The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, February 09, 1961, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    i
(
—
NE IR AAA A A NE EA UMA
Rp Se Ua 3
A A TW UA
ir ks SG FR
CLAY A SE SER AY ARR
RAT
A 4 ARAB
ENA
RANG
PME RR
I tt 0
EA EAN ROO HTT RES NE GE Reta
RRR
AR
before coming to the United States
SECTION A — PAGE 4
Three Cornell Students From India
Sample Area Cooking, Skip Blizzard ot BE ee!
Three Cornell students from India
were guests at the Edward Oncay |
. home at Outlet Road. Lehman, for
two days last week, starting for
Philadelphia just before the blizzard
struck this area.
Hailed as Kris, John and Charlie, |
because their names were unpro- |
nounceable to Pennsylvania tongues,
Dr. Krichna Das, Taraneswari Jha,
and Surjamoni Tathak, all natives of
India, had not encountered snow
as students almost four years ago. If
they had stayed until Saturday in-
stead of taking off in their ancient
jalopy on Friday, Mrs. Oncay re-
flected, they'd have had their |
money's worth.
At loose ends during the mid-
winter vacation between semesters,
tae three men, who occupy an apart-
raent near Cornell University, got
as far as Scranton on their trip to
Philadelphia to see the cradle of
liberty, remembered that the On-
cays lived near by, and called to say
| invitation when next the
remained closed to visitors.
seemed lonesome, and glad to talk.
He | have
Mrs. Oncay sent him some cookies |
when she returned to Leiiman.
The Oncays now have a pressing
visit Cor-
nell. They have been promised a
true Indian meal,
three men and served Indian style
seated on the floor, and without
silver. They also have an inyita-
tion to visit India, see Calcutta and
Delhi, and renew the friendship after
the students return to their home
land in June. A bait is offered:
Charlie’s father, who made one of
| the beautiful rugs for the United
Nations building, will give Mrs.
Oncay a rug if she collects it herself.
There were: a few eating taboos.
Krie cats everything; one visitor was
a strict vegetarian, one could eat
chicken, but not beef or pork. Fried
chicken legs and plenty of assorted
vegetables made a good compromise.
“They wondered about coming
into the kitchén with their shoes
they would drop in for an hour if on,” explained Mrs. Oncay. “At home
perfectly convenient. | in India, and probably in their apart-
Mr. and Mrs. Oncay had met Dr. ment, too, they take off their shoes,
Das when they visited Cornell with substitute sandals, and wash thor-
their son, Billy, a junior at Wyom- | oughly before entering.” Then she
Seminary, who is leaning toward a | added, “But you'd think that with
career as a veterinarian. Dr. Das, | the peppery food they eat, no germ
carrying keys of the medical build- | could survive. They gave us a jar
ing where he both teaches and
studies for another degree, unlocked:
doors which would normally have
of pickles from India, quarters of
lemons, with the hottest sauce I ever
tasted.”
MAIN HIGHWAY, TRUCKSVILLE
coolied by the | ishing to Mrs. Oncay that Charlie,
Kris ig a doctor, who will take the
latest developments in medicine
back to India.
John is working on a soil testing |
Q
Since coming to this country they
travelled widely. They all
speak beautiful English, having
started to study it in the eighth
grade.
The Oncays and the visitors ex-
changed notes on customs, dress,
habits, and education.It was aston=
now 29, had been married ever since
he was fourteen.
Kris knew. that he would be wel-
come in the Oncay home. The two
other men were a bit hesitant, fear-
ing they intruded. Would foreign-
ers be welcome ? The Oncays settled
that in a hurry. Another bit of
international relationship leading to
understanding between races and
nations.
Cub Pack 233 Dinner
Shavertown Cub Pack 233 will
hold it’s annual Blue and Gold Din-
ner Friday night at 6:30 in the Social |
Rooms of Shavertown Methodist
Church.
A buffet dinner is planned and the
arrangements were made by the Cub
Pack Auxiliary, Mrs. George Shaver,
Chairman. Entertainment will be
furnished by H. S. Daron who will
show films on Alaskan trips.
Awards 'will be presented to the
winners of the Cub Pack Fruit Cake
sales. Also, awards will be presented
to Cubs who have attained their
Bear rating.
\
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9 1961
109th Has Colorful History
Dog Officers
Open Campaign
Unlicensed Dogs
May Mean Stiff Fine
On or about February 15 a general |
check-up will be started for owners
of unlicensed dogs.
All persons found owning or har-
boring unlicensed dogs will be prose-
cuted without exception.
The minimum fine is $5.00 and
costs of prosecution, and the maxi-
mum fine is $100.00 and costs, or
30 days in jail, or both.
It is not the wish of the Bureau
of Animal Industry or Thomas Mar-
shall, local enforcement officer, to
make these prosecutions, and it is |
hoped that dog ownmers will take
advantage of this warning and pur-
chase their 1961 license at once.
The purpose of this check-up is to
license all dogs having homes and to
distinguish: them from stray and
homeless dogs.
The strays can then be picked up
and disposed of eliminating the
possibility of them causing damage
to livestock and poultry and also
preventing an outbreak of rabies
among dogs.
All dogs not bearing a current
license tag are considered strays and
may be disposed of by any officer on
sight. \
A fee of $2.00 is paid by the Com-
monwealth to officers for each stray
dog disposed of. Forms for Teport-
ing same may be secured from your
ocal Bureau of Animal Industry
officer, or from the Dog Law Divi-
sion, Bureau of Animal Industry,
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
The purchase of ‘a license does
not permit your dog to run at large
unaccompanied, and
picked up by any officer.
So, protect your dog and respect
your neighbor's property by keeping
your dog confined to your own
property.
Bookmobile Is
Suggested At Meeting
(Continued from Page 1 A)
the kitchen, relaxed for presentation
| of reports.
|
A social hour followed the meet-
ing. Present were Charles Man-
near, Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Jenkins,
L. E. Jordan, D. T. Scott, Jr., Rich-
ard Demmy, Fred Eck, Robert Bach-
man, Mrs. Fred Howell, Mrs. T. M. B.
Hicks, Homer Moyer, Mr, and Mrs.
Albert Jones, Mrs. Mae Townend,
Mrs. Harold Titman, Miss Miriam
Lathrop, Miss Frances Dorrance, My-
ron Baker, Mrs. Herman Thomas, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Gross, Mrs. Charles
Frantz, Ralph Hazeltine, Mrs. Dana
Crump, Mrs. John - Wilson, John
Conyngham, Mrs. Thomas Heffer-
nan, Stefan Hellersperk, Howard
Risley, Frank Slaff, Mrs. Hanford
Eckman, and from the Canal Zone
Lt. Col. Thomas Hicks.
SUBSCRIBE TO THE POST
CHOICE MEATS
A S
BB:
wioLe 509:
Y BEEF LIVER 39:
SPECIAL!
SHANK
HALF
BETTY CROCKER
CAKE MIXES
WHITE
YELLOW
DEVILS FOOD
19 Oz.
Pkgs.
3/99
*3
Chuck Roast
BLADE CUT c
3 ‘3 LB.
RIBS 49:
BIG ‘1. SALE
AMERICAN BEAUTY
® Kidney Beans
® Tomato Juice
SPARE
auerkraut
10 CANS
FROZEN FOODS
1°1,
131.
SUNSHINE
STRAWBERRIES
10 Oz. Pkgs.
PICSWEET
® CHICKEN
® TURKEY
® BEEF
PIES
PRODUCE
CELERY
LETTUCE Hds.
MAINE POTATOES —10 Lbs.
2 Bu.
29
29c
55.
CANDY
BARS
NESTLE’S or HERSHEY'S
10 BARS
39
Remember Our New Year Resolution
“We Will Not Be Undersold On Quality” |
ELIVERY — OR 4-7161 |
a sii pau pn
FREE
it may be)
|| lowing the grain of the wood.
tw.
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANI,
Dating
Back To Washington ’s Continentals
The 109th Artillery, Pennsylvania The action was taken by the
Army National Guard, ‘one of the | Office of the Chief of Military His- |
few units of the U. 8. Army able to | tory, Department of the Army, upon
trace its history directly to Wash- | the request of Maj. Gen. A. J. Drexel
ington’s “Continentals,” has been | Biddle, Adjutant ‘General of Penn-
awarded the combined traditional | sylvania.
designation of the “Wyoming Valley | What is now the 109th was organ-
Guards.” lized on October 17, 1775, as part of
[the 24th Regiment, Connecticut
1 Militia, Wyoming Valley then being
Acme Fourth Largest | part of Connecticut.
U. S. Food Store Chain | On September 17, 1776, two com-
: | panies of Pennsylvania Riflemen,
American Steres Company is the | organized from the 24th Connecti-
fourth largest retail food: chain in | cyt, were mustered into the Conti-
the United - States and presently | penta] Army as the First and Second
operates in seven eastern states and |, de pendent Westmoreland, or
the District of Columbia. Alpha Beta | Wyoming Companies. | :
Food Market, recently merged, oper- | © :
ates in the Seuthern California area
with its headquarters at La Habra,
California. Combined sales of the two
companies are now estimated at an
annual rate of approximately one
billion: dollars. The combined South-
ern California operation will be con-
The two companies served in com-
bat at Brandywine, Germantown, in
the New Jersey Campaign of 1777,
through the winter of 1777-1778 at
Valley Forge, and in the Pennsyl-
vania Campaigns of 1778-1779.
The Regiment as a whole was
| 590 pounds in 305 days. Both Day-
| light and Hollinprincess were milked L
i twice daily.
4 Myrna, junior four-year old, 559
| pounds of fat in 272 days; Sterling
| Mickey, senior three-year old, 521
ducted by Alpha Beta Acme Markets,
Inc, a wholly-owned subsidiary of |
American Stores Company, through
the present personnel of Alpha Beta
Food Markets, Inc.
To Remove Water Spots
In Refinishing Wood
‘In refinishing furniture, says Ruth
Darbie, Luzerne County extension
economist, water spots may show up |
after removing the old finish. i
+ To remove these water marks try |
4/0 steel wool saturated in dena- |
tured alcohol and rub briskly, fol- |
Water spots can also be bleached |
with a solution of two ounces oxalic |
and two ounces tartaric acid]
to one quart of hot water. This |
solution is poisonous, mix carefully |
in a glass container, and keep it out |
of reach of young children.
Apply the solution to the whole |
| surface so bleaching will be even;
OR 4-7161 |
wash off |
leave 20 minutes. Then,
acid with a solution of one table-
spoon household ammonia to one
quart cold water, Rinse with clear
water and let the wood dry
thoroughly. :
|
Local Guernsey Records |
A five-year old registered Guern- |
sey cow, property of Raymond Goer- |
inger, Lake Louise, produced 656
pounds of butterfat in 273 days, and
a junior three-year old produced |
Official records [rom American |
Guernsey Cattle Club also show two
cows from A. J. Sordoni's Sterling
Farms making high records: Sterling
pourrds in 295 days, on a twice daily
milking schedule.
Farm Calendar
More Roses — You'll have more
blooms on your roses this summer
if you delay any pruning until
March, remind Penn State exten-
sion floriculturists. ‘This practice
applies to all roses except the
climbers, which should be pruned
after they bloom.
Be Prepared — Best defense
against a farm fire is a good fire ex-
tinguisher located in the right
place. Every farm and home should
be equipped with suitable hand ex-
tinguishers that are properly main-
tained and easily reached if needed.
Guard Fruit Trees — Rabbits get
mightly hungry in winter, and one
of their favorite targets is fruit
trees. Carl Bittner, Penn State ex-
tension pomologist, suggests using
wire cylinders of hardware cloth, at
least two feet high and loose enough
to keep rabbits away from all parts
of the tree trunk. Use a stake to
prevent the wire from rubbing the
trunk. |
Care for Battery — Cold weather
puts an extra load on the battery
of your tractor, truck or automo-
bile. It is especially important to
have the battery fully charged to
take care of every need.
Skating Helps — Skating on the
farm pond benefits fish life, accord:
ing to Robert Wingard, extension
wildlife management specialist.
Skaters keep the snow cleared, thus
permitting some sunlight to pene-
trate the ice and water beneath.
Costs Higher — Because of the
increase in the average size of
farms, expenditure per farm ‘will
continue to rise in 1961, according
to extension® farm management
specialists at Penn State. Items
that will tend to keep costs higher
will be interest rates, taxes, wage
rates and new machinery.
Three Water Sheds
Near Coudetrsport in Potter Coun-
ty, are the sources of three water-
sheds, each flowing off in different
directions. Headwaters for the Gen-
éssee River flow north to Lake
Ontario. The Allegheny River flows
east, then north, then south to Pitts-
burgh forming the Ohio which joins
the Mississippi, eventually flowing
into the ‘Gulf of Mexico near New
Orleans. The third watershed, the
Susquehanna, flows southeast into
Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic
Ocean.
1
“Sometimes a young man who
thinks he has a gifl oh a string
finds out too late that he has hold
of a cord with a hook on the end of |
decimated at the Battle of Wyoming,
July 3, 1778, while attempting to
| defend the Valley against a powerful
force .of Tories and Indians. The
Continental units, by then combined
into cne company, arrived too late
for the battle itself, but formed a
rallying point for the remainder of
the Regiment. ‘
Following the Revolution, Wyom-
ing Valley units were known suc-
cessively as Colonel Hollenback’s
Battalion, Luzerne County Pennsyl-
vania Militia; Third Regiment,
Luzerne County Pennsylvania
Militia, and 35th Regiment, Pennsyl- |
vania Militia. . {
Part of the Regiment saw active
Hclped During Flood
The 109th played a distinguished
part in disaster relief during and
following the flood of 1936.
: Woild War II
On February 17, 1941, the 109th
re-entered Federal service with the
28th Division. Reorgainzed as sepa-
rate field artillery battalions, the
Regiment served in the 28th and
under various other commands in
the campaigns of Normandy,.Noth-
ern France, Ardennes, Alsaflf and
Central Europe. 3
In August 1950, one of these
separate battalions—the 109th Field
Artillery Battalion—was alerted for
Federal service with the 28th Divi-
sion for the Korean emergency.
Thirty-three men from this battalion
were killed in the train wreck at
‘Coshocton, Ohio the following
month. A large portion of the Penn-
sylvania National Guard remaining
on State duty was mobilized in
whole or in part to render honors
upon return of the dead to Wilkes-
Barre. The battalion trained at
Camp Atterbury, Ind., and served
overseas with the 28th Division in
Germany.
In May, 1951, the second batta-
lion of what is now, once again the
109th Artillery—the 967th Armored
Field Artillery Battalion—was or-
dered up for duty as part g& the
school troops at the Artillery ool,
Fort Sill, Okla. : :
The 109th was reconstituted as a
regiment in June, 1959, incident to
| the ‘Pentomic” reorganization. It
| now consistes of two howitzeg. bat-
| talions located at Kingston ory.
service in the War of 1812, furnish- |
ing a number of individual gunners
for the U. S. Navy at the Battle of |
Lake Erie.
Mexican War
Two units of what by then had
become the Wyoming Volunteer
Regiment served, combined, in the
Mexican War as Company I, First
Pennsylvania Volunteers, earning
battle honors for Vera Cruz and
Cerro Gordo.
Served In Civil War
As the 8th Pennsylvania Volun- |
teer Infantry, the Regiment was one |
of the first to respond to President |
Lincoln’s call for volunteers in April
1861.
month term of service in the Vir-
ginia Campaign of 1861, the Regi-
ment returned home. Reorganized
land regrouped as the 143d Penn-
sylvania Volunteers, the Regiment
| re-entered Federal service in Octo-
After completing its initial three- |
ber, 1862. Under this designation, it
fought in the battles of Chancel-
lorsville, Gettysburg, the
ness, Spottsylvania Court House,
Cold Harbor and Petersburg.
In Lesser Conflicts
duty, but not in combat, during the
Spanish American War and on the
Mexican Border. .
On July 15, 1917, the Regiment
re-entered Federal Service. Two of
its units had served continuously
since the call to the Mexican Border
in August 1916.
World War I
Tn three months of almost contin-
uous combat, from August 12 to
November 11, 1918, the 109th lost
268 officers and men killed,
wounded, gassed or injured, out of
Wilder- |
The Regiment served on active
Lt. Col. Tyssul G. Thomas, Forty
Fort commands the First Howitzer
Battalion, Lt. Col. Fletcher C. Book-
er, Jr., Dallas, commands the Second
Howitzer Battalion.
Stormy Day
SPECIALS
Save up to ¥2
on all Fall Shoes,
Winter Boots "
Fleece lined Shoes
Values to 9.95
Now S2.-$4.- $5.
.
op OR ASS
an original strength of 1500. The
regimental commander, Col. Asher
Miner, Pennsylvania National E :
Guard, Wilkes-Barre, was awarded 0 pen Daily to 9 p-m.
the Distinguished Service Cross as !
were seven of his officers and men. Se}
When one of his batteries became 4
engaged with the enemy at rifle and :
machine gun range, Colonel Miner ;
went forward and personally di- 25
rected emplacement of the guns 3
until severely wounded in the face f
and suffering the loss of his left leg. : :
All of the Regiment's original Chidren’s Bootery
National Guard officers remained in ¥
command until killed, wounded or
promoted. The battalion comman- Bk. Mt. Sho ine Cehi
ders received, on behalf of their . . pping Lenter
commands, the French Croix de Joa ;
Guerre. Twenty-two individual offi- Shavertown
cers and men also were awarded this |
decoration.
RAT KILLER of
New. ..
Vv READY MIXED
Vv READY TO USE he
TO WORK WHEN OTHER
BRANDS DON'T ae
"An Exclusive Blend!
7 4 :
8 {
rd
ft
3
got
tran
cha
cov
The
i
es
oS
o
{NER SG
tn
a
jo”
*