SECTION A —PAGE 2 THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its Tlst Year” Member Audit Bureau of Circulations Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association Member National Editorial Association Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. six months. to be placed en mailing list. ~ trospitals. | held for more than 30 days. 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 Out-of-State subscriptions: $4.50 a year; $5.00 six “months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c. When requesting a change of address subscribers are asked tw give their old as well as new address. ~ Allow two weeks for changes of address or new subscription ‘The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local 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 self - addressed, ~ stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be Unless paid for at advertising rates, we can give no assurance ‘hat announcements of plays, parties, rummage sales or any affair for raising money will appear in a specific issue. Preference will in all instances be given to editorial matter which has not previously appeared in publication. Transient rates 80c. Monday 5 P.M. at 85¢ per column inch. © National display advertising rates 84c per column inch. Political advertising $1.10 per inch. Preferred position additional 10c per inch. Advertising deadline Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged Classified rates 5¢ per word. Minimum if charged $1.00. ‘Editor and Publisher—HOWARD W. RISLEY “<ociate Editors—MYRA ZEISER Associate Publisher—ROBERT F. BACHMAN RISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS Sports—JAMES LOHMAN Advertising—LOUISE C. MARKS ation. : his world completely. by the kindly atmosphere: Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post IT HAPPENED 30 YEARS AGO: Store and home of Asa Prutz- © man at Chase were competely des- troyed by fire. Funds were transferred under police guard - from the old bank building to the new. James Kunkle, Dallas Township supervisor, died of pneumonia. Word had been received that Dr. E. C. Honeywell, Dallas native, died at Norristown. Lehman cagers took Dallas Town. ship 50 to 42. Official inspections stations open- ed, inspection mandatory. John Girvan married- Agnes Prior of Germantown, Harrisburg inspectors looked over plots of land suggested for the new high school in Kingston Town- ship. : Himmler Theatre was showing Huckleberry Finn with child stars Jacke Cooper and Mitzi Green. You could get 3 tall cans of evaporated milk for 20 cents. Lard was 7 cents a pound. William Hier of Laketon, dropped dead in the doctor’s office in Beth- lehem, The new excise tax on cars was deplored by James Oliver, who asked customers to write their congressman, rr uappeNeD 2() years aco: Harveys Lake police, using a powerful submarine lamp, were un- able to locate the body of a six year old boy who slipped through the ice into the river at Sunbury. Search lasted two days. Ice harvest reached its peak at Mountain Springs. Three Lehigh Valley engins handled the ice cars over the heavy grades. Called in the draft were Glen Amos Kitchen, Kenneth Paul Jones, Calvin Harding = Ferrell, Henry Chester Zarno, and Robert Sum- merville, Senator Andrew J. Sordoni was elected president of Wyoming Val- ley Motor Club. Mrs. Rose Walter, Shavertown, was 85 years old. A thaw, with high temperatures, spoiled skating at Harveys Lake. Letters began coming in to the Post from goldiers in training camps, / ) 7 A man imprisoned in a flooding submarine. thousands of miles out in the far blue younder. Editorially Speaking: OUT OF THIS WORLD ~ What with the moon-shoot going thirty thousand miles astray and the astronaut unable to get himself off the ground, things are in a sad state in this space age. To be sure, thirty thousand miles is a mere bagatelle, compared with mileage along the Milky: Way, but if there were an astronaut encased in that capsule, headed for the ~ fringes of the universe, he might be now thinking long ~ thoughts about the planet he had left behind forever. Commonsense reminds us sternly that each time we get behind the wheel of a car we take our life in our hands; that bathroom and kitchen are lethal spots in any household; that heart trouble takes a deadly toll of our population, and that the common cold, accompanied by terminal pnemonia, is forever with us. But there is something about outer space that is'chil- ling in its very concept. The thought of an intrepid astro- naut blasting his way toward infinity, behind him the point of no return, staggers the imagin- leaving eons A man Out of There’ is something so comforting about: ‘green grass Binehth the feet, and arching blue, up there where it belongs, its fiery brilliance and its deadly cold cushioned We are such infinitesimal specks of sensate mat- ter . . . and so in need of the old familiar things, the bridge from ‘the unknown to the unknown. ir HAPPENED ]() YEARS Aco: L. W. LeGrand and Jasper B. Carr were named to the YMCA board. ; Mrs. George. Babchalk won a $300. Laundromat for the last line of a jingle. d Farmers were told by State College that an alarm clock is cheaper than supporting a rooster for a year. Dr. Jacob Tilem opened an of- fice at Harveys Lake. i The body of Cpt. Frederick Brown, killed in action in Korea, was on the way home for burial. Dan Richards was elected presi- dent of Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Company. Bowman's Restaurant had the only clock of its kind, a mammoth cuckoo job from the Black Forest. Jean DeRemer became the bride of Robert Whitney. Miss Susie L. Seward, Orange, died aged 92 at the Ransom Home. Sam T. Allen, Outlet, died at 71: Lehman-Jackson Jointure pur- chased a station wagon. William R. Neely, Lehman Sunday School superintendent for many years, died at 88. In the death of Samuel Eggles- ton, 93, Harveys Lake lost a pion- eer apple man. Mad foxes were reported in in- creasing numbers. Lydd Bom Warren Mr. and Mrs. Francis Warren, Tunkhannock Highway, announce the birth of a baby girl, Lynn Ann, at General Hospital on January 5. They have three boys, Frank, aged seven, Walter, six, and Billy, four. Mrs. Warren is the former Vir- ginia Brungess, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Water Brungess of Claude Street. Mr. Warren is son of Mrs. Monica Warren, Germantown, and Frank Warren, Philadelphia. He is associated with Smith Kline and French Laboratories in Philadelphia. Brynn Elizabeth Oney Mr. and Mrs. William Oney, New- ton, N. J. announce the birth of a baby girl, Brynn Elizabeth, five pounds, six ounces, at Hamneman Hospital Scranton. This is their first child. Mrs. Oney is the former Barbara Cottell, daughter of Mrs. Floyd Cot- tell of Daton. Mr. Oney is son of Mr. and Mrs. Amos Oney of Shaver- town. He is employed by A. T. and T. as switchboard ' installation mechanic at Newton, Heads Real Estate Board THOMAS P. GARRITY Thomas P. Garrity, resident. of Harvey's Lake, was in- stalled as president of the Greater a lifelong Wilkes-Barre Tuesday night. Owner and operator of the Thom- as P. Garrity Real Estate and Insur- ance business with offices at Stone- hurst Lodge, Harvey's Lake, Mr. Garrity is one of the area's well- known residents. Other officers who will assist Mr. Garrity include Robert Laux, Midland Drive, Dallas Twp., a sec- ond vice-president; and Harry Goer. inger, East Dallas, named to a two year term on' the board of direct- ors. Robert Harvey is first wvice- president; Michael J. Repa is treas- urer, and Claire Hart Cummings is secretary. Carl A. Leighton, retir- ing president is board ' chairman, and John P. Sammon is state dir- ector. Other board directors are Robert Hoffman, 1-year term, and Betty Kanarr Bierly, 3-year term. Mr. Garrity, whose community activities are rivalled by his numer- ous positions with realator and ap- praiser groups, is the present chief of the Daniel C. Roberts Co. at Harv- ey's Lake and is a past president of the Harvey's Lake Lions, . Pro- tective Association, and Rod and Gun Club. Mr. Garrity, who has operated his real estate and insurance busi- ness at Harvey's Lake for more than a dozen years after an as- sociation with Wesley A. Freeman Agency, Sweet Valley, has improved the Stonehurst summer resort area with 15 imots spread over 14 acres with a 260-ft. private beach area. He is senior member of the Soc- iety of Residential Appraisers, mem- ber of the Right of Way Association, Philadelphia Chapter; member of the Pennsylvania and National Real Estate Boards, and appraiser for the FHA. Mr. Garrity is a director of the Rural Building and Loan Associa- tion, Dallas, and a member of the Board of Advisors of the Dallas Branch of the Miners National Bank. During World War 2 Mr. Garrity was an Air Fore pilot with 8th Air Force and 20th Air Force in England. He is presently serving as training officer of the 92nd Air Terminal Squadron with the rank of captain in the Air Force Reserve here. The 92nd Squadron, was the Real Estate Board first category. A unit assigned to |. the Eastern United States when it was first activated by Mr. Gar- rity. Mr. Garrity is currently engaged |: in study for a master’s degree in appraising, which is comparable to post graduate work for a doctor. ate in education. Married to the former Mary De- laney, the couple has two child- ren, Christine and Michael. They are members of Our Lady of Vict- ory Church at Harvey's Lake. Mrs. Paul Gross Is Hostess To Golfers Mrs. Paul Gross, Trucksville, golf chairman of Irem Temple Women Golfers, entertained at luncheon officers and chairmen for the coming season on Friday. Plans were discussed for weekly and monthly tournaments and a special tournament scheduled for May. Mrs. John R. Vivian and Mrs. William Wicks were chosen to assist in redecorating the ladies’ locker room. Officers and chairmen selected: Mrs. Gross, Chairman, Mrs. C. Russell Havey, team captain, Mrs. George Dean, secretary, Mrs. Warren Unger, handicap chairman, Mrs. Lloyd Kear, Mrs. Mitchell Jenkins, Mrs. William Pack, rules committee, Mrs, Charles Phillips, Mrs. George Montgomery, Mrs. John Pritchard, advisory board, Mrs. William Wicks and Mrs. George Common, prizes, Mrs. F. E. Hopkins, publicity, Mrs. Harold Snowdon, hostess, Mrs. Frank Wagner, lockers. Present at ‘the luncheon: Mes- dames Kear, Wicks, Common, War- ren Uager, Dean, Snowden, Phillips and Hopkins. Mrs. Frank Lutinski Heads Lake Altar And Rosary Mrs. Frank Lutinski was installed as president, at the January meet. ing of Our Lady of Victory, Altar And Rosary Society, Harveys Lake, Other officers for the New Year are: Vice President, Mrs. Thomas Meighan; Secretary, Mrs. Joseph Orzechowski; Treasurer, Mrs. Wil- liam Ziminski. Retiring Officers are President, Mrs. Vera Bennett; Vice President, Mrs, William Purcell; Secretary, Mrs. Thomas Cadwalader; Treasurer, Mrs. Myron Williams, THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1962 El g Jnma King Charles II (a lukewarm Roman (Catholic) granted to Wil- liam Penn ( Quaker) ownership of, and authority to govern with minor sylvania, One of the Charter clauses provided that the Bishop of London (Established Church) might send out a minister when at least twenty residents desired it. Neither the King, whose late father had been executed by the hard- headed Puritans, nor Penn, who had been jailed for his religion, had any intention of establishing an intoler- ant Church. Penn announced ‘An Holy Experiment” with guarantee of religious freedom for all law- abiding persons who ‘‘acknowl- edged one Almighty and Eternal God to be the Creator, Upholder, and Ruler of the World”. Office- holders had to be Christians, and later upon pressure from England, Catholics were excluded from office. A great variety of religious sects, refuge in Pennsylvania, The Dutch, Swedes, and Finns oc- cupied the lower: Delaware, includ- ing. what is now Delaware, granted separately to Penn. They had reli- gious - meeting places before Penn came. Gloria Dei (1642) was con- sidered the first congregation in Pa, The Quakers came from Eng- land, "Wales, and Ireland, being numerous and many of them weal- thy, well educated and influential. With help from minor groups they dominated the. Provincial Assembly for decades, until the dire necessity of the French and Indian campaigns forced abandonment of their pacif- ist policies. They did not believe in elaborate churches and ecclestical authorities, their groups being known as ‘‘meetings” with large “annual meetings” for promotional, organizational, and missionary pur- poses. There . were also monthly and ' quarterly meetings in some places. They soon established “meetings” in Philadelphia, Darby, Haverford, Radnor, Chester, etc. Penn gave them a burial ground in 1701, Ancestors of [Daniel Boone and Abe Lincoln worshipped at a meet- ing in Berks County established in 1725. They had spread as far as York County in 1745, to Catawissa in 1775 and to Lycoming County in 1799. Penn's sons forsook the faith and became Episcopalians, which was bad for the Colony as it tumed out. The Episcopalians formed the fashionable church. From the par- ‘ent Christ Church, founded 1695 in Philadelphia, in which = George Washington and Benjamin [Franklin and other notables held pews, they spread out as far as Carlisle by 1751. Many rural congregations all over. the state held services in union churches’ or in schoolhouses without a separate church building, sometimes for generations, and this applied © to many Protestant de- nominations. HALTER AE ESA EE TEES CA EI Rambling Around By The Oldtimer—D. A. Waters EE EC EEE E30 TEU CHEE REE ins restrictions, the Province of Penn. many persecuted in Europe, found (IIEINTHITING acm The Germans included the Lu- therans, Reformed, and Evangeli- cal, with some smaller sects. The great organizer and educator of the Lutherans was Henry Melchior Muhlenberg who was a pastor in Montgomery County of a church founded in 1700. He is buried at Trappe, which church he built in 1743, the oldest unchanged Luther- an Church in the State. They had spread to Westmoreland County by 1773 and to Chambersburg by 1780. ‘A ministerium was organized in Pa. in 1748, The Reformed; who had theologi- cal ideas more like John Calvin, in- cluded the Holland Dutch and some Germans; and spread out over a similar area. They were in Mont- gomery County in 1727, Easton in 1745, Adams County in 1747, Chambersburg in 1780. Their great organizer and educator was Michael Schlatter, a Hollander. Another group, led by Jacob Albright, was the Evangelical, which held. its first general conference in Union Coun- ty in 1816. In 1800 Dr. Philip Wil- liam Otterbein: founded ‘the United Brethern Church, These two were united as the Evangelical United Brethern Church at Johnstown in 1946 making a church of about three quarters of a million mem- bers. In general the German type churches have so many sectional synods = with, mergers here and there “that they are difficult to comprehend, The Mennonites, already nearly two hundred years old, came about 1683 settling Germantown, with a church built in 1708. In the same area was another group, The Dunk- ers, led by Peter Becker, in 1719 with a building built in 1735. Ger- man Baptists under Conrad Beisel probably organized the first Sunday School in the U.S. in 1740. We are running out of space before we get to the other Baptist groups, The Methodists, © the Moravians, most missionary of all the early churches in the state, the Presbyterians, who were probably the most widespread, and the Roman Catholics. Several sects, who were distinctly different in beliefs and manner of life, flour- ished in Pennsylvania. It might be said that many of the divergent groups, which peopled Pennsylvania and contributed to her prosperity and prominence, were not popular in their former homelands. Probably the govern- ments there were glad to get rid of them. And they did not come to Pennsylvania by accident. Penn con- ducted aggressive campaigns to en- courage. settlers. © Since 1745, The Evangelical and Reformed Church at Tulpehocken, founded 1727, has held a ceremony paying to ‘the heirs of ‘Caspar: Wis- tar. ONE RED ‘ROSE, the annual rental required for him for the land to be: paid forever. In Lancaster County, The Lutheran Church at Manheim, founded 1762, makes a similar payment to heirs of Baron Stiegel. Looking at T-V With GEORGE A. and. EDITH ANN BURKE MIKE WALLACE has made his evening show such a success that “PM West” is being dropped as of February 2nd and the show will be known as plain ‘PM.” The whole 90-minute program will come from New York. Mike, with the blessings of his sponsor, may revert somewhat to his manner on “‘Night Beat,” which means his interviewing = technique may become more sharp and prov- ocative. Abe Burrows, a frequent guest on the show will become a ‘‘regular.” He will be on the show until Spring, when he goes to London to start the British company of his Broadway hit, “How to Suc- ceed.” S Viewers will see less of Miss Dav- idson who has been criticized for some of her remarks to guests. She will appear only once each evening in a special interview feature. Guests on this show’ receive a smaller fee than Jack Paar’'s going rate of $320. Mike pays $265. Fees do not harm his guest list. Sammy Davis, Jr. will appear on the Feb. 2nd evening, the final evening under the old system. The opening night of the new “PM” = program . will have Carol Baker, Abe Burrows, Dorian Leigh, the highest paid model in the world, the Maharishi Mahest Yogi from India ‘and poet-cab- driver Louis Blugerman from Brooklyn. Bette Davis, Perle Mesta, piano satirist Alex Templeton and Ed- ward Everett Horton are the guests for the second evening. It would be difficult to do better than this guestwise. The new show will jump around quickly from subject to subject. As viewers know the old system has the show built around one theme. This made it rather difficult. An idea that would have been excel- lent for maybe twenty or thirty minutes just didn’t stretch to 60 minutes, so many good ideas were just discarded. “PM” is taped eight days ahead of schedule before a’ live audience of about 100. JACK PAAR will make a guest appearance on the Bob Newhart Show on Wednesday, February 7 at 10 p.m. CAR 54, WHERE ARE YOU is doing very well. It is rated in the top fifteen shows. Some people thought the New York - police might. resent the port- royal of a couple of cops as comic characters. But it is just the op- posite. According to Nat Hiken, creator of “Car 54,” every once in a while) some policeman , comes up to him and tells him confidentially that there is a Toddy in his precinct. Joe ‘and Fred attended a police affair and got a standing ovation when they appeared. Officers and committee chairmen of Gate of Heaven Holy Name Soc- iety pictured above are, seated left to right: Secretary, Gus Shul- eski; Retiring President, Victor Bor- zone; Pastor and Moderator, Rev. Francis A. Kane; President, Andrew Lavix; Vice President, Leonard Dougherty. Standing: Marshall, Jos- eph Noon; Ways and Means, Wil- liam Motyka; Treasurer, John Spencer; Youth, William Hartman; Pubicity, Paul Williams. President Lavix has announced the formation of an Advisory Board, Gate Of Heaven Holy Name Installs Officers made up of the following men: John Casey, Thomas Garrity, Dr. William Kennedy, Abdon Kupstas, Robert Laux, Roger McShea, Jr, Phillip Moore, James O'Connell, George [Ruckno, Alfred Ranstall, Stephen Tkach, Dr. Louis Vitale. SAFETY VALVE SAVE YOUR LIFE Community-wide participation in the Woman’s Club of Dallas ‘Crus- ade for Seat Belts” are urged to- day. Far too few of us are taking advantage of this proven lifesav- ing device due, in part, to lack of full understanding of the needs and benefits to be gained through regular seat belt use. For example, more than half of all injury-producing automobile ac- cidents occur at speeds less than 40 miles per hour. And, three out of every four traffic deaths occur within 25 miles of home. This means that we, in our everyday driving, could be involved in an accident-producing situation. help protect automobile passengers in both major and minor accid- ents. In collisions, seat belts help keep passengers from being eject- ed, and reduce the force of im- pact of the body or amy part of the car's interior. The Dallas clubwomen are dis- tributing special Crusade Cards to encourage increase in the number of seat belt users in our commun- ity. The cards point out the fol- lowing advantages for equipping motor vehicles with seat belts: Added protection for your family. Releasable with one hand instant~ ly. : Comfortable and reduce fatigue. Helpful to new drivers. Smartly designed, colorful colorfast. Sincerely, Mrs. Francis Fry and Research in auto crash injury cases hag shown that seat belts Elmerest Drive Dallas, Penna, Woman's Club of Dallas OR 4-5534 TWO FOR A TWOSOME Dear Mr, Risley: For the last two weeks we have been receiving two copies of the Dallag Post. This is wonderful! My husband and I don’t have to scram- ble for the paper—but it is not right. We enjoy the post very much and I'm sure someone else would like to have that extra copy! Mrs. Carl Gries Jr. Ed Note: It's the measure of our regard for you. Two papers for two nice people. Youll be sorry! Prob- ably both papers will now be stopped in an excess of zeal or 8 This is a good week to do the things you promised yourself you would do last week, thrift. ] From time. just as the front door opened. received earlier in the week. expected, or had already left? on. hand. “What's for breakfast?’ A hold at 45. “Where's the toy box?” Still holdiig at 45. the astronaut. room. TV. piece of toast. the astronaut in reasonable peace. worked out so well. “Due to weather conditions, celled.” Gate Of Heaven Society To Receive New Members Altar and Rosary Society of Gate of Heaven Church will receive new members at an Enrollment Cere- mony to be held Monday evening, 8 p.m. at the church. All women are invited to attend whether they be former; present or prospective members. Those enrolled last year will renew their pledge to the soc- iety. Rev. Francis A. Kane, Pastor and Moderator, will officiate and install the new officers." Mrs. George Arzente Jr., will preside at the follow. Mrs. Joseph Wentzel is chairman of the affair and Mrs. Joseph Kus- iak Co-chairman. = The following Band Leaders are aiding with the membership drive: Mary Weir, Mrs. Don McCrea, Marie Thevenon, Mes- dames Raymond Jacobs, Clifford Burkhardt, William Henninger, Wil- liam ‘Wasser, John Polachek, Jr. Walter Weir, Jr., John Kaschak, Martin McEnrue, J. Warren Yarnal, John McAndrew, Ignatius Gallagher, Robert Young, John Yalick, Willard Whalen, John . Elenchik, George Stolarick, Robert Lavelle, Matt Evans, William Gallagher, Stephen mer. The Society will receive Holy Communion in a body at the 9 am. Mass on Sunday. Little Girl Swallows Poison Tablet A little two year old in the Children’s Hospital in Philadelphia has had a miraculous escape from deadly damage to delicate tissues, caused by swallowing of a tablet not designed for internal use, but for laboratory use. Little Deborah Haegenbaugh, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Haegenbaugh of Leh- man, is now able to swallow soft food as well as liquids, and daily stretching of the esophagus is slowly correcting strictures. She entered the hospital January 12, and ex- pects to remain for at least one more week. In the meantime, she hopes for pretty cards. It helps to while away the time. Address one to Deborah today. Firmness is that admirable qual- ity in ourselves that is merely stub- bornness in others. TA eg. US. Pu. OF. PRD Helge “I took my car to the garage that uses the Want Ads — now it's stopped smoking, too!” business meeting. Refreshments will | be served and a Social Hour will | Would they be arriving Saturday ‘morning, Monday morning? “Keep your schedule elastic,” “We'll take our coffee right in there and finish it in front of the Bi The procession formed, each marcher carrying a cup. and a a We settled down in front of the T-V. Now, we could oh : DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Pillar To Post... by Hix They came boiling into the house Saturday morning, shortly after the crack of dawn, while the astronaut was still lying in his capsule atop lethal tons of explosive, sweating it out until take-off The horn beeped gently in the driveway, but with sufficient authority to cause a sleep-sogged Nomnie to vault from her blankets, tie a bathrobe sash around her midriff, and stumble down the stairs Sunday morning, was the warning “Could be most any time, but chances - are we'll keep an eye on the weather and if there’s a blizzard in the making, we'll hightail it out of Colorado right ahead of the storm. A neighbor has been alerted to welcome the moving vans, just in case we can’t stay until the furniture leaves.” Tom and I went into a huddle Friday night. son Tommy in Chicago, to see if the wanderers had been there, were Too late, we decided. > ting folks out of bed to ask questions. Food in quantity was already Should we call No sense get We mapped it out in our mind. A thousand miles from Boulder to Chicago, another thousand to Dallas. have started was Wednesday evening. So, the errliest they could get to Dallas would be Sunday morning. prepared. They just might jump the gun. chorused eight voices. girding his bathrobe, and added a ninth. ” The astronaut atop his capsule, far from the madding thong 3 lay strapped to his couch. The announcer intoned the ‘time, ‘the, weather: condition, the emotional. state of tha astronaut. NE The earliest they could Still, it was well to be Tom: appenred, 4 Plenty of time to make a caldron of hot chocolate, boil up- a kettle of oatmeal. The astronaut continued to lie in his capsule, and the announcer continued to give prevue shots of the flight. ; Mass adjournment to the kitchen and the Franklin stove, leaving the astronaut flat on his back. Well have breakfast, and THEN we'll go back into the living room and ' watch the blast-off. astronaut can get along without us for a few minutes. The “Hold everything, I'll get you kids something to play with. on the rug. Finish your oatmeal first.” : A quick foray ‘to the second floor to locate some battered A animals and a flock of toy airplanes, one ear tuned to the annoucer. . Small children established on the big rug, safely apart oh Big children accommodated with chairs in front of the T-V. Four weary adults sipping hot coffee in the kitchen and finishing off the hot buttered toast. An eye on the astronaut by remote control. “Count-down started,” came a warning yell from the living Nice that the breakfast schedule the orbital flight has been can- : Takes Special Course ROBERT H. EVANS Robert H. Evans, of Charles H | Long, M -Ferguson dealer in Charles Glawe, Paul Gates, Joseph | one Boaey LT Wentzel, Andrew Stash, Leo Chase, week advance technical course, at Sweet Valley, is attendin the M-F Service Training Cet in Detroit, Michigan. Established to develop “better customer service at the dealer level, Schmaltz, Leon Bartz, Edward Gil- | the center offers M-F dealer person- nel a choice of fourteen courses, ranging from shop management to tractor hydraulics. The one - to | four ‘week courses ensure dealers | are up to date on the latest in- Tuy service techniques, as wel as the maintenance and = operation of the company's expanding lines of agricultural and industrial equip- ment. The world’s largest rofl) ducer of tractors and combines, M-F markets its products in 161 countries. Stanley, co-chairman of the Dal- Will Complete Laying 01 Drains This Week All drains for the septic tank will be laid at the new Lake-Leh- man High School by the end of this week, preventing any possible flooding during the spring thaw. Weather is slowing all work. Electricians and plumbers, skele- ton crews of three and four, are working steadily, along with a few maintenance men. Twenty inches of frost was encountered even before the subzero temperatures of Tues» day and Wednesday nights. Returns To Base Capt. John Werts, Navigator ® United States Air Force, recently returned to Offutt A.F.B., Nebras- ka, after a two week visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Werts, Wyoming Campgrounds Rd., R.D. 1, Pittston. Capt. Werts is a 1949 graduate of Westmoreland High School, and served. for four years in the U. S. Navy during the Korean Conflict. Admitted By Ambulance Mrs. Joseph Marsh, 101 Welling- ton Avenue, was taken to General ital in Dallas Commuity Am- bulance Wednesday: afternoon at 1, on order of Dr. Michael Bucan. i i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers