i I PT TRC NIT 73 YEARS A NEWSPAPER Oldest Business Back of the TEN CENTS PER Cor YOURTEEN PAGES Memorial Plot Is Dismantled Trucksville Shrine Victim Of Progress Another prominent landmark has disappeared from Memorial High- way as bulldozers making way for the new road rip out adioining grades and completely change the landscape. Latest to fall victim to the march of progress is the attractive plot at the interkeetion of Harris Hill and Main Highway, maintained for twenty years by the Trucksville Service Mothers ;and Wives Club in memory of those who fought for their country and those who gave their lives that others might re- main free. A beauty spot in the heart of the verdant village, the well kept lawn and carefully tended flowers above which flew daily the Stars and Stripes, except in stormy weather, the memorial plot attract- ed much favorable comment from motorists travelling through the area. 3 Organized in 1942 and headed by the late Jane Lohan, former Trucksville postmaster, the local’ group remembered the boys in the armed forces on birthdays and Christmas and gontinued to send _ greetings throughout the year to show that those far away were not forgotten. Many flags were own from the tall flagpole, high above Trucks- ville’s busy corner, some donated by individuals and organizations several by former Congressman, Mitchell Jenkins and Congressman Dan Flood. With the, spot now dismantled, club members decided regretfully ~ that the time had come to disband., Last officers of the group were Mrs. Albert Williams, president; - Mrs. William Gregory, vice president; Mrs. Jacob Beline, secretary, Mrs. Lebn Beisel, treasurer; Mrs. Stanley Henning, chaplain; Mrs. Fred Case, contingent and Mrs. William Rhodes, organist. Loses Life In Head-On Crash ]. B. Carr Ledves 9-Week-0ld Son e The controversy about the ef- ficacy of safety-belts is stalemated by tragedy early Saturday morning, when one man wearing a safety belt and one man thrown clear of the wreckage were both killed in a head-on crash. Jeffrey B. Carr, 25, Trucksville, and Donald R. Closterman Jr., 23, Kingston, were pronoumced dead at the scene, one and one half miles south of Mt. Pocono. Impact was so great that Carr was hurled 100 feet into a drainage ditch. The. driver of the other car, operating on the wrong side of the” road, a bartender at Carousel Motel, escaped with minor injuries, and was listed in fair condition at Monroe County General Hospital, East Stroudsburg. He is thirty- year old Robert Theos, Mountain- home. . ) Both cars were completely de- molished, the small Triumph con- vertible in which Carr was a passenger, reduced ‘to shards of 8 glass and metal. Born at Altoona, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Carr, Carr was a sopho- more at Wilkes College. He had graduated from Wilkes-Barre Day School, Mercersburg Academy, the Graham Eckey School in Florida, and St. John's College, Amnapolis. Before - enterting Wilkes, he had served four years in the Navy. . . He was a member of St. John’s Lutheran = Church, Wilkes - Barre. | His pastor, Rev. Frank Jogwick, conducted services from the Snow- don Funeral Home in Kingston, Monday morning. Burial was at Oak Lawn. - The victim leaves his parents; his wife, the former Judith Ann Jones of Austin, Texas; a mnine-week old son, Scott Mitchell; and a brother David, West Palm Beach. Pallbearers were William C. Henry, David Carr, George Wil- liams, Gail and Robert Spare, and » Jack Farr. Lettermen Boosters Will Meet Tonight Newly organized Dallas Area Lettermen-Booster Club will hold its first general meeting tonight, start- ing at 8 p.m. in the auditorium of "Dallas Senior High School. The main speaker will be Repre- sentative Francis “Chink” Crossin, former basketball All-American from: Penn and star forward for several years with the Philadelphia Warriors. Crossin told club presi- dent Bob Anderson that while the House session may have just ended, he will make special. arrangements Institution Mountain illegally. a p— Plus Final Auction Round-Up Monday, Rugust 5, 8 P.M. Final meeting of 1963 Library Auction Chairmen is scheduled for Monday, August 5, 8 p.m. in the Library Annex. Chairman Robert Fleming will receive reports from all chairmen, and entertain sug- gestions for guidance of Frank Huttman, chairman for 1964. Pool Looted Sunday Dallas Township “police are in- vestigating the ‘theft late Sunday night of about thirty-five dollars from vending machines at Sacred: Heart Pool. Entry was gained to the building | by smashing a window. Chief Pete Lange says. it is the third such offense at the pool re- cently, the other two occurring be- fore the apprehension of a group of Luzerne and Larksville boys -who were swimming there at night Summer Hours For Library Summer hours for Back Moun- tain Memorial Library will see the library closed Tuesday evenings, | open as usual Thursday evenings, until ‘September 10, when schedule | will revert to normal. Summer schedule: Monday, closed; Tuesday, Wednesday, Fri-’ day, 1:30 to 5:30; Thursday, 1:30 to 8:30; Saturday 10:30 to: 5:30. 8-Page Tabloid New Chief Takes Over At Red Rock Funderburke Assigned To Local Radar Post Benton Air Force Depot of the 648th AC and W Squadron Red Rock has a new commander. Lt. Colonel William O. Funder- burke, 45, assumed his new duties on July 1, coming here from an Air Force Installation at Spokane, Washington. manding officer has been in the | service of his country for 22 years, | dur ‘ng which time he has been on assignments both here and abroad. He is married and the father of two sons, fifteen and eleven years | of age. ( | Col. Funderburke replaces Capt. | |G: I. Dora, who served as tempor- | | ary head of the radar station fol- | lowing the death of Colonel Ross P. | Hanna, who met a tragic death on = morning of March 16, when his car skidded on ice coated Memorial | Highway. | | | i ' More Speed Signs Lake Township police have dis- tributed additional 35 - mile - per- ‘hour speed limit signs around the | Lake, and are awaiting the repaint- ling of more. # work now in progress. late last year The new home of Mrs. Marguerite Shaver, Laketon, ready for occupancy as carpenters await completion of plastering Shaver Home Nearing Completion go is almost Builder Bob Mathers will finish minor details, hoping to have . the residence ready for occupancy early in -September. ; The ‘Shaver family is presently living over the old garage on the property, during the summer months. The new structure will replace the old home destroyed by fire. Two Scouts Peddle Fifty One Miles Jeff Morris, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Morris, Shrine Acres and Roger Maury, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilson J. Maury, ‘Shady Side, rode their bicycles 51 miles to Blooms- burg to ‘qualify for a Scout Merit Badge. the 101 foot excavation in two digging, right. to insure his being at this first and important meeting, Ambulance Crew John Sheehan's ambulance crew, now captained by Les Tinsley since John was grabbed up by the army, remains on duty until midnight Sun- day. Next week's crew is: Ed Roth, captain; Charles Flack, Tony Zach- ary, and Lane Jarrett. Drilling, Digging at Big Bend; Dallas Post camera took to the hills this week to see just what is making all the fuss and smoke on top of the elbow mountain at the big bend, lower Kingston Township, where the hill is being split for a new curve for the highway. Work is coming along fine, according to the men, who operate stages — drilling, above left, and ; ' The rain we've had is regarded as minor by experienced con- struction workers, who even found it a relief from the rock dust. After some 40 feet of excavation with 60 more to go, the base is bed rock. Four removable drills pierce the substratum, followed. A native of Texas, the new com- | This Week: Auction — Horses MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION Candy Bar sales contest held by Back Mountain Baseball for Boys to raise funds for the new refresh- ment stand and press box at the Little League field on Church Above are the winners in the | ow P POST Little League Candy Sale Winners Rewarded in the picture are me of the youngsters : rt T. Parry who pre- ‘awards to the winners. left to right: B. Nagle, La W. Frederick, L. Cor- bett, A. Williams, J. Martin, B. Shoemaker, T. Reese. Second row: K. Morris, G. Sto- larick, R. Belles, J. Pope, E. Pryor, S. Lefko, W. Lawler, D. Chamber- lain, G. Sponseller. Ocelots To Accomp: Unusual visitors will come to the | Back Mountain next week when the Long. Island Ocelot Club will hold | its eighth annual picnic in Shaver- town, Event is scheduled for August 31 and 4 with Mrs. John Kessler, | Shaver Avenue, as hostess. Long | a feline loyer and owner of a four | year old , jocelot named Loki, Mrs. Kessler i§ the only local member of the gro p- ? Expected to attend the meet wil! be guests from Canada, New York; Florida * and possibly California. The Club is a coast to coast organ- izatiom which boasts 250 members. Branches extend to the European continent. $ Dan Mannix, feature animal writer of True Magazing, jwho has a pet margay, hopes to be among the visiting contingent. President of the Long Island group is Mrs. Catherine Ciscin, who will bring young Carlotta, her pet ocelot. Members will stay at a Dallas Motel, which has permitted the animals to be housed with their owners. A tour of the region is also included on the agenda. The ocelot, tawny yellow or red- dish grey in color and marked with black spots, ranges from Arkansas to” Paraguay and is much larger than the ordinary cat. Its agility pAPIWners In Scheduled Visit To Locality times to be a rather rough and tumble companion. Named Director Of Cancer Board Shavertown Woman Active In Program CA Shavertow: % woman was elected Auk members Hip on’ ..thevelauzerie: | County Unit Board of the American Cancer Society recently. Avenue, was, named a director at the annual dinner meeting in Hazle- ton. Mrs. Anderson has been active in’ Cancer Prevention work for a number of years, serving as cam- paign chairman for the Back Moun- tain district during three crusades. She has been chairman of the Dallas Cancer Center for six years, coordinating its efforts, organizing dressings groups and promoting its educational programs. Literature, film showings and school textbooks have been widely distributed in a constant effort to present to the public the important knowledge necessary to save lives from the dread disease. On the service end of the pro- is. notable, Those living with other with their distant kin, but tend at cats in a household become playful | gram, the Back Mountain has fur- nished thousands of dressings and other aid ‘to cancer victims. [= by two power shovels, biggest of which is seen above right, a number of Euclid earth-movers and trucks which dump the dirt far back on the mountain, and a gasoline truck. Big shovel uses 300 gallons of gas a day, fuel transported from several large underground tanks a in Trucksville. t H. J. Williams base headquarters Another four to six weeks’ drilling and digging is esti- mated for the cut through the big bend, which, widening the curve to six degrees, will leave just the extremity of the old mountain (above) with the electric line tower and the rear of the ‘mountain, beginning with stake in foreground, Mrs. Frederick Anderson, Pionger |, Seek To End RR Run From Dallas-Luzerne Partly because the new high- way is forcing 'relocation of tracks for two-thirds of a mile and partly because of scant us- age, the Lehigh Valley Railroad yesterday petitioned the ICC in ‘Washington to permit them to abandon 6.2 of the Bowman’s Creek Branch between Dallas and Luzerne. Hound Races Sunday Coonhound water races will be held ‘Sunday July 28, all afternoon, ig Shady Side Lgke Kunkle. dog is eligible to. swim’ to enter. Fifty dollars paid finals. No ad- mission, and’ the pubic is invited. All-Stars Beaten In Close Contest Back Mountain All-Stars, hoping to push their illustrious record to a second State championship in a row, were disappointed Tuesday night, as a strong Pittston team broke a 3-3 tie in the last inning with a single that drove in the de- ciding run. Katyl pitched four-hitter for us, Tribbett a six-hitter for Pittston. Drawn For Jury Bernice Kreitzer, Fernbrook, and Pauline Polachek, Dallas R. D. 1, were ' among seventeen women chosen to serve as the September Sessions grand jury the week of August 12. At the base, NOES ” oto Tabloid Insert VOL. 75, NO. 30 THURSDAY, JULY 25, 1963 Third row: B. Kern, Mesdames Morris, Corbett, Nagle, Belles, Wil- liams, Parry, Sponseller, Frederick, Chamberlain, Martin, Reese. Absent” when picture was taken: D. Cutten and E. Labatch. Little Leaguers Net Some $1600 Candy Sale Defrays Much Building Cost Sale of candy bars by Little Leaguers to help defray cost of the new buildings at the’ field on Church Street netted the league about * $1600, according to official announcement. Cost of the buildings: themselves Iran about $2900, Any | i “Lop salesmen of the Back Moun- tain Baseball for Boys program were D. Chamberlain, with 230 bars of candy, and ‘W. Frederick, with 195. Each won a camera. Mrs. Robert Parry, wife of the league president, was in charge of the program. Third highest salesman was G. Sponseller, with 156 bars. He won a boat. Winners of a bageball were: E. Pryor, K. Morris, B. Nagle, B. Merithew, J. Martin, A. Williams, B. Kern, 8. Lefko, L. Corbett, B. Shoemaker, and T. Reese. Winners of a baseball T-shirt were: W. Lawler, E. Labatch, D. Cutten, R. Belles, G. Stolarick, and J. Pope. Mrs. Parry said of the campaign: “The success of this sale shows, by united effort by the boys and the support of the people of the Back Mountain, that it is a good com- munity to be part of.” Expect Solid Rock for Last 60 Feet two projects are underway for re-routing the creek—one on the upper side, just above the hairpin turn, and the other down below O’Malia’s in Courtdale on the east side of the road. The creek project in Kingston Township, now being dug with ‘a ‘back-hoe, involves installation of a three-pipe, covered under- ground aquaduct, some 640 feet long. ; Operations in the area behind what used to be Ross Williams’ gas station involve pouring concrete for a second bridge abutment, one already standing. Similar abutments are being poured for bridges in Shavertown and Trucksville. TWO EASY TO REMEMBER Telephone Numbers 674-5656 '| directors. ¢ ‘Dallas Chapter O.E.S. | just missed the. Pierce boathouse. 674-7676 Cave Is Elected Post Commander Legion Chooses Four To Home Association George Cave is Commander of Daddow-Isaacs Post 672, American Legion, for the coming year, and Leonard Dougherty is Senior Vice Commander, as a result of elections : held recently. Richard Fuller, Steve Hrrtiman,. ¥ Bernard McDermott, and Harold @ LaBar were elected to the Home As- sociation, which consists of twelve Gus Shuleski ran for Commander against Cave, this year’s Chaplain," and Joe Oravic opposed Dougherty for his post. - : Candidates who swept into office with no opposition are: Curtis Bynon, Junior Vice Commander; William O’Briem, Service Officer; Richard Fuller, Historian; Richard Staub, Chaplain; Sergeant-At-Arms, Tom Kane and Rowland Spencer; and Treasurer, Ed Buckley. Other candidates for the Home’ Association were: Leonard Harvey, Dougherty, Cave, and Spencer. Bi Auction On Saturday’ Dallas Chapter # 896 Order of the Eastern Star invites the public to bid, eat, and enjoy the annual Auction this coming Saturday, July 27, at Mrs. Evelyn Smith’s home, Meadow Lake Farm (near Jackson Correctional Institution). Myron Baker and Dick Demmy, auctioneers, will have new and old goods ready to go at 2 p.m. Mrs. Jane Schooley has "her home. grown plant and flower booth set up, while Laura Dymond and Olga Kozemchak have been shining jewelry for their booth. The Children’s Corral, Bina Hold- redge in charge, will take care of small fry with games and contests and some bidding of their own too. Then to climax a well planned program “The- Little Red Wagon will be chanced off. This “Little Red Wagon” is a teenager's dream of a sport car. See Sarah Strauser and Mildred Howell for donations before the evening's bidding closes. Scarlet Corvair Dives Into Lake Four Pringle Girls 2 Suffer Minor Hurts A’ small scarlet Corvair took a dive under a boathouse at Harveys Lake Tuesday night, at 11:30, wedg- ing itself between the wall, a badly bent maple tree, and the boathouse v underpinning, its tail high in. the | air, its front end and windshield smashed to smithers. The four young girls from Pringle who had been attending a dance at Hanson's, erupted from the car, screaming, but with only minor bruises and lacerations. Taken to Nesbitt Hospital in Lake Township ambulance, they were treated and discharged. Two youths galloping up as the ambulance drove away, stood there with their mouths ajar. They. sput- tered, “What happened? We were ° supposed to have a date with those | girls.” They surveyed the wreck- age, went off shaking their heads. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Pierce, Pole 271, awakened by the crash in front of their house, watched as Chief Edgar Hughes and assist- ant Walbridge Leinthall investigat- ed, and Walter Meade raised the car to tow it to his garage in Ide- town. “Probably it would run, the engine didn’t get wet,” he opined, while elevating it with chains. ; The car is the second that has gone into the lake on that straight stretch of road. Last year’s car Rppeals Board Hears Two Cases Saraka Gets Approval; Getz Fence Is Changed Appeal of Joseph Saraka; Hunts- ville Road, to erect a two and a half car garage in the rear of his property was approved Monday eve- ning by the Kingston Township Board of Adjustment. J The Trucksville man sought per- mission to build a cinder block one story structure in which to hoe a truck, car and utility trailer. : Lot has a frontage of 44 feet with 43.8 footage in the rear amd a depth of 325 feet. Proposed | building would have a clear- ance of only six feet on one side and three on the othgr from neighy # bors’ line.’ Mr. Saraka obtained motarized statements from Mr. Samuel and | Mr. Beck approving proposed plan. hardship and produce no hazard. {Continued on Page 2 4