TL SECTION A — PAGE 2 THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 | “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its 73rd Year” ns A mowpartisan, liberal progressive newspaper pub- lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, ‘Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania. : Nt? a, Member Audit Bureau of Circulations ATT Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association <, a Member National Editoria: Association Count Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. Ug Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879. \. 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¢. bt We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu- .. 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. a When requesting a change of address subscribers are asked w 0 give their old as well as new address. * Allow two weeks for changes of address or new subscriptions #20 be splaced on mailing list. z The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local spitals. It you are a patient ask your nurse for it. ; 5 ¥ Unless paid for at advertising rates, we can give no assurance § “at announcements of plays, parties, rummage sales or any affair Hen raising money will appear in a specific issue. § Preference will in all instances be given to editorial matter which Subeription rates: $4.00 a EER has not previously appeared in publication. National display advertising rates 84c per column inch. Transient rates 80c. Political advertising $1.10 per inch. i Preferred position additional 10c per inch. Advertising deadline Monday 5 P.M. ; Advertising copy received efter Monday 5 P.M. will be charged i 85¢c per columa inch. Classified rates 5c per word. Minimum if charged $1.00. i Single copies at a rate of 10c can be obtainex every Thursday . Coroner at the following newstands: Dallas - - Bert’s Drug Store, lonial Restaurant, = Daring’s Marks, Gosart’s Market, Bo House Restaurant; Shavertown — Evans Drug Store, Hall's Drug Store; Trucksville — Gregory’s Store, Trucksville Drugs; ‘Idetown — 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- brook — Bogdon’s Store, Bunney’s Store, Orchard Farm Restaurant; Luzerne — Novak’s Confectionary. Editor and Publisher—HOWARD W. RISLEY " Associate Editors—MYRA ZEISER RISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS : Sports—JAMES LOHMAN Accounting—DORIS MALLIN Circulation—MRS. VELMA DAVIS ditorially Speaking: HAVE A HEART People used to call it “growing pains” when a child became feverish and listless, and complained of pains in his knees. / “Blue babies” had little expectation of living. Since the tremendous amount of research into cardiac problems, the “growing pains” now translate themselves into rheusgytic fever, and miracle drugs aresshortening the neceséfry time of inaction for complete recovery. The first operation on a heart was successfully per- formed twenty-five years ago in Boston at the Children’s Hospital. - “Blue babies” now have a chance for normal life as they grow into healthy, active children. A vast amount of research goes into studies of the heart. Research costs money. It is carried out so that YOUR child may live. A vast amount of antibiotics is necessary to combat infection of rheumatic fever and give the damaged heart a chance to cure itself. In this Back Mountain area, twenty-five rheumatic fever sufferers are regularly receiving daily doses of peni- cillin from the Heart Association. The cost of the medication is great. Is the community contributing the cost, or is it lag- ging behind? Back Mountain children are receiving aid at a cost which would seriously cripple the average family budget. ‘Are YOU giving enough to the Heart Fund? IS THE FOOD STAMP PLAN BACK-FIRING? Recently, two cases have been brought to the atten- tion of the Dallas Post, where elderly women who once received surplus food, counted on surplus food, and man- aged to eke out a slonder income because of the staples obtained through surplus food, are not able to avail them- selves of food stamps. The food stamp plan assumes that elderly women on limited incomes buy steak and potroast and that if they had food stamps with which to bolster their budget, they will buy more steak and potroast, thus boosting their caloric intake and doing at the same time a good turn for the retail stores. The fact of the matter is that a great many elderly women do very little marketing. In this widely scattered community, living in many instances far from bank facili- ties and with curtailed transportation, dependent in.many instances upon a ride with a neighbor, they are virtually isolated. They managed to get to food distribution centers on the appointed day. The butter and rice and cheese and dried eggs and dried milk, and flour and cornmeal and other staples, and more recently can of nourishing meat, supplemented the canned vegetables and canned fruit that they had painstakingly prepared during the growing sea- ~~ son, when neighbors were generous with their surplus from the orchard or from the garden. . The surplus food was a godsend. The country still has a surplus of butter and dairy products. How many elderly women, even with food stamps, will spend money for butter when margarine is so much cheaper? Is the food stamp plan defeating its own ends? Has anybody in the Food Stamp Department ever in- vestigated to find out what a woman on a fixed income of perhaps $50 a month, actually eats? A woman who must clothe herself, keep herself warm, make a token contribution to her church, pay her doctor bill, buy medicine at the drugstore? It is the single person who suffers. Families with several children seem to get by pretty well on the food stamp plan. But it is safe to state that very few families ont the food stamp plan are buying butter. Is the government still stacking up surpluses of butter to grow rancid in warehouses? Schools get it, institutions get it. N There are some elderly folks out this way who need But they will not buy it through food stamps. it. GE a Better Leighton Never by Down at the bank Friday, while transacting some routine business, I had occasion to do a couple of takes. All of a sudden I'm interupted in the act of scooping up my mil- lions by what sounds as if some- body’s playing one of those “Sounds of Sebring” records behind the counter. Plainly this is not the practice of banking houses, whose daily routine of perpetuating the pulse of civiliza- tion has nothing to do with the cam-lift of a Jaguar or the tuning of a Maserati, ‘Well, pretty soon that program is over, and I'm still waiting for the cashier to count out another hund- red thousand, when a new sound wafts up out of the walls. This time it's a gentle ‘crunch, crunch, crunch, crunch”, as though Tonto is walking into camp through four inches of snow beginning the second half of the show and is about to say: “Bart Slade, him in town, Kemo-Sabe”. Instead, he says loud and clear: “Beautiful day, isn’t?” And the Lone Ranger says: ‘“‘Sure is!” I'm still getting the feeling that the cashier isn’t listening to the show, since she certainly ought to register on that conversation. Ev- erybody knows that the Lone Ranger and Tonto don’t have time to fool around with this weather nonsense. Anyway, the boys must have sad- dled up and rode into town, or may- be they thumbed a ride with that Maserati. Somebody had changed the program again, and it was warm-up time in the pits at Bryn- fan Tyddyn. “Nine hundred ninety nine thous- and, nine hundred ninety eight — ninety nine, one million, thank you”, says the cashier, as I'm fumb- ling to fit it all into my wallet. All of a sudden, I hear Tonto’s foot-steps again, and then I see him out the drive-in window, only he ain’t Tonto. He’s somebody I know from Huntsville. And then I see the Lone Ranger, and hear his footsteps, still sounding transcribed, or ‘“tap- ed”, off in the distance. He’s not wearing a mask. He's wearing a Woolrich coat, and he has his wife with him. “Sensitive radio you've got there”, I observe to the cashier, nodding toward the drive-in window. A schoolbus is warming up out on Main Street, with a rapid fire belch- ing sound that characteristically comes from those racing mufflers they put on them. #+ “I imagine you pick up some fair- y foul language on that thing over the weeks”, says I. (I don’t know why, but that’s the sort of thing that first pops into my mind.) “Sure do”, she smiles, and T walk off grinning to myself about the multitudes who must have nonchal- antly traded chummy opprobrium in front of that window, and had not known they could be seen and heard. The radio is on constantly, and I'm pretty certain that it's about twice as sensitive as the human ear would be at the same distance without glass in between. KEEP THE SINKING FUND AFLOAT Maybe I ought to let bad-enough alone, but I'd prefer to clear up something if I can. _ Several weeks ago I reported on a meeting of the Ambulance Assoc- iation, and mentioned certain rou- tine facts about their treasury. Three of the boys on the staff, two of whom incidentally missed the meeting, objected to this men- tion, saying that volunteer organiza- tions depend on public drives, and I made it look as if the Association didn’t need money. They have a point. BE YE AD- VISED, there are many ambulances that have lots more money and lots less willing and able help than ours. All volunteer emergency groups have sinking funds which sink plenty fast, as emergency vehicles use expensive equipment, need top- flight service, and are notorious gas gohblers. Leighton Scott THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1963 33 3050 3 3030 0 HE A EE HE EN HN HE HH RR RR HRN RRR RRS Rambling Around By The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters The “Bigger is always better” boys, having put through the Dallas Union School District (which has so- far not lived up to its advance prom- ises) are now working to extend it to Ricketts Fire Tower and Colum- bia County. They have also started on the postal service and wiped out the independent postoffices in Kingston Township, by no means an unmixed blessing. Now they are starting on ‘the pre- vailing municipal governments, bor- ough and township, in the Back Mountain. According to their view this area has been neglected for a hundred and fifty years mostly be- cause it is divided into separate municipalities, and all that is need- ed is to get rid of some old fogies whose families have been around for several generations and import some new and younger blood, never dis- tinguished anywhere else, and give then a chance to see what can be done by one big gevernment. Excepting a single year a mile away in Dallas Township, I am one of the third generation old fogies living in Dallas Borough and T know from personal knowledge that this story of longtime neglect is not true. About the time I started to school, maybe a year or two before, my father was street commissioner in the borough. He opened a red-shale quarry on the then Welch farm, later Wallo’s, and stoned Huntsville street hill from Ryman’s store to the old pines at the cemstery. Also then they laid a stone base on Norton Avenue, then new, and built a stone arch bridge over the little stream there, since submerged. These were good roads for those days, in the absence of speeding automobiles. And such activity continued right along, year after year. While I was in high school the County blacktopped the old turnpike road along the creek. Shortly there- after the Borough bought a steam roller and had a stone crusher, as; well as a grader. Power from the roller was used on the crusher wihich was set up to provide crushed stone from convenient points, spread, and then rolled down. About the time of World War I, they re- moved stone walls along Center Hill and stoned that road, Machell Ave- nue, and other roads. Shortly there- after the state took over the lower road from Luzerne and the county took over Pioneer Avenue, later a state road. The Borough participated with the state in work on Church Street and paving Main and Lake Streets. In those days, and maybe now, the laws were more favorable to towns ships as to state road aid than to boroughs. This was done - shortly after World War I. In 1925-26 the state came along with pians to widen the road, the borough to as- sume all the expense of additional right of way, which would not only cost money but destroy most of the income-producing properties on HRHRHRKR, Main Street. The borough declined. Eventually the right of way of the street car company was utilized, a better plan at less expense. About 1922 the County took over Hunts- ville Street. While a member of the council in 1925-27, with the assistance of John Jeter, Borough Engineer, I personally prepared and introduced ordinances covering the numbering of houses in ‘the borough, and re- quiring the laying of sidewalks. There were some complaints. Some- one remarked that, “If Dan Waters had not had to push a baby carriage up that hill, no one would have asked for sidewalks”. Even before I went on the coun- cil, a policy was in force to build permanent-type blacktop streets, one or more every year, to be re- surfaced when required and as mon- ey was available. To this plan, in depression days, the borough added a lot of W.P.A. work, especially in laying drainage and stone curbs. As new plots were opened over the years the borough has accepted ad- ditional streets and stoned and sur- faced them one by one, replacing the cld drains with pipe 12 inches or over as needed. At present the borough has about ten miles of streets. Street lights were installed when I was a small child, I attended a meeting in Raubs Hotel about the time The Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Company was organized. Our police protection has not been too bad over ‘the years, as far as I know. Our roads are plowed and ashed frequently, sometimes several times a day. As far as temporary road re- pairs are concerned, to which the “Bigger is Always Better Boys” seem to be taking exception, I would suggest they accompany me in my regular drive to work through sev- eral of the bigger towns they think so well of, in which I have to drive over or around holes you can lay an inflated tire in. Some of the tem- porary repairs they complain of would be useful on North Street Bridge, and other places also. As far as snow removal and ashing is con- cerned, Back Mountain roads that I drive on are in better shape than some of those in the Valley. Last summer the borough surfaced or rebuilt Franklin Street and Cen- ter Hill Road, and built about 1,000 ft. of all new road on Powderhorn Drive. Our roads are not neglected and our money .is not thrown away. Most of our borough ‘officers serve without pay, and those paid are not paid exhorbitant salaries. It is. true we have a sewer prob- lem, but we are not facing trial or prosecution by the state as are many of the Valley municipalities. For the Borcugh to enter any big municipal- ity would throw away at least half a century of improvements and as- sume obligation to bring: all the area up to the Borough standards. Area Passing Up A Fine Chance To Establish A Small Museum Dallas is missing a good bet if it does not establish a small museum to house some of the interesting Early American things that normally get shovelled out with the trash when househplders do not know what to do with them. Zel Garinger, whose collection of early farm implements on Lake Street has been featured in the Dallas Post from time to time, has permitted the Historical Museum in Wilkes-Barre to take fifteen of his prized possessions, because, “Nobody is interested in them out this way.” Mr. Garinger gets a big kick out of some of the misconceptions of the present generation. He has re- cently seen, in museum, a frow for making shingles labelled “ice-cut- ter.” A frow slices off straight- grained wood into straight-grained shingles. Every once in awhile somebody leaves an oddity on his back porch. Right now Zel has a pair of skates used on the Zuyder Zee over a cen- tury ago, racing skates with turned- up toes and exceptionally long blades. Zel enjoys showing his things. He has a marvelous nucleus for a small museum, right out back of his kitchen. ROBERT FROST WILL LIVE ON IN LOVING MEMORY OUR Robert Frost, winner of four Pulitzer prizes for poetry, is dead at 88. People in this area remember him as they last saw him two years ago on television at the Kennedy in- augural, when the intrepid old- ster, hair fanned to wild dis order in the bitter January wind, read one of his poems in honor of the new President of the United States. Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post It Happened 30 Years Ago: Asa R. Holcomb, 78, severely burned while building a bonfire at his home in Huntsville in the fall, never recovered from the shock. He died at his home, where he had been an invalid since the accident. Warm sunshine and mild breezes for several days were a pre-vue of spring. Honey bees buzzed, small boys waded happily through mud- puddles, and the groundhog saw his shadow, but didn’t do anything about it. Castle Inn was leased to Gene Gabriel of Pikes Creek, former man- ager of Redington Hotel. Marie Dressler was the star of a picture “Prosperity” at Himmler Theatre. Four airplane pilots dropped flowers over St. Mary's Cemetery as Rev. J. E. Sullivan, the “flying priest” was buried. Rev. F. D. Hartsock, pastor of Dallas M. E. Church, officiated at services for Mrs. Wilhelmina Krauss, Dallas, who died at 77 of pneu- monia. * You could get a tall can of evap- orated milk for a mickel, and eggs for 19 cents a dozen, pork butt for 8 cents a pound. Wild windstorm in the area level- led trees, signs, fences, uprooted roofs, It Huppened 20 Years Ago When a heavy snow blocked roads for motorized equipment, Cliff Space sent in a team to bring out the Goodleigh Farm milk. A few weeks later, another storm struck, and Cliff sent in a ‘team, saying it was the neighborly thing to do. Each time he refused payment. But Mary Weir, farm manager, settled her cbligation by presenting Cliff with a purebred Guernsey bull calf. Little Romulus’ mother won the State championship for production, two years after her calf went to Mr. Space. Cliff stated he wouldn't take $1,500 for his bull. Mrs. Jennie Buffington, teacher at Lehman schools, died after sur- gery. John Miller, 87, a native of Switzerland and a former prospector for gold, died at the old Brace farm in East Dallas. Heaviest snowfall of ‘the season kept snow plows busy all night. Dallas rationing board was order- ed to make drastic cuts in B and C gas rations, holding that there was less ride sharing in the area than indicated, and gas was becoming steadily scarcer. A cartoon in a magazine showed two cars on the empty road, one driver saying “Hi, Doc,” the other “Hi, Reverend.” Night clubs were finding heavy sledding since the ban on pleasure driving. A Piiiar to Post outlined the diffi- culties of reserving a berth in a Pullman between Philadelphia and Norfolk. Remember standing in those swaying aisles or perching on a suitcase, while mere civilians got the brushoff and the sailors reigned supreme ? It didn’t pay to travel un- less absolutely necessary during the war, “There's a war on,” was the standard come-back to civilians And it was a pleasure to give ur accomodations for boys who would soon be fighting it out on the high seas, or drowning in a smother 0 icy foam. It was about ‘the onl: | thing the average civilian could dc for the boys . . . that, and keepin home fires burning at war temper atures. Servicemen heard from: Eric Web er, US Navy; Paul Oberst, Ecuador embassy; Robert P. Hanson, For’ Sheridan; Robert B. Price, Gulfport Emory Kitchen, Camp Atterbury Frank Morgan, Fort Bragg; Arje Heart Fund drive officials for the ! Back Mountain Area met recently at the home of Mrs. Fletcher C. Booker, Jr., Back Mountain Chairman. The co-chairman is Mrs. Thomas P, Shel- burne of Centermoreland. Raymon R. Hedden is Special Gifts chairman. Pictured at the meeting at the home of Mrs. Booker on Machell Avenue, Dallas, are first row, left) Standing: Mrs, Peter Wolfe, Jey fe J Sal hl Heart Fund Aides Plan Campaign o right: Mrs. Chester Glahn, Bunker Hill; Mrs. Thomas Shelburne, co- chairman; Mrs. Booker, chairman; Miss Priscilla. Roselle, executive di- rector, Northeastern Pennsylvania Heart Association; Joseph Wroblew- ski, general chairman of the cam- paign; and Mrs. F. Allan Nichols, Trucksville. Eb } Sweet Valley; Mrs. Harold Daven- W. Shiveriowm Mrs. Joseph Lopez, port, Franklin Twp.; Mrs. Pierce, Harveys Lake; Andrew Shavertown; Lavix, Lehman Twp.; Mrs. William Lake Mrs. W. Trucksville; Mrs. John Burke, West- Mrs. John Ferguson, Silkworth; Mrs. J. L. Weir, Wayne Dornsife, Dallas; Mrs. Jos |moreland Hills; Mrs. Earl Gregory, eph Reynolds, III, Trucksville; Mrs. Frank Summa, Dallas; and Mrs. William Hughes, Chase. Nixon, Others are Mrs. Don Innes, Hunts- ) Thompson, ville; Miss Elizabeth Wardan, East | Richard Prynn, Carverton, D7, Carverton Road; Mrs. David Trucksville; Mrs. James Trucksville; Mrs. Donald Trucksville; and Mrs. Jr., | Mathers, DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA “ From— Pillar To Post... By Hix Would it be asking too much of the groundhog to stay in his burrow Saturday and pass up that annual chance to see his shadow? On account of, most of us have HAD it. This has been the most brutal winter in many a year, a godsend to the fuel dealers, and the service stations, but not what the doctor : ordered for people whose cars must stand out in the driveway as the mercury shrinks down into the bulb and draws the bulb around it. This spring should find householders studying blueprints for an attached garage, and figuring estimates on the cost of laying a new driveway on the opposite side of the house, uprooting a section of picket fence, and relocating it across the present driveway, all in the interests of preserving what frontage to the winter sun there is on the southeast. Anyhow, that’s what one householder on Pioneer Avenue is considering. But then, theres this counter-thought. After all, Rov many subzero mornings do we have in this area, compared with how many mild mornings when the car starts up in a flash? And what about the idea of a small collapsible aluminum tent which could be hoisted into place with one finger in the face of an expected reading of ten below at 7 am.? And, happy thought, what about those crocus shoots, already - pushing their way toward the surface through the frozen earth? Six more weeks, and in sunny spots close to the house, warmed by reflected sunshine, those crocuses will be in bloom, orange cups open- : ing to the buzzing bees, green shoots of hyacinth pricking through the humus, and a solicitous cardinal stepping politely back from the bird feeder so that the lady friend whom he has nudged aside all winter may have first go at the sunflower seed. % Ah, spring. Come to think of it, we don’t have a winter like this in a blue moon. Maybe next year the thermometer will remain safely above zero, ‘a situation to be deplored by the fuel dealers, but a break for Mr. I. Q. Public. . Probably it would be a sinful extravagance to build a garage and relocate the driveway. But it certainly would be comfortable to step out of the cellar door into a garage instead of stepping out the side door into! a drift and excavating the car with a shovel. Come next summer, these subzero mornings might be a happy memory in the grip of a heat wave. Six more weeks of nipped fingers and ice on the windshield. Six more weeks. That is, if the groundhog sees his shadow. But if he should stay put Saturday and not venture forth, the oldtimers say that spring will come on apace. Of course, there are other oldtimers who say that if he doesn’t see his shadow, goodness knows when spring will come, because there will be nothing to frighten him and he just might sleep until April. One thing is for sure, you can’t win. Not in weather like this. And of course there’s that annual March blizzard to anticipate, the blizzard that the papers always refer to as phenomenal, the usual BP unusual March weather. Followed, naturally, by the five onion snows early in April. Move over, groundhog, here I come. Services Today For Mrs. Edna M. Brown Mrs. Edna M. Brown, 84, widow of the late Dr. H. A. Brown's brother Arthur, and well known in the Leh- man area, died Sunday morning at Fairwinds Nursing Home, near New Kensington, after several of illness. . Funeral services are scheduled for this morning at 11, from ‘the Hughes Funeral Home, Forty Fort, Rev. John Episcopal Church, officiating. Burial Idetown Cemetery. Mrs. Brown, the former Edna Mil- ler, a native of (Clarion, taught at Lehman schools for a time before marriage with Arthur. She and her wusband observed their Golden Wed- ling June 10, 1963. Mr. Brown died ‘nm 1959. Following his death, his vidow moved from Kingston to Na- rona Heights to make her home with her son Robert, head of the ‘esearch department of Alcoa Com- any at New Kensington. In addition to her son, Mrs. Brown saves a sister Mrs. Walter Clarke, Riverside, California; two grandchil- ‘ren, Mrs. Nicholas Kloap of Tafford, ‘nd Donald ‘A. Brown of Natrona Teights; and one greatgrandechild. drown, Kentucky; J. Marchakitus, nfantry overseas; Paul Redmond, Jew York APO; Irving Ashton, Fort Devens; John (Sholtis, Jr. Camp 3landing; Daniel Linsinbigler, Af- ‘ica; Albert Salansky, Camp Hood; Jarry Rogers, Emmett Hoover, John McCulloch, in England; Howard Rice, Camp McCoy; Bill Baker, Flor- ‘da; Darwin Husted, Fort Bragg; Dan Boyle, Camp Edwards. Married: Elva Knecht and Gomer Isaacs Elston. Anniversary: Mr. and Mrs. 'Wash- ‘ngton Spencer, 53rd. Mrs. Albertine Allen, daughter of Chester Fuller, first postmaster of Tdetown, died aged 87. Rev. Frank Abbott officiated at the funeral. It Happened 10 Years Ago Featured on the front page was a picture of a class at Dallas Town- chip taken forty years earlier, star- ring John Yaple in the front row. Dallas Water Company located a break in one of the mains supply- ing upper Dallas properties. Mary Weir received a trophy for outstanding production of the Good- leigh Guernsey herd. Ralph Dixon: bought Bowman's Restaurant. Married: Helen Marie Brody to Harry Jeter. Hillside Farms brought home 17 ribbons from the Farm Show, show- ing 11 milking shorthorms. Edward H. Kent, Lehman, died after a painful illness. Mrs. Mary Hardisky, Lehman Heights, was found dead in bed. Despite patrols on the Red China border, 200 to 300 refugees reach Hong Kong every week. CARE has special $1 Food Crusade packages to help new arrivals and other needy Chinese families in the! months |: R. Prater, rector of Prince of Peace |: will be in the Brown family plot in| colony, etl iii (EHS DALLAS POST Promoted EDWARD L. McMANAMAN Edward L. McManaman, control- ler, was elected Assistant Secretary and Assistant Treasurer at a meet- ing of the Board of Directors of Linear, Inc., according to announce- ment by Philip H. Moore, Vice President and General Manager. Mr. McManaman joined Linear in 1956 as a cost accountant and has served in supervisory positions within the accounting department. A native of Wilkes-Barre and a graduate accountant, he attended St. Mary’s High School, Alfred Uni~ versity, Manhattan College and ‘King’s College. He is a member of Scranton-Wilkes-Barre Chapter of The National Association of Aec- countants and Data Processing Management Association, - and of American Legion Post 132. Mr. McManaman is a veteran of World War II, an officer with the Air Force in the China-Burma-India Theater. His wife is the former Doris Kelley of Hornell, N. Y. The couple has five children: Edward, Patricia, Michael, Ann Marie and Kelley. ; Lions Clubs, Guests At Annual Meeting The Second Annual Meeting of Zone “B” Lions (Clubs, consisting of Dallas, Noxen, Harveys Lake and Back Mountain Clubs was hosted by Noxen Lions Club on Tuesday Night January 15. Chairman of the meeting was Ronald Fielding. Marino Fiorucci, District Deputy Governor of District 14H, from Sugar Notch, was guest of the eve- ning. Among those present, besides members of the Noxen Lions Club were Richard O. Myers, president, Russell A. DeRemer, Secretary, and Russell E. DeRemer, Vice President of Dallas Lions Club; Leonard Bruce, president, Joseph Schappert, vice president and Donald Kitchen, Harveys Lake Lions Club. : The next Zone “B” meeting will be held in March 1963. Ce ‘ BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENTS Wedding Invitations ~~ ad Oe HN lone §