72 YEARS A NEWSPAPER Oldest Business Institution Back of the Mountain THE DALLAS POST anti, TWO EASY TO REMEMBER Telephone Numbers ORchard 4-5656 OR 4-7676 TEN CENTS PER COPY—TWELVE PAGES Civil Defense Session Draws Crowd Of 87 Kunkle Meeting Is Largest To Date In Back Mountain Mass care instruction for Civil Defense drew eighty-seven workers to Kunkle last Wednesday evening. Mrs. Gordon Bell stated afterwards that it was the largest audience she had spoken to in her years of in- struction. Stefan Hellersperk, ally visited, East Dallas Methodist Church the Sunday before the meet- ing, to ask for cooperation with Kunkle Methodist in its staging of <~ the mass care instruction program. Women’s units served refreshments at the coffee break midway of the three hour evening program. ° Mrs. Rell, representing Wyoming Valley Red Cross, showed a film of situations which develop 'in any mass care program where large numbers of refugees might be ex- a pected, portraying procedures in Re of accident or illness, and covering situations calling for hous- ing and feeding of many strangers. Dr. Robert Bodycomb, Luzerne County Sector 4 director,’ was present Clarence Laidler repre- Neented Dallas Township. Chief Rus- sell Honeywell, Dallas Borough; Ted Wilson, mass care chief for Sector 5, and Fred Dodson, mass care chief , for sector 4, represented East Dallas | and Kunkle. East Dallas sent a delegation of forty. Francis Ambrose and Stefan Hel- lersperk were present in their of- ficial capacity as key men of the Civil Defense effort in the area. Charlie Gosart Near Tornado Visits Amana Plant Near Cedar Rapids Flying through the edge of a tor- nado last Sunday night. Charles Gosart of Gosant’s Market landed safely at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, six- jteen miles from the storm eenter ‘where two persons were killed and property damage amounted to $2 million. Charlie made the trip from Phila- delphia as a guest of the Amana Refrigeration Manufacturing Com- pany along with some 72 other dea- | lers from all other parts of the country who gathered there for a tour of the big plant and the Amana community. ‘Amana Township, 19 miles south- | west of Cedar Rapids, is the home of a German Religious Society whose members live in various communit- jes along the Iowa River. The Society owns 26,000 acres. Villages one mile apart are named Amana, West Amana, East Amana, South. Amana, North Amana, Mid- dle Amana, and High Amana and Homestead. Houses are of brick and unfinished wood. Principal occupation is farming although the members have woolen amills, noted for {their quality, cotton rin factory, flour mills, saw mills (Continued on Page 3 A) © Community chairman of | Civil Defense for this area, person- | time. Safety Patrol Parade JOHN EVENSON | Three lads from the Back Moun- tain will march in the Safety Patrol | Parade in Washington Saturday morning. Already practicing parade formation and marching technique weekly at Coughlin High School are two boys from Lake-Lehman and one from Dallas Schools. Next Thursday, from Trucksville, Edward Schrama Jr. and Richard Post from Lehman, will join patrol leaders from Wyom- ing Valley, and the 36-passenger bus will start from Washington, via Gettysburg, where boys and girls will visit the battlefield. They will stay at the Burlington Hote! in Washington, and do as much sightseeing as possible. In a parade of 35,000 children (Continued on Page 3 A) Two Local Men Named To Board | Tuberculosis Society" Will Expand Program Elected to the Board of Directors of Wyoming Valley Tuberculosis and Health Society at its annual meeting {in April, two Back Mountain men, | Dr. Robert A. Mellman and Charles | Mannear were given important as- | signments at the meeting of the ' Board of Directors on Monday at Kirby Health Center. | Kenneth Muchler, president of the Society, announced that Dr. Mell- man will head an important new Health and Education/Committee for | the entire county. | Assisting him will be Rev. Robert | | Yost, Dr. Robert Klein and Dr. Har- old J. Harris. Mr. Mannear was appointed chair- {man of the important nominating | committee. | Mr. Muchler said the Society will | embark on am expanding program for detecting and finding evidences of tuberculosis among young people especiallly of school age and he ex- pects Dr. Mellman to be of invaluable service in organizing this work. Mr. Muchler said the Wyoming ; Valley has the highest incidence of tuberculosis of any area in the State—largely due to health hazards of the mines. He was extremely optimistic about | the successful treament of TB, espe- cially if detected early among the young and added that complete cure | can be affected in many of these | young cases in a short period of | | John Evenson MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION Bloodmobile Has | Unusually Good Dallas Response Appearance Of 119 Donors Ranks High In 11 Year Program Blood donation at Dallas Borough School on Friday was a banner con- tribution, 119 people offering them- selves for the sake of keeping them- selves and other members of their group assured of receiving trans- fusion if it should become necessary ation. The preceding day, Linear’s roster showed sixty-two names. Local women who cooperated in the Bloodmobile collection included Mesdames Harvey Kitchen, Margarek Dykman, Alfred Root, Mary Wright, Walter Davis, George Seelandt, Al- bert Rebenmack, David Evans, Irven Schobert, Peter Roushey, Fred Eck, Carleton Davies, James Keiper, Charles Sieber, Stefan . Hellersperk, and Edward Gilroy. Mrs. Gilroy reports an innovation in serving meals to the nursing staff. A smorgasbord was set up with spring flowers as a centerpiece, silver and fine china, and daffodils relieved the workaday atmosphere of the auditorium where donors awaited their turn. At the time of the red alert 4 p. m. school children lined the corridor outside, ready for the first | sound of the all-clear sirens, and Red Cross transportation was | 2¥onndsd for ‘ten minutes. In the eleven years of visitation of the Bloodmobile to Dallas, the present collection ranks as one of ! the top donations. The Blood Bank | usually nets approximately 100 | pints. LIBRARY AUCTION DINNER TONIGHT HAS INNOVATIONS Tonight's Library Auction Kick-off Dinner is an innova- tion, new from start to finish, la smorgasbord instead of a reg- ulation dinmer, and with a fast- stepping program planned by Charles Mannear and George McCutcheon. Festivities start at 6:30 at Trem Country Club. General Auction chairman Dr. L. E. Jordan announced commit- tees in advance, to eliminate ponderous pronouncements from the head table. A special feature will be the auctioning off of a swinging doll cradle made and decorated in pastels by Robert M. Scott, who has made doll cradles and beds since the beginning of the Auc- tion fifteen years ago. Mrs. Lee Tracy, wife of the Broadway star of ‘The Best Man,” made the dainty dotted swiss coverlet, trimmed with val lace.” Mrs. Tracy is a con- stant visitor at the Annual Auc- i tion. ! Robert Bachman, chairman of Auctioneers as well as president of the Library Association, will auction the cradle. Bt Governor's Forum Kingston Township Police Chief ; major Herbert Updyke is attending the Governor’s Traffic Safety Council in Harrisburg. because of accident, illness, or oper- | William Wright, ! Clinton Myers, Ward Jaquish, Percy , Love, Ted Ruff, Margaret Shoemaker, | “Dance Your Way Through the U.S.A” is the theme of this year’s May Day at the Lehman School. On Tuesday, May 16, the program will begin at 1:30 p.m. with the crown- ing of the May Queen, Rosemary Scavone, by the Maid of Honor, Cindy Disque. Attendants are Gladys McDermott, Patsy Hoover, JoAnn | Lois Price, and Mary Sabo. { For her Majesty's pleasure, jun- | ior and senior high school girls will | present a travelogue in the form | of various dances. Included in the sections of the country will be Ala- | ska, the Far West, Hawaii ,the South- | west, the South, the Central states, and the East. Rosemary Scavone, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Scavone, Sweet Valley, took the academic course and plans to go to the Macklin Practical Nursing School in Wil- kes-Barre. She was a member of the Student Council, Chorus, Tri- Hi-Y, and jis now a class officer for the third year. She is president of the Future Nurses of America. | Rosemary comes from a family of nine and has a twin brother. She |is a waitress at Pomeroy’s Depart- ment Store in Wilkes-Barre. She belongs to Qur Lady of Mount Carmel Church in Lake Silkworth. Mary Sabo, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Sabo of R. D. 4 Dallas, took the Academic course and was active in Senior Band, Senior Chorus, | Future Teachers of America (F.T.A.), Newspaper staff, Junior and Senior Plays. She ‘is: a member of the Nat- ional Honor Society, Record Club and Tri-Hi Y. Mary was chosen “Girl of the Month” by the Lehman Woman's Club in 1959. She is a member of the Idetown Methodist Church and choir. After graduation, she plans to attend Wilkes-Barre Business Col- lege. { She now works as a waitress in | Brace’s Coffee Shop in Shavertown. Cindy Disque, daughter of Mr. { and Mrs. Robert Disque R. D. 2 Dal- las, took the Vocational Course. She has participated in Band, | Chorus, ‘Junior and Senior Plays, i Basketball, F.H.A. Yearbook Staff, | Student Council { FFA. “Sweetheart” | Ridge Chapter, | Cindy is attending Night classes | at the Empire Beauty School, and | after graduation plans to attend day | classes. | She is a member of the Lehman | Methodist (Church, is active in church of affairs, is Secretary-Treasurer of the | Lafayette Choir Plans Concert For May 7, 8 | The 77-member Lafayette College | choir will present a concert at Irem | Temple, Wilkes-Barre, Sunday eve- | ning, May 7, at 8, it was announced { by John R. Corke, Dallas, chairman | f the local choir concert committee. | Under the direction of Dr. John | D. Raymond, chairman of the col- | lege's Department of Music, and staff | member of the Fred Waring Music | Workshop, the choir has gained an | outstanding reputation among eas- | tern collegiate choral groups. It has i been featured over ‘the nation’s radio networks since 1947 and has made a number of tele- vision appearances in Philadelphia |and New York. Applauds College Misericordia Award and was chosen | the Blue 2 community, the role of College Misericordia in | MARY SABO GLADYS McDERMOTT M.Y.F., and a member of the Sen- | ior Choir. | Gladys is the daughter of Mr. and | Mrs. Clarence McDermott of 84 Oak Drive, Oak Hill Dallas, Pennsylvania. She took the Commercial course and her future plans include office work. While in school she was a member of the National Honor Society, Year- ook Staff, Newspaper staff, chorus, | Vice-president of the Nursing Club, | a member of the Tri-Hi-Y, dancing club and intermural basketball. | Gladys attends the Gate of Heaven Church in Dallas. Justice Jones Lauds College Community| Award Presented Monday More than 250 persons, ‘them community leaders of all faiths, | saw Sister Mary Celestine, pres- | ident of College Misericordia, re- i ceive the 1961 Community Service | Award of Back Mountain Protective | Association for the college Monday night at a Community dinner at Irem Temple Country Club. | to that individual or organization in recognition of outstanding achieve- | ments for the betterment of | Back Mountain area. { Since its establishment here in { 1924, the college has maintained a | close relationship with the commun- | ity generously granting scholarships to scores of Back Mountain young women who would mot otherwise have received a college education. Its concerts, lectures and social func- tions have raised the. cultural level of the entire commumity. The col- lege courses in remedial reading have been a boon to Back Mountain | parents. In his role as spokesman for the Justice Jones praised the educational field, mentioning that the college is a great economic and aesthetic asset to the region. . He noted that the college was | being honored on May Day—signifi- cant for aw and order in the free world in contrast to the rule of fear prevailing in the communist world. ‘ Prior to and during the dinner music was provided by the College String Ensemble composed of: Jean Marie Neff, Mavgaret Kennedy, Ger- aldine Orowicz and Barbara Turn- bach, violins; Ann del Collo and Lorraine Rowe, violas; Donna Fries and Joan Voveris, cellos, and Ann Marie Jamilkoski, bass. Music for the lobby was from Mozart. During the dinner, selections from Broadway shows were by Patricia Ungemach, was accompanied by Madelyn Gloge, pianist. among | The award is presented annually | the | mezzo soprano, accompanied by Enid | Housty. Ann Marie McAfee, flutist, | ROSEMARY SCAVO PATSY HOOVER Patsy Hoover, daughter of Mr. and Jia Floyd Hoover of R. D. 4 Dallas, | took the academic course and after | graduation plans to go into nursing | at Wilkes-Barre General Hospital. She was chosen “Miss Senior’ by her class mates, and participated in Chorus, Junior and Senior Plays, | Staff, Tri-Hi Y, Record Club, Bas- | ketball, F.T.A., and was a class of- ficer. Patsy attends Tirst Christian | Church of Sweet Valley,. Jo Ann Lois Price, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Morgan C. Price of Eileen Crispell At BARBARA A. KOVALICK | May Day at Lake is scheduled for | May 16, when Eileen Crispell, attend- {ed by Barbara Kovalick, will be | crowned Queen of the May. Other girls of the senior class at the Lake Building will act as Royal Court, Fourth, fifth and sixth grades will | participate in the program , “Music | in the Air.” All high school students | will be present, and students from ! Noxen building will be transported | to the high school in time for the ‘one o'clock ceremonials. Eileen Crispell, daughter of Mr. | and Mrs. Earl Crispell of Noxen, is i taking the Academic course. After | graduation, she plans to enter train- (ing at Wyoming Valley School of | Nursing. { = Her activities include band, chorus, | cheerleading, Pep Club, Junior and Senior play, yearbook staff, intra- | mural basketball, newspaper staff, | FTA, honorary member of FHA) | Rainbow Girls. She was selected Girl {of the Month. Eileen attends St. Luke’s Lutheran Church in Nexen. Barbara A. Kovalick, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Visneski, { Noxen, is taking the Commercial | course. Upon graduation she plans VOL. 73, NO. 18, THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1961 Lehman. To Honor Queen Of May ie Rr CINDY DISQUE JO ANN LOIS PRICE R. D. 2 Hunlock Creek, took the academic course and after grad- uation, plans to attend Bloomsburg State. Teachers College to study Elementary Education. She was a member of the Band, Chorus, Junior and Senior Plays, F.T.A. Club, Dance Club, President of Vocal Aids Club, Newspaper re- porter. She also participated in the West - Side Conference Band. After school ‘and on week-ends she has a part” (ime. job 4b Shidly's liner wi Sweet. Valley. TT JO Ann’ sings in the choir at Maple Grove Methodist Church. Lake Building Will Crown Its Queen Outdoor Festival EILEEN CRISPELL Town Meeting Will Discuss Sewage Plans _ Citizens Invited To Ask Questions At School Tonight A town meeting will be held to- night at 8 in Dallas Borough Ele- mentary School for a discussion of the recent sewage feasibility survey completed by Roy Weston Associates. Experts in the field will be pres- ent to answer questions and to aid interested citizens in reaching a de- cision on the sewage disposal prob- lems. Residents of all Back Mountain communities concerned are invited to attend and take part in the dis- cussion. Borough President Harold Brobst will act as chairman; and Robert 1 Brown, Borough Secretary, will out- line the problem and the steps taken to date to determine the feasibility of sewage disposal for this com- munity. , Representatives of the engineer- ing firm, Roy F. Weston Associates, will be present, ito aid in answering technical questions, and a represen- tative of C. C. Collins, financial ad- visers, will be on hand to discuss financial aspects. Atty. Joseph Flan- agan will handle the legal side. In announcing the meeting, Sec- retary Brown said: “Only an in- formed public can understand the sewage problem, the need for cor- recting it and the costs of solving if. This Town Meeting meeting will be a golden opportunity for all of us to get first hand information on which to make decisions.” Work To Start On New Stores Pethick Gets Contract At Shopping Center Pethick Construction = Company was awarded the contract this week for erection of the first 144 feet of stores in the Dallas Shopping Center and will start construction within a day or. two. according to an an- nountement made ‘yesterday dir Louis Goeringeor owner of the Center. The first group of shops will be at the extreme back of the lot; parallel to the Lehigh Valley Railroad, per- mitting ample parking space in front. Participations. and front will not be completed until requirements of tenants are determined. Mr. Goeringer said there is great interest in the :Center and leases for most of the stores are pending. Underground light and power lines have been run under the parking area for the big lighting standards that will be erected shortly. Addie Construction. Company - has about completed filling the parking area so that black top can be laid within a matter of days. The A&P Building is nearing com- pletion with beautiful tile floors laid this week. It now appears that the market will be ready for opening abount June 15. Rural Republican Club Rural Republican Club of the Fourth District will hold an import- ant meeting on Wednesday night, May 10 at Pete Wolfe's, Sweet Val- ley, 8 p. m. Important papers will be distrib- uted at that time. All committee men and women are requested to attend. Rotary Exchange Students Planning To Take Off For Foreign Lands. [Five students from Westmoreland High School are Rotary Exchange students to foreign lands. Mary Alice Knecht, the only junior among the exchange students, will finish her high school education in Sweden. Marilyn Eck will go to Southern Rhodesia. - George Jacobs will study in the Philippines. Annabelle Am- brose and Lynn Jordan, will take postgraduate work in the Nether- lands. All four girls will sail July 21 from where they will separate. Jacobs, som of Mr. and Mrs. George Jacobs, Shavertown, origin- ally scheduled for Indonesia, expects now to go to the Philippines, start- ing immediately after graduation, | and flying half way round the world. His main interest is agriculture. School starts over there around the first of June, lasts for ten months. Marilyn, daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Montreal , bound for Amsterdam, Rotary Exchange Students Planning To Take Off For Foreign Lands. "during August. The school semes- ter, third of the current year, begins in September... Marilyn will take this semester work, then graduate to a higher level of postgraduate work, and take two more semesters. Two long vacations are the rule in this school, one in January, one in Au- ' gust. Mary Alice Knecht, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Knecht, Dallas, will be with Mr. and Mrs. Carl David- son in Simrishamn, Sweden, and will attend the local school in that com- munity. She is studying Swedish. Lynn Jordan and Anabelle Am- brose are studying Dutch with Hans Meiheizer, a last year’s Rotary ex- change student, living in Kingston. They expect to do quite a bit of traveling while in Holland. Lynn is daughter of Dr. and Mrs. L. E. Jor- dan, Trucksville; Annabelle, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Ambrose, Elmcrest. Lynn hopes to keep up with her art interests while in Eindhoven. Annabelle goes to den Helder. | Robert W. Laux, general chair- ! man, presented Rev. Francis Kane, {to take a beautician and barbering | Fred Eck, Shavertown, after disem- | course at Wilkes-Barre Beauty Cul- harking in Amsterdam, will go to | ture School. London, where she will be guest of Her activities include secretary of | a Rotary International family while Rifle Club, and member for two awaiting accommodation by plane to | years; yearbook staff. Junior play; | Southern Rhodesia. She will study | intramural basketball, honorary in an English girl’s school at Bula- | member of FHA. She attends Noxen | wayo, arriving in time to take a trip ' Methodist Church. to a famous African game preserve From fifty applicants from dis- trict 741, Rotary selected twenty- two. Five were from Westmoreland. High “School. Thirty-eight clubs offered candidates. : Rotary exchange students go to Australia, New Zealand, India, Afri- ca, and many other countries. In- donesia is no longer on. the list. Seated in front of the speakers e D o pastor of Gate of Heaven Church, eo-chairman; Father James P. Walsh, St. Therese’s Church; Judge Edward Lopotto, Luzerne County Orphan’s Court; Robert W. Laux, ‘general chairman; Mrs. Thomas Mack, Thomas Mack, Mus. F. B. Schooley, Dr. F. B. Schooley, Mrs. Stanley Hozempa., Ana, dean of the college; Rev. Robert DeWitt Yost, president of the Pro- R. Jones, State Supreme Court; Mrs. R. Jones, State Suprere Court; Mrs. Benjamin R. Jones, Atty. James Lenahan Brown; : Frank Wadas, Mrs. Leonard Corgan, Leonard Corgan, Mrs. Joseph Wallo, i Seated at speakers table, left to 4 right, Father Edmund Byrne, assis- tant college chaplain; Mrs. Robert, Laux, Msgr. James Clark college chaplain; Father Francis Kane, Gate of Heaven Church; Mrs. Daniel J. Flood, Sister Mary Celestine, presi- dent of the college; Sister Mary table are members of the College § ; Advisory Council, among them Percy | who gave the invocation. A. Brown; John Stapleton, Mr. and | Congressman Daniel J. Flood, Mrs. George Ruckno, James Balz, | toastmaster was in fine fettle, in- Mr. and Mrs. William Fenstermacher | troducing the speakers and making and Rev. Francis Brennan, St. Ther- | everybody comfortable. | ese’s Parish, y (Continued on Page 3 A) % \ Aid ZEN iia, ha Hi pal