> SECTION B — PAGE 2 THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 ~ “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its 71st Year” . WED Member Audit Bureau of Circulations & Vo Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association o 2 | Member National Editorial Association br od Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local hospitals. If you are a patient ask your nurse for it. We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu- scripts, photographs and editorial matter unless sel - addressed, - stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be held for more than 30 days. National display advertising rates 84c per column inch. Transient rates 80c. Political advertising $1.10 per inch. Preferred position additional 10c per inch. Advertising deadline Monday 5 P.M. Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M, will be charged at 85c per column inch. Classified rates 5c per word. Minimum if charged $1.00. Unless paid for at advertising rates, we can give no assurance _that announcements of plays, parties, rummage sales or any affair for raising money will appear in a specific issue. Preferenee will in all instances be given to editorial matter which has not previously appeared in publication. Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subscription rates: $4.00 a year; $2.50 six months. No subscriptions ‘accepted for less than _ six months. Out-of-State subscriptions: $4.50 a year; $1.00 six months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15¢c. When requesting a change of address subscribers are asked to give their old as well as new address. Allow two weeks for changes of address or new subscription to be placed en mailing list. Editor and Publisher—HOWARD W. RISLEY Associate Publisher—ROBERT F. BACHMAN Associate Editors—MYRA ZEISER RISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS Sports—JAMES LOHMAN Advertising—LOQUISE C. MARKS \ ~ Editorially Speaking:.. NO ISOLATED PROBLEM Jack Cox, a prominent Texas oil man and life-long conservative Democrat, and who may turn up as a Repub- lican gubernatorial candidate, has announced his defection to the GOP, in terms that may well touch off a stampede "among Lone Star Democrats of Jeffersonian views. As reported by Human Events, Mr. Cox said: “For over a decade, loyal, thinking Texans who value their political independence, the rights of states, the sound financial handling of taxpayers’ money and Constitu- tional goverment have been faced with a dire political dilemma: the customary blind loyalty to the Democratic Party, regardless of platform or leadership, versus the his- torical and fundamental principles of government on “which Texas and these United States of America were ~ founded.” .. Castigating the “Harry Truman-—Adlaj Stevenson— - Walter Reuther—Eleanor Roosevelt—dominated Demo- ~ cratic party” as “dedicated to a course which can lead . only to the destruction of the basic political: and civil Ape fin rights : guaranteed by our Constitution”, Mr. Cox concluded: “It should not be a question of party loyalty. Rather it 1s a question of an individual citizen being loyal to the basic principles of government in which he believes .and then determining the established political party in which and through which these basic principles of - government—and a way of life—can be put into oper- ation in an orderly and successful manner.” And while disturbed Democrats in Texas are think- ing this over—so might the millions of others in 49 other states. Whether he’s a New York Democrat or an Oregon . Democrat or Kansas Democrat he knows perfectly well what Mr. Jefferson would think of the present goings-on. Poet's Corner FIREBREAK The mountain wears a shaven strip Across its bearded cheek and lip Where razor might Have scraped the trees And left an aisle (where only breeze And birds may go) of open grounds “To keep a fire in certain bounds, Whose purpose is for keeping out, Not like most aisles for asking in. I'm glad | was not here to see The cutting done and tree by tree Come down like jackstraws on the: slope Although the act was done in hope Of lesser fires—an unhealed scar Must mark the place no pine trees are. Destruction will be limited Where trees and brush are cleared and dead. These fallen trees who paid the chit For all their fellows’ benefit, Who felt the steel of saw or axe Might not have voted such a tax, But in the measure they were dumb And constitute a premium Required to insure the rest, Should fire put it to the test. Some few, it seems, are always lost Securing against holocaust. EH.J. TO AN EARTHWORM Earthworm, I salute you. Your make-up is simple-a long intestine With a sex attachment. Living on humus you are humble. Your waderings through dirt create fertility. 7+ ~~ Your looks — coming or going you are the same. - Probably you don’t know the past from the future for you extend both ways. You have no poses. You were around Hamlet's graveyard; you knew the glory of Greece, the gradeur of Rome, and their predecessors a billion years ago. You have no dental trouble nor arthritis. You eat your way through life continually not ~ bothered by menus, alcohol or hot-spots. Your love-life is plain and clean; you are no pervert; you write no books about scandals in provincial places. “+ Your position in society is secure; you need no autobi- _ New York. Roc telling of evolution from 8th to 5th Avenue, n Insurance is no concern: if you are cut in two, you you survive somehow, You hear no jungle instruments or idiotic siging. Insurance is no concern: if you are cut in two, but in the long run you consume both of them. So, friend, hail and farewell. Ralph A. Weatherly Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1961 SENTINEL Ago In The Dallas Post IT HAPPENED 30 YEARS AGO: Jessie M. Hislop, Forty-Fort, be- came the bride of Thomas S. Moore of Dallas. Twenty-two years earlier, in 1909, a copy of the Dallas Post listed premium winners at the Dallas Fair. Wilson Garinger had a copy. Wil- liam Bulford got a premium for the ‘best Holstein bull; prize for a bull calf went. to Elmer Parrish; second place to C. W. Kunkle; third, G.M. Carpenter. Fred Ellsworth took the premium for a year old bull. ‘Coal shipments were showing a decline. Former constable and chief of Pol- ice [Charles E. Fiske died of a heart attack. Edwin Swanson, Alderson, was cast in a leading role in a theatrical production at Upsala College. Mrs. William Reinhart, Spring City, died at the home of her daugh- ter, Mrs. Albert May, in Noxen. You could buy a loaf of bread for’ 8 cents; five cans of baked beans for 29 cents; 2 large cans of peaches for a quarter; coffee for 17 cents a pound; milk, 4 tall cans for 23 cents. ir mappenep 2() YEARS AGO: Charles Stookey, deputy warden, with offices in the Borough Build- ing, warned the area of a practice blackout. Les Warhola was ready to stand by with the fire apparatus, R. L. Brickel and Richard Disque with their ambulances. Nazi planes weje busy bombing the Eastern Front. In China, a pic- ture showed refugees with small bundles of belongings, rushing the gates of the International Settle- ment. Mr. and Mrs. E. Humphrey Owen, Dallas, observed their 52nd wedding anniversary with a family dinner. Robert Frank Garris, [Shavertown, was called into the servicce, leaving for New Cumberland in a group of five men from Greater Wyoming Valley, the first to be drafted since spring. Calls upon local draft boards were expected to increase. H. Austin ‘Snyder, supervising principal of Lehman Schools, using charts of exits for advance training of teachers and pupils, was able to cuf several seconds from ‘the time needed to evacuate all child- ren during the fire-drill. In 48 sec- onds the building was empty. In Dallas, the frame building was emp- tied in 40 seconds, the high school building in 50. Dallas Dairy and Harter's Dairy were picketed. The short lived strike caused much inconvenience. The union’s demand for extra pay was met by employers. Lehigh Valley Railroad planned to discontinue service on a nine mile stretch of track between Nox- en and Splashdam. Two years earl- jer it abandoned a thirteen-mile stretch between Splashdam and Lopez. William Powell of Shrine View was appointed to help = returning soldiers get jobs. Many men of 28 or over, were expected home before Christmas from training camps. Betty Case became the bride of Sherman Kunkle, Rev, Harry Sava- cool officiating. Kingston Township high school took Plymouth by a landslide of 20 to 0. Announcements was made of the wedding of June Chance of Fern- brook to Keith Wolfe, Wilkes-Barre. One of the landmarks of Dallas, dating from goodness knows when, was being razed by John Morrett. Mr. Morrett, resting on his crowbar said that removal would give resi- dents of Dallas a far better view of Toby’s Creek in its capacity as an open sewer. The building had housed Paul Suska’s shoe shop. Wash Spencer recollected that over fifty years earlier he had bought fa clock from a jeweller in that same build- ing. “Cost $5, and that was a lot of money in those days. Just paid Bob Roberts to overhaul it, and put it in good running condition again.” IT HAPPENED 10 YEARS AGO: Lt. Guthrie Conyngham, evacu- ated from a battlefield in Korea with a shattering wound of the leg, wrote to say that he would be forever grateful for the seven pints of blood and two of plasma from the Red Cross. He was encased in a body- length cast, facing a hospital of six months. One of his visitors was Ad- miral McManues, a friend of Admiral Stark. Darrell Major was featured as an outstanding member of Blue Ridge Chapter FFA, standing between his rows of strawberries with two and a half acres of oats as a background, Westmoreland adopted the student guidance program. Walter Mohr was appointed director. Dallas Water Company hopefully announced, ‘This is it. The new well, with a 195 gallon per minute flow, will eliminate all future {water shortages on the high grounds of Dallas.” Toll Gate Lions were promoting a scrap metal drive. Haven was cancelled because rain. The historic old church at Wal- wallopen wag rededicated. It was built in 1833 for the Evangelical of community, a joint project of Ger- | ~ Iman Reformed, and Lutheran con- Flaming Foliage Festival at Lock | H g g £ 8 £ 5 The tax collector and the fuel dealer are standng around with outstretched palms for larger and larger sums of money, and nature is coloring up and disrobing the trees. Otherwise, for city and sub- urban dwellers, which include most of the people in the nation now, fall is just about like any other time of year. ‘Harvest [Time” celebrated for hundreds, probably thousands of years, even by primitive peoples, has gone with many other things of the past. The rolling corn fields, dotted with shocks standing in regular pattern, are rare indeed. What corn is grown for grain local- ‘ly is mostly machine picked from standing stalks and the stalks left, torn and ragged to the elements. Since everything grown has a period of maturity and this time is not the same for everythng, there: really never was a single harvest time. Harvest stretched out over several months, from the time the housewife started to pick a few green vegetables until snow covered the land, and many times the snow arrived before the harvest was com- pleted. In the season of early frosts many special actions had to be taken to protect immature crops and those not yet harvested. However, late in the fall, there usually was a time when the family could look around without too much harvest yet to be com- pleted and take stock of what was on hand for the winter season, the best gauge of whether the year had been a success or failure." And since much «of the family living was grown on the place, it was also the best gauge of the living standard the family would enjoy or have to endure for nearly a full year. Early method of preserving was drying and smoking, supplemented by salting and pickling. Then can- ning was invented and all were used. Even in our own time, house- wives canned hundreds of jars, many of two quarts or even larger. Some women died with hundreds of jars of fruits and vegetables, mostly fruits, in the cellar. Vegetables were not canned to the same extent at first, many being buried in pits or sunken barrels. Not mentioning apple juice, made into cider and allowed to ferment for drinking purposes or the manu- facture of vinegar, much manufac- turing was done at home, even within the recollection of many now living. Cabbage was made in- to sauerkrout. Large quantities of apple butter were made, and a wide variety of special condiments, pick- les, ketchups, etc. Hogs were slaughtered, and as in the packing houses, nearly every- thing was utilized excepting the squeal. After the hogs were Killed, they were hung by the hind legs to bleed, then still hanging, doused with boiling water and sometimes dunked in boiling water to facilitate the removal of the hair with scrap- ers. Then they were rehung, evis- cerated, and allowed to hang a couple of days to cool. The whole operation had to be done in frosty weather, Handling a slippery hog weighing well over two hundred pounds closely resembled work. iAnd then the real work began. The carcass was cut up in the com- mon market cuts, not sliced. Lard which lay along the inside of the gregations. Kunkle Methodists realized over $800 on their food stand at Blooms- burg Fair. Betty Jane Naugle became the bride of Albert E. Agnew, Rev. Frank K. Abbott officiating. Joanne Shortz was wed to Sgt. Paul Kostenbauder. Ralph Sands’ Holsteins took 19 ribbons at Bloomsburg. Herbert E. Atkins and Eleanor H. Simmons became man and wife. Mt. Zion Methodist [Church marked its centennial. Mrs. Corey Klinetob, 70, was bur- ied in Wardan Cemetery. Redskins lost to Lehman. William J. Shiber, Fernbrook, died HOE SUE CE EIR EE ERE EL EER TTT RET LET ENE IE Rambling Around By The Oldtimer—D. A. Waters AEH CTE EO ESTEE EES ACS at 57. ; y ACI ribs like a leaf was peeled out, whence the term ‘leaf lard”, con- sidered to 'be superior to lard from scraps. The lard was ‘tried out” by heating, and packed. The head was cut off, cut up in a prescribed pat- tern, the jowls laid aside and the balance soaked a®d cleaned. From it was made head cheese and souse. The jowls, bacon, hams, and should- ers were salted and later smoked. Most of the balance was salted and pickled in a salt brine in barrels. The trimmings were made up into sausage, some cooked and packed. The liver, heart etc., were made into pudding and scrapple. Early method of preserving a lamb or calf slaughtered was by suspending in the well which was always cool and of uniform temperature. Pumpkins and squashes were brought in and usually laid under a tree or at night covered with a blanket to ripen and harden. Per- sonally, from my own garden, I brought in one year sixty-two, in- cluding many of the small acorn variety. Beans were put in a bag and threshed with a flail, until someone tipped us off that a com- mon clothes ringer did a good job. It did, although there was a flying of beans, sometimes, in all direc- tions. All this was real work. But today we have nothing to take the place of walking down cellar and viewing hundreds of jars and large crocks of good clean foodstuffs, a bin of potatoes, piles of carrots, beets, and turnips, a barrel of sauerkraut and another of pickled pork, a supply of smoked meat to last a long time, shelves of pumpkins and squashes and fresh cabbage, apples, scrapple, head cheese, and sausage packed in lard. The modern freezer helps out some, replacing the canning. Tn the barn the men could take satisfaction in a well filled granary and corncrib, mows of hay, and stacks of straw. (Silos were "well filled, even as now, and in the barn was another generation of replace- ment stock also grown during the year, as well as the tried and tested older stock. Well, Harvest Time is here any- way. Try to feel good about it. Looking at T-V With GEORGE A. and EDITH ANN BURKE ANIMATED CHARACTERS, must have voices. Many veteran comedians are working fulltime. Five, such comics are currently em- ployed supplying the principal voices for ABC TV’s “Top Cat,” which deals with the adventure of some zany felines in a trash-can-forested Manhattan alley and can be seen Wednesdays at 8:30 p.m. Heard in the title role will be bespectacled, pint-sized Arnold Stang. Stang landed the role over such other interested parties as Ken Murray, Ben Blue, Jerry Lester, Jack Oakie, Andy Devine and Mickey Rooney. The producer said when they were casting for voices, they avoided looking at the people while they read because they could mislead us by being visually funny. Jerry Les- the readings, but his contedy was visual rather than vocal. Among those furnishing the voices of other" ‘Top Cat” colleagues will be Maurice Gosfield, the erstwhile Pvt. Doberman of the Phil Silvers show; Leo De Lyon; a night club veteran, and Marvin Kaplan, re- membered as the well-meaning Al- fred of the “Meet Millie” series. The lone human cartoon character, that of Officer Dibble, will speak in the familiar rough tones of Allen Jenkins, last seen regularly. as the cabbi of “Hey, Johnnie.” : CALVIN AND THE COLONEL, an- other cartoon which premiered Tues- day, Oct. 3, at 8:30 p.m. co-stars Freeman Gosden and Charles (Cor- rell of “Amos ‘n’ Andy” fame. Correll provides the wvoice for Calvin, a bear, and Gosden is heard as the Colonel, a fox. Other voices in ‘the, half-Hour program, ‘which puts some animals from Dixie woods in a big Northern city, ‘belong to Beatrice Kay and Gloria Blondell of “The Life of Riley” series. lf established are the un- seen co-stars of “The Flintstones.” who also must be classified as com- edy veterans. Alan Reed, the voice of Fred Flintstone, portrayed such radio roles as Falstaff Openshaw on the Fred Allen Show. Rubinoff on the Eddie Cantor Show and was Baby Snooks’ original Daddy. Jean Vander Pyl, who speaks for Wilma, played the mother of radio’s Father Knows Best. Mel Blanc, heard as Barney Rubble, has been Bugs Bun- ny’s spokesman since 1938. Bea Benadaret, otherwide Betty Rubble was Blanche on the George Burns and Gracie Allen TV series, Wilma on “Peter Loves Mary.” For their vocal contributions un- seen stars make up to $500 a week, but this often is only the beginning. They usually devote no more than four hours to every half-hour car- toon, the : dialogue and sound ef- fects are recorded first via illus- trated seripts, and the final drawing are made to conform , voices and sound. ROBERT CONRAD of ‘Hawaiian Eye’ started his professional career as ‘a nightclub singer in Chicago. For extra money he worked ‘during the daytime for Consolidated Ship- ping as a dockhand, and as a milk- man. When he saved up enough money he headed for Hollywood. He got some parts, very small ones. Finally Warner Brothers put him under contract. Joan Kenley of Chicago. They have ished apartment in Sherman Oaks, Cal. : 3 Safety Valve . . . WORLD CRISIS Dear Sirs: First I would like to thank-you for making it possible for me to receive the Dallas Post. After being a steady reader of the Post while I was back in the States, it makes home seem a lot closer. Due to the fact that the Post comes by boat mail, I have just received the September 7, issue. 1 am writing concerning the ques- tion asked of Back Mountain resi- dents; “What is the greatest prob- lem the United States faces?” I personally think there will be no war over Berlin, The reason I say ‘this is because of our military strength. I know we are stronger than Russia and more able to go into action faster. I also think Berlin is worth fight- ing for because if we back out now after all we have said and done, the Russians are just going to keep going until they have the whole world under their power. I am very discouraged at the way the teenagers are reacting to the ‘World crisis. It is very important what they think, say, and do about it because very shortly they will be running the United States whether or not they know it. ‘American people better wake up and start doing something instead of just sitting back and having a good time. They also better realize that there is only one person who is capable of running this world and that is God. Until the American people and the rest of the world realize this, there will be wars and blood shed as long | as the World is here. Sincerely Yours, PFC William Meade Tripoli, Africa WANTS OLD PICTURES - [Dear Sirs: {A year or two ago your news- paper carried a photograph of an old locomotive which was reported to have been used by the Trexell and Turrell Lumber Co. in their opera- tions in the Noxen area. - This locomotive was a Class A ‘Climax’ geared engine, more com- monly called a “stem winder”. I am most interested in securing a glossy photo of this locomotive for my collection and I am wonder- ing if you still have the photo-copy or the negative which I may borrow so that I can have a print made. I so, I would be most happy to come to Dallas and pick it. up. Could you tell me who may have the original copy from which you made your plate ? If you now of any other photos in existance of this particular lumb- ering operation showing motor pow- er, etc, I would appreciate this in- formation also. Your cooperation in this matter would be greatly appreciated. Sincerely yours, J. Edward Smith 96 Putnam Street Tunkhannock, Pa. Pennsylvania Electric Co. @® Any help our readers can give Mr. Smith in obtaining the infor- mation will be appreciated—Editor Gardecki Finishes Course Charles B. Gardecki, has com- pleted a course in Radio and Tele- vision Servicing and has been a- warded a Diploma by the National Radio Institute of Washington, D.C. stars | of several nighttime cartoon series | and’ with the He is married to non-professional | SUBSCRIBE TO THE POST ter, for one, was very funny during | two daughters and freside in a furn- | DALLAS. PENNSYLVANIA | From Pillar To Post... by Hix A lady barged into the library one day, hot and bothered from dealing with a household of demanding children, her hair in bobby- pins ill-concealed by a flowered scarf, her hands wearing that dish- pan look as she delivered a stack of books to the counter. One eye on the clock, she snatched two books from the shelves. “It must be marvelous,” she breathed, “to be a Librarian. All you have to do is sit here and stamp books.” Miss Lathrop, calm, cool, and collected, smiled a secret smile, but innate breeding won out, “It's very interesting,” she agreed, as she stamped the books and speeded her harried guest on her way. That morning she had mended six boxfulls of Books; cleaned off the shelves in the back room; changed the display in the cabinet, substituting valentines for calendars; catalogued the new books; coped with a balky furnace; typed out some letters of inquiry; selected a memory book for a much loved aunt whose niece had been a little vague about her requirements; eaten a sandwich on the run: while waiting for an influx of school children. Few people except those who are in library work, have any con- ception of what it means to run a small library. A small child appears. “It was a red book, about this thick,” measuring with her hands, “and I want it again.” “Did it have a horse on the cover?” The child beams Yes, 43 had a horse on the cover, and here it'is, right on this shelf. That "was before the children’s Gepartmeny outgrew. the main Library and was moved to the Annex. “I can’t really get used to it,” Miss Lathrop said a few weeks ago. “I used to know all those children, and they all knew me, and now I don’t see enough of them. One day I went to the kitchen door of the Annex. It was locked, and‘I asked 4 little ‘girl to tell Mrs, ‘Bachman to please come and unlock it. And you know what the little girl said? ‘There's a lady out here and she wants to got] in, I don’t know who it is.” ” Class after class of school children visited the Library. Students came back year after year, through their high school days, and vaca- tion times in college, to collect material for their term papers. ‘They bring their own small children in to meet Miss Lathrop. : Sixteen years? It isn't so long, out of a whole lifetime, but children grow to. manhood in that period. The sixth graders who made their first trip to the Library shortly after it was founded are nearing thirty now. They look back on their trips to the Library as one of the high spots of their school years. And the children who attended the one-room td look back to the visits of “The Library Lady,” as something which sparked the day, making it different from other days. Eager-eyed, big boys would come rushing out to help Miss Lathrop with the heavy boxes of books. No more one-room schools. Their passing was the ond; of an era. They live only in memory . . . and an indestructible part of the memory is “The Library Lady.” , x _ Our Library Lady never asked for much recognition or public ac- claim. But she is accepting gracefully the recognition which she is receiving now, on the eve of her departure for Arizona, and her new home. y When she leaves her apartment above the Library for the last time, Dallas will have lost a part of itself: I wonder if she knows how much she has meant to he com- munity ? 100 Years Ago This Week...in THE CIVIL WAR |» (Events exactly 100 years ago this week in the Civil War— told in the language and style of today. 7 Lay Keel of ‘Monitor, Union’s First Ironclad Designer’s version of how the U.S.S. MONITOR will look when ~and if—she gets to sea. The two revolving turrets will support two 11-inch guns. 3-Way Crash Program Ordered; Rebel “Merrimac” Alarms Experts BROOKLYN, N.Y.—Oct. 12—Both skeptical and enthusiastic naval experts gathered here today for the beginning of work on the U.S.S. Monitor, the Union Navy's first ironclad man-of-war. The keel for the controversial vessel was laid in the Greenpoint area shipyard of Thomas F. Rowland by workmen under direction of Capt. John Ericsson, Swedish immigrant who designed the ship. Launching of the work ended many bitter weeks for the outspoken, dedicated Ericsson. He ran into a stone seawall of opposition trying to convince the N avy department that his odd-looking craft would be the most effective in the Union fleet. Many Navy officers said they didn’t think it would float. Target date for launching of the 172-foot vessel in Jan. 30. Three . snanufacturers are combining facilities to speed up the work. * * * The ironclad will have ‘as major armament two 11-inch guns housed in thickly sheathed revolving turrets. It will have a waterline length of 122 feet, a beam of 41 feet, and a draft of 10 feet. Two boilers and one steam cylinder will power its heavily-protected four-blade screw. " Ericsson landed with both feet on the Navy department’s neck when the North learned that the Confederates were reconstructing - the frigate Merrimac as a turreted ironclad. One of the first officers to inspect his model told him: “Take it home and worship it. It will not be idolatry. It is the image of nothing in the heavens above, or the earth beneath, or the waters under the earth.” * * “ But Ericsson pushed on and soon won approval of Navy Secy. Gideon Welles for the Monitor project. Construction is proceeding on a crash basis because of the alarmingly rapid progress already made by the Confederates in the conversion of the Merrimac. That man-of-war was a 3500- ton, 40-gun frigate ‘when retreating Union forces scuttled it last spring at Norfolk. Rebel technicians raised it, cut its superstructure to the berth deck, and began covering it with iron logs nine inches thick, faced with two-inch iron plate. Its armament, judging from size of its turrets, will be vastly superior to that of the Monitor. ‘Efficiency of ironclads is a hotly disputed subject among Navy men. Britain’s vast fleet of 149 men-of-war boasts only two, the Warrior and Ironside. Napoleon's fleet has only one, the La Gloire. » *-