondary Schools of the Middle
States Association of Colleges and
Secondary Schools placed West-
moreland High School on its list of
Accredited Schools. Early in Jan-
uary of 1955 you will receive of-
ficial notification of this action.
“May I express to you my per-
sonal congratulations to your school.
We trust that your membership in
the Middle States Association may
be profitable to you and to the
Association.
Yours sincerely,
Ira R. Kraybill -
Executive Secretary”
Caldwell Has
Fall Reunion
Dallas Cast Gave
Fitth Degree Tuesday
Many Back Mountain members of
Caldwell Consistory are attending
the annual reunion which opened
at the Cathedral in Bloomsburg on
Tuesday night.
A number of local men have
prominent parts in the various de-
grees and several are candidates.
Schedule for the reunion ealled
for the conferring of 12 degrees in
full ceremonial form Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday.
Degrees and casts: Wednesday,
5th, Dallas, 6th, Sunbury, 8th, Ash-
ley, 15th and 18th, Bloomsburg.
Thursday, 25th, Hazleton, 24th
Bloomsburg, 22nd, Caldwell Con-
sistory Choir, and 20th, Pottsville.
Friday, 29th, Shamokin, 2; 21st,
Wilkes-Barre, 3:45, and 32nd,
Bloomsburg, 7:45 p.m.
Among the highlights of the re-
union will be the conferring of the
21st Degree this afternoon at 3:45
by a cast of 75 members from
Wilkes-Barre area with Dr. Samuel
T. Buckman as degree master and
Harry L. Ohlman, 33rd, James E.
Graham and James G. Myerly, as-
sistant degree masters; as well as
the 8th Degree this afternoon, at
4:45, by a cast from Ashley, Harry
J. Williams and Robert Lloyd, de-
gree masters. :
The 33rd Degree jewel will be
presented to Attorney Robert L.
Coughlin and Roy V. Eder and the
Meritorious Service Award Jewel
for 1954-55, to Robert Cohen Friday
night.
Harveyville Girl Shot
In Freak Accident
A sixteen-year old Harveyyville
girl was seriously injured Thursday
afternoon when a .22 calibre bullet
penetrated her left shoulder. Doro-
thy Alice Farver, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. J. P. Farver, tiptoed to
reach a magazine on a closet shelf,
knocked over the loaded rifle, and
was shot when the rifle touched the
floor. She was admitted to Nanti-
coke State Hospital.
Mrs. William F. Cairl observed
her eighty-sixth birthday quietly on
Tuesday at her home on Woodlawn
Drive. Friends remembered her with
cards and gifts, but out of defer-
ence to her husband’s memory,
there was no party. Mr. Cairl
passed away June 10 of a long
standing heart ailment. Mrs. Cairl’s
activities are somewhat -circum-
scribed of late, but she keeps up
with her sewing and crocheting,
turning out delightful little sewing
kits and decorated coat hangers,
snugly fitting ascots to wear with
tailored suits and coats, and ‘a
variety of other little knicknacks for
which she finds a ready sale.
Among the birthday cards was
one showing a lovely red Japanese
lantern, mailed from Japan by her
grandson, Lt. Clayton L. Cairl.
Mrs. Cairl is the last of her branch
of the Wesley family. Born in
Mooretown, she is the daughter of
the late Daniel and Lucinda Wes-
ley. Her grandfather was second
cousin to the famous founder of
Methodism, John ‘Wesley. A soldier
in the War of Eighteen-Twelve, he
is buried in Sweet Valley. Mrs. Cairl
has four children, five grandchii-
dren and seven great grandchildren,
all living. Florence lives in Phila-
delphia, Viola and William in Dallas,
Ear] in Broomal.
Many happy returns of the day
to a lovely lady, whose blue eyes
and peach-blow skin are as beau-
tiful as ever, with radiance of char-
acter shining through.
Buy Ambulance
Or Have Wreck
Reconditioned?
Dallas Ambulance
Board Must Make
Quick Decision
Is the Dallas Community Am-
bulance worth salvaging after Sat-
urday’s early morning wreck, or
would it be more sensible to apply
the insurance to another good used
ambulance ? 3
That was the burning question at
Sunday afternoon’s board meeting
in the Dallas Borough Building.
Board members who had argued
the matter of a heavy duty gen-
erator as opposed to an alternating
system at Friday night's meeting,
found themselves without an am-
bulance to house either one or the
other.
Ken Baylis, reporting his findings
after wreckage had been inspected
estimated. the cost of reconditioning
it at approximately $2,700, perhaps
slightly less. IF a steel turret top
should happen to be available at
the Superior Body Works. It was
the turret top which prevented
death of the patient, Mrs. Joseph
Jewell; her immediate attendant,
Norti Berti; and the three men of
the crew in the front seat; Law-
rence Delet-Kanie, driver; Leslie
Barstow and Raymond Titus. :
Delet-Kanic came to a stop on
Union Street before crossing the
double railroad tracks, to avoid
swaying the ambulance and dis-
turbing Mrs. Jewell, who was suf-
fering from a severe hemorrhage
from the nose. Crossing the tracks,
Larry noted that the light at Mer-
cer Avenue intersection had turned
from red to green, giving him the
right of way. As he went through
the interesection with siren sound-
ing, a passenger car driven by Dur-
land Edwards of Swoyerville shot
out of Mercer Avenue going north,
and crashed into the rear quarter
of the ambulance. :
The ambulance rolled over four
times, throwing out the patient as
it came to rest on its side. Berti,
on the head, opened his eyes to
find himself looking at what he
took to be bars, the metal slatting
treated for shock at General Hos-
pital. Mr. Jewell, following the am-
bulance, made the rest of the run
to the hospital. Titus was treated
for bruises at Nesbitt. Harry Brown
and Charles Flack were called from
Dallas to guard the wreck.
Columbian Hose Company exting-
uished gasoline flames,
from the street the spilled gasoline.
the crash except the principals in-
volved, - but residents on Union
Street who had not yet gone to
the crash, and one witness reached
the window in time to see the
ambulance completing its roll.
Comparative cost of repairing the
ambulance, and cost of a replace-
Cadillac ambulance can be procured
for $3,100, through the same com-
pany which furnished the original.
At least a two-months delay may
be expected if the ambulance is to
be repaired, while another one could
be procured within a matter of a
week or two.
Kingston Township, Lehman, and
Lake ambulance associations will
supply ambulance service during
the interim. Dallas crews will assist,
to lighten the load.
The next meeting, to discuss
findings of the investigation, and to
decide on appropriate action, will
be held at the call of the president.
Present at Sunday afternoon’s
meeting were Norti Berti, Alvin
Shaffer, Ray Titus, Elmer Williams,
Robert W. Laux, Howard Johns,
Harry Brown, Mr. and Mrs. William
Wright, Russell Honeywell, Mar-
garet Roberts, Jennie Newman,
Robert Fleming, Ken Bayliss, Billy
Berti, Lawrence Delet-Kanic, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Flack, Don Evans,
Mrs. T. M. B. Hicks.
Westmoreland Band
To Canvass Neighbors
Westmoreland Band Parents As-
sociation would appreciate the co-
operation of the people of Dallas
Borough and Kingston Township to-
morrow when band members and
majorettes will canvass their neigh-
bors for donations.
The proceeds will be used to de-
fray costs of the annual banquet
and to purchase needed equipment.
To date the members have pur-
chased a trombone case, a trumpet
case, a base clarinet, a flute and a
piccalo. ;
Members of the Association will
meet in the High School Monday
evening at 8 p.m. :