The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, May 02, 1963, Image 1

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    73 YEARS A NEWSPAPER
Oldest Business Institution Telephone Numbers
Back of the Mountain 674-5656 674-7676
TEN CENTS PER COPY—SIXTEZN PAGES MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER. A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION VOL. 75, NO. 18 THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1963
THE DALLAS POST
YWO EASY TO REMEMBER
Highway Construction Company
Names Order Of Road-Project
! : ? Trucksville Tracks
Jack-knifes, Flips, Will Be Relocated
Trying To Pull Over Demolition and clearing of build-
Raymond Malkemes, Jr., Harveys | ings, railroad relocation, bridge re-
Lake RD 1, and his wife were un-
hurt Monday afternoon when a car
they were towing jack-knifed
around and caused their car to flip
one mile north of Hunlock Creek on
Route 11.
According to Ray Malkemes, Sr.,
who went down from Dallas to help,
his son said that cause of the jack-
knife was a signal from a State
trooper to pull over. In bringing
his rig to a halt abruptly enough
to avoid hitting the rear end of
the patrol car, Malkemes braked
out of control.
w
The trooper, Nevin Hamor, was
making a routine check of the tow-
ing rig, a tow bar.
~ Antiques Show
Sets Its Stage
Young Churchmen
Give An Assist
On page 2, sectica B, is a picture
of Episcopal Young Churchmen ar-
® ranging for booths at the 11th an-
“ nual Antiques Show and Sale
scheduled for Tuesday and Wednes-
» day ‘at Prince of Peace Episcopal
Church parish house, together with
details of an event which has be-
come a Back Mountain institution.
In addition to the usual display
of antiques on the main floor, flea
market and flower market compete
for space on the lower level, a sure
come-on for the flower lover and
the do-it-yourself addict: Come and
see what’ you can pirk up in a
Hitchcock chair or 8 rashstand in
need wf ref; ine.
{ £0 show old
“highlighting old
Snack Bar will be open both days
of the show from 11 until 10, offer-
ing homemade food of all kinds.
A ham dinner will be served Tues-
day and chicken-loaf on Wednes-
day. Serving will be from five until
seven. Reservations for both din-
ners may be made by phoning Mrs.
Walter Kozemchak, who is in
charges/nf’ the kitcl on’ comn@ttee.
She will be assisted by Mrs. Edwin
Roth and Mrs. Ben Edwards.
Furthers Chance
# As Pro Artist
Updyke Is Thrilled
With National Prize
Winning national first place in
his division of a safety poster con-
test launches young John Updyke,
14, well on the way to realizing
his ambition of becoming a com-
mercial artist.
John says he is “real proud” of
the honor, received Thursday from
Wyoming Valley Motor Club, of
$50 and a certificate for his traffic
safety poster “Help Your Safety
Patrol.”
The winning entry competed
against about 16,000 entries
tionally. :
Son of Police Chief and Mrs. Her-
bert Updyke, 101 Davis Street,
Trucksville, John is an ' eighth
grader at Dallas Junior High School.
Presentation was made by Clif-
ford Bigelow, secretary-manager of
the motor club, at a meeting of
Wilkes-Barre Kiwanis Club, Hotel
Sterling. John’s was the junior
division of the contest, which was
in its nineteenth year this year.
na-
Poster was of a school safety pa-
trol boy helping a little girl across
the street. It was done in black
and red tempra-color on white, in
silhouette style, and was about two
weeks in the making, according to
the artist. (
If talent is inherited, John gets
his from his mother, he says. Mrs.
'Updyke does drawings, sometimes
using her son’s paints,
For the past two years John has
won first prize in the Dallas Wo-
men’s Club art contest. His school
teacher is Mrs. Nancy Hontz, and
he takes private lessons from Mrs.
Alice Welsh Jenkins, Kingston. The
motor club presented awards to
Mrs. Hontz and to Dallas Junior
High School also.
First art-work he can remember
is a fire-engine he drew in kinder-
garten. He received a lot of praise
for it at the time.
Stops Car Safely
When Stricken
A former resident of Idetown,
suffering a severe stroke, was able
to guide his car off the freeway
near Trenton, and stop it safely be-
fore becoming unconscious. Harvey
Bottoms, found by the police and
rushed to St. Francis Hospital, is
listed as in critical condition. He
was on his way to his employment
at Fairless: Steel Mills.
location, and grading, is the order
of work in the first stages of con-
struction of the new Dallas-Luzerne
Highway, according to H. J. Wil-
liams and Company officials.
The York construction company
was awarded the contract last
Thursday by the Pennsylvania De-
partment of Highways, after the
project had undergone delay and
‘one degrading set-back when a lone
bid early in the year was refused.
Base president Robert Bartell,
York, said he does not know what
date construction will begin, since
the state has not yet issued its ‘“no-
tice to proceed,” the official go-
ahead on production.
When that notice is received,
there will be a meeting ‘of company
officials and engineers with high-
way department officials in Scran-
ton.
Yesterday and today, Williams
engineers intended to visit in the
Back Mountain, and look over site
of the project which will involve
4.61 miles between Luzerne and
Dallas.
Stretch of railroad to be relocat-
led is that In the Hillside-Birch
ish section, from just below
the blueprints to point 254-0,
above the “big bend.”
Lehigh Valley Railroad men wil
help the contractor relocate the
tracks.
H. J. Williams and Company has
not yet decided on an actual start-
ing point for the building part of
the job, according to Bartell.
Summer School
Starts July 8°
Summer school classes will be
conducted mornings, starting July
8 and ending ‘August 16, in Dallas
School District for its secondary
students. Class arrangements will
be made after the program has been
explained to the students and a
survey ‘made to ' determine the
number interested in specific sub-
jects.
_ Apnroval ¢£, their school principal]
and guidance counselor will have to
be received by students before ob-
taining parental permission to at-
tend.
Out-of-district students, admitted
on a tuition basis, will need their
school principals or guidance coun-
selors recommendation.
Civil] Service Exam
At High School Soon
A representative from Washing-
ton headquarters of U. S. Public
Health Service will conduct the
competitive Civil Service examina-
tion for Stenographers and Typists
at Dallas Senior High School, Wed-
nesday, May 8, at 8:15 a.m.
Public Health Service expects to
have attractive and interesting po-
sition openings for competemt and
well-trained high school graduates
who attain eligibility by success-
fully passing the Civil Service Ste-
nographer or Typist examination.
Entrance salary rates are $3820
for typists and from $3820 to $4110
for stenographers, depending on
training, experience, and examina-
tion rating.
{Harter’s dairy at point 286-40 on:
| Area Cancer Drive
Progressing Well
Several hundred volunteers have
been doing a terrific job carring on
the 1963 Cancer Crusade in the
Back Mountain, according to Mrs.
Frederic Anderson, district chair-
man.
List of captains is as follows:
Dallas Township: New Goss Man-
or, Mrs. George Bauman; Old Goss
Manor, Mrs. Edward Boltz; Fern-
brook, Mrs. Andrew Roberts; Over-
brook, Mrs. John O’Malia; East
Dallas, Mrs, Fred Stevens; Kunkle,
Mrs. Sheldon Mosier; Lake Catalpa,
Mrs. Allison Thomas; Shrine Acres,
Mrs. Frank Thompson; Elmcrest,
Mrs. J. F. Sallada.
Mrs. Jerome Gardner headed
Dallas Township crusaders.
Dallas Borough: Mesdames Ken-
neth Young, Bruce Slocum, Lloyd
| Williams, Robert Parry, Harry Lef-
ko, Betty Beizup, Francis Barry,
Frank Kuehn, Robert Brown, Robert
Stair, James Huston, Jr.
Mrs. Homer Moyer was chairman
of the area.
Trucksville: Mrs. Richard Cromp-
ton, general chairman; captains:
Mesdames Walter Phillips, Harold
Croom, James Lenahan Brown, Ed-
ward Johnson, Fred Blair, Walter
Marz, Conrad Martin, George Gail-
lard, Fred Dingle, Robert Kleiner.
Mrs.. Michael Stanley is chairman
of West Trucksville.
Mrs. Albert Gulitis, Lake Town-
ship chairman announced the fol-
lowing captains: Mrs. John Zales-
kas, Mrs. Howard Piatt, Mrs.
Charles Casterline,
Mrs. Elmer Laskowski and Mrs.
Sidney Fielding were captains in the
Jackson area under chairmanship of
Mrs. Roland Gensel.
Mrs. Richard Garman served as
captain of Brown Manor in the
Carverton area and Mrs. Danald
Britt, Bunker Hill under chairman-
ship of Mrs. Harry Spare and Mrs.
David Perry, Jr.
Mrs. Charles Sieber headed East
Shavertown area and Mrs. Frank
Wadas, the west sector.
Mrs. William Gentile was captain
Mrs. Gordon Dawe.
Mrs. Edward Dorrance headed a
large group of volunteers in Frank-
lin Township.
Bloodmobile In
Area May 10th
‘Red Cross Bloodmobile will be at
“Back Mountain YMCA May 10th,
11:45 to 5:45 to enable Back Moun-
tain groups to fill quotas for the
next six months. ;
A new service will be available:
a responsible woman will take care
of children, while the mother is
giving blood. A baby-sitter will
help some donors to better their
plans for coming in.
Mrs. Edward Gilroy,
coordinator, announces a quota of
110 pints. Groups effected include
Commonwealth Telephone Company,
Natona Mills, Gate of Heaven Par.
ent-Teachers Guild and Back Moun-
tain Parent-Teachers Council. 'Any.
one needing transportation should
contact Mrs. Gilroy at the YMCA.
Mrs. Gilroy says, “There is some-
thing about the giving of blood that
provides an unequaled feeling of
himself.
“It is unfortunate so many people
have an unfounded fear of giving.
“Everyone knows there is a great
need for blood. When one gives a
pint of blood, he knows that some-
one, somewhere, a wounded service.
man, an injured child or an indus-
trial worker, will receive strength
or perhaps have his life saved by
the donor’s blood.”
Red Cross
Kiwanis Pancake
Kiwanis Club members will flip
pancakes all day Saturday at Dallas
Senior High School, when the com-
munity will take aboard more cal-
J ories than it can comfortably digest,
Festival Saturday
to raise money for Kiwanis activi-
ties. Here are Robert Dolbear, pro-
motion and advertising manager,
and Robert Parry, general co-chair-
man.
at Lehman under chairmanship of |
Beating Victim
Is Badly Hurt
Savagely Attacked
In Dark At School
Daniel Yanchick, 15, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Alec Yanchick, Bunker
Hospital following a brutal beating
by unidentified assailants early Mon-
day morning at Dallas Junior High
School.
Yanchick had entered a darkened
interior lavatory in the annex build-
ing shortly before morning classes
and reached to turn on the light
when he was grabbed from behind,
his arms pinioned.
Vicious blows smashing into hig
face and abdomen left the youth
unconscious. Upon returning to his
senses, the boy made his way to
the principal's office, where John
Rosser immediately administered
first aid and called the family phy-
sician, Dr. Richard Crompton.
Mr. Rosser and George Me-
Cutcheon, a member of the faculty,
removed the boy to the hospital,
where X-rays were being taken to
determine whetltler internal injuries
had been inflicted, possibility of a
ruptured spleen being of primary
concern.
The injured youth was still un-
able to walk at the time this news.
paper went to press.
Although five teachers were in
the building, so swift and quiet was
the attack that nothing was heard,
nor were the aggressors apprehend-
ed. Matter has been turned over
to Dallas Township Police for in-
vestigation.
Officials are of the opinion that
a fracas, begun elsewhere, ended at
the school where the attackers lay
in wait for their victim before the
day's sessions began.
Fire Drill Success;
BEnother Next Week
Eighteen members of Dr. Henry
M. Laing Fire Company were pres-
ent at the fire drill Tuesday night,
confined indoors because of weather.
Chief Daniel Richards instructed
in use of pumps and smoke masks.
Another drill will be held next
Tuesday night at 6:30, for operation
of pump and suctiom hose.
Guardians Go Bail
For Robert Fuller
A Demunds man, Robert Faller’
21, was released Tuesday from Lu-
zerne County prison, when $2500
bail was posted .for him by Major
Fuller and Lillian Fuller, guardians,
Courtdale.
Charges of burglary by forced
entry of fifteen Luzerne County bus.
iness establishments, including one
robbery at Ross Williams’ service
station, Lehman, two each at
Gorda’s Service Station, Trucksville,
and the Ranch Wagon, Fernbrook,
and one at Bolton's Diner, Shaver-
town, were placed against Fuller,
and, in some of the cases, against
two Wilkes-Barre men and a Marcy-
town man.
Burglaries alleged by state police
took place between November 15,
1962 and March 17, 1963.
Kiwanians To
Flip Pancakes
Will Serve All Day
At Annual Festival
Dallas Kiwanis Club is holding
its annual pancake festival, Satur-
day ‘at the Dallas Senior High
School Cafeteria. Serving will be-
gin at 10:00 a.m. and continue
until 7:00. p.m. Co-operating will
be Key Club, Keyettes and the
Ladies Auxiliary of Kiwanis.
Co-chairmen are George Thomas
and Robert Parry who have ar-
ranged a program of delightful en-
tertainment.
Ira Smith, chairman of arrange-
ments has obtained an electric
range with the compliments of the
U.G.I. Co. for a door prize.
Promotion and advertisement is
in the hands of Robert Dolbear and
Leo Corbett Jr. is handling pub-
icity.
Bill Baker and George McCutch-
eon ,ticket chairmen announce that
tickets may be obtained from any
Kiwanis or Key Club member or
at the door.
The Ladies Auxiliary will stage a
bake sale. Each visiting lady will
receive a free box of famous Aunt
Jemima Pancake Flour.
President Merrill Faegenburg ex-
presses his thanks to the community
for their cooperation in making last
year’s festival such a complete suc-
cess, and is looking forward to see-
ing every one at the féstival this
many contributions of the Kiwanis
Club to the community are depend.
ent, upon the success of the festival
and this year our scholarship fund,
work with boys and girls, com-
munity service, . Back Mountain
Baseball for boys, farm league, and
other worthwhile community serv-
ices will be supported from funds
realized from Saturday's Pancake
Festival.
Hill, is under observation at Nesbit:"
Saturday. He pointed out that the |
Marchers Show Three Years of Prizes
Leaders of the
Dallas school marching groups, who
cleaned up again this year at Nanti-
coke, and their advisors and sup-
porting members of the administra-
tion are justifiably proud of the
trophies which represent three con-
secutive years of first place in the
competition.
First row: Robert Van Orden and
prize-winning | Susan Kitchen.
Second row: George McCutcheon,
advisor; Thomas Peirce, captain;
Donald Anderson, former captain;
William Cooper, color guard cap-
tain; Glenda Williams, former cap-
tain; Susan Karl, former lieutenant;
Marsha Sowden,
Eck, captain; Sharon Titus,
Chamber Tours
Natona Mills
See Friendly People
As A Selling Point
“Folks around here are friend-
lier,” was the consensus of opinion
of a committee of Greater Wilkes-
Barre Chamber of Commerce, guests
of Natona Mills and plant manager
Charles Gardner Tuesday afternoon.
Purpose of its monthly visits,
according to secretary Richard
Cronin, is chiefly to project to
the community an appraisal of its
industry. Also the group wants to
let industry know their area is
interested in them.
A number of committee members
expressed their belief that the na-
ture’ of the people in the greater
Wilkes-Barre area would'be 2 strong
selling point insattracting industry.
Occasion of the conversation was
lunch: provided by the mill for visit-
ing members before a tour conduct-
ed by the manager. After lunch,
Gardner welcomed the men to the
plant, and spoke of Natona’s local
growth since, ground was broken
for it im 1946.
He also spoke of Natona's dy-
namic changeover to the ‘Tricot’
process of weaving in the last dec-
ade, and listed the various products
which now stem from the Angelace
and Jersey material produced here.
Some 250-275 persons are em-
ployed by the local plant, which
has an annual payroll of well over
one million dollars annually. Em-
ployees come from as far away as
Tunkhannock to work here. Male-
female ratio is 50-50.
Raw materials taken in are chief-
ly nylon, bought from seven differ-
ent producers. Textile products are
sent from Dallas to a Glens Falls
plant, where they are dyed. Natona
also has its own dye house here.
Manager Gardner ‘was enthus-
iastic about the plant’s productiv-
ity. He said Indian Head Mills,
Inc., which bought Native Laces
and Textile’s four plants, has twen-
ty-one plants, elevem union, includ-
ing this one, and ten not.
Especially interesting to the tour
was the process whereby acetate
threads joining strips of market-
able fabric are dissolved in acetone
by immersion of the fabric, while
the nylon products remain un-
scathed in the desired widths.
guard captain.
Back row: Dr. Robert Mellman,
superintendent; Thomas Jenkins,
assistant principal; Frank Trimble,
principal; William Wright, Kiwanis
advisor; Mrs. William ‘Wright,
| Keyette advisor; Mrs. Betty Hanna,
captain; Beverly | Junior High advisor; Mrs. Elizabeth
color | Titus, Colorette advisor.
Members of Key Club and of the school marching units
picked up a number of honors this weekend, ‘both at the con-
vention in Harrisburg and at the Loyalty Day Parade in
Nanticoke.
For the third year in a row, the marching units took first
prize in the parade.
At the convention thirteen club members were the proud
recipients, for the whole Dallas group, of two plaques for out-
standing state and national work.
They also received a letter for outstanding monthly re-
ports to District headquarters in Harrisburg.
With them were their hard-working advisors, George Mc-
Cutcheon and Robert Dolbear.
For the marching teams, Mrs. Elizabeth Titus received
a trophy for their honor.
Sales Manager
GEORGE Ww. JACKSON
Philip H. Moore, Vice-President
and General Manager
Incorporated, Dallas, announces the
appointment of George W. Jackson,
Los - Angeles, as General Sales
Manager.
Mr. Jackson, a native of Cleve-
land, Ohio has been West Coast
Sales Manager for Linear and pre-
viously associated with the Frank-
lin Wolfe Division of Parker Seals.
He was founder and President of
the Bay Rubber and Plastics (Cor-
poration of Cleveland, Ohio, :
Mr. Jackson attended Cleveland
College of, The Western Reserve
University and is a member of the
Dover Lodge F.&A.M., Lake Erie
Consistory and Al Koran Shrine,
Cleveland, Ohio. He is affiliated
with the Los Angeles Rubber Group.
Naiona Shows Plant To Guests
Members of the visitation com- |
mittee of Greater
Wilkes-Barre Chamber of Commerce | Samuel,
look over the warping process of | Michael
George Bierly, chairman of the com.
Wilkes-Barre | mittee; Charles Gardner, J. Russell
Robert Ell, James Price,
Kravitsky, Jr., Donald
Natona Mills, as it was explained by Smith, Samuel Bannan, John Uhl,
Charles Gardner, plant
Tuesday afternoon.
Included in the picture are:
manager, | Joseph
|
|
Hall, Jr., Wilbur Shorts,
Richard Laux, Hanford Eckman, Ed-
gar Lashford, and Robert M. Way.
of Linear,
Disputed $4500
Again A Problem
Board Relying Upon
Solocitor’s Advice
oh 2 ARAL
Problem . of the disputed El
estate transfer tax from sale of Na-
tona Mills, plaguing Dallas Borough,
which claims the $4,500, and Dallas
Township, which has it, loomed up
again, with the beginning of a new
month.
The township still held the sum
‘mtact as the Board of Supervisors
met last night. Borough Council's
meeting will be May 14.
Attorney Frank Townend, town-
ship solicitor, has received to date
no more communications than that
revealed at last meeting, in which
Natona formally requested return
of ‘the money, which it was told
was paid to ‘the towaship by mis-
take.
Transfer of title of the mill took
place early last year, and company
lawyers paid the tax to the town-
ship, because existing deeds regis-
tered the property as being in that
jurisdiction. However, a 1952 Su-
perior Court decision acknowledged
the local annexation of the mill by
Dallas Borough.
Borough Solicitor Robert Flem-
img has received a letter from Na-
tona’s lawyers in New York saying
they are still studying the matter.
Council agreed to wait, and avoid
unpleasant legal proceedings, until
Natona and the township work
something out.
Although Natona is still studying
the matter, their formal request for
return of the money has been reg-
istered.
President Supervisor Fred Lam-
oreaux said early this week he
would rely on Solicitor Townend’s
“| cident.
Pilot Killed
In Mid-Flight
Related Here
Bir Turbulence
Probably Caused
Disintegration
The Michigan man who was killed
Tuesday morning twenty minutes
after take-off from Forty Fort when
his plane disintergrated im midair
two miles north of Benton, was
closely connected in this area, a rel-
ative by marriage of Mrs. Gordon
Wolverton, Shavertown, and Rev.
and Mrs. Charles Frick, formerly of
Huntsville.
Oakley Lutes, 56, in the face of
known turbulent weather, headed
west when he learned that a plane
had come through safely from Wil-
liamsport. He expected to make a
landing in western Pennsylvania cn
business while en route to Jackson,
Michigan.
At 10:20, parts from his Navien
showered the montainous terrain
west of Shickshinny, and ‘the fuse-
lage ploughed through the trees on
the Vernon Belles place, Koonsville.
Indications are that the plane may
have been nosed into a small twister,
and exploded as a house explodes
in the path of a tornado when air
pressure drops suddenly. Fire did
not follow the disaster. The body
of the pilot was found in the cabin.
Three months ago, during heavy
snow, Mr. Lutes, in the east in a
helicopter, was forced down near
Phillipsburg, the rotor blades shear-
ed off by snowdrift when the copter
flipped on its side. It was a family
occasion at the time, a wedding in
Doylestown when Earl Frick’s daugh-
ter Helen was married.
It was a family funeral that
brought Mr. Lutes east to accomp-
any his family to Sunbury when his
aunt, Mrs. Clyde Laubaugh was bur-
ied. He had parked his Navion at
Forty Fort, spending the weekend
with his sister, Mrs. Robert Rusbar.
Rev. Frick, now pastor of Benton
Christian Church, went immediately
to the scene of the crash Tuesday
|p He reports that wreckage
was so complete that little was left
except fragments.
Fragments are now being reas-
sembled in the Belles garage by an
inspection team of the C.AB. to
determine probable cause of the ac-
Mr. Lutes, a nephew of the late au
Dr. Emory Lutes, Wilkes-Barre vet-
erinarian, was a real estate man.
He will be buried Saturday after-
noon . at Valparaiso, Indiana
Dallas Fire Co.,
Ambulance Drive
Work Toward Purchase
Of New Equipment
Dallas. Community Ambulance
Association and Dr. Henry M. Laing
Fire Company will launch their an-
nual coin card campaign May 11th.
Volunteers have already begun. dis-
tribution of cards.
‘As in the past years proceeds will
be used in part to pay current ex-
penses and largely to set aside
monies for capital outlays and
eventual purchase of new equip-
ment. Members anticipate the |
usual cordial respomse. If anyone
is missed, please contact a solicitor
or - officer of either company. {|
Closing date of campaign is Septem- |
ber 21st.
In the Kunkle area, for
ambulance Association the
paign will begin on July 20th.
Committee and solicitors include
the following: )
Chairman of the ambulance drive
is Mrs. James Wertman; co-chair-
men of the fire company drive, Mrs.
Nelson Thompson and Henry Peter-
son, ~ Captains are Mrs. Edward
Cavan, Mrs. Paul Labar, Mrs. Wil-
bur Davis, and Mrs. Willard Covert.
the |
cam- |
legal advice, since the matter has
resolved itself to a strictly legal
question.
Lamoreaux also indicated his |
willingness to be reasonable about
for return of the $4,500.
SPCR Buthorized To
Pick Up Stray Dogs
The SPCA has been deputized to
come into Kingston Township on a
regular week-by-week basis to pick
up. stray dogs. without licenses, and
licensed dogs running at large. Chief
Updyke says that owners may get
their dogs back again by paying
ain impounding fee, but that he
plans to put teeth in the State law
against dogs rumning loose.
Now is the beginning of garden-
ing seascn, and already property
owners are besieging the police de-
partment for relief from wandering
dogs which are digging up the flower
beds. Three children have recently
been bitten, according to Mr. Up-
dyke.
Buy It At Stone's
Hurray for Stone’s Grocery Store
in Beaumont. Starting with five
Dallas Posts per week, the number
has now worked up to thirty-five.
any request by the company itself |
‘Workers are James Wertman,
Wilson Cease, Edward Estock,
Henry Evans, Wayne Schmoll,
| Leonard Hotvey William Baker, Jr., aid
| Joseph Adamitz, Robert Brown,
| Jerry Machell, Arthur Ross, R. B.
Botsford, Robert Besecker, Edwin
Roth, Richard Oliver, Boyd White, |
William Lamb, Al Mcintross, Robert
Rice, Robert Covert, Joseph O'Don- |]
nell, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Young, |
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Brobst, Mr.
and Mrs. H. L. Hoover, Mr. and Mrs. |
i Thomas Bunney. a:
Judy Wertmen, Karen Harvey, |
Teresa McCue, Edna Rogers, Rose-
mary Kravits, June Hayes, Edith
Dietz, Susan Jones, Agnes Gregson,
Carmela Cavan, Kathy Bomberger,
Gloria Covert.
Mesdames M. U. Rumbaugh, An-
drew Sholtis, G. Dunbauld, D. An-
derson, George Swan, Carl Goering-
er, Oscar Dymond, William Ostrum,
Fred Nicely, Jr., Edward Kupstas,
D. Daron, Lewis Reese, Thomas
Bottoms, Laverne Race, Basel Lord,
Richard Bennie, Archie Johnstone,
Louise Brown, Ben Edwards, Ross
Lewin, Ermest Wolfe, Robert Parry, *
Nathan Weiss, William Cooper,
George Ruckno, Herman Thoma
Robert Wilde, Freda Woolbert/
Oliver Rome, George Bauman
Ignatius Gallagher, Robert Youn
John Yaple, Donald McCrea, Frank
Wagner, Emma Creagh, Laing Cool-"|
baugh, Thomas Moore, Pete Lange, |