I game a 73 YEARS A NEWSPAPER Institution Mountain ‘ Oldest Business | Back of the THE DALLAS POST 4 WO EASY TO REMEMBER Telephone Numbers 674-5656 S747676. as TEN CENTS PER COPY— FOURTEEN PAGES Valley To Lake, And Then Some, In Big Hike Local Boys In Group Of West Side Youth Who Hiked Highway A cheerful parade of ninth grade marchers, many girls, paced Me- morial Highway from Kingston to Harveys Lake Saturday, and de- cided ‘they liked it so much they'd walk around the lake too. They were stopped from continuing back to Kingston only by darkness, at Forty-Second Street. Despite sore feet, eleven made it to a party in Forty Fort Satur- day night, ; The West Side Catholic High School freshmen, several of whom were local, started from Stull "Brothers, Wyoming Avenue, at 9:20 ® ™ Street, in the morning, Dallas at 11:30. Number ranged anywhere from the fourteen who began the 23-mile hike, in token of President Ken- nedy’s new fad, to nineteen. They took on friends, curiosity-seekers, and a Post reporter on the way. Five left the procession near the picnic-grounds. . passing through By unspoken agreement, feet called it quits as the remaining class-mates, sipping hot chocolate at Tim Houlihan's home, Forty- watched sun and temperature sink slowly in. the west. No sense going crazy about this: thing. Reportedly, everyone there was in favor of continuing to Kingston. Whoever was against it was not available for comment at this time. Local boys in the march were: Houlihan, Pat Malloy, Bill Nothoff, and John Ruckno. Chuck Dunn, Mike Young, and Leighton Scott, Post representative, joined at Sun- set, Harveys Lake. Group telephoned football coach and history teacher Bernard Popson from the residence of Neil Mac- Intyre, Laketon, to remind him of his alleged statement that they'd never make it past the railroad tracks. School authorities discovered the plan for the hike one week earlier, and quickly announced ithat they did not support. or sponsor it. How- ever, they voiced no objections to wn “independent try. Ih an apparently unrelated exer- ‘cise, two Central Catholic girls, Mary Chase and Christine Steele walked ‘to school Thursday from Dallas. Also taking part in Saturday's epic walk were: Karen Krogulski, Rosemarie Kosek, Ann Marie Blaso, Peggy Hogan, Mary Carol Hornyak, Carol Piledggi, Judy Healey, Elaine Schlosser, George Dailey, Velda Ja- nicki, Judy Tobin, John Kosek, and Benjamin Rydjewski. “ There were routine cries of “oh, my aching feet,” especially from the girls, as the group proceeded in the unplanned circumambulation of Harveys Lake, but each wag game to go as far as the rest were. Sun- day motorists scratched their heads, and passed with a shrug. The boys and girls stopped for soda at McCrory’s, Shavertown, lunch at Houlihan's home, soda at Maclntyre's, refreshments at Puter- baugh’s Store, Sunset, and rest ‘again at Houlihan's. * ~ “A number of friends came along ‘in cars, many especially to see how the group was doing. One, Frank Smith, came along just in the nick | of time, and helped to join dissident elements of the procession. Forgetting for a moment that they were trying to walk distance, and not to cut corners, six paraders seceded when they viewed the Alderson side so temptingly close from Pole 70. After squabbling among factions, the rebels took ito the ice. Re- mainder continued to walk until picked up by Smith, whereupon they set some kind of record for space-filling in the car, and met the others across the ice. Whole group made another short- cut over the ice at Outlet, to the amazement of fishermen. Three girls left the hike at Ide- town Corners, when a worried father drove out to find them.. Kiwanis Club Hears Germond Pastor Speaks On Brotherhood: Rev. Robert E. Germond, pastor of Trucksville Methodist Church, spoke to twenty-five members of Dallas Kiwanis Club last Wednesday night at Irem Country Club. Rev. Germond, chairman Thomas Kreidler, talked on Brotherhood Week, calling atten- tion to the other fifty-one weeks in the year when Brotherhood could also be practiced. Bradford Alden, vice - president and cashier of Kingston National Bank, who recently moved to Yeager Avenue, Dallas, was introduced.as a new: member, Merrill Faegenburg presided. i a |Grand Champion In Science Fair Will Exhibit At King’s March 17 CHARLENE MAKAR : [Charlene Makar has done it again, continuing what promises to be an annual winning of high awards at Science Fairs. A junior at West Side Central Catholic, showing her Per- petual Motion Pump for a grand champion: rating at her own Science Fair of 330 projects, she will exhibit her project at King’s College March 17, and later at Scranton University if she again wins. Last year she took a first in the engineering division at King’s, with a problem of insulation, and a third against heavy competition at the Northeast Regional Show at Univer- sity of Scranton. stration of the action of a frog's heart under direct stimulation, she studied with Dr. M. Kantor, Chief of Medical Service at Veterans’ Hos- ‘pital, and with Dr. C. A. Laubach, head of cardiac research at Geis- inger. Her instructor is Sister Mary Letitia, S.C.C., Central Catholic High School. During the summer she worked with Sister Mary Jean- | ette, RSM, College Misericordia, and | did her kymographing with Ann Marie Kuharcik, College Misericordia instructor, devising a’ machine called the cardiac nerve reactor which re- cords : the heartbeat by: sight and sound.” a Charlene ‘is daughter of Mr. ‘and Mrs. Vincent Makar, New Goss Manor and a former pupil of Gate of Heaven school. In working up her present demon- | MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION Noxen trappers and hunters were no more thrilled than Mike himself last week when their old friend, in whose Evans Falls store they had spun many a hunting yarn over years past, trapped a forty-one pound beaver, The sixty-year-old storekeeper, who does his own cooking, scrub- bing, and even runs his own coon- dogs, is totally blind. Deputy game warden William Ev- ans, Noxen, one of Mike Salansky’s closest friends, says Mike can do almost everything a man with eyes can, and this time did more. Robert Teetsel and Evans helped North Eaton to cut ice, but Mike set his own traps, including the one which yielded the seventy four inch pelt. Teetsal was with Mike on Mon- Blind Trapper Traps Big One, Biggest Beaver In Whole Life day the 18th, and saw a big smile grow slowly across his friend’s face as his hands found the beaver in one of the traps and measured its size even while under water. It was the biggest beaver he had ever caught. Teetse]l and Evans themselves had cleaned seven beavers out of Game- lands 57 area, covering twelve to fourteen miles at a time on snow- shoes, but had not gotten one this size. All the men who gathered at Mike's place at Viola Park to talk hunting could wish no greater re- the blind hunter choose the sites at | ward for him than this. The next day William Evans wrote down the story of Mike's big beaver, tipping his hat.to the trapper ‘who has lived most of his life in dark- ness”, but “who travels the woods | with the boys as if he could see.” Accused by Commonwealth of Pennsylvania of “involuntary man- slaughter” in the death of Rose Marie Spencer, 17, 100 Claude Street, Dallas, in g car wreck July 8, 1962, in which she was driver, Nancy ‘Bialogowicz, 16, Harveys Lake RD 2, was acquitted yesterday at trial be- fore Judge Richard Bigelow. The trial] took the better part of a day, from 9:30 to 3:45. Prosecution failed, the judge said, to prove that ‘the alleged unlawful act was proximate cause of Rose Marie’s death. Unlawful act alleged was criminal negligence of Miss Bialogowicz, found to exist by coroner’s inquest Aug- ust 2, 1962, as driver of the car which overturned on Lake Catalpa Road. In civil suit last week on the same set of facts, Judge Frank Pinola ap- proved a settlement of $7,500 in favor of the family of the dead girl, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Spencer. Testifying at the trial yesterday were state police Paul Kleckner, and Joseph F. Skuntz, Chief of Police Frank Lange, Earlene L a y a o u, 16, Dallas RD 2, who with Marjorie Bynon, 19, Main Street, was also passenger in the fatal automobile. Facts studied during the trial in- “cluded the speed of the car, the origin of the group, Joe's Tavern, Demunds, the amount of beer drunk by defendant, and the fact that Miss Bialogowicz was driving under a ‘Junior permit’, which permitted her to drive only until midnight. Accident happened shortly after mid- Young Lake Driver Acquitted Of Involuntary Manslaughter night. Failure to prove proximate cause means that deceased may have in- terposed some: action which con- tributed to her death. Rose Marie was killed when the car swerved in a ditch and overturned on top of her. Her head and upper body were out . the window after car tipped over. Alsg testifying was defendant's mother, Mrs. Frank Bialogowicz. Representing Miss Bialogowicz was state, Assistant District Attorney Sol Lubin. . Former ' Governor Arthur ceased. Legal grounds for a conviction of involuntary manslaughter requires prosecution ‘to prove: no malice; un- unlawful act must be proximate cause of death; negligence must be | in disregard for safety of others. Prosecution failed to prove all legal | points to make a case. ‘Backo Free On Bail John Backo, Meadowcrest, Trucks- ville, was released from prison last week under bond furnished by his parents, Held under charges of indeccal assault, assault and ‘battery an surety of the’ peace, the local man was allowed to go free under $2500 bail by Judge Jacob Shiffman. Original amount of bail had been set at $3500 by Justice of the Peace | Freder ick Anderson. Attorney Thomas Mack, and for the. | Letterman Tops In Engineering Noxen Boy Is First Lake-Lehman Winner EDWARD HOLLOS Take one seventeen-year-old com- bination varsity basketball player, Student = Council - president, and straight-A man in high school sci- ence and mathematics, and chances are he'll win not only ballgames, but public recognition as well. Edward Hollos, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Hollos, Noxen, received his recognition Thursday at Kings College. He is Lake-Lehman High School's first winner of the Pennsylvania So- ciety of Professional Engineers an- James represented family of de- lawful act must be less than a felony; | | nual award for best all-around stu- dent planning to study engineering. “A tireless worker”, as described by one of his teachers, Ed has piled up an impressive number of extra- | curricular credits as well. | In addition to holding Student "Council and athletic honors, he is vice president of the senior class, vice president and two-year member of the National Honor Society, pres- ident of the Advanced Math Club, | member of the “Round Table” staff, and last summer he attended ‘the Junior Engineers and Scientists Summer Institute at Lehigh Univer- sity. He has received straight A’s in | science and mathematics all the way through ‘school. + Northeastern University, Boston, he accepted him for admission ‘this ear. ' Hollos family has lived in Noxen for fourteen years, where they mov- ed from Larksville. Ed has a brother, | John, in the seventh grade at Lake- Lehman. School District To Join Board In Taxing Units Meadowcrest People Offended At Reports 0f Tax Non-Payment Dallas Area School District will join Kingston Township Supervisors in an effort to collect real estate payments from Luzerne County Housing Authority, operating a hun- dred family unit at Meadowcrest it was disclosed by Dr. Robert Body- comb, president of the board. No remuneration is being sought from occupants of the homes, who are paying a per capita tax of $13 per adult, with the exception of those inhabiting the dwellings for short periods. children to parochial schools were disturbed over reports that Meadow- crest was to be assessed. Many others were disturbed at reports in several papers which in- dicated, erroneously, that they per- sonally did not pay school taxes. ‘Actually, only the Authority, as landlord, has been tax-exempt on real estate. When the Housing Authority planned to erect the structures in 1950, representatives met with local officials and ‘school board, propos- ing that both sign an agreement allowing the agency to be tax free, until the bond issue set up for a forty-year period was liquidated or profits realized, Kingston Township School Board, comprised of Robert Currie, Stanley |1 Davis, Stanley Henning, Frederic Anderson and J. D. Hutchison re- fused to sign. Board of Supervisors Arthut Smith, Philip Pascoe and William ‘Myers accepted the pro- posal. ; Land needed for the project was sold to Ben Banks, contractor, by Arthur Smith, taking a large por- tion of his farm. The state then purchased the acreage from Banks. (County Commissioners appointed board members to look after its up- keep and rental.- Until Dr. Hugo Mailey became chairman of the Board of the Housing Authority, many units went unrented and the enterprise reportedly showed a de- ficit. bedroom units: are being converted into three-bedroom homes with all units being: occupied. Several one- bedroom structures are bringing a monthly rental of $40, two-bedroom units, $54: three bedrooms, $57.50. (Continued on Page 6 AY: Under his direction, many one-- Many residents who send their (8&3 VOL. 75, NO. 9 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2 i963 SENATOR SORDONI CARVED HAUNCHES FOR THE OX-ROAST People who attended the ox- roast sponsored by Common- wealth Telephone Company in support of the Back Mountain Memorial Library Auction, three years ago, come July, will remember that Senator Sordoni, arrayed in tall chef's hat and white apron, carved with his own hands some of ithe smoking haunches of beef at the outdoor supper staged on Gate of Heaven parking lot. Senator Sordoni was vitally in- terested in everything that per- tained to the Library, and a close personal friend of the late editor of the Dallas Post, Howard Risley. a Freddie Hennebaul Will Be Eighteen Freddie Hennebaul will be eighteen years old next Wednesday. Every- body in the Back Mountain who has followed his progress since he was almost fatally injured over a year ago, will want to send him a birth- day card. His address is: Johnstown Rehabilitation Center 727 Goucher Street Johnstown, Penna. Freddie, whose life was despaired of for months after his neck was broken in a wrestling meet at Lake- Lehman high school last January, is regaining use of his arms. As soon as arrangements can be completed, he will be taken to Un- iversity of Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia for removal of calcium deposits in his shoulders, which make motion painful at present. Therapy can then be stepped up, and weaken- ed muscles strengthened. Under a program of eight hours of therapy a day at Johnstown, Freddie is sitting up in a wheelchair, eating by himself, and able to type short letters. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hennebaul, have re- cently received a note from Freddie. Send Freddie a card for his birth- day. Two Big Bulldozers To Clear Gameland's Gamelands 57, west- of Noxen, favorite ground of many Back Moun- tain sportsmen and conservationists, are scheduled for extensive bull- dozer clearing to improve wildlife habitats, according to Pennsylvania Game Commission, Dallas. introduced by program |: Still full of steam at Warden Place, Harveys Lake, a co-educa- tional crowd of West Side Catholic “leg” of their 23-mile walkathon from Wyoming Avenue, Kingston, to and around Harveys Lake, Satur- Love of walking itself, however, took a crowded back seat (far right) to convenience, when a rable couple, bolted ranks (center) and cut across the frustratingly round-about Alderson end at Pole 70. | gether, the remaining fourteen caught a mile-long ride in an al- | ready crowded car, driven by a Freshmen tooy Higley, Kingston Around Lake To ldetown Chuck Dunn, and Tim Bill 'Nothoff, Houlihan urge photographer Leigh- ton Scott to jump on board. The Church Street, was awarded the PMA Bronze Award for one-year record of safe driving for Kutz Bakery, Inc, Wilkes-Barre, last night. Well-known bakery products sales- man for the Back Mountain, where he has covered the same route for many years, Bernie is among fifteen Kutz drivers honored by Pennsyl- vania Manufacturers’ Association Casualty Insurance Company. Four From Dallas In Northeast Band Four members of Dallas Senior High School Band will attend North- |- east District Band at East Strouds- dell, Richard Ratcliffe, Lee Philco and William Cooper will be accom- Director Lester Lewis. 15 at Wilkes College at an audition. out for the State Band which meets later in the spring. Admitted To Hospital to ‘Nesbitt Hospital Tuesday in | Kingston Township ambulance, burg March 7, 8, and 9. John War- panied to East Stroudsburg by Band : The four boys tried out October | While at Stroudsburg, they will try. Of Heights Home A burglar surprised in the act slipped out the back door of Clifford day night before he could be identi- | fied. ris was entering the front door around 9:30 when she heard the back door shut. She knew her hus- band and children were still at church. The house was dark. {She found the bedroom ransacked, the -bed torn apart, and clothes pulled out of drawers and thrown around in the upstairs boy's bed-! room. Officers 'Cliff Foss and Ray Titus’ investigated. Nothing was taken from the house. Mosier In Playoffs With 6-2 guard Clark Mosier, Dal- i las, leading his team Susquehanna University basketball “| team meets the champion of the Middle Atlantic Conference's South- |ern College Division, Drexel Insti- | beginning MAC playoffs, at Muhl- enberg College, Allentown, i Garris’ home, Jackson Street, Fri- | Recruiting Office, Returning from church, Mrs. Gar- | in scoring, With officers of the U.S. Naval . guests, Back Mountain Civil War i Roundtable viewed films of Naval | Conflicts Thursday evening at the Back Mountain Library Annex. The importance of naval participa- tion in the War between the States was revealed in the documentary portrayal loaned by the 4th Naval Division. And shown by James Malk- | emes. The Civil War began with the North heavily endowed with /assets, including a large navy. The South had no navy, and of its able bodied men one quarter were slaves. The plan of the North to blockade the southern ports and split the Con- federacy was met with resourceful- ness. Privateers slipped through the blockade, obtaining needed goods From the European continent and : strong sympathy for the southern , cause. The War also found wooden ships becoming obsolete with the intro- duction of the ironclads, Monitor and Merrimac. The forerunners of | our present submarines were also Sam Diloer, Trucksville, was taken | tute of Technology, tomorrow night developed during this period. One interesting point brought out by Tom Gully, program chairman, Wilkes-Barre as [Participation Ot Ironclad Ships was the gentlemanly conduct appar- ent among fighting units during the Civil War as compared to our pres- ent day disengagement from personal association with the enemy. A paper on the “Trent Affair” was | read by Mrs. Thomas Heffernan, Sr., who stated that the sympathy of the English people was with, the South due to their similar social behavior and agricultural pursuits. The capture of James Mason and John Siddell, ex-congressmen from the South, could well have triggered the entry of Great Britain into the battle on the side of the Confederacy, had it not been for the intervention of Abraham Lincoln and Prince Albert. Carl Goeringer, Jr., read a report on the Monitor and the Merrimac. Richard Garman presided. The group will have a dinner meeting April 18th at Irem Country (Club, with Col Fletcher Booker speaking on “Civil War Artillery.” Present were Harry R. Fletcher, [ SKI, USN; Arthur C. Bauman, Lt. JG, USN; Clyde A. Teems, YNC, USN; William C. Conner, QMC, USN; John Grencavage, GMGC, ‘USN; M /Sgt. | Thomas Beky, Gaeringer, Bruce Goeringer, Carl F, US Army; Carl F.! New Librarian Back Mountain Library Associa- tion executive board announces that a new librarian has been pro- cured. Miss Elizabeth Ryder, Lancaster, will stant her work April 1. Miss Ryder, with thirty-three years of library experience, took library science at Drexel and at University of Wyoming after grad- uating from Millersburg = State College. : December 27, Miss Ryder met with the selection committee, Hom- er Moyer, Mrs. Fred Howell, Mrs. H. W. Smith, Mrs, Thomas Heffer- nan, and D. T. Scott; studied the library, and was pleased with tentative arrangements. In Geisinger Recent admissions to Geisinger Medical Center, Danville, were Wil- liam T. Levi, Shavertown, February 20, and Cynthia J. Cobosco, RD 1, Hunlock Creek, February 25. Goeringer, Jr., Mrs. Thomas Heffer- nan, Sr., James Joseph, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Garman, Mrs. Dana Grump, Thomas Cully, Robert Scrimeour, Mrs. F. W. Anderson. High !Schol freshmen continues a | day. group of six, including one insepa- In order to keep the gang to- | friend who happened along. Here | four Back Mountain men rode in A 1 the trunk. —Story Column 1— Safe Driver : : ic Ww fe Daver | Burglar Slips Out vil ar Round-Table Discusses | Board Announces | Ambulance Calls ernar ‘Bernie” Williamson, Dallas ambulance made the follow- ing calls this week: Mrs. M. Bush, Maplewood Avenue, transported February 18 to Nesbitt Hospital, Bill Berti and Robert Besecker at- tending. Friday, February 23, Anna Brown, 63 Joseph Street, to Nesbitt, Lane Jarrett, Charles Flack and Les Tinsley attending. Mrs. Anna Polachek, East Dallas, transported Monday, February 25, to General Hospital, Bill Berti and Jack Berti attending. Tuesday, February 26, Mrs. C. Hartley, Elmecrest, brought from Geisinger Medical Center, Danville, to General, Cliff Foss, William Kelly, and Mrs. Delmar Wintersteen, R.N. attending. #* ® we * Ambulance News: New hydraulic stretcher is ex- pected in ten days, having been on order since the meeting last week. New Reeves hand stretcher was received Tuesday, and placed into service that evening. Shortest, Coldest Month Today the last day of the shortest month, and the coldest, in is the year, with subzero temperatures i predominating, ! a 11 Senator Andrew J. Sordoni, 73, Passes Away Quietly In Sleep Dynamic Founder Saw Phenomenal Growth SENATOR SORDONI With the death of Senator An- drew J. Sordoni early Wednesday morning at his ‘home in Miami Beach, Florida, the Back Mountain has lost a ‘loyal supporter and the | Dallas Post a close friend. Death came quietly to this dy- namic man of affairs. He simply did not wake up at 7 a. m.. Each morning at 9 he was peshtomed to call his son, Jack, tal , key. men in his industrial ro Se ing his hand on affairs. He had ‘made his usual call on Tuesday. His daughter, Mary, Mrs. Joseph Sekera, was at Miami Beach at the time of his death. At last reports, the family planned to fly from Flor- ida to Philadelphia this morning. Arrangements for the funeral had not yet been completed at press time, Dr. and Mrs. guests of the Sordonis for a ten day vacation in January, found the Sen- ator in good spirits, and enjoying the Florida sunshine. : A resident of Harveys Lake dur- i ing the summer months, Miami Beach during the winter, and Sterl- ing Hotel in between seasons, Sen- ator Sordoni was peculiarly a part of .the Back Mountain, where he had built up the Commonwealth Telpphone Lom nny. from’ “small be~ ginnings to its present 4500 _squar mile service area, with a plant in- vestment'of ten and a half millions, and four and a half million construc- tion program slated for 1963. Sterling Farms, with the famous glass barn and pedigreed cattle, at Alderson, is one of the show farms of ‘the State. Grasslands Festivals were often held there, featuring demonstrations of new forage cut- ting, crop rotation, contour plow- ing under aegis of former Agricul- tural Extension agent Jim Hutchi- son. Mr. Sordoni was proud of his small beginnings fifty-three years ago, when as a newly married man of twenty-two with a wife to sup- port, he borrowed a team of horses from his father, Nicholas, and went Eugene Farley, 7 i into the hauling business for him- 5 self. ‘His father, who came to this country from. Venice shortly after the close of the Civil War, was of an old and wealthy family, instilling into his twelve children, of whom 3 Andrew was the youngest, a love of art and beauty as well as a de- termination to make a success in life. Senator Sordoni’s Mary, was his idol. For forty years she was interpreter at Luzerne County Court House. In 1959, Senator Sordoni was tapped ‘for Man-Of-The-Year by Back Mountain Protective Associa- = { tion in recognition of his service to the community in building an organization which furnished em- ployment for increasing numbers of Back Mountain residents as well as for people in many other communi- mother, almost / ties welcoming Sordoni Enterprises. In October of 1960, Senator and Mrs. Sordoni, the former Ruth Speece, observed their Golden Wedding. The Dallas Post ran a picture of the couple. A loyal sub- scriber to the Dallas Post, Senator Sordoni had it forwarded to him in Florida and to his home at Har- veys Lake. His organization includes a chain of hotels headed by Hotel Sterling; Commonwealth and Harveys Lake Light Companies; construction units. He was vice president of Wilkes College Board of Trustees. The sci- ence hall, the Admiral Stark build- ing, was one of his sonstivction i projects. His son Jack was his rigs hand man, his son-in-law Joe Sekera a key man. / It is next to impossible to write “was” about Senator Sordoni. For generations he has been a living force in the community, leaving his imprint upon its face. Lehman Emergency Mrs. Hannah Jones, Carpenter Convalescent Home, Idetown, was taken Friday night at 8 to Nesbitt Hospital in Lehman ambulance, Lee Wentzel and William Hardisky at- tending. ; d