SECTION A —PAGE 2 THE DALLAS POS T Established 1889] “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution , Now In Its Tlst Year” Member Audit Bureau Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association Member National Editorial Association Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. “re Member of Circulations The Post is sent free to all =-Frospitals. If you are a patient Back Mountain patients in local 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 h&ld ‘for more than 30 days. wa. National display advertising rates 84c per column inch. Transient rates 80c. P.M. Advertising at 85¢ per column inch. em paid f +, that ounceme for raising money w has not previously Advertising deadline g copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged sified rates 5c per word. Minimum if charged $1.00. r at advertising rates, we can give no assurance s of plays, pafties, rummage sales or any affair ill appear in a specific issue. eference will in all instances be given to editorial matter which i in publication. ising—LO A Ron ranting. liberal UISE C. MARKS graphs—JAMES KOZEMCHAK . C JFeulation DORIS MALLIN progressive newspaper pub- “lished. ev ery Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania. PRESIDENT KENNEDY will be TV's most frequently-seen person- ality during the seven-day period starting May 31, and ending on the following Thur June 6. That's when the netwo his overseas mee mier Khrushchev. lined up eight special telecasts on the subject. NBC-TV has ' scheduled three special half-hour will cover the Pre President de Gaulle at 8 p.m. Fri- day, June 2. The meeting with Pre- mier Khrushchev will be shown aft 9:30 p.m. Saturday, June 4. A general wrap-up will be recounted on the regular Chet Huntley show 5:30 p.m. Sunday, June 4, and the ting: with Pri 1 ime Minister Mac- Hon 40.3 be shown in a special ine 5 at 10:30 p.m. SID R would like to’ get back in ion on a more regular Basics 2 has-been conferring | in New York with Patricia Barry, who co-starred with him earlier this season in a GE. play. He would like a weekly situation comedy in which she would play the wife. MILTON BERLE is another who is casting for a new show. His first preference is for ad-lib panel show. BILL BENDIX, with The Life of Riley and Overland Trail in the | past, is filming a Mr. Ed. episode which he intends to use as a pilot for a third series starring himself. PILOT SHOWS will ‘be used on “Westinghouse = Preview Theatre” to be' seen Fridays' from 9:30 to 10 p.m. on NBC starting July 14. A pilot film is a one episode story in a series that-a producer hopes will be bought by some sponsor after he is shown the one pilot film. WN g a pilot film aften costs $50,000 or more to produce. The stars, cast, crew and writers S, are paid whether "it is bought or not. Many | more ‘pilots. are made than can be used. It is a case * of backing one’s convictions with hard cash. So eles e123 ren of these pilot films that Soper will be uwdience. The | tion cemedies were m seen by shows will all 1 and you will se stars as Hal Joe E. Brown, Myron Mec- Cormick among others. They were made by se 1 of the major prod- reasom Or an- f sponsor interest, other series—they grade as full- tho made fledged series. Maybe you, the home never think they showed than. the one] will promise audience, better chosen. CANDID CAMERA - Alan Funt plans shoot future sequences in Europe, Australia, Greenland and Alaska this summer, enough for seven full programs. One thing good . about these location he won’t be recognized. BING CROSBY intends to tape an all Irish special in Ireland for showing next season, but he has warned ABC-TV not to schedule it opposite any competing network special. Bing doesn’t want any re- currence of the situation in which he found himself scheduled a half- hour after the start of Ingrid Berg- man’s CBS-TV drama. NO WONDER! It has been said that David Susskind’s latest prod- uction of “The Power and the Glory”, which is now in rehearsal and will be taped for eventual CBS-TV showing is costing some- thing like $500,000. But seeing who is in the cast it is no wonder. Sir Laurence Oliver is starring in this 90-minute : adaptation of Graham Green’s moving story. Others in the cast are Julie Harris, George C. Scott, Keésnan Wynn, Roddy ' Me- Dowall, Patty Duke, Fritz Weaver, to Cyril Cusack, Frank Conroy and Tim O'Connor. DINAH SHORE will start her eleventh season on television with will be covering | : ngs with French | President de Gaulle and Soviet Pre- | CBS-TV alone has | casts. The first | sident’s visit with | Bucknell Graduate STEPHEN L. DAVIS Bucknell University will = confer bachelors degrees upon approxi- mately 375 seniors and honorary degrees upon five distinguished guests at its 111th. annual Com- mencement Sunday, according to President Merele M. Odgers. gree of bachelor of arts is Stephen L. Davis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Steph- en N. Davis of Pioneer Avenue. Graduation festivities will start Saturday with the formal opening of the University’s new $650, 000 | Administration Center as the high- | light of Alumni Day. The Rev. John S. Bonnell, pastor of the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian { Church of New York, will preach the sermon at Baccalaureate exer- cises Sunday morning, preceding the graduation ceremony. Roger M. Blough, chairman of the Board of Directors, United States Steel Cor- poration, will deliver the Com- mencement address. : THE DRIVER'S Normally, scare techniques in- tended to frighten drivers into aren't too. effective. Most drivers | have a firm belief that it is “the {other guy” who will be hurt or killed in traffic accidents. However, before a recent holiday weekend, a radio station in Califor- nia came up with a novel idea that may have convinced at least 225 drivers that traffic accidents could happen to them. Radio Station KPAY in Chico, Calif., startled its listeners by offer- ling a free $750 funeral for anyone killed in holiday traffic. The only { qualification necessary was that the victim had registered with the sta- tion in advance. “Simply send in your name and address, along with the next of kin's on a postcard,” said cheerful- voiced announcers. The station re- ceived 225 postcards in advance of the holiday. But everyone made it home safely and there were no claimants for the free funerals, The station owner commented that he felt the purpose of the stunt—to instill in listeners the realization that it might not be “the other fellow,” but themselves, who could be killed unless they drove safely—was successfully ac- complished. It often takes dramatic or atten- tion-getting stunts such as this to jolt motorists out of their blind conviction that accidents happen to “the other guy.” In spite of all safety authorities do to help drivers avoid accidents—law enforcement programs, better roads, improved signs—traffic accidents remain ithe single biggest cause of deaths in this country every year. two new sponsors and on a differ ent evening. Her show, which will be in color, will be seen on alter- nating Fridays at 9:30 p.m. starting in October. Among the candidates for the de- avoiding accidents by safe driving | ONLY YESTERDAY ir HAPPENED J() | YEARS AGO: Thomas Carle supervising prin- cipal of Kingston Townships schools, had his contract renewed for $2,700. All but two of the teachers were retained, at salaries ranging from $900 to $1,950. Conditions were becoming over- crowded in Trucksville Schools, but a building program was deemed impossible to finance at the time. Ralph Eipper was improving after having been in for several weeks, and friends expected to see him shortly, resuming work at Oiiver’s (Garage. Mr. and Mrs. James Perrigo of Trucksville were preparing to ob- serve their Golden Wedding. Eli Parrish, one of the few surv- iving “veterans of the Civil War in this area, reminisced that “Shell Anna had been born in a log cabin in the midst of heayy skirmishing side Atlanta. American Stores opened a new grocery at the Inlet, Harvey's Lake. State and County road workers were selected ‘ from married men applicants, to relieve shortage of work among heads of families. The area hoped to see billboards eliminated from the entrance to the beautiful Back Mountain, following recommendations of a committee formed in Wilkes-Barre for beauti- fying approaches to the city. . Signs of the times of the Great Depression: six sheriff-sales adver- tised in the Dallas Post. rr HAPPENED 2() YEARS Aco: The Dallas Postoffice was raised to a second class status. . Arch Austin, completing his tenth year at Beaumont, headed a faculty of nine teachers. Ten seniors were getting ready to graduate. + At Lehman, honor students were announced: Nancy Parks, Victoria Niezgoda, Esther Decker, and Jes- sie Bonning. Javie Aiche, in an editorial, states that though Germany had the best equipped fighting force in the world, Japan had nothing to worry this country. Dallas Borough expected to grad- uate 23 seniors; Dallas Township 34; Kingston Township, 58; Lehman, 21. Kingston Township May Queen was Marion Jones. Thorwald E. Lewis was at the helm in Dallas Township; James A. Martin; in Kingston Township; T. A. Williamee, Dallas Borough; Austin ‘Sayder, Lehman. Tom Kinney was helping make Martin Bombers in Baltimore. ann 1() years aco: in the last graduating class to receive diplomas from Dallas Bor- ough high school bafore Dallas Bor- ough joined forces with Kingston Township, top students were Joan Bruns and David Kunkle. At Dallas Township, valedictorian and salut- atorian were announced as Louise Brziski and William Goddard. Janice Rose was May Queen at Kingston Townshoip. : Fifth annual Memorial Day Parade at Sweet Valley dréw thousands of spectators. { ‘With arrival of ‘structural steel, Gate of Heaven parochial school building took a spurt ahead. Mary Alice Lewis was selected May Queen at Lehman. Farmers Night market opened in its greatly expanded location in Kingston. ) Harold: Souder and Herbert Brobst joined the air force. Mrs. David Edwards, 79, died at her home in Noxen. Gloria Sickler became the bride of Pvt. George Parrish.’ Treva Traver was selected as Lake Township valedictorian. Treva had already been Queen of the May. Harry Allen, who had a leg ampu-~ tated at General Hospital was home again at Harveys Lake, much im- proved. Reunion Planned At Lavelle Home A meeting ‘was held Thursday evening at the home of Mildred Price Lavelle, Joseph Street, to outline plans for a reunion of Class 1946, Kingston Township High - School. The affair will be held at Castle Inn on Saturday, September 2. Mary Lou Boyes Swingle is chairman. Present at the meeting were Mary Lou, Hazel Roushey Garris, Marie Calkins, Lamoroux, Alice Lloyd Lameroux, Lois Sickler Perry, and Mildred Lavelle. Bittenbenders Have Son Mr. and Mrs. George Bittenbender, Machell Avenue, have announced the birth ‘of a six pound, fourteen ounce baby boy, Brett, at General Hospital on May 25. There are three other children, Drew, Jan and Chris. Mrs. Bittenbender is the former Lucille Disque of Dallas. Mr. Bitten- bender is son of Mrs. George Bitten- bender and the late (George Bitten- bender. Mother and baby returned to their home on Monday. Gail Funke took care of the older children while their mother was in the hospital. Subscribe To The Post during the battle that raged out-| seven.” oe We N THE DALLAS POST, FRIDAY, JUNE 5 1961 Basic In Texas RICHARD F. LANG Mr. and Mrs. Reuben F. Gabel have received word from Major Gen- eral Robert M. Stillman, Command- er of United States Air Force, Lack- land Military Training Center, Texas, with reference to Richard F. Lang, stating that his basic period is pro- gressing satisfactorily. . Richard intends to study electron- ics upon conclusion of his basic training. A nephew of Mr. Gabel he was raised by Mr. and Mrs. Gabel. He graduated from Lake-Lehman High School, class of 59 . Richard would like to hear from his former school mates. Mt. Zion One of cur Mt. Zion girls is grad- uating from the University of Penn- sylvania Hospital School of Nurs- ing. She is Miss Harriet Howell (I knew her as a little girl when she was called “Happy” Howell, a good descriptive name), daughter of Mrs. Ida Howell who teaches in West Pittston School. The graduation ceremonies will take place in Phila- delphia on June 5. Harriet was in the class of 1958 in West Pittston High School. Those who expect to attend her grduation are her sister, Mrs. Richard Dymond; her mother, Mrs. Ida Howell, and her grand- mother, Mrs. Lucy Howell. ‘When I was over on the other road at Richard Dymond’s getting this news a little girl stood by wait- ing a chance to get a word in edge- wise. She stood before me and asked, “Do you want to know how many children there of us?” And I said “Yes, how many?” Five,” she replied. “Do you want to know how old they are?” Of course any reporter would be glad of such news. ‘‘There’s Debra and Barbara, they are twins.” “How old are are they?” “Five.” “Who else?” I inquired. “There's Ricky, he’s And?” “And Robert. He's three.” Said I, “That’s only four.” “I'm Brenda, and I'm six,” she said. Now I thought that was a pretty good story, and this is my opinion, that there is a valuable Dy- mond cluster. Mr. ‘and Mrs. Paul Smith of Mt. Zion are spending Sunday with their scn’s family, Keith Smith at Center Valley, Pa. Keith and his wife have two children, a boy and a girl. Last Saturday our pastor, Rev. William Reid, Jr., attended a con- ference for pastors and laymen at the Federated Church of Maine, N. Y. The conference was conducted by the Town and Country Commis- sion of the Wyoming Methodist Conference. ; The Mt. Zion reporter did not get to church last Sunday. He got a call to preach at the Dallas Meth- odist Church in the absence of the pastor, Rev. Russell Lawry. One of the delights of supplying the Dallas pulpit is hearing the very well trained youth choir sing under the direction of Miss Fern (Coldren. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Lewis and Miss Nettie Parrish visited Frank Parrish in Montrose and to Nich- olson to visit Mr. and Mrs. Addison Woolbedt. A most interesting session of Neighborhood Quarterly Conferences was held Sunday night at Orange. The group included members and officials from the Center Moreland parish and the Carverton, Mt. Zion and Orange churches. It was pre- sided over by Rev. Leon Bouton, superintendent of Wilkes-Barre Dis- trict. Two Coolbaugh Brothers In Amphibious Exercise ONSLOW BEACH (FHTNC) — Merten Coolbaugh, seaman, USN, and Laing . N. Coolbaugh, fireman apprentice, USN, sons of Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Coolbaugh of Shaver- town, serving aboard the tank landing ship USS Wood County, participated, May 22-29, in large scale amphibious assault exercises at Omslow Beach, N.C., with 1,000 Navy and Marine Corps personnel. Brenda Lee Stuart’ Mr. and Mrs. George R. Stuart, R. D. 2, Dallas, announce the birth of a daughter, Brenda Lee, in Nes- bitt Memorial Hospital on May ‘18. She weighed six pounds, seven ounces. Mrs. Stuart is the former Doris Varner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Varner, Meeker, and Mr. Stuart is son of Mr. and Mrs. George Stuart of Poplar Street, Fernbrook. They have another daughter, Pamela Jeanne, nineteen months. A chance remark is anything a man manages to say when two women ‘are talking. —The Southside-Sentinel Urbanna, Virginia Children from all over~the world | write for information on Pennsylvan- | ia, according to the Pennsylvania Department of Commerce. They have requested information | on “fish hatitcheraries”, “the Penn- sylvania Dutchess Country” and Pittsburg’s “steal industry.” They address their letters to the | “State Information Bureaucrat,” “Mr. Commerce” and the “Pennsyl- | vania Answer Department.” Many | request samples of coal, petroleum, | rocks or minerals. One asked for a “fragrant of the Liberty Bell.” Al little girl from Alabama wrote, “Please send the state tree, the state | bird and the Guvner.” ; A girl in Arizona wrote for infor- | mation on the practice of witchcraft | in Pennsylvania. Another, from Texas, wanted the story of ‘the Development of Development since 1935.” |A fifth-grade boy in Long Island, New York wrote, ‘Please send all infermashun you have on Pennsyl- vania. . Our teach don’t.” A boy, age 7, in California said, “Send me everything , you have on Pennsyl- vania. =I was born. there. I like California but I like Pennsylvania gooder.” A boy from Arkansas said, “We have been studying your state in social study. P.S. I thing your state is petty.” An Illinois fourth-grade gir] had this concise request: ‘Please send me samples of Pennsylvania "Information Bureaucral” “Pickled” By Pen Queries | “In our class we were to pick a state {and I pickled Pennsylvania.” | was awarded an “A” in Chippendale i of Early American Deccration held history, past and present.” A Washington state boy declared, A homesick 8-year-old boy near Buf- falo, New York write, “I like | Pennsylvania becaus I lived there | four years and 1 would like to see some fremilyour sights.” The Department of Commerce student inquiry section services | 45,000 children’s requests annually. (Note to Editors: — Incorrect | spellings are those of the children.) Local Women, Honored By Historical Society Mrs. Paul Sutton Road, Gross, painting, and Mrs. Harry Edwards was received as a member at the meeting of the Esther Stevens Bra- zer Guild of the Historical Society at Williams Inn, Williamstown, Mass. on May 18, 19 and 20. They both entered decorated trays. Fifty Years Associated With Wyoming Sem. Dr. and Mrs. Wilbur H. Fleck, 420 | Warren Avenue, Kingston, are this | June completing their fiftieth year of association with Wyoming Sem- inary. Dr. Fleck has served as Teacher, Dean, President, Trustee and Advisor to Alumni. HOMETOWN AMERICA THE REPORT CARD — PARENTS NG J ARE SUCH Lucky J PEOPLE ! [DB ALL THOSE APPLES I BROUGHT, AND YOU GIMME GRAPES Lire “That’s be- cause it’s one of the top- notch weeklies in the entire country!” weekly 0 OILAY PENTA From HT Pillar To Post That new Parkade entrance direct to the Miners National Bank” 38 in Wilkes-Barre is strictly the cats. A wounded citizen, concealing" the lack of teeth, can sneak out of the dentist’s office, holding her = aching jaw in her hand, move quietly along a dim corridor, make* a quick dash across the connecting link, and hide herself in her cart ii with nobody the wiser. : No going out on the street, no battling a crowd at the revol- ving door, no unseenly exposure. : No trying to cogverse with a casual acquaintance on the street... while mumbling through the novocaina. Why is it that when you have your best hat, and have just. treated yourself 'to a new permanent, you meet nobody you know, = but when you are in a sad condition, hoping only for privacy, you: run into a schoolmate you haven't seen for twenty years? One: who sizes you up with a gratified air, saying inwardly, “Mildred is" SLIPPING.” : No such contretemps, that the Parkade above the alley, is a going concern. Such an easy place to park, too. You can lock your car, and; when you come back to it, there it is in the same spot, not buried behind a large Cadillac and three compacts. If you get a parking gouge, it’s your own gouge. Nobody did it to you while you weren't : looking. Plenty of room to back in and out. 2 The innards resembled a huge snailshell while in process of" construction, as viewed from the upper deck of the Boston : : store parking ramp. The spiral looked a little small for exoert maneuvering of the battleships now on the road, the oversize sta- tion wagons, and the deluxe models, but drivers seem to manage all right, creeping down the incline on their hands and knees. " Compacts, Volkswagons, and elderly 1953 Chevvies zip around the curves without trouble, and up to date nobody has run over the smiling attendent at the check-out booth. " This automation is really astonishing. At the supermarkets, a door springs to attention and opens itself as a rolling cart of gro- ceries approaches it, closing gently as the housewife passes through. Probably the same kind of a beam that makes the entrance gadget at the Parkade open its mouth and extend a slip, already numbered, dated and timed to the hour and minute. It used to be considered impolite to stick out your tongue, but machines can do it with impunity. * ' And that is real progress. Doubtless there will eventually be spanking machines, designed to deliver a paddling, soft or hard depending upon the pushing of the designated button. 2 ‘And the soap people, spurred by competition, keep on Invent ing new hazards for the housewife. The latest is Dirt ‘Backwash, which has been always with us, but has lately found its appointed spot in the headlines and on T-V. ! There’s one thing, however which has died a well-earned death, and that is the publicized ballyhoo about the detergent which required no rinsing, just hang the sheets on the line and : hope for the best. 1 f What ever happened to it, anywa entrance, high advising All the washday products <, while still mothers of babies to rinse the di ly. Then all of a sudden there dense silence, and all the detergents invented something els extra bleaching, or dynamic action. All soap companies assume that every housewife has an auto- matic washer which clogs because of the other company’s deter- /; gent. I've news for the T-V . . . lots of us are still using non-auto- matic washers where we can control the suds by just looking at the level, and we don’t get clogged on wésh-day. Instead of waiting for the washer to choke itself off, we just add soap a little at a time, increasing the amount as sheets proceed to shirts and towels. And we don’t feel the least bit deprived, anymore than we feel deprived about belonging to the vast majority who do not hove, dish-washers, What's more, we are not above swishing out the lingerie in + the bathroom sink and letting it dri ip over the tub. “But that Parkade entrance to the Miners National Banl'. a ‘modern, improvement I can go for in a big way. super cleaning power, or } .. That's. FOR MODERN PRINTING, TRY THE POST “I see The Dallas Post has been honored again !”’ Membership in GREATER WEEKLIES is by invitation only . .. we are proud to have received this invitation to the ranks of America’s finest newspapers. Our selection points up the fact that The Dallas Post meets the require- ments equal to those demanded by metropolitan papers. you, our readers, are getting more local news, pictures, features and adver- tising than the average weekly paper offers. lation is carefully checked by the Audit Bureau of Circulation, for the pro- tection of our advertisers, it helped tremendously in our selection as a member .of Greater Weeklies. We thank you for your readership of The Dallas Post . ~ are able to publish a better newspaper. Keep up with your community-Read The Dallas Post Yes... b THE DALLAS POST HAS BEEN SELECTED A Greater Weeklies Newspaper i’ It means that Since The Dallas Post circu- . through you we “More than a Newspaper — A Community Institution” — NOW A GREATER WEEKLY NEWSPAPER — con