~ BECTION A— PAGE 2 | THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its Tlst Year” \TED Member Audit Bureau of Circulations en Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association tg National Editorial Association ~ vat 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. Deliven) advertising $1.10 per inch. eferred position additional 10c per inch. Ad isi 1 RA Pp vertising deadline Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged at 85¢ per column inch. Classified rates Sc 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. Qut-of-State subscriptions: $4.50 a year; $2.75 six months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15¢. When renuesting a chunge of address subscribers are asked to ing old as well as new address. ow two weeks for changes of address o ipti to be placed en mailing list. Fen Nhe 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, Gossart’s Market: Shavertown—Evans Drug Store, Hall’s Drug Store; Trucksville— Gregory’s Store, Tracksville Drugs; Idetown—Cave’s Store; Har- veys Lake—Marie’'s Store: Sweet Valley—Adams Grocery; a Moms Sirs: Rosen Sooners Store; Shawanese—. erbaugh’s Store; Fernbrook—Bogdon’ , 2 Orchard Farm Restaurant. The Toray Sle Editor and Publisher—HOWARD W. RISLEY 3 Associate Publisher—ROBERT F. RACHMAN Associate Editors—MYRA ZEISER RISLEY. MRS T. M. B. HICKS : Sports—JAMES LOHMAN Advertising—ILOUISE C. MARKS n Photogranhs*~JAMES KOZEMCHAKRK 3 Circulation—DORIS MALLIN Editorially Speaking: One Woman And A Dream The death of Mrs. Lewis LeGrand early Saturdav morning, following months of discouraging illness and frustrating partial incapacity, removed one who has left a rich heritage to this community. Within her family, her church, and Back Mountain - Memorial Library her valiant spirit will live on! ; A native of Nebraska, where she obtained her early training and college edugation, Mrs. LeGrand was, until marriage, a teacher. Throughout her lifetime she main- tained a deep interest in education and things cultural— art, literature and music. For many of her early years in Dallas she was a busy housewife and mother, rearing a family of five active redheads at her home on Baldwin Street. She could easily have become lost in the routine of homemaking; but she had too much vitality and, too much zest to become sub- merged. i EPR Te : In a community, which at that time offered few cul- tural advantages outside of schools and church, Mrs. Le- Grand solicited the cooperation of her neighbors in form- ing a Book Club. She walked from house to house, and street to ‘street, explaining its purpose. Each member purchased one current book and, after reading it, passed it on—#ill it went full circle by the end of the year. So many wanted to join the original club that she organized another! ; Spurred by this interest among Book Club members, Mrs. LeGrand came to the conclusion that the time was ripe for the establishment of a small library in Dallas, perhaps a branch of Osterhout. ; With characteristic determination to do something about it, she explored the possibilities in several conver- - sations with Miss Grace Estes, then librarian at Osterhout Library. Miss Estes encouraged her, offering the full cooperation of the Wilkes-Barre library in an effort to establish a branch in Dallas. : This was all Mrs. LeGrand needed! Guided by an idea, encouraged by her book clubs, and ‘armed with the support of Migs Estes, Mrs. LeGrand presented a tentative plan for the creation of a Dallas Library in a talk before Dallas Rotary Club. : Her enthusiasm was the spark that kindled the fires for a community effort that saw its culmination in the establishment of Back Mountain Memorial Library—a permanent memorial to the men and women of all wars who have served to preserve the American ideal—not for Dallas alone—but for the whole Back Mountain country! At its beginning, Mrs. LeGrand served as a director and secretary of the Association and was instrumental in obtaining a generous contribution from the Ryman family toward establishing the new library in the former Ryman homestead on Main Street. She and her husband were among the first 100 to contribute $50 toward the purchase. Likewise, and of her own volition, she kept a volum- - inous scrap book of all library and associated community activities. When it became necessary to raise more funds to keep the library going from year to year, it was Mrs. LeGrand who came up with the suggestion of an annual Auction. A friend in Western Pennsylvania had suggested in a letter to her that $1,000 might be raised that way! And years later, when both the Library and its Auc- tions were acknowledged successes, she suggested a Book Stall, as both an appealing and profitable feature of the Auction. : The Library Book Club, with its 196 members, an integral part of the Library, is but the continuation of the Clubs she established years ago! It was typical of the indominable spirit of this woman that during the years when she was partially paralyzed, she took care of much of her own housework, improvising means by which she could assist herself to prepare meals and be less of a burden to her devotel husband. And through it all her interest in the library was un- diminished! It was the first topic of conversation when visitors called, and whenever it was physically possible, she attended Library Board of Directors meetings. Her indomitable courage made her final years, per- haps, her finest ones; but her dream and spunk gave the Back Mountain its library! Robin In The Snow Arch Hutchison, West Overbrook Avenue, could hardly believe his eyes Saturday noon when he ob- served a robin flitting about in the snow just opposite Shavertown Methodist Church. Annual Meeting Annual meeting of Noxen Com- munity Ambulance Association for the election of officers will be held Monday night, February 6, at 8 at the home of Earl Crispell. The public is invited. : 3 * i ONLY YESTERDAY Ten and Twenty Years Age In The Dallas Post IT HAPPENED 30 YEARS AGO: Charles H. Cooke, 80, ill only two died here. estate, and his attack was attri- buted to overwork. # Harveys Lake is a paradise for skaters these days. On Saturday, a plane piloted by Howard Sterne landed on the ice, offering sight- seeing trips to visitors. Lares of Luzerne 41 to 27. Ernest Montross and Bethel Shook were married at the Center Moreland M. E. parsonage. m/ Parents of five small children in Idetown were sent to jail for neglect- ing their family while they went on a binge. The children, ranging in age from eight months to seven years had been alone without food in an unheated house from Friday until Monday. Toes of the baby were frozen. | Irem Country Club will be reno- vated during the next two months. to April 1. V Gas and oil leases are being pro- cured in the Forkston area, with 2,600 acres already under lease by Wayne Canfield, North Moreland. Date of drilling has not been an- nounced. IT HAPPENED 20 YEARS AGO: No definite date has been set for beginning of construction of the new Harveys Lake Highway in spite of optimistic reports from Wilkes-Barre papers. Rev. (Charles Frick, pastor of Huntsville Christian Church, will be given a one-year leave of absence to join the armed forces as chaplain of the 109th at Indiantown Gap. Rev. Frick was with the army during the first World War. Harry J. Harter has been elected school director to replace the late W. E. Bennett in Kingston Town- ship. w Rotary will hear Ray Helton on zoning, in line with Dallas Borough's efforts to. draft a workable zoning ordinance. «John Stredney, 22 year old foun- der of an athletic club in Kunkle, was instantly killed by a fall of rock at. the Harry E. Colliery. Boys had outfitted the Condon chicken house with muscle-building equipment, weight-lifting apparatus, ping-pong table, Indian Clubs and dumbbells, and under John’s instruction were all set to build their bodies to the best advantage. Dr. Henry M. Laing Firemen are closing the year with a cash balance of $1203.46, nine times as much as a year ago. ¥ School millage could be reduced if delinquent taxes were collected, re- ports Dan Waters, school board sec- retary. Most of the overdue taxes are on vacant lots. 3 A newspaper poll taken in Port- land, Oregon, shows 90 percent of the people in favor of no strikes in defense factories. nternational pressure is mount- ing, with strong anti-German feeling rampant. Mrs. Elizabeth Searfoss, stricken with a sudden heart attack on Sunday, died at her home in Alder- son, Announcement has been made of the marriage of Lois M. Rogers, Trucksville, to Sgt. William May- nard Berni, of San Antonio, Texas. Florence A. Park, 73, descendent of pioneer settlers of this area, was buried in Idetown cemetery not far from the home where she was born and spent her entire life. AND 10 YEARS AGO: « Howard Hendricks, former super- vising principal of Lehman Schools, spoke at the annual meeting of Back Mountain Memorial Library Associa- tion, showing slides taken last sum- mer while he was on vacation tour of National parks. Miss Lathrop, librarian, reported circulation for the year over 50,000, including schools, Catalogued are 22442 volumes. Tug Weyant, Noxen, has been named as the first executive secre- tary of Back Mountain YMCA by Lewis, LeGrand, president. The Grover Anderson home at Harveys Lake was damaged by fire from an overheated furnace. En- tire interior will have to be redec- orated because of smoke damage. Lehman-Jackson joint schools have the green light from Harris- burg to go ahead with a gymnasium wing to the present high school building. It will include not only a large gymnasium, but a shop and four extra clasrooms, at a cost of approximately $250,000. \/ Robert Bachman, associated with Lynn-Fieldhouse for the past five years, has been appointed as sales representative for Brown and Bige- low. Peter Skopic, Lehman, has been upped to the rank of Captain in the Air Corps at Westover Field, Mass. /Sloppy Tony's estate is being sued for $43,000 damages for a traffic accident August 19, 1949. Mr. and Mrs. ‘Anthony Burnett, proprietors of Sloppy Tony's, died by suffocation by coal gas in their home in Wilkes- Barre on Christmas day. Plaintiffs are Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Gels- leichter, Shavertown. Mrs. Nellie Allen, 64, Noxen, died suddenly on Saturday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. James Miers, of Kunkle, - days following a severe heart attack, | He was stricken ‘while | attending court sessions in Wyom- | ing County. He had been extremely | busy in settling the Albert Lewis | Local Meridians of Dallas defeated | It will be closed from February 1 | N THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1961 — — By The Oldtimer Rambling Around —D. A. Waters CRI, Never throw away anything. | | This is a man’s maxim impossible | | to live by as it gets no support from | | women. Either by nature or train- | {ing women seem to‘have only two | | ways to dispose of anything: (1) put | it away; (2) throw it away. | By good luck and careful man- | agement a man can cometimes sal- | vage something he knows will be | useful some day, but it requires ingenuity and watchfulness to get away with it. The rewards are well worth the effort. A few examples follow. For generations a broken chair, which had belonged to one of my | | grandmothers, or maybe to one of | | her ancestors, had been around. Numerous times it was headed for the bonfire or woodpile but was rescued just in time. Finally one of the boys, in the early days of the | Auction, wiped it off with oil er | something, puttied up a hole where a piece was missing, and took it i down as the Auction was in pro- gress. He swung it up on the block and backed into the crowd. In minutes it brought $5. Then we had an old roll-top desk that originally belonged to Jesse Albertson. My sister bought it for the postoffice. 1 used it for ten | years for school board work. Finally { it just had to go. But parts of it are still useful. The two end sec- tions containing drawers hold most of the family papers. A panel forms a shelf for plants and magazines on a radiator in the summertime and the top, insulated with fibreglass | and aluminum sheets, covers an: | other for plants all the year round. | The roll was pretty well destroyed | before we woke up to the fact that | the oak strips are just right to tack {on screening, etc. The old ice refrigerator made of | sturdy oak took a couple of days to | dismantle but it provided a pile of | small pieces and boards still holding {| out. When one of the grandchil- dren climbed on a radiator in: the bathroom and fell, the old refrig- erator top was just the right size for a protecting and very useful shelf. Even the hinges and sheet metal have seen use since. A console radio once owned by David Blocksage had a beautiful | cabinet of walnut veneer. This is | written on a table made from the top board and the bottom portion. The side panels have also been used. When Harriet Laing put in some new kitchen cabinets maybe half a century ago, she gave my father an old fashioned kitchen cupboard, hand made probably for Ira 'D. Shaver in the days when twenty- four inch clear white pine was com- mon. here. Most of drawers in their original condition. it has b worked into use, including the ® James Peddebone, local carpenter and cabinet maker, made for us a cupboard for kitchen use in what is now Clifford Space’s basement. It | today cantains my tools. After over | fty years it was almost impossible to tear apart the flour bins, etc, grooved, screwed, and glued to- gether. They would have held water even then. The old artisans were | real workmen. About 1911, Wes Daddow got Scout Troop No. 1, pine and some oak. I made a ladder from two of the oak staves and some salvaged fence pickets. This year I tore it apart and used one of the staves painted white for a pole for the new fifty- star flag. We were complimented on it. / To cultivate narrow rows in the garden, my father made by hand a short whiffletree. He also accumu- lated quite a collection of trace chains wariously equipped with rings, hooks, and snaps. With the whiffletree they make perfect equip- head. : ? Right now backyards and nearby points are littered with discarded Christmas trees. About the most desolate thing to have around is an abandoned Christmas tree, but they are excellent for at least two pur- poses. Clip off the limbs with the tree pruning shears and burn them a few at a time in the fireplace. The crackle will please the young- sters no end and the aroma is really something. Of course you want to be sure the damper is not closed or you will have real trouble. Then the branches make excellent cover- ing for binding around rose bushes, ete. They usually are green in the spring. And years from now when you want to mix up a spray solution, or make a cleaning solution, or similar item where an exact measurement ‘in ounces is necessary, you , will you threw away. Altar And Rosary To Install New Members - Gate of Heaven Altar and Rosary Society invites all the women of the parish to join in a missa recitata mass at 9 a. m. on Sunday, and attend a meeting in the evening for installation of new members. A social hour will follow the short business meeting. Mrs. Leo Mohen and Mrs. George Arzente, Jr., are co-chairmen of the affair, which will take the place of the usual February meeting. Mrs. Ted Popielarz will preside, ev, Francis A.’ Kane, pastor and moderator will officiate at the When I was about four years old, installation. THOSE TV COMMERCIALS TO THE EDITOR Dear Mr. Risley, I so enjoyed the article on tele- vision by Mrs. Carleton Jones which appeared in the Dallas Post on Thursday, January 26th. Her spark- ling comments on the value of “selected” television viewing were refreshing. What a grander view of the world we live in we all have as the result of TV coverage. For in- stance, 1 have attended a Corona- tion, a Royal Wedding, a United Nations Meeting, a Senate Hearing, an Inauguration Ceremony and In- augural Ball, and just the other evening an historic Press Conference without leaving the comforts of my livingroom. As I took my seat at the United Nations Meeting, the gray chair near the fireplace, I became so engrossed in the proceedings that I neglected to explain the ways and wherefores to my small companion. After sit- ting quietly by my side for several pages of a very pompous speech, in a language not our own, my little son said “This is sure a long com- mercial, Mommie.” Which brings me to a delightful subject—TV Com- mercials. The frequent interruptions of com- mercial messages during a favorite television program have prompted many an interested party to cam- paign for non-commercial television. As a mother of small children, my concern is not with the interruptions as such but with the effect these messages from the sponsor have upon the children who can become completely absorbed in them. Television commercials often play odd tricks on the imaginative minds of little viewers. A child's inter- pretation may be somewhat differ- ent than what is actully said. What do you tell a member of the very young set when he. insists that all you have to do is buy him a box of Crusty Brand cereal and he'll be able to win a new car for the family, or when he wants you to change from your favorite dishwashing pro- duct so he can send for a space suit ? My heart goes out to a little candy lover when the announcer, with his mouth full and lips smacking, offers a taste of his candy bar to the tele- vision = audience and says ‘Don't you wish you had a “Marvelous Mallow Bar, kiddies? Ask Good Ol Mom to get you one right now.” And of course, Good OI’ Mom doesn’t happen to have one in her pocket at that very moment! On the humorous side of course is the child’s eye view of certain com- mercial promises. A well informed little lad in our house advised me that with a Lazy Dazy completely Valve . . . carefree automatic washer and dryer installed convienently in just the smallest space, I'd have so much spare time, I could color or play cowboys every morning. It was also necessary - to clarify the fact that there IS more to producing a perfect pie than simply by buying a can of Bliss shortening. I am not campaigning for or against commercial television! - Our children certainly have received a liberal education in the field of alphabet identification’ and word association from product displays, and like millions of other youngsters of ‘their generation, they could spout a television commercial, word for word, before they had learned a nursery rhyme. To them, the com- mercial is often the best part of the show. And so I say “Thanks” to the sponsors for making it possible for us to enjoy the wide variey of Tele- vision viewing available today. (Mrs.) Jane B. Roberts 65 Davis Street 8 Trucksville WANTS TO COME BACK Dear Editor: I am, writing concerning the piece in the paper Thursday, January 12, about the job campaign in the Back Mountain area. I own my home and five and a half acres back there. I pay my taxes and spend my money back there, and I have to be down here working in Bristol. 1 would be glad to put 25¢ or even 50c a week for a donation, but let me tell you I wouldn’t give anything if they are going to pick the ones they want. I ‘don’t believe in that. I have my application in two times in RCA at Mountaintop, and I know for a fact we got to know someone to get in. When I get a job I'll do my job and that’s it. I don’t have people get me a job. It's awful, I have a home and I can’t live in it and enjoy it. 1 just hate to live down here, I room and I have always wished they'd get jobs back there, so I could come back and work closer to my people. Sure I'd save some money, espec- ially 25 cents a day, but if I didn't get a job, I still wouldn't give it to them. A steady subscriber for the Post, Nellie Steinruck 207 Wood Street Bristol, Pa. PS. You can publish this if you want to, so they'll know how we feel about it, us poor people. Over one-third of all the cloth- ing produced in the U.S. is manu- factured by firms in New York State. / 7 ! some eight foot staves for old Boy | some yellow | Ten years later | ment to suspend long ladders over- think of all those good baby bottles Looking at 7-v | With GEORGE A. and EDITH ANN BURKE St. Valentine’s Day, vaudeville and Victor Herbert’s music will be the theme for this Friday's “Bell | Telephone Hour.” Polly Bergen, Roberta Peters, Carol Lawrence, Paul Whiteman, Jorge Bolet, Theodore Uppman, Kelly Brown and Russell Arms will | take part in the song and dance. NBC Opera Company will do the English version of Beethoven's “Fidelio” in a repeat performance on Sunday, 3-5 p. m. Two Good Plays will be presented on Tuesday, February 7. The first one at 7:30 p. m. will be “Time Re- membered” on “The Hallmark Hall of Fame” program. Dame Edith Evans, Christopher Plummer and Janet Munro co-star. An eccentric woman (Dame Edith Evans) con- the lethargy of her rich young nephew (Plummer), who is in love with the memory of a dead girl. At 10 p. m: will be ‘‘A String of Beads,” by W. Somerset Maughan. Jane Fonda, George Grizzard and Glenda Ferrell have the starring roles. A secretary (Miss Fonda) faces unexpected penalties when she refuses to return a $60,000 pearl necklace, sent to her in error by 'an exclusive Jewelry store. ; “A String of Beads” will' mark Jane Fonda’s dramatic debut on television. She is appearing on a March.” A year ago she was voted “The most promosing young actress of the '59-’60 season” in the New York Critics award: Jack Paar wasn’t kidding the other night when he said that he might be living down in Florida next year. He has requested a release from his contract by the end of this year. | He owns land in Key Biscayne and he would like a home built on it. | Also he would like to travel. After a | year he believes he would like to return to television but not another version of his night. show: Jack seems to feel that NBC will grant his request. Unlike Perry Como. who loves to watch television and admits to being a Western fan, Jack Parr says he only averages an hour a week before a television set. Robert Horton, the scout on Wag- on Train” is a strong, rugged look- is on the sickly side should take hope from watching him because at one time Robert Horton was re- stricted from most sports because of a kidney ailment. The only sport he was allowed to take part in was swimming and he became an @ ex- cellent swimmer. * At that time it was never thought he would develop into the rugged, healthy 6-foot, 1 inch 185-pounds of action. During the war he served in the Coast Guard. After his discharge he came to New York to gain exper- ience as an actor. He worked in little theater productions. During the past three years Hor- ton’s singing voice has been paying dividends. He starred in the sum- mer presentation of . “Guys and Dolls.” His appearance at London’s Palladium last year was recorded and quickly became one of England's top-selling albums. : : _ Bobby Darin didn't start out to be a singer. He wanted to be an actor. | But a whole year of trying and not getting one job changed his mind. He and a young song-writer friend formed: their own business of writ- ing radio commercials." They were successful in a small way. As a side line they wrote songs that didn’t sell. Then they wrote ‘Splish, Splash, Taking a Bath’ and it sold one million records. After that came ‘Mack the Knife” which sold over two million copies. Lake Service Club Plans Interesting Talk The pages of history will turn back for a revealing look into the lives of some of Pennsylvania's pioneers tonight, Thursday, Febru- ary 2, when Rosemary P. Simonic, public relations representative . of the Bell Telephone, talks about famous women of the Common- wealth at the meeting of Harveys Lake Woman's Service Club at Lake Noxen School. She will show how the ‘‘man’s world” was gradually changed as vigorous, adventurous women fought for careers and posi- tions of leadership in fields once far beyond their reach. The above arrangements were made at a recent board meeting held at the Ray Garinger home. Present were Mesdames George Searfoss, Howard Jones, Carrie Rood, Malcolm Nelson, John Zorzi Jr., Bruce Renard, Lee Bicking, El- wood Whitesell Rowland Ritts, Ar- thur Darnell, Albert Armitage, Richard Williams, Wilfred Ide, Pau- line Davis, Ruth Zorzi and the hostess. Lake Legion To Meet At Kerns On Tuesday Harveys Lake American Legion will geet at Kern's Restaurant, Har- veys Lake on Tuesday, February 7. Commander Jackson urges all mem- bers to be present to help make plans for the Easter Egg Hunt. A film “Operation Abolition” can be obtained by any civic group by ceives a fantastic plot to cope with | Broadway currently in ‘Invitation to |. ing individual. -Any youngster who |’ TE i 5 et DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA From monn 4 Pillar To Post... This spell of sub-zero weather has created a tremendous down draft in The Franklin stove, and has caused it to deliver a billow of = smoke instead of the anticipated radiant heat. In fact, the situation + became so acute last week that the stove had to be jacketed in a * ° plastic sheathe to prevent cold air from flooding the kitchen. ; All the usual expedients were tried. Burning paper, held at the © throat of the chimney, failed to reverse the downdraft. All that happened was that the paper, still burning, blew back into the room, accompanied by more black smoke than one section of the Dallas Post should normally produce. The plastic was readjusted and secured by a bellyband of stout string. Around the edges seeped the arctic air. The small stove pipe : elbow connecting the stove with the chimney, became so frigid that © the fingers threatened to stick to it when its temperature was taken. I got a lot of free advice. One heating expert said I ought to « have a chimney crown, the kind that turns with the wind. Another inquired in horror, “But you surely have a damper in’-"’ that stove pipe? Turn it off.” \ i No, we don’t have a damper in that stove-pipe. The crooked little pipe elbow that runs through the brick facing of the kitchen wall to the outside chimney, isn't tailored for a damper. Not enough horizontal or vertical space to accommodate one. Well, how about building the chimney a few feet higher? 5 r No Comment. Brother, it's zero outside, not chimney building ‘ the peak of the roof. Se All day Friday the plastic quivered under the impact of the down draft. : 3 Joe dropped around Saturday morning. “Joe, I've got a problem.” I explained. Joe made sympathetic noises. xy weather. Besides, it’s high enough, rearing itself several feet above .. “You tried a wad of newspaper already burning, held up against ig the back of the stove right under the smoke shelf? “Uh-huh.” Sb “Try ‘poking it right up into the hole?” All'1 get is three bushels of smoke, right in the face.” : . I demonstrated. We readjusted the plastic after groping our why back to the stove through the encircling gloom. 3 Joe ruminated. Together we discussed and abandoned: slinging a a a tray of burning charcoal under the elbow to.heat it up; running gg of steel wool in k.rosene and lighting it in the throat of the stove, : putting off having a fire until. next summer, to give the outside chimney a chance to heat up. ; os 1d “Lemme at it,’ quoth Joe, removing the plastic, and letting - himself down joint by joint until he was hunkered down on the flagstones, staring up the chimney. “Light another piece of newspaper,” he directed, to see what happened.” We both reeled back from the puff of smoke. “Light another piece, a good big one,” says Joe. Joe inflated his chest. I touched a match to the newspaper and rammed it against the opening. : “Who0000000f, says Joe, shrinking his chest against his back- § = / “While I watch bone ; . The flame danced, and the smoke reversed itself. 3 “Now, let’s give it the gun again,” says Joe, “a good big wad of paper this time, and I'll stuff it right up the chimney.” Joe got ready to act like a bellows again, but this proved un- necessary. The second installment of the draft reverser exceeded all expectations. There was a crackling and then a roar, as the soot inside the elbow started to burn. “That'll do it,” says Joe, letting out his breath, but gradually. The stove pipe elbow started to glow cherry red and there was a stench of hurning stove enamel. y “I'll give the chimney a good cleaning, for free,” says Joe. “Just step outside, Joe, and see if we've got sparks coming out ofthe top ‘of the chimney.” . Joe came in again, stamping snow off his feet. : “Nope, no sparks, and very little smoke,” he reported, and added, _ from the eminence of a laboratory man in the senior year of West- moreland, “Combustion Must be jut about complete.” ' / / Combustion in the stove was doing fine. The kindling crackled, " a trouble light with a big bulb up inside the elbow; soaking a wad **® : rounded up an enthusiastic group contributed greatly to the dressings contacting Kenneth Jackson, Leo Wodaski or Calvin Strobel. | a dhe dah a to LE * the dry wood slabs caught, and the cherry glow in the stove pipe & ': faded. rr hen, Panna “Joe-the-Blow, “I remarked, “if you're not on the cheering squad 9. at high school you're wasting a marvelous set of lungs.” { CC “You ought to have a pair of bellows,” he suggested. “You know, » those things you pump to give a fire more air? ; y BS : “I've got a pair of bellows. They're right in the living room by & the fireplace.” ; A PT : Joe's comment, plain to read on his face, but left unspoken was, & “Well, how dumb can you get!" \ 2 : Cop : Ce oT ] iP : re Dedicated Local Women A To Work For Cancer Victims By DOROTHY ANDERSON Throughout the heat of the sum- mer, while others relaxed, ~ two Shavertown women spent their spare time making Cancer dressings. Mrs. Charles Gosart, Sr. and her neighbor, Mrs. Charles Michel with the assistance of Mrs. Charles Sieber, Mrs. Ruth Houser, Mrs. Florence Kast, Mrs. Arthur Marth and Mrs. Bess Gerloch made 381 dozen dress- ings during this time. It was Mrs. Gosart who also of ladies when the Back Mountain Cancer Center needed new volun- teers last year. The same group with the addition of Mrs. C. F. Kresge, Mrs. John Ferguson and Mrs. W. Alexander work faithfully on Tuesday afternoons at the Back Mountain Library Annex. Other faithful workers who have been loyal in their volunteer work at the Center ar Mrs. Edgar Lashford and Mrs. Joseph Emerick, Chase; Mrs. Sheldon Bennett, Mrs. William King and Mrs. George Pearce, Truck- sville, Mrs. Seady Sauers, Mrs. Richard Cook and Mrs. Lowther Brown also project by making dozens of dress- ing at home, throughout the year. i i a a a a Numerous others have served such as Mrs. Harold Flack and Mrs: Mabel Evans, who for years organized and supervised a group at Goss Manor. Last year, two dedicated volunteers were lost to this area when Mrs. Donald Weeden and Mrs. Glenn Sickler moved from the area. EE Mrs. Sickler had organized th Carverton group and made bandages in large numbers, also at her home. She in turn interested Mrs. David Perry, Jr., in the project. Now Mrs Sickler has gathered together a group of men and women from the Couples Club of Carverton Methodist Church who are enthusiastic over their services to a worthy cause. Mrs. Harold Flack has now inter- ested the members of Prince of Peace Auxiliary in the dressing pro- gram and this group will contribute its services to the project each month. : For the past year the Senior Girl Scout Troop 9 of Harveys Lake has done an admirable job in supplying needed dressings. All these groups and individuals are part of the pro- gram planned by the Back Moun- tain Cancer Board headed by Mrs. Fredric Anderson. Mrs. Hat'® Crawford is in charge of volunteerS* at the Center. Mrs. Lloyd Kear is dressings chairman. Dallas Woman's Chik Chomle™ Enjoys Thirteenth Dinner Dallas Woman's Club Chorale staged its thirteenth annual dinner Monday night at St. Paul's Lutheran Church. Arvilla Keiper was master of ceremonies; Mrs. Alva Eggleston, senior club president, gave the in- vocation; Mrs. William Carroll, new choral director, and Mrs. John Culp, junior club president spoke briefly. Games were directed by Evelyn Seely, and group singing was led by Mrs. Carroll, Mrs. Victor Cross, Mrs. Charles Mahler, and Mrs. Joseph Schneider presented ‘Clothesline Gossip” a hilarious comedy skit adapted to the audience. Theme eof the decorations was “June in January,” cleverly carried out by Mrs. Clifford Troup. General chairman was Mrs. Charles Nicol Jr., assisted by Mrs. Charles Kishbaugh, Mrs. Robert Price, and Evelyn Seely. Others present were Mesdames William Baker Sr., Roy Bohlander, Russell Case, John Chapple, Joseph Goode, Hilda Grifed, Leonard Har- vey, William Hanna, Joseph Katyl, George Kostenbauder, Howard Gar- ris, William Krimell, William Mun- ncie, Joseph Perry, Lewis Reese, Burton Roberts, Bernard Rogers, Theodore Ruff, Stephen Sedler, Fred Templin, and David Carey. SRF AE gE SELLS SOR WE 8 EE FRA a ER ER IPT RR SN RR FFE YG IL Pg TH bli ——- dg vp — ar