ON A — PAGE 2 “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its 71st Year” \ 3 : VIED ~~ Member Audit Bureau of Circulations 3 Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association ° National Editorial Association Cuca The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in loeal Hospitals. H¥ you are a patient &sk your nurse fof it: We will not be responsible for thé return of unsolicited mani= scripts, photographs and editorial mattér unléss self = addressed, stamped envelope is enclosed, and in ne case will this material be held for moré than 30 days. National display advertising rates 84¢ pér column inch. Transient rates 80c. Political advertising $1.10 per inch. Preferred position additional 10¢ pér inch. Advertising deadline Monday 5 P.M. Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged at 85¢c per column inch. Classified rates 5¢ per word. Minimum if charged $1.00. 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Single copies at a rate of 10c edch, ean bé 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. RACHMAN Associate Editors—MYRA ZEISER RISLEY,MRS T. M. B. HICKS 2 Sports—JAMES LOHMAN Advertising—LOUISE C. MARKS Photographs—JAMES KOZEMCHAK Circulation—~DORIS MALLIN Editorially Speaking: iE DALLAS POST Established 1889 go down; money is easier. | 95, with a current yield of 4.74 per buys on the basis of tips and ‘to invest through a broker. Opportunity Without Takers Medicine today offers more opportunities and re- wards than ever before. But the signs say that many young persons are failing to take advantage of them. This unhappy piece of intelligence comes from the American Medical Association. The number of applicants for admission to the nation’s 85 medical colleges has been dropping. In 1947, for instance, nearly seven per cent of all college graduates made applications to these schools. In 1958, only four per. cent did. There are known reasons why. The low birth rate of the 30's is one. Also, multi- plying opportunities in other professional fields are believed to be diverting possible medical candidates. The pity of it is, as the AMA points out, that those who pass up medicine today are doing so at a time when it has become one of the most rapidly progressing fields of all, offering maximum promise for a young man or woman. In 1940, medic4l research amounted to $45 million—the 1960 figure was roughly $600 million, and predictions for 1970 go as high as $3 billion. The deniand for medical researchers in the future will be matched only by the opportunities, So far as the individual is concerned, the possible rewards are great, and the greatest one by far is the doc- tor’s capacity to do so much good for so many people. All of us should want to leave the world a little better place because we passed through it. The M. D. degree offers one big way of doing that. It's A Tough World The foundation stone for juvenile delinquency is frequently laid in the super-market. Children who are permitted by their parents to roam the store while Mother selects her groceri€s, pose 4 con- stant problem to the store manager.’ : Shall he complain to the mother when he spots her child tearing open a sack of hard candy and filling his mouth and his pockets? Shall he bear in mind that the mother is a good customer, and that her weekly food bill passes the fifty dollar mark? Can he risk offending her? One such manager recently found that a small child had opened three cellophane bags of candied cherries, taking oné cherry from each bag. He escorted the small culprit to the mother, showed her what the child had done, and asked her to pay for the - merchandise. 3.0 “But he’s a VERY small child.” the mother responded, and he didn’t know any better.” i Why didn’t he know any better? After the mother’ has paid 90 cents apiece for the three sacks of opened cherries, will she see to it that he DOES know better, or keep him with her as she makes _ her rounds? Children who habitually pick up candy bars and stuff them in their pockets, are on the road to the juvenile court. : Property rights are extremely important. A child who steals candy when he is five years old, is laying the . corner stone for a light-fingered future. The second time is always much easier than the first. He is a very lucky little boy indeed if he is caught the first time. It is no favor to a child to let him establish a habit which will get him into trouble later. ' It will be a blow to his pride and his dignity to be obliged blow. | It will save him, and his parents, the humiliation of appearing in juvenile court five years from now. | Looking at | With so much available time why to return the merchandise, but a very salutary Whitesell Attends Window Workshop Trucksville Pupils See Film On Care Of Teeth | interest for the viewers and it has Trucksville elementary school stu- dents, gradés 4, 5, and 6, viewed a film recently, “It’s Your Health,” stressing care of the teeth, as part of National Childrén’s Hedlth Week observance. The film, released by Dairy Council, stressed drinking of milk for sound teeth. Principal Adaline Burgess, and teachers Marion Young, Mrs. Arlene Trimble, Mrs. Margaret Garrison, and Walter Prokopchak, cooperated in laying down rules for cleanliness, visits to the dentist, and proper diet. Subscribe To k++ AG The Post ren ra Elwood Whitesell of Whitesell Brothers Building Supply, Inc. re- cently attended a two day “Window Workshop” at the Andersen Corpor- ation, manufacturers of Andersen WIDOWALLS at Bayport, Minn. The Workshop included a trip through the plant, which is the largest in the world devoted entirely to the manufacture of window units. The next day and a half was spent learning how windows effect the livability of a home. ct es oN rss SUCCESSFUL INVESTING ... Investment Advisor and Analyst Q. Why so much talk about easy money and just what does it mean ? —P. C. A. When terest rates on bor- rowed money ténd to go down or do When this happens; already existing in= debtedness; like corporate bonds issued when going intérest ‘rates were higher, tend to conform, bond prices going up and yields coming down. For example, with money “hard,” a corporate bond with a 415 per cent coupon might sell at cént, whereas the same bond, with money ‘‘easy,” might sell at 105, with a current yield of 4.29 per cent. If there is a lot of talk currently about easy money, it is because many investors think that money will get easier in the near future and that good bonds will accord- ingly offer opportunities for capital gains, Q. Isn't a. brand-new investor hikely to make so many mistakes that it will take him years fo get ‘even ? : A. Yes, if he plunges into invest- ment alone and uninformed and hunches. But there is nothing to keep a neophyte investor from pro- fiting from the experience and ex- periences of others. You will have Given & good broker, tell him everything that he needs to know about your personal circumstances, your objec: tives, how much you have to invest. Ask him for information. Study that information carefully. When you have a clearer idea of what you want to do and what the results will be, go back to your broker for more advice. ' Every broker needs to know what is in the front of the investor’s mind, and what facet of investment policy gets top booking. Editor's note: Questions on invest- ment may be addressed to the auth- or of this column in care 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. -V With GEORGE A. and EDITH ANN BURKE WHY ' THE SAME EVENING ? do the networks schedule the best for the same night, Why don’t they want a complete audience for each performance rather than a split audience wondering if the other show is the better one. The Bing Crosby special and the Ingrid Bergman special will both be on opposite each other on March 20. Ironically, each had been scheduled for an earlier date. CBS-TV had tabbed “Twenty- Four Hours in a Woman’s Life,” the 90-minute drama starring Miss Bergman, for March 6. But because the cosmetic sponsor is planning a spring promotional campaign it was requested that a later date would be beneficial. So the program was moved to March 20, from 9 to 10:30 p.m. : ABC-TV's Bing Crosby Show, with Maurice Chevalier and Carol Lawrence as guest stars, originally was scheduled for March 13. But it seems that the auto sponsor did not want it televised on the night when the Floyd Patterson-Ingemar Johansson heavyweight title fight was shown on the theater EV cir- cuit. So now the Crosby hour is set for 9:30 to 10:30 p.m. on March 20. Let’s hope the sponsors will con- sider us viewers and one of them change his time schedule as a public service. FINIS—Fred Astaire says viewers will see his final performance on TV as a dancer in the repeat of his “Astaire Time Monday, February 20, over NBC. The colorcast was orig- inally shown last September 28. At that time Astaire said it would be his last dance special, the third given on NBC in as many seasons. GUNSMOKE will be expanded to a full hour on the CBS network next Fall. Tt will be telecast Saturdays from 10 to 11 p. m. And under another title, re-runs will be pre- sented on Tuesdays at 7:30 p. m. JULIE HARRIS and Farley Grang- er will co-star in “The Heiress” the next Family Classics presentation, on February 13. This series which: started out as a show for the entire family and with a “two-part” format, will be changed to a complete, one-hour dramdti- zation aiméd strictly to adults. Reason for the change is that 4 two-part show does not maintain the been discovered that the younger members of the family are not watching the classics. SHIRLEY TEMPLE'S SHOW on Sunday, January 29 should be a horror show, since evén an ordinary story is presented in a way that can scare young childfen. A number of parents have reported that they do not allow their children to watch Shirley’s show for: this reason. This week's story is titled “The Terrible Clockman”—a 19th Century fairy tale about a man-sized me- chanical clock that becomes an obedient monster. The script is based on “Master Zacharias,” ah early short novel by Jules Verne. THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1961 TAX FACTS FOR THE BUYING, SELLING OR IMPROVING YOUR HOME (The following article is the second in a series of four articles on income tax filing prepared for this newspaper by the Committee on Taxation of the Penmsylvania Insti- tute of Certified Public Accountants and in cooperation with the local district office of the Internal Revenue Service.) Home ownership, like so ries with it certain tax implications which the home owner should know. Consequently, complete and accurate records of all transactions which might have some bearing upon the com- putation of the gain or loss resulting from the sale of the property should be maintained. In certain respects, the sale of the principal residence of a taxpayer must be considered the same as any other in- vestment and any gain resulting from ‘the sale must be com- pletely reported in the taxpayer's income tax return for the year in which the sale occurs. of a personal residence, however, is considered to be a personal loss and is not deductible for tax purposes. Sale of Residence During the past few years of rising prices, residential pro- perty has tended to increase in value. Consequently, in many instances the sale of a personal residence results in a gain. The gain may be taxable in the year of sale or it may reduce the cost, or basis; of a new residence acquired by the home- owner, depending upon whether or not replacement is made, If you sell your residenée and purchase a new home with- in a period of one year before or after the sale. the gain is tax- able only to the extent that the adjusted sales price of the former residence exceeds the cost of the new residence. That portion of the gain which is not reinvested is subject to tax as a long-term capital gain (asuming that the home had been owned more than six months) at a maximum rate of 25 percent. The same rule applies if construction of a new home is begun within this two year period and occupied by the owner within '18 months of the date of sale. purchased a home five years ago for $15,000 and sold it last year for $20,000. The entire gain of $5,000 is taxable if re- placement is not made. However, if a new residence is acquired within the applicable time limits for $20,000 or more, gain is not taxable in the year of sale but reduces the cost of the new residence, The point to watch is that the new residence must cost as much or more than the amount you realize from the old residence. If in the above example the cost of the new résidence | was $19,000, the portion of the gain not used in replacing (1,000) would be taxable as a long-term capital gain. Bear in mind that the portion of the gain that is not taxable in the year of sale because it is used in dcquiring the new residence reduces the cost of the new residence. The cumulative gain may be taxable when the last principal residence is sold without being replaced, depending upon whether a gain is realized or a loss incurred in that transaction. Home Improvements and Repairs Improvements to your home increase its cost and must be considered in computing the gain for its sale. Additions to the home and assessments for sewers, etc. are considered in this category. This is one of the reasons why complete records are essential. Repairs on the other hand are considered personal ex- penses. They are not deductible and do not increase the cost of your home for computing gain. Certain repairs and main- tenance costs, however, such as painting and papering, may be used to reduce the amount which must be invested in the new house in order to postpone payment of income taxes on the gain. However, this applies only to those costs which are A incurred within 90 days before contracting to sell the residence and paid within 30 days thereafter. HOMEOWNER NO. 2 many other things today, car- A loss incurred upon the sale For example, assume that you the ST Wrest 2, Miss Frances Dorrance, of Church Street, is one of the very few whose families can show connection with Wyoming Valley for over two hun- dred years. In 1753 John Dorrance with others signed a petition to the Connecticut Assembly claim to them a large quantity of land upon the Susquehanna River at a place called Quiwaumuck, where there is no English inhabitant that lives on said land nor near there- unto.” No Dorrance was in the First Forty, but they arrived shortly thereafter and the family has re- mained prominent to this day. In fact, John Dorrance was in the val- ley in 1762 with a group for about ten days, several years before the First Forty came. The Dorrance family traces de- scent from Rev. Samuel Dorrance, a native of Ireland, who graduated from Glasgow University and settled in Connecticut in 1723. He was pas- tor many years and died in 1775, age 90. Apparently the present Miss Dor- rance inherits her vitality. Two sons of Rev. Samuel came to King- ston Township, John and George. The former, unmarried, was surveyor of highways, constable, and tax coll- ector. He was the defendant in a test case brought by a Pennsylvania claimant Vanhorne, to dispossess the Connecticut claimants. Dorrance lost after fifteen days of a famous trial, but many years later the Connecticut people were confirmed in their poss- essions which they had never relin- quished. Geo. Dorrance was a second lient. in the 2 nd. Co., 24th Conn. militia, and was gradually promoted until he held the rank of Lt. Col . in June 1778. With others of the more level- In this story, kindly, wise clock- maker Zacharias creates a man- shaped clock as a gift for the King, who visits the village, Meanwhile, évil alchemist Van der Craf arrives and is attracted by the clockmaker’s daughter. Rebuffed by the beautiful girl he brings the clockman to life and commands the monster to cap- ture the girl and bring her to his ghostly castle. How about that for thé kiddies! COMING—Jack Benny heads a cast of top stars who will review the great songs of the past three decades in a full-hour musical- variety special to be broadcast«on February 9.- The McGuire Sisters, Andy Wil- liams, Connie Francis, Juliet Prowse and Harry James will be featured. WINTER CARNIVAL—The grand parade of the annual St. Paul Winter Carnival will be telecast for oné- hout on Saurday, January 28 on the NBC-TV Network, Sra pars Rambling Around Bu The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters “To quit- | Ae, headed, he favored delay when the colonists: moved out to meet the Indians and Tories, and commanded the left wing in the Battle of Wyom- ing. He was badly wounded and cap-- tured. The Indians thought he might be worth ransom and held him for a day or two but later killed him. = His son Benjamin, born 1767, mar- ried Mary Ann Buckingham. He was elected sheriff, county commissioner, member of the legislature, and was first president of the Wyoming Bank of Wilkes-Barre. Rev. John Dorrance son of Benjamin, was a Presbyterian preacher for about thirty years, the last twenty-eight in Wilkes Barre. Another son Charles, whose wife was Susan Ford, was a colonel in the mil- itia and held some public office. He also was president of the Wyoming Bank; serving 1845-1892. Benj. Dorrance, born 1846, son of Charles, was a lawyer, who marr- ied Ruth Strong. They were parents of Misses Anne and Frances, who resides in this immediate area, and several other children. Mr. Dorrance was president of the Wyoming Com- memorative ‘Association in which post he was succeeded by his two daughters. The family resided in an imposing red sandstone house on Wyoming Avenue, at the corner of Dorrance Street, which in Europe would have ratéd as a palace, or at least a chateau. The Borough of Dorranceton, since merged with Kingston, was named for them, as was the street. The estate included greenhouses, from which the sisters acquired a knowledge of, and love for plants and both published works on certain aspects of horticulture. Both ‘were graduated from Vassar and took additional training elsewhere, Miss Frances being trained in library work, in which shé has engaged in one manner or another for about half a century. After a period at Osterhout Libra- ary, she became Director of Wyom- ing Historical and Geological Society, where she remained for several yedrs, then transferred to Hoyt Li- brary after the death of Miss Marg- aret Jackson. After retiring there she’ served for a time at Wilkes College. Miss Dorrance has beén interested in all kinds of cultural activities including musical organizations and the Little Theatre. She became a very active member of the State Archaeological [Society and the local chapter, Frances Dorrance Chapter No. 11, was so named in her honor. It is a going concern, meeting regu- larly at the Historical Society Build- ing. In recent years she has lectured to local groups on various phases of the United Nations, and maintains an interest in: Backi Mountain Memorial Library. 7 ONLY YESTERDAY Ten and Twenty Years Age In The Dallas Post It Happéned 30 Years Ago: Theresa Polachek, ten year old school child was fatally injured ‘when run over by a car at intersection of franklin and Main Street; while walking home from school. Dying a Nesbitt Hospital of 4 fracturéd skull and multiple injuries; she did not regain consciousness. She was daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. John Polachéck Jf Fernbrook. Proceeds of ‘a benefit basketball game between all-stars of the Baek Mountain in Ddllas Borough gym- nasium January 29 will go to relief of needy families. A move is on foot to have the Eff: ort Mountain read paved: Wyoming Valley Motor Club is sparking the drive to get legislation passed for the 18 mile paving project. Mrs. H. F. Henry, wife of Shaver: town Methodist ‘minister; is recovers ing from injuries received when the family car. skidded on “ice and rammed a stone wall. Robert BE. Knarr; Féernbrook : Jus- dice of the peace, died Friday morning, 5 ; Ice skating has been spoiled by heavy snow. Sandy Beach is plough- ed, ready for skaters; and the res: taurant is open. 2 wFor a limited time, and because times were hard, the Dallas Post, thirty years ago, published adver- tisements offering employment, with no charge for the service. It happened 20 Years ago: .......... ik \/ Fred Swanson has rescued two | loons trapped by encircling ice at Harveys Lake, carrying them to the Outlet, where two acrés of water still remains unfrozen. Loons cannot e off without water. William J. Jones, brother of Mrs. William Neimeyer, detects = under currents in US. Navy preparations. Great quantities of supplies are be- ing shipped to Pacific bases and Ha- wail. “Something is up, for sure,” he writes. : M a in Streeet ‘may get fire hydrants. ; Lehman school children are re-) turning to classes as the epidemic of influenza wanes. Noxen schools are now closing, and flu is on the in- crease among Dallas Township | students. $ Defense courses for civilians are being set up in Lehman and Dallas. Courses include automotive mech- anics;, metal work, wood work, and elementary electricity. ai ealth offices sare investigating sanitation on Franklin Street, where overflowing sumps pose: a health problem. ; Thief who stole Fred Swanson’s car turns out to be a Scranton man on parole. ; : Ie A third bridge across the Susque- hanna at Wilkes-Barre is recomm- ended by the Rotary Club. : Ice fishing is poor this year: Mrs. Jerusha Ide, 85,°'a wheelchair prisoder for twenty years, died ‘of influenza. : 4a Mrs. Louise Frick, 77, native’ of Germany and long time resident of Lake Township, is buried at Fern Knoll. : Concrete has been poured on the underpass at Fernbrook, and Banks Construction Co. is grading between Fernbrook and Trucksville. . A record speed of 620 m.p.h. is set by a pilot in an Airocobra Inter- ceptor plane. : ' Harry Hill; 77, for forty years a month illness. Women of the area are helping with sewing for the Red Cross, for clothing of destitute - people in Europe. ; And 10 Years Ago: ........... ima Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Hubble of Beaumont collided head-on with another car in front of thé Union Church, but escaped serious injury. Kiler Updyke has been transferred from a base in Toyyo to a hospital south of there. He was injured in Korea in September. Franklin Township's new truck is due tomorrow. + Dr. Roger Owens is winding up his dental practice in Dallas to join the Navy. Says he'll be back after the war is over. Adult education classes, sponsored by the Recreation Association, will start at Kingston Township High School February 8. They will include sewing ceramics, and shop work. An open session on school -join- ture attracted 200 people to Kingston Township gym. St. Paul's Lutheran Church is let- ting the contract for remodelling to Arthur Calkins, Dallas. Fifteenth crash at intersection of route 115 with the Lake highway occured Sunday night, when a Wil- kes-Barre car plunged over the bank at the dead end. . Arléann Bowman was reelected president of Dallas Businessmen. Kenneth Hughes, 4, Trucksville, is at Home after a sledding accident ‘in which he fractured his skull: fire ers off chickens, dug a hole at the foot of a big tree, smashed windows, put TF-V sets out of order, and re: duced Dallas to darkness, David Perry, 93, who suffered a stroke in September; died at his home in Orange. W. H. Crispell, 86, resident of the Lake, died while on a visit to his son in Phillipsburg. = Harold Lloyd of Shavertown hds four broken ribs after a skidding accident. : el .. Mr: and Mrs. R. B. Shaver have been married fifty years. Lake resident died following a four | January thunderstorm took feath- | Tuzerné County Charles Connolly, DALLAS, PENNSYL A ® THOUGHTS FOR A WINTER NIGHT A great surgeon pits his skill against cancer in “The Man With A Life In His Hands” an excellent article by W. C. Heinz in the January 20 issue of LIFE Magazine. ; If you haven't réad it; by all means, do. It is very well written. If you aré like most of us; you may want to put it down a couple of times before you finish it: It i§ as tense as a mystery thriller. Lucky is thé family that has a good pile of seasoned fireplace logs heaped handy by thé house in this kind of weather. Logs piled under the snow in the back yard aren't much use on frigid nights. I like them stored on the front porch. : Don't forget the birds. Their survival depends on body tempera- with good grain and seed. Never feed anything wet or moist to wild birds in winter. . i“ This is a wonderful time of the year to study the seed catalogues. The best gardens I've ever had are those built in imagination in the middle of thé winter: Watch out for these young fruit trees planted during the past . surrounded them with wire screen. You can’t blame the starving rab- bits if they girdle them above the snow line. They are so hungry that they hop up to our back porch for bits of lettuce, celery and cats and dogs. No‘ book makes bettér winter reading than the Wise Garden Encyclopedia: If you don’t own one and yet love plants, shrubs, gardens and the ground around your home, by all means buy a copy. It is obtainable at any book or department store. It's a lifetime in- vestment that you will use hundreds of times no matter how well versed you are in horiculture. " j A bushel of walnuts, butternuts or hickorynuts and a sturdy upturned log in the cellar can provide plenty of enjoyment when TV programs are dull. Its surprising how much fun it is to crack nuts and now and then a finger. - I'm willing to bet that our new neighbours Dwight Eisenhower and Mamie will make a visit to this béattiful part of Pennsylvania before the summer is over. It would be kinda nice to have them stop by for the Auction wouldn't it? And then there's that drive up the Susquehanna from Harrisburg to Athens. I wonder if they have ever made it. . This might be a good time to make your first visit to Back Mountain Memorial Library. I think you might be surprised at the cordial welcome you will receive from Miss Lathrop and Mrs. Jones. You will likewise be impressed with the variety and quality of books available for your enjoyment. I suspect that a number who have never been within the library doors, think of it only as a store house for novels and a place where middle aged and elderly women have tea. This isn't farfetched. I've listened to too many people ask ques- tions about the library. Well just for fun how much interest do you think’ the following on the Kentucky rifle, how to mix cement; repair a gasoline motor; cure pork; grow Christmas trees, build an outdoor fire place, design a new home; handle bees, shoe a horse, survive if lost out of doors in midwinter, caught in a burning hotel. You can find the answer at the library. t From | : | Pillar To Post . Folks who glued themselves to the television last Friday to watch * § e © Huntley intoned, ‘Here comes the Squedunk High School Band, and ‘we will now have a word from our sponsors.” % ©" Then, “The Squedunk High School Band has just passed the reviewing stand.” Reap ; < ‘Chances are that the viewers, up to their necks in soapsuds, courtesy of the sponsors, made a solemn promise to themselves never to buy that product again, and were tempted to throw a cake of soap through the TV ‘screen. pe After. all, there ‘are other ways of getting a message across. “Courtesy of Slimex,” would have been enough, and delighted, aunts her way down Pennsylvania Avenue, fingers securely frosted to the .Alute, but nonetheless beaming in her hour of. glory. FH ~~ briefly. upon the’ marchers, with no obstruction. the first two units, but I, too, was watching for one small marcher, fifty-star flag. : ; The day started early for the Boy Scouts. If they could get to Seven Corners in Virginia by nine o'clock, the Army would trans- port them to the place where they were to assemble for the parade. The blizzard cancelled out any private means of getting them to Washington. : A phone call from Herndon just after the Inaugural and the solemn oath of office: Rl marching with the massed flag unit. He'll be somewhere else, but he doesn’t know where.” That much for watching for the massed flags. ; This accounted for the increasing fury as Slimex demonstrated, hour after hour, how the stuff doesn’t leave a ring on the sink, and how it reduces itself to wafer thinness, bath after bath after bath, without losing its symmetry. (I have always felt equal to polishing off a ring on the sink, or even heaving broken soap into a shaker.) It began to get dark, and both Slimex and I were worn to a -wvafer. 2 y Chet Huntley announced, ‘It's getting too dark to see the marchers.” : x But there stood the newly inaugurated President, game to the last, taking the parade to the bitter end. ia Maybe he even waved to one Boy Scout, gallantly bearing a new nylon fifty-star flag. Goodness knows when the Boy Scout got home, doubtless to be treated to a mustard footbath for extreme exposure. : I've been afraid to ask. After all, I'm only his grandmother. Those future citizens certainly stuck it out, and probably with- - out a peep. & ; : : a) hii SE Police Chief Instruction Starts At Wilkes College Kingston Township Police Chief Herbert Updyke will study one afternoon a week for fourteen weeks, with other police chiefs tak- ing a specialized course Tuesday afternoon at Wilkes Collége. Former Chief John Schwartz, of Easton, who writes a column in Law and Order, a: national police publication, will in- | struct. ; Among those who will speak on various subjects, including preven= | tion of crime, public relations; and records, are Chief of Detectives for STOCKS - BONDS MUTUAL FUNDS Lemuel T. | TROSTER TELEPHONE Dallas OR 4-3041 vv Russell R. Rivenburg BROKER - DEALER TH CVT VW VU UV eV WV eee and Captain Harry Meeker, of the Philadelphisz Pélicer Academy. An advanced course for police will Hop-Bottors, Pa. also start February 7. es g ; = mia tures up. Toss bread and crackers on the snow and fill the feeders’ carrots that Myra tosses out. ‘They appear to have lost fear of the books would have for dainty ladies who love to drink tea; Books - and it seemed of vital importance to see him carrying a new nylon VANIA C VEY N § Barnyard Notes a " few years. The rabbits and field mice will get them if you haven't for the fourth marcher from'the left, ‘sixth row, in the Squedunk High School Band, must: have been frantic with fury when Chet and uncles could have enjoyed the sight of frozen Flossie tootling 3 The “Courtesy of ‘Slimex” might even have been superimposed “Normally, I wouldn't have watched an Inaugural Parade beyond Ww $ “Todd has just called to say he’s there, but that he won't be SAR Ai i i ' i ~— ents ESI imi ts CSE