SECTION A —PAGE 2 {hk DALLAS POST Established 1889 “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its 73rd Year” A monpartisan, liberal progressive newspaper pub- lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania. Member ‘National Editoria: Association Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. 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 six months, Out-of-State subscriptions; $4.50 a year; $3.00 six months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15¢. scripts, photographs and editorial matter unless self-addressed, stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be held for more than 30 days. io give their old as well as new address. Allow two weeks for changes of address or mew subscriptions 0 be placed on mailing list. The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local hospitals. 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 for raising money will appear in a specific issue. Preference will in all instances be given to editorial matter which sas not previously appeared in publication. National display advertising rates 84c per column inch. Transient rates 80c. Political advertising $1.10 per inch. Preferred position additional 10c per inch. Advertising deadline ionday 5 P.M. Advertising copy received sfter Monday 5 P.M. will be charged at 85c per column inch. Classified rates 5c per word. Minimum if charged $1.00. Single copies at a rate of 10c can be obtainex every Thursday aorning at the following newstands: Dallas - - Bert's Drug. Store. x . i a TORE RON RR AEN RR BRN OR BAER NRA RA A pig FARNESE ER iy a ne * Colonial = Restaurant, Daring’s Merk_s, 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 : Store; Sweet Valley — Adams Grocery; Lehman — Moore's Store; + Noxen -— Scouten’s Store; Shawnese — Puterbaugh’s Store; Fern- 5 brook — Bogdon’s Store, Bunney’s Store, Orchard Farm Restaurant; ¢ Luzerne — Novak’s Confectionary. : Editor and Publisher—HOWARD W. RISLEY # ssociate BEditors—MYRA ZEISER RISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS Sports—JAMES LOHMAN Accounting—DORIS MALLIN Circulation—MRS. VELMA DAVIS We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu- When requesting a change of address subscribers are asked PLLA a, . » S Member Audit Bureau of Circulations =A@iin° Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association eS Ss Cunt Editorially Speaking: CELESTIAL POST Dear departed friend, I guess You are busy at your celestial press Recording the news. The What and Why and Who The Where and When of those that live with you. Copying the names from Birth Department before they go to Earth To be recorded there. Stop and see ‘Which songs of reverence or glee The choir will sing tonight } Before the Throne, in His sight. Stop to praise and inquire Of the Divine Nine as they aspire To the Heavenly League Crown. Write their chances down. Stop for some quick looks At the library’s new books. Note the collision of two Angels at Wing Lane and Blue Sky Way. Meet and greet A timid soul on the street ‘Who for the first time passed fhrongh The Pearly Gates. Ask who He was. And with your usual flair I'm sure that there You'll have an auction block Complete and full of stock Of second-hand angel wings, Antiques, knick-knacks, divine things. And if this were not enough, most Of all, at your Celestial Post It would not be you Without an animal or two. OD ER SA NS TC RR NT a Ts 7 RENE Elizabeth Ross Ed. Note: Mrs. Ross is a member of the Adult Crea- tive Writing Course, taught by Robert Hukill, at Dallas Senior High School. She recently switched from writing children’s stories to writing poetry. She did not know Howard personally, but was deeply conscious of the in- delible impress made by him upon the community, and the sense of loss felt by everybody in the area when he died. PROTEST COMES TOO LATE By Dorothy Anderson With the current crisis over drivers license applica-~ tions creating quite a stir in the community, one wonders why no voices were raised in like protest when our post office was gobbled up by the Wilkes-Barre installation. * Your local postmasters had completed a survey and sent it to the Postal Department for the purpose of estab- lishing door-to-door delivery, in our township. By com- bining the Shavertown and Trucksville offices, we could have had the same type of service offered at present, with- out coming under the jurisdiction of the city operation. Dallas residents were not so easily fooled when similar strategy was used to bring that office under con- solidation. They fought for their rights and preserved their individuality. Dallas has an independent Post Office and a Post- master, who does not have to consult with the executive staff in Wilkes-Barre on each and every minute detail. Now, we, the people of Kingston Township, no longer have a Postmaster and we have forfeited our identity. In the twinkling of an eye, both local offices were combined, the staffs of both units shoved together under one roof, in impossible and cramped quarters. The change two years ago occurred right before the Christmas rush. ‘We have a new Post Office. It would have been there without the merger, for it was part of the blue print set up by the department when local plans were made. As it stands now, we have only a Superintendent of Mails, with no opportunity to make decisions on his own, nor can he hire local residents from civil service lists to fill openings needed by our own people. All appoint- ments come from the Wilkes-Barre rolls. Check the em- ployees. Now is the time to support a worthy cause of lasting benefit to your community. This is the opportunity to seck a change. Let's go back to an independent postal # status. i v al Ra oy rk fs WOM REE ARSE WIR IER COR RETR NL, ERS EE ERE DY RRS Ee AL DERE DoS SR RW WRN QE WS A td FT Better Leighton Never by Scott D’ja wonder where I've been? I was on my way to school, much to your relief, but eventualities put me back to work. With lots 6f time to do nothing in early December, I had oppor- tunity to get everything to the cleaner, write letters, and also to work up enough nerve to make my regular check-up visit to the den- tist. That's always a tough one. Well, let's get with it. I had time to fill up my Leighton’s Library of essential information too. LITTLE KNOWN FACT From the newspaperman’s daily mail: This is the second time in American history that the first-class letter has a base rate postage of five cents. Postal Service lowered the rate from a nickel in 1851. DALLAS CURFEW Borough Council recently con- sidered what to do about reconciling the curfew ordinance with the American Legion dances Saturday night, Everybody ‘ agreed that the dances are well-behaved, and so forth, but they clearly let out after 10. And minors under eighteen aren’t supposed to be in public places after that hour, according to law. Leighton At first the Council tried to equate the chaperones at the affair with the “parent” or “guardian” who is supposed to accompany the after-hours minor. That wasn’t the answer, they determined. So what evolved was the most sensible solution under the circum- stances: That each case of a public place in which young minors were found after hours would have to be THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 1963 What Is News? What is news? The spectacular? The dramatic? The out-of-the- ordinary? Stark tragedy? The heartbreak of a family when a son goes astray? The loss of a good man, mourn- ed by the community? Sometimes news is much smaller. A woman goes about her business in the home. She is not a saint, but she has a feeling for her neighborhood. On foot, she makes a daily trip to the grocery, and walks back up the hill, laden down with bundles. Not all of them are for her. A house-bound neighbor a loaf of bread. Would it be too much to ask... Of course not. And could she stop at the Light Company and pay a bill? Again, of course. “And what are you doing coming down those icy steps with those bundles?’ A helping hand outstretched. A telephone appeal: “Won't you call the doctor for me? I'm feeling sick.” The call is made and the doctor comes. It is a marvelous advertisement for the human race that it is the burglaries and the accidents and the un- pleasantness that constitute news, and that it is the kindly everyday deeds that go unrecorded. The plain fact of the matter is that we EXPECT people to be good, and to be decent and to be helpful. It is only when they defy our laws of conduct that people are noticeable. Few people make the front page because they are going about their business, lending a hand when needed, and making, in their small way, the Back Mountain a better place to live in. RR RS A RR RE I EN EY Rambling Around * By The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters PR RR RR AR RR NE RN RN RE NR NN NS In the U.S. Department of Agri- culture statistics on the milk busi- ness, the numbers are so long that it has been necessary to use round numbers. Therefore the following should not be taken as exact, but considered on its own merits, if and | will show trends and are approxi- when occasion arose. So who needs the curfew ? NEW HIGHWAY PLANS I hi look h $300 pet 8 chance to look: at the just under 2 billion dollars. ‘was an average of 4,167 lbs. per blueprints of the new Dallas-Lu- zerne Highway, notice what's hap- pened to intersections. Hillside - Huntsville Road, old Route 115, receives a long-needed squaring off with the highway. This will deaden the temptation, now present in three places on the road, to make a flying, morth-bound left turn, no matter whether anybody’s coming toward you or not. A worse “flying left” intersection is the lower end of Pioneer Avenue, which will really take on some weird configurations. At that point, there will be three — count ’em — three big intersec- tions. And don’t ask me what this engineering is about. But I hope it'll work this way: Present approach will be one- way, for south-bound traffic, coming off Pioneer toward Luzerne. Then, a squared-off junction opposite Har- ris Hill Road for left turns on to Pioneer Avenue by north-bound traffic, and for access from Pioneer to Harris Hill. The last joint is one which bends back from Pioneer toward IShavertown, at least for south-bound cars to turn onto ‘the upper road. Other possibilities, such as turn- ing from Pioneer up toward Dallas, will depend on the traffic-light system used. The communities will each decide what lights they want, and where. Shavertown and Dallas intersec- tions will undergo minor changes only, and basic present direction will be maintained in those cases. Kingston Township (Continued from Page 1 A) James Gordon, Grove Street ad- joining Trucksville Grade School, disclosed that water was pouring down from Harris Hill Road and settling in the school yard, where children were forced to play in large puddles. Mr. Hauck directed Lawton Cul- ver, road superintendent, ‘to in- vestigate. Mrs. Elizabeth Wormeck, who operates the 24-hour self service laundry, Shavertown Shopping Cen- ter, asked for a curfew in the town- ship. She stated that her place of busi- ness had become a late hour meet- ing place for teen-agers, that the frequentors dirtied her floors and damaged her equipment. She said, “What's wrong with parents that they don’t set a time for their chil- dren to be home and fail to check on their whereabouts as the early morning hours approach?” Mr. Hauck stated he had con- tacted both Senator Harold Flack and Representative Fred Shupnik, concerning undelivered license ap- plications. Senator Flack said he would send down envelopes, but Representative Shupnik asked that a list be compiled, giving individ- uals’ name, address and plate num- ber, stating he would pick up same on January 14, take it to Harris- burg and have changes expedited,” Hauck reported, he top had failed to change his address. “Mr. Republican” Misses Ceremonies Ted Poad, Shavertown, known as “Mr. Republican” throughout the Back Mountain, was forced to sit on the sidelines on Inauguration Day. Ted, who received an engraved invitation to attend ceremonies held in Harrisburg had planned for months to be on hand when Gover- nor Scranton took over the reins of government. A painful knee increased in dis- comfort as the day drew near, and Ted was forced to watch pi ceced: mately correct. In the country as a whole, in 1924, 21 million cows produced 89 billion 1bs. of mik with a farm value This cow, containing 163 lbs. of milk-fat, or 3.92%. All of these figures increased year after year up to 1944, when there were 25% million cows, producing 117 billion lbs. with a farm value of 31, billion dollars. Average pro- duction per cow was 4,572 lbs. con- taining 182 lbs. of milk-fat, or 3.98%. Since 1944, number of cows and milk-fat percentage has de- creased right along, but total pro- duction and value has increased. In 1960, 17% million cows pro- duced 123 billion lbs. of milk, farm value over 5 billion dollars, Average per cow was 7,004 lbs., milk-fat 263 lbs., or 3.7%. There is wide varia- tion in production per cow and size of herds. In 1959, farms averaged 9.2 cows each, nearly doubled in ten years due to smaller number of farms. In Pennsylvania in 1959 the average was 14, up from 6.8 in 1940. Leading states, with approximate production in billions of lbs., 1960, were: Wisconsin 18, New York 10, Minnesota 10, California 8, Penn- sylvania 7, Iowa 6, Ohio 5, Michi- gan 5. Here arises the first big problem. The production in certain areas greatly exceeds the demand in that area, and other areas can use outside milk. Wholesale dollar value in the big states: Wisconsin 590 million, New York 430 million, California 320 mil- lion, Pennsylvania 304 million, all for 1960. In 1960, California led the mation in production per cow, 9,770 Ibs. Other high ranking states showed: New Jersey, 9010 lbs.; Washington 8,510; Wisconsin 8,300; New York, 8,140; Idaho, 8140; Pennsylvania, in tenth place, 7,700. All the New England, Atlantic Seaboard, and southeastern states have shown consistently high rat- ings in milk fat, but most of these do not show high quantity produc- tion per cow. State averages of 4 to 4.5% are fairly common in these areas, also in Washington and Oregon. (California has never re- ported as much as 4%, the 1960 figure being 3.7%. Wisconsin and show relative low fat averages, 1960 averages, 3.7% and 3.5%. Now what did the farmers do with all this milk? Annually they have fed from 2, to 3% billion lbs. to calves, the lower rate recently. They have themselves consumed as fluid milk and cream from 13 bil- lion to 5 billion lbs. recent rate the ower, In ‘1924 they used over 13 billion lbs. to make butter on the farm. This has dropped right along until now it is about one-tenth as much. In 1924 they retailed as milk and cream over 6 billion lbs. since dropped to less than 2 billion. Formerly they skimmed much of the milk and sold more to dealers as cream than as whole milk, but re- cently farm - skimmed cream amounts to only about 8 billion Ibs, with sales of whole milk to dealers running over 100 billion lbs. Combined average price per 100 Ibs. received by farmers was -2.16 in 1924, moved up and down to a low in 1932 of $1,24, in 1960 stood at $2.17, equivalent to 46, qts. This is a ‘national average, and varies widely in various areas. Now, what conclusions of general % can be drawn from all igures. First, the troubles of the farmers are not due to inefficiency. Increas- ing the production per cow, nation- al average, nearly 70% is certainly not bad, considering that many are far above that figure. Secondly, the great surplus in the middle west, particularly in Wis- consin and Minnesota, hangs over the market of all other areas, since transportation of milk is now im- proved and also very efficient. The making of butter and of cream on the farm has decreased to very small amounts. This may ac- count for the fact that it is practi- cally impossible to get a decent drink of buttermik. The oldtime farmer never heard of ‘‘cultured” buttermilk. Retailing of milk by farmers has almost been discontinued, except- ing ‘those farmers who have estab- lished and are now operating pro- cessing and distributing businesses or restaurants. Farmers apparently are struggling against a packed pricing system. Last week the administrator of the New York-New Jersey marketing area announced that farm prices for the first half of 1962 probably would be about 20 cents per cwt. less than in the same period of 1961. He also estimated an increase in production expected to be about 8%. This pre- liminary threat of a reduction in prices only adds to the surplus, the in: th | farmers forcing up ‘their production Minnesota, big quantity states, also | to balance out on money income. Poet's Corner WHO WOULD STEAL A CHRISTMAS TREE, Whose footsteps violate the snow, Whose hands have stolen tree and bough, ‘What thieves have triumphed here Where scented pine and blue spruce grow ? What does the marred snow’s face relate? That some human creature and his lady mate Through * some have picked Our blue spruce grove to dese- crate? The tall white birches' branches bleed Where vandalism’s rush and greed Have torn their bark and spilled their seed Such senseless slaughter without reason, without creed. Is it wrong that I should grow The lovely spruces in a row? Have I wrongly tempted you By my trees of white and blue? “Come back,” I cry, “by light of day, “I'll gladly give all you need away. “Only dig them deep and cut them clean, “And leave unspoiled the Woodland scene.” My mind seems like a soning sea, A pondering, troubled memory — compelling need ‘Who would steal a Christmas tree? by Herbert Downs Ed Note: Mr. Downs is a member of the adult class in Creative writing at Dallas High School. When he found deep footprints, male and female, outlining the place where once a perfect blue spruce had stood, he took pen in hand instead of a shotgun. We can hear the marauder now: “Well, it was just growing there, wasn’t it?” New Book By Local Resident Acclaimed “The American College Girl”, a new book by Dr. K. C. Cirtautas, professor at College Misericordia, is praised by Francis H. Horn, presi- dent of University of Rhode Island and a frequent reviewer of educa- tional books in the New York Times. Mr. Horn writes to the author: “I am delighted that out of your experience you are dealing with the pleasanter side of the life of Amer- ican college girls. I, too, have been pretty much fed up with the psycho- analytical studies which would lead one to believe that all American college girls are maladjusted and bound straight for hell. You are to be congratulated upon having pre- sented the other side of the picture”. RR a Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post It Happened 30 Years Ago: Valuable clay deposits were found at Noxen. Located in a ravine near the Noxen Tannery dam on Schooley Mountain, drills showed a depth of forty feet, suitable for use in man- ufacturing rubber. The site was near Bowman's Creek Branch line, easily accessible by freight train. H. E. Nelson was elected to fill the vacancy in Dallas Borough school caused by resignation of coach Don- ald Wormley. Excavation of: a cellar under Dal- las Methodist Church was ' being done largely by help of men work- ing under the Talbot Relief Act. The editor was asking readers for tips on news stories, “It is im- possible to learn of many important happenings in the area without co- operation from residents,” said How- ard Risley. “Please phone in any tips.” John Yaple, Wardan Kunkle and Clifford Ide released thirteen Reeves Pheasants near the Country Cub, for breeding stock. Two newborn twin girls born to Mrs. Adrian Taylor, died. Mr. and Mrs. Taylor, Loyalville, had nine {living children. Charles M. Phoenix, Monroe Township native, died in Tacoma, Washington. Freight shipments were on the upswing. Misericordia Debating team de- feated Knights of Columbus of Pitts- ton, More reminiscenses by former ed- itor, Harry Anderson, “King of ‘the Jungle” was still going strong, filling up a lot of space in the four-page paer. You could get stewing lamb for ten cents a pound, ham for 12%, any size piece. Sugar was 10 pounds for 39 cents. Peanut butter 2 pounds 21 cents. It Happened 20 Years Ago Robert Loomis, 25, was seriously injured when the truck which he was driving was struck by a fast passenger train in Kingston. David Smith, Pottsville, was elec- ted to head the Dallas band. The story added: ‘until he gets called into the: service.” Farmers were urged to meet with canners, to assay what property could be used for growing ‘tomatoes. Teen-age boys were warned they would be in the next draft, but students would be permitted to fin- ish their high school education. Commonwealth Telephone Com- pany turned over to the scrap drive 3,000 discarded dry-cell batteries for salvage of zinc. Servicemen heard from: Joseph J. Hudak, Fort Benning; Arden C. Steele, Florida; Marion J. B. Disque, DesMoines; Albert W. Klump, San Francisco APO; Peter [Skopic, Fort Meade; Jack Ruggles, US Navy; Wm. Cairl, California; Phil Cheney, New Cumberland; Willard Shaver, Guad- alcanal; Leonard Harvey, Coast Guard; Donald Deans, Maxwell Field; William Hayes, Santa Monica; Dorey Evans, Texas; Mart Waltick, Colorado; Ted Parrish, Fort Bragg; Velton Bean, Groton; Herbert Culp, San Antonio; Jack Link, Fort Bliss; C. H. Davis, Amarillo. “Married: Peg Hicks to Grover Anderson. Rina Mascielli to Fred Galletti. Lillian Spencer to Dr. John J. Foot. Died: Mrs. Mamie Santee, Shaver- town. Mrs. Alice Stock, 81, Shaver- town. Arthur James, Noxen. It Happened {0 Years Ago Local folks were preparing for inauguration of General Dwight Eis- enhower, many residents planning to drive to Washington, Sally Kear was home again after a grim battle with death. She had been injured December 29 in a crash which left three dead, three serious- ly hurt. Ray Henney won a Keystone Farmer degree at the Farm Show, in recognition of his Rush School students having won more than forty awards. Burgess Herbert A Smith was recovering from a cataract opera- tion, Died: Mrs. William Griffiths, 81, Trucksville, Clarence Gay, 57, Bing- hamton. Married: Jean Robertson, Robert Abbott. Joan Nichols, R. B. Hart- man, ‘William Amos spent his 87th birthday in the hospital. Mrs. Elsie Winter, 90, had her first hospital experience, submitting to surgery under local anesthetic. Jonathan Valentine became assis- tant district attorney. Rainbow Girls On Saturday the Charles James Memorial Assembly will meet at 7:30 p.m., at the Trucksville Meth- odist Church Educational Building for an installation service. Worthy Advisor Jo-Carol Birn- stock will be installed, and Mrs. Betty Meeker, Worthy Matron of Dallas Order of Eastern Star, will be installed as mother advisor, ' oy \ DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA From— Pillar To Pest... By Hix The January thaw was nice while it lasted, but it didn't last long enough. Solid chunks of ice that were joyfully kicked off the under- side of car fenders as the temperature rose, solidified again into rocks that menaced traffic as the thermometer plummeted Sunday night, and folks who depended upon the sunshine to take care of the snow blanketing the windshield, got a nasty surprise Monday morning when they found that it had frozen on. Tip to the car-owner: (that is, if she happens to be of what is laughingly called the gentler sex) It's a lot easier to aim a well placed kick at the frozen car latch if you're wearing nylon tights that give you latitude than if you're hampered by the classic garments of your sex. It may astonish the passerby to see a length of fireman red long-~ John tipped by a substantial sneaker, raised in a determined assault on the car-latch, but it works. And on a zero morning, what works is the only thing that cuts any ice or loosens any latches. For awhile there, this driver bore a strong resemblance to the headless horseman, peering through the only clear spot on the wind- shield, roughly eight inches square, and fogging constantly. Talk about tunnel vision, this was it. Usually, a pitcher of cold water poured over the windahield. with the windshield wipers in motion, does the trick. ‘| specting them before sending them dodge has a detour sign on it. better. to clear the ice off a windshield anything about this?" the coke do to the car finish?” If it does anything to the car terior decor of the driver ? afety THE TOLL-FREE QUESTION January 12, 1963 Dallas Post: In regard to the matter of this Commonwealth Telephone Company wanting subscribers to pay a dollar a month more for free toll service to Wilkes-Barre and Kingston—The people of Dallas seem to be in apathy about the matter. There must surely be more people who have few toll calls than those who do. Most people in this Back Moun- tain area have telephones for local convenience and necessity, not for indulgence of toll calls, and many are on. fixed incomes and cannot afford a dollar more per month for their telephones. This is the biggest piece of im- position that has come up yet. The people seem too stupid to see its nature. If it goes through the Dallas area it will be all over the system. If the Company cannot get along on what they are getting, they should sell out to the main Bell Telephone Co. They must certainly be getting paid for all toll calls. What more do they want? We of course pay more for utili- ties than any other area, and still we must be gouged for more. It is a nice “swan song” to be told there is something free, but the people better get wise to what the “free” means, that is, paying for some other person’s toll calls. Non-toll subscriber Elsie M. Gillman, Dallas RD 4 Margaret Dykman (Continued from 1—A) Major Carl has a heritage. Last December, when Mrs. Dykman help- ed decorate for Christmas at Red Rock,- she had taken advantage of an offer to servicemen to tape a record of Christmas greetings for their families. The tape recorded by Mrs. Dykman to her son, was mailed to Korea, a living reminder of the mother to whom he was devoted. This spring, Mrs. Dylan had expected to replace the antiquated pump with an up-to-date system which would not require her to climb the steep hill back of her house in icy weather to check on the water supply. Another winter, she said, it would be automatic, with a tank in the house instead of a gravity tank high on the hill. Sometimes in severe weather, ice formed and hindered the flow. Al- ways, the pump had to be checked once a day. Mrs. Dykman formed the backlog ‘of a number of worthy community projects. She solicited for the Red Cross drive, was active in Blood- mobile arrangements, helped found the Nesbitt Hospital hospitality shop, and was active in church work at the White Church on the Hill. For fourteen years she acted as choir-mother for the smaller chil- dren, checking on their robes, in- up the narrow stairway, then wait- ing for them at the foot of the stairs to see that they did not fall. She and Mrs. Schooley shared the same love of growing things. Their rock gardens on Harris Hill Road stopped traffic in the spring. At the Library Auction, Mrs. Dykman was always enlisted for service in the Plant Booth, where she gave advice as well as selling plants and flowers. Mrs. Dykman | was of the stuff of the pioneers. But when the windshield wipers are frozen solid, that clever At this point, with another zero night behind us, we're doing The car latch remains tractable after that first ferocious assault upon it, followed by a spray of something which is guaraniond and doesn’t. Somebody claims that a bottle of coke poured over the at shield will crumble the ice like nobody’s business. . Anybody know Inquiry around the office brought the question, “What does finish, what does it do to the in- And the answer to that has to be nuttin, on account of coke is a standby of the long distance driver, or even the short haul driver, and nothing must be permitted to undermine a tradition. Valve . . . TELEGRAM FROM TRACY Just received from Rbt Scott Dal- las Post of Dec. 27. I extend to you my sincere condolences, as I recall so forcibly the several talks I had with Howard in your home. He left with me a far deeper and lasting impression than I have car- ried away from chats with men of national renown. He had something, and I feel the community’s loss is intangible. Lee Tracy, Pacific Palisades, Calif. Dear Mrs. Risley, . While we do mot know you per- sonally, through the pages of THE DALLAS POST over the years weé | feel ‘you and Mr. Hicks were friends. Due to the holidays, I am late with my reading of our papers so it was only yesterday that I read of ‘the death of your husband. And believe me we were stunned. Then today I came to the January 3rd issue” with the letter House”. Mr. Risley is proud of you all, and my faith may be rather simple but I feel he will continue to watch over you ‘and his Ole Devil Dallas Post. { hope you will not feel we are intruding but we did want you to know that we are thinking of you. Bob and I know that God will give you the strength to carry on. Sincerely, Winnifred - S. Taylor FREDDIE’S CLASSMATE REPORTS Dear Editor: I had the pleasure of visiting a classmate of mine, while at ‘the Pennsylvania Rehabiliation Center, during his Christmas vacation. James David Bebey, Owen Street, Swoyersville, is physically handi- capped, due to a back injury, so therefore a wheelchair is necessary for him to get around. Bebey has Risley and «Mrs. | ¥ v “From The ” =» a hand controlled automobile and drives back and forth frequently, but being a member of the “Wheel- ers,” the basket ball team, he doesn’t get home as often as he would otherwise. Bebey will com= plete his 18 month business course along with therapy in March. I paid a visit to Freddie Henne- baul, also a trainee at the Center, while he was home over the holi- days. He is cheerful and looking well. Freddie hopes to complete his Junior and Senior High School years at the Rehabiliation Center. His mom and dad, who is employed at Clyde Birth’s Service Station, were almost daily visitors, while he was a patient at Geisinger Medical Center. A delicate bone graft operation has strengthened Freddie's neck and long hours of daily. occupational and physical theraphy are paying off with great imrovement, Freddie returned to the Center Saturday via the Harveys Lake Am- bulance. Carol Williams. Missile Technician Returns To Base : Robert F. Palmer, missile techni- clan third class, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ogden B. Palmer of 34 Grove Street, Trucksville, returned to Long Beach, Calif., aboard the guided missile cruiser USS Topeka just prior to Christmas. The Topeka had been in the West- ern Pacific for six months as part of the Seventh Fleet, a major ele= | ment of American seapower overs seas. PAPER NAPKINS For Unique Designs Fl i a) 3]