vi PARE CASTER TO FOIE SIR es 1s A SECTION A —PAEGE 2 Now In Its THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution 73rd Year” ; A nowmpartisan, liberal progressive mewspaper pub- lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania. Member Audit Bureau of Circulations Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association Member National Editorial Association Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. ® Cuat vear; $2.50 six months. scripts, photographs and held for more than 30 days. « be placed on mailing list: ' ospitals. Transient rates 80c. .wonday 5 P.M. at 85c per column inch. Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa. under the Att of March 3, 1879. Subceription rates: $4.00 a No subscriptions accepted for less than six months. * Out-of-State subscriptions; months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c. We will net be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu- editorial matter unless self-addressed, stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be $4.50 a year; $3.00 six he When requesting a change of address subscribers are asked 0 give their old as well as new address. Allow two weeks for changes of address or mew subscriptions The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local It you are a patient ask your nurse for it. Unless paid for at advertising rates, we can give no assurance at announcements of plays, parties, rummage sales or any affair ior raising money will appear in a specific issue. Preference will in all instances be given to editorial matter which nas not previously appeared in publication. ' 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 5c per word. Minimum if charged $1.00. Single copies at a rate of 10c can be obtainexi every Thursday morning at the following newstands: Dallas ~ - Bert's Drug Store. Colonial Restaurant, Daring’s Mark. Gosart’s Market, - Towne House Restaurant; Shavertown — Evans Drug Store, Hall's Drug Store; Trucksville — Gregory's Store, Trucksville Drugs; {detown — Cave’s Maket; Harveys Lake — Javers Store, Kockers’s ENE PER va 2 Store; Sweet Valley — Adams Grocery; Lehman — Moore's Store; Noxen -— Scouten’s Store; Shawnese — Puterbaugh’s Store; Fern- brook -— Bogdon’s Store, Bunney’s Store, Orchard Farm Restaurant; Luzerne — Novak's Confectionary. Editor and Publisher—HOWARD W. RISHEY Associate Publisher—ROBERT F. BACHMAN Associate Editors—MYRA ZEISER RISLEY, MRS. T. M. 'B. HICKS , Sports—JAMES LOHMAN Advertising—LOUISE C. MARKS Aceounting—DORIS MALLIN Circulation—MRS. VELMA DAVIS BR AEE RA TE Se EPR PER a a Se Photographs—JAMES KOZEMCHAK . « » Safety DO WE GET OUR MONEY'S WORTH? Dear Mr. Risley; Most of wus feel taxes are too » high. Most of us worry whether the education our children are get- ting is good enough. Most of us grumble — and do mothing about it. On Wednesday, October 10, at 8:00 p.m. in the High School Audi- torium, the Citizens Committee for Better Schools will present a panel discussion: . A Quality Education — © What Does It Cost? Four qualified leaders of our * community, Raymond Carmon, Wil- liam Clewell, Welton Farrar, and Dr. = Robert Mellman will ask and answer questions on this topic to offer all « of us an education about education. * This will be a definitive discussion a rather than g statistical recitation. ~ We hope to answer questions . about comparative costs of educa- s tion; assesment and reassessment and what this could mean in terms + of income to the digtrict; financial . emergencies and how they might be handled; what is being left out to ~ balance the budget; how the num- ~ bers of children being enrolled add . to.our costs; and other questions that our audience may submit to us. Valve . . . The time spent in preparation for this session indicates the importance our panelists place on these ques- tions. . People become disturbed when! ‘taxes are raised. Very few know how they are actually spent. The School Dollar is the largest tax bite! in the Back Mountain. What are we buying for ‘this dollar? Those who attend the session of October 10 have a chance to learn. Sincerely, Morris Slater, chairman Citizens Committee for Better Schools LET’S RAISE A LITTLE HELL Dear Editor: The conservative voice in America has always played an important part in our society and it will continue to do so. I think that all decent people have certain basic ideas that are conservative but as a long-time Democrat and perhaps a so-called liberal, 1 have always felt that the present day voice from the right, albeit well phrased, does not an- swer any questions or solve any problems. Your article some week’s ago was properly named by Tulsa Editor Jones as a ‘“‘jeremiad” and as such becomes a case in point for this discussion. The article was well written and certainly has many good points. It inspires all the pure motives of man but T humbly submit that his tirade is somewhat offensive to people who think beyond the printed word. What exactly did Editor Jones say? It made wonderful copy but what did he say? Well, he’s against sin and that is for sure — but is that a new idea? Not @at all. In addition, who can “knock” a man who stands squarely against sin. Not I, But let's look again, Jones is against our educa- tional system. True, there is room for further improvement but he seems to prefer the old red school- house. I can only say he has a short and selective memory. Most extreme conservatives do. Jones is against Art. As for me I ignore all art, modern or otherwise, and Mr. Tulsa can do likewise if he so chooses. [ am not aware that art in any form is being forced upon our citizenry by the “welfare state.” Mr. Tulsa Editor is against modern literature but unless he is as old as Mathuselah, he can't pos- sibly have read even a fraction of the good books available, and may I add that all reading is done by free choice. Mr. Tulsa Tribune is also against relief per se. Well, I don’t relish the thought of supporting illegitimate children, yea even illegitimate fami- lies in some cases, but what solu- tion does he advance for the very real problem of people who truly need help for reasons beyond their control? Of course he has no an-~ swer. His must be the law of the jungle or the survival of the fittest. If that be his creed, then he can keep it and try to reconcile that idea with the world of 1962. Mr. Jones is also against Ten- nessee Williams but we don’t eed a sermon on that point. Mr. Jomes is also against Holly- wood. He is right in saying that many of todays’ pictures are down- right sickening! But what is his solution. Aye, there’s the rub! In a masterful piece of rationalizing, Mr. Selfrighteous Jones managed the ultmate act of hypocrisy. He deftly rapped the film-makers with- out letting one of their tainted dol- lars escape from the advertising revenue fund of his sermon-pure newspaper! He has lots of com- pany but he is the first to attempt a whitewash. Yes, the good Mr. Jones is even against slum clearance. I can't fathom that thought but I'd appreci- ate hearing his alternative sugges- tion for correcting that great prob- lem, both here and all over the world. So much for that. The extreme conservative line is not new but this is the first time I ever felt like making a written reply even though ¥ have been a student of govern- ment politics for many, many years. It just seems to me that the con- servative voice has been more noticeable recently. [I've always welcomed intelligent debate, inter- party rivalry, exchange of ideas, etc. That is essential to the two- party system which made our coun- try great and will make us even greater in years to come. The con- flicts have always been stormy and they will no doubt get worse, but that is our built-in system of checks and balances which Wtimately pro- tects us all, ‘What bothers me most though, is the recent upsurge of political inter- est in many people who never really took an interest until 1960. At that time our country was blessed by the election of a good Democratic Presi- dent, John F. Kennedy, by name. My feeling is that Kennedy’s reli- gion has irritated far too many otherwise ,decent people. Do you SHEET AE @ pl FUE RE ps EE EE ae ae ~ BE ASK ABOUT OUR WINTERIZING We don’t “mess around” brakes, heater etc. You get all this at one low price. BIRTH’ S DALLAS ESSO | OPEN 24 HOURS DAILY Beat Jack Frost to the punch. Get anti-freeze nowl when it comes to getting your car ready for cold weather — radiator, battery, lubrication, anti-freeze, engine tune-up, SERVICENTER -— AT THE “Y” — RTS. 309 &. 18 = SPECIAL AAA GARAGE | were something to be avoided at all THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1962 Is “The Lord's Prayer” Unlawful (Continued from Page 2 A) He went on to say Congress should sub- mit immediately a Constitutional amend- ment ‘‘to establish the right of religious devotion in all governmental agencies— national, state, or local.” Have you read the First Amendment to the Constitution lately? ' It says very simply and plainly, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a ‘redress of grievances.’ That this amendment was intended to foster true religious faith, rather than stifle it, is apparent in the official history of our nation. The official affirmation of faith in God is woven into the revered documents of our national liberty and unity. The Declaration of Independence is a declaration of faith in a creator: “All men are created equal, and that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights.” And the concluding statement of that great document is an appeal to the Almighty: “And for the sup- port of this declaration; with a firm re- liance on the protection of Almighty Provi- dence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.,” ‘Where would this’ nation be today— this haven of security for the oppressed and the downtrodden—were it not for the prayers of great governmental leaders: George Washington’s prayers while upon his knees in the snow at Valley Forge; when the Constitutional Convention was stalled in Philadelphia, and at the point of dissolution after weary weeks and months, recess was had for prayer, and the “Great Compromise” was soon ef- fected or when, in the crisis of civil war, the nation was cutting itself to pieces, Lincoln was ‘‘driven to his knees” by the conviction that there was no other place to go! If religion must be totally divorced from notice, recognition, or sanction, then what shall we do with all the papers, let- ters, documents, contracts, treaties, etc., that give a sectarian affirmation of faith in the words, ‘In the year of our Lord. . . .”—and whatever the date may be? What shall we do with all our coins, which bear the religious affirmation, “In God we trust”? ‘What will become of our National Anthem, the fourth stanza of which prays fervently, “Oh, thus be it ever when free men shall stand Between their loved homes and the war’d desolation; r Blest with victory and peace, may the heav'n~ rescued land Praise the Power that hath made and preserved mg a nation Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just; And this be our motto, In God is our Trust.’ And the Star-spangled Banner in triumph shall wave O'er the land of the free and the home of brave.” : What will we do with that patriotic hymn, “America,” now so well-known to every school child in America, with its 4th stanza, “Our fathers’ God to Thee, Author of liberty To Thee we sing Long may our land be bright With freedom’s holy light; Protect us by Thy might, Great God our King!” Or “America the Beautiful,” the last portion of each stanza with its petition to the Almighty: “God mend thine every flaw, Confirm thy soul in self-control, Thy liberty in law.” “May God thy gold refine, Till all success be nobleness, And every gain divine.” “God shed His grace on thee, And crown thy good with brotherhood, From sea to shining sea.” 4 Or the rousing patriotic hymn of Julia Ward Howe, the whole of which takes its cue from the opening revelation, “Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord,” and the following four stanzas: triumphantly proclaiming, “Our God is marching on”! The Herrick school district, approxi- mate to the one used as a test case in this prayer ban decision, has announced it will use the last stanza of the National Anthem as a prayer in its schools. Since this has been officially adopted nationally, it will be interesting to see if the Supreme Court will declare the National Anthem unconstitutional] because of its indirect coercive pressure upon minority groups to adopt the state religion! ‘What shall be done with our pledge of allegiance to the flag of the United States, with its assertion that we are “one nation, under God, . ..”? This pledge, unlike the New York voluntary prayer, has been and is a nation-wide requirement in our schools. What will a judge do now if one comes to trial for refusing to affirm the faith of this pledge? It is well known that moral character has no foundation apart from the precepts of a holy God. Everyone should read J. Edgar Hoover’s article in the July Youth in Action, “Communist Target— Youth.” In it he reveals that the schools and col- leges are most active and successful in the United States today. Communism “main- tains that God does not exist, and it holds that religions are false and harmful and must be ruthlessly destroyed. Thus Com- munism rejects the moral code embodied in the Ten Commandments, and maintains there is no absolute right and wrong, Ac- cording to the Communists, anything— theft, murder, falsehood—becomes moral if it serves 1 advance or maintain the Communist order.” A morally corrupt and a godless so- ciety: these will be the easy prey and the suffering slave of Communism, and the disciplined party members who have in- filtrated the control points of society and government will liquidate the helpless op- position and fly the hammer and sickle from the mast! “What can the righteous do if the foundations are destroyed?’ asks the Psalmist. Well, let's not wait until they are wholly destroyed; get busy now. First, make use of the power of prayer; second, write your national and state senators and representatives, letting them know that the righteous, praying people of this land are not asleep nor dead. Don't waste time with petitions—get individuals to write personal, if only brief, notes, protesting ‘the misinterpretation of the Court's de- cision on school prayer, and pledging sup- port for a constitutional amendment which will clarify the right of religious devotions of a non-sectarian nature in all agencies and branches of government—national, gtate, or local. Third, if your school author- ities are afraid to have vecal prayer, press upon them the opportunity for two minutes of meditation, when the agnostic may pon- der the imponderable, and the believers can’ silently pray for the salvation of their country. Finally, don’t let your outraged enthusiasm of the moment die out into indifference; a constitutional amendment requires up to five years to pass Congres- sional and State hurdles. That means cam- paign persistence! ‘Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord” (Psa. 33:12). A. S. Cilvik, manufacturer of Cil- vik Products, was guest of honor at a seventy-sixth birthday party Sun- day at this home 'on Outlet Road, Lake Township. Born in Bialystok, Poland, Mr. Cil- vik came to this country as a child of five and a half years with his par- ents who settled in the Georgetown section of ‘Wyoming Valley. After attending the local schools and his marriage, fifty-three years ago on December 26 to Anna Grasav- age of Wilkes-Barre Township, Mr. Silvik was employed in the men's furnishings department of Shepherd’s Hat Store and then with Simon Long's. In 1916 he joined Metropoli- tan Life Insurance Company in a sales capacity. Some years earlier in 1912 he had begun the manufacture of certain remedies which he distributed among his friends and customers for the treatment of colds. So successful did they become that he began produc- ing them on a larger scale. Ten years ago this coming July Mr. and Mrs. Cilvik purchased the thirty- one acre Dymond Farm in Lake Township and there amid beautiful surroundings established their man- DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA A c Cilvik Celebrates His Seventy -sixth Birthday ufacturing plant in association with sons, Edward and Carl who now re- present the firm through Pennsyl- vania. Under the trade name Herbaum a variety of remedies for colds, tooth- ache, sprains are manufactured. A devoted couple,: Mr. and Mrs. Cilvik, have eleven living children and twenty-one grandchildren with a great-grandchild due in January. Paying tribute to her husband, Mrs. smoke, drink or swear. His only vice is fishing.” ! Edward, will go to Ontario on a fishing trip. 1 Attending the A on Sunday ter, Mrs. Francis Killian, daughter Barbara, Kingston: Mr. and Mrs. Frank Werkman, daughter Barbara, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Peter Avery, sons Jimmy and Michael, Lib- erty, N.Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cil- vik and children, Edward Jr., Caffey, Paul, Willard and Lyshia; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Cilvik and children, Ralph, Lynn, Ruth, and Mrs. Clair Cilvik, Pittston: Spoiling That Rabbit {Aunt Jo Norton is pampering a wild rabbit on doughnuts, Says she’s the past month, and Bunny-Bunny comes to havé his ears stroked. | Watch it, Aunt Jo. Hunting season | is upon us. bought dozens of doughnuts during believe that is true? As for me, I think it has generated a lot of near- ly blind opposition. You don’t have to look far from your press room to see many people who learned at their Mothers knee that Catholics costs. A very sad situation but of course no one would admit to having such an unkind thought. So much for religion. All religious are good when practiced seven days a week. Religion is a private matter Boy Scout Executive Requiem Mass Friday For Mrs. Farber, 53 A mags of requiem for Mrs. Jose- phine M. Farber is scheduled for Friday morning at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church, Lake Silkworth, with burial in the parish cemetery. Mrs. Farber, 53, Humlock Creek R. D. 2, died Tuesday at General Hospital where she had been admit- as it should be. I omly hope that many recent and very subtle ai- tacks on our country, government and our President are the fruits of unfettered and logical thought. As of now I feel that the Tulsa editor had more than one ax to grind. I would like to pursue the subject with your many readers. Respectfully, George Phillips Rev. Frick Loses His Stepmother The community extends sympa- thy to Rev. Charles H. Frick, pas- tor of Huntsville Christian Church, whose stepmother, Mrs. Victoria Frick, of Pikes Creek, died Friday morning at Mercy Hospital, where she had been admitted as a medical patient September 11. Mrs. Frick, 84, was buried Mon- day morning, Rev. Frick officiating at services conducted from the Bronson Funeral Home. Mrs. Frick's husband, Rev. M. C. Frick, died in 1941. She was a native of Huntsville, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fuller. Church affiliations were with Huntsville Christian. In addition to her stepson, she is survived by numerous nieces and nephews, CLIFFORD DAVID MANSLEY Clifford David Mansley, whose story appears in ‘the tabloid section of this current issue of the Dallas Post, a salute to the newly installed executive of Wyoming Valley Boy Scouts who has recently moved to Dallas, is enthusiastic about the op- portunities for hiking and camping in this area, with so much usable space so close to the city, and so eas- ily reached, Mountains and wood- lands within a stone’s throw of pop- ulation centers. Boy Scouting, in its essence, says the new executive, is hiking and camping and becoming acquainted with nature as an antidote to the growing trend toward easy living and physical softness. The Dallas Post Has Hundreds of Modern Type Faces To Select From ted a day earlier. A native of Scranton, daughter of the late John and Mary Kizek Penkal, she was educated in Scran- ton schools, moving to this area fifteen years ago. She was a mem- ber of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel and its societies, organizer and past president of the Third Order of St. Francis. Survivors are: tek husband, Philip; children: Philip, instructor ‘at Georgetown University, Wash- ington; Leonard, Hunlock Creek; James, at home; Sister Jane Eliza- beth, Mt. Alverna Convent, Read- ing; Phyllis and Kathleen, at home; brothers: John, Baltimore; Henry, Scranton sisters: Mrs. Irvin Farber, Wilkes-Barre; Mrs Cullen Ellin- burgh, Camp LeJeune. John Flucks, Hosts At Birthday Dinner Mr. and Mrs. John Fluck, Harveys Lake, entertained at a family dinner Sunday honoring their daughter, Katherine, who was eight and their daughter-in-law, Mrs. Joan Fluck of Wilkes-Barre who also celebrated her birthday anniversary. Present were Rev. and Mrs. Andrew Derrick, Mr. and Mrs. Lou Zanni and Mrs. Minnie Wirth of Philadelphia, John Fluck, the guests of honor, and the host and hostess. \ © Ae, METRICAL SOUPS '® Split Pea with Ham @® Cream of Tomato ® Clam Chowder HEAT & SERVE Evans Drug Store SHAVERTOWN 674-3888 PAINT CLOSE-OUT ® BPS QUALITY PAINTS ®© AT PRICES. Royal » On Latex Wall Paint BPS Flatlux Oil Base Wall Paint BPS Vinyl - Bond Vinyl Latex Wall Paint BPS Florlux Floor Paint GREATLY REDUCED BUY NOW ! SAVE ! QTs. 99¢ 1.19 1.25 1.50 GALS, $2.99 3.80 4.20 4.95 BPS HOUSE PRINT 10 = res. IER GAL 9P and HUSTON’S FEED — SERVICE — OR 4-6191 FERNBROOK CORNERS Cilvik says: ‘He is a wonderful man. | I have never liked drink. He does not This week Mr. Cilvik and his son, were: Mrs. Matilda VanDyke, daugh-