The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, January 26, 1961, Image 1

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® Robert Girvan Has Front Row Seat | |
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70 YEARS A NEWSPAPER
Oldest Business Institution
Back of the Mountain
THE DALLAS POST
ORchard
TWO EASY TO REMEMBER
Telephone Numbers
4-5656 OR 4-7676
VOL. 73, NO. 4, THURSDAY,
African Teacher
To Appear With
Fritz Hendricks
Township PTA Will
Hear Both Speakers
Tonight At School
Fritz Hendricks, speaker for
Dallas Township PTA tonight, will
have with him Matthias Ogutu,
headmaster of a school in Kenya,
Africa, in the United States in the
interests of a teachers development
program sponsored by the govern-
ment,
The business meeting will start
at 8, to permit the program to start
at 8:30.
Mr. Hendricks, former supervis-
ing principal of Lehman schools,
went to Millersville as supervisor
after leaving Lehman, and has for
the past eight years headed a four-
~ district school jointure at Shilling-
ton, the product of his organization.
Shillington jointure, recognized
as one of the finest in the State,
with curriculum extending from
kindergarten through the twelfth
grade, is completing a five million
dollar construction program. A one
school is now under construction.
Mr. Hendricks will be the guest
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nuss. Mr.
Nuss served on the Lehman school |
board at the time Mr. Hendricks
Credit Union
Has Good Year
Natona Group Has
Its ‘Annual Meeting
Natona Mills Employees Federal
Credit Union held its tenth annual
meeting Saturday night at 0O’Con- |
nell’s Kingston House with more
than 100 members and wives pres-
ent.
JANUARY 26, 1961
Harry H. Ritts, Jr., Receives Jewel
Harry H. Ritts, Jr., immediate
past Master of George M. Dallas |
Lodge 531, Free and Accepted |
Masons, receives the Past Master's |
MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION
King Winter Holds Huntsville In His Grip
(jewel from Hayward Lancio at the
St. John’s Day dinner held Thursday
night at Irem Temple Country Club.
Photo by Kozemchak
Blizzard Does Not Discourage
Crowd From Attending Dinner
St. John's Day dinner of (George |
| M. Dallas Lodge 531, F&AM, Thurs- |
| day night at Irem Country Club, at- |
| tracted a good crowd in spite of |
heavy snow. \
Rev. Robert D. Yost was the |
John Fisher, president, presided.
The Credit Committee report was |
given by Bernard Kriso and the]
Supervision Committee report was
by Anna Manzoni.
the treasurer’s report.
The three openings existing on |
the Board of; Directors were filled
by the elechann of “Nicholas [Fons
asak, Mrs. Elizabeth Reese and Mrs. |
Betty Jones.
At the reorganization meeting of
‘the Board of
Tomasak was elected president;
Elizabeth Reese, vice president; Wil- |
liam Chik, secretary; Joe Harris, |
treasurer, and Mrs. Elizabeth Jones,
assistant treasurer.
Named to the Credit Committee |
were: Arthur Gosart, Victor Me- |
Carty and Bernard Kriso.
Mrs. Raghnild Johnson was named
chairman of the Supervisory Com-
mittee with Mrs. Della Bellas and
Elizabeth Ellman as the other Super-
visory committee member.
A buffet luncheon was served.
Rear End Collision
At Minus 10 Degrees
‘Chief Russell Honeywell was called
to a rear-end collision Wednesday |
morning at 3.
intersection of route 309 with 115,
were able to move off under their
surance.
A small boy in the back seat of
the New Jersey car driven by George
Bee, piped, “Boy, it’s cold!” It was
ten below zero.
John Garbish = from Scranton,
stopped his car at the stop sign, |
and the New Jersey car, on sleek
ice, polished by gusts of snow, was
unable to stop.
Giant Cake For Rotarians
A six-foot cake bearing the in- |
scription “Sorry, This Won't Happen |
Again” greeted members of Dallas |
Rotary Club when they were guests
of Kingston Rotary Club’ at the
Kingston House Thursday night as |
winners of a 100-percent attendance
contest between the two clubs.
Joe Harris gave |
Directors, Nicholas
Both cars, locked at |
own steam. Both drivers had in- |
principal speaker, taking as his sub- |
ject his summer trip to Europe; and |
stressing friendliness of the con-
tinent toward Americans.
Ted Wilson introduced Myron |
| Baker, toastmaster. A past master’s |
jewel was presented to Harry H. |
Ritts, Jr.,
shipful Master Harry D. Swepston,
| Jr., introduced officers for 1961.
Present were Frank E. Wagner, !
Sr., Frank Wagner? Jr.; Henry E.
| Schimmel, Nelson J. Richards, Ww.
| H. Krimmel, David C. Jones, Paul!
M. Williams, Garwin Tough, G. D. |
| Tough, Robert Speare, James Ko- |
| zemchak, Raymond J. Daring, Lloyd |
| Williams, Joe Sekera, Harry Craw-|
| ford, + Allen @ Williams, = Thomas |
| Kreidler, Glenn M. Howell, Thomas
| G. Williams, Daniel E. Meeker, John
N. (Graves, R. Stewart Ferguson, |
, John H. D. Ferguson.
| Robert Bennett, Lewis R. Hack-
| ling, Russell Newell, Alan R. Rood,
| Alger P. Antanitas, Leonard R. |
Heverly, Roy A. Dendler, Thomas
D. Swainbank, Harold Bennett, John |
| P. Havir, Alfred M. Feist, R. bo
| Wagner, Robert J. Costello, Harold
| Zismeninen, Duncan Whitehead, O. |
A. Allen, Mervin L. Knaub, William |
[ E. Strange, Stuart L. Thomas, Har-
old Heidel, David J. Thomas,
William Lewis, William James,
| Wesley Lamoreux, Michael Slimal,
Roland Gensel, Andrew Kozemchak,
| Carl E. Johnson, Milton J. Evans,
| John 'M.: Porter, John C. Kuder,
| Clarence W. Payne, Gordon Yetter,
William L. Wagner, Sherwood Wil- |
| son, Jack Strickland, John N:|
Landis, Granville H. Sowden, L. L.
Richardson, Stephen Johnson, W.
M. Porter, Robert H. Voelker, Wil-
liam Pugh, Charles D. Lemmond, Jr.
Abram Nesbitt, H. Elwood Meyers,
William Meyers, Clarence D. Hunter,
Eugene W. Traver, Edgar Lashford,
| Thomas R. Morgan, Jr.,
by Hayward Lancio. Wor- |
Jack E. Jones, J. Chester Hart- |
man, Fred W. Malkemes, Obed |
Hontz, Clyde W. Birth, Richard J. |
| Holdredge, Willard Garey, Willard |
Hoover, John Heider, Harry L.
Wood, Jr., Robert Stephenson, Ed-
ward S. Powell, Frank Gelsleichter,
| Jr., William Berti, Dick Oliver, |
Selling Programs At Inauguration
A Dallas young man, Robert Gir- |
van and architectural student at
Catholic University, Washington,
D.C., was right in the middle of
things at the inauguration of Presi- |
dent John Kennedy.
Along with fifty other
where the swearing in ceremonies
~ took place.
Did he mind the cold and stormy |
weather ? “Not at all”, he told
his mother Mrs. Francis Girvan, 45, |
"North Lakeside
Drive,
phone conversation, ‘I'm used to
northern winters.”
Earlier this winter, Robert was
among a group of R.O.T.C. stu-
dents at Catholic University who |
made a flight to Miami, Florida, to
see the Army’s Jet Bombers. The |
flight was eventful because they |
‘were supposed to be back in school
on Friday and were unable because '
students |
from Catholic University he sold |
programs in. front of the stands
in a tele-|
| Mrs. John Girvan Lake Street, |
Monday at 6 AM. Even then they |
were unable to land in Washington
but had to put down in. Baltimore.
Bob will arrive in Dallas for his |
| mid - winter
night and
Wednesday. His brother,
a senior
School at Bucknell University,
spending his mid-winter vatation |
with his parents this week.
Bob Girvan bears a grand
name. His . uncle the late
Robert Girvan, son of Mr. and
return to classes next |
| was a [lighting Irishmen who
| volunteered fer a dangerous
assignment in Italy and was
killed during World War II. He
was a graduate of Dallas Town-
ship High School and known to
everybody in the Dallas of
| those days. — Editor
|
| brand,
Irish,
| Lewis,
of storm conditions to return until |
vacation on Friday | 3
Theodore, |
in the (Civil Engineering |
is |
Charles Dressell,
Glenn Stroh, Sr.,
Milne, Thomas Neyhard, David
Thomas, Jr., Jack W. Stanley, Rob-
ert Nygren, Harry H. Ritter, Sr.,
William Eicke, Sheldon Patton,
Robert Lewis Chaplain, Clinton D.
| Smith, Sr., Carl H. Remley, Charles
| Sakoski, Jr., Charles F. Quinn,
Earl Borchet, Robert A. Rave,
Edward Hartman, Melvin Morris,
Glenn Stroh, Jr.,
Fred Nicely, Bob |
| William Atherton, D. Wayne Black-
mer, Harold Bryson, Walter C. Hilde-
Michael Sabonis, John Par- |
Willard R. Piatt, G. esley |
Charles Van Buskirk, Ray-
imond C. Hyatt, Kenneth Bayliss, |
Edwin Roth, Sheldon Fahringer,
George Parry, Dick Houlette, Allan |
Nichols, James Alexander,
Graham, Robert Parry, Niles M.
White, Willard Rhone, Russell Cease, |
Richard Owens, ‘Dominic ‘Merolla, |
Dr. R. M. Bodycomb, Richard Body- | scooping it up in her arms.
comb.
Robert Yetter, John Bradochek, |
| George M. Jacobs, Alfred Sassaman, |
Sheldon H. Morgan, Joseph Ash-
| bridge, = Harold Britt, Sherman
Kunkle; Loren Cragle, Jr., Glenn.
| Case, George H. Bronson, Vernon
Cease, ‘Laing Coolbaugh, Marc Ruch,
R. R. Phipps, Tex Wilson, Harry
| Hughey, D. E. Daron, Merl Bigelow,
John Penman, A. Parsons,
Bestwick, Samuel M. Harrison.
Discover Timber Theft
Benjamin Blaze, visiting his pro-
perty on Bunker Hill last week,
discovered that several large and
valuable trees had been cut from
his timber land. He reported the
theft to Kingston Township police
chief Herbert Updyke. Mr. Blaze,
Luzerne, whose house on Bunker
Hill was burned to the ground
three years ago, has property also
on Green Road, Kingston Township.
Not So Cold As Expected
It was not so cold as expected
Tuesday night. Just 10 below zero,
same as several nights in a row.
Robert |
Wade, Robert Thompson, Theodore |.
! Poad, Frederick Anderson, John R. |
| morning, when she found it’stuck | thirty-seven times:
New Housing
May Be Bright
Spot Of 1961
Herbert Hill Made
President Of Rural
Building And Loan
Herbert Hill, Shavertown florist,
was elected president at the twenty-
eighth annual meeting of Rural
Building Association held in the Di-
rector’s room of Dallas Branch Min-
‘ers National Bank.
Mr. Hill's late father, Herbert
Hill, was for many years a director
of the association.
Other officers elected were Dr. F.
Budd Schooley, vice president; Wil-
bur Nichols, secretary; W. B. Jeter,
‘treasurer; and Atty. Burt B. Lewis,
solicitor.
Directors reelected were: Edward
W. Hall, Howard Isaacs, Thomas P.
Garrity, L. L. Richardson, William
H. Baker, Jr., F. Allan Nichols,
Thomas G. Reese, G. Wilbur Nichols,
Granville H. Sowden, W. B. Jeter,
Dr. F. Budd Schooley, Frederick J.
Eck, Burt B. Lewis, Sheldon T.
Evans and Herbert H. Hill.
Rural Building & Loan Associa-
tion, founded in 1933, has assets of
$166,553. Throughout the years it
has confined its activities to the
rapidly growing Back Mountain
area and its board of directors and
officers are composed. entirely of
Back Mountain business .and pro-
fessional men.
In addressing the shareholders,
Mr. Hill said: “The high savings
level, coupled with ever increasing
repayments on outstanding mort-
gages assures an. ample supply of
home mortgage money for home
buyers in 1961.” :
“Looking ahead,” Mr. Hill sug-
gested ‘that the recent slowdown
in business probably contains in it-
| self the seeds of its own recovery.”
He listed as plus factors, a con-
tinued high level of sales, produc-
tion, employment and personal in-
come. He believes that housing
may be one of the’ bright spots on
the economy for 1961.
The vapour rising from the warm-
er water at outlet of Huntsville Res-
'ervoir has frozen to form this fan-
think that this was a frozen water-
tistic fairyland along the face of fall.
the dam. One might at first glance | vapour did the trick.
TEN
It is not. King Winter and
—Photo by Kozemchak
Dallas Firemen
Elect Officers
Peterson Retains
Presidency
Elected at the annual meeting of
Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Company
president; Stephen . Hartman, vice
president; William Baker, Jr., sec-
retary; Ray Titus, treasurer; Leslie
Tinsley and William Berti, trustees.
Al Shaffer was elected fire chief,
Rescues Loon From
Surrounding Drifts
Leave it to Mary Frantz. Unless |
| it starves to death for lack of fresh
[ fish, she has a loon. Since Sur: ay
Donald Bulford assistant.
Officers appointed were: assistant
| chiefs: Dan Richards, Howard Johns,
| William Berti; engineer, James
| Wertman; assistant engineer, Thom-
as Richardson; captain, Ray Titus.
Chief Shaffer reported that the
company during 1960 w.s called out
twenty grass
LS
in a snowbank' in a field, she has | fires, eight dwellings, four automo-
been cajoling it with a bass from!
biles, one garage, one restaurant,
| the deep freeze, and even with. a ["oge trailer, and one tree.
| can of crab meat, but to date it has |
|
Robert | refused nourishment.
Mary immured it in the duck pen
| after she had captured it by throw- |
{ing a car blanket over its head and
It’s |
{ about the size of a large goose. In |
fact, viewing it through binoculars |
as it floundered in the snow, unable |
to take off because of‘lack of open
water, Mary thought it was a Cana-
dian goose, and waded to the rescue
in high boots.
Thick Layer Of Snow
Prevents Deep Freeze
Les Warhola, manager of Dallas- |
Shavertown Water Company, says |
that the thick snow is a blessing, |
preventing the ground from freezing |
too deeply.
has never gone off since the tenth |
of December, protecting under- |
ground water mains during sub-zero |
temperatures.
Only two frozen pipes during the |
In the mid-thirties, |
entire period.
during six weeks of sub-zero
weather, thawing apparatus
used night and day, and' more
equipment had to be procured |
from Philadelphia.
In excavating for water connec-
tions for the new Laundricenter at |
Back Mountain Shopping Center,
two feet of frost was encountered |
few |
under bare ground, only a
inches under ground protected by |
snow. {
Snow came early, and |
‘was |
During the past year, 132 men
| responded to. calls. The company
| was assisted by neighboring com-
| panies of five occasions, and assisted
| others twice. Estimated fire loss
| during 1960 was $24,800.
Stuart Marks Spends
Frantic Hour At Avoca
|
|
Stuart Marks spent a hair-raising
half hour at Avoca airport Tuesday
afternoon, until a telephone call from
Pittsburgh informed him that his
| wife had not been:on the plane that
{ made a belly-landing, but on the
| one which had landed safely two
minutes earlier:
Louise got off instead of coming
on to Avoca, where she was due to
land at 2:30, and spent the night
{ with relatives. All planes were be-
ling buffeted by extreme turbulence
{as they wove themselves into the
| landing pattern. On Wednesday,
| planes came through without trou-
ble, and Mrs. Marks landed on sched-
| ule, after spending two weeks in In-
| dianapolis.
Schweiss To Receive
‘Psychiatric Examination
Kenneth Schweiss, 17, indicted by
the Grand Jury last week for |
murder of his father, State Trooper
Kurt Schweiss, at Dallas November
20,
| amination at Danville.
i 3%
|
|
|
|
|
|
| that remains of two
| properties that were destroyed with-
This is ‘all
in a matter of hours Saturday at
| Harveys Lake. :
| To the left is the Charles Caster-
! line home at Sunset where fire was
| discovered in a bedroom shortly
| before noon by Mrs. Rebecca Caster-
| line while her husband was at work
"| at Natona Mills.
| Mus. Casterline grabbed her four
| children, Mary Lou 12; George, 8; Jo | home was discovered by an airplane |
Saturday Fires Destroy Two Lake Properties
Ann, 4; and Karen, 2, and fled while
flames roared through the building.
Firemen arrived immediately but
they could save none of the contents.
The Casterlines carried no insurance.
To the right is all that is left of
the three-story property near Har-
veys Lake Picnic Grounds owned by
George Kanarr of Trucksville and
Charles B. Kanarr of Kingston.
Fire in the recently renovated
pilot, Daniel Yatsko, who landed his
ski-equipped plane upon the lake
and notified Daniel C. Roberts Fire
Company.
Jonathan R. Davis Fire Company,
Idetown; Lehman Fire Company,
Daniel C. Roberts Fire Company,
the same men and equipment who
‘had fought the Casterline Fire, plus
men and equipment from Kunkle
fought the Kanarr fire.
The property had af various times
house numbering adopted by Kings-
ton Township, Supervisors of Dal- |
Dallas Township Assigns Numbers
To Homes In Overbrook Avenue Area
Following ' the same system of |signed to North and South Yeager
[Avenue and to Ferguson Avenue in
Druid Hills,
were these officers: Henry Peterson,
las Township have engaged En- | Richard Griffith, superintendent
gineer John Jeter to assign house |of mails at Shavertown, asks all
numbers to homes in Dallas Town- | patrons to be sure to notify their
ship served with mail from Shaver- | correspondents of their house num-
town Postoffice. | bers.
Formerly these homes, mainly in | Engineer Jeter has had consider-
Fernbrook and Overbrook Avenue |able experience in assigning house
section received their mail by rural | numbers for he was employed in
carrier from Trucksville Postoffice. | the Engineers ' Office of Wilkes-
The properties now being as- | Barre City and was oné’ of ‘those
signed numbers by Engineer Jeter | who helped to number Wilkes-
are on North Pioneer Avenue from | Barre streets many years ago when
the vicinity of the Lacy home near | a uniform system was established
Shavertown Methodist church to | there. ; :
the Thomas Morgan property in Mr. Jeter says any householder
Dallas Borough. | can determine how far his home is
Overbrook Avenue from Fern-|from the place of the beginning of
brook to Huntsville has’ now been [the numbers by simply adding a 0
renamed East Overbrook from Me- {to his house number. For example
morial Highway to Fernbrook and |a householder living at number 447
West Overbrook Avenue from Me- | North Pioneer Avenue, by adding
morial Highway to Huntsville Dam. | 0 to his number, learns: that his
For the most part West Overbrook | home is 4,470 feet from ' Division
Avenue is serviced by Dallas R.F.D. | street at Mt. Greenwood Cemetery
routes. ! | (approximately Davis Street).
House numbers are also being as- |
Native Hawaiion Badly -
Montrose Bowl Bruised By Fall On Ice
Skiing is excellent at Notions Mrs. Willard Miner, admitted ' to
Ski Bowl, according to Mr. and Mrs. [Neo Memorial Hospital Saturday
Myron Baker who spent Saturday | | afternoon badly bruised and shaken
i and Sunday there. after falling on the ice on Miners
It was somewhat faster on Sun- | Bank parking lot in Dallas, returned
Skiing Good At
will receive a psychiatric ex- |
shaded, and the altitude of Mont-
rose is sufficiently high, to assure
by slopes are slow.
Saturday and Sunday from 10 a. m.
until dark.
ment of a young man, recently dis-
charged by the Army after several
| years service in Alaska.
.| Steak roasts are a popular feat-
| ure of the Bowl on certain Satur-
| days when the management pro- |
| vides a supply of salads, baked |
‘beans and other foods for $1.50
| with patrons providing their own
steak which is broiled over a big
{ open fire.
{ Information on skiing conditions |
can be obtained by calling Montrose |
{ Inn.
been owned by Judge Barnum, H. B.
Hale and Mortimer Goldsmith. The’
$20,000 insurance carried by the
Kanarrs covered only a small part
of the loss.
An effort is being made by friends
and neighbors to assist Mr. Caster-
line in rebuilding his home. Dona- |
tions of money ‘or materials may be |
sent to “The Casterline Building
Fund” in care of Charles Derr or
John Kriel, Harveys Lake,
day than Saturday. The slope is well | to her home in Meeker yesterday.
| Mrs. Miner, a native Hawaiian,
| spending her first winter in the
good skiing when many other near-| jpited States after coming here in
June from Hawaii, and accustomed
The Bowl is being operated every | to the balmy temperatures of ‘the
Island, thinks the snow is perfectly
The fee is $2.50 per | beautiful, but that the underlying
day with reduced rates after 3 p. m. | ice is treacherous.
The Bowl is under the manage- |
She lay for almost an hour on the
ice, unable to get to her feet,
covered with coats and blankets,
{ until Dallas Community Ambulance
| er ew took control. X-Rays showed
| system of house enumeration.
1.
Bake Sale Tomorrow
East Dallas Methodist women din
a bake-sale tomorrow at’ Shaver-
town Acme, starting at 10:30. Mrs.
Irvin Barber is general chairman.
CENTS PER COPY—TWELVE PAGE’
rd
Presbyterians
Plan To Build
Church In Area
No Site Has Yet
Been Selected
For New Edifice
Back Mountain will have a Pres-
of Presbyterians in the community
who wish to establish a place of
Wilkes-Barre. There is no Presby-
Tunkhannock.
For the past six months, an in-
tensive survey has been made in this
area, to indicate the need and the
demand.
Interested residents will meet to-
and Mrs. William Shuster in Trucks-
ville. :
Back Mountain people who are
willing to go ahead with the move,
are asked to get in touch with any
one of the following: Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. John H. Dungey, Mr. and
Mrs. R. H.
and Mrs. R. C. Ziegler, Trucksville.
The move to establish a Presby-
terian Church has the blessing of
pastors of the city churches, and of
the Presbytery.
No site has yet been selected. A
number of places suitable for an
edifice have been discussed. Definite
commitments of seventy-five
families lead the proponents to be-
lieve that adequate support will be
available, (and that more families
will realize the advantages of having
a local church. Presbyterians have
gram.
Dallas Postoffice
Staft Gives Book
Library Receives
Mailman, U. S. A.
Dallas Post Office employees have
placed upon the shelves of the Back
of “Mailman, USA” written by
chronicles the exciting
the development’ and
story of
of Letter
president.
Gate of Heaven school also re-
ceived a copy.
A letter written by Joseph Po-
lacky, Dallas Postmaster, and signed
by employees John Juris, E, W. Mc-
Dade, S. H. Drake, L. J. Reese, Al
Bellas, ‘Dorothy B. Moore, Edmund
G. Labatch; Allen Montross, Edward
M. Buckley, Joseph Lavelle, Jose-
phine Ostrum, and Andy Sokol, says:
“Dallas Public Library: On behalf
of the Dallas Post Office, we, the
Carriers, ‘as told bot its
this publication, ‘Mailman, USA,” for
your files, that it may serve as a
grateful tribute to all citizens of our
community for the privilege of hav-
by the community have been heart-
warming and are gratefully appre-
ciated. We trust this publication
will be of both aid and interest to
tents.
“Very respectfully submitted,
“Joseph Polacky, Postmaster.”
Pass Ordinance
‘Tuesday night. Kingston Township
Supervisors passed the ordinance
system of house enumberation.:
Keeps Township's
Residents of Dallas Township have |
reason to be proud of their Road
Department as they watch its four-
man road crew buck four-foot snow
drifts with modern equipment, day |
and night, on its twenty- -eight miles
of drifted highways.
Since the beginning of winter the |
tributed more than 319 tons of ashes
reserve supply.
The work of spreading ashes has
been made easier by the use of two
novel cinder spreaders which were
ervision of Fred .Lamoreux.
These spreaders,
three-horsepower Briggs & Stratton
motors, are easily attached to the
tail gates of the township trucks by
only two bolts and really add to
the efficiency of winter road main-
tenance.
Another big factor in Roenin
township roads clear is a new 9,000-
pound International BulldozZer-Pay-
loader that was put into operation
|only a few weeks ago at a cost of
$7,000. The loader cuts greatly into
the time and cost of loading cinders
and snow.
The Road Department also oper-
ates two big trucks—one an Inter-
i]
\
Township Road Department has -dis-
and is now cutting heavily into its |
constructed this fall under the sup-
powered by
Small Crew With Modern Machines ;
28 Miles Open
| national and the other a giant “Ford.
| With this modern equipment, Su-
pervisors Fred Lamoreaux and Wil-
| liam Brace assisted by Clifford
Shields and Robert Strohl,
been able to keep all the roads
| open without difficulty in even the
most extreme weather.
The hills, of course,
pervisors, mindful that school buses
and mail must go. through every
day, have given them special con-
sideration.
{ parking lot and area around Dallas
Junior High School open during the
| severest days.
Like all crews in the Back Moun-
hours and whenever conditions war-
ranted’ it,” frequently starting at 2
a. m, and continuing around the
clock.
“We don't set a special time to
start work,” Supervisor Lamo
says” we let the weather determ?
when to start. We've learned tha}
‘you can’t wait. In some places the
drifts have been four feet high but
any motorists.
wy 4
byterian Church, a four-year dream
worship nearer than Kingston or
terian church between Kingston and
morrow night at the home of Mr.
Thomas Longmore, Dallas; Mr. and
Mnrs. Lester Hauck, Shavertown; Mr.
Carmon, Dallas; or Mr.
a strong children and youth pro-
Mountain Memorial Library a copy
William © C. Doherty. The book
following employees, wish to present
all who shall dwell upon its con-
At a brief adjourned meeting
changing the names of a number of |
streets and adopting a Erion 5
“have 2
are the Sup
| hardest to keep open, but the Su- =
tain area, they have worked at all
with our equipment, which I think MY
is about the best in the area, we've
had practically no complaints from ;
3
&
accomplish- 3
ments of the National Association
5
ing been able to serve them in our
capacity as mail carriers and clerks.
“The kindnesses extended to us
They have also kept the |
)