EE Sls Nolan Sr etd man Ea spre ES as 3 § RE REA Ee Bak wR Rem Ee wae aw BW RA own re ae wos moe ve ow new oe SECTION B — PAGE 6 Snow Fungus Many lawns in the area are show- | ing symptoms of a fungus disease called Snow Mold, according to county agent E. V. Chadwick. Snow mold is most severe when snow covers the lawn for long per- iods as it did this winter. It is most severe on well-fertilized lawns and particularly where the snow fell on grass that was still fairly green. Symptoms are a white cottony growth. As the leaves die they turn brown and cling together. Where the grass is long, a crust-like mat of dieseased blades is formed. Uninjured roots will produce a new growth in four to eight weeks. If the grass is matted, raking away faster re-growth. Fungicides help reduce the seveér- ! ity of snow mold but will not prevent its They are best applied in the fall or during a mid-winter thaw. Applied now, fungicides may reduce further injury. Mixtures are sold commercially as Calo-Car, Calocure, Fungchex, Woodrich mixture 21, etc. These are usually Mercury or Cadmium containing compounds. Spring’ Began Monday Spring began officially Monday afternoon at 3:32, bright sunshine following weekend snow and freez- ing rain which sheathed branches in ice and made highways hazardous. the dead portions will stimulate Subscribe To The Post Provide now ° for their eo protection e ... insure! 5 BR © OT Fire Insurance and Extended Coverage. Life Insurance: Retirement, Fam- ily Protection. Accident, Liabil- ity, Theft and Auto Insurance. eoeososoocscrces HAROLD E. FLACK \. To Hazle Myra Berti, daughter of Mrs. Hazle Berti and the late Bur- gess Norti Berti, goes the credit for having identified more than ninety persons in the picture of the crowd at the Westmoreland-West Hazle- ton basketball game at Scranton which appeared on the front page of last week’s Dallas Post. Since Hazle Myra’s family have long been subscribers to this news- paper, she will receive’ a year’s subscription to the magazine*Sev- enteen.” This is Myra’s list: Mr. and Mrs. Francis Ambrose, Lou, John, Diane, Peggy and Cathy Reese, Bonnie ¢ “ny VA 3-2189 INSURANCE Brooks Bldg. Wilkes-Barre treat yourself to luxury... COTY surround yourself with * sprays your fragrance in a super-fine mist. Typically it is. Choose from four world-famous fragrances, created by Coty especially for a lovelier you. UAIMANT EMERAUDE 00 L’ORIGAN plus tax ‘PARIS’ PARFUM DE TOILETTE" beauty...Coty’s new atomizer French... which, of course, SE FREE ATOMIZER! with each purchase of parfum de toilette at regular price of $2.00 EVANS DRUG STORE SHAVERTOWN > | Don’t Sell Yourself SHORT . . . ASK ABOUT OUR DRASTIC COST REDUCTIONS oN GAS RANGES WATER HEATERS SPACE HEATERS MAYTAG WASHERS MAYTAG DRYERS CVU OUR BUSINESS, BOTTLED GAS BUT We Can Save You MONEY ON APPLIANCES JEAN. GAS SERVICE CO. Memorial Highway DALLAS TARO Ai WE SELL ANY | APPLIANCE | Made To Burn ahs | Baker, Marion Eck, Dr, Brobst, Shirley Brown, | Robert Brown, Robert Moore, Mary Reese, Mr. and Mrs. James Wertman, Wil- bur Davis, Robert Ash, Jean Ash, || Eugene Brobst, Beverly Anderson, and Mrs. William and Mrs. and Mrs. Edward Buckley, Dr. Mellman, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bodycomb, Mr. "i Richard Bodycomb, Robert Parry, | Jr, Eddie McDade, Art Dennis, Don- ald Dennis, Jack Evans, Elmer THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1961 bing ai eas 'Hazle Myra Berti Identifies Ninety Persons At Basketball Game Williams, Henry Owens, Bobby Welsh, Carol Cleasby, Frank Trim- ble, Pam Baker, Myra Berti, Susan Moore, Mimi Mohr, Gale Morgan, Linda "Farrar, Charles Baker, Roger Lacy, Carol Myers, Bucky Hale, Robert Maturi, James Knecht, Doc. Whittaker, Donny Shaver, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mohr, Carol Remley, James Besecker, Sr., James Beseck- er, Jr., William Allabaugh, Mr. and Mrs. John Williams and son, Miss Jennie Hill, Mabel Jenkins, Wayne Schmoll, Judy Wertman, Pete Up- dyke, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mathers, Sharon DeRemer, Chere Gauntlett, Harriet Sands, Susan Williams, Dona Richell, Sandra Hoover, Carol Dymond, Susan Larrish, Celia Monka, Annabelle Ambrose, Shirley Yalick, Donna Bolen, James Lawson, Fred Tembplin, Ralph' Templin, Fred Brokenshire, Mr. and Mrs. Tex Wil- son, Roy Stein, Willard Lozo, Robert Bachman, Lem Troster, Joe Sekara, Mrs. T. M. B. Hicks, Mrs. James Goodwin, Mrs. Irwin Coolbaugh, Dr. Malcolm Borthwick Friday was a beautiful day for the bow and brook trout. Sportsmen gathered to help with the transfer of fish from the four trucks, the first installment of an addition of 21,000 trout to the icy lake waters, completed on Wednesday, when the final truckload was delivered. Trucks, first of the season from the fish hatcheries near Carlisle, arrived at Alderson Post Office at 1:30 on Friday. Hundreds of cars were lined up at that end of the lake, and anglers crowded the banks. Compressor motors purred, as attendants waited for the signal. Two trucks took off down the road to Point Breeze, towing a long line of cars behind them like the tail of a kite. A sportsman in hip boots kicked |! at the rotten ice along the shore alongside the pier. Open water appeared, welling up from the frigid depths. : . A fish truck driver lifted the lid of a tank, and a great splashing ensued, foam flying, water soaking the by- | standers. A reporter climbed up into the truck to look into the tanks, where fish swam in darting circles. “Ever lose any in transit?” “Nope, we get'em there alive. We don’t crowd them, we give them lots of room to move around, and the compressors furnish ‘enough air for twice that many fish.” “Do you have to keep the tanks at a constant temperature?” The driver pulled a thermometer out of the water. “Just forty-eight degrees,” he reported, ‘same as when we started from Carlisle four and a half hours ago.” \ He flourished a deep net, and | sportsmen gathered round, clamor- ing for the buckets. A dip into the tank, a breathless instant as the silvery mass was lifted and turned into the bucket, a. quick run to the bank, a quick plunge of the bucket into the open water, and the trout were free, dart- ing under the ice. Bucket followed bucket until the tanks were exhausted, as an atten- dant lifted the last fish from the tank and turned the faucet that dis- charged the water with a gush, pursued the trucks which had trundled off earlier in the after- néon. Two miles down the road, the two advance trucks were still unloading, close enough to the shore to permit use of nts without inter- mediate buckets. One huge rainbow trout escaped, and a sportsman fell on him as on a football, scooping up the slippery fish and carrying it to the shore. It darted away, hesitating for a moment under the shadow of a rock, and was gone. Wheeler's Cafe NOXEN ROAD HARVEYS LAKE EVERY SAT. NIGHT LOBSTER TAIL PLATTER i/> Spring Chicken 75¢ PEARL’S PIZZA Open Daily 5 p. m. fo Midnight * FRIDAYS — Open 11 a. mf. to Midnight PHONE ORDERS FILLED 'IN 10 MINUTES ‘Memorial Highway, Dallas OR 5-1852 RIERA ia i Gosart's | stocking of Harveys Lake with rain- | sportsmen leaped into their cars and Planting Of Fish At Harveys Lake Attracts Hundreds Of Sportsmen. Many small children were in the crowd, watching with Dad’ while the fish were planted, shrieking with delight when the buckets spilled their load into the water, dashing across the road with small regard for safety. But sportsmen’ and spectators drove with caution. Nobody was hurt. On Saturday, two more fish trucks with: four tanks apiece, delivered 1,900 brook trout and 1,900 rain- bows. On Monday, four trucks delivered 3,820 brook and an equal number of rainbow trout. On Wednesday, the last consignment was delivered, one truck's worth, 950 brook and 950 rainbow. Stocking of streams, says J. F. Yoder, district fish warden, must be postponed - each spring until the freshets are over and the streams 4 normal size. Lakes get their quota: first. This year, the fish are un- usually large, by no means finger- lings: Many of them run well aver twelve inches in length. Kingston Township Installs Police Radio Installation was completed last week on a new short wave radio set-up for Kingston Township “Police Department. The base station for the new Globe Electronic Broadcaster is in the Kingston Township Municipal Build- ing. The tower is installed on the roof of the building. Now officials in the municipal building can call the police cruiser in any part of the Township. - CLEAN STORY Robinson Crusoe had leisurely weekends (yet all was neat and tidy) because=—at least the story goes—his work was done by Friday. Our cars and roads have been improved. Now let's improve our driving. — DRIVE SAFELY. ELVIS PRESLEY'S newest gal is NANCY’ SHARPE . . - CONNIE STEVENS and GARY CLARKE won't set the! date yet « o's NATALIE WOOD wants to use her own voice in “West Side Story”, but United Artists says no dice « o « BOBBY RYDEWL shared FABIAN'S apartment when he was aT venteen MAGAZINE | SUBSTITUTION if SY y @ JOANNE WALTERS special correspondent’ in Hollywood’ NEW GAL recently’. . « DAVID’ NELSON is off to, Germany for a five week trapeze stint. . . TROY DONAHUE substituted SHERRY JACKSON for’ SALLY TODD « « . CONNIE FRANCIS, in an eye opening current SEVENTEEN article: “It's: terrible in" o/ way that’ every- thing I' want’ is’ done’ because I'm important” . . . DOLORES HART cosfaring with BRAD DILLMAN: in “Francis of Assisi” Looks like a budding romance for’ EDD" BYRNES' and’ ANGIE DICKIN- SON « . . ANTHONY HALL, former Philly thespian, signed to'a long term’ contract’ with MGM . . . JIMMY RODGERS just put the finishing touch- es on his new flick, “Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come”. . . DIANE MC BAIN wants out of “Surfside Six” My: FIANCEE" \ FRANCIS OF ASSISI . BONNIE FOWLDS of Aitken, Minn. was our January Mystery Picture $50: contest winner. Congratulations; Bonnie! . .. ROBERT HORTON is’ introducing MARILYN BRADLEY fo his friends as “my fiance” « « « DEBBIE REYNOLDS and TAB HUNTER cosstarring in “The Pledsure Of His Company” «eo S€ you next month{ ~ needed GETS DOLLS READY FOR AUCTION BEFORE GOING TO HOSPITAL Louis Cottle, his arm. We began unwrapping dolls. “My wife,” he said conversa- in the Dallas Post. where the Library Amction dolls, and she Had them all ready to come when she went i to the hospital on Friday.” tionally, “saw some dressed these. “Hospital 2” “Yes, she's at Nesbitt. fell downstairs Friday evening just as the Sing Along With Mitch: show was warming up. Broke her left arm close to the shoulder, and for a few minutes we thought she’d put out an eye, but it turned out the blood was from a deep gash on her scalp.” Four little dolls, scrubbed to their original color, and neatly dressed, will go over the Auc- courtesy of Mrs. tion blook, Cottle, for thirty-two years a resident of Shavertown before moving to Seneca Place in Forty Fort December 17, dropped by the Dallas Post Wednesday, with a box under Most narrow minds seems. DR. I. BERGER - OPTOMETRIST Phone OR 4-4921 27 Machell Ave., Dallas also come combined with a wide mouth, it: i EYES EXAMINED GLASSES FITTED CONTACT LENSES High Ri Production | Ralph M. Sands, Wyoming, has 24 completed production records aver- aging 12,177 lbs. of milk and 504 lbs: of butterfat, according to Holstein | Farm News. 3 Lactation averages are calculated on the commoniy-employed two- milkings a day, 305 day, mature equivalent basis. , uniform basis for drugs w hen This provides a 'a DALLA DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA comparison’ and. he registered Holstein Bc selection In breeding programs. incidence of - 20 years compared This day 4 to 6 other nd new reactions ago was very low with the present per cent sensitizing index: of how widely used drugs such as penicillin, sulfa drugs, streptomycin, highly reactive OUTDOOR THEATRE to: Er : FRIDAY, SATUR DEBORAH HOBERT KERR HUTCH CLANS JOHNS DINAMERRILL | Screenplay By ISOBEL LENNART MUSIC COMPOSED AND COND DAY, SUNDAY PETER ing PRODUCTION OF HE el TECHNICOLOR® PRESENTED 8Y WARNER BROS. Directed by reo av DIMITRI TIOMKIK | FRED 2ZINNEMANN usTIioY ER lie WL Tr 0 TB BR FIGHT P ICTURES Filmed where it happened «5,000 years slag * ULYSSES—7:15 — 11:15 FIGHT PICTURES—8:40 THE SUNDOWNERS—9:15 i iin 0; CRON» az STARTING i FRIDAY AND SUNDAY THE SUNDOWNERS—7:00 — 11:00 FIGHT PICTURES—9:10 ULYSSES—9:30 > PATTERSON AND JOHANSSON 4 i En ye TIMES SATURDAY COMING The World of Susie Wong The Grass is Greener SOON The Wackiest Shi Where the Boys Are p in the lh SEES RW EEE RRR RRR ER SE REE En RR REE ERLE ER Re eT EE BB Se BS Ra eB She ¥ § 2 13 Hes ge «5 f= pa ww Co