-r > Gi: N =o z ba 7 N Fan EEE NEN Re EE EE eee we we a DERE FOE REN RI R a e B RO Se pra a ae ETRE a ad wR aa wv - ol a = / ¢ SECTION A — PAGE 2 “THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 Ba A mnomnpartisan, liberal “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In lts 73rd Year” progressive newspaper pub- lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania. Member Audit Bureau of Circulations Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association Member National Editoria: Association Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. year; $2.50 six months, six months, seld for more than 30 days. © be placed on mailing list. hospitals. Transient rates 80c. wnday 5 P.M. at 85¢c per column inch. Classified rates 5c per word. Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subcription rates: $4.00 a No subscriptions accepted for less than Out-of-State subscriptions; months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15¢c. ~ 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 $4.50 a year; $3.00 six When requesting a change of address subscribers are asked o give their old as well as new address. Allow two weeks for changes of sufress or new 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 tor ‘raising money will appear in a specific issue. Preference will in all instances be given to editorial matter which ms not previously appeared in publication. National display advertising rates 84c per column inch. Political advertising $1.10 per inch. Preferred position additional 10c per inch. Advertising deadline Advertising copy received efter Monday 5 P.M. will be charged Minimum if charged $1.00, Single copies at a rate of 10c can be obtaineu every Thursday morning at the following newstands: Dallas - - Bert’s Drug Store. & 5 oc . a a a . i i : : “ : 3 : - > aEma sr er SEED TALA CAREC RL BY RIESE REN EET BEES EA EERE EEE SEY SWE ES EEE SWE RE EEE SE aE rr Lom ionial Restaurant, Daring’s Mark_i, Gosart’s Market, ‘Towne House Restaurant; Shavertown — Evans Drug Store, Hall's Drug Store; Trucksvile — 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 &ssociate Editors—MYRA ZEISER RISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS Sports—JAMES LOHMAN Accounting—DORIS MALLIN > Circulation—MRS. VELMA DAVIS WHAT NEW HIGHWAY? For two years now, the highway has looked like the approach to a public dump. Owners of filling stations have been obliged to abandon their sites and their livelihood. Stores have folded. ¢ Elderly women who depended upon rentals from their second floor apartments, find themselves with no apart- merits, no rentals, and no homes, their only assets a rapid- ly shrinking capital from the sale of their homes, seized by the Highway Commission. The empty buildings, boarded up and adorned with signs, “Making Way for the New Highway,” are an easy prey for anybody who feels like throwing a el through the windows. What new highway? ‘Where IS the highway? ‘Where are the plans for the highway? Will any contractor in his right mind actually and seriously make a bid which involves tearing down the ig a mountain with a railway track clinging to its side? Didn’t anybody consider the level right-of-way of the old streetcar tracks across Toby’s Creek, or the feasi- bility of building a conduit to contain that noisome little sewer, and constructing a highway on top of it? Ten't the winding highway an asset rather than a ¢ liability? Who really wants a straight rou through one of the t most. scenic parts of Pennsylvania? We have three miles of extremely beautiful gorge . festooned now with advertisements, and in dire need of being cleaned up, but beautiful nonetheless, We do need a one-way arrangement, to prevent drivers from committing suicide. But there must be a simpler way to accomplish it than to put the railroad out the colossal cost. mythical highway. about a highway. How about adopting a getting the show on the road? It will not restore the income of the people who have lost it forever, but it will at least look like progress and not a step toward the poorhouse. of business by tearing down the side of the mountain. So, how about having another look at the plans, as long as contractors are not standing in line to estimate Yes, yes, we've heard it all. It's a dream on somebody’s planning board, that It’s been years now, since we first began talking plan that is practical, and School-guard David Spencer, 69, looked at a wad of traffic tickets in his pocket Thursday, one of his last days at the job. “I never used these”, he mused. : “Just showed ’em to anybody who ‘ caused top much trouble, and they * behaved”. Drivers who passed him Friday * waved as they had every day through winter, and he waved back. , But, for the retired farmer and long- time Back Mountain resident who answered Council's request for a guard for the elementary school in * September, it was his final day at that corner, The Council had decided to bol- ster security there, ag traffic poses a formidable problem, and regular patrolman Cliff Foss was advised to assume duties at that corner as soon as Chief Russell Honeywell was over his virus. Mr. Spencer took the job chiefly to have something to do. He gave , up his farms, two in Union, and one : in Exeter Townships some years * back, and he and his wife now live op the Heights on Elizabeth Street. +» He has been a familiar figure walk-~ from home to work twice each day, jd vay have stopped to give him 2 a, ¢ dil Ex-Farmer Ends Corner Patrol, i Thinks Back On Rough Winter Hie Yon, soon Gilt a Arimiie 0F years more pleasant for him than this one. The last night of the aue- tion, July 8, he lost a granddaugh- ter, Rose Marie, daughter of Daniel Spencer, Claude Street, In a car crash on Lake Catalpa Road, near Tex Wilson's saw-mill. Father of eight, six boys and two girls, he and Mrs. [Spencer used to live on Lehman Avenue across from the Post’s present building. “There wes horse end wagon ftraffio here then”, he laughed. He said he just liked the Job as school-guard for its own sake, and avon’t miss the income too much. Thinking back over what is now be- ing called the hardest winter of this century, he grinned: “I handled it through the worst of it for "em”. Baby Is Christened Joseph Bernard, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Adrian BE. Demarco, Sutton Road, Trucksville, was christened at St. Therese’ Church, Sunday, with Rev. Francis Bremnan, officiating. Godparents are Mr. and Mrs. Albert L. Ray, Sweet Valley. Also attending were the baby’s maternal grand- parents, Mr end Mrs, John M. Baur, Shavertown and Mr. and Mre. John M Baur, Jv, Nagareth, “ Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post a It Happened 30 Years Ago Away back then, thirty years be- fore the day of sonic booms from jet planes, folks were trying to dope out what was making the heavy concussions heard and felt from time to time. The matter remained shrouded in mystery. No dynamiting around, but windows rattled and the racket was heard from Dalles down to Wyoming Valley. Struck by a street car as he stumbled into its path, Norman Smith, 57, of Fast Dallas, was ad- mitted to Nesbitt Hospital with a crushed hip. Site of the accident was between Dallas and |Shaver’s Mill, B. P. Stroh, manager of Common- wealth Telephone Company's local office, was on the spot in Miami when Guiseppe Zangara made his attempt to assassinate president- elect Franklin D. Roosevelt, shoot- ing instead Mayor Cermak of Chi- cago. Stroh was within fifty feet of the assassin. Dallas Rotary Club was laying plans for the annual egg-hunt. Lehman took Dallas Borough 22 to 20, dealing out Dallas’ first defeat of the season. Dallas Township took Laketon 23 to 16. Lard was four pounds for 19cents; celery 5 cents a bunch; eggs, 17 cents dozen; chocolate drops 10 cents a pound; pork loins 9 cents; butter 2 pounds for 43 cents. It Happened 20 Years Ago Sgt. Harold Kepner, veteran radio operator on a Flying Fortress, was reported missing over the South Pacific. His parents, Mr, and Mrs. Kepner, had a cable from him on New Years Eve, but no further word. Official word of missing in ac- tion came from the War Depart- ment. ; A strike closed the Noxen Tann- ery, though it was engaged solely in war work. Joseph MacVeigh and Harry Ohl- man headed the Red Cross drive. The Edward VanHorn home near the old Goss School was destroyed by fire on the coldest day of the year, when firemen’s hoses were frozen. A hole was chopped in the ice of a mearby creek to provide water. Sgt. William Glenn Knecht was advanced to glider pilot at Stutt- gart Field. [Servicemen heard from included: Karl Borkowski, Foster Field; Leo Niezgoda, England; Leonard Harvey, Brooklyn; Bill Oberst, San Diego; Edward Nafus, Virginia; Julian Bal- avage, New York APO; Larry New- hart, New York APO; Patrick Finne- gan, South Pacific; Dana Campbell, Texas; A. D. Dunn, Goldboro; Jay Gould, N.Y. APO; Alfred Lamor- eaux, New Guinea; Charles Warden, Texas; Lester Reakes, Camp Ed- wards; Harry Sutton, Georgia; Jam-~ es Davies, Atlantic City; Stewart Yorks, New Mexico; Ward Yorks, Fort Meade; Edward Parrish, Fort Bragg; Lewis Button, Camp Robert- son, Anniversary: Mr. and. Mrs. John Crispell, 59th; Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Swainbank, 50th. Married: Margaret Campbell to Capt. E. C. Deal. Helen Gacha to Lt. Alexander J. Wazeter. Died: Thomas P. Himm, 53, Dallas. Harold Cook Jr., 18, Trucksville. Ernest - Rothar, 85, formerly of Huntsville, Thomas E. Sayre, 86. It Happened {0 Years Ago Bids wene opened for construction of a $200,000 elementary school at Ross Township, to replace six one- | room school buildings. Prices on beef were tumbling, housewives were stocking freezers. Sheldon Drake, John Juris and Fred Youngblood, all Dallas carriers, were on the sick list. Dennis Bonning wrecked his car on an icy road near Chase. The [Seventh Annual Library Auc- tion was set for July 10 and 11. Mary Weir was a patient at Rob- ert Packer Hospital in Sayre. Died: Raymond C. Smith, 52 Lake Township. Benjamin Evans, 41, Mill Street. Alvin J. Misson, 76, Dallas. Melvina Shouldice, while on vaca- tion in Florida. Warren Dennis, 57, Harveys Lake, heart attack. William Lewis, 84, Lake. Mrs. Georgia Post Johnson, 88, formerly of Dallas. Mrs. Alicia Weaver, Idetown. Mrs, Clara 'E. Shupp, formerly of Lehman. Mi- chael Niemzyck, Sweet Valley. Anniversary: Mr. and Mrs. Ed- ward Kocher, 50th. Mrs, Charles Tremayne, 84. : 1 Trucksville topped the church league. Sharon Lee Anesi Has Third Birthday : Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Anesi, Oak: Hill, entertained at a dinner party, February 3, honoring their grand- daughter, Sharon Lee, who observed her third birthday. Attending were. the honoree’s father, Dale Anesi, Sr., her brother, Dale Earl, Donald Anes, | Mrs. Michael Crissi and daughter, Michelle, Qak Hill, Mr, and Mrs. Charles Monahan and daughters, Bonnie June, Barbara And and B wary, Kingston. THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1963 By The Oideimes ter (Sessions issued an order on the pending petition for a new town- ship as follows: “The court confirms the division, and in testimony of the respect which the court entertains for the late Alexander James Dallas, call the new township ‘DALLAS’.” So was Dallas Township named for ‘Alexander James Dallas who had died at Trenton, N.J., Jan. 14, 1817. Probably the petitioners were sur- prised. They had asked that the old Township of Bedford be reinstated, by cutting off from the Townships of Kingston and Plymouth the addi- tional land back of the mountain, which had been added only a few years before. There is nothing to show that there was any local reason for the name. Alexander J. Dallas, son of a Scottish physician, was born in Ja- maica in 1759, married to Arabella Maria Smith, daughter of an army officer stationed in Jamaica. He was educated as a lawyer in London and at the University of Edinburgh and admitted to the Bar. But the climate of England did not agree with Mrs. Dallas, so the family moved to Phil- adelphia in 1783, then the capital of the United States and of Pennsyl- vania. It was the largest city in the country, mlso the wealthiest and most cultured. As soon as possible he became a citizen and a member of the Bar in 1785. He became ac- tive in politics, was a founder of the Democratic Society, and for four- teen years was Federal Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. He was appointed by President Madison as a member of the peace commission at ‘the end of the War of 1812, but his appointment was not acceptable to some of the politi- cal leaders and Albert Gallatin was sent instead. Dallas was appointed Secretary of the Treasury in 1814- 1815, part of the time serving 'also as Secretary of War during the ill- ness of James Monroe. He retired from public life in 1816 end return- ed to his law practice. He was try- ing @ case In Trenton at the time of his death. George Mifflin Dallas, ‘son of the preceding, was born in Philadelphia, educated as a lawyer at Princeton and married Sophie Micklin in 1818. He enlisted in the War of 1812 but resigned in 1813 to go to Ghent as Secretary to Albert Gallatin, one of the commissioners. He was at sea From— By Must be the groundhog took highways were clear. That was on Monday. would be rain, enough to maybe the spring freshets. In April 1817, The Court of Quar- RS Around EK D. A. Weters bringing the treaty home when the Battle of New Orleans was fought. Like his father, he was active in Democratic politics in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and the United States. He was deputy attorney general, district attorney, and mayor of the city. He served as U.S. Senator, minister to Russia, and Vice Presi- dent during ‘the term of James K. Polk. Later he returned to the prac- tice of law, but was sent as am- bassador to Great Britain in 1856 by President Van Buren and con- tinued by President Buchanan. He came home in 1861 and died in 1864. There are about fifteen towns named “Dallas”, or including the word “Dallas” in‘ the name, in the United States. While not too much written, it would appear that our own Dallas, named for the father, Alexander J. Dallas, is the oldest, most of the others having been nam- ed for the son, George M, Dallas. The many towns of the same name causes some confusion in mailing, ete. as many have heard of only the big Dallas, Texas. When we were married we had to start housekeep- ing without a dining table, due to some clerk having made a bill of loading to read, Dallas, Texas. There is a Dallas City in McKean County, almost up to the New York State line, and a Dallastown in York County near the Maryland line. There are towns named “Dallas”, in Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, North Carolina, Oregon, ‘South Da- kota, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and a Dallas Center, Dallas County, Iowa, and a Dallas City, Bl This is written to answer ques- tions raised by one of the local his- tory teachers. Concerning the nam- ing of Tobys Oreck, Mr. William Brewster writes as follows, in his HISTORY OF THE CERTIFIED TOWNSHIP OF KINGSTON: ‘The most notable Indian was, however, Toby, who continued to reside in Kingston Township after its settle- ment, and for a time was on quite friendly terms with the whites. He gave his name to Toby's Creek, Toby’s Eddy and Toby’s Cave; the latter being on the hillside above the eddy and just below the Wood- ward breaker.” Abrahams Creek and flats were named from a chief named Abra- ham. Pillar To Post... Hix just ‘a little peek, maybe by the Night of the moon just before daybreak, with its gathering of im- penetrable grey clouds that completely hid the sun on February 2. And here we thought we were safe! Spring birds were chirping to beat the band on Monday, motor- ists were kicking off the black icebergs from under their fenders, roads ‘were running rivers, little boys minus boots were splashing happily in the puddles. Newcasters reported jubilantly that all On Tuesday the weatherman optimistically predicted that there wash the roads a little and give the melting snow an assist with the spring runoff, and a good thing, too, considering how much snow has to melt and go downstream in Good idea to have some of the melting take place ahead of time... this with a backward look at the 1936 flood. That was the flood where a prominent citizen decided to tether information is available as this is a small and useful outbuilding to a brace of trees at his summer place, and went back the following week to find the Chic Sale com- fortably secured, but his summer home on its way %o Harrisburg, rocking along on the crest of the flood. might not be unmixed with snow. or So. eight inches. a month ago. By 2 p.m. the broadcasters weren't hinting any longer. © were laying it on the line. Three to six inches of snow expected. By 4 p.m. they were suggesting that-the six inches might be Spring was nice while it lasted. So, the small rain would help the melting, and clean the streets, and it might even be possible to get the car washed with no danger of having it revert to its winter smut. At noon on Tuesday, the broadcasters suggested that the rain That was Okay, too. An inch or so of nice white stow would improve the looks of the landscape no end. After all, it would be just as well to keep the flowerbeds under wraps for another week They Highways degenerated rapidly to the point where if you didn’t get a good running start, you didn’t get up at all, same deal we had Ch . + « Safety HUNTING LICENSE INCREASE Dear Editor; With the great number of hunters in the Back Mountain, I think that they should know what is going to be done with the money if the Game ‘Commission gets the hunting license increase. 1 myself as a conservationist and hunter talked to Roy W. Trexler, supervisor of the Northeastern Divi- sion of the Pennsylvania Game Com- mission, and asked him if he would | tell some of the improvements to be, done with the license increase. We first talked about improving | the Commission's nurseries to make available more plants. Then we talked about improving of our game lands by being able to hire more men to take care of the game lands by this increase. Mr. Trexler also told me that they could also be able to buy more game lands and give the hunters better hunting grounds. This I know would help with persons and clubs lands, wu must go to the game lands. se are only some of the improve- ts which could be done hy the ’ Valve increase in hunting licenses. If you are a conservationist or hunter, no matter if you're a youth or adult, you should contact your local Game Commission office. In our area, the Northeastern Division Office is Box 218, Dallas, or call 675-1122 and ask how you may vote. Jim Hopple THANKS FROM JOHN B. Dear Sir; In the eighteen years I have been in Scouting. I have found that people have gone out of their way to help the Scouts.” I guess we sort of take it for granted and for- get to thank our benefactors for their kindnesses. For this reason and because we really appreciate the many things that have been done for us, I would like to thank you for everything you have done for us this past week, I know all my Scouts and their families want to thank you. For my Assistant Scoutmaster Jim McCoog and myself. THANK YOU ash Si fe | Mr. John B, asic a / Better Leighton Never by Leighton Scott POST WALKING TEAM In keeping with President Theo- dore Roosevelt's dicta on keeping marines physically fit, and in Presi- dent Kennedy's revival of the cult, a Dallas Post employee is now in training for long-distance walking, Preferring to remain nameless un- til after certain distance and sp=ed goals have been attained, this person nevertheless announced Monday completion of a twenty-some mile walk from Dallas to Mogan’s Diner, Tunkhannock, Sunday, in five hours and fifteen minutes. The jaunt, which started at 5:17 a.m., was accomplished non-stop, except for one pause—a must. THE RUSH-HOUR STOMP At rush and lunchtime hours, traffic around the parking lot be- tween Church and Lake Streets be- hind the filling station is “pretty funny. I haven't seen so much automotive metal groping around helplessly since the last time I tried to get into Manhattan by the Lincoln Tun- nel on a summer Sunday night. From the stand-point that every- out life over great spaces, and to mold our being into a great shopping center existence, with built-in safety and bliss, this center of Dallas has remnants of old-world charm. From the stand-point of practical- ity, if any ‘given rush-hour traffic situation evokes a laugh from any party concerned, it is doing well. Ice and snow seem to have an affinity for the section of Lake Street which lies between the park- ing lot and Post Office. Cars are always emerging from the lot at weird angles, and pushing their luck on the ice. Meanwhile, trucks are coming in and out of the Post Office. They use care, but they are just one more item in the way. Meanwhile Backwater doesn’t feel like driving his car through to Church Street and waiting for the light, just ‘to make a lousy turn up the highway, when he can much more easily back out onto Lake, and go out the cut-off. At the same time, Bargely has just fifteen minutes to get from his home in Shrine Acres to the office in town, and spots a green light in his favor just as he gets abreast of the tele- phone company. The Light lasts about one and a half seconds. And even then, five lovely Miseri- cordia students are studying philoso- phy in transit from Post Office to restaurant. ° : Meanwhile, whoever has finished putting his letters in that pernicious arm-length mail-box, pulls his car out into traffic. Meanwhile, the three drivers who have managed to squeeze their iron from the highway into the cut-off to Lake Street have tossed into the wind ‘their daily guess as to whether there is any on-coming traffic be- hind the truck parked in front of the milk-machine, and they make a break for it. Tt’s like being in Paris when “the taxis are in bloom, this little bit of our own back yard, this last strong- hold of the devil-may-care driver, where the puny are quickly sorted out, and might is all in the wrist. Edward Gilroy Dies At Mercy Hospital Edward E. Gilroy, gravely ill at his home on Sunset Avenue, Shav- ertown, for a long time, died aged 58 Tuesday afternoon at Mercy Hos- pital. Funeral arrangements are private, at the convenience of the family, from the Snowdon Funeral Home, with burial at Memorial Shrine. Rev. Lyle O. Snyder will officiate. A native of West Pittston, his parents were the late John and Mary McDonald Gilroy. He moved to this area twenty-five years ago, enjoying the hunting and fishing as long as health permitted. He was a cable machine operator at Hazard Okonite Company for 29 years, retiring five years ago. He leaves in addition to his widow, the former Z. Pearl Harding, a brother Leo Gilroy of Hanover Township, several nieces and nep- ews. Mrs. Gilroy is a mainstay of Wyoming Valley Red Cross and its Bloodmobile program, and also a Grey Lady at Veterans’ Hospital. Mrs, Gilroy rounds up blood donors from the community in event of an emergency, sees to it that organiza- tions contribute their fair share for the Blood Assurance Program. Mrs. W. A. Grant, Trucksville, Dies Mrs. Sarah Thomas Grant, 72, wife of Dr. W. Arthur Grant, Trucks- ville dentist, died Tuesday after- had been admitted two weeks earl- ier. Services will be conducted by Rev. Robert Germond Friday from the Harold Snowdon Funeral Home, Wilkes-Barre, with burial in Hol- lenback Cemetery. Friends may call tonight. Born in Wilkes-Barre, of John B. and Casiah Phillips Thomas, she moved to this area in 1938. Member of Trucksville Methodist Church, she was a past Matron of Chapter 90, OES. Surviving are: her husband; daughters: Mrs. Francis T. Roche, Levittown, N. J.; and Mrs. Andrew E. Link, Springdale, N. J.; a brother William B. Thomas, Denver; two 25 aia ll grandchildren. | one’s trying to modernize and spread | noon at Nesbitt Hospital, where she | ; daughter | § The flu has laid many a resident low this week. Local doctors are ad- ministering to the great number of ill without rest. Some folks have still not received their driver's licenses and there is concern that more trouble will be encountered when license plates ar- rive. Faulty Numbering ? James Goodwin, Harris Hill Road, has had to change the deed to his property, insurance policies and many other important items receiv- ed by mail due to the change in numbering of homes. He cannot con- ceive how his house received the number 66, since it is located some distance from the highway and his neighbor was assigned the number 112. Four licenses usually come to the Goodwin home. Two were delivered, two were not. Injured in Fall Mrs. Ira Hoover, Holly Street, Trucksville, fell in her home last | week upon getting up to answer the door and fractured three bones in her left ankle. She is coming along nicely in Nesbitt Hospital. Prizes Awarded Men's Club of Trucksville Meth- odist Church had an attendance of 113 at their annual Father and Son Banquet last week, despite the snowy weather and icy hills. Ted Bennett, toastmaster, award- ed the following prizes: Oldest Fath- er, William Hewitt; Youngest Fath- er, Harry Johnson; Youngest son, Scott Johnson; Oldest Son with Father present, Kenneth Beisel, son of Leon Beisel; Fathers with the Most Sons present, Charles Prutz- man, Herbert Updyke, Thomas Will- iams. Don Finney received a special prize for having the most banquets given by the group. Mr. Finney has chalked up 40 attendances. William Strange, who has been steward of the kitchen for the past two years also received a prize. Lady Toby Rebekkah Lodge No. 154 will hold a Smorgasbord in the Educational Building tomorrow eve- ning. Meal will be served by the WSCS. Mrs. David Mathers is chair- man; Mrs. ward Baker, co-chair- man, Verne Pritchard, Maple Street, was confined to his home last week by illness. He is just getting about again but now Mrs. Pritchard is bedded with the same malady. Fire Company of Trucksville will entertain members of the Auxiliary . at a Covered Dish Supper Friday evening, March 1st. Ass’t. Chief of Police Jesse Coslett following quite a siege of illness. He was not thoroughly recovered but felt the call of duty. Birthdays Greetings _ this week to Martha Hadsel, Mrs. Bertha Evans, Richard B. Davis, Sandra L. Cleasby, Abbie Ann Jones, Gisela Rosnik; Susan Weigel Walch, Lena Ide, James Bot- toms; Eric Dingle, Marian Jones ! Mitchell; James Dick, Peter Martin, F. Gordon Mathers; Wada Keller, Charlotte E, Mathers, Mrs. Robert Johnson; Margaret E. Gardner, John G. Tuscott; Sandra IL. Johnson, reported back to work on Monday | DALLAS, PENN SYLVANIA a Charles Coolbaugh, Mrs. Leland Moss, Evelyn Spencer. ¥ Mrs. Lewis Youngblood in the un- expected death of her husband Mon- day evening and to Robert Moore in the loss of his wife, Helen. 3 Barbara Lynn Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. Dean Johnson is ill at her home. Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Anderson visited their daughter, Mrs. Joan Haughwout, Annandale, New Jersey, over the weekend. WSCS will meet on Tuesday eve- ning. Mrs. Carl Hontz will be guest speaker. Mrs. William Robbins returned oy her home Sunday from Geisinger Hospital. Mrs. Anna Zinn is a patient in Nesbitt Hospital. King, now residing in Chicago, will yearn for his former home come summer. Mrs. King, who did so much work in a number of organ- izations, is still sorely missed. Ruth Owens, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Owens, is recuperiting from an illness. “Bud” Williams may well receive a state job in the near future. 3 Mrs. John Roushey is recuperat- ing from a recent illness which also claimed her husband as the first victim in their household. Mr. and Mrs. W. Dean Johnsox entertained Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Parker, Shavertown, and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Kuhnert, Dallas, at cards recently. Announce Birth . Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Williams, Towanda, announce the birth of a son February 7 in Towanda Mem- orial Hospital. They have two daughters, Patricia and Judy. Moth er is the former Betty Johnson, Trucksville. George Isaacs, Staub Road, iP turned to his home on Saturday 'after submitting to surgery at Nes- bitt Hospital. ‘ Residents attending the supervis- ors meeting Saturday morning sat and shivered in the intense cold. There is no doubt in any one’s mind that Edward Richards is prov- ing to be a most efficient secretary to the board of supervisors. His handling of the job is most admir- able. Mrs. Elmer Ott, Taylor and Mrs. Phoebe Kavlick, Dushore, are spead- ing some time with their sister, Mrs. Theda Hoover. Clyde Littleford Has Twelith Birthday Party A birthday party was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Littleford, Chase Manor, Sunday in honor of their son, Clyde, who celebrated his twelfth birthday and niece Paula Roby, who celebrated her fourteenth birthday. Attending were Paul Little- ford, Clyde Littleford, Paula Roby, Tom Purvis, Judy Young, Billy Young, Mary Pauletti, Joseph Paul- etti, Mrs, Henrietta Romanowski, Mr. and Mrs. John Yuhas, Mr. and Mr [Sam Pauletti, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gimble, and Mr. and Mrs. John Littleford. ® DARING'S MAIN HIGHWAY DALLAS Choice Western Chuck Roast 39 Ib. ce eo 59c¢ Ib. Our Own Sliced Bacon 59¢ Ib. Spring Leg 0’ Lamb 99¢ Ib. Choice Standing Ribs 69¢ Ib. Frozen Cut (10 oz. pkg.) - Frozen (10 oz. pkg.) Bird Seed 3 for $1.00 Corn Baby Limas 6 for 79% 6 for 99¢ 5-1b. bag Wild Scotties (400) Tissues 4 for 89¢ curt RVYaT 1 | WOOD PLASTICS B= LIGHT METALS Seo itin operation today! NIRS ALK LLL VE © Features big 614" capacity, 12%" with height attachment © Wood cutting speed of 3000 FPM with 1725 RPM motor ® Double sealed, lubricated-for-life ball bearings ® Guides set for micrometer accuracy @ Table tilts 45° right, 10° left evoseae liudesvavusvnasuunann Pay As Little As $1 3-00 on our Approved Credit Plan Gay - Murray Co. * Tunkhannock, Pa. Sincere sympathy is extended to Friends are betting that William -