ZEEE EEE on = Tl lS SUC SUT ag Adlon 05 7 Ai B55 Vtg Tl Slr WAT i Bot bo Te Te AW Re eS ked late mer § del- ota - an has ion nan i Say - teel teel hat om be- Po- erit uld { the i vil Rod 2 TEER SRS ss risit 1 tely nty 1ar- any ters LLAS, PENNSYLVANIA 1s. McCaffery uried Tuesday Was Daughter Of Late James Oliver * Irs. Margaret Oliver McCaffery, member of a prominent Back intain family, was buried Tués- following = largely attended sral services from Glova Funeral ne at Harveys Lake. ervices were in charge of Rev. n Stahl of Alderson Methodist rch with interment in St. :ph’s Cemetery, Danville. [rs. ‘McCaffery died Saturday it at 10 at Geisinger Medical ter, Danville, where she was ®. Tuesday following a stroke ler in the day while she was raring to attend her duties at Old dy Bottom Beach which she and husband operated. orn in Dallas, she was the ghter of ithe late James R. rer and Alice Hufford. Her fa- + was for many years in the mobile business in Dallas and James R. Oliver Agency was one he largest and oldest in Luzerne nty. [argaret was valedictorian of the 3s of 1932 at Dallas Borough h School and like other mem- 5 of her family was blessed with Junior Women Have Tickets For House Tour Tickets for the House Tour to be held by the Dallas Junior Woman's Club can be purchased from any member of the club or at the door of any of the six homes to be toured on September 9. Sunday afternoon from 1 to 5 p.m. Any club member in need of more tickets, please contact Mrs. Thomas Decker, Burndale Road, Dallas. a beautiful voice. After graduation from Geisinger Medical Center, Dan- ville, she did private duty nursing until her marriage to Mr. McCaf- fery. In 1947 the couple moved to Harveys Lake where they engaged in business and developed the Old Sandy Bottom area, now one of the leading beaches at the Lake. She was a member of Danville Methodist Church, Harveys Lake Business and Protective Association and Ladies Auxiliary of Daniel C. Roberts Fire Company. Beside her husband, Joseph, she leaves a son James and two grand- children; also a sister Madge, Mrs. Calvin McHose; brothers Kenneth, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, James and several nieces and nephews. Pallbearers were: Thomas Gar- rity, Lee Zimmerman, Edward De- laney, Walbridge Lienthall, Ho- ward Jones and Bert Bainbridge. Out Of Isolation Ronnie Richards, who was severe- ly burned several weeks ago, is out of isolation and having therapy. Ronnie has had skin grafts, which were very successful. He recently celebrated his birthday and has re- ceived many birthday and get-well cards. Tomato Harvest Now At Peak In Centermoreland (Continued from 1—A) The drought this summer, of course, has played havoc with the green tomato crop. Since a grower gets about three crops per field, and the fields are planted in a staggered fashion, it is not now possible to estimate the total loss from dryness. Some of the big growers have esti- mated the loss so far as upwards of twenty per cent. Smaller grow- ers, such as Francis Faux of Lock- ville, hesitatingly place the loss at some twenty to fifty per cent, de- pending on the field. With fewer fields due at different times, the small grower doesn’t have the lati- tude of productive area to pick from. The labor supply involved in the tomato industry is enormous. Local labor is used more prevalently than is usually thought. Small growers, who by far outnumber the big ones THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1962 in number and acreage, rarely em- ploy migrants. They cannot afford to build facilities to house them. “But the time will come”, Faux figured, “when we’ll have to start using them.” Packing houses vary in their practice of employment. Sponholtz uses both local and migrant packing crews. Dymond appears to have mostly local workers, but his is a smaller operation since he packs only his own produce.. Dymond Brothers is ‘the only corporation in the Back Mountain which does both its own packing and growing. Carl Sickler grows only for Abood, but the ‘two remain separate en- tities. The migrants almost all base in Florida. There is where their work is most of the year. At the various camps along their route to the north, they are housed in barracks by the large growers for whom they work, houses for families, and trail- ers. Life for them is not easy. They are always beset by poverty and prejudice. On the other hand, the gypsy-like existence is not one of invariable drudgery. One worker, Arthur Flores, 18- year old truck-driver for Andrew Prebola, did not complain. His brother, for example, picked 217 baskets in one day. At 14 cents per basket, that comes out to over $30 in one day. There is room at the top in any business for a good man. Flores’ father is Prebola’s crew- leader, so the young Texas Mexican knows the tomato-business well. “I used to work at this alone’, he said. “Then 1 got married three months ago. It’s a lot better, be- cause this job is very hard, and it gets very lonely.” He met his wife in Florida. Unless you are married, you get your meals at the camp cook-house Arthur noted only one exception to this: a friend of his who is married and still eats at the cook-house. Mostly, the young single men stay home at night, or else they go as far as Wilkes-Barre for fun “Nothing to do around here”, he noted. On the other hand, one get: up at 5 in the morning to start work, so it is best to stay home. At the Centermoreland Methodist Church, 19 migrants’ youngsters are taken care of during the day by the joint efforts of the Pennsylvania Department of Welfare, Penn State University, and the Methodist Church. The children, aged 3 ‘to 14, are transported by bus from twc camps around Centermoreland, Dy- mond’s and Prebola’s. (Carl Sickler declined use of this voluntary serv- ice this year. The tots play games, and stick to- gether modern art, etc, and the older ones learn early grade-school lessons under the supervision of state teachers: Mrs. Dorothy Brown, Pine Grove Mills, Supervisor; Ann Ask your neighbor who heats with gas... He will tell 1 you that A ill N VEY AS HEAT is clean, quiet, economical and so-0-0-0 carefree! More and more of your neighbors are switching to GAS, the Nation’s Number One Househeating Fuel. Nearly 30 million homes now enjoy clean, quiet, low cost, dependable and carefree Gas Heat. Ask for a FREE HEATING SU home now! There’s no obligation, of course! of your Here are just a few examples of happy homes heated with GAS! Area home, 7 rooms and 2 baths. Cost of heating with Gas . tr AYE £00 Area home, 7 rooms and bath. Cost of heating with Gas ...... $193. 0 wn $122.99 \ Area home, 8 rooms and bath. } Cost of heating with Gas ........ $164.00 Area home, 5 rooms and bath. Cast of heating with Gas we. $144. 80 Before you buy fuel or gonvert your heating equipment, be sure to phone your Heating Contractor, Dealer, Plumber or Gas Company! Get Your FREE Heating Survey Now! PENNSYLVANIA GAS 7 = : and WATER Company GAS HEAT costs less to Install... to Operate... and Maintain! strong backs and tough dispositions. SECTION A —PAGE 3 Hege and (Sally Aikens, teachers. Miss Hege is entering Indiana State Teacher’s College this fall, and Miss Aikens is a senior at Muskingum College, Ohio. Marjorie Willis, a Wilson College graduate, is social worker for the state at the school. Mrs. Brown, a kindergarten teacher in the winter, has a Master of Edu- cation degree from Penn State. In general, the tomato industry is getting bigger and more auto- matized. But like most truck agriculture production, it will re- main a gambler’'s game, work for FILLER PAPER Fine Quality = 5 Holes 300 Sheets 88c The state cannot supervise the weather, nor can it convince the lists of unemployed standing on Val- ‘ey street-corners that tomato-pick- ing is work. The Back Mountain jreen-tomato industry will continue to boom along on its own merits, and fall apart under adverse con- ditions if it has to. / Chances are tomatoes will be, seasonally, Back Mountain’s biggest production for some ‘time to come. Evans Drug Store SHAVERTOWN OR 4-3888 T I'M SMART! On a */5.00 order from Whitesell Bros. 12 because | took full | saved advantage of their. Cash Carry SPECIALS WEEK'S SPECIALS ON... LUMBING FIXTURES Get "MODERN THIS rid nuisance now ! MODEL 124 B Continuous Feed. Micro Sizing Shredders. of your garbage MODEL 244 B Continuous Feed. Power Surge reversing DISPOSAL action. ale 95 ale UN IT Soke 4% 53 ACID AND STAIN-PROOF PE RANLT 20”. x 17” Fe Rus 22” x 18” with LAVATORIES Ta Te a 2 1s VITREOUS CHINA coLon $4Q:3> BOWL & TANK N 20 42 DURABLE WOOD Guaranteed COMBINATION WH Enamel Finish $2612 I 0 | ¢ I S WHITE or COLOR TOILETS COLOR SEATS PAL WITH SEAT 33:25 CAST IRON - ACID RESISTANT, 14” RECESSED BATH TUBS +60 ~~ +64. MIRRORED MEDICINE Be prepared for the Fall rains with a... BRASS, UPRIGHT AUTOMATIC SUMP PUMP CABINETS 36 SDF 300 With top light and CAN SAVE s 40s Sliding doors OR pig Many styles to choose from The only thing you save he re is money! 8 AM. -5 PM. BUILDING SUPPLIERS & CONTRACTORS Line Of Except Saturday Fad : pin Building 8 AM. -1PM. fro). TT elec _o== ad Supplies’ : DES Route 118 ~ Just orf Harveys Lake Highway