2s ARREREEERiE v uw CB i { = Bn ' DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA | | Summer bowling season ended at Crown Imperial Lanes with a tre- mendous outing at O’Connell’s Twin Lakes, Sunday, August 26th. All vacation leagues united for the big celebration and those who attended enjoyed an abundance of food, a variety of games ‘and dancing in the evening to the music of the “Merrymakers.” The George Shupp League is elready underway with two nights of competition behind it. Linear wasyin its second week on Tuesday | andWSt. Paul’s Brotherhood started | Friday. ; Country League began Tuesday and last night was the first for Back Mountain Church League. Crown Imperial Majors and Imperialettes Bowling News By DORIS MALLIN will roll tomorrow night. Watch for complete roster of leagues with starting times next week. What an array of colors this year! Some leagues are all red; some green and white; red and white; black and white; some have a different color for each team and believe it or not, one league is all orchid! One men’s traveling team will be completely outfitted in gold shirts and brown slacks. They may not bowl like champions but they'll look the part. Time to get out to Crown Im- perial, find a comfortable seat and watch your favorite team start on its way to championship. Community Service League will begin Monday night at 7. KODACOLOR AST ILM INISHING Evans Drug Store \ SHAVERTOWN OR 4-3888 © Lake-Lehman an Opens Season Saturday [© 'lescopeck “THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1962 i Lake-Lehman Considered “Dark-Horse™ As Edwards Has Eleven Lettermen Back With fall two weeks away, Lake- Lehman gridders will get the fall grid season underway early when it travels to Nescopeck Saturday to tackle the charges of John Stan- ko at 2 p. m. Last season the Knights tripped the Warriors 25-2 in the season opener with two of this year's re- turning lettermen, Stan Palmer and Tom Evans, each tallying two touch- downs. Nescopeck, coached by former Washington Redskin pro, John Stan- ko, always comes up with a scrappy ball club that extends Lake-Lehman right down to 'the wire. son was the first that more than one touchdown separated the teams. Little is known about the Warriors except that a number of last season's players are returning. Ten Game Slate This will be the first of a ten- game slate for Lake-Lehman who meet Forty Fort next week in its first conference game. Lake-Lehman js among the early favorites to be in the thick of the West Side Conference race and barring serious injuries could be the darkhorse. Other contests after the Nesco- peck game include: Forty Fort (Fri- day night), Sept 14 (A); Dallas, Sept. 22 (A); Northwest, Sept. 29 (H); Wyoming, Oct. 6 (A); Ed- wardsville, Oct. 13 (A); Exeter, Oct. 20...(H); St. John’s; Qct. 27 (H); Luzerne, Nov. 3 (H); West Wyoming, Nov. 10 (A). NOTE: All Lake-Lehman home games will ‘be played on the Dallas Junior High field. Dallas School authorities granted Lake-Lehman permission to use ‘the Junior High field and facilities since the field and accommodations at the new Lake- Last sea-. Lehman Senior High are not com- pleted. Eleven Lettermen Head Coach Eddie Edwards and his staff have been putting their charges through intensive daily drills the past two weeks and last Thursday evening scrimmaged Tunk- hannock: Edwards stated, the boys held their own, and had it been a real game it probably would have been a close one.” Hoping to improve on the 4-2-4 record of last season, Edwards has eleven lettermen returning with all eleven as starters but there is not too much depth experience wise. Thirty-eight gridders have been participating in the daily work- outs including three freshmen. Lettermen include Tom = Evans, Bernie Snyder, Bob Rinken, Karl Squier, Lee Lord, Bruce Spencer, Stan Rusiloski all linemen, with Bob Rogers, Stanley Palmer, Kenny Ellsworth and Fred Brown in ‘the backfield. ‘Others slated to see plenty of ac- tion include Alan Landis, Dave Cook, James Worth, Larry Lettie, Dick Lopasky and Ed Crispell. Of this group two players are doubtful starters for the Nescopeck game Bob Rogers still shows effects of hig knee injury suffered last sea- son, while Fred Brown has a few bruised chest muscles. Good Backfield : Lake-Lehman presents a formid- able array in the backfield with Rogers and Palmer having the most experience, while Ellsworth and Brown saw plenty of action on de- fense last season but were used sparingly on offense. The latter two are both capable ball carriers however. J Palmer was the bread and butter Sure I'm Smart! I Live in a Home Heated with Gas! GAS HEAT costs less fo install, cperate and maintain! PEN Before you buy fuel or convert your heating equipment, be sure to phone your Heating Contractor, Dealer, Plumber or Gas Company! Get Your FREE Heating Survey Now! NSYLVANIA GAS and WATER Company In the BACK MOUNTAIN telephone EMterprise 2-0668, TOLL FREE for information and service, ~~ runner for last year’s team and should have another big year toting the pigskin. Rogers has a year’s experience at the signal-calling post and did a fine job last season until he came up with torn ligaments late in the season. He is a good ball carrier on the option play as well as he is at using his arm to toss long ones downfield. Ellsworth showed signs of being able to break away in a few con- tests last year and will probably handle the punting chores along with kicking points after touch- downs. Brown played good defensive ball last season in a reserve role and this season Edwards is counting on him to take up some of the slack left after Anesi graduated. All in all this could be the year | for Lake-Lehman with a few breaks providing it can elude key injuries. Market Firming Permits Perspicacious Purchases abson Park, Mass.—Recent mar- ket strength has put stocks on a more solid footing, and moderate purchases of selected quality is- sues can again be recommended, according to Spear & Staff, invest- ment advisors. However, Roger E. Spear, president, prescribes a cau- tious approach: ‘‘Although another wave of panic selling seems unlikely in the mear future, neither do we see a strong upward surge in pros- pect. With inordinate dumping ap- | parently out of the way, many bat- tered but promising issues should now be able to move independently of the market as a whole. A per- spicacious bull can thrive in such an environment.” Spear points out that every sig- nificant market cycle is made up of four stages: Stage 1) accumulation —during which the most astute or most fortunate investors pick up their shares, with prices generally drifting sideways; up—prices begin to rise, and the public is attracted; tribution—public bullishness peaks, and purchasers from the accumula- | tion stage pass the stock into less sophisticated hands; Stage 4) mark-down—new buyers become in- creasingly hard to find, and demand is substantially reduced as early buyers continue to sell. Spear believes that the market in general is still in Stage 4—ad- ditional marking down may be necessary before a sustained upward advance—a new Stage 1 accumula- tion phase—can occur. Some stocks, however, are already in Stage 1. “It is obvious,” comments Mr. Spear, “that the greatest profits are salted away by Stage 1 investors. | Yet a switch .from pessimism to optimism requires considerable thought, knowledge, and just plain guts. Non-professional could well at this time select five or six quality issues, watch their { action studiously, and use the Dow as background only. With the field thus narrowed, chances of success improve considerably.” “Vacations date back long ago to the time when Columbus started the ! fad of taking a trip on borrowed | money.” 5 O'MALIA Sanitone Dry ~ Cleaning “does for party " clothes ® Gets out every trace of dirt, soil and perspiration * Gets rid of that limp look « . . restores store-fresh fit and drape ® Protects the most deli- cate fabrics, the most frag- ile trim Call us today for service O’'MALIA LAUNDRY . and DRY CLEANING Luzerne - Dallas Highway ENTERPRISE 1-0843 Stage 2 mark- | Stage 3) dis- | investors | ‘standards, ‘the so-called literature that is flood- ‘ing the market?” Mrs. Henry Ward, one of the top brass at the Wilkes-Barre YWCA, and spark-plug for Back Mountain Home-Makers Holiday, phoned to compliment the Dallas Post on a re- cent publication of a timely article written by Jenkin L. Jones, editor of the Tulsa, Oklahoma Tribune, in which the editor stated that sin was still sin, and that no battery of excuses for not doing the right thing was as good as doing it. “Can we quote you?” inquired the Dallas Post. “Of course you can quote me,” and the Dallas Post jotted down her name. (Last week a lady called, also very much impressed with the ‘article, but remained anonymous.) “I believe in standing up to be counted,” Mrs. Ward continued. “The trend these days is toward abandonment of all old fashioned Have you seen some of YWCA Dave Compliments Post On Stand Against Magazine Filth She went on to say that indecen- cies were peddled so skillfully and in the guise of good reading, that any young boy or girl might be ex- cused for thinking that growing up involved nothing but animal in- stinets. When you see marijuana ciga- rettes made the subject of an article which in actuality is aimed at sell- ing the stuff instead of decrying it, and find a popular magazine con- taining hidden poison, on the cof- fee table in your friend's home, where young children can hardly fail to see it, it is time to do some- thing, she concluded. Parents see to it that children get the proper food, that they are sup- plied with warm clothing, that they have recreational opportunity. What are these parents doing about combatting the filth to which their children are exposed through the medium of pornographic litera- ture which masquerades as accept- SECTION A — PAGE 3 able reading material ? Mrs, Ward is recommending the article by Editor Jones to her YWCA Round Table which meets five Fridays during the year in Philadelphia. She clipped another article on the same subject early in April, and had it read into the minutes. Mrs. Ward is vice president of the or- ganization, She bought ten copies of the issue of August 9 which contained the Jones article, for distribution to co-workers. “Keep it up,” she urges. “Some- body has to take the lead against the growing laxness in morality. What better place for a crusade than a home-town newspaper?” Franklin Yankees Many of Franklin Township's first settlers were from Connecticut, as were the first white settlers of Wyo- ming Valley. Connecticut Yankees fought ‘three informal wars with Pennsylvanians over the fertile val- ley, all in the late 18th century. SUBSCRIBE TO THE POST SPECIALS IDAHO WHITE PINE SHEATHING GRADE NOW'S THE TIME TO GET YOUR HOME FIXED UP FOR WINTER AND SAVE MONEY ON THESE CASH 'n CARRY AT WHITES ELL BROS. CEDAR LUMBER CONSTRUCTION GRADE — RA NDOM LENGTH 2” x 4” ’s 2x 4x 8 Gh en, 2x. 4x10 — 80c. ea. 1 Pc 2x RNY Sr O6c eq RU x4 ¥4 — i.) eq. SQ. 2 x 4x16 —i""1.28 ea. FI. IDAHO 17% 2° = 3c Lin. Ft. Joox I'x 3"-= 5¢ Lin. Fi. 1" x 12" — 11% Lin. 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