The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, December 27, 1962, Image 8

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JICTION 8 PAGE 2
“More Than A Newspaper,
Now In Its
Ml : HE DALLAS POST Established 1889
A Community Institution
73rd Year”
i A rowpartisan, liberal progressive newspaper pub-
! lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant,
.ehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania.
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper
i Member Audit Bureau of Circulations .
Member National Editorial Association
Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc.
Publishers! Association
Eo
year; $2.50 six months.
six months,
o nonths or less. Back issues, more
Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas,
Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879.
Subeription rates: $4.00 a
No subscriptions accepted for less than
Out-of-State subscriptions; $4.50 a year; $3.00 six
than one week old, 15c.
| We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu-
stamped envelope is enclosed, and
eld for more than 30 days.
Allow two weeks for changes
be placed on mailing list.
hospitals.
Preference will in all instances
Transient rates 80c.
Political advertising $1.10 per
at 85¢c per column inch.
© Classified rates 5c per word.
Single copies at a rate of 10c
olonial
Restaurant, Daring’s
Luzerne — Novak's Confectionary.
ripts, photographs and editorial matter unless self-addressed,
in no case will this material be
When requesting a change of address subscribers are asked
.o give their old as well as new address.
of address or mew subscriptions
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
at announcements of plays, parties, rummage sales or any affair
or raising money will appear in a specific issue.
be given to editorial matter which
~as not previously appeared in publication.
National display advertising rates 84c per column inch.
inch.
Preferred position additional 10c per inch. Advertising deadline
Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged
Minimum if charged $1.00.
can be obtained every Thursday
| morning at the following mewstands: Dallas —- Bert's Drug Store.
Mark:i, Gosart’s Market,
wae House Restaurant; Shavertown — Evans Drug Store, Hall's
g Store; Trucksville — Gregory's Store,
detown — Cave’s Maket; Harveys Lake — Javers Store,
Store; Sweet Valley — Adams Grocery; Lehman — Moore's Store;
oxen — Scouten’s Store; Shawnese — Puterbaugh’s Stores Fern-
brook — Bogdon’s Store, Bunney’s Store, Orchard Farm Restaurant;
Trucksville | Drugs;
Kackers’s
& Editor and Publisher HOWARD W. RISLEY
i
Associate Editors—MYRA ZEISER
RISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS
Sports—JAMES LOHMAN
Accounting—DORIS MALLIN
Circulation—MRS.
VELMA DAVIS
he dn 19, 1962
3 Three Junior High School students
ured in tumbling; Carl McMichael,
le Prynn, Beverly Pierce.
Mrs. Phil Walters hurt in crash,
safe,
gles accident claims life of
: rersville. teen-ager.
OWstorn: Palm Sanday.
ed: -Mrg. Hilda Newberry to
1 Kistler, Donna Tee Caringer
niversary: Mrs. Catherine fomke
DysHown, 91.
“dd: Wilbur Major, 89, Kunkle.
iL 26, 1962
ymond Roushey spearheads :
ve for new Noxen industry, as
gineering advisor,
i McSparran at Lehman Rally, Re-
(con’t.)
publican Primary candidate for gov-
ernor.
Died: Mrs. Dorothy Lincoln, 53,
Chase. Mrs. Elizabeth Chaney,
Trucksville. Arthur Sorber, 82, Hun-
lock Creek RD.
Anniversary: Mr, and Mrs. Edward
{1 Roberts, 56th.
MAY 3, 1962
Auction dinner, huge crowd.
Helicopter crash, George Horwatt
and student pilot, due to faulty gas
gauge. Minor injuries, helicopter
wrecked at Riverside,
Lake-Lehman will have kindergar-
ten. :
Ted Poad retires after 12 years of
tax gathering in Kingston Township.
Aunt Jemima. arrives, preliminary
to Aunt Jemima Pancake Day, bene-
fit of Key Club Denver trip.
Anniversary: Mr. and Mrs. B. B.
Lewis, Golden Wedding. Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Gay, 55th.
Married: Elizabeth Ann Muleey to
Gerald S. French. Janice Morris to
Thomas Siley.
Died: Mrs. Nellie Hislop, Dallas.
Theodore Lavelle, 56, Dallas. Mrs.
Maude Lord, 65, Kingston. Lohman
W. Hawk, 65, Ross Township. Mrs.
Rose Goldsmith Francis, 82, Color-
ado. Infant Carson Philip Gramley,
Harveys Lake.
MAY 10, 1962
Banner crowd at Library Auction
dinner. !
Aunt Jemima Pancake Festival
raises $2,000 toward the Key Club
trip to Denver.
Lake Queen, Sandra Yellitz, Prin-
cess, Kay Williams; King, Ivor Wil-
liams, Prince, William Morris.
Dallas Schools tentative budget
$1,139,750. No increase in millage,
per capita increase of $2.
Anniversary: Herbert Major, 85. Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Searfoss, Leh-
man, fiftieth. Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Moss, 25th. Mr. and Mrs. W. J.
Robbins, 30th.
Died: Mrs. Sarah Brink, 95, Sweet
Valley. Mrs. Betty Barrett, 27,
Trucksville. Elmer Frey, 81, Trucks-
ville. Rev. Merritt Updyke, 52, Sweet
Valley mative. Ralph Davis, 68,
Birch Grove. Robert W. Little, 53,
formerly of Trucksville. Gilbert
Whitesell, 95, in Utica.
SECOND TABLOID ......
MAY 1%, 1962
Dallas school board rescinds raise.
in per capita tax.
Flack, Fleming, win in Republican
primaries,
Top honors at Lehman, Carolyn
Ide, Sandra Yellitz; at Lake, Carol
Drapiewski, Marie Hardisky.
# Wyoming [Seminary Alumni chair-
man, Mrs. Alva Eggleston.
Eleanor Rodda heads PTA Council.
Arson suspected in California
Fruit Market blaze, unexplained
grass fires, empty building in Trucks-
ville,
Killing frost threatens fruit, tem-
peratures drop to 24.
Lehman May Queen,
Briggs.
Died: Clifford Stroud, 68, Ross Town-
ship. Mrs. Frank Slaff, 64, Dallas;
George Novicki, 61, Bunker Hill.
Mrs. Anna Zosh, 74, Lake. Mrs.
Clara Garringer, 47, Dallas. George
Uebe, 77, Lehman.
MAY 24, 1962
Kids register normal reactions to
going to school by letting air out of
tires of school buses.
New contract at Linear.
Died: Mrs. Eliza Arber, 78, Shaver-
town. Walter E. Harris, 73, Trucks-
ville. Harold Thompson, 86, Noxen.
Bernard Sorber, 49, Hunlock Creek.
Amdrew Sholtis, East Dallas, fatal
heart attack while driving. Mrs. Ella
McConnell, 66, Harveys Lake. Mrs.
Mary Mackert, 70, Meeker. Elizabeth
‘Parks, 80, Old Ladies Home. Sher-
man Hoover, 64, Oakdale.
Rev. J. Edwin Lintern transferred
from Center Moreland to Chinchilla.
Replacement, Rev. William Watson,
from Westover, N. Y.
MAY 31, 1962
Editor Risley honored by Back
Lorelie
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1962
Mountain Protective Association.
Back Mountain Little League Base-
ball opens.
Glenn Major, 23, killed while driv-
ing without license,
Body of Mrs. Lillian Merdick,
drowned March 15, recovered from
river,
Married: Gloria Anne Beppler to
Walter C. Bronson,
Died: Mrs. Mary Mihalick, 49, Harris
Hill Road. Mrs. Irene Comiskey,
mother of Mrs. Howard Ehret, Leh-
man.
JUNE 7, 1962
Dallas Junior High School Science
Fair big success.
Borough, Street. program ac-
claimed, Franklin Street already re-
surfaced.
Key Club drill team en route to
Denver.
Died: Arthur J. Brown, 73, first
commander of Legion Post. Z. Platt
Bennett, 81, president of Wyoming
Seminary trustees. Zibia Wesley Sut-
ton, 65, Trucksville. Mrs. Edward
Kent, Atlanta. Mrs. Anna McCarroll,
66, Lehman. Russell P. Griffiths, Dal-
las, 63. Major J. Brown, 68, Roushey
Plot. Elmer C. Nagel, Trucksville.
Married: Joan Warmouth to William
‘White. Della Marie Steinruck to
Warren R. Long.
JUNE 14, 1962
Dallas High School graduates 141;
Lake-Lehman, 90.
Dog poisoners operating again.
Key Club in Denver.
Joseph Ide home destroyed by fire.
Died: John Ladamus, Lehman. Es-
telle J. O'Donnell, Lehman faculty.
Presbyterians launch new church
at formal ceremony.
Trucksville Free Methodists pur-
chase plot of land, hire architect for
new church.
JUNE 21, 1962
Key Club gets ovation, at Denver,
back home again.
Sixth grades go to Philly.
Auction news, Lehman Horse
Show news, Nesbitt 50th anniver-
sary.
Died: Charles Warden, 40, Shaver-
town. Roy E. Evans, Outlet, 67.
Married: Grace Ann Bachman to
Thomas ‘Shackleford Pesikey. Nancy
Cole to Michael Parsons. Rosemary
Kistler to John H. Mease. [Sally
Dawn Edwards to J. Hall Shaver.
JUNE 28, 1962 0
AUCTION, HORSE-SHOW ........ .....
TABLOID... io. 2 oto,
Kenneth Rice plans to open 225
lots for development on his farm.
Two large rattlesnakes killed, one
at Mountain Springs, one at Noxen.
Two young girls selling magazine
subscriptions in Lehman and Dallas
Townships are arrested and fined.
Solicitation forbidden without per-
mit.
Mrs. Mary Lamoreaux and Albert
Peters, slightly injured in a collision
near Lehman.
Gate of Heaven graduates 75.
Married: Linda Ann Grey ‘to Carl
Montross, Jr. Sharon Louise De-
Remer to Robert Rogers.
Died: Rev. Albert Decker, Tunkhan-
nock. Rev. Benjamin R. Rickenbach,
Jr, Tunkhannock. Frank Castner,
61, Larksville, Charles R. Howell,
69, Shavertown. Walter Zimmer-
man, 75, Pittsfield, Mass. (Charles
Only Yesterday
self, the depression won't be over
for a good many months. The
country became great because it
was founded in the face of great
peril. A depression is a challenge,
and a depression does not take
wings over night with the coming of
a New Year.
S. J. Woolbert purchased a fine
lot of prize-winning yearling steers
from W. H. Conyngham Farms, to
butcher for the holiday season.
Esther Cortright headed King's
Daughters.
It Happened
30 Years Ago:
An ex-soldier, Arthur Lee, an
employee of the Dallas Post, re-
called on the front page his experi-
ences in the trenches on Christmas
of 1914, 1915 and 1916. Christmas
of 1917 he spent in the hospital at
Arras. He was with the British
Army. British and German soldiers
met briefly in No-Mans Land on the
Christmas of 1914 at Ypres, exchang-
ed presents, returned to their
trenches, and resumed sniping.
Hills at Irem Country Club af-
forded good sledding.
Fire in the Fred Kunkle home at
Kunkle was discovered before it
grew into a disaster, confined to
the kitchen. ;
Fifty small pupils at Noxen had
the measles. :
Shavertown Firemen elected
George Prater president; P. M. Mal-
kemes vice president; L. T. Schwartz
secretary; Scott VanHorn treas-
urer; Donald. Hutchison, financial
It Happened
20 Years Ago
The entire front page of the Dal-
las Post was dedicated to greetings
to the boys in the service, men
who were fighting it out on land
and sea, and in the air. Raymond
Kuhnert talked to the men, boys
only yesterday, who remembered
the days at Dallas Township High
School. Austin Snyder talked to
the boys from Lehman. T. A. Wil-
secretary; fire chief, Herman Van | liamee encouraged the boys from
Campen, assistant Stephen John- | Dallas.
son. "It was a heartbreaking page. Dal-
An editorial said don’t kid your-
Race, 69, Center Moreland.
JULY 5, 1962
Auction starts for 3-day session.
Lehman Horse-Show July 4, in
new location.
Rev. John S. Prater new rector of
Prince of Peace.
Mrs. Jay A. Young, mother of
twelve children, dies suddenly. .
Ronnie Richards, 12, Boy Scout, is
burned when his sleeping bag
catches fire. f
Died: Samuel Ralph Nicholson, 63,
Huntsville. Sheldon Pollock, 57,
Sweet Valley. Mrs. Celesta A. Day,
65, Harris Hill Road. Harry L. Gates,
last Post editor Risley reminded
boys in the service of the homely
things, the fire on the hearth, the
puppy ‘that frolicked on the forbidden
rug, the sounds and scents of a
Christmas at home.
world, to remind the boys that
they were not forgotten at Christ-
mas time. ,
It was printed in green ink, with
Christmas decorations everywhere,
candles and holly and stars and
pine trees.
Boys in the service who wrote
to the Out-Post included: Robert
Ray, Cherry Point; Kenneth Davis,
Scott Field; Arthur Dunn, Seymour
61, Chase. Leslie F. Spencer, East | johnson Field; Louis Kelly, Virginia;
Dallas. | Glen Knecht, Arkansas; Joe Wool-
Married: Ada Mae Freeman to James bert, Denver; Tommy Evans, New
Hoyt. Zealand.
JULY 12, 1962 Porter Michael, 68, died at
Auction over, probable $16,000 net | Carverton. “0s
profit. :
Thomas Hillyer, 57, found dead in
ar 2 It Happened
[0 Years Ago
William Ridell, popular custodian
at Kingston Township high school,
was ill with pneumonia at Nesbitt
Postmaster Joseph Polacky, 55,
has fatal heart attack. i
Lashford resigns presidency of
Lake-Lehman Board, Willard Sutton
succeeds. Hospi
5 ; pital.
Be Spencer, 17, killed in car Barbara Jane . Malkemes was
crash.
decorating windows in the area
while home for the holidays from
art school in Washington.
Dr. Sherman Schooley Memorial
Fund in the Back Mountain amount-
ed to $2,534. # :
Edward Biezup’s Nativity Scene
on lower Main Street was stopping
traffic.
Clarence Jacoby, 50, Carverton,
died of a heart attack.
Captain William Dierolf, home
after a year in Korea, was assigned
to instruct air-borne troops at Fort
Benning.
Dallas Township supervisors plan-
ned to open two roads, Garbutt and
Gerald Avenues.
Died: Walter P. Shaver, 64, Shaver-
town. Dr. James R. VanLoon, 65,
Harveys Lake. Sylvanus Eroh, 80,
Harveys Lake. Raymond H. Blizzard,
70, Evans Falls. Walter Barnauskas,
Harveys Lake.
JULY 19, 1962
Bob Horlacher Tittle League, Nox-
en, wins pennant for third successive
year. ’ :
Kingston girl, Susan Sgarlat, 186,
water-skiing at Lake, badly injured
when head strikes diving board.
Five-weeks old New Jersey infant
resuscitated by heart massage, dies.
(Continued on Page 3 B)
The paper went out, all over the |
Ld
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
AHBXR CR NNERKRRREEKS REE ANNA AUN HERR NRRANRAHSRS
Rambling Around
By The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters
NANAK HEH H AERA HHA HAXKAXK ARK RKARKR RRR RLNKS
William H. Capwell, editor and
publisher of the DALLAS POST
over the turn of the century was
an active member of Dallas Meth-
odist Church. He served as steward
and as trustee and his daughter,
Gertrude, was a worker in the Sun-
day School. He reported, in some
detail, church activities and pub-
licized coming events, even com-
menting on the minister's sermons
from time to time. This may not
have been due entirely to personal
religious interest. Excepting the
flourishing fraternal orders, the
Church was the only organization
in town in which large numbers of
people were ‘interested, and Church
affairs were therefore news.
We do not have at hand any edi-
torials on” church matters, there
may have been none. We do have
a few of the items he wag in the
habit of inserting in his general
columns which are quoted below.
“Two young men, one of whom
was so drunk that he lay down in
the street after his companion had
succeeded in getting him off a
Wilkes-Barre car, was one of the
shameful sights seen in the centre
of Luzerne Borough Sunday after-
noon. ‘And the liquor was sold
according to law’.
“Our ‘motto is: ‘Lie, steal, drink
and swear’. When you lie, let it
be down to pleasant dreams; when
you steal, let it be away from im-
moral companions; when you drink,
let it be pure cold water; when you
swear, swear that you will patronize
your home paper, pay your sub-
scription, and not send your job
work away from home.”
At another time he gave a couple
of inches space discussing the an-
noyance of boys swearing, mention-
ing no names. He carried at his
masthead; “There is nothing too
good for Dallas.”
Mr. Capwell could write well on
almost anything, but did not do
too much of it. This may have
been due to lack of space or of
time, either to write it personally,
or for the typesetters to set it by
hand. An exception was obituaries.
These were long and flowery. The
death of a prominent citizen, Ira
D. Shaver, for example, would be
given a whole column. A trip out
of town would usually be men-
tioned, sometimes at some length.
He made a trip to Washington, D.C.
and his description of the place ran
for several weeks. He attended a
convention of editors and publishers
at Atlantic City and reported it.
A summer employe of the POST
was a student at Pennsylvania State
College. He went out by railroad
to visit the student and see the
area, just at the time when election
of trustees was taking place. He
met a number of them, some of
whom he had known for years. The
number of students was then 350.
In 1899, he attended the services
at Wyoming Monument, commem-
orating = the Wyoming Massacre.
Some grandsons of the victims were
in attendance, and one of them,
Calvin Parsons, presided. After the
meeting he had dinner with Mr.
and Mrs. Charles D. Linskill, well
known locally, at Wyoming. Also
present were Rev. and Mrs, Wilson
Trieble and their little daughter.
some fifteen years later Rev. Trieble
was pastor at Dallag and the little
daughter, Helen was a music teacher
in Dallas,
He frequently wrote news items
in a facetious manner. John TI
Philips visited here, from Kentucky,
reporting that Low Yaple had a
new son, who would soon be cut-
ting firewood. When Bertha Ran-
dall drove to the parsonage, he
reported that a BAER, weighing
about 150 lbs. entered the carriage
with her and she did mot scream.
He headed the item, “Captured by
a Baer.” In another place in a
routine manner he reported the
marriage of Miss Bertha Randall
and Edward Baer.
Sometimes it would be difficult
to distinguish “a true story from
a plain joke as: “A certain gentle-
man living not more than two hun-
dred miles from Dallas, has a son
who is very hard to get out of bed
mornings. When called the boy
had a habit of answering, ‘Yes Sir’,
and going to sleep again. A few.
mornings ago, after the usual an-
swer, he crept upstairs in the dark,
turned down the covers and gave
him a lively spanking. It happen-
ed the night before the hired girl
had been given the boys room.
When the tumult was over the
farmer went out behind the barn
and drafted an apology to the hired
girl.”
A few are still living here who .
attended a party given by Nora
Thomas in 1899 at which the follow- |
ing were present: Mabel Mott, Rita
Hileman, Helen Coyle, Ruth and
Florence Gordon, Inez Welch, Mabel
Edgar, Ruth and Natalie Hallock,
Lila Shaver, Edith Lauderbach,
Laura Gregory, Bessie Horning,
Mamie Hefft, Edna Isaacs, Anna
Franklin, and Ruth Strickland.
Private Dorosky
Completes Course
Army Pvt. Thomas J. Dorosky,
whose wife Carol, and parents Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas C. Dorosky, live
at 146 W. Mount Airy Road,
Shavertown, recently completed the
five - week aircraft maintenance
basic course! at Avistion Scheel, ;
Fort Rucker, Ala. Lavhé oh EY
Dorosky i ition. easy
fundamentals = of operating Army
airfields and in servicing of air-
planes and helicopters. .
The 18-year-old soldier entered
the Army in August and completed
basic training at Fort Jackson, S. C.
Dorosky is a due of Dallas
High School.
250 = Empirin
Compound
— Relief of Pain —
200
Anacin
— Family
Size =——
Bromo Seltzer
— Nervous Tension —
98c
EVANS |
DRUG
Alka = Seltzer
Alkalizing Tablets
59c
STORE
$
== Income Tax Size ——
300
REXALL
Bayer
Aspirin
TABLETS
225 i
Bufferin
— Value Size —
37
—
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PRESCRIPTION DRUG STOR
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