TION A — PAGE 2 HE DALLAS POST Established 1889 “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its Tlst Year” Member Audit Bureau of Circulations Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association National Editorial Association The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local - Hospitals. « If you are a patient ask your nurse for it. We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu- scripts, photographs and editorial matter unless self - addressed, stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be held for more than 30 days. National display advertising rates 84c per column inch. Transient rates 80c. 3 Political advertising $1.10 per inch. Preferred position additional 10c per inch. Advertising deadline Monday 5 P.M. : Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged at 85¢ per column inch. ; Classified rates 5¢ per word. Minimum if charged $1.00. Unless paid for at advertising rates, we can give no assurance that announcements of plays, parties, rummage sales or any affair for raising money will appear in a specific issue. Preference will in all instances be given‘to editorial matter which has not previously appeared in publication. Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subscription rates: $4.00 a year; $2.50 six months. No subscriptions accepted for less than six months. Out-of-State subscriptions: $4.50 a year; $2.75 six months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c. When requesting a chunge of address subscribers are asked to give their old as well as new address. Allow two weeks for changes of address or new subscription to be placed on mailing list. Single copies at a rate of 10c each, can be obtained every Thursday morning at following newsstands: Dallas—Berts Drug Store, Dixon’s Restaurant, Helen's Restaurant, Gosart’s Market; Shavertown—Evans Drug Store, Hall’s Drug Store; Trucksville— Gregory’s Store, Trucksville Drugs; Idetown—Cave’s Store; Har- veys Lake—Marie’s Store; Sweet Valley—Adams Grocery; Lehman—Moore’s Store; Noxen—Scouten’s Store; Shawanese— Puterbaugh’s Store; Fernbrook-—Bogdon’s Store, Bunney’s Store, Orchard Farm Restaurant. Editor and Publisher— HOWARD W. RISLEY Associate Publisher— ROBERT F. BACHMAN Associate Editors~—MYRA ZEISER RISLEYMRS T. M. B. HICKS Sports—JAMES LOHMAN Advertising—TLOUISE C. MARKS Photographs—JAMES KOZEMCHAK Circulation—DORIS MALLIN Editorially Speaking: Costs Of Tax Collection Must Be Cut Along with increased taxes for school purposes in all Back Mountain communities, the costs of tax collee- tion have risen considerably in the past four years. Since the collectors in this area are paid on a percent- age basis every increase in the millage rate for State, County Municipality and Schools means a similar increase in the tax collector's take. This is a problem faced in many rapidly expanding suburban communities throughout the: State. In the Harrisburg area, for example, “there are a dozen boroughs and townships where,” according to the - Harrisburg Patriot, “tax collectors are now making from $10,000 to $25,000 a year.” Municipal officials and school directors should take a good hard lock at the rates they are paying out and act accordingly. 3 Fortunately something can be done about it! This is brought to the attention of the community this week in a letter to THE POST written by John Cashmark of Trucksville. It is a letter that everyone who is interested in some economy in government should read. : In a nut shell here is what has happened and here is what can be done about it. The costs of tax collection for Dallas Union School District—comnosed of Dallas Borough, Kingston, Dallas and Franklin Townships—have now risen to about $19,600 a year. This is a sizeable sum and considerably higher than when the taxpayers of Dallas Borough, as an example, were paying (8.7 mills instead of the current 105.1 mills plus $10 per capita and personal property taxes. The present rates for tax collection in various sub- divisions making up the Union District are: 5 percent in Dallas Borough; 4 percent, until the penalty period when the rate rises to 5%, in Dallas Township; 4 percent in Kingston Township, and a low of 3 percent in Franklin Township. It would probably be the better part of sense to have / all of the taxes for the Union District collected by one tax receiver at a lower percentage rate. This would automat- ically lower the costs of collection and at the same time give an adequate return to the collector. Unfortunately a law passed in 1956 prevents the School Board from appointing one collector or any other collector than those duly elected. There is, however, another way out. The School Boards and municipalities can cut the percentage they pay for tax collections. This would seem to be fair. Local tax collectors believe this is right for it costs them no more time to write 65 or 100 mills on their tax cards than it does to write in 25 mills. But if school boards and municipalities are going to take action officials of these districts will have to move fast. The law stipulates that the only time taxing dis- . tricts can slash rates whether the collectors like it not is every four years when the collection posts are up for election. This is one of those years and according to State fiscal experts the deadline is March 10, less than two months from now. What does the law provide for taxing districts that wish to slash present commission rates? Borough Councils and Township Supervisors, ir. pay- ( ment for municipal taxes collected, must hold to a percent- age basis. The upper limit is 5 percent of taxes collected, except in first class townships where the compensation cannot exceed $10,000. There is no lower limit. School districts are permitted under the School Code to pay on/a percentage or salary basis. The upper limit is five percent or its equivalent in salary. There is no lower limit. County Commissioners also pay on a percentage basis. They are faced with a different problem since they deal with many tax collectors. According to Section 36.1 of the Local Tax Collection Law the deadline for changing the percentage rate is “10 days prior to the last day fixed by law for candidates to withdraw their names from nomination previous to the day for municipal elections.” The Primary is fixed as the third Tuesday in May. This year it will be May 10. Candidates must file for nomination no later than 64 days before the Primary. That would be March 13. They have seven days after filing to withdraw. The last day for that ig March 20 and so the deadline for action to reduce the costs of tax collec- tion is March 10.. SUCCESSFUL INVESTING... Q. 1 keep hearing about the need for diversification, but how can a small investor diversify when real diversification would mean holding only one or two shares of each stock ? A. You are correct in thinking that diversification of this sort is carrying a good thing too far. If diversification strikes you as a good thing, do it as you go along. In a reasonable time you'll come to a fair approximation of it. There is more than one kind of diversifica- tion and one variety of it can be started even with a small portfolio. That is diversification by objectives, splitting your investments up into stocks with good stability and secur- ity of return and those with smaller réturn, but greater prospects of capital gains. High-grade stocks can be found in both categories, so that as a beginning investor you will not be neglecting the basic objective of protecting the principal. Q. Is it a good sign when the officers and directors of a company hold substantial amounts of stock in that company ? “A. Tt often is, but such holdings alone are not a signal to buy the stock. On the surface, substantial share ownership by management argues that those in best position to know the future direction of the company think that it’s on the way up. But such ownership should be studied against the background of sales, earnings and dividends over a period of years. The nature of stock-option plans, if in existence, should also be studied. In some in- stances, notably in the case of rela- tively new companies, a large man- agement interest reflects the fact that those who started the company are still in, the saddle and this may have no bearing on the investment quality of the stock. y Editor’s note: Questions on invest- ment may be addressed to the author of this column in cate of this newspaper. Those of general inter- est will be answered in this column. It will be understood that no ques- tions can be answered by mail. | Looking at -V With GEORGE A. end EDITH ANN BURKE Complete Coverage of the Presi- dential Inauguration will be carried by ABC-TV. Bill Shadel, ABC com- mentator, will serve as anchor man for the coverage, which will be pro- vided by more than 20 cameras at the Capitol and along the parade route, plus pooled camera positions where space limitations do not per- mit ABC-TV to have its own cam- eras. Coverage is expected to ‘include the President-elect’s departure from his Georgetown home, his arrival at the White house where he will be joined ' by President Eisenhower, their ride to the Capitol, the prepar- ations for the ceremonies and the ceremonies themselves, Following a brief luncheon at the Capitol, President Kennedy will take his place at the head of the parade and lead it up Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House. There he will take his position in the reviewing stand to review the entire parade, which is expected to last more than two hours. ABC-TV cameras and commenta- tors along with the other networks will keep the President in view through-out the program, except when he is waiting in the Capitol for the ceremonies to begin and during a portion of the luncheon. Inauguration sidelights — David Brinkley, who will be covering Inau- gural festivities for NBC-TV reports that not all of our Presidents went to their Inauguration in long pants. In fact, the commentator reports, it wasn’t until 1825 and the Inaugura- tion of John Quincy Adams that our Presidents decided against the knee breeches for full-length trou- sers. One of the most ornate Inaugura- tions was Washington’s second Inau- gural. President Washington rode behind a team of six silvery horses. He was dressed in a black velvet suit, had long black silk stockings, sported diamond buckles on ‘his knees and shoes, and carried a plain cocked hat.in his hand. Two at- tendents with long white wands cleared a path for him. Thoughts On Leaving—How does the outgoing President feel on In- auguration Day—having a world of responsibility one minute and vir- tually none the next. One commentator has some an- swers ready. Ray ‘Scherer traveled with Harry S. Truman on his train trip back to Missouri the day he became a for- mer President. As White House cor- respondent, he has covered Dwight D. Eisenhower throughout the eight years of his administration. On the train trip back to Inde- pendence, citizen Truman was “any- thing but aloof,” Scherer recalls. “He kept coming through the Pull- man car that we half-dozen report- ers occupied and talking to us—as if he didn't want to cut him self loose from the outside world too suddenly. “The next morning when he asked him what was the first thing he had done on reaching his home as an ex- President; Mr. Truman said: I carried the grips up to the attic.” Somehow that remark told the story more precisely than anything else THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JANUARY 19 1961 Of course the big historical Indian story of this area is the Battle of Wyoming and following Massacre | appointed to command, started from { July 3, 1778. Since this is almost a household word to native residents, any account in the column would be superfluous. The numerous histor- ical markers along route 309 north- ward awake an interest in events not so well known. It is said the Susquehannocks, called by the French Andastes, had about forty villages along the river. In the early 1600's the Iriquois started down the river and gradually | drove them out. There was a village at Tunkhannock reported in 1756 with a hundred Indians and prob- ably smaller villages at Mehoopany and Meshoppen. Wyalusing was an important Indian place and Tioga Point more so. and Indian force which attacked the Wyoming Valley congregated near Tunkhannock and left their canoes in the vicinity a few days before they struck. On September 14 following the Massacre, Captain Spalding with fifty-eight men and Captain John i Franklin with twelve men, mostly valley residents returned after the | battle, marched down the river to Shickshinny, then across the moun- tains to Muncy, joining Col. Thomas Hartley in a punitive expedition. Swimming rivers at midnight, mak- ing long hard marches, and fighting along the way, they struck and burned Queen Ester’s Town, near Tioga Point, on September 27. They arrived at Wyalusing at 11 o'clock the following night. The next day they ran: into an Indian force on a hill about four miles south of Wyalusing and, defeated them, but this did not stop sporadic raids on both branches of the Susquehanna, ‘in one of which Frances Slocum was captured right in Wilkes-Barre. On March 28, 1779 about 250 Indians attacked Fort Wyoming, burned some barns, and carried off about fifty cattle. The Congress belatedly decided to do something and authorized a real army move against the Iroquois, not only as a punitive measure but to prevent TAX FACTS FOR THE Rambling Around Bu The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters The combined Tory | A | their aid to the British. | Major General John ' Sullivan, | Easton and assembled his army at | Wilkes-Barre where for five weeks | supplies were accumulated. Event- | ually the following were organized | and ready to go: Proctor’'s Pennsyl- vania Artillery, Poor’s New Hamp- | shire. Brigade, Maxwell's New Jersey | Brigade, the 11th. Pennsylvania | Continentals, a German regiment, and Schotts Independent Corps. The troops furnished by Pennsylvania were comparatively few in number | causing much criticism. The army | had eight pieces of artillery and am- | munition, salt meat, flour, other | supplies and baggage, loaded into | 214 boats and on 1220 pack horses. | A heard of 600 cattle was driven along for fresh meat. The whole | army made a line about two miles | long on the march and in a day | made only the distance we make {now in a few minutes. The route | was along the river, requiring three | days to Tunkhannock and seven to | Sheshequin. A Fort was built at | Tioga called Fort Sullivan. Here | General James (Clinton joined with additional troops from New York. The Indian town of Chemung was easily taken but the Indians put up a fight on a hill near Newtown about fifteen miles from Tioga. About two hundred and fifty Tories, under the same John Butler, who had com- manded them at Wyoming, assisted the Indians but they were soundly defeated. The Indians assembled for a two-day council at Queen Cath- erine’s Town near Montour Falls and decided to abandon everything and flee to Fort Niagara. This town had thirty or forty good houses with fine cornfields and orchards. All through the Finger Lakes country were found laid out towns of good houses, barns, stacks of hay, horses and cattle, fine gardens in which were growing onions, peas, beans, squashes, potatoes, turnips, cab- bages, cucumbers and melons. The orchards contained apples, peaches, and pears. In all about forty towns were destroyed, also the orchards and growing crops. HOMEOWNER NO. 1 THEFT, DAMAGE AND DESTRUCTION OF PROPERTY (The following article is the first in a series of four articles on income tax filing prepared for this newspaper by the Committee on Taxation of the Pennsylvania Institute of Certified Public Accountants and in cooperation with the local district office of the Internal Revenue Service.) All of us at some time have been confronted with a loss. Possibly a minor loss, such as a youngster losing the store money on an ‘errand after school, or a more serious one of having your home burglarized. Webster defines loss as an act or fact of losing, especially an unintentional parting with something of value. The Internal | Revenue Service accepts this definition. However, for a loss to be deductible for tax purposes, it must be sustained during the taxable year and must arise from fire, storm, theft or other casualty. By other casualty, we can assume that it would in- clude such losses similar to those arising from fire or storm, if occasioned by natural or other external forces in an event due to some sudden, unexpected or unusual cause. Theft Losses For a loss by theft to be deductible, two questions must be answered. Was the property actually stolen and, what is the amount of the loss? The mere act of mis-laying a diamond ring, | or losing a wallet containing money are not to be considered as losses deductible for tax purposes. However, having your camera stolen from your locked car is a loss by theft. In order to substantiate your claim of loss, a copy of the information furnished to the police reporting the theft should be retained. Also the newspaper clippings of the incident should be kept. The amount of the loss is best or other receipt for payment supported by a cancelled check and an appraisal of the lost article. Actually, the amount is measured by the fair market value of the property at the time of the theft, but not in ex- cess of its cost, reduced by any insurance received. At the time of preparing their income tax returns, many taxpayers forget about the damage to trees and shrubs caused by storms and other natural forces during the year. The amount of the loss is the difference between the fair market value of the whole property before and after the damage. It should be emphasized that restoration cost is not to be accepted as a measure of loss. Another type of loss that is occasionally for- gotten or mistaken as not being deductible is one that arises from damage in an automobile collision. The amount of loss is the difference between the market value before and after the accident, not in excess of its cost, reduced by any insurance proceeds. Losses discussed to this point have all had one point in common, i.e., suddenness. There are occasions where a casualty can happen over a period of time and still be an allowable loss, for instance, damage caused by termites. An example of such deductible loss would be the case where the property was free from termites when acquired, but less than a year later in- festation was discovered and the destroyed property replaced or repaired. In order for any loss to be deductible, the property involved must be owned by the taxpayer claiming the loss. : To summarize, we can say that in the event of loss, you must be prepared to support the deduction by evidencing the following: 1. Nature of incident. 2. Ownership of property. 3. Description of property. 4. Cost or appraisal, 5. Fair market value before and after casualty. 6. Insurance recovery. : You can get additional information on casualty and theft deductions from the instruction booklet issued by the Internal Revenue Service each year. Harry Truman could have said.” Scherer says that President Eisen- hower walked out on the North Por- tico of the White House the other day, watched the work going for- ward on the reviewing stand and remarked “I feel like the fellow in jail who is watching his scaffold being built.” : Scherer reports that the President will maintain a permanent apart- ment in Washington to keep in touch with domestic and interna- tional problems, He will also begin work on another volume of memoirs which will take him from his presi- dency of Columbia University through his post-war assignment in Europe and his two terms in the White House. : He and Mrs. Eisenhower would part of (Africa, perhaps Australia and New Zealand. Travel will be by sea. Classified Ads Get Quick Results like to travel to Japan, Scandinavia, | ~ ONLY YESTERDAY | Ten and Twenty Years Age In The Dallas Post IT , HAPPENED 30 YEARS AGO: Va traffic accident near Harter’s Dairy injured three persons, one | seriously. Jean Dixon, 24, had a leg amputated, and lost the other foot. - The car in which she was a passenger skidded = on the ice, crashed into a Ford driven by Wil- liam A. Austin of Beaumont. Richard Puterbaugh of Shavertown, driving another Ford, crashed into the wreckage. Frank W. Moore, 64, died at his home in Idetown. Editor of the Twin Falls Daily News, Idaho, pays a tribute to Macy | Hoover, formerly of Dallas, who died December 5, citing his outstanding and owner of the Gregg Business College at Twin Falls. Twelve inch ice is providing heavy freight traffic, as harvesters find good cutting weather at Moun- tain Springs. George IS. Baer, lifelong resident of Hunlock Creek is buried at Oak- dale. Game Commission has purchased and released 156 raccoons. Thous- ands of live rabbits are being shipped in from Missouri. Mrs. James Patton, Noxen, suf- fered a fatal heart attack, aged 71. Sixty free tickets to the Himmler Theatre will be given away by the Dallas Post. The shortest route between Wash- ington, D. C., and Ottawa, Canada, runs directly through Dallas. Game law prosecutions are at an all-time high as families in need of food hunt out of season. IT HAPPENED 20 YEARS AGO: All First National directors are reelected, and C. A. Frantz retains the presidency. / Influenza is sweeping Idetown and Lehman. Dallas firemen will produce a show written by Fred Kiefer and John Heffernan, ‘Let Us Council.” William Bennett, Trucksville school director died of a heart attack following pneumonia. $ Mrs. Alice Weaver, daughter of pioneer settlers of Vernon, is dead at 75. Mrs. Ada B. Holcomb, Huntsville, is celebrating her 86th birthday. Elizabeth Niehmeyer of Dallas of Baltimore January 11. Entries for the 25th annual Penn- sylvania Farm Show are breaking all records. 3 Benjamin F.. Winters of Loyalville died at his home, aged 61. er v/ Free Methodist Church in Trucks- ville was damaged by an overheated furnace pipe. Shavertown, Trucks- ville and Dallas responded to the alarm. Fred Kehrle of Factoryville, area dog-catcher, issues a last warning to owners of unlicensed dogs. Wp skating at Harveys Lake. AND 10 YEARS AGO: 5 ivi. 7a vA public forum is to be held on school jointure at Kingston Town- ship: high school January 23. The Citizens Committee will answer questions. Charles Hemenway writes up the Farm Show, listing local winners: Ralph Sands, yearling heifers; Hill- side Farms, shorthorns. i Ducks flock to White Lake, where there'is some open water. og: Grace Barrall heads the model in- stallation of FHA at the Farm Show in Harrisburg. Grace is president of Lehman and Luzerne County FHA. Kenneth Hughes, four year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hughes, Trucksville, is recovering slowly ‘after a sledding accident. Mrs. Nellie Blizzard, 80, died at her home in Noxen after along ill- ness. Mrs. Sarah Jane Ball, mother of Mrs. Lloyd Kear, died at Minersville. Leona (Cigarski, Chase, became the bride of Carl A. Aston, of Hunlock Creek. Ruth Wilson Laurence, Massa- chusetts, is wed to John Durbin, a former resident of Dallas. SAFETY VALVE CALLING CARDS To the people of Dallas Twp., Our deep appreciation to all of you nice folks in the Dallas area for your warm welcome and many kindnesses to us newcomers to this beautiful country. But please—won’t you keep your dogs at home? Our back yard seems to be a public meeting place (and comfort station) for all the dogs in Luzerne county. Our own pet, in accordance with the local ordinance, is confined on a short rope, a rope which he breaks al- most daily in his pantic efforts to run loose with his “visitors.” Call- ing cards” of the latter can be buried in the snow — but I shudder to think of the spring and summer months, when we will want to use our yard and patio for other things besides a way side rest for stray dogs. ~ New resident Hislops Remarried Louise Williams Hislop and Robert Wayne Hislop, Franklin Street, Dal- las, were remarried in Dallas Metho- ‘dist Church on Friday, January 6. Rev. Russell Lawry performed the ceremony in Dallas Methodist Church. : contribution to education as fcunder | Take | became the bride of Edward Jones | / nn DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA From the office at the Dallas Post. We've been changing things you'd better drop around to see “Does it make any difference that they were invisible. This desk is right in the lime is no concealment. : : “I see you roll your socks,” flanked on one side by a filing ca case. gores to afford a little ease. tion. 2 rolled socks.” “and I seem to.detect a slight sli ination.” “How DO you hold them up, do it with thumbtacks.” Pillar To Post . gh There are some odd sidelights to the recent upheaval around The next morning I came in and demonstrated. “That, Howard,” I disillusioned him, ST Howard called up late Saturday afternoon. around a little, he confided,” and how you like it.” whether I like it or not?” “You'll have a lot more room. Come and have a look.” : Inspection proved that I did have more room. Right in the middle of a lobby, with traffic tramping past. c On Monday, when I took over the new desk, I found I was going to have to trim my sails. No more hunching down over the type- writer and ignoring the cash customers at the counter on the grounds -light (whatever that is) and there 8 In fact, there is no concealment, period. For anything. : I was beating out a spot of copy with smoke spiralling up fi pm the typewriter, when Howard glanced in my direction. ; he announced blithely. “I'm the flapper type,” I responded, whisking down my shire” Then I readjusted my typewriter table so that it faced the wall, binet, on the other by a tall book- It's these modern short skirts, tight all the way down, with no But you never know how they look, until you arrange a group of women for a photograph, or chance to ‘sit just below the head _ table, which seldom hag a long enough tablecloth to cover the situa- “See? No “Well, ' well,” he responded in a congratulatory tone of voice, mming of the waist-line, too.” Mis a figment of the imag- then?” he wanted to know. “That, Howard, is my little secret, but I'll let you in on it. I : Homes Homes on wheels have grown up since the first Reo Speed-Wagon in 1924 tailored a truck body to ac- commodate four passengers, for eat- .| ing and sleeping, with wings that let down at night to form two double beds, and adjusted during the day to form backs for the couches. : None of the amenities were con- sidered. ‘There was a small gasoline powered stove, but everything re- quiring water was left up to the filling stations. : The sixty-foot monsters that tour the nation’s highways at the present day, or establish themselves perma- nently in trailer courts are a far cry from the home-made jobs that succeeded the Reo Speed-Wagons. Some of the trailers. .come .in sections, - to be “put together ‘upon arrival, simulating a modern house with a gently peaked roof. One such trailer may bbe seen at the trail- er park near Dallas Outdoor Theatre. ‘A ‘morning ‘call on’ Mrs. Stanley Farr at White Birch Trailer Court was illuminating. BAR Mrs. Farr much prefers living in ‘a trailer to living in a house. Trailers have changed a lot since the: first one ‘she lived in at Chattanooga, Tennessee, while - her husband ‘was engaged in construction work at.the air ‘force |base shortly after Pearl Harbor was attacked... .. The couple had three children, and three children looked like a whole herd in ja thirty-foot trailer; In those days, there was no. water, no disposal plant. Construction work- ers’ trailers, parked in a farm’ yard at great ‘profit. to’ the farmer, had access “to a. fairly substantial Chic Sale. Trailer owners carried, water by the bucket, and. if a child upset the bucket, it classified as a catas- trophe. | i : HAY ~The Farr trailer had a couch at either end, and a gasoline stove that had to be pumped up. Trailers had not yet taken on the modern look. A great many were carpentered to order and built short enough so the car and taking off. Most modern trailers require truck service. The Farrs abandoned trailer living when ‘they moved to their home on Lehigh Street in Trucksville. For sixteen years they gave not another thought to trailers. : And then they dropped in at the White Birch Trailer Camp for a visit. : The fifty and sixty foot trailers were modern and delightfully liv: able. equipped with small furnaces, efficiently engineered kitchen and bath, plenty of privacy, beautifully decorated, and with every cubic inch of space cleverly utilized. Three years ago they moved to White Birch. A look out of the glass-louvered windows showed a number of small children playing around. . Space be- tween trailers showed lopsided snowmen. A two-year old sat down hard on the slippery road, and roared. His mother rescued him. “How does it work, having small children in a trailer? Aren’t they under foot all the time? And how is it possible to keep up with the laundry 2" : Eh 0: Mrs. Farr knew the answer to that one. ‘‘Aren’t small children under foot all the time anyway, no matter how big the house is? It’s easier to keep track of them if they can’t get too far away. And as for the laundry, many of these trailers have combination washers and dryers.” “How about you? Do you have a washer?” “No, I do things the easy way. I take my laundry to the Laundromat, and while I shop, it washes itself, and while T shop a little more, it dries in the big cylinder.” There is space at the White Birch for twenty-four trailers. There is a certain amount of moving in and out, but a surprising number of trailers stay put. There's one man, a retired baker, who used to spend On Wheels Have Grown Into Modern House Trailers there was no problem in hitching | # He is con- ut for an invita- somebody's trailer ‘bake some nice fresh ke cheese blintzes. - His pment isn’t large ‘enough him, as he has one of the r trailers. 3 e number of small children is going to be augmented shortly. Babies are very much the thing at the trailer court, and neighbors keep a solicitous eye on expectant moth- res. : : “How. about water freezing in the pipes during zero weather? 1 see all the trailers are sitting up on their wheels, and there is an airspace beneath. : 3 “We've never had any frozen pipes. There’s an electrically heated tape wound around the pipes, that | we switch on in really cold weather to keep the pipes warm. They think of everything around here.” “How's the water supply, 7” ° “It’s marvelous. And sewagg. is taken care of in large septic ca Mrs. Farr explained about the Hislop trailer. © : ! “It came in two long secs, and was slid onto its foundation and ‘bolted together. But it didn’t all come at the same time. Coming in from the factory, the second section was struck by a tornado and rolled over on the road. There was quite a gap of time in there, before it could be reconditioned and continu ‘its overland haul.” ’ “Bolted together side by side, the two sections make a house fifty feet long and’ twenty feet wide, with a large living room at one end. A ‘room that would normally be used ‘ag a bedroom, has been turned into an office. : ; : ‘One thing was puzzling: How did the manufacturers arrange matters so that the open sections of the large living room did not collect dust and road grime on the trip east? : Sh a © Both sections were protectedffith plastic. When they pulled slowly | into the parking lot in the wake of a huge truck, they looked as if they had been gift-wrapped. The trggfer, inside and out, is as clean as a new pin. g : 3 g/ The trailer court gets together for picnics in the summer, minds each others babies, cooperates in giving people lifts into town, and is gen- uinely sorry when nice neighbors move away. z The dairy and the cleaning estab- lishment and the bakery truck makes deliveries. The school = bus stops at the driveway. 8.4 In summer, folks enjoy their shaded patios, and in winter they are cozy with small furnaces which cost far less to operate than even the most modest of furnaces in the most modest of houses. As This may explain why so kz young married couples, and so ¥gny elderly couples, live in trailers, Tt costs less, with no diminotion of comfort, and it is convenient. If a man is transferred, his house is ready to go with him, and there is no mighty upheaval of moving. There is always another trailer court at the end of the line, and another set of interesting neighbors. Mrs. Alvin A. Shaffer Is Showing Improvement Mrs. Alvin A. Shaffer is making good progress after returning home from Nesbitt Memorial Hospital where she was treated after suffer- ing a stroke on the night of De- cember 20. A well-liked member of the cafeteria staff at Westmore- land High School, Dolly wishes to thank the many students, mem- bers of the faculty and friends who ‘sent her lovely flowers and cards during her hospital stay. She still has little grip in her left hand but she has been able to walk out on the porch three days this week. ¢ PEATE ANNAN REE ITT A TE SR SERED Zr