a a 72 YEARS A NEWSPAPER Oldest Business Institution Back of the Mountai n TEN CENTS PER COPY- SIXTEEN PAGES Sixty-Five Top Musicians Of Seven Schools To Give Band Concert Here West Side Conferenc e Group Will Later Play At Fine Arts Fiesta In Wilkes-Barre A select group of musicians from the seven schools of the West Side Conference will present a band con- cert at Dallas Senior High School auditorium Thursday evening, April 5:at8. This will be the eighth annual program for this organization but will be the first time that Dallas has been the host. ! The seven schools ‘and their direc- tors are: Dallas, Lester R. Lewis; Edwardsville, Anthony Kane; BEx- eter, Ross Tarintino; Forty Fort, Reese E. Pelton; Wyoming, Mazzetelli; West Wyoming, Geno Marchetelli; Lake - Lehman, John Milauskas. President of the West Side Con- ference organization is John Miliaus- kas and the conductors for the Fes- tival Band are: Lester R, Lewis and Reese E. Pelton. The Festival Band is made up of approximately sixty-five selected players who rehearse every Thurs- day evening. Both directors and players give their own free time to ‘advance the cause of better band | music. The calibre of music used for the band is superior to what any one individual band might attempt to perform. Each year two different directors are selected to conduct the group. For both directors and students, this is an excellent musi- cal experience. The program on April 5 will be | the second appearance of the group | this year. The first was at Teacher's ~ Institute on October 25. ® The band has also been invited to play at the Fine : Arts Fiesta, Public Square, Wilkes-Barre, May 19. An excellent program of conceit: band literature has been selecte for the Dallas concert. Included are selections from Lohengrin, a . melodic caravan (selections. of pop- | A w w p ® ular themes) march, On The Mall march, There will be two special num- bers—Sax Serenade which features a saxophone quartet and Slide Kicks, which features the entire trombone section. Dorothy Eck and Richard Ratcliffe will provide organ music before and after the concert. and chorale, For Back Mountain music lovers this program should be a must. There will be no admission charge. $80,274.40 To Be Distributed Here Eight Back Mountain municipal- ities are among the 2,561 political subdivisions in the Commonwealth that will receive a share of $27 Vito | on | Rotary Honors James Besecker Charter Member Active In Business And Civil Affairs In The Community | James F. Besecker, one of the | staunchest community supporters | | Dallas ever had was honored Thurs- | day evening by Dallas Rotary Club | at its 85th Anniversary dinner {dance held at Irem Country Club. |A charter member, and Rotary’s | third president, Jim was awarded ia desk plaque fashioned of anthra- | cite coal, bearing his name, inscription, and the Rotary seal. an | | oR EEE JAMES F. BESECKER District Governor Elmer Daniels {made the presentation. i ville Center, N. Y., |idate for Director of Rotary Inter- | national in Northeastern United States, made the main address. Honored Rotary «Exe change Student from Holland, 'Els- beth Gerrits, introduced by presi | dent James Alexander, and -given an orchid by Mrs. i president of Women of Rotary. Dallas cheerleaders, winners of | the Bloomsburg competition, coached iby Miss Engler, demonstrated their skill. The evening ended with dancing to music by Bobby Baird’s orches- | tra. | Mr. | ary also wie since Dallas Rot- in 1927 at the Besecker, was formed | Atty. James F. Conway, Rock- appointed to | {a number of International Rotary | committees, and presently a cand- | Jack Stanley, | million. Liquid Fuels Tax which will {old Raub Hotel, has held about every be distributed starting April 1 by the State Department of Highways. The mcney will be used for con- struction and maintenance of loc- al streets, roads and bridges. The amount coming to the Back Mountain area will be $80,274.40. Allocations are based on the mile- age of local roads within the polit ical subdivision and on the popu- lation of the municipality. The formula for 1962 is $291.93 for each mile in each subdivision and $1.06 per capita for each person within its confines. The formula is 60 percent of mileage and 40 percent on population as specified in Act 635. Amounts to be received by each Back Mountain municipality with its population and miles of roads are listed as follows: Dallas Town- ship, $11,080.61, population 4,053, miles of roads 23.24, Dallas Bor- ough $5,891.06, population 2586, miles of roads 10.79; Franklin Town- ship, 5,501.49, population 880, miles 15.64; Jackson Township, $8,063.88, population 1,364, miles 22.67; King- ston Township, $13,942.24, popula- | tion 5,450, miles 27.97; Lake "Town- ship, $11,067.27, population 1.895, miles 31.03; Lehman Township, $12,852.69, population 2,318, miles 35.61; Ross Township $11,875.16, population 1,360, miles 35.74. Distribution of the 90 percent in April was started by Governor George M. Leader in 1958 and has enabled municipalities to undertake substantial construction work dur- ing the swmmer months. Allocation of $30,000,000 annu- ally to the municipalities is auth- orized by Act 8655 enacted in 1956, | as amended by Act 8 in 1961. The $27,000,000, ninety percent of the total allocation, is being made in April so that the municipalities may construct necessary projects during the summer months. The remaining 10 percent will be distributed in October. SURPLUS FOOD urplus Food tale place Thursday, April 12, at Triksville Fire Hall, 10 am. to 2 \m. for Back Mountain resid- <4 ents Se. B distribution will | | office in the Club, He was its first | secretary, its third president. The secretaryship was his’ for many years. Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Comp- any, organized the same year as Dallas Rotary, elected Jim fire chief | year after year, fifteen in all. Jim was one of a committee which sel- ected the original fire truck, the Mack pumper still in use as an auxiliary engine. With the late Harry L. Ohlman and Henry Peter- | son, Jim worked for installation of | fire plugs in Dallas. | Jim knows where every pond and | every stream is located in Dallas | Borough or Dallas Township, every | | back road, and how to get to a| place in a hurry. For eight years he was secre- tary of Dallas Borough School Board, and for fourteen years sec- retary of Dallas Borough Council. been in the Real Estate business in Dallas, recently establishing ground floor quarters in his new building on Main Street, having moved from the second floor in the | Gregory Building, : Prior to that time, he operated {the Atlantic filling station. in cen- | tral Dallas, on the site of the Old | Raub Hotel where Rotary was | founded. For many years he owned | the Ford agency, building the | structure on Lake Street which now | houses the Dodge agency under L. | L. Richardson. | The face of Dallas has changed, | Jim says, but it is a place of un- { limited opportunity to a man with vision, With the current plans to | widen the highway from Luzerne, Mr, Besecker sees more and more | Valley residents moving to the Back | Mountain, and more and more op- | portunity for up and coming busi- | nessmen. Mrs. Besecker is the former Em- [ily Conner. There are six children | living; a twin died some years ago when a little boy. All the child- | ren have at one time or another taken an active part in the com- | munity, The youngest, Robert, 22, | who lives in Silver Springs, Mary- | land can hardly wait to get home | so that he can answer ambulance | or fire calls. | re; Beverly Craig in Nuttley, N. J; | Virginia Nichols, in Trucksville; Jim Jr. in East Dallas; and Donald in | Boynton Beach, Florida. For the past twelve years he has | Son Delmar lives in Wilkes-Bar- | HE DALLAS POST MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION | | | Dallas Rotary who was honored at | the 35th anniversary of Dallas Rot- ary Thursday night at Irem Coun- | try Club? When the picture was | taken early in the evening, ~ his | James F. Besecker himself was com- pletely unsuspecting. Left to right are: John, Landis,. Fred Jennings, Attorney -James Conway, speaker; | District Governor Elmer Daniels, W. B. Jeter, James Alexander, and Dr. | |ing College Misericordia’s Reading | Conference on Saturday are many |Steele, Louise Colwell, Oce B. Aus- | ough School, Mrs. Colwell's class, | |Mason, Grace Fleming, Manta Dallas Rotary Prepares To Honor A Sterling Citizen Where 1s the charter member of | identity was still under wraps, and |L. E. Jordar. The Dallas Post had ‘in its files a ‘one-column cut of Jim, which accompanies the story, and adds its congratulations to a solid citizen who has always served his com- munity © faithfully. | Reading Conference At Misericordia Draws Many Teachers In this group of teachers attend-chak, Ruth Ambrose, Antionette Hughey. | The fourth grade at Dallas Bor- | teachers from Dallas Elementary |tin, Thelma Lamoreaux, John Mul- | was used for demonstration. Child- | schools. They include Edythe Krom- |hern, -Sarah Mitten, Adaline Burg-|yen were | elbein, Ruth Novy, James Good- | win, Hilda Bredbenner, William A. | Austin, Joyce Gordon, Leila Anskis, Many Educa Reading Prominent among the 400 edu- cators who attended College Miseri- cordia’s Third Annual Reading Con- | ference March 23-24 were approxi- mately seventy teachers and ad- ministrators from the Dallas area. Sister M.” Celestine, R.S.M., presi- pressed appreciation for their co- operation, mentioning their contribution in all stages of confer- ence development. [Serving on the executive commit- tee were: Lester B. Squier, super- vising principal, Lake-Lehman area; and William A. Austin, elementary supervisor, Dallas Schools. On the planning committee were: Mrs. Louise Colwell, Dallas, Mrs, Cath- erine C. ~ Fynn, Sweet Valley, Anthony Marchakitus, principal, | Lake-Lehman. High School; Chester Molley, Dallas Senior High School. John “J. Mulhern, "Principal, West- | moreland School, Dr. Helen Murphy's workshop on | The Teaching of Reading in Elemen- tary Grades. . Mrs. Colwell arranged to have her fourth grade class from Dallas Ele- { mentary School used in demonstra- | tion by Dr. Helen Murphy, professor | of education at Boston University. | Lake-Leh- | Anthony Marchakitus, | man, assembled a group of sopho- | | mores for demonstration by Miss | Rosemary Wilson, assistant curri- {culum director of Philadelphia | Schools, in her | School Reading | Content Area. { William A. Austin is seen in the | picture with a group of Dallas teach. | ers attending the post-luncheon ses- {sion on Saturday afternoon when Sister Caroline, 1.HM., author of | Breaking the Sound Barrier, spoke lon technique in phonetic analysis. National reading authority, 'Dr. Morton Botel, assistant superintend- ent Bucks County Schools, presi- Instruction in the dent of College Mistericordia, ex- | large | was chairman of workshop on High | ess, .Eva McGuire, Marion Young, Georgiena Weidner, Margaret Gar- | ris, Mary Mohr, Margaret Hughes, address Friday evening, A Total Ap- proach to Reading.. Chairman was the Right Reverend Monsignor John { J. Maher, LL.D., Superintendent of | Schools in the Scranton Diocese. was designed to meet reading prob- lems on three levels. Techniques {and procedures were discussed and { authorities in lectures and work- shops. A workshop on The Slow Learner in the Classroom which considered problems met by teachers on thé ducted by Dr. Betty Davis, professor {of education, - Pennsylvania tate | University. Exchange Students On Assembly Program Exchange students from New | Zealand, India, Denmark and Hol- iland will take part in the Assem- { bly Program at Dallas Senior High | School Friday at 1:15. All of the students are here under | | the Rotary Exhange program and | are attending institutions of learn- | ing in East Stroudsburg, Plymouth, | Kingston, Forty Fort and Scranton. |of a forum with a High School {student acting as moderator and exchange students giving their im- | pressions of America. | Prior to the program in the aud- {itorium the exchange students will | be entertained at luncheon in. the cafeteria, Later they will have an opportunity to visit classrooms and {make a tour of the building and | perhaps, parts of the community. | To Receive Award Back Mountain Protective Associ- ation has named Howard W. Risley, | ‘editor of The Dallas Post, to receive its Community Award at a dinner demonstrated by national reading | junior high - school ‘level was con- | The program will be in the nature | tested" dramatizing, -one of the she - had for motivation grouping, most responsive groups | Hannah James, Katherine Scott, |Sarah Welker, Alice Yaple, Doro. | ever worked with, according to Dr. | Mary Emmanuel Walter Prokop- |thy Henney! Arlene Trimble, Freda |Helen Murphy. tors Derive Benefit From Cancer Crusade Conference At Misericordia Names Captains | House To House | Calls On Tuesday Cancer Crusade starts next week, Misericordia’s Reading Conference | its quota for the area, $7,500. Vis- | ern battlefield and spent days trudg- | iting homes will be approximately {300 workers, who will start on | Tuesday. i Co-chairman R. Spencer Martin (and Lester W. Hauck, South Dis- { trict covering Jackson, Kingston, {and Franklin Townships, announce | these area chairmen and group | captains: { For East Trucksville, Mrs. Frank | Worssam Jr., chairman; Captains | Mesdames William G. Pressman, { Charles A. Bray, George Parry, Har- | {old W. Belles, Loren Fiske, Merton | E, Jones. West Trucksville, chairman Mrs. | ay 3 | { James Nixon; captains, Mesdames | | Justus Letts, Donald Thompson, Wil- |lis D. Johnson, William Long, Ern- | est Norrie, Adrian DeMarco. | ‘iCarverton, chairman Mrs. ard Garman. Franklin Township, chairman Mrs. Theodore McHenry; captains Mrs. | Ira Frantz, Mrs. Glenn Rozelle, Mrs. | Grace Harris. Jackson: Mrs. Wesley Lamoreaux. | East Shavertown, Mrs. Marlan (Frantz; captains Mesdames Sylvia Wells, James Farland, Leo Kelly, | Robert Methot. | West Shavertown, Mrs. Vernon Ash, captains Mrs. Ben Kleppinger, | Mrs. James Rutledge, Mrs. A. W. { Shaffer. ‘Mrs. John Gunton, 28 Mrs. John Gunton, 28, Buffalo, | N. Y. died March 10 after a brief | illness at Roswell Park Memorial | Institute. Her husband is son of Mr. and Noxen, with | Mrs. Ray Gunton, whom the three chidren. Charles,4; | dent-elect of the International Read- lat Irem Temple Country Club May | David,2; and Cynthia, 1, will make ling Association, gave the opening i 8th, | their home in Noxen. ‘Raymond Shiber, Civil War Buff, Dies Suddenly Antique Collector And Gladioli Hybridizer Buried On Tuesday { Raymond Frederick Shiber, 77, | whose active mind and zest for i living led him during his long and useful lifetime to become a self- i taught student of the Civil War, outstanding grower of prize gladi- ‘oli and collector of antique colored glass died suddenly and as peace- fully as he had lived while chatting Saturday night with Donald Paeg- low and Mrs. Shiber in the living room of his home on Center Hill Road. Mr. Shiber had not been ill. His death came without warning as he slumped in his chair in the same living room where a family friend Mrs. Wesley Himmler died as unexpectedly on a Saturday night some years ago in the company of friends. At that time Ray said, “that is the way I'd like to go.” The family physician Dr. Richard Crompton, and Dr. Harry Gallagher were summoned, both arriving at the same time, but there was noth- ing to be done. He died instant- ly. A son of the late George and Isabel Jones Shiber, Ray was born in Pittston, December 18, 1884. His father = died when he was about nine and his mother, a tiny Scots- woman, with Ray and her two younger children, Walter and Ber. tha, returned to live with her mother in West Pittston. It was there that he formed a lifetime friendship with Atty. Burt B. Lewis whose family lived just two doors away. His widowed mother married the late Alexander Veitch and the fam- ily moved to Mr. Veitch’s farm at Demunds, There during Teachers In- VOL. 74, NO. 13, POPULAR BEAUMONT CATCHER HOME FROM JEFFERSON HOSPITAL Melvin Crispell, well-known Back Mountain baseball catch- er who played for a time with the Boston Red Sox organiza- tion, is recuperating at his home in Buckwheat Hollow, where he returned last Thurs- day following twenty days at Jefferson Hospital, Philadelph- ia. ‘ Mel wishes to thank public- ally George Shupp and all others who contributed so gen- erously toward hospital expens- es. Their kindness and thought- fullness is deeply appreciated. Mel caught for Dallas in the Wyoming League; played with the Church League and more recently played with Beaumont. Dallas Hardware Open House Today, Fri. & Sat Door Prizes, Coffee, Doughnuts, Sodapop, Everybody Welcome Today, 12:30 to 9, Friday 9 to 9, and Saturday 9 to 6, Dallas’ new hardware store on Main Street will hold open house for everybody, offering door prizes, refreshments, and sociability. mower. Also offered are other prizes including an electric drill. i Pyrex ware, Revere ware, {lash { lights, and an electric fry pan. | Hutchinson, resident of i Dallas for the past eight years, {who personally supervised con- | struction of his modern brick { James | house on Franklin Street, had not | | expected to go ‘into the hardware | | business after retiring from employ- | Construction | | Company, but time hung heavy on | ment with Sordoni ORchard 4-5656 The main prize is a riding lawn- | stitute, around October 15, Burt | his hands after his house was com. and his brother would come to stay | a week hunting birds with Ray and his brother Walter. From his youth Ray loved the out-of-doors and tel excel in what. ever he undertook, One of his earls iest fancies was raising little known and prize breeds of ghickens. He exhibited at local fairsiand in nat- ional x ribbons. 3 i What little fofmal education he obtained was in rural schools and at Keystone Academy, Factoryville, where he met the Mathewson broth- | ers—Christy, who became the fam- | * | ed pitcher for the New York Giants, | and. his younger ‘brother who, Ray | always claimed, was ‘just as good a pitcher.” Ray loved all kinds of sports, and was himself a fast pitcher play- |ing with many amateur teams. { It was during those formative years and later when he worked in he became fascinated with the Civ- | il War through conversations with | veterans: who daily refought its | battles as they gathered about a | North Main Street livery stable. One of them, a minister, asked Ray | to accompany him whenever he was called to give a patriotic talk at a church. From these lectures, Ray |'became engrossed in the war. To understand the background of its tactics and strategy he stud- ied Napoleon's campaigns and freq- uently in later years drew compari- sons between errors and triumphs of Union and Southern generals with those of Napoleon's Marshals. He visited practically every east- jing over the fields at Antietam, i Chancellorsville and Gettysburg talk- ling wherever he could with veter- | ans, searching out in Soldiers’ Homes | men who could add light to some | controversial action. | Many Interests But his study of the war did not !narrow his interests, While equally | versed on the early history of Wyom- {ing Valley and Canal boat days, he | turned his mind -in later years to of them on his fields in Dallas. He | exhibited them in all of the big shows of the east, becoming so {much an authority and hybridizer {that his advice was sought out by | leading horticulturists including the | nationally famous Burpee growers. | Rich- | He was also a judge at many flow- er shows. ‘When he was no longer physically able to tend, himself, his beloved gladioli, he turned to the collection of antique colored glass, travelling out-of-the-way place. Their collection spread out into every room, nook and corner of {their shaded home on Center Hill Road and’ became the mecca of collectors from distant places includ- ing General Motors and DuPont ex- | ecutives. Ray could talk with any- i body, and learned from them all, land Mrs. Shiber was his constant | companion, attempting futilely to {have him watch his English as well las the glass. They would have been married fifty-six years next month. After moving from Wilkes-Barre ‘to Dallas thirty-eight years ago, the 'Shibers became members of Dallas competition, winning - many | Wilkes-Barre Record mail room that | the culture of gladioli, growing acres | pleted. He recognized the demand | for a local hardware store, and had { wide knowledge of builders’ sup- | i plies. | © During World War II, he served lin the Pacific with the USS Navy, lin such areas as Australia, and the | Philippines. | Pittston man. | the: hardwire: business | for fo ty- eight Voars, twenty ix of thos | years with Harris Hardware, is in | charge of setting up the store and | stockng it. by Mrs. Helen Williams of Churc { Street, who will be on the store | staff, and Elmer Williams, Dallas. | Mr, Bailey will be present during | the store open-house and for two | weeks thereafter. [The shelves, which will be com-- | pletely stocked by this morning, a wide variety of essentials for building and upkeep, from plumb bobs and paints, to locks and bolts: garden tools in profusion; and on the pest prevention side, even a catch-em-alive rat trap. | show Visit Business Places Fifty Dallas High School Busi- ness Education Students visited Commonwealth Telephone, Miners Bank and the Dallas Post Wednes- day. Motor-Cycle Crash Spells 20th Birthday In Hospital Daniel Grey, Loyalville Road, celebrated his 20th birthday yes- terday at Nesbitt Hospital, where he was admitted Saturday after- noon after a motorcycle accident half a mile from his own home. Dragged by hig motorcycle after striking a bump, he suffered a chipped ankle, was badly lacerated, and an injured collarbone. Original sutures were removed on Monday to permit better drainage. Dan, home for the weekend from { Schenectady, took off at 2 p.m. for {a spin, crashing seconds later. His mother, Mrs. Leland Grey, and his brother Paul, 17, accompanied him in Harveys Lake Ambulance, after the cycle had been lifted by neigh- bors Floyd McRoy and Paul Meade. Dan, a Lake-Lehman 1960 gradu- {ate, one of ten children, is with { General Electric, his latest course one in blue-printing. | Methodist Church where Ray served on the Board. He was also a mem- : 3 ; ber of Wyoming Historical and ot Mee company yy Geological Society, Back Moun- Mrs Perio Ind ae tain Civil ‘War Round Table, and | of Mary Gregory glass in some numerous flower clubs and antique groups. Bertha Exler, Pittsburgh; half broth- ers Wiley and Clyde Veitch, Dallas; half sister Margaret Veitch, Dallas. Largely attended funeral services were held Tuesday in Dallas with his pastor, Rev. Russell Lawry of | Dallas Methodist Church giving the | eulogy. Pallbearers were: William | Baker, Sr. David Evans, Donald | Veitch, Donald Peglow, Clyde Veitch | and Wiley Veitch. | 3 | Interment was in Hanover Green | Cemetery. | He is a former West | Thomas Bailey of Allentown, in | He was being assisted on Friday | In addition to his wife, the form- | a " Yost ie er Clara Gilman, he leaves a broth- | She wit A ey gi er Walter, Connecticut: sister, Mrs. | TOSS from Bac TWO EASY TO REMEMBER Telephone Numbers OR 4-7676 THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 1962 Plan Gala Day For New Openings |At Shavertown Postoffice, Bank And Hardware Store To Open On Bpril 5 Opening of the new United States Postoffice, Wyoming National Bank and Back Mountain Hardware Com- pany’s new buildings in the Back Mountain Shopping Area at Shav- ertown on Thursday morning, April 8 will provide a gala occasion for all Back Mountain residents. Officials of the Post Office De- partment, Congressman Daniel Flood, Representative Fred Shupnik, Bank Directors and other notables will be on hand for the offical flag raising at the Postoffice at 9:30 a.m. Although plans are now only tent- ative, it is expected that members of Daddow-Isaacs Post and possibly two school bands will take part in the ceremonies which will include the opening of Back Mountain Lum- ber and Coal Company's beautiful new store, already acclaimed as one of the outstanding hardware and gift stores outside the Philadelphia and Pittsburgh areas. Visitors to the openings will also have an opportunity to look over the recently completed Shavertown Fire Company Building. A more detailed account of the program for the day and next week will appear in next week's issue | of The Post. Annual Green | | t { ‘Thumb Course Starts Tuesday At Homemakers Holiday Back Mountain YWCA Homemak- | er’s Holiday classes at Shavertown | YMCA will start Tuesday for an {eight week period, again offering the “Green Thumb’ course taught {once each year by E. V. Chadwick {of the Pennsylvania State Univer- i sity Extension School of Agricul- | ture. He will advise on care of | houseplants, outdoor landscaping, {and all types of planting. Bridge, taught by Miss Marion Welza provides an SHOTS to {earn a socizl skill that is a Aust. | The Coren Count system, a newer | and easier way to learn bridge, will | be used. | Golf will be taught by Mrs. George | Montgomery, an expert golfer, the "only term that golf will be of- | fered. Those registering may bring their own clubs or use some that the YWCA has on hand. Two separate classes in art will be taught by Mrs. John Vivian; a beginners’ class in charcoal, and for more advanced students, paint- ing in oils. A dedicated group of bowlers meets every Tuesday morning af- ter youngsters are settled in the pre-school playground. Registration is open to anyone else who would like to join the group. Braille, taught by Mrs. Kenneth Bayliss, is now in progress and can take no additional students. Those desiring to learn Braille should register for next Fall. Many women with leisure time are so grateful for their own blessing of sight that they learn to ‘serve the blind by transcribing material into Braille. Former teachers and people who live with blind oldsters, find this a most satisfactory leisure time activity. Those completing the course may submit a manuscript to the Library of Congress, pass this examination, and become certified Braillists. { ; Outdoor and party cooking will be offered with¥bach week a dif- ferent expert. § The pre-school playroom is avail able at Shavertown Methodist Church, directed by Mrs. Guthrie Conyngham, Mrs. Thomas Heffer- nan 2nd, Mrs. Ray Turner Jr. and Mrs. Edward Brace. Mrs. Blice Davis At Cleaners Convention Mrs. Alice Davis, proprietor of Davis Cleaners in Trucksville, at- tended over the past weekend the American Institute of Launderers and Dry Cleaners Convention at McCormick Place in Chicago, fly- ing there and back. Mrs. Davis reports that she picked up a num- ber of new ideas, and inspected some new machinery and equip- ment which she plans to install when she moves from her present quarters to Shavertown. ping Center in Shavertown, com- pletely modern with up to date equipment. Purchase of properties along the new highway dictates the move from the present location at intersection of Harris Hill Road and Highway 309. Burn Grass With Care All fire companies have been pes- tered by useless grass fire alarms this week.