The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, March 02, 1961, Image 1

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    72 YEARS A NEWSPAPER
Oldest Busiriess Institution
Back of the Mountain
THE DALLAS POST
TEN CENTS PER COPY—TWELVE PAGES
Star Of Opera On
Ls
Elaine Malbin Will
On Misericordia’s Theatre 3 |
Elaine Malbin, the remarkable |
young soprano who is star in all of |
the singer's media, will sing the role |
of Mimi in the Boston Opera’s ‘‘La
ELAINE MALBIN
| made | her
College Program
Star
stage, in supper clubs, and on radio.
In the Fall of 1953, Miss Malbin
first trip to England,
where she did a concert program of
| arias and songs from “The Medium”
| attended the opening
ORchard
TWO EASY TO REMEMBER
Telephone Numbers
4-5656 OR 4-7676
MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION
Trebilcox To Be
Concert Soloist
Philharmonic Will
Play March 13
Wilkes-Barre Philharmonic Soci-
ety will offer its second concert ‘of
the seasocn March 13, ‘at Irem Tem-
ple at 8:30 .p.m. Under ‘direction of
Ferdinand Liva, the orchestra, cele-
brating its 10th anniversary season,
| will present Harry Trebilcox, well-
| known Trucksville pianist, as solo-
ist.
Mr. Trebilcox, a member of the
faculty at Wyoming Seminary and
Wilkes College and music critic for
the Wilkes-Barre Record, will play
Ravel's Concerto for the Left Hand.
In recognition of the Easter sea-
son the program will also include
the Prelude to Wagner's opera,
“Parsifal”’, as well as the melodic
Symphony No. 4 by Tchaikowsky.
The evening concert will again be
preceded by a free youth concert
Monday afternoon, March 13, for
junior and senior high school stu-
dents. Two busloads of students
from the Dallas Junior High School
concert in
November... Details of the concert
will be presented to the Junior High
School by Alfred Camp.
William “Bill” Jeter
Is Slightly Improved
William “Bill” Jeter is seriously
|ill at General Hospital wher¢ he was
taken Saturday afternoon in Kings-
| ton Township Ambulance following
| a heart attack suffered at his home
lin Meadowcrest,
The son of Mr. and Mrs. W. B.
Boheme” which College Misericor- | on BBC. She appeared at England's | Jeter of Lake street, Bill has been
dia’s ‘Theatre 3” will present at
Irem Temple, Wilkes-Barre, on
Maich 10, at 8:30 p. m. The Boston
Opera’s production of Puccini's per-
ennial favorite, “La Boheme,”
sung in English. It is a production,
newly - designed, newly - mounted,
and fresh-voiced with young talent.
Elaine Malbin is an extraordinary
representative of the new genera-
tion of opera singers who are young,
beautiful, vocally skilled, and excel-
lent actresses. She ‘has had a full
career in media of musical expres-
sion. In the field of TV opera she
has scored consistently in a series of
remarkable performances since the
age of nineteen, when she sang
Violetta in the CBS-TV Opera
Theatre presentations, a5 the star
§ two Broadway shows, ‘and in
Glyndebourne ‘Festival in 1954, and
| in the same year sang in BBS-TV’s
| production of “Girl of the Golden
{| West.” . Early in 1959, Miss Malbin
| she performed on BBC-TV in “Il
{ Tabarro’’ and received such acclaim
| that she was immediately reengaged
to sing excerpts from ‘Madame
| Butterfly” and “Kismet” on that
| networl’s “Music for You’ - series
| the following month.
In 1960, Miss Malbin went to Eng-
| land twice. In May she created the
| leading role in the world premiere
| of Sir Arthur Bliss’ “Tobias and the
Angel.” = In October she sang Nedda
| in “Pagliacci.” Both of these appear-
| ances were on BBC-TV. Back in
America, ‘she sang MIMI at the
| Academy of Music in Brooklyn and
Numerous guest appearances on top | did some concert work as well a
TV variety shows, on the ‘concert
E Founders Day Celebration At Dallas Borough PTA
Members of Dallas Borough PTA |
who made Founders Day a success, |
% shown grouped behind a fes- |
Wroly decorated tea table, bright |
with cherries and small hatchets, |
and a large Washington’s Birthday
cake. |
making appearances on TV.
|
|
|
Welton
Farrar, chairman; Mrs. Earl Brown,
hostess; Hanford Eckman, president;
Left to right are: Mrs.
Mrs. Graydon Mayer, hostess; and
Mrs. Louise Colwell, school principal.
Photo by Kozemchak
Song Written By Mrs. MacVeigh's
Father Brings Up Happy Memories
It was Mrs. Joseph MacVeigh’s
father, Cy Warman, who is responsi-
ble for one of Mrs. T. M. B. Hicks’
earliest and pleasantest recollec-
ns.
9 must have been four years old
at the time. There was Mamma,
tgmming a pie crust, and singing
® Marie’ at the top of her
lungs.
“Every daisy in the dell
Knows my secret, knows it well,
And yet I dare not tell
Sweet Marie,” !
Mamma, carolled, as the trimmings
“fell to the floured board.
And then, as she gathered them
up and deftly patted them into a
tiny saucer pie for a small girl, she
sang again,
“When I hold your hand in mine,
Sweet Marie,
A feeling most divine,
Comes to me.”
Whistling the refrain between her
teeth, she slipped the saucer pie in-
to the oven and took me on her lap
in the big rocking chair with the
curly arms.
It was warm in the kitchen, and
it smelled heavenly, of brown sugar
and cinnamon, ‘Sweet Marie” was
the micest song in the world.
1 wondered about the line, “Makes
me falter at your feet,” but there
was no question about, ‘Makes my
of Mamma's arms, the robin outside
on the lawn, whistling up a shower,
the bleeding hearts in the garden,
and the saucer pie bubbling in the
oven.
Cy Warman, songster and editor,
is long dead.
His daughter, Charlotte MacVeigh,
died this week.
But his song lives on, evoking
happy memories . and those
who knew Charlotte MacVeigh will
always remember
sence, a living song of happiness.
South District To Have
A New Polling Place
For the first time in many years
Dallas Towship voters in the South |
District wil have a new voting place
in the Primary Election.
The former polling place on the |
Oscar Dymond property having be-
come too small because of increased
population, the Charcoal
Building has been obtained through
the joint efforts of John Gosart,
Democratic ~~ committeeman, and
Clarence Laidler, Republican com-
mitteeman.
The (Charcoal
has a large room, ‘two doors, plenty
of parking space and is located
happiniess complete,” because that
only a short distance from the form-
was all bound up with the comfort | er polling place, GAR
| in
her gentle pre- |
Products |
Products Building |
| constantly under oxygen since his
| admission and on Monday night it
| was thought that he might not pull
| through. He is now showing some
| treated by Dr. G. W. Klem.
Elderly Shavertown
Woman Breaks Hip
| Miss Anna Holcomb, 81, nearly
| bedridden for the past six years at
the home of her sister, Mrs. Walter
| Shaver, on Pionecr Avenue, broke
|her hip Monday morning in a
| fall in the bathroom. She was taken |
| to General Hospital in the Kingston
| Township ambulance by crewmen
“Gordon; Pugh and Hill,"and placed
lin traction.
Mr. Shaver discovered Miss Hol- |
l'comb at 4:30. Confined to hospital
bed or wheelchair, she never before
Ihiad attempted to get about by her-
self.
Death Releases
Mrs. MacVeigh
Has Been In Hospital
For Over A Year
For over a year, ever since a fall
which she fractured her hip,
| Charlotte Warman MacVeigh, wife
| of Joseph MacVeigh of Center Hill | John Sidler; treasurer, Mrs. June inger as chairman of the reporting
Road, had been a patient at the|Swanson; assistant treasurer, Mrs. | committee.
[Son 1s Genera] Hospital, Salis-
bury, Maryland. Early Monday
| morning she died.
| - Private funeral services were con-
| ducted by Rev. Robert Hollett, rec-
| tor of St. Andrews Episcopal Church
| at Princess Anne, and Rev. William
| McClelland, rector of Prince of
{ Peace, on Wednesday at St. An-
| drews.
| - Her death comes shortly after the
| retirement of Mr. MacVeigh from his
| position as vice president and gen-
eral manager of the Pressed Steel
| Corporation, an action which became
| effective January 1. Mr. MacVeigh |
| resigned his position as president of
| Dallas Borough Council several years
ago.
Mrs. MacVeigh, 74, was spending
| the holidays with her sister-in-law,
[2a Philip Platt of Princess Anne,
| when she was injured December 27,
[ 1959. For many months she had
| not been expected to live.
| She was born in Salida, Colorado,
| daughter of the late Cy and Ida B.
| Hays Warman. Her father, owner
lof a daily newspaper in Crede,
| Colorado, was known as ‘The Poet
of the Rockies.” He published a book
of poetry known as ‘Songs of ‘Cy
{ Warman,” among them the popular
song, ‘Sweet Marie,” first sung in
| 1893. Mr. Warman was president
{ of the Grand Trunk Railway in Col-
| orado at the time of his death in
11914, and from his fund of know-
| ledge of railroaders, spun tales about
their courage and resourcefullness.
As a young girl graduate of
Sacard Heart Convent in London,
Ontario, Charlotte Warman travelled
widely in Japan and the Philippines,
before marrying Joseph MacVeigh
in 1910, and moving in 1918 to
Wilkes-Barre. [For the past twenty-
seven years, the couple has lived in
| Dallas. \
Mrs. MacVeigh was a member of
Prince of Peace Episcopal Church,
| and Dallas Women of Rotary.
There are no children. Mrs. Mac-
Veigh leaves her husband; three
half brothers: Dana, Bryan and Rob-
ert Warman, all of Buffalo, N. Y,;
| ; ;
land several nieces and nephews.
|
Photo by Kozemchak
Senior members of Lake-Lehman
Band who won sweaters last Mon-
day night, are reading from left to
right, first row: Barbara Hoover,
Janet Allen, Sharon Coombs, Susan
Dodd, Jackie Ruff, Donna Meeker,
Judy Shalata, and Jeanie Kocher.
Lake - Lehman Band Sponsors
1S | again journeyed to England, where | light improvement. He is being | awarded sweaters to senior mem-
| bers of the Band last Monday night.
During the past year, Band Spon-
| sors have raised money through
| these activities: bake sales, weekly
roller-skating parties, sale of hoagies,
a record hop, candy sales, pecan
| sales, making of autumn and Christ-
| mas corsages, a Band Night at Sandy
| Beach, a turkey raffle at Christmas,
| and assisting with the County Fair
| at the Lake building.
| This money, in addition to the
[amount needed for purchase of
| sweaters for boys and girls who are
| playing their. last season with the
| band, has been used to buy kettle
| drums and other band instruments;
a voice gun for use of John Miliaus-
| kas in conducting the band; electric
| tuner, drum cases, drum heads, and
| special music.
| In addition, Sponsors have fin-
| anced purchase of a new American
| flag and a new school flag; two
| sabers for the color guard; twirlers’
| flags. Instruments have been over-
| hauled and uniforms repaired.
| During the summer a picnic for
band members and their - parents
was financed by Band Sponsors.
The group also made a substantial
deposit in a savings account to help
|
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purchase new uniforms in the future. ; Tection. | trict, choir director and baritone |
Officers of Lake-Lehman Band ' The next meeting, scheduled for | soloist at Shavertown Methodist
Sponsors are: president, Mrs. | March 15, will be dovoted to voca- | Church, and has appeared as bari-
Eltheda Hacklin; vice president, | tional education, with Carl Goer- | tone soloist throughout Northeast-
| Mary Zorzi; recording secretary, Mrs.
| Mary Drapiewski; corresponding sec-
| retary, Mrs. Naomi Davis; John
Miliauskas, director.
Dallas Chorale
Elects Officers
Mrs. Howard Garris
Named President
Dallas Womans Club Chorale
| elected officers Monday night, when
they met to rehearse at Back Moun-
tain Memorial Library Annex.
Mrs. Howard Garris was elected
president; Mrs. Joseph Goode, sec-
retary; Mrs. Russell Case, treasurer;
Mrs. Lewis Reese and Mrs. William
Hanna, music chairmen; Mrs. George
Kostenbauder, public relations.
Announcement was made that
bookings for concerts this spring are
.now being made. Civic organiza-
arrange for concerts may get in
touch with Mrs. Goode.
panist, Mrs. Robert Carey.
Four new members welcomed to
Turner, Mrs. Ralph Fitch, Mrs.
Arthur Williams, and Mrs. William
Rood.
American Flag To Scouts
Commander Kenneth Jackson of
Harveys Lake Post No. 967 American
Legion urges all members of the
Post and Auxiliary to be at Lake-
Noxen School Building Tuesday eve-
ning, March 7, at 8 for ‘the
presentation of an Americal flag to
Harveys Lake Troop 331 Boy Scouts.
Post and its Auxiliary.
Immediately after the ceremonies
:he Post will hold its regular meeting
at 9 at Herman Kern's Restaurant.
(inal plans will be made for the
annual Egg Hunt, }
Senior Band Members At Lake-Lehman Win Sweaters
Lake-Lehman Band Sponsors Give |
Sweaters To Senior Band Members
Fielding, Carol Mathers. Fifth: Jack Donnelly, Bill Wil-
Third: John Price, Pat Hoover, |liams, Mike Zorzi, Mike Yurko, Royal
Ruth Tremayne, Helen Sidler, Mary | Culver.
Manzoni, Mary Sabo, Glenda Lyons. |: John Miliauskas, band director,
Fourth: Dean Long, Dale Titus, | does not appear in the picture.
John Corbett, John Landis, Doug | Absent when the picture was
| Trumbower | taken, Grover Anderson and Barbara
| Second row: Eileen Crispell, Ron- | Hennebaul. 3
|
Concert Soloist
A
Be
Dr. Husted Talks
‘To Study Group
Dr. Inez Husted, Luzerne County |
{ Supervisor of Special Education, in |
a talk to members of ‘the citizens |
| Committee for Better Schools last!
| week, called attention to the many |
| services offered by the County in |
| the line of special education, for |
deaf children, children with physi-
| cal andifraps, those with restricted
'powers of d¥rning~and-facreasingly, +
for gifted children. i
She sees in the future a mobile
0 GORDSIN. J. EVENS!
Gordon J. Evans, Trucksville, will
be the featured baritone soloist in
VOL. 73, NO. 9,
THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 1961
| Westmoreland-West Hazleton
Meet At Scranton CYC March 8
District Eliminations
March 8-13;
Winner Plays Winner Of District 4
‘Wednesday, March 8th, the firsts
game of the PIAA class A district
play-offs gets underway at Catholic
Youth Center in Scranton.
In District 2 five teams will battle
it out for honors. They include:
Nanticoke, last year’s regional win-
ner; Westmoreland; Scranton Cen-
tral; West Hazleton and either Plains
or Northwest.
| Westmoreland (18-3) meets West
Hazleton (19-2) in the opening
game on Wednesday. Winner meets
Nanticoke, March 10.
Scranton Central meets the Valley
league representative, Plains or
the CYC. The winner advances to
Northwest, Thursday, March 9, at
the finals, Monday, March 13.
District 2 winner meets the Dis-
trict 4 winner, Wednesday, March
15, somewhere in the’ region.
West Hazleton Strong
Westmoreland will have its hands
full in the first encounter when it
takes on a strong West Hazleton
team.
The Hazleton team with 19-2
slate, lost two per-season games to
a strong Tomaqua club, a class A
representative in its District.
The charges of coach Bill Radz-
wich have had little trouble in win-
ning handily in the Anthracite
league of the Hazleton area.
Biggest offensive threat on the
ball club is the 6'5” pivotman, Bob
Yencho. Yencho is a capable scorer
and tough rebounder, using - the
jump-shot mostly for his points. Bob
is on the slow side but ‘a capable
performer. He is a senior.
Bob Koch, 62’ senior, is the
team’s leading scorer with an aver-
age ‘of 19.2 points per game, Records
for 19 games show® Koch with 140
goals, 85 fouls for 365 points. Bob
is a standout when it comes to ball
handling and dribbling. He is a
possible: All-State selection,
John Bartko, 510” sophomore is
the second leading scorer on the
squad with a 13.2 average. Bartko
in 19 games shows 110 field goals,
33 fouls for 253 tallies.
Carl Schneider also a 510" sopho-
more is a fine backcourt performer
and handles the ball well.
The other big man on the squad
is Larry Krause, a 6'3” senior, also
a rugged rebounder.
Ed .Bredeski, Louis Flain,
Joe
Nos jick aad -Roland ‘Boyle. round
| out the. squad.
| This was the first season for
| clinic, social worker, phychiatrist
several numbers on ‘the ‘Orpheus 'Radzwich as head mentor of the var-
tions or church groups that wish to |
Mrs. Ted Ruff presided. Director |
is Mrs. William Carroll, and accom- | #
the group recently are Mrs. Albert |
The flag is being presented by the |
This is an important meeting since |
Choral Society's 9th annual spring
concert on Tuesday, March 21, 8:15
p. m. at Irem Temple. Mr. Evans is
the associate’ conductor of Orpheus
and will also conduct a group of
male chorus numbers in this concert.
He is a graduate of Mansfield. State
Teachers College, was soloist “with
the Advanced Chorus and a member
of its opera workshop.
A former resident of Taylor, he
now resides in Trucksville with his
wife. and small son. He is vocal
supervisor of Forty Fort School Dis-
| and ‘psychologist, able to make, the |
rounds. of schools in the county,’
i helping teachers to understand their
| pupil's problems. |
Joseph Boyle, Director of Pupil!
Personnel « for © Wilkes-Barre City |
| Schools, explained his department
{as a team approach to specific pro- |
! blems, where children are unable
| to progress satisfactorily within the
| framework of a regular teaching
! schedule, because of handicaps, re-
| March 15, will be devoted to voca-
ern Pennsylvania as well as with
| many local organizations.
Awarded For Perfect Game
|
Cliff Garris, Dallas, is shown on Both men started bowling just four
| the left above receiving a Polaroid |years ago.
Land Camera from Tony Bonomo, | Mr. Bonomo feels many more big
proprietor of Crown Imperial Lanes. | games, will go on record with the
Cliff rolled his first perfect game of fuse of the new pins recently in-
| 800, the thrill of a bowler’s lifetime, | stalled and says ‘Cliff has broken
i during a practice series at Crown | the ‘jinx’ so many bowlers claim
| Imperial Lanes last Wednesday. |these lanes have against, high
He started on lane 12 with a 193, | scores.”
| topped it with 203, and finished with Cliff was among those honored at
| twelve consecutive strikes, the first [a party Saturday night given at
{300 rolled on the local lanes since | Crown Imperial by Tony for local
| they opened in 1956. | winners of the All-Star Tournament,
Cliff and Nick Stredny, also of |scorekeepers and others who helped
| Dallas, held previous, high game make the events a success.
{records at Crown with 299 games. | Photo by Kozemchak
| sity. He previously - handled the
| Junior Varsity who are undefeated
this season, and have won 59
| straight over the past three seasons.
{ The latest victory for West Hazle-
(ton was a 113-34 win over White
Haven, Tuesday night. This was the
{ second time for the team. to hit over
{100 points this season. :
| “A smooth functioning team, with
fine ball handling and coordination,
|a coach’s dream,’ is the way a
| Hazleton Sports Writer described
| the team.
Local Coaches Confident
George ‘McCutcheon, junior var-
sity coach, who has been scouting
the district teams, claims West
Hazleton will give us a rugged time,
but believes we have the potential
on the Westmoreland team to stop
the West Hazleton club..
With such fine scorers as Trewern,
Gauntlett ‘and Evans, who rebound
as well as they score, our team can
make it rough for any team.
Trewern Leads Scorers
Ronnie Trewern, 6’5” senior, owns
three scorers with an average of
20.3. Trewern also has a high single
game of 44 points.
fouls for 363 points.
Tommy Gauntlett, 63”
more, shows an average of 19.3 with
402 counters in 21 games. He has
collected 169 goals and 64 fouls.
aging 14.7 points per game.
has collected 115 goals, 71 fouls for
301 markers in 21 games.
Also capable of scoring, but
usually content to play their fine
floor game, setting up baskets for
other teammates are Ed Inman and
Lynn Dietz.
Rounding out the Mountaineers
squad is Tom Oney, Ernie Supulski
and Bob Letts.
Game Time 8 P. M.
Playing at the spacious CYC, fans
should have no trouble getting a
good seat since it holds around 5,000
fans.
Ample parking facilities are in
the fans favor, but those desiring to
go by bus may make reservations
through the high school.
GOOD LUCK! Mountaineers from
all the fans in the Back Mountain
area.
Twice In 10 Minutes
Within * ten minutes, Lester
Squier’s car, parked back of Leh-
man school, was struck twice, both
times by members of his faculty,
Tuesday afternoon at closing time.
Robin Arrives
All operations at The Dallas Post
ceased yesterday afternoon when a
robin, a pair of cardinals and a
dozen juncos alighted at the same
time in the back yard.
the highest average among the top |
In 18 games |
Trewern has garnered 156 goals, 51 |
sopho- |
Wes Evans, 60” senior, is aver- |
Wes
Mellman Plans
Use Of School
y/_ DR. ROBERT MELLMAN
Dr: Robert Mellman, superinten-
dent of Dallas Schools, says that
when the new building is completed,
it will’ be available for use by the
general public: whenever extra-cur-~
ricular offerings of the school per-
mit.
It lis planned to offer evening ex-
tension school courses at least three
evenings each week. A later an-
nouncement by Mr. Alfred M. Camp,
evening school principal, will [ist
the subjects and the nights on which
the offerings will be scheduled.
The auditorium will’ be scheduled
for concerts, plays and lectures, "to
be sponsored by High School groups,
parent-teacher associations, com-
munity and service organizations.
~The gymnasium will be scheduled
for leading sports spectaculars and
exhibitions by teams of college
gymnasts and physical education
students. Physical education and
recreation programs for adults will
be offered cooperatively by the Y.
M. C. A. and the Dallas School Dis-
trict. The recreation advisory com-
mittee to the Board of School
Directors of the Dallas School Dis-
trict will be asked tor submit a
comprehensive program of adult
recreation.
Classrooms will be scheduled for
college extension classes conducted
by cooperating colleges and univer-
sities.” Adults and qualified high
school = students will be asked to
participate in a long-range program
of college credit’ courses. Technical
theory courses will also be available
for prospective supervisors.
All organizations, groups, and
clubs should cooperate in the estab-
lishment of a clearing house for all
activities conducted in the Back
Mountain area. All activities, con-
ducted for the good of the commun-
ity and its people, should be planned
only after the date has been ap-
proved by a committee made up of
representatives of the groups inter-
ested in better community service,
Lays Wreath On Tomb
53
GEORGE JACOBS
George Jacobs, Pennsylvania win-
ner in the recent Voice of Democracy
contest for high school students, was
accorded the honor of laying the
wreath on the tomb of George
Washington last Sunday, the only
student permitted to enter through
the grilled iron doorway which bars
visitors from the resting place of
the Father of his Country.
George, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George Jacobs of Pioneer Avenue,
and senior at Westmoreland, return-
ing after four days spent in Wash-
ington with winners from 50 states
and District of Columbia, says, “It
wasn't the sight-seeing or the lun-
cheon, it was the students from so
many different places that made
the whole thing so interesting.”
A Japanese exchange ° student
took first place, an English exchange
student second. Winners of third
and fourth places were high school
seniors who have long experience
in radio wark,
we