- < SRR ra la Jo } na i Cy Te i {® RSE — EDT — DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA SUBSCRIBE TO THE POST BET YOUR HOME {OLIDAYS! Add enchanting charm to your rooms with a coat of SPREAD SATIN Paint. It's easy to do with either a brush or roller." 6.69 per Gal. 2.15 per Qt. SPECIAL: _ Less 10% on all paints. ‘Blissful silence is yours ' when you install our attrac- “tive CEILING TILE. Easy to do . . . economical, too. See us this week for esti- mates. ‘Oak Flooring adds warmth, color and beauty to your rooms. Replace your worn- out flooring NOW! PROMPT, FREE DELIVERY . « » « Contractors Recommended READY FOR THE[: by ELEANOR And, wistful Muzzles to the Thus may they wait, “FOR WITHOUT ARE DOGS”—Rev. 22, 15 Duncan Woop Not very far without! Oh, let them be Gathered beyond Heaven's door all hopefully, Waiting their lord’s quick summons or command, Dreaming they hear his voice, or feel his hand, threshold pressed Ask, as of old, the chance to give their best. with homage in their eyes. Till the Great Master of the House arise, And flinging wide the door, their penance ends— “Love is Heaven’s password. Come ye in, my Friends!” _- Final autumn meeting for Public Library Administrators’ Round | Table was held at Scranton Novem- I'ber 8. Nine libraries were repre- sented: Towanda, Tunkhannock, Laceyville, Wyalusing, Ulster, Can- ton, Troy, Factoryville and Brad- rd-Sullivan-Wyoming County Li- braries. The subject was finance and standards of public library service in small communities. The librarians agreed that libra- ries should be considered education- al institutions and that they should prove their value to their public by the good quality of their book col- lections and the skill of their staffs. As educational institutions, they should be supported by. public funds. Group Feels Libraries’ Support {Should Come From Public Funds Endowments and gifts are very wel- come and should be encouraged but they should be used to demonstrate new projects or for specialized serv- ices that may not be required for a large part of the patrons. A library may be established and demonstrated in an area by private funds and volunteer labor. However, if the public is convinced of its permanent value, it would support the library from part of the normal budget for public service. The Round Table discussions were adjourned until late in March. In the spring three more meetings will be held to further explore the ways in which a library can improve its work for the public. Read The Post Classified Why Not Let Us Plan Your | Winter Cruise or Tour SIX FULL S175. i |, DAYS FROM | vaney 33166 "PROFESSIONAL | TRIP PLANNING TRAVEL AGENT Don’t Be Disappointed, Make Res- ervations Now! Call or Drop In... No Extra Charge For Reservations. | Central Ticket & Travel Agency | 80 Public Square, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Giver A Decade of Service to Wyoming Valley! I Locally Owned! Operated By Local People!! l AT SCRANTON’S MOST BEAUTIFUL ‘THEATRE NOW SHOWING and Central Pa. that TECHNICOLOR o We Jb E.CENTER ST. o SHAVERTOWN = SCRANTON HOME OF CINERAMA St THEATRE SPRUCE ST. DI 4-1268 “IMITATIONS COME * the only theatre in N. will show CINERAMA! 7 as ARS) PUTS YOU IN THE PICTURE! TIN ) LN SrLsLald ¢ Ad 1 & T in BT WORTH A TRIP 7 TO SCRANTON Matinee—2:30 P.M.—Wead. & Sat, Orchestra & Loge—$1.50 Balcony 25 Matinee—2:30 P. M. —Sunday Orchestra & Loge—$1.75 Balcony — 1.50 Evenings—8:30 P.M.—Mon. thru Fri. Orchestra & Loge—$1.75 Balcony — 1.50 Evenings—8:30 P.M.—Sat. & Sun, Orchestra & Loge—$2.00 Balcony 75 E. STRAND THEATRE SPRUCE ST. DOWNTOWN SCRANTON, PA. Enclosed is §...... performance on.......... eve And hole... sarees 3rd choice PLEASE ENCLOSE STAMPED, | SELF-ADDRESSED ENVELOPE CINERAMA PUTS YOU. IN “The Daring’s Friendliest Store In Town” OR 4- 8481 18 - 20 Lh. | TURKEYS 29: 10 - 16 Lb. TURKEYS 33. 5'2 Lb. ROASTING CHICKENS 45: FRESH KILLED TURKEYS 35. FRESH KILLED CAPONS 63. FROZEN FOODS GROCERIES DIAMOND WALNUTS Lh. 53c NABISCO PREMIUM SALTINES 29¢ ~ Ocean Spray Cranberry Sauce 2/4ic Shurfine Sweet Potatoes (2 1,) 3lc SHURFINE FRENCH FRIES EATRITE ICE CREAM PET RITZ PUMPKIN PIES 2/55¢ (16 oz.) : I/> Gal. 19¢ 49c “OUR OWN DELICIOUSLY DIFFERENT SMOKED MEATS” Try Qur Home Made Potato Salad, Macaroni Salad, Cole Slaw, Baked Beans. | of wood to weep over partings in THE DALLAS POST, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1961 Since our friend Ralph Weatherly, former rector of | Grace Episcopal Church in Kingston, retired to live on a high hill in Mt. Zion, he has been enjoying the view of the . far mountains, revelling in the sunsets, and raising tomatoes and sweet peppers. Sometimes, now that he has more leisure than he did when he was in the forefront of the battle, he takes time to write. He starts off with Charlie Gilbert, also re- tired, and goes on from there. Like this: About Dogs and Parsong Gentle Saint Charles of Mt. Zion, diarist and meditative Methodist, has taken to his family one Tuffy, a composite pup;—composed of the best traits maybe, and certainly of energy, fun and curiosity, excited by rabbits, awed by deer, and dis- turbed by fish in Charles’: pond. Does Tuffy know how fortunate he is to be in that family of dedicated, happy folk,—Dorothy who, writes like St. Paul, Catherine the singer and social worker, their parents, Charles like him of Assissi, and his quiet wife? 1 think so; dogs are indeed perceptive. Cindy came to us when apple trees were in their glory in the great garden, with Carol in her play-pen under a tree amidst thick grass, “the spring ‘sun ‘in .itg glory over Montrose, the air keen like the best wine.’ Cindy was a sort of shepherd with ‘a gallant tail and a laughing mouth, loyal to our: chil- | dren, eager to bark. In that garden among the heaven-kissing hills there came to me as I worked with ‘a hoe in an open shirt a young man, al- most. running -in apparent distress. Down the driveway he rushed to me and said, “Are. you a. priest?! Can you, will you give me absolu-, tion 7-1 have -done a ‘terrible thing!" There . we talked and presently knelt in the kindly soil, praying together. - He had: hurt Our Father and an innocent man, participating for both of us men. Then I rose and gave him the ancient promise of the | Church’s - - cleansing, after. repent- po and amendment .of life; and 1 tried to tell. him how much I knew { | of God's forgiveness of me. Present: ly he arose and with: his face-aglow | went away from me forever. To Carolina, Cindy went with me mobile; in 1926; under a misappre- hension that. Harper's Fetry was in Virginia I drove there the first day. A hotel keeper admitted Cindy with me: I awoke next morning to find that the town is in West: Virginia, a dubious state to Southerners, with queer boundaries: In that strategic gulch John Brown, saint and: hero, desperado . and. Kansas: murderer (depending: on how one thinks) started action - still - revolutionary and disturbing. Cindy swam-in-the Shenandoah, and after -the second "day and a seventy mile detour by | Fincastle - slept in my car with me in a farmer’s barnyard. Nextmor- rolet, roads, had been repaired, we crossed the Blue Ridge and descended by | Boone’s Mill, driving in: the bed of la creek in branch-water sometimes (a quarter of a mile. If .it had rained! 2 . Sion Barking in Montrose -was _ the cause of Cindy’s leaving us, for she disturbed -our- neighbors. - - With: a heavy heart I took her down to Rush hoping that Christy Curra#i, an | Irish : school : teacher and “homé:itun would take-heér. ‘Christy came! oat to my car and I could hot expldin understood, “amazingly ‘ reaching - for Cindy he placed her around his strong shoulders like a muff and walked away from me, whistling, to turn presently and say how glad he was to have her. 1 drove away and after a bit stopped in a kind life like this, a sort of death when even a loved dog goes; and then grateful for such a man as my friend, I came home to the rectory and my lonely wife. Bounding with life and joy, Bengy rushed into our hearts, an Esqui- maux Spitz we first saw on a farm lawn near Montrose, with a noble forehead, eyes that smiled and a loving heart. Rolling down lawms, rushing after rabbits, and alas, ence after a skunk, leaping with energy, he adored our children, protecting them, showing off for their sakes, anxious to be with all of us. Hae loved to come to church and once burst through a chapel ‘door to join me at the altar as I celebrated Holy Communion. He enjoyed riding, thrilled to get into a fight. Old Tom the grey cat grew up with Bengy from kittenhood; they fought for each other. Once I saw Tom jump on the back of a dog that was in battle with Bengy; Tom leaped through the air and descended with drawn claws upon the enemy who took off in terror with Bengy in pursuit, laughing I think. For ten years Bengy and Tom were with us. - Tom and the family had a sort of mutual affection; Bengy gave all of his love to us, asking nothing. Then in a crowd before Grace Church he was hit by a motor. My heart aches when I remember parting with him, and [ : OPEN = MON., TUES., WED. . MEMORIAL HIGHWAY DALLAS, PA. OPEN THUR,, FRI., SAT., SUN. 9-9 j mean aches physically. 1 have thought about him and written about him and prayed for him, in gratitude to God for such a noble character, abounding * in loyalty, unselfishness, fineness of feeling (he was a gentleman that made me in a crime; and we asked pardon] on my first trip there in an .autoe- Ralph Weatherly Writes Appealingly Rbout His Favorite Dogs And Parsons loving beyond duty. . Arche rode with my son upon his | parish visits sitting so that some | drivers approaching thought with {alarm that a dog was driving the car. A. big and sort of awkward fellow, he had the sensitiveness of a fine dog. -- His unbelievable ex- ploit- staggers my, ‘mind. Left by | necessity to continue his hunt with his sister at Mountain Lake, some ten’ miles east of Bear Creek, he did not return to the parishioner’s house and everybody assumed that ha was’ lost, stolen or killed by a deer.” Mr. Stanley Zeveney never saw Arche at the lake, and his master in Nanticoke waited for days and then gave up hope. It was midwinter ' with snow and zero temperatures. Somehow across the thirty miles over mountains and gulches, through Wilkes-Barre and neighboring ‘towns, Arche made his way, .and after a week he scratched at the rectory door on State Street, and. protection, lean and tired and sleepy but alive. He was led by the lodestar of love and gratitude. In our Cathedral Church of St. Peter and St. Paul built on a hill overlooking Washington on land given by a family from Susquehanna County, some fifteen acres, lie the bodies of distinguished Americans. The cathedral domain was once an ideal, a concept, a dream; but now it stands in grandeur, with schools for boys and girls, a library, a col- lege of preachers, with majestic columns. of stone and windows of intricate design admitting light on faltarg ‘in various chapels,—a digni- fied shrine for all people; this House ‘of God. Long in building, costly indeed, ‘it challenges all to worship and to help. Woodrow Wilson, staunch Pres- Nanticoke; and came’ in to warmth byterian, lies in his crypt perhaps dreaming of the universal peace for which he gave his life; and there are others there, Dewey and various great or good men. The body of Alfred Harding, for fourteen years Bishop of Washington is there, be- neath a life-sized sarcophagus. He’ was ome of those who built the cathedral by vision, dream, prayer and money. What kind of a shep- herd of shepherds he was we can only guess for time runs on and men pass like a dream. It is a sign of the kind of heart and mind Alfred the Bishop had, that at the feet of his monument lies the sculpture of his little dog, curled up,—a homely little dog that may have wandered in from the street to the bishop's heart, forever asleep as near as he can get to his master. I am im- pressed by the cathedral’s vast building and I know its invaluable work, but somehow, in some warm way, the friendly saint and his little dog bring a sort of focus that is humanly significant and that opens into heavenly intimacies. Kozemchak Helped Hurricane Victims British Honduras (FHTNC)—Dan- iel Kozemchak, chief pournalist, USN, son of Mrs. Rose Kozemchak of Overbrook Avenue joined rescue operations in hurricane - stricken British Honduras, November 3, aboard the anti-submarine warfare support aircraft carrier USS Antie- tam, The Antietam departed Pens:cola, Fla., November 1, in answer to an urgent appeal by the British govern- ment to aid the Central American nation which had been ravaged by Hurricane Hattie. The carrier, on its second Suri. cane rescue mission in ag many months, transported some 300 tons of supplies to the storm victims, as’ well as 48 Navy doctors, 4 Navy nurses, 87 corpsmen and 23 heli- copters. STE ET ESTEE EE LEE COE HR CS CT Tenth Annual Christmas Tea Planned For Dec. 8 Plans are complete for Altar and Rosary Society’s = Tenth . Annual Christmas Tea, Friday, December 8, Gate of Heaven Church auditor- ium. Mrs. Ted Popielarz, President, has appointed Mrs, J ames E. Regan General Chairman, Mrs. Louis J. Vitali Co-Chairman. Mrs. Gustav A. Kabeschat will act as toastmistress. Members and guests are asked to bring foodstuffs for the Christmas charity baskets. A special feature of the tea will be judging of the best centerpiece submitted in religious, fantasy, or original categories. Decoration Chairman is Mrs. Leon Chase, Co-Chairman Mrs. George Ruckno, assisted by Mesdames Char- SECTION B—PAGE 1 les Glawe, Paul Gates, John Elen- chick, Emerson Steele, Edward Pyd- zefski, Paul Monahan, William Stew- art, Joseph O'Donnell, and Miss Marie Thevenon. 2 Refreshment Chairman, Mrs, John Chesnovith,: Co