SECTION A — PAGE 2 THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its 73rd Year” «A mowpartisan, liberal progressive mewspaper pub- + lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania. 2rd fa Member Audit Bureau of Circulations “"Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association Member National Editorial Association ay Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Ine. Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, . Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subcription rates: $4.00 a Year; $2.50 six months, No subscriptions accepted for less than ...8ix months, Out-of-State subscriptions; $4.50 a year; $3.00 six "months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15¢. 1590 r We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu- scripts, phetographs amd editorial matter unless self-addressed, ob held for more than 30 days. stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be a 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 © Po be placed on mailing list. gy hospitals. The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local If you are a patient ask your nurse for it. Unless paid for at advertising rates, we can give no assurance that announcements of plays, parties, rummage sales or any affair A 1 Transient rates 80c. :fonday 5 P.M. at 85¢c per column inch. ERR A RR WR, WOT or raising money will appear in a specific issue. Preference will in all instances be given to editorial matter which has not previously appeared in publication. National display advertising rates 84c per column inch, Political advertising $1.10 per inch. Preferred position additional 10¢ per inch. Advertising deadline Advertising copy received efter Monday 5 P.M. will be charged Classified rates 5c per word. Minimum if charged $1.00. ‘Editorially Speaking: i SEND IN YOUR BALLOT NOW! » In response to the appeal of Back sMountain Protective Association for the elimination of telephone toll fates between Dallas and Wilkes- Barre-Kingston and the subsequent sampling of opinion in last week's «Dallas Post, eight thousand letters Swill go out this weekend to Com- .;monwealth Telephone Company sub- uscribers served by the Dallas and South Dallas exchanges of the comp- y. # The letters will explain the new rates that will be necessary if toll grates are to be eliminated. They will jalso be accompanied by a self-ad- Jeessad postage paid ballot on which TO OUR DALLAS CUSTOMERS: ARES DET Pos dF RBTRIEE. ” “ telephone patrons can record their desires for or against the elimination of toll rates. These ballots will g& directly to the Public Service Commission office in Scranton where they will be ‘tab- ulated. All ballots must be returned by December 31; 1962. Any ballots not mailed will be assumed to be in favor of the present toll system. In other words ballots not returned will be a vote against elimination of toll rates to Wilkes-Barre-Kingston. Persons who favor elimination of toll should vote immediately and urge their neighbors to do so. ThisIsThelLetter REVISED DRAFT COMMONWEALTH TELEPHONE COMPANY . Dallas, Pennsylvania t i Zr Area Code 717 674-1211 December 1, 1962 : Continued interest has been evidenced by some of our customers il Wilkes-Barre, Kingston local calling privileges. #*the elimination of the 10c message charge between Dallas and Wilkes- « Barre-Kingston customers and an increase in local service monthly # charges for our Dallas customers in accordance ‘with the following: This would mean = o . Present Monthly Alternative : Class of Service Rates Monthly Rates Increase § Multi-Pty Res... ....... $3.75 $ 4.75 $ 1.00 # 4 Pty. Res. .... 3.75 4.75 1.00 ER 2 Py Res. o.oo... 5.00 6.00 1.00 i Ind, Res, i. or ie tli ll 5.75 7.00 1.25 § Multi-Pty. Bus. locum 5.50 7.00 1.50 EB 4Pty. Bus... 00 5.50 7.00 1.50 : 7.00 8.50 1.50 : 8.00 11.00 3.00 x As a result of the interest in the extension of your local service area, we are taking a poll of our customers to determine how many {customers would be willing to accept increased local service charges in jorder to eliminate the 10c message charge on all calls to. Wilkes-Barre- Kingston telephones to you. The above table permits you to determine ‘of service and the relative value to you of unlimited local calling! to a ilkes-Barre-Kingston. acceptable to our customers. or amount of the monthly local service charge increase for your class Commonwealth Telephone Company desires to provide service which Because of the effect of such a change ©n the net cost of your telephone service, we urge you to indicate on ithe enclosed card whether or not you would be willing to pay the in- wreased local service rates in order to be able to talk to Wilkes-Barre- Kingston customers without a 10c message charge. ; Since it would be undesirable to make this change unless the ma- Jority of all our customers record their desire for it, it will be appreciated it you will return the card on or before December 31, 1962 so that we can determine if there is sufficient demand for the extension of the local balling area at the alternative rates. It will be assumed that those who do not return the card want no change in the present service ar- angement. If you should desire information on the effect of the proposed change jon your telephone cost, please call the Business Office. te Individual Business 4-Pty. Business Multi-Pty. Business Individual Residence 2-Pty. Residence 4-Pty. Residence Multi-Pty. Residence ) ol ENERO BA I I 0 5 RS Main Stations — No. Telephones — : LER OR amr En ol 2-Pty. Business ....... fide rents: Dallas Local Calling Area -— Total 8,310 plus 69,920 Sincerely yours, J. N. LANDIS, District Manager Main Stations — Dallas Local Calling Area October 31, 1962 / Harveys Sweet Center- Dallas Lake Valley Moreland Sak 251 44 18 16 Dies 38 3 5 i ines 6 11 3 Ri Satna 28 10 16 2 ../1,006 212 27 29 - 454 141 46 12 . 1,368 400 95 93 ... 703 339 301 186 31 — 4 jell 3,885 1,170 515 339 Wilkes-Barre- Kingston Total Dallas Local Calling Area — Total 5,909 plus 45,401 51,310 78,230 AL sana ans Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post It Happened 30 Years Ago: Diphtheria, in spite of universal knowledge of antitoxin and avail- ability through schools and public agencies, was still exacting a hor- rifying toll in the United States and Canada. Noxen Tannery was studying methods of treating waste before discharge into Bowman’s Creek. ton Bicentennial was drawing to a close. Dallas Township took Dallas Bor- ough with a score of 10 to 0, in the first game played between the two teams for several years. There was the usual dither about the implications of the name “Back Mountain” “which many newcomers considered equivalent to “Back Woods.” To permit dances, or not to per- mit dances, in the new Kingston Township auditorium was a burning question. Eskimos completed a seventy-foot shaft in memory of Commander Peary, discoverer of the North Pole. D. H. Hons and E. S. Stevens rented the former Ritter garage and set up an automobile repair business. It Happened 20 Years Ago Alva Eggleston shot a 400 pound bear in Root Hollow, Frank Hardisky got one weighing 200. That gorilla man out in the Back Mountain turned out to be the fig- ment of a town reporter’s imagina- tion, but it helped enforce curfew laws for a time. Due to so many men being in the service and working in defense plants, the deer-kill was expected to be lighter than usual. A scale model of an airplane won a top award for Ray Jones in the current model contest sponsored by Piper Aircraft and New York Daily Mirror. Ray was a student at Dal- las Township. His award netted him the equivalent of $2,500, including a year of instruction at the Piper plant and 100 hours of pilot train- ing. American Legion was preparing to dedicate the Honor Roll in Dallas. Henry J. Williams, handyman of Nothoff’'s Grotto, dropped dead of a heart attack. ‘Gerald. Frantz planned: to close his store’ at Christmas time and leave for Baltimore, to work in the Martin. Bomber plant. Service men heard from: Paul Montross, Columbia; Robert J. Prit- chard, Fort Sheridan; Herb Updyke, Manchester, Conn.; Don Roberts, Oklahoma; Alan Kistler, Chicago; Harry Decker, Fort Meyers; Donald Metzger, Camp Atterbury; Franklin Lienthal, Camp Lee; Tommy Evans, Middle East; Glen Kessler, England; Willard Garey, Guadalcanal. « Married: Irene Breza to Floyd E. Olson. Thelma Kelley to Walter DeRemer. Ruth Bertram to Allen Kittle. Evelyn Keith to Floyd Jack- son. Two pages of names and addresses "| of boys from the Back Mountain in the service, with a notation for everybody to send Christmas cards. The Government was asking for heavy farm scrap. Housewives were urged to flatten all tin cans for the scrap drive. It Happened I10 Years Ago It is incredible . . . but it was ten years ago that twelve Luzerne high school students, on a stolen jaunt in a truck during school hours, happily planning on collecting furniture for the senior play, struck a bridge abut- ment at ‘the foot of Lehman hill where Route 115 spanned Harveys Creek, and were thrown out. It developed later that the students in the cab were playing “chicken.” One girl broke her back. Lehman students, summoned to help, were sickened at the sight. A photograph- er from Life Magazine, chancing to pass at the timeygot pictures. Ten of; the injured were hospitalized. "Mustangs and Redskins were ready to battle it out at the Thanks- giving classic between Westmoreland and Dallas Township. Rain relieved a long drought, re- lieving domestic water shortage and eliminating danger of forest fires. Al Bowman got himself a Javelin- Jupiter, one of the first sports cars in the area. Married: Dorothy Niezgoda to Wil- liam W. Cooper. Mary Ann Polachek to Ray Balweirczak. Oliver Hoyt, 63, lost his life at the same spot where his nephew, Albert Martin, was killed the year before. Crossing the road at the height of the storm, he was struck by a car on Route 309 at Kunkle. President-e l ect Eisenhower and vice-president-elect Richard Nixon shook hands on page seven. Republican Dinner The following from Noxen at- tended the Republican Victory din- ner at ‘Lackawanna Trail High School, Saturday evening: Howard Engelman, Mrs. Clark Oliver, Elida Beahm, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Ben- der, Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler Hess. Dinner was served at 7 p.m. after which many enjoyed dancing to Bob Bachak’s orchestra. A huge Victory cake was cut and served to the many guests after which there was The world-wide George Washing-# THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1962 CE HH HH HN HHH HH HAHN HH EHH HHH H HHH HE RHR R HHH HRI%S Rambling Around By The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters 03030503030 30 30 30 A 3 33 0 330 30 0 0 0 I RH HR HH RA RRR Dallas loses the last members of | two well established families in the removal of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Van- Nortwick to Ohio. While Main Street was still a dirt road, Archie and Nellie VanNortwick and their small son, Ralph, moved into the Chet. White farmhouse on the lower side of Main Street oppo- site the Franklin Street intersection. A few years later they purchased from Eli Parrish the house on the curve a short distance west, with property extending up to Franklin Street, where the family lived over forty years. The home and grounds became one of Mr. VanNortwick's main in- terests in life. The house was ex- tensively remodeled, new walks, fences, trees and shrubs put in, and poultry houses and other outbuild- ings built. For many years he kept chickens, always had a large vege- table and flower garden, and har- vested a lot of small fruits. He read extensively on agricultural subjects, once told me he had an unbelievable number of bulletins issued by federal and state departments and research institutions, it seems to me it was about a thousand. For a long time, probably years, I rode back and forth on ‘the street cars with Mr. Van- Nortwick. He was not a politician, but I re- call he was a member of the town council, while I served 1925-27, and probably before and after. He may have held other offices. He was active in many worthwhile public affairs. In his regular job, he was an office employe of Hazard Manu- facturing Company. Although they had not previously been Methodists, Archie and Nellie VanNortwick joined the Methodist Church and became active therein. Both were teachers in Sunday School, he served as a department superintendent and later as super- intendent. Mr. VanNortwick was a member of the Official Board for many years and part of the time was a ‘trustee. Their son, Ralph, became a member of the church in 1922. Ralph was graduated from the University of Cincinnati as a geolog- ical engineer and went to Texas to work. While there he entered Fort Worth Bible School and became an ordained minister. After residing several years in Texas and vicinity he returned to Ohio where he or- ganized an independent Baptist Church at Hamilton known as The Lindenwald Baptist Church. He has been preaching over twenty ¥ears. Mrs. Nellie VanNortwick died many years ago. The present Mrs. VanNortwick, the former Grace Stroud, comes from a family residing here over twice as long. Her father, Barney Stroud, had a farm along Reservoir Avenue bordering Lehman Town- ship, since largely flooded by Hunts- ville Reservoir. He headed up the petition to form the Borough, being the first signer, and young Charles H. Cooke started at Stroud’s corner to survey the Borough, The Stroud house stood on the knoll presently between two inlets of the Reservoir, a little south of the intersection. of Machell Avenue. Barney Stroud was married twice.' By his first wife, dren, one of whom, Frank, later lived here and was the father of the late Clifford Stroud, who had a farm and maintained a stand on Route 118. Mr. Stroud’s second wife, Jane Steele, had sons Walter and Her- bert, and one daughter, Grace. Mrs. Stroud came to Franklin Street as a widow and built the first house on the north side, on a lot cut from the corner of what was then the Rice pasture field. Her unmarried son Walter, nicknamed Barney after his father, lived with his mother and was a familiar figure about town until his death. Grace, unmarried at the time, lived for many years in the middle west, returning to care for her mother, well known here for decades as Jane Stroud. The VanNortwick and Stroud properties ad join. [Subsequently Grace Stroud married widower Van- Nortwick. Good substantial citizens; these, and the town loses by their removal. In over forty-three years on the Lehigh Valley T have seen a lot of railroading, and heard about a lot more from those older than I am. Some of the best stories by outsiders are those which apparently cover events that never happened. Among these I would put the recent story about the 20th Century running via the Pumpkin Line. Now it is true that railroad tracks are of uniform gauge and engines and cars are interchangeable. It is also true that in emergencies some highly unusual routes are used. But always detours must be in accord- ance with operating conditions and practices on the home road being used. When you handle passenger trains, or even freights with long, heavy, high, or wide shipments, all questions such as safety, track sup- port, bridge capacity, side and over- head clearances, curvature, etc. must be considered. In my time and long before, the Lehigh Valley never detoured its own main line trains over the Pumpkin Line (Bowmans Creek Branch). In emergencies such as flooding, they were always put on the Lackawanna from Waverly to Pittston Jct. and vice versa. If the 20th Century ever got over Trucks- ville Trestle, for example, assuredly the’ man who ordered it would never have worked again. Bridges, grades, curvature, weight of rail, and a lot of other conditions would not have allowed it. Dan Webster, whom I knew very well, was a trainmaster, not the {rain dispatcher. And I was working at Coxton at the time and personally saw Pennsylvania, New York Cen- tral, B & O, and other foreign trains running up and down the river on more than one occasion, including the heavy flood times when we were about the only road running. in the east. The track was lifted between Mountain Springs and Lopez about 1938-39 which, even the smartest writers would admit, would not per- mit a train to run in 1940. And the Vosburg floods were caused by cloudbursts along the creek running down from Russell Hill and not by the raising of the Susquehanna. It was a good story, but just not Rebecca Louder, he had seven c¢hil- SO. . « . Safety TO HER MANY FRIENDS Dear Howard Risley: This letter is written to thank you people, and to ask a favor. My thanks are occasioned by the Dallas Post handling of Mrs. Wirt’s obituary. I do not recollect ever having seen so beautifully sympa- thetic a newspaper nod of farewell. Among other things, the very ex- istence of this unusual news account betokens the unusual character of the deceased and the unusual char- acter of your community; because only a superior individual could so impress a community in a few months’ time as to warrant that news account, and conversely, only a community of the character of yours could have elicited such zeal- ous devotion and love from a per- son such as Mrs. Wirt, The favor I am impelled to ask you, is that you find a way to in- from Mrs, Wirt’s friends, perhaps by publishing this letter, that if they did not receive direct personal notice of her death from our son, John, it is because he lacks their names and addresses even though scores of them had written to his mother. John notified only the few my befogged mind was able to re- call on the spur of the moment. For private reasons, I, myself, noti- fied Mrs. Thomas E. Heffernan. Though so many Back Mountain folks had written Mrs. Wirt, no trace of their identity and address remained at her death. Perhaps the reason for this will interest them and you. Since shortly after Mrs. Wirt’s return to New Jersey, I have spent twenty-four hours a day where she was, first at our home in the coun- try and then at her apartment in town, but only since“her death have I learned what happened dur- ing those regular daily periods of the last month of her life when she sent me out on contrived errands. During ‘these periods, she had her companion go over her personal effects with her—clothing, jewelry, trinkets, bricc-a-brae, ete.—to desig- nate a suggested. disposition «of - vir- tually every item. Similarly, she had her companion go through. Valve . . . eral baskets and cartons of letters and cards, read them to her once more, then destroy them. Her desk is clear, its drawers empty. All this was effected without my participation or knowledge, of course. So great was Mrs. Wirt’s strength of mind that neither her suffering nor her intense drugging diminished the quality and use of her faculties. But that discarding of correspondence accounts © in good, part for the absence of names and addresses to which son John could refer. Please renew my currently expir- ing © subscription to your paper. Shortly after Mrs. Wirt left Dallas, she directed that she should no longer be shown the Dallas Post, or even appraised of its arrival, so much did it break her heart all ever again each week. It breaks mine, too, so deeply is my soul in the Back Mountain—the place she had so aptly agreeably chosen for our resi- dence for the rest of our lives—but it also breaks my heart not to see a weekly reminder of a location where her soul found itself sympa- thetically at home, and reveling in accomplishment. Perhaps through your kindness, my gratitude and good wishes can be extended to all up there who in various degrees and ways were as- sociated with my lamented wife. Respectfully, Prosper D. Wirt. Three Die In Fire (Continued from Page 1 A) do to save the other children or the structure except control the spread of flames to other properties. About thirty firemen headed by Chief Thomas Garrity manned lines and pumpers of Harveys Lake, Kunkle and Jonathan Davis Fire Companies. The Idetown tanker supplied additional water. State Fire Marshall Michael Ry- an and Chief Hughes said the fire is believed to have started in a wood burning kitchen range which shared a round insulated chimney. with a cabinet oil heater in the first floor living room, % 2 ! Better Leighton Never by Leighton Scott HOLIDAY RATS Season opened on rats in our back yard with somewhat less than a bang over the holidays, since it ic illegal to discharge a gun in the Borough. But, season’s entrance was not exactly a whimper either, as yours truly called on twenty-four years of varmint-hunting experience and came up with a natural. The slingshot, whose use has been known to mankind as far back as King David's youth, reached peak of development in design and use during the pre-adolescent Leighton- ithic era. As kids we had many a near miss on flights of starlings with the redoubtable “Whamo.” As far as I could recall, we may even have hit a few. I can’t say the same for the rats, who seem to be able to smell me coming for miles. I've even tried taking a bath every half-hour. I get a few good shots off with my sling-shot, but ammunition is so inferior that the rat hag time to make himself a sandwich before he gets out of its way. Quarter and half «inch steel ball- bearings were what we used to use, although these are now ap- parestly unavailable. Tm now reduced to using marbles, which are so light they sail after going a few yards. Not only are the rats not running when they hear the feeble whirr of one of my marbles, but they're begin- ning to look like they might come up and slap me around a little for being so presumptuous. I really don’t know what to do. There's another problem involved in that the parakeet who lives right behind my rat-blind is now given to’ shouting about my approach every time I open the door. It's only a matter of time before the bird and rat team stops using “Pretty boy” and “Good morning, momma’ code, and my little feath- ered Quisling starts yelling “Hit the dirt, boys’ right out. You probably think I'm dis- traught about this turn of events, but I'm not. As soon as the rats and I see eye to eye, we're going to go into business. We can just make the Christmas season, if I can teach them some songs, like Alvin and the chip- munks. The parakeet already has a head-start. Local Merchants Say Yule Business Is Good (Cont. from Page 1) days after Thanksgiving, but gift sales the Friday and Saturday after Thanksgiving were exceptionally heavy this year. I wish we could have eight days a week like them,” he added wistfully. Upgrading Lines Robert Boyer, manager of Mec- Crory’s bright Junior Department Store in Back Mountain Shopping Center across the street from Mr. Sowden, agreed that better lines of merchandise are in demand. “We are upgrading most of our lines in- cluding furniture, TV and Stereo, and wearing apparel for the entire family. We look for a decided in- crease in sales of these better qual- ity items.” Mr. Boyer stated “that McCrory’s now offers credit for the convenience of its customers. This too, will stimulate Christmas buying.” Sperting Goods Sales “We're selling far more boats and motors for Christmas than ever before,” said Caddie Labar, Dallas owner of one of the county’s largest sporting goods stores. “Of course this is our peak season, but I'd say, we're way ahead of last year.” “Women do a lot of early season buying of expensive sporting goods as gifts for their hubands especially in our better grades of fishing tackle, reels and rods. We have al- ready sold two powerful motors to wives who will put them under the Christmas tree for their husbands.” Labar’s store carries a big in- ventory of toys and bikes. Because of stiff competition of discount houses, many of these items must be sold at prices far below those listed by the manufacturers. “People know what they should pay and we meet all competition even though the profit is short. Christmas 1962 should see business up five to ten percent.” Recession Fears Wave “With the economy holding at a high level and fears of a 1963 recession fading,” Edward Humph- reys of Humphreys’ Children Boot- ery in Back Mountain Shopping Center, feels that sales records should be topped this December. “October was good, November will top 1961. It may be a bit early to get the big feel of pent up holi- day spending, many of our items go during the last month, but we already feel this urge. T'd say Christmas business will be 10 to 15 percent ahead of last season, with emphasis on higher priced merchandise. Take one item: Wo- men’s Snow Boots, fairly high priced at $11.95 to 12.95. They are moving rapidly as advance pur- chase Christmas gifts.” Humphreys feels that Back Moun- right merchandise have an advan- tage in attracting holiday business, ‘because of the ease of finding ad- equate parking. Did You Read ’ From— By at the time, the Franklin stove. It would add in slow motion, while the mashed harden in the oven. It did look like a good idea. taken aboard on Wednesday. had set in. before we attacked it. turn the turkey on its side, and would be enough retained heat in growing actually cold. turned on. clearly was no centerpiece for a doubtless yield itself to slicing of a pies and such.) It worked out pretty well. together after a fashion. The hot turkey, brown and dipped in salad dressing. and added to the gravy. It didn’t really save too much about two dollars apiece . . . DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Pillar To Post... Hix Getting two turkeys for Thanksgiving looked like a sound idea One turkey, fattened in luxury at Beaumont, would be the main- stay of the family gathering. The second, thriftily purchased in a frozen state and roasted the night before, would make a focus for hungry eyes while the real McCoy was being rent limb from limb in the kitchen and brought in, hot and savory, on plates warmed on up to an exteremely quick carving session, and would keep everybody from dying of hunger. Methodical slices of white and dark are customarily detached from the turkey potatoes grow cold and the biscuits But that was before the meagre pre-Thanksgiving meal had been By the time the pumpkin pies were out of the oven and the first turkey, the stage property, was sufficiently browned, hunger pangs Would anybody know if we took just one small slice apiece off that beautifully browned white meat ? X : : Tom and I argued the thing back and forth, hither and yon. It was ridiculous, we agreed, not to sample the bird. put parsley on the gash and it would look just as noble as it did Or if we carved off too much, we could just We could again use plenty of parsley. We settled down to a turkey sandwich apiece and a mug. of coffee. We had a second sandwich apiece, and ariother mug of coffee. We covered the roaster and slipped it back in the oven. There the oven ‘to keep the turkey from It probably would have been fine, except that the oven was still ; That's what you get for trying tq cook late at night. The next morning the turkey had melted. It lay there on its back its legs spread in an abandoned pose, the oven, at low heat, still gallantly doing its best, but against overwhelming odds. Shovelled out and reassembled on a large platter, the turkey table. But the die was cast, and there was plenty of parsley. Allowed to get cold, the turkey would sort. 3 Into the oven went the large economy sized turkey, while th stage property cooled off in the coop. netting box with shelves, located in a cold place for reception of (The coop is a large wire- The first turkey cemented itself crackling from the oven, sending out the aroma associated with Thanksgiving, got itself sliced in no time, and the guests, hypnotized by the sight of the stage property on the table, obediently nibbled celery stalks and cauliflower florets Tl i The stage property was unobtrusively hacked up afterwards time after all, maybe ten minutes. We figure that the Thanksgiving Eve sandwiches set us back and that isn’t counting in the gas con- sumed by the oven atlowtemperature from midnight until 7 am. - One morning last week my morning mail. Harvard over the weekend, and his company, neighbours and the is over. Peterson. He conscientiously looks morning, and why my friend Pete of thirty-five years with the old flakes. wouldn’t work. might work. easier.” mornings ? The 1962-1963 exhibition basket- ball season opens Tuesday evening, December 4, for Dallas High School Mountaineers when they host the Redskins of Wyoming High School at Dallas gymnasicm. This will be one of seven exhibition games which precede the regular North League schedule. The Dallas cagers will. be out to avenge the three-point loss to Wyom- ing last year, the only defeat in ex- hibition play suffered by the local quintet. Loyal fans are advised to stock up on tranquilizers, as this year’s ver- sion of the Mountaineers promises to give out with an exceptionally ex- citing brand of ball. The team will be led by returning captain, Thomas Gauntlett and big Bob Letts, who will combine with Ronnie Sinicrope, Jack Mokychie, Joe Noon, John Farley, Mike Jones, Ralph Boston, Tom Siket, and Brad- |ley Earl to provide a good account from the upper two classes. Pete painstakingly, scraped the frost from the windshield, dusted the soft snow from the rear window, reached deep in his overcoat for the key, tried vainly to unlock the car door. The darn thing Gary Cobb, John Zarno, Paul Siket, |. Tho sophomore cls has chipped FV VV VV VY VV VY VV VY VY VY YY 5 § Barnyard Notes: a A Ad Obl bb iodide didn dod odin dod good friend and neighbour Henry Peterson, preoccupied and weighed down with his duties for the Springfield Monarch Insurance Company, shuttled down to the Post- office in his Chevrolet, parked. it with the motor running, and scampered up the flight of steps into the office to gather up his Several of his old cronies greeted him with a cheerful Monday “morning” as they squeezed by the sorting table in the. corner; con- gratulated him on the good showing Brown University made against otherwise interrupted his train of thought. A train, incidentally, which of a Monday morning is usually whistling down the track loaded with a shipment of good deeds, de- tails and miscellaneous freight which Pete will have to expedite for fire company before the day’s run is finished. Not to mention a few groceries, he will have to pick up for Helen, and a spool of thread for Florence Phillips before the day No man could be more loyal to the Springfield Fire and Marine, more punctual in his appointments, or more concerned with the wel- fare of the sick, the halt and the faltering than my good friend Hank in on the widows as Louise Brown and Clara Ohlman will tell you. He stops by the undertaking estab- lishments to offer his condolances. lishments to offer his condolences. With so much good in the world to do and so little time in which to do it, it is easy to understand what happened last Monday He is the first to welcome a new He is the first to welcome a new is to be humiliated before the sun has melted many more snowflakes. ; eA His arms loaded with mail, some of it letters with directives from the newest 14th vice president hired by the company, the veteran Springfield Fire and Marine, went out to his waiting car now covered with frost and sparkling snow- ’ Lloyd Williams, standing helpfully by, tapped him gently on the shoulder, pointed up Lake Street to another Chevrolet parked against the curb. “Why don’t you try the key in your own car, it You'd have thought the whole Harvard line had crashed through the right tackle of the 1922 Brown team if you had been there. ; Why don’t you widows pick up your own thread on Monday Dallas Senior High School Opens Basketball Season This Tuesday in with a dozen hustling cagers, head- ed by Don Martin and Nicholas Sosik. Plenty of action will be offered in the preliminary games by sopho- mores Fred Gosart, Kit Karuza, Char- les Stevens, Gene Shelley, Ed Mc- Dade, Keith Swisher, Bill Baker, Tom Szela, Sumner Bachman, and Orazio Kyle. Head Manager Jack Kaleta and his staff, Richard Ratcliffe, John Ferguson, and Dave Kopetchney are hard at work seeing that the team’s needs are provided. Coach Clint Brobst has been fortu- nate to secure the services of Len Kozick as assistant coach, a post left vacant by the resignation of the very capable and successful George Mc- Cutcheon. Increased duties in the guidance program have made it im- possible for Mr. McCutcheon to con= tinue in the coaching field. The Mountaineers hope to make a bid for the North League Champion established as an early favorite. Once again, the North League expects keen competition from all teams in ship, where Swoyerville has been