SECTION A — PAGE 2 | THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 oo a . . S Member Audit Bureau of Circulations = Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association < Member National Editorial Association CuLat Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subcription rates: $4.00 a year; $2.50 six months. No subscriptions accepted for less than six months. Out-of-State subscriptions; $4.50 a year; $3.00 six months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15¢c. “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its 73rd Year” A non-partisan, liberal progressive mewspaper pub- lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania. a We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu- scripts, photographs and editorial matter unless self-addressed, stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be held for more than 30 days. When requesting a change of address subscribers are asked to give their old as well as new address. Allow two weeks for change of address or new subscription ‘> be placed on mailing list. The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local hospitals. If you are a patient ask your nurse for it. Unless paid for at advertising rates, we can give no assurance that announcements of plays, parties, rummage sales or any affair for raising money will appear in a specific issue. Preference will in all intances be given to editorial matter which has not previously appeared in other publications. National display advertising rates 84c per column inch. Transient rates 80. Political advertising $.85, $1.10, $1.25 per inch Preferred position additional 10c per inch. Advertising degdiine Monday 5 P.M. : Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged at 85¢ per column inch. Classified rates 5c per word. Minimum if charged $1.15. Single copies at a rate of 10c can be obtained every Thursday morning at the following newstands: Dallas — Bert's Drug Store, Colonial Restaurant, Daring’s Market, Gosart’s Market, Towne House Restaurant; Shavertown — Evans Drug Store, Hall's Drug Store; Trucksville Cairns Store, Trucksville Pharmacy; Idetown — Cave’s Market; Harveys Lake — Javers Store Kocher’s Store; Sweet Valley — Adams Grocery; Lehman—Stolarick’s Store; Noxen — Scouten’s Store; Shawaneses — Puterbaugh’s Store; Fern- brook — Bogdon’s Store, Bunney’s Store, Orchard Farm Restaur- ant; Luzerne — Novak’s Confectionary; Beaumont — Stone's Grocery. Editor and Publisher Associate Editors— Mgrs. T.M.B. Hicks, Leicaron R. Scott, Jr. . Myra Z. RISLEY ees sees ss en ee Social Editor . ............ .Mgrs. DoroTHY B. ANDERSON Business Manager ........... cioue. Doris R. MALLIN Circulation Manager .............. Mgrs. VELMA Davis Sports -...... Gea Jim LOHMAN Accounting ...... SANDRA STRAZDUS Editorially Speaking: Immunity For A Quarter A quarter is the price of a loaf of bread, a pound of marshmallows, three tomatoes, half a dozen ears of corn, a small bottle of aspirin. A quarter is what used to admit you to the movies. It will buy you ‘a pint of cheap ice-cream. A quarter will buy you status in the Sunday School collection plate. And it will buy you immunity from Polio. Luzerne County Medical Association has mounted the band wagon, following the lead of many other counties in Pennsylvania, and is now sponsoring the countywide vaccination program. Take advantage of the program. It is not alone for your benefit, but for the benefit of everybody with whom you come in contact. If you get polio, you are a menace to the community. Line up September 15, take your lump of sugar with its drop of polio vaccine on it, drop your quarter in the box, and be thankful that one of the most devastating diseases of the century can now be controlled, along with typhoid fever and diphtheria. © It would be cheap at twenty-five dollars.. © At twenty-five cents, it is fantastic. Salute To Clarence Laidler After reading the comprehensive coverage on our Clarence Laidler’s retirement after forty-two years of banking, in the town papers, it seems redundant to publish the same material in the Dallas Post. Mr. Laidler has always been one of the more solid citizens of the Back Mountain, spearheading movements for Civil Defense, zoning, better cooperation between Township and Borough, and everything worthwhile in the area. Some years ago, when the merger of First National Bank of Dallas with Miners National Bank was new, resi- dents were delighted to find veteran banker Laidler sta- tioned at the Dallas Bank for a time. ; What Clarence is going to do with his spare time is anybody's guess, but knowing the calibre of the man, the Dallas Post feels that it will be interesting. Any more wild ducks on the pond, Clarence? Safety Valve AND NOW A CURFEW Dear Editor: " It’s good to be home — after nine weeks in the hospital — even though you do see your husband come round the corner of the barn every time you look out the win- dow — hear his voice every time the phone rings — or miss the big kiss amd “Hi”, Myry, at 5 o'clock. But the church bells! On Sunday — the day one needs to sleep after being wakened ‘every four hours to take medicine — 7:00, 7:30, 8:00, 8:30, 9:00, (I must have dozed off throught ten) 11:00, 12:00, 6:00 — and now a curfew! All we meed now is both mills to blow whistles at 12 and 1 to signify lunch hours — just like the big boys do in the cities! Our folks came up the hard way. Dad taught all day and tutored every night umtil midnight to send us girls to college. Saturday at supper he’d say, “Sunday school tomorrow, kids. You get your baths, get dressed and I'll be up in time to cut your Weekday nights, We were home — no curfew! As grandpa used to say, cow! IT WAS 80 YEARS AGO Dear Editor: brother Phil Reynolds, Thirty Years Ago column. member of the welcoming group. fingernails.” We were up — with- | at the University of Pennsylvania out bells. with a gcholarship toward a Mas- RNAS, Bro Mayra enh CI NL MI 0 2 TEINS A Sa Sinan a ~ nda “you may go out, but I want you home by 9:30.” “Holy What's the world coming to.” Myra Risley Thank you for the item about my in your Phil was flying the lead plane in the welcome flight, and he was the first to spot Balbo and his armada. Later on, the Italian flyers were entertained im New York, and some of them returned on the Ile de France. I met them en route to the Sorbonne, as they were in my sec- tion of the train going to Paris from Le Havre. We conversed in Spanish, and they were most courteous when I explained that my brother was a The item in the Post was passed on to Phil's older som, George Mal- colm Reynolds, who is staying with us this summer and will matriculate Shavertown came out in number one position in the Miners’ Bank League this year after a very suc- cessful season. _— THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1963 Shavertown Team Tops Miners Bank League First row (left to right): Dungey, Andy Roan, Chuck ‘Glenn, Brian Wadas, Bob Merithew, Scott Wimmer, David Way, Ricky Shel- | Porter, Cliff | don, amd John Schneider. " Second row: Robrt Way, coach; Eddy Miskil, Bob Considine, John Bob Youngblood, Donald Brobst, Tonny Fanmick, Bill Flock, Bob Boylan, Robert Filar, Gary Klip- pinger, Lyle Merithew, manager. Absent: Donald Voelker. Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post It Happened 30 Years Ago Eighteen huckleberry pickers from Wyoming Valley were lost for three days on North Mountain. Boy Scouts later traversed the same route. Saturday night closing of Dallas Bank was authorized. The bank had been open for business, the only bank in greater Wyoming Valley to give this service. Closing hour was set for noon. Stormy weather decimated the crowd at Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Company carnival. A Forty-Fort boy of 17, Theodore Smith, was killed when the car in which he was a passenger over- turned near Hillside on the Lehman road. ; Mrs. Mae Worthy, Wilkes-Barre, was killed near Hillside when her head struck a parked car. She was a passenger in the rumble seat. Dorrance Reynolds won mational recognition for his pure-bred Guern- sey bull, Edgewood Herald. Speeding on Main Street was a problem. No traffic lights. Raymond Laux announced ‘his candidacy for Kingston Township tax collector. Merle Shaver was advertising to paint porches at 50 cents an hour, or a flat charge of 13% cents per square foot, best paimt included. Thin drinking glasses were 29 cents a dozen. It Happened 20 Years Ago Joseph Schuler, Trucksville, was appointed head of the Ration Board. Fred Howell was granted a patent for his gear shift indicator, for use on semi-automatic shifts. 2 William J. Corcoran, Dallas rural carrier, celebrated his twenty-fifth anniversary of service. Evans Drug Store was cited. for community service by the Rexall firm. Two Kingston boys were badly injured when their car flipped twice at Ruggles on the Noxen road. Air raid wardems in Dallas got their signals 15 minutes late, throw- ing a monkey wrench into operation of a practice alert. Thomas Ayre felled the first tree for clearing of the Memorial site in Trucksville. Service personnel heard from: W. Montross, Camp Carson; Don Wat- son, Camp Shelby; Estella Prushko, Denver; Woodrow ‘A. Ruth, Atlanta; Chet Rusiloski, Atlantic Fleet; Don Metzger, England; Tom Templin, ter’s degree in Languages. He grad- uated in Jume from Westminster College, Salt Lake City, Utah. His brother, Philip Graham Reynolds, is a sophomore there. Thank you so much for your won- derful paper. Best of luck always, Helen Reynolds Conrad. Ed. Note: Dear Mrs. Conrad: We are always so glad to hear from you. Sometimes we wonder if it is worth while to run the Only Yesterday column, and then we get a letter such as yours, and take a new lease on life. Hix. Library Auction Success y July 26, 1963 Dear Mrs. Hicks: Another succesful Library auction is now history and we should make a net profit of about $16,000, twelve of which will be needed for the an- nual budget of $18,000 for the op- eration of the Library. I wish to personally thank you and the staff of the Post for your splendid cooperation not only for this year but for previous years. ‘Without dedicated people like your- self our Library would be less suc- cessful than it is. Very sincerely, David N. Schooley, President Back Mountain Memorial Library Association DNS::ew Rambling Around By The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters The site of the Lundy property on Main Street, recently offered at auc- tion, was the location of one of the better log houses in Dallas, original- ly built by Christian Rice, about 100 years ago. Around 1862 it was removed to make room for a new home for Clinton Honeywell, who built there a big white house, most of which is still standing although it would be hard to find it. A little over forty years ago, John Sullivan acquired the property and built additions om three sides of the building and above it, completely concealing the old house, which was changed inside also to conform to his plans for stores and apartments. The center part of Dallas was in- cluded in Lot 3 of the Connecticut Township of Bedford, bought by William Trucks in 1801, patented to him by Pennsylvania in 1812-13 and sold to Philip Shaver in 1813. He shortly sold part to Jonah Mec- Lellon, who in turn, sold 25 acres to Christian Rice in 1816. This included land covered by the Lundy property and reached over to include Wood- lawn Cemetery. Rice built a saw- mill in 1818 about where the Dev- ens building, across from the office, is now located.” The Rice familly, through about four generations, sold it off piece by piece. One of the last parcels, including the house owned by Charles Gregory, they owned for over 100 years. In 1816, Christian Rice bought a farm on the top of Huntsville Street Hill, which the family held about 97 years until it was sold to Elmer Parrish in 1913. Jacob Rice, son of Christian, born in 1817, probably the first to occupy the log house on Main Street, in 1838 bought 37 acres from Abram King, and other parcels of land so that the Rice family be- came one of the largest property owners in towm. Huntsville Road, laid out in 1823, began at the mill of Christian Rice and passed his house on top of the hill. Christian Rice in 1841 was taxed as the owner of a watch (there was only cine more in town) and a pleas- ure carriage, the first one in town. The carriage, an open buggy, was traded to Rice in exchange for the corner property at Main and Hunts- ville Streets, (no buildings there then), occupied by Joseph Hand, and extending some distance on both streets. Rice mused his home for Methodist meetings and was otherwise prominent in public af- fairs. In 1818 he owned 70 acres, ome house, two horses, and two cows. He always listed himself as a farmer. His son, Jacob, also a farmer, became a business man in various lines. He was a captain of militia and was always called Capt. Rice. He served in the Civil War as a lieutenant and maintained a home for the local GAR post. He later lived in the big house now oc- cupied by Dr. Bodycomb. Coming back to the Lundy prop- erty, the white house built by Clin- ton Honeywell stood fairly close to Main Street with a small lawn on the side toward the alley along Ryman’s Store, variously called Rice and Mill Street. There was a white picket fence on both sides of the corner with a barn at the back, later used for many years by B. W. Brick- el and son, Ralph. There was a big tree, probably am elm, just inside the picket ferice, and a big telephone pole about a sidewalk width from the fence. Prior to the advent of numerous autos, the favorite coasting place in town was Huntsville Street Hill. In swinging around the corner into Main ‘Street, the favorite plan, or in crossing into the alley by the store, the white picket fence along the Honeywell property was a perfect backstop in ease of skidding. Nu- merous injuries to coasters were re- ported every year amd damage to the fence was a frequent occur- rence. When Main Street was paved, with a speed limit of 15 M.P.H., the sides were lined with a concrete walk and curb, which reached out several feet from the fence, and the corner rounded. This was about forty years ago, or a little more. By then coasting had declined and the fence could stand for a whole season undamaged. Sicily; Frank Billings, Fort Bliss; Ralph Antrim, Fort Bemning; Will Rogers, San Francisco APO; Emory Kitchen, Tennessee; Edward Shilan- ski, Navy Yard; John Seletski, New- | port News; Walter E. DeRemer, Fort Monroe; John (S. Sholtis, Camp Rucker; Elias Miller, Long Beach; Howard S. Rice, Camp McCoy; Jon- athan W. Jones, Myrtle Beach; Charles Barnes, Lincoln; Glenwood Haring, Sicily; Elmer Lamoreaux, Sicily. Military police from Nanticoke took part in war-games at Hunts- ville, Married: Marjorie Wendell Harry Boice. Candidate for Sheriff, Jacob E. Hess. Mrs. Rachel Wykoff was 95 years old, Mrs. Daniel Evans, 93. Died: Kathryn Girvan, 26, Dallas. Mrs. Edith Davenport, 64, Sweet Valley. Mrs. Margaretta Keil, 21, Shavertown. to It Happened 10 Years Ago Edward McDade and Andrew Sokol were appointed mail-carriers for house to house delivery in Dal- las. William Perry, bee inspector from _| Oramge, was in Dallas looking for Foul Brood. Lewis Reese headed the American Legion. Shavertown awarded a contract for a new fire truck to Peter Pirsch Company for $14,800. Frank Jackson had scar tissue removed from his eye, following a long period of sightlessness after a cataract operatiom. Wayne Harvey won the Commen- dation Medal for service in commu- nications in Korea. Died: Mrs. Mae E. Hunt, 67, Shavertown. Daniel Hoover, 82, Outlet. Married: Cecelia Kasaba to A. Bruce Roberts. Charlotte Gregory to Raymond Kuhnert. Ruth Hey to Donald Besecker, a ¥ Home From Hospital “Warren Gensel, 5, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roland Gensel, Chase Manor, returned home on Tuesday from General Hospital, where he had been a patient for two weeks. HAYCOX VISITS Harris Haycox, Boytecm Beach, Florida, came up to attend the Center Moreland Auction on Friday. His friends were delighted to see him. For Letter Press Try The Dallas Post TICKET to DALLAS PAID ADMISSION ! We're Open 24 HRS. —— —— —— Better Leighton Never by Leighton Scott FALL VISITOR As sure a harbinger of fall as ci- der and falling leaves, Ira Frantz dropped into the Post this week with a basket of apples to sell. Said the frost got all his other fruit. CHURCH AUCTION The Centermoreland Church auc- tion and barbecue drew a huge crowd Saturday night, probably because of the publicity, which was very good. For a church affair, the auctiom is a real phenomenon, the second biggest in the Back Mountain. It brings a heavy attendance from the Valley, and is a must, of course, for everybody from Fernbrook to Ver- non, east of the highway. I'm a natural slob, so I don’t mind eating chicken like a cave-man, especially their chicken, which is very, very good. But many of the ladies have apparently never heard of the loophole in Emily Post's doc- trine which permits fingers for fried chicken (and, probably, for barbe- cued). People around me were try- ing to cut pieces with the little wooden forks which were really only for the baked potato salad. Looking at the mob of people gathered before the block, I wond- ered if the spomsors were thinking of running it afternoons from here on in. “No”, said Glenn Major, “be- cause its hard to get help im the afternoon”. And really, if it hadn’t rained Friday night, they would have cleaned the place out on sched- ule. So I guess it’s just a matter of them having a mice crowd to work with, with no particular need to ex- pand the operation. Say, while I'm over here, how do you pronounce Centermoreland ? And do you spell it as one or two words ? Old-timers I know (and a lot of other old-timers will not recognize this) pronounced it Centermore- LAND. Telephone book lists it “Center Moreland”, while the state sign out- side of town says “Centermoreland’’. Dan Waters, can you help on this? SUGGESTION If I’ve heard it once around town, I've heard it a hundred times: If the government would let the Le-- high Valley give up the line from Dallas to Luzerne right now, it would. not only save the cost of relocation at $1.72 a yard, now in progress, but it would give us the station prop- erty for a nice new Postoffice locat- ion. It would also keep local wags from threatening to paint the stat- ion pink and green in the middle of the night. Put In New Floor Shavertown Fire Company is in- stalling a mew asphalt floor in the meeting room of their new building. "DRIVE-IN Theatre. A Official and We Give S & H Green Stamps! AAA SERVICE From— By has gone, marvel at the manner school shoes and added two inche selves that it is time to emerge fr don civilized tonight. rod lights the dusty roadside. Six weeks from now, it will starting of the furnace. Indian Summer, deceptively mild, The heady aroma of burning bed for the winter. again to the: first crocus. summer. dealt with the sunny hours. shooting the moon. It has always felt that the the sky. Pillar to Post has come of age. It has followed the astronauts through space, DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Pillar To Post... Hix This is the season when mothers wonder where the summer in which Junior has outgrown his s to his stature, and remind them- om that halter and pair of shorts, raiment, and take their sunburn to the shopping centers to purchase fitting garb for their school-age children. It's the season for coolish nights and hot days. The season for a memory lapse about that cold spell that always occurs around about the 25th of August, surprise. (It NEVER happened before, the climate must be changing). One thing is for sure, the first day of school the thermometer will outdo itself, and kids will steam in their unaccustomed clothing. And two weeks later, the radio will warn of expected frost catching everybody by The first flaming branch of the sumac is already visible. Golden- be too cool in the house, and folks who are lucky enough to have old fashioned cookstoves in the kitchen will stoke them up in the morning, postponing the inevitable The windshield will be frosted on the first of October, and will follow the turning of the leaves. leaves will follow that final raking of the lawn and burying of the new bulbs, as the garden is put to And there will be: that frantic rush, late in October, to find a filling station open late at night, when the thermometer starts to plummet, and you have forgotten to get anti-freeze for the car. Summer is about over, and now you can begin to look forward It is twenty-one years old this It has followed the seasons, winter and summer and spring and fall; it has welcomed grandchildren; it has lived through a war and a Korean conflict; it has commented on disasters, but mostly it has and deplored moon should be left in ‘peace, to shine peacefully down upon the earth, bringing into sharp relief the inky shadows under the trees, sailing serene across the vastness of Little people on the earth need something vast and limitless to convince themselves of their own smallness. Something like the unchanging procession of the seasons, and "the conviction that winter ends, spring comes, and life renews itself. MARINE NOTES By Bill Barbour Editor Marine Products Magazine ~ A Chilton Publication It’s later than you think. In most sections of the country pleasure mariners soon will be faced with the chore of wrapping up the sea- son. This means lifting the boat out of the water making arrangements for storage, and, most important, puting all of the gear in shape for a quick and easy start mext spring. Distasteful as the mop-up job may seem, it has to be done. The temp- tation to skip a few of the dirtier details is great, but a few extra mo- ments of work in the fall may save many hours (and dollars) next spring. A common springtime complaint of outboarders is stalling and rough idling engines. Usually this condit- iom is caused by gummed and fouled carburetors. And, more often than not, the carburetor is gummed and fouled simply because the boater forgot to run his engine dry the previous fall. This oversight leaves gasoline pockets in ‘the throttle plate amd float assemblies. Evaporation sets in during storage and leaves a gummy residue which fouls and slows action in the carburetor. When this happens, the only solution is a tear-dowm and thorough cleaning of the carburetor. A lesson in proper storage pract- ices will prevent the problem in most cases. After running the engine dry in the fall, if you have a little spare time, it might even be wise to give the carburetor a do-it-yourself over- haul. You don’t have to be a super mechanic to do the job, and ordin- ary shop tools will suffice. Of course the carburetor should be removed from the engine for thorough cleaning, While you've got it in the shop, check the condition of bolts and stud nuts, gas strainer element, movement of the choke valve, and freedom of throttle link- age. Then, after cleaning fuel resi- due and other foreign matter from the carburetor, a thorough flushing of the fuel system is in order. This extra clean-up entails re- DON'T MISS THIS OFFER! BUY $2 IN GAS or Merchandise and you wil will receive a FREE DRIVER'S Must Be Used MONDAY Through THURSDAY. Driver must be accompanied by DAY MAIN HIGHWAY — BIRTH'S DALLAS ESSO SERVICENTER At The “Y” Routes No. 309 and No. 118 moving and cleaning the fuel filter bowl amd rinsing it with neutral spirits of gasoline. Follow this by blowing out, the fuel lines, paying particular attention to areas where hoses are bent or connected to fit- tings. These are the spots ‘that re- | tain gasoline pockts and give you trouble next spring. Next, as long the lines disconnected, you might as well go right ahead and flush out the gas tank. Kunkle Drug-Store Postmaster of Kunkle in 1880, Dr. DH. Silkworth owned a drug-store on ‘the site of what is now Dan Meeker’s garage. His first baby de- livery was Mrs. Calla Parrish, Beau- mont. Semi-Afinm! SALE! 20 off The Following ® Sport Shiris (Short and Long Sleeve) ® Slacks (Summer) ® Shiris (Entire Stock) Bermuda Shorts ® Pajamas (Entire Stock) ® Jackets (Entire Stock) ® Sport Coats ® Straw Hats © Robes (Summer) ® French-Shriner Shoes (Present Stock) ® Belts Regular Price Tags On All Marchandise — You Deduct The 20% 9 MEN'S WEAR Narrows Shopping Genter Established Since 1871 STORE HOURS: Mon., Thurs., Fri. 9:30 to 8:55 Summer Items! iv Tues., Wed., Sat. 9:30 to 5:25 as you have the carburetor off and ® In 1 early I Westms pitching qd Le ville 6- Dairy 1 Dall: = h 8.1 TOD Se 5 ( Nunes?