The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, April 19, 1962, Image 1

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72 YEARS A NEWSPAPER
Oldest Business Institution
Back of the Mountain
TEN CENTS PER COPY- SIXTEEN PAGES
Professor At Third Student
Misericordia Is Injured In
‘Publishes Book Tumbling Class
Surveys College Girls Dale McMichael At
With Analytical Mind Nesbitt In Traction
And Rare Sympathy Dale Prynn Discharged
The third casualty of tumbling
at Dallag Junior High School with-
in a week is at Nesbitt Hospital in
traction, with expectation of wear-
ing a rigid collar for several months.
Carl McMichael, in the ninth grade,
got up from the gymnasium floor
Friday afternoon at 1:35 after crash-
ing in a tumbling maneuver. Mrs.
Eudora Baird, school nurse, took
him home to his mother, Mrs. Ster-
i ling McMichael, on Walnut Street,
! Trucksville, a stone's throw from
the office of Dr. Charles Perkins.
Dr. Perkins took the boy to Nes-
bitt Hospital where he had x-rays
and was placed in = traction for
partial dislocation of a cervical vert-
| ebra. He is in room 222.
| Dale Prynn, who suffered a neck
injury a few days earlier, was dis-
| charged on Thursday from Nesbitt,
| Baster holiday.
| Beverly Pierce, daughter of Mr.
George Pierce, Rice St.,
Dr.
sor at College Misericordia, recently | and Mrs.
published his new book THE AMER- | strained her neck in girls’ gym
ICAN COLLEGE GIRL. In his intro- [class the same afternoon that Carl
K. Claude Cirtautas, profes- |
and will return: to classes after the |°
duction, Dr,
intention. in writing this book when
he says: “I have presented the
American college girl as I saw her
during my ten years with her, either
as her teacher or as one who hap-
pened to meet her by choice or by
chance.” He further discusses his |
experience: “As a ‘teacher, I had |
her at College Misericordia for five
years; as a Research Fellow ‘at
Harvard, I became acquainted wit
many students from Radcliffe, iii
lesley, Smith, and Mount Holyoke; as |
a visitor, I conversed with her at |
Trinity in Washington, at Hunter |
in New York, and at Marywood in
Scranton; as a traveler, I met her
in trains and buses,
on the sea.’
Dr. Cirtautas analyzes the vari-
ous types of college girls in his
book: the intellectual, the social,
the aesthetic, and the classic. A |
special Section of the book is de- |
voted to the topic: The College
Girl Speaks About Henggh®. In this
avvendix two college &. essays
are included. The young authors |
are Nannerl Overholser, junior at
‘Wellesley College, Wellesley, Massa-~ |
chusetts, and Jeanne Von Kamen
junior at College Misericordia.
In his foreword, George N. Shust- |
er, former president of Hunter Col- |
lege, explains the special view of |
Dr. Cirtauvtas in his book:
no one except a man [with a Euro- |
pean background could manage to
judge this part of the American
scene so wisely and rightly.” He
concludes his foreword with a des-
cription of the character of Dr.
Cirtautas’ approach to this study of
the American college girl: “And
because what our author says about
it comes out of an affection so genu- |
ine and so wholly without dross,
there can be no doubt that many |
will like the book very much and
turn for once to contemplation of
the. marvels of our common life
rather than to any sort of clinical
dissection of what is wrong with it.”
Dr. Cirtautas was born in Lithu-
ania, and educated in Germany and
Austria. From 1946 to 1950 he was
Professor at the University of Er-
langen, Bavaria, and from 1950 to |
1956 was visiting professor at
several American colleges, including
Harvard University. He is also the
author of another book, The Refugee
published in Boston, 1957.
‘Infection, Scarlet Fever,
Follow Hccident To Boy
John, two year old son of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Billings, Trucks-
ville, ‘was painfully injured last
Wednesday when he caught his foot
in the spokes of a bicycle on which
his older sister was giving him a
ride.. The accident dislocated his
ankle, both sides of which were
deeply lacerated.
On Sunday, four days after being
hurt, he was admitted to Nesbitt
Hospital suffering from infection,
and is now at home again, in bed
with scarlet fever.
Cirtautas explains his |
“Perhaps |
was injured, but did not receive
| treatment.
| Carl is the boy who broke his
arm in three places during intra-
| mural football season last fall in
| an extra-curricular stunt, making no
complaint about the injury until the
following morning.
* Hurt In Traffic
Crash, Baby Safe
Mrs. Phil Walters
Home From Hospital
rs. Phil Walters, bruised from
| head to foot, was discharged @ on
Saturday from. Nesbitt Hospital,
where she was admitted two days
| earlier.
Mrs. Walters, Demunds Road,
| rammed the rear “of a car driven
by a retifed UF ek *2
which stopped “Suddenly in a no-
| passing zone near the A&P Store
on Route 309 Thursday morning at
10:45.
The three and a half year old
| daughter who was in the seat along-
side her mother, rolled to the floor,
escaping serious injury. Mrs. Wal-
! ters, thrown violently against the
| steering wheel of her Ford station
| wagon, broke the wheel, and was
| suspected of possible internal bleed-
| ing' by Dr. A. A, Mascali.
Bill Purcell took the victim to
the hospital, after Mrs. Stuart Marks
had taken the baby into Clyde
Birth’s filling station to be called
for by her father, proprietor of a
Shavertown filling station.
in the air and |
{
Fill Your Gholi
At Blood Bank
PTA groups of the area are re-
minded that only Dallas Junior
High School PTA filled its quota
of blood donation at the last visit
of the Red Cross Bloodmobile. Other
| groups failed to get ten percent
of their membership to contribute.
Unless the PTA group covering in-
dividuals registered for the Blood
Assurance Plan, has a minimum of
ten percent donation, residents
needing blood for operation, acci-
dent, or extreme illness, will be
in debt to the Red Cross for trans-
fusions.
The Dallas area, including Natona
Mills, has a quota of approximately
100 pints twice a year. Linear has
its own quota for donation, sched-
uled for May 8, 12:45 to 5:45, which
is filled for protection of its em-
ployees.
Local residents, depending on
PTA coverage are reminded that the
Friday after Easter is their date for
| donation at Back Mountain Branch
| YMCA in Shavertown, noon until
'6 p.m.
Playground Apparatus Installation
This Week At Westmoreland School
Playground equipment is being |
installed at Westmoreland , elemen-
tary school this week, Principal
John Mulhern, guidance counsellor |
John Thomas, and elementary sup- |
The entire installation
| fully selected to build health and
| physcial fitness, straight backs and
strong muscles.
ervisor William R. Austin lending a | of eight swings.
hand with the project, assisted by |
Harveys Lake Light Company which |
has lent equipment and personnel |
for installation.
There is a health ladder,
er.
igned for climbing and swinging,
. and a rainbow climber which ac-
commodates the tiniest of children, |
up to the largest.
There is a wave-
baskets = with backboards.
stride which de- |
velops arm muscles, the basketball |
There is no present intention of
paving the play area. Experience,
| says Mr. Austin, has shown that
i rapidly after a rainstorm and ef-
that reason, result in
| more injuries to children than grass |
| surfaces.
The school has gotten along with
no equipment to the present, since |
lits conversion from high school to |
| grade school use, and parents have |
{deplored the lack of apparatus.
| ficient . for
“ik olic priest, :
is care- |
And just for fun, there is a bank |
fee rer ining
A large thivty-foot slide Is frank. | P20 ed play areas, though draining
ed by a twelve-foot climbing tow-
des- |
HE DALLAS POST
MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION
Post Photographer James Kozem- |
chak searched in vain for signs of
spring among the crowds who at-
tended Palm Sunday services at
Back Mountain Churches.
At St. Paul’s Lutheran Church in |
Shavertown a snow storm greeted
the: departing worshipers. It was
thus throughout the area and Pho-
| tographer Kozemchak returned home
Snow Storm Greets Palm Sunday Worshipers
with wet feet and no pictures.
The ¢ calendar sdys it is spring,
but the weather belies -it.
Photo by Kozemchak
Tables were reversed and guest
speakers entertained Back Mountain
Toastmaster Club at its guest night
program Thursday night in the Li-
brary Annex.
Seated, left to right, are: Ziba
Assembling ‘a bird-box at the ’
left is John McClary, closely watched
by Jay Buckingham, B. Scott Rum-
baugh, Drew Bittenbender, James
Tupper, Thomas Bottoms, Douglas
from the rear is Den-Chief Mar-
shall Rumbaugh. Grant Davis was
absent when the picture was taken.
And Mrs. George J. Krashkevich,
Den Mother, in whose recreation
room on Huntsville Road Cubs of
Dallas Boy Scout Troop 281 meet
Hess. and Mark Carm. Supervising :
| Friday afternoon, stood back to give
Gosart’s Store Loses
' $40 From Cash Register
Charlie Gosart’s store was robbed
of $40 from a cash register during
| store hours Thursday night. Sus-
| picion points to three youths who
| were hanging about the rear of the
store.
| Mrs. Gosart says, “It couldnt
| have ever happened during the
i night. Not in our store. We keep
| two large dogs, permitted the run of
| the store after closing hours. About
| a year ago, somebody broke into a
| rear window, and the dog met him.
He got right out the same window,
|in a tearing hurry,”
Toastmasters Entertained By Guests
Smith and Ward Jacguish.
‘Absent * when © the picture was
Standing, left to right, are: John | taken were: Walter S. Black, Frank
Juris, John Reinert, Don Edwards,
Leonard Psalka, George Norton,
Jerry Fritzen, Keith Yeisley, John
Woychick and. Ralph Downend Jr.
Wadas, © Paul Monahan,
William
Morgan and Jack: Hogan. :
|
the spotlight to Cubs she has been
training in Den 1 since September.
Mrs. Krashkevich was drafted to
take Mrs. John Churry’s place. Rent- |
ing the Sterling Williams home
when she moved here last year from
Wyoming, she found the basement
suitable ‘for recreation,
denly, was overrun with small boys.
‘Do you have a Cub Scout in this |
pack yourself?” No, she admits,
she hasn’t any little boy of
own, , but. she likes little boys.
and sud- !
Waiting For A Blue-Bird, Cub Scouts Make Bird Boxes
| With assistance of her den chief,
| she is carrying out the program for
Cubs, and especially interested in |
| conservation of natural resources.
Bird boxes, easily assembled, are
issued by Boy Scouts of America,
| with directions for placing them | ———
| to the liking of various species.
Next meeting of Pack 281, Pack-
master Joseph Katyl says, is post-
poned from the third Wednesday in
| April to April 25, because of Easter.
her | |
PHOTO BY: PAUL GATES |
VANDALS DESTROY MAIL BOXES.
Destruction of rural mailboxes in
Dallas Township has reached a stage
where Chief of Police Frank Lange
will call on United States Postal
Inspectors to help apprehend the
vandals.
Several boxes have been destroyed
in the Fernbrook and Overbrook
Avenue areas.
Monday night a carload of mail-
boxes -and other materials was
dumped on the Miners Bank Park-
ing lot in Dallas. Included was a
beautiful new large mailbox with
the name Sloat worked into the
iron grillwork on top of it. There
were also red and white flag staffs
from the greens at Irem Country
lub; wooden horses, used by road
working crews ‘for blocking traf-
fic, and several new wooden signs
lettered , “Men Working.”
Chief Lange says that the license
number of an accompanying car
was obtained, but that the occu-
pants refuse to reveal the identity
of those who dumped the stuff on
the parking lot. The boys said they
had nothing to do with the escep-
Lange can receive no cooperation,
{he has decided to ask Postal In-
“spectors to come in.
Photo by Zozemchak
ade but know who did. Since Chief |
Charlene Maker, receiving a third
place award at King’s College for
the Science exhibit which won for
her second place and a silver medal
at her own high school, West Side
Central Catholic, March 26, went on
to take a third place in Scranton,
April 14-16.
Entering her exhibit on Research
and Experimentation with the In-
sulating Abilities of Building Mater-
ials, Charlene was in competition
with 180 students, all winners of
first, second or third places in their
Regional Science Fairs. Charlene’s
exhibit was entered in the engineer-
ing category. Her award was a bronze
medal.
Rotary, Kiwanis,
Lions, To Attend
Buction Dinner
Cancel Meetings
To Permit Clubs
To Be Present
Dallas Rotary, Dallas Kiwanis, and
Dallas Lions have cancelled their
club meetings for the week of the
Library Auction Kickoff Dinner, to
permit members to attend the
smorgasbord at Irem Country Club
Thursday, May 3.
The Kickoff dinner will take the
place of their regular meetings,
officially recognizer.
Hotpoint range as a come-on, no-
body can afford to miss this din-
ner, says Harry Lefko, dinner chair-
man.
Entertainment, fun, fellowship, and
a prevue of the July 5, 6 and 7
Library. Auction, a chance on a Hot-
| point range donated by U. G.I and
|a spot of auctioneering by Myron
| Baker, all for the price of a smorg-
{asbord ticket.
| Tickets may be purchased immed-
iately. Dallas Post has them, 'or
call Harry Lefko, ORchard 4-0046.
{Or getithem at the Back Mountain
| Lumber Company, where the range
lis on display.
Guests Address
Toastmasters
| Back Mountain Toastmasters, held
Vu “Guest Night” at Back Mountain
Library Annex Thursday night.
Members present were Ward
Jacquish, Don Edwards, George
Norton, Jerry Fritzen, Keith Yeisley,
and John Woychick. Guests in-
cluded Ziba Smith, John Juris, ‘John
Reinert, Leonard Psalka, and Ralph
Downend, Jr.
Keith Yeisley, serving as Toast-
master, introduced the following
speakers: Jerry Fritzen, Safety En-
gineer for P.M.A. Insurance Com-
pany,
talk on safe driving and the hazards
prevail, such ds fog, snow, sleet,
rain, intoxication, etc.;
Ward Jacquish imparted to the
guests the significance and impor-
_| tance of Toastmasters, International;
John Woychick gave the prayer |
and served as Topic Master.
Evaluators George Norton and
Don Edwards, constructively criti-
cised the speakers and offered sug-
gestions for better speech delivery.
Due to unavoidable circumstances,
the scheduled debate gn the “Wel-
fare Program” ' with participants
Walter S. Black and Frank Wadas
was postponed until the next meet-
ing Thursday" evening, April 19, at
8 at the Library Annex.
All members, guests, prospective
members, and interested parties
are urged to attend.
Roast Beef Dinner
An organ recital by Mrs. Newton
Beef Dinner of the Brotherhood of
{iSt. Paul's Lutheran Church, Satur- |
|day April 28, 5 until 7.
Themeal, + cooked and served
by the én of the congre-;
| gation, will offer a tempting change |
| from other years.
With a door prize of a 40 inch
who gave an informative |
of driving while certain conditions |
Ness will precede the annual Roast |
VOL. 74, NO. 16,
Another Award For Charlene Makar
At Science Fair Held In Scranton
The Science Fair at Scranton
University, taking in all of North-
eastern Pennsylvania, is sponsored
by the University and the Scranton
Times.
‘Winners are eligible to enter com-
petition early in May at Kutztown.
Charlene, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Vincent Makar, New Goss Man-
or, is a sophomore at Central Cath-
olic, a graduate of Gate of Heaven
School.
Last Year, her first in competi-
tion, ‘she placed first at King’s Col-
lege, receiving not only an award,
but a set of ten books from the
Grolier Society. At West Side, her
entry was awarded a silver medal.
Post Manages
Campaign For
Harold Flack
Four Former House
Members Will Also
Support Incumbent
James B. Post, formerly of Han- |
| over Township who served as a
State’ Representative from the Sec-
| ond Lgeislative District and now res-
lidertzin Dallas, williscrve as primary
carapaign nay
dacy and re-election of State Sena-
tor: Harold E. Flack, 20th Senatorial
District.
“It will be vital for Luzerne Coun-
ty,” Post said,” to have the great
advantage of Senator Flack’s senior-
ity in the Senate when the Repub-
licans take over the state adminis-
tration mext year under: William W.
Scranton as governor.
“The value of that seniority, while
generally understood, cannot really
be appreciated by anyone who has
tot had experience in Harrisburg.
“For just one thing, it means get-
| ting the chairmanships of commit-
| tees—and places on important com- |
| mittees.
“Newcomers get only.the unim- |
| portant posts while they are spend-
ing most of their first term learn-
ing their way around.
In addition to eight years in
the: Senate, Flack spent six terms
fin the House and, ‘in all, has been
{in Harrisburg steadily since 1942.”
Post concluded, ‘Senator Flack is
not new to waging successful prim-
ary battles, and going on to victory
in the general election. We are
particularly encouraged early in this
campaign by the support of former
members of the House—Roy Parry
from the Sixth, Gordon Dieterrick
from the Fifth; Bruno Kowalski of
{the Fourth, and Leo Kubitski of
| the First.”
Lake-Lehman Wins
Lake-Lehman baseball team
opened the season Monday with a
7-4 win over Nanticoke in an extra
inning.
Trailing ‘4-1, the Knights tallied
i three times in the 7th to knot the
game at 4-all then wrapped it up
| with three more tallies in the extra
| inning.
| Lanning and Lettie ‘with 2 hits
| apiece led the Knights offense.
Malak was the ‘winner, fanning
five, walking two while allowing
| twely e hits.
Another Victim Of The Suicide Seat
Is Killed As Car Crashes Stone Wall
| victim Tuesday evening, when an
18 ‘year old Swoyersville youth
died at General Hospital after being
thrown from a car into a flooded
| ditch near Ruggles Monday at noon.
Driver of the car, Harry Smith,
suffering minor injuries, will be ar-
| rested for involuntary manslaughter
{upon release from General Hospital,
where all three teen age youths
were rushed by Lake Township am-
bulance and patrol car, after a visit
to the Liake-Noxen Clinic, The fourth
| boy, unidentified, riding in the back
seat, walked away.
Investigation by Chief Edgar
| Hughes and assistant Walbridge
| Leinthal on their way from Pikes
| Creek patrol duty when alerted by
| two-way radio, showed that the car
The suicide seat claimed another |
| had caromed from one side of route
129 to the other, hit a stone wall
| twice, and rolled over. On the sec-
ond roll, Melvin Terry, was thrown
out, sustaining a massive fracture
of the skull.
Walter Hoover, returning to his
door after picking up his mail, heard
the first crash and saw the finale.
Father Rafferty, driving on Route
29, pulled over as far as possible
to avoid being hit. Another driver
reported that the careening car had
passed him as if he had been tied
to a post, at far beyond legal speed,
and offered to testify at the hear-
ing.
Road conditions were excellent.
Reports are that the three pas-
“let her out.”
ORchard 4-5656
HF the candi- |
TWO EASY TO REMEMBER
Telephone Numbers
OR 4-7676
THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1962
Gate Of Heaven
Plans Spring
Garden Project
Market Will Be
Held In Lake May
Flower And Shrub
A spring garden project that will |
have a tremendous appeal for all J
who are interested in
their home grounds is being plan-
ned for May 25 and 26 by Altar
and Rosary and Holy Name Soci-
ety of Gate of Heaven Church.
It will be a big outdoor market
on Gate of Heaven Grounds for all
types of shrubs, flowers, perennial
plants and seedling in flats.
Cooperating with the committees
man, Joseph Mazer, Hill-the-florist,
Rafael Rodriguez, Keller Gardens,
and many other growers.
It is hoped to make the market
an annual affair that will draw
buyers from all parts of the county
because of the color and quality
of the many home-grown products
that will be displayed. The sale will
open at 10 and continue through
8:30 p.m. on each day.
For a number of years Gate of
Hbkaven Parish has been seeking a
project with a suburban and country
flavor that would have a wide ap-
peal throughout a community of
home owners and gardeners.
Mary Weir, until recently one
the few woman farm managers
of
in
the state, a charter member of
Dallas Woman’s Club and one of
the sparkplugs of the Library Auct-
ion, is general chairman.
Nick Stredney, landscape garden-
men of the Holy Name Committee:
Members of Miss Weir's commit-
improving
are Huntsville Nursery, Henry Good- |
er, and William Gallagher are chair- |
| tee are: Mesdames George Arzente |
{ Jr., Philip Ansilio Sr., William Bonn,
| Victor Borzone, Edward Cavan, Leon
{ Chase, James Clinton, George Deck-~ 4
| er, Lawrence Carr, Ralph Daley,
\
| Maurice Evans, Harry Gallagher
Paul Gates, Edward Gilmer, Char-
les Glawe, Henry Goodman, Jeff
| Guida, John Elenchick, Frederick,
| Rowman, Joseph Hughes Sr., Ray-
mond Jacobs, Gerald Johas, Phillip
{ Jones, William Kennedy, John
Kupstas, Joseph Kusiak, William
Lloyd, Doaald McCrea, Roger Mc-
Shea, Midhael Magnifico,
Mini! en Makar, Pruno ‘Marascio,
eph. Neuner, Leo Mohen, ‘Paul
Monahan, John Girvan, Frank Fer-
ry, Theodore Popielarz, George Ruck-
no, Stephen Schmaltz, Edward Sid-
orek, Andrew Sokol, Angelo Son,
i Roy Theobald, Stephen Tkach, James
Tyler, Joseph Wallo, William Was-
ser, Joseph Wentzel, Ben C. Banks,
John Yalick, Steve Yalick, J. War-
ren Yarnel, Robert Young, Mary
Weir, Frank Vasello, Angelo Mas-
cali, Andy Lavix, Joseph Grier, Walt-
| er Black, Louis Vitale, Jane Hazel-
| tine, William Henninger, James Ton-
| rey, William Gallagher.
Publicity will be handled by Mrs.
| Frederick Houlihan, Mrs. Vincent
Makar, Paul Williams, and Ralph
Downend, Jr.
Holy -Name Executive Board:
| President, Andy Lavix; Vice Presi-
| dent, Len Dougherty; Treasurer,
John Spencer; Secretary; Gus Shul-
eski; Moderator, Father Francis
Kane;
Advisory Board: John Casey, Dr.
Louis Vitale, Dr. William Kennedy,
Philip Moore, Thomas Garrity, Rob-
ert Laux, Adam Kupstas, James
O’Connell, George Ruckno, Stephen
Tkach, Roger McShea, Al Runstall;
Committee: Chairman, Nick Stred-
ney, Co-Chairman, Walter Galla-
gher; Publicity, Paul Williams; Ralph
Downend Jr. Gus Shuleski, Paul
Davis, Thomas Lynch, Myron Wil-
liams, Joseph Noon, Bernard Roll-
man,
pak, John Anzik, Stephen Glova, An-
dy Lavix, John Chesnovitch, Bob
Tilger, John Spencer, Walter Woz-
nicki, William Hartman, Donald
Farnnon, Roger Conner, Thomas
Noon Jr., Ray McDonald.
Sands And Redmond
Have Narrow Escape
Last Saturday morning what
might have been a fatal accident
occurred on the road building pro-
ject in front of Andrew Patricks
house on the road up toward the
Camp Ground. One of contractor
Addy’s dump trucks backed just a
little too close on the soft shoulder
‘being built on the bank at the side
of the road. The truck went end
over end down into the ravine
barely missing Ralph Sands and
Ralph Redmond who were hauling
out logs. They ran, one way and
the other in opposite direction. The
log they had been hauling. The
driver leaped from the cab to safety
and was uninjured. It looked to
those who saw it that all that
might be salvaged from the wreck
would be the tires. How fortunate
the catastrophe. cost no lives!
Rotary To Hear Chadwick
Rotary Club will have as speaker
next Thursday Llzerne County
Agent E. ¥. Chadwick, who will
sengers were urging the driver to | talk on Back Mountain and con-
solidation.
Joseph Wentzel, Joseph Tur-
Paul ‘Meénapace, John Michael, “gus
be ie.
truck came to rest a-straddle the §