9. 1A pr Ww eekliq Ind-class mPa post office at Dallas, of March 3, 1879. Subscription rates: $4.00 a nths. No subscriptions accepted for less than f-State subscriptions: $4.50 a year; $5.00 six ack issues, more than one week old, 15¢. g a chunge of address subscribers are asked well as new address. | for changes of address or new subscription ling list. t free to all Back Mountain patients in local e a patient ask your nurse for it. esponsible for the return of unsolicited manu- and editorial matter unless self - addressed, nclosed, and in no case will this material be D days. or atjadvertising rates, we can give no assurance hts of! plays, parties, rummage sales or any affair will appear in a specific issue. 1 in all instances be given to editorial matter which r appeared in publication. ay advertising rates 84c per column inch. s 80c. rtising $1.10 per inch. ition additional 10c per inch. Advertising deadline he eceived after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged word. Minimum if charged $1.00. ggher—HOWARD W. RISLEY ERT F. BACHMAN ISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS LOHMAN SE C. MARKS Speaking: INGINE CHARLIES” o well, the nation does well, “President bers of the National Association of other day. ange similarity to a sentiment once at- Secretary of Defense Charles Wilson, beneral Motors is good for the country.” ’s remark will not, we are sure, create vse over ‘Engine Charlie’s” comment. lon to any such statement depends on gortion which is put upon it. hs always seemed perfectly logical to us that the y of the country, of industry and of labor is all ther. If industry is in depression, so is the and labor suffers. Any business firm or in- hd its employes have a common stake in seeing employer is able to make a profit. oo long the idea has persisted that the em- a natural enemy of the working man who must for a rightful share of the take, even if it means im to the wall. Too little attention has been he truth that the take is flexible; it can be larger r, depending on the opportunities and freedom ‘he employer, and if he prospers the share avail- pl, ,the employer, the worker—and the govern-~ la hh : 2A / ‘ Yh, D—AND CADILLACS ditionally a charitable people. They Llp, the needy amongst us, To take government’s project of distri- in want—which has, as a corol- cultural surpluses—undoubtedly prt. d intentions can be abused. lhagazine reported: “For the receiving free groceries, the ’s first half is nearly quadruple same period last year. It has also bpularity of free groceries. Since f people getting them has risen . . Recipients have included a rried: his bags in a taxicab and punty, Texas who took them adillac . ...” gher administration of plans prate the genuine needy from ct is that any welfare state r foolish, essential or just he worst in a great many morney, and resumed her profes- ional career—this time as an edu- | cation reporter for Life magazine. | In 1953, when the radio fore- | runner of College Bowl appeared | Lon the NBC network, Mrs. Forbes got the job as the person prepar- y02 the questions for the program end continued to do so for varying "| periods during the next three years. best | Alison, a baby daughter arrived ay | in 1956, and the new mother set- it | tled back for awhile in the primary {role of housewife, When College Bowl had its prem- j lere on the CBS network as a TV series, producer John Cleary, who had Been connected with the radio version of NBC, asked Mrs. Forbes a! | to again decide on the questions. The Forbes family lives in Dar- gonn. In addition to Aliso, Mrs. also has two stepchildren: Forbes, 22, a senior at Yale, therin, 18, a freshman at the of Wisconsin, [ DYKE is in the un- pon of being too good. son the network present time slot no. Must be giv- led with the the p1- fhe HO, a brand BS Thursday, is is not a SPORTS 6:30 p.m. rograms es, the atches, will is COL. FRANK TOWNEND Salute To Nurses By Auxiliary Col. Townend To MC 50th Anniversary Col. Frank Townend, member of Board of Directors and chairman of Nursing Service Committee at Nesbitt Hospital, will MC the Gold- en Anniversary celebration January 16, 8 p.m., when the Ladies Aux- iliary will honor all graduates and student nurses of the Hospital in the Pettebone-Dickson Student Cen- ter of Wyoming Seminary. A pro- | gram, “Salute to the Nurses”, will | be presented honoring also those | who have dedicated their lives to the progress of the Nesbitt Mem- orial Hospital and its School quested to wear full uniform and all and pins. Miss Esther Tinsley, Administrator of Pittston Hospital, was the sec- ond Administrator of Nesbitt (known then as West Side Hospital). will speak, recalling events during her stay at Nesbitt. Miss Tinsley, who is celebrating her 50th year of continuous nursing service, was recently honored with her selection as Pennsylvania Nurse of the Year. There will be selections from the student nurses Glee Club, directed by Miss Patricia Lutz, a student at Wilkes College. Miss Judith Wi- nans, student nurse, will be solo- ist. A skit entitled “History of Nesbitt ‘School of Nursing”, written by Miss Thelma DeWitt, Director of Nursing, and directed by Miss Lucy Liggett, Assistant Director of Nursing Education, will be present- ed by the student nurses. Dr. Ruth Jesse, head of the: De- partment of Nursing Education of Wilkes College, will be the guest speaker. Following the program, refresh- ments will be served. A family re- union of Nesbitt Memorial Hospital Nurses, Staff, Auxiliary and friends will be held. All friends of the Hospital are cordially invited, and there will be no admission fee. This event will kick off the cele- bration during 1962 of the 50 years of continuous service te the pub- lic of the Nesbitt Memorial Hos- pital. Joint Coin Card Drive Brings In Over $6180.00 Dallas Community Ambulance Association and Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Company report a successful conclusion of their recent coin card campaign. In this joint effort a total of $6,180.00 was realized plus a pleasing additional amount of $300.25 for the Ambulance Associ- ation in the Kunkle area. This annual campaign enables these organizations to pay their operating expenses plus setting a- side money for purchase of new apparatus, For the ambulance as- sociation in 1961 this meant the acquisition of a new ambulance, fully paid for. (Ambulance and Fire Company members appreciate the support of the public. Edwin Johnson Promoted Edwin I. Johnson, 34 Midland Drive, has been commissioned a Lieutenant Junior Grade in the Coast Guard Reserve. Mr. Johnson was sworn in by Lt. Comdr. Charles F. Correll, com- manding officer in the Kingston Coast Guard Reserve Unit. The son of Mrs. E. M. Johnson, Dunmore, Mr. Johnson is guidance counselor and English instructor at LakeLehman High School. During 1945-46 he served in the Pacific with th U.S. Navy He re- ceived the Victory and American Theater medals. A graduate of Cranford High School, N.J., Mr. Johnson attended Union Junior College, Cranford, and received a bachelor of arts degree from Wilkes College and a master’s degree from Bucknell University, Lewisburg, He is married to the former Lee Ann Jakes. They have two child- | ren, Mark and Eric. He shortly will an | be assigned as training officer of the noston/ Unit; rem rtp ccond apartment house of ! Nursing. All active nurses are re- | inactive graduates their caps | She | “All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy”. This old copy-book maxim was probably considered all right when first written and accepted as mean- ing exactly what it says. In colonial days, and even later, hard work was necessary for survival, and was the accepted routine for men, women and children. It was so im- portant that. it was made into a virtue. But times have changed. Now no one works as hard as almost everyone did in earlier days, and work in itself is no longer respected and considered a virtue. And with the changing times, a new interpre- tation is being placed on the old maxim which seems to be in a fair | this country. Ignoring the signifi- cant words “all” and “no”, some law makers, labor leaders, social workers, school administrators and teachers, writers, speakers, and even some parents, have taken the view that it is “work” that pro- motes dullness, which must be avoided at all costs, and conversely “play” promotes keenness or bright- ness, which must be encouraged. And carrying it a little farther, by decreasing the work and increasing the play, dullness will disappear and brilliance ‘will result. This view seems to be spreading rapidy. It takes no special training to see that this is untrue. As ome exam- ple, among many, take Thomas A. Edison. Probably no one in this age has shown greater brilliance of mind and done more for, the com- | mon advancement, yet this man so | concetrated on his work that some- | times he slept in his laboratory. | And no one can show any example where idleness and play has pro- duced such a man in our day. In | ancient Greece and Rome where slaves did all the work it may have been different, This column casts no reflection on any local boys. We have plenty of young men who have always been workers, especially in some of the father and son teams and where there are several brothers in a family. Likewise we are not aim- ing criticism. at the local schools, in particular. They are too new for any proven results. In some high schools, special schools, and col- leges which have acquired a reputa- tion for “pouring it eon”, pupils have thrived and asked for more. The line between work and play is not always right, either in defini- tion or activity. Boys in a vacant | way to disrupt bringing up boys in | - By ‘The Oldtimer—D. A. Waters EES EEA THEE TERESI nS on lot, with a football or baseball, with appropriate equipment, will play for hours; but when they get into the pro leagues or a bowl game such activity becomes strenuous work. Playing regularly in a theatre orchestra or on the stage is work, Conversely, employees or others assigned to perform a definite task, through inattention or deliberate neglect, can fail complete- ly. They are only playing around. And the line between play and idle- ness is even less definite. In Europe, while our forefathers were working so hard here, they had reached a point where play and idleness were problems. ' Tuberville wrote, “Eschewe the ydle life, Flee, flee, from doing nought: For never was there ydle braine But bred an ydle thought’. We sing in church an old hymn of Isaac Watts: “In works of labor, or of skill, I would be busy too, For Satan finds some mischief still For idle hands to do.” In 1598 Shakespeare saw, the situation in King Henry IV: “If all the year were playing holidays, To sport would be as tedious as to work”, In 1748 James ‘Thomson com- pleted fifteen years of work on a poem which ran to about fifteen hundred words entitled, “The Castle of Indolence”., One stanza reads: “Their only labor was to kill the time (And labor dire it is and weary woe.) They sit, they loll, turn o'er some | idle rhyme, Then, rising sudden, to the glass they go Or saunter step and slow.” forth with tottering | In his day the idle drunks did | not have high powered cars to slay all and sundry. In our own time we heard a lot | about the “idle rich”. There were some, maybe a few yet. But Gover- nor Rockefeller, Secretary Dillon, President Kennedy and others show that it is not common among them. Today most of the idleness is among those who are not rich. The rich are compelled to keep busy to pro- tect what they have. And their fortunes were not acquired by play- ing and idleness in the first place. And while there are also some rich playboys, most of the playboys | would like to be very rich and are not. of Churches to provide such serv- I got a call from the Council office asking if I would be available. I wes glad to go. Mrs. Gilbert and dawghter Cath- erine went with me. Catherine was to play for the meeting. We bor- rowed a dozen hymnals from the Orange Church in case we needed them. The Rev. Guy Leinthal of Dorranceton Methodist Church had brought his two daughters, Sally and Mary Elizabeth, to sing. The large auditorium was well fitted for religious services of all three faiths. The revolving altar had one segment fitted with a small slab of stone which is for the use of the Roman (Catholic services. Each of the other two segments with whatever religious symbols the other two faiths care to provide. The organ is electric with an elec- tronic chime keyboard. of affairs we ‘decided to hold an informal service in the solarium in- stead of in the auditorium. The ers and other comfortable seats at well-prepared dinner, ‘While the patients finished their trays we began the service by ask- ing the two Leinthal girls to sing which they did without accompani- ment, It was beautifully done and the group in one voice said ‘Thank You.” We didn’t bother to pass out hymnals but with the help of the visitors present I led them in singing a stanza of a well-known hymn. Rev. Mr. Leinthal offered a prayer and we all repeated the 23rd Psalm. The girls sang another dust which delighted the people as be- fore. In my brief talk I spoke of ‘the newness of the Valley Crest Home, and the newness of the year 1962, and finally the newness of each day. The fact that many new experiences are plain and can be fitted out | Due to the still unsettled state! patients sat in wheel chairs, rock- | small tables with their dinner trays. | The meal looked like a tasty and | Some help- | ers were feeding those who could | not manage with their own hands. | Charles Gilbert Carries Message To Guests At Valley Crest Home Fifty new residents last week | would be coming to them would came into Valley Crest Home, Their | call for following God in each situ- first Sunday was coming up and | ation ‘for they have not passed religious services were needed. Dr. this way before.” Craft, superintendent of the Home | asked the Wyoming Valley Council | in the midst of this group than we More new events are happening | at first discovered. For instance, ices. That is how it happened that | | somebody told me that one of the women who obviously had some severe handicap had said “hello”, which was the first she had spoken in‘ 20 years! I couldn't get her to say “hello” to me but she smiled volumes. T knew. one of the pat- ients for I had seen her every week showed manifest pleasure at see- ing me at Valley Crest. had stopped with each one and | them, ning to walk again. Still another had not been using table imple- ments for eating but had fed her- self with her fingers. Now she is learning to use silverware like other | people and enjoys it. The doctor had caught up the idea of newness that I had been talking about in my brief address. ‘This is a new life to these people and it is a problem to them”, said the doctor. He also said that he was seeing a new human interest side to his work which he just be- gan last Tuesday with the first admissions to the Home. He expressed the wish that he were a writer so that he could interest the public in the opportuni- ties for helping these who need common friendship often expressed. None should be allowed to become forgotten people. I was personally thrilled by the spiritual vision this professional man was getting of his task. Immediately following our chapel services the Womens Club of Wilkes- Barre was putting on a party, yes, a Christmas party for the patients. People were gathering for this when we left. | Tommy Traver Has First Birthday Party Mr. and Mrs. Charles Snyder, Claude St., entertained at a birthday supper in honor of their grandson, Tommy Traver, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Traver of Idetown, who was a year old on December 2nd. Pres- ent: Jimmy Snyder, Mrs. George Shaver, Jr., George, Tommy and Alan, Mrs. Clayton Traver, and Pamela, the guest of honor and the host and hostess. Dog License Due Purpose of the Pennsylvania Dog Law is for the protection of the public and their property through the proper control of dogs. Your 1961 dog license expires January 15, 1962 regardless of when you purchased it. 1962 dog license are now on sale at County Treas- urer’s Office or may be ordered through any notary public, justice of the peace or alderman, - eC nly Yesterday | Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas POst ir uapPENED 3{) YEARS Aco: Appeal of Kingston . Township School Board, seeking to evade pay- ment of damages of $4,832.67 to Mrs. Z. R. Howell in the death of her husband who suffered a fatal accident near Harrisburg while on school business, was denied for the second time. Trouble stemmed from a lapsed insurance policy. Dallas Borough was hopeful that $822.40 could be raised through overdue taxes |efore it became necessary to hold up teachers’ sala- ries, A ten mill hike was pre- dicted. Warm weather during the Janu- ary Thaw brought out leaf buds on the trees. iGay-Murray, Tunkhannock, open- ed a harness department. Mrs. G. Harold Magnnr won a radio as prize for a hastily written slogan, Elwood Elston’s salary as Bor- ough police officer was cut from $100 to $50 a month for the winter period. Wardan Kunkle, Elmer Par- rish, Clyde Veitch, and William Schmoll, were sworn in by Burgess Harry Anderson. Street Commission- er W. T. Daddow was reappointed, at sixty cents an hour. Borough expenses were pared to the bone. A. M. Shoemaker, former main- tenance man for Dallas-Shavertown Water Company, died in Tunkhan- | nock. Cheese was 17 cents a pound, prunes 4 pounds for 19 cents, rye bread 7 cents a loaf, hot dogs 2 pounds for a quarter. And at Rooney’s, you could get a full course Sunday dinner for 75 cents. rr uappeneD 2() YEARS Aco: (Air-raid observation post in Lake Township was manned by 58 vol- unteers working in two-man de- tails for 24 hour coverage. Exposed when they attended a Christmas program at Idetown, 22 children contracted measles. Dr. H. A. Brown of Lehman missed out on the New Years baby by half an hour Mrs. Anthony Stefanowitz | of Loyalville was the mother. In 11941, Dr. Brown delivered babies right and left on New Years Day, earning the title Dr. Stork of 1941. College Misericordia started clas- ses in First Aid. Red Cross asked for six times the usual collection of money. Borough Council elected William Baker street commissioner at $100 per month, succeeding William Schmoll, James Besecker succeeded William Neimeyer as secretary. Tire rationing board swung into action. Stores curtailed deliveries to save tires and gas. Steak was 35 cents a pound, pork chops 29. Married: Alice Ertley to Ernest Lomax. Theresa Belles to Albert Stolarick. Doris Schoonover to Keith Kresge. Mrs. Adda Garinger was 84 years old; Mrs. Emma Hazeltine, ninety. Dorrie C. Smith, 76, suffered a fatal heart attack, collapsing in the since she first came to the Pittston | snow after leaving services at Shav- Hospital with a broken leg. She | ertown Methodist Church. Mrs. Samuel Williams, Shaver- | town, died at 34, leaving four small Along the corridor I stopped at | children. the desk to visit with Dr. Joseph | Shedlawski of Forty Fort who had | Township supervisors. { been busy checking charts He was | eager to share his enthusiasm for | this new work. He told how he | pound tank every 45 minutes. Philip Pascoe headed Kingston American Car and Foundry at Berwick was producing one 24,000 Townsend Clubs were still in oper- | heard parts of the life stories and | ation. was amazed at the mew life that | was already beginning for some of | las RD 3, was instantly killed at Marshall L. Lamoreaux, 29, Dal- | Harry E. Colliery, electrocuted by One patient, he said, had not|a live wire been walking but now was begin- | rr uappeNen 1() YEARS Aco: Rev. Francis A. Kane was made pastor of Gate of Heaven Parish, a tribute to his outstanding serv- ices as administrator of ‘the new parochial school Heretofore, the par- ish had been part of St. Therese’s. Harold Payne was made a direc- tor of First National Bank of Dal- las at its 46th annual stockholders meeting. Peynton Lee, Dallas, passed army qualification tests with a perfect score, a phenomenal achievement. Married: Dorothy Davis to Ken- neth Cosgrove; Mary Geraldine Koz- ick to Donald Kitchen: Florabelle Brown to John W. Smith; Betty Buglehall to Robert Shone. Steven Wolfe, Meeker was 96. Died: Leland Sickler, 25, native of Vernon. Charles DeWees, 57, Shrine View. All dogs over six (6) months of age must be licensed. Male dog license costs $1.10 and female dog license $2.10. Spayed female dog license costs $1.10 if a veterinar- ian’s certificate or an affidavit is produced. License tags must be affixed to a substantial collar and worn by the dog at all times. If your dog does not wear a current license tag it is considered a stray and may be disposed of by any officer on sight. Violators of the Pennsylvania Dog Law are liable to a fine of not less than $5.00 and costs, or not more than $100.00 and costs, or impris- onment not exceeding 30 days, or both. The first power-producing public utility was built in New York City in 1882. DALLAS,y PENNSYLVANIA | | 1 Pill P | illar To Pgst... by Hix + | “Want some suet for your bird feeder 2 i 2 { - It was Frances Dress on the phone last Saturday, with a strictly spontaneous offer of suet. Suet, as all bird; lovers know, is what S keeps small brightly feathered bodies warm Cou to twitter, even ! 1 in zero weather. Good and fat, and loaded with heat units. ! a “How on earth do you happen to be” glvine out suet, and do I you throw in green trading stamps?” h Frances explained, after denying the. ‘trading stamps, “We e bought a side of beef for the deep freeze: and it s loaded. How much suet can you use?” i I laid down the phone for a minute to inspect the oven, where one of the mince pies was boiling over and creating charcoal. “I've got an extra mince pie,” I annouhaed, fanning away the charcoal smoke, “and T'll trade it for some suet. OK ? Or would you rather just have the mincemeat, and make Tp your own crust when you get ready for it?” wg “You kidding?” id “Well, Tll be along with the pie tomotrow, probably at a very inconvenient time, but thass life.” Sunday, at the very inconvenient as “1 delivered the pie. I held it out in one hand and extended: the other for the suet. “Come on in and eat,” invited Frances hospitably. Frances will never know what self well-bred denial, “We had a very late jeakiast, and though we'd just love to stay, we can’t. Lots of paper ork.” "Give with the suet.” “Wait a minute Hillman will go downstairs and get it” Hillman came puffing up the stairs.! He was stacked to the chin with boxes. “Good heavens, is all that SUET % a. ¢ sacrifice went into that SAHOO AS HERFa oud OD WW Boe Bd & pe wi ~ Hillman staggered out to the car With the suet. “Estimated in terms of mince piesy pound for pound, just how f many pies do I owe you, and are you Jvilling to take a promissory + note ?” 5 Je | Hillman and Frances waved away any idea of long term payment. | iS “We're stuck with the suet,” they explained, “and the birds | may as well have it. There's lots nore in, ithe basement. Sure you | E can't use a little more?” ; | ‘We now have enough suet on Hida to fill all the bird feeders | a in the Back Mountain. Rev. Williams Reid of Carverton, dropping \ 1 by with his church notice on Mond looked dazed, but he said, i e when pressed, that yes, he could, pro ably use some suet in his bird i t] feeder. 1 | n Tom, sitting out in the car fn Sunday awaiting the suet, | claimed that it didn’t smell like suefiiit smelled like roast beef. lA “What you're smelling,” I enlig htened him, “is the aroma of h roast beef I picked up on my way. jj hough the kitchen, and it has 3 nothing to do with the suet.” | p “Roast beef,” yearned Tom, | licking his chops and looking { A hopeful. bp HN “Cut it out. I've already saidfwe couldn't possibly stay. You | Ss KNOW you just finished a large! weakfast. Corned beef hash with { v a dropped egg, and two slices of crécked wheat toasted, and an order | € of wild grape jelly, and three cups ‘of coffee. What on earth are : you working up digestive juices afi ‘this hour for?” a “That,” said Tom, preparing to open the door and alight, “was | P a whole hour ago.” 4 ® | i ‘Hold everything, here we of 2 | Tom settled back. “What are Hie going to have for dinner?” | N “Fried suet, 1 think, » He — Ly Te { J: 100 Y; VFhis Week : ears Aga This Week...in n i : THE CIVIL WAR | | : 3 ; / 5 \ a Wed, ; 5 L SAE AN "A 3 A S (Events exactly 100 years ago this week in the Civil War—told in 3 the language and style of today.) 2 TOUGH T. : GH TARS | | 0 J 0 e A 1K | ] I i I © « a S 0 t. L [Ss |. : ! t . p One hundred years ago this week—on Jan. 3, 1861— f Confederate Navy vessels inflicted moderate damage when a they bombarded Federal Forts Mc Rae and Barrancas in $ 4 Florida. As land forces grew in strength early in the Civil ; War, so did the Navies, with their offers of high bounties I and pay. Above: A typfea Union crew. i sl JOL JOHNSTON ASKS: | t | t Furlough, Bounty Act — ; ia I Menace To Army Strength? : RICHMOND, Va.—Janii6—Gen. Joseph E. Johnston has asked > Confederate War Secretary Judah P. Benjamin for help in ad- 1 ministering the controversial ‘‘Furlough and Bounty Act,” which went into effect last week! r Aides of Benjamin indicated the secretary tossed the 'prob- lem right into the lap of Se : Johnston, who comman Confederate forces in/Noiu Virginia. Under terms of the legis) —originally intended to: Sl enlistments and areas) federate Army strength ties of $50 would be aw soldiers extending theif duty for three years or ration of the war. More enticing yet, federate Congress a 60-day furloughs for the and said they would mitted to switch their or even their branches, ice, if they wished. i # ¥ JOHNSTON is said to pointed out in strong language that the majority of the 60 en in his command were nearing the end of their origing onth hitch. If he granted furlg nder terms of the new act, his ranks would be strippf his already shaky position made critically weaker, Jo advised. But Benjamin, whol ist Sept. 17 was the Confederate attorney general, declf issue formal instructions, telling Johnston only to use prudence’ in granting furloughs. ews Syndicate, Chicago 33, Ill, of Congress) ar oe: VPA ret ope FH a JOHNSTON Copyright, 1062, 8 X (Photg