The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, May 06, 1955, Image 2

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PAGE TWO
be placed on mailing list.
. held for more than 30 days.
Transient rates 75¢.
per column inch.
ads 10¢ additional.
Preference will in
cool bathtu "2
-
recipe by
deserves an apology.”
rebuild it. re
This morning when
how to use a rectal thermometer.
I told her.
Looking at
T-V
With GEORGE A. and
EDITH ANN BURKE
GOODMAN ACE who with his
wife Jane formed one of the most
popular and entertaining teams in
network radio, the: “Easy Aces” is
essentially a writer. Not only does
he write his own material but wrote
for Tallulah Bankhead’s “Big Show’
on radio, and this current season
has been chief writer on the Milton
Berle TV Show.
Ace was born in Kansas City, Mo.,
January 15, 1899. He became a re-
porter on the Kansas City Post, after
studying journalism at Kansas City
Junior College. Later promoted to
drama and movie reviewer, he alter-
nately infuriated and delighted his
publisher with his barbed, witty
criticisms,
In 1927, he married Jane Sher-
wood, a high school sweetheart. The
following year, to supplement his
newspaper income, he inaugurated a
15-minute weekly radio show, at
$10 per show. He read comics and
broadcast part of his column, at-
tempting to be informative and in-
formal.
“Easy Aces” evolved one day
when the performers on the follow-
ing quarter-hour program failed to
arrive at the station. Signalled to
continue talking, Ace called in Jane,
who was waiting outside and they
ad-libbed a conversation about the
bridge game they had played the
night before.
So favorable was listener response
that the Aces were soon being
heard three ‘times a week and on
their way to a network showing.
The Aces live in a midtown New
York apartment. Goodman, in addi-
tion, to turning out high-priced
comedy scripts, keeps his hand in
as columnist by reviewing radio and
television for the Saturday Review.
Jane collects records and is an avid
baseball fan. They're planning a
TV version of the Aces so, soon, we
may be getting new Jane-isms such
as ‘“She’s putting on the rich” and
“Familiarity breeds attempt.”
THE KENTUCKY DERBY turf-
doom’s greatest race of the season
will be on (CBS-TV this Saturday
from 5:15 to 5:45 p.m. The Derby,
the most colorful jewel in racing’s
famous Triple Crown (the others
are the Preakness and Belmont) will
be shown directly from Churchill
Downs in Louisville, Kentucky. Race
caller will be veteran turf broad-
caster, Fred Capossela, while Win
Elliott, popular emcee and sports-
caster will handle the “color.” Sorry,
we can’t “Tout” you on to the
winner. We'll be just watching, not
betting, and interesting watching it
should be.
MAMA, ‘the series which topped
family popularity polls since its be-
ginning in 1949, will receive the
first tribute ever paid a TV show by
the American Mothers Committee.
The group which annually designates
the Mother of the Year will give the
award to ‘Mama’ tonight, at the
organization’s 20th Annual Awards
Luncheon because of what they
term “its constructive portrayal of
of highest standards of love of God,
sanctity of the home and personal
sacrifice.”
NELSON EDDY and Gale Sher-
wood are the stars in Sigmund Rom-
berg’s wonderful operetta “The
Desert Song,” this [Saturday 9:00
to 10:30 p.m. on NBC. It should be
enjoyable to hear Nelson sing such
favorites as ‘Desert Song,” “One
Alone,” “Sabre Song” and “Ro-
mance.” We wish, of course, that he
could be teamed with his long-time
movie partner, Jeanette MacDonald,
but it should make fine viewing and
listening, nevertheless.
Harveys Lake
WSCS of the Alderson Methodist
Church will hold its mother and
Mr. and Mrs. James Patton, Jr.
and baby of Reading are visiting
the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
James Patton, Sr. :
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Shook and
children, Ricky and Lynne, Niagara
~ Falls, N. Y., are visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Shook and family.
‘ Mr. and Mrs. William Hackling
and son, Charles are visiting the
former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Hackling.
Barbara Engelman, daughter of
Edgar Engelman, has been ill this
week.
Mr. and Mrs. James Gillis and
son, Jimmy, visited the latter’s par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Rennix at
Parsons, W. Va., over the weekend.
Mrs. Oscar Fish and Mrs. Ira
Beahm spent Saturday in Wilkes-
Barre.
Mr, and Mrs. Nick Novak and son,
Nick of Williamsport, visited the
latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ira
Beahm over the weekend.
Private First Class, Dale Engel-
man, who spent the past eighteén
months in France, was discharged
April 22.
Pvt. John Hanson who is sta-
tioned at Fort Monmouth, N. J,
spent the weekend at the Edgar
Engelman home.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hackling and
son, Jeffrey and daughter Joy, of
Kunkle, visited Mr. and Mrs. George
VanCampen on Sunday.
Callers at the Albert Casterline
home on Sunday were Mrs. George
Young, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Yeung,
Betty Lou and ‘Charles of Drums.
Mr. and Mrs. Osmand Casterline
and son Brent, and daughter Dar-
/
lene, visited the latter’s sister and
brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Tony
Hinkey and family at Binghamton
on Saturday. The Hinkeys announce
the birth of a baby girl, Marsha
Ann on April 11. Mrs. Casterline
is the former Helen Doty.
Mrs. William Race who was tak-
en suddenly ill on Wednesday is
recovering.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Harlow of
Kingston, visited relatives here on
Sunday.
Holden Newell fell at his home
and broke two ribs, puncturing a
lung, He has been unable to work
for two weeks.
Mrs. Sophia Hackling and son
John, and daughter Linda, drove
to Far Hills, N. J., to visit Mrs.
Hackling’s mother, Mrs. Flossie
Palmer.
Mr. and Mrs. Vane Race and
sons attended a farewell dinner for
Mrs. Race's two brothers, Malcolm
and Jimmy Eyet at the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Eyet.
The boys left this week for service
with the U. S. Army. All members
of the family enjoyed the dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Fish spent
Sunday at the home’ of the latter's
sister and brother-in-law, Rev. and
Mrs. Alfred Backus, Binghamton,
N.Y.
To Hold Banquet
A mother and daughter banquet
will be held in the Glenview Primi-
tive Methodist Church May 8 start-
ing at 6:30. Friends and neighbors
are invited. -
The only item of business will be
Mrs. Garvin Smith ‘is chairman.
The MYF of the Alderson Church
Mrs. Herman Garinger and Lloyd
Pa., on
Mrs. Harold Gebler and daugh-
7
Reese Finn is recuperating at his
in New
Elizabeth Reynolds; RN, on a
Miss Reynolds, during her leave,
and expecting to
Babson Park, Mass.—The small,
non-progressive farmer is gradually
being forced out of business. The
trend is toward large mechanized
farms. I forecast that this trend will
continue. The stubborn farmer simp-
ly cannot compete, over the long
term, with the low-cost mass-pro-
duction methods of the modern
mechanized farm. He has not suf-
ficient land and will not buy the
necessary equipment.
Small Farmers Hit Hardest
Farm income has
average about 8 per cent since
1951. This decline has been felt
by all farmens, but particularly by
the smaller operators whose costs
are high. Some have had to close
up shop. Those in the Dust Bowl
area were dealt another severe blow
recently when Federal Crop Insur-
ance was discontinued in certain
sections. Withdrawal of this insur-
ance will be felt especially by the
small marginal farmer. Banks which
heretofore have been willing to
make loans to marginal farmers
with crop insurance protection are
now neither willing nor able to risk
their depositors’ funds. Someday it
may be possible to predict and con-
trol the weather. This should be a
great help to the farmer, but would
apply only to production, not to de-
mand. \
Government acreage control has
helped the small farmer compete
against his bigger brother to the ex-
tent that the large mechanized
operator has been forced to restrict
his output. This, however, is only a
stopgap measure and is unfair to
the mass-production farmer because
he cannot make full use of his
facilities. This reduces his efficiency
and ups his costs. Someday mechan-
ized farmers will revolt against this
artificial restriction in much the
same manner as the discount hous-
es are currently overthrowing the
Fair Trade laws.
Push-button Farming
Although the day of wholly-mech-
anized farms is still in the distant
future, some amazing devices have
been developed and are now in use.
The farmer can now push a button
to grind, mix, and serve feed to a
barnful of cows. Pushing another
button changes the feed formula and
the machine serves the hogs; push-
ing a third button prepares and
serves feed to the chickens. Talk
about the big-city automatic res-
taurants! Those who have done
chores on a farm will readily ap-
preciate the time and back-breaking
labor these machines save. I fore-
ONLY
YESTERDAY
Ten and Twenty Years Ago
In The Dallas Post
From The Issue of May 4, 1945
Register for canning sugar Mon-
day. Limit, twenty pounds per per-
son.
Rev. Russell Edmondson is called
to newly established Bible Church
in Shavertown.
Major Talcott Wainwright, form-
erly of Shavertown, dies in the
Philippines.
Boys and girls are needed on
farms. Sign up for vacation work.
Raymond Kuderka, Vernon, is
liberated from Belgian prison camp.
David Pascoe, 17, Carverton, nar-
rowly escaped death by electrocu-
tion, his father Philip, snatching a
live wire from him. David and his
younger brother Franklin were tos-
sing a roll of copper wire over a
power line to see it spark and burn.
The end struck Franklin's shoe,
David struck it off, freezing to the
wire and sustaining severe burns
of chest and hands. Voltage was
chair,
In the Outpost: David [Schmerer,
Iwo Jima; Richard Winter, . Italy;
George Swan, France; Herb Updyke,
Germany; ‘Charles Smith, Camp
Blanding; Lewis G. Sax, San Burno,
California.
Married: Marion Dover, Bunker
Hill, to A. J. Kisailus, Pringle.
Rev. Charles Gilbert marks his
tenth anniversary .at [Carverton
Charge. 4
Jack Jones, Shavertown, gets
Combat Infantry Badge, has seen
heavy duty.
Howard L. Piatt, Carverton, gets
group commendation in Saar-
Moselle area.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith, Kunkle,
receive posthumous purple heart
after the death of their son, Harry,
killed in action in Belgium, January
15.
From The Issue of May 3, 1935
Business campaign to end Satur-
day night with award of prizes.
Judges are Rev. Francis Freeman,
G. Harold Wagner, burgess, and
Peter D. Clark, president of Dallas
Businessmen.
Rev. W. S. York is transferred
from Alderson Charge to Bennett
Memorial, Wilkes-Barre. Other
Methodist churches retain their min-
isters.
Two ancient local copies of the
Ulster Gazette are adjudged reprints
of the original telling of the funeral
of George Washington.
Dallas American Legion gets
charter,
Chuck pot-roast, 19c¢c per Ib;
evaporated apricots, 19¢ per lb;
shad, 12¢ per 1b.; butter, 2 Ibs.. for
69c; window screens 35c; raisin
for 19¢; strawberries, 19¢ per qt.
cast that women will supersede men
in running certain farms.
Another valuable machine is the
hay and grain dryer, which roughly
corresponds to the ‘ housewife’s
clothes dryer. The dryer makes the
farmer less dependent on the weath-
er and lets him harvest at his con-
venience. It reduces spoilage and
gives him more value from his crop.
In addition, there are machines for
planting, spraying and harvesting,
plus countless practical gadgets that
efficient.
What Farmers’ Sons Should Do
I forecast the future is bright for
farmers who have well-located farms
and will adopt the new equipment,
and for the makers of this new farm
equipment; but I fear the days of
many stubborn, small marginal
farmers are numbered. Fortunately,
the impact of mechanization will be
gradual, but this is a problem which
should be recognized and planned
for now by the farmer and his chil-
dren. Government should get to-
gether with industry and try ‘to
make this transition as easy as pos-
sible. Farm workers especially
should face up to the situation
realistically.
In industry, the man who finds
work in his own line diminishing,
turns to another type of business.
He frequently does much better in
the new endeavor. In this connec-
tion, many small farmers and farm
workers have nothing to lose. Most
farm people have character, cour-
age and good health. They often
have the advantage of being handy
with tools. In planning and running
their farms they have had valuable
administrative and supervisory ex-
perience. What does this all mean?
To me it means that one of the
farmer’s sons or daughters might
do well to adopt the new conditions
and remain with the farm; but the
“hired men” with ambition had bet-
ter get jobs elsewhere. Employers
may well use the “Help Wanted”
ads in farm areas as job opportuni-
ties arise.
Kingston Twp.
Mrs. Bernice Kitchen, Franklin
Street, Shavertown, is a patient in
the Nesbitt Hospital, where she
submitted to surgery.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Edmondson
and sons, Ralph, Tommy and Doug-
las, Merrick, Long Island, are spend-
ing the week with Mrs. Edmondson’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hand-
ley, Main Street, Shavertown.
Richard Farr, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Farr, Lehigh Street, Trucks-
ville, is a patient in the Nesbitt
Hospital.
Mrs. Elizabeth Keller, Trucks-
ville, is a patient in the Nesbitt
Hospital.
SAFETY VALVE
APPRECIATE PUBLICITY
Dear Editor:
The Board of Directors of the “Old
Ladies Home” at their annual meet-
ing expressed their appreciation of
the publicity which your paper has
given us throughout the year.
Sincerely Yours
Virginia C. Welles
Secretary
oh Tales
ck had a rough time con-
business transaction the
s
o it when he had to deal
wi Lippett, Bob Brown, Bob
Fle d Bob Bachman.
; * x x
Li inally taken a brighter
side’ ouse . . . Sumner is
walk] again, He's still not
altoge tter, but much im-
is like a new ex-
and he is happily
legs” a good work
proved
periency
giving
out. :
s
- Graziano has had
Tho
bit & of formal educa-
tion T thi made a most pro-
found 5 the other night
while bein ed by Ed Mur-
row. In s bout this coun-
try, Rocky there was an-
other Amor d be jealous.”
wr
Sunday is y ... a day
we should ecial attention.
My wife and t our moth-
at too early
happens you
ou wonder if
ke them for
how as much
ers a few y
an age, and
feel badly bee
you didn’t ki
granted and fai
affection as you a ve, If you
have your mot. you, count
her you
your blessings,
love her on Mot
* v
will appre-
Anyone with ch :
ciate the story o foungster,
who, upon looking his tidy
immaculate bedroo: g: ‘OK!
Who's been messi ind my
room?” (Don Tobin, atures).
* Vi
I have an awful ti ping my
grass cut . . . my wi (daugh-
ter don’t seem to be Hid tious
as they used to be.
* * x
By the looks of some
it's a race to see whi
first . . . the blossoms
caterpillars. 1
* Ew
I heard a story about
efficient law officers who i
to round up eleven esca
a mental institution and
were returned. ;
* x =
a
Though a week never goes
someone doesn’t criticize
las Post, it’s amazing how
ulation keeps growing. It’s li
politician said, “I don’t care
you say about me as long
keep saying something.”
sw id :
It was a shame what ha;
to the Whitesell Brothers this w
They were going to advertise |
new model homes to be opened
inspection this weekend and,
gone it, someone-went and hom
them. That’s the kind of thing t!
makes a contractor mad. {
* * * i
WANTED: Young men, betw
the ages of 25 and 60, who have
an interest in this community, who
think it’s rewarding to serve a good
with other good men, who enjoy the
friendships gained in the atmosphere
of a country gathering . . . to serve
coming Library Auction.
| * *
Mrs. Mae E. Townend, Dallas R.
D. 2, is this week’s winner of two
FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1955
Theodore Bostons Are
Married Three Years
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore J. Boston
will celebrate their third wedding
anniversary May 8.
The couple was married in Christ
the King Church, Norfolk, Va., while
Mr. Boston was serving there with
the U. S. Navy. He is now aboard
the U. S. S. Jarvis, heading toward
the Far East. Before embarking, he
phoned his wife from (California,
Mrs. Boston, the former Marie B.
Backo, resides with Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Boston at Swoyerville. [She
is a former employee of Dallas 5
to $1.00 Store. :
»
Have Baby Girl
Mr. and Mrs. George Charney,
Dallas R. D. 1, have announced the
birth of a baby girl at Nesbitt Hos-~
pital on April 22. The Charneys
have two other children, George,
aged eight, and Gloria, aged five.
STATE POLICE SAY
The medium through which
we can do the most to improve
pedestrian safety is education.
This education includes im-
provement of our youth in the
schools and education of our
adults through maximum use of
posters, signs, newspaper re-
leases, and radio programs.
tre. Tickets are waiting for you at
The Dallas Post, Mrs. Townend.
Poet's Corner
Little Sammy's Thoughts
They call me Samuel, Sammy and
Sam
Until I wonder just who I am;
Please tell me which one I may be
Or do you suppose I might be all
three.
My mother loves me very, very
much,
I can tell it by her gentle touch;
And when around me is her loving
arm
I feel so safe from all that could
alarm.
Like sweet music is her voice as she
speaks to me
So gentle, low and soft as it can
be; ;
When her dear lips press my soft
I am so filled with joy I cannot
; ely know there are so many
a hws
~ I just wish I might see her shining
Se wings.
then for I see hér fly about
e's here, then there, now in,
~ now out.
)W, she’s bathing me, now I'm
being fed;
2 soon asleep I am in my little
xe
5)
Lan
vorld is filled with Mother and
her love, )
: all around me it’s below,
~~ above;
if she knows I love her too
IS so great, it fills me through
and through. -
ten by Sammy’s Grandmother
Mrs. W. M. Major
Lehman, Pa.
free tickets to the Himmler Thea-
of his very own... at the
SECOND NATIONAL
While he’s young, that’s the
time to build for his future.
Teach him—and all your child-
ren—that the best way to get
what you want in life is to
work hard and SAVE regular-
ly. Start him on the road to
thrift and financial security.
Open a savings account in his
name—make his tomorrows as
carefree as today!
Are You Using The FREE P
Lot At Our Kingston Offi
D NATIONAL BANK;
1H" Main Office
_1 Market at Franklin
Wyoming
p
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