SECTION A — PAGE 4 THE SEASONS & by Mrs. Mary L. Craig There are two seasons which I love best of all; they are spring and fall. TI love spring, for it is the time when all things begin to awaken , after their long winter sleep. Standing on a windy hill with the warm gentle spring winds blowing, you look down on a world of wondrous. nature beginning to come alive. In the streams the ice is melting from their banks. In the middle clear water is running; hear it sing like happy children’s laughter as it goes merrily on its way. .The snow has melted from moun- tains and hillsides, and the once darker with time. Over yonder watch the lambs as they run and jump. bare trees no longer are brown; their buds are starting to peep from limbs and twigs. Our song birds have come back again; what a beautiful sight to see them hopping here and there | or “with a baa-baa, I'll race you to looking for seeds, or maybe the warm | the goal” My memories carry me rains have brought other food for |back to my son, how he loved them. What a glad sound to hear |spring. At his first sight of spring their chirping, fiwhistling, and warb- | ‘when the peep toads were starting ling again. How [busy the little [to sing, it would be a mad dash to creatures are, building nests. You | the small streams and creeks; then may see one with a piece of string, | look out, my pins and spools of grass, or a feather, some even with | thread, no matter what color, disap- mud in his mouth. How cleverly peared’ like magic. How many times they weave their homes with only |'I watched him sitting patiently with their bills by patting the mud to | a bent pin and la spool of thread, to make it solid for their new families. | hear him say again, ‘Tll get a big How soothing are their: soft, sweet | one Mom, one of these days and he choruses when shades of evening | will be a big one.” Now the dear start to fall. boy is sleeping on the hillside. One The fields have put on a new car- | spring day he slipped peacefully away | They act like circus clowns; I wonder if it is leap. frog, follow the leader, pet of light green which will become | to join the Skipper. He had called OPEN HOUSE Sat. & Sun. - 2 To 7P.I. opps. THE INSTITUTE FOR 3 This ++ NAL) ESSENTIAL HOUSING VACATION HOME Located In Hemlock Gardens - Warden Place, Harvey's Lake Ys Mile Back Of The Catholic Church (Ses Mop Below) - THE “BUTTONWOOD RIDGE” MODEL, Modern, compact yet de- signed to give you the roominess and privacy of a big house. Here you get a huge living-dining area and up-to-the minute kitchen. Two big bed- rooms have cross ventila- tion, room for either twin beds or double, large closets, recessed vanities and plenty of wall space. 200 DE DRY GUE NR UBT GN BD BW I CN GD GA WE SO OT WP Be AS L Hiden Furnished & Decorated ‘By The BOSTON STORE NOW! . . . For The First Time ... We'll Build. You A Custom Built Home For: * NO DOWN PAYMENT * 100% FINANCING (Tmo * NO EXTRA CLOSING COSTS * Pay Less Per Month For A Livable House : Than Buyer Would Pay For “Shell” Alone. LOW MONTHLY PAYMENT * 17 DIFFERENT DESIGNS AND PLANS HEMLOCK GARDENS CATHOLIC CHURCH I. E.H. HOMES For EVERYONE * 2.3 Bedroom Homes * Vacation Homes * Lake Cottages ® Retirement Homes, TARE LY Vis JG Murray and Dilley Sts Ni El ¥ RIEL i Le | your stomach. You have lost a gallon RE | cn month, the beginning of fall. The @# low, gold, and brown. The asters, § riot of colors. The corn is cut and ll | the pumpkins are ripe in the fields | or sweet cider. fl] whist of wings. A light snow has ll | scarce; the deer come closer. How | | you have waited a whole year for | #8 when you started out this morning, ; | who is the more tired, you or the | i are not the only ones who have been fl winter. Everyone helps to gather | {| walnuts, | § nuts. You dry them and crack them | k beautiful THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1961 his dad Skipper from the time he made him paper boats and had whittled a sail boat from the limb of a tree. The sail was one of my best pillowcases which they snitched | from the clothes line. The skipper! had gone over the great divide two years before and was waiting for his loved son to clasp his hand and together guide their boat into the harbor and on to the shore of no return. The summer, oh yes, we have fun in that season. You become sunburnt like a tomato and peeled like an onion. There's swimming; you swallow a gallon of water; your hair is as straight as a string and looks like wheat straw; you look like a floor mop. Picnics too, oh yes, | the ants make a road in the potato salad; the flies think they were in- vited to taste the beans. You swat a mosquito here, now there, and last but not least a bee has put his mark in a funny place. You load up on soda till your seams begin to | split. At night the hot dogs and ham- | burgs have a war of their own in lof sweat or a pound or two. Your | feet feel like a bed of coals. What | fun!! Then September is here the gold- trees are now dressed in red, yel- | mums and the late roses have de- cided they are going to join this | At Woodstock, Ontario, breeders of fine cattle welcomed two fine products of the Ralph Sands Farm | with all their shades of yellow. In | at Carverton. Open, house this | the country kitchens there are the | smells of apples, fresh popped corn, | Masterpiece and his companion, In the meadows, woods, and moun- | tains you hear shots, a brrr, and a | fallen that makes good tracking. Whee, there goes a rabbit. Got him. The woods are bare now; food is | this time. My, how fresh you were | | but dusk has fallen and you wonder | | deer. A good night's sleep. and up again at dawn the next morning to try your luck again. No luck, but there's always another year. The squirrels, chipmunks and ants busy storing nuts and seeds for the butternuts, and hickory for goodies, somteime cracking fing- | | ers ‘too as well as thumbs. h Thanking is here at last. There Pictured here, attending the Sum- as been baking and candy making | hi : tc f Penn- for a week. Mom has baked apple, | Ter foadership Confarence of Perm pumpkin, and mincemeat pies. The chickens are stuffed and ready for | the oven. sylvania Congress of Parents and Teachers at Gettysburg (College are: Mrs. George Daniels, District Mana- Grandma has outdone |. 5, George : Tables are set to the last speen; ling little man, Tables are set to the last spoon; ! Wh udivien The Fests will think you can’t hold any more; wait, | besglven vO & ; 4 | fly low, so you can see the young the candy. You are not going to | i . > Sig A : {ones stealing a ride on their mothers pass that up now. With a sigh both | 3 : ao back when they become too tired hands with sore fingers dig in. to fly the Io trail ‘Wait! There are still two more © MY the ‘ong trai. | sights of nature's someday a reward fall | The trees are now bare except the season. The Northern Lights, another | Stubborn pine who refuses to have one of God’s great wonders. They { her face lifted since green looks fill the sky with all the colors of !so' well on her. We know winter is the rainbow sometimes forming |1OW on its way. The fields are circles small then large or straight | brown, the ground frozen, even old paths up and down as if the flood | mother bear knows she has to been turned on. | fall softly and lay a blanket of white But best of all, you hear the honk- | over all the earth. It looks clean and ing way up high. Some day when | white and in the sun’s and moon's white clouds are drifting by or may- | rays it sparkles like millions of dia- be on a clear cold night with the full | monds. moon, do you like to look up at the | [Skating, sleigh riding, and snow- sky to see the wondrous sight or |balling, what fun for the young, but are you too busy with worldly ' these old bones are creaky and the things? My dear the sight that will | blood thinner. We don’t like cold in V formation,a big captain on |but the giver of the sun, moon, both of the wide ends and another | stars, water, air and all good things captain where the V slims down to | meant each season for something. a point. These captains are never |'Spring so growing things can come gentle when formation is broken. | back with a fresh, young, gentle, and They push, peck, and shove a little | clean start. Summer to temper us for Prize Bull Calf Sandsdale Rocket Masterpiece Goes To Ontario 7 coming Sunday, will present Rocket | Attend PTA Leadership Conference At Gettysburg Work Progressing herself this year on the candies. | till all are in line again. Keep watch | the hard hot road of life, ‘and to lights from the whole world had ' hibernate. Winter snows start to | fill your eyes is wild- geese always |feet or a frosted nose and fingers, | DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Everybody Drives But Father A pedestrian, according to an Oklahoma Senator, is a man with three grown children and one car. i‘ What about the man with one car and one wife? SUBSCRIBE TO THE POST STAR-LITE DRIVE IH THEATRE TUNKHANNOCK, PA. Thur.-Fri.-Sat, July 27-28-29 One Showing Each Evening. Come Early (Plays 1st Friday Evening) A == MYRNA LOY- RODDY MCDOWALL HERBERT MARSHALL - NATASHA PARRY - JOHN WILLIAMS ! ws HERMIONE BADDELEY A ROSS HUNTER-ARWIN PRODUCTION A UNIVERSAL- INTERNATIONAL RELEASE (Plays 1st Thur. and Sat. Evs.) AUDIE MURPHY - JOHN SAXON Led iB Hf A. 1 : fos Roe | Rosafe Supreme Reflection (v.g) to | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. = Sands, interested breeders of the Oxford | and a cattle breeder in her own | and District Breeders. Association | right. She is reluctant to part: with | of Woodstock: | the young bull, but business is] Holding * six-month old | Rocket | business, and $5,000 for ‘a baby bull Harriet Sands, |'isn’t hay. ? | Masterpiece is IN EASTMAN COLOR ¥ ‘co-starring ZOHRA LAMPERT » WARD RAMSEY VIC MORROW + ROBERT KEITH with ROYAL DAKO A UNIVERSAL- INTERNATIONAL PICTURE Workmen this week began the construction - of the new front for | the building in Shavertown: which will be occupied by Back Mountain Branch of Wyoming National Bank and the new Shavertown Postoffice. Considerable interior work has also been completed. Occupancy is not | “expected ‘before. fall. - Sunday-Monday, July 30-31 (Plays 1st & 3rd Each Evening) Copiv presen . 5 ONEDF $0 ° “If the four-day work-week ever | becomes . a reality, ‘then who's 2 9 going to compensate us for the two. | — TANS — coffee’ breaks we'll. no’ longer WALT DiSNEY'S 3 Loa One Hundred One Dalmatians | rd I Beton Gn xc Cw 0 5x0 ion | gp one / FORTY FORT THEATRE ; THUR. — FRI. — SAT. ger, District 7; Mrs. Thelma C. Culp, Lake-Noxen, Program Chairman, Dis~ | trict 7; Mrs. Harold Moore, Presi- dent Pennsylvania Congress of Par- ents and Teachers. Troy Donahue Claudette Colbert “Parrish” Filmed in the heart of the world's | share the joys with the heartaches. : most rugged country! | Our fall season to enjoy the beauty | we have been given and the love of the extended hand. The winter seas- | on when we know that we will have | to take that long winter sleep to rise again in the spring. Why the | | reminiscing of all this? | | Today 1 stood high on a windy | hill looking down in the valley and | up at the mountains. My thoughts took a slow journey back through the years. These things came to my | mind, like a reel in a moving pic- | ture; the joys and loves I have had | | as T now know I am traveling down { the road to the last winter sunset. Mrs. Mary L. Craig, 253 'Courtdale Ave. Courtdale, Pa. | SUN. — MON. — TUES. “Continuous Sun. §- 11 Jeff Chaneller Carol Lynley Return To Peyton Place Cinemascope and Color JIM BROWN - FRANCES RAFFERTY #P & Tiger Production, Lid.-Picture + A Universal-International Release Tuesday-Wednesday, Aug. 1-2 $1.00 CARLOAD NIGHTS LUZERNE THEATRE THURS., FRI, SAT. Elvis Presley, - Hope Lange “Wild In The Country” Cinemascope & Color | Attention, skin divers who wear false teeth: Your problem is dis- cussed in a new U.S. Dept. of Com- merce publication entitled “Under- SUN. and MON. water Swimming”: price, $3.00... | | Continuous: Sun. 2 - 11 Women have set a record for mem- bership in Congress: the total is now 19... JFK will get an $8.3-mil- lion-dollar jet plane under a $12.5 billion military procurement bill | Rock Hudson - Kirk Douglas “The Last Sunset” In . Technicolor LEONARD’S In The Gateway Shopping Center Opened Every Night Uniil 9... () AUTOMATICALLY TELLS BOTH THE DATE AND THE MINUTE ' 125.00 Convenient Terms OTHER OMEGAS FROM 69.50 Omega Calendar Watch Damn Valls Lng Jel ae 's DIAMONDS o WATCHES o GIFTS S AAR AS “Shop The Leonard's Nearest To You” 61 S0. MAIN ST. or TH GATEWAY \l & An qn SANDY BEACH FRI. & SAT. July 28 - 29 “Cimarron” Glen Ford - Maria Schell Anne Baxter The Story of a Man, a Land, a Love! FRI. and SAT. 9:40 P.M. also “Music Box Kid” Ronald Foster - Luana Pattern FRI. and SAT. 8:40 P.M. Robert Mitchum - Martha Hyer “The Last Time | Saw Archie” GIFT NIGHTS Choice Crystalware or China DALLAS OUTDOOR THEATRE WED. — FRI. 9:00 | a TUES. and WED. | | COMING SOON Last Time I Saw Archie Snow White and The 3 Stooges From The Terrace Grass Is Greener THUR. — SAT 10:30 SUN & MON. July 30 - 31 Return To Peyton Place Jeff Chandler - Eleanor Parker Carol Lynley SUN. and MON. 9:30 P.M. also “High Powered Rifle” Willard Parker - Allison Hayes SUN. and MON. 8:40 P.M. TUES. and WED. Aug. 1 - 2 “Can Can” Frank Sinatra - Shirley MacLaine Maurice Chevalier a Louis Jourdon x A Picture Worth Seeing Over and Over Again. TUES. and WED. 9:30 P.M. also_ “Oklahoma Territory” Bill Williams - Georgia Falbolt TUES. and WED. 8:30 P-M. 10:45 THUR. — SAT 9:00 New... greatest adventures of Rehin Hood! ® one scronss snsts RICHARD GREENE - PETER CUSHING A HAMMER FILM PRODUCTION - MEGASCOPE - Eastman [SEINE SUNDAY — MONDAY — TUESDAY "YHE SPECTACULAR LOVE STORY THAT THRILLED MILLIONS! COMING ” DAVID Q.SELZNICKS / wascaser ures Le GONE WITH THE WIND 4 ou CLARK GABLE - VIVIEN LEIGH ess LESLIE HOWARD-OLIVIA deHAVILLAND A SELZNICK INTERNATIONAL, PICTURE - meLeasen ev METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER mc. “By Love Possessed” Theatre open everynite ..Beach open Everyday. | TTT a a CA ET