SECTION A — PAGE 2 THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 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, 15c. pe Member Audit Bureau of Circulations Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association Member National Editorial Assaciation Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. . . . Safety Valve . . . THANKS TO LAKE AMBULANCE Dear Editor: | Your editorial, week of Septem- ber 19, was indeed most fitting. We are a family which had the un- fortunate experience to call upon the Lake ambulance only a week ago. However, the fortunate expe- riences as you pointed out in your editorial, the dedicated men came and served. Please be so kind as to express our humble thanks to Mr. Lee Wet- zel and Mr. Bud Anesi of Oak Hill, who gallantly gave of their serv- ice and delivered Mrs. Crisci safely to the hospital in Wilkes-Barre. We are indeed indebted to the Lake Ambulance for this service. I sin- cerely hope that all the people in this area will help, so that these fine dedicated men and women can continue to carry on this work. Thank you, Lake, Michael J. Crigki, Jr. Oak - Hill All the ambulance associations in the Back Mountain need support of the areas which they protect. Private ambulance service to a city hospital costs a tremendous amount. This whole Back Moun- tain is lucky to have ambulance as- sociations and dedicated men to staff the ambulances. A BOUQUET FOR AMBULANCE Dear Editor: Our sincerest thanks to the Dal- las Post for offering the oppor- tunity to our friends of keeping in- formed on the progress of our in- jured son. The kindmess of people is never truly evident until we are con- fronted with deep trouble or dis- aster. SPE . If there is ever the opportunity for the Post to boost the work of the many ambulance crews in the Back Mountain area, we would cer- tainly be at the head of the list to back you up. Our son is still hospitalized, due mostly to drainage after some extra surgery last Friday. However, he is comfortable. Sincerely Joseph and Mary A. Harris First Winner Of Football Contest “Smiling Charlie,” Dallas merchant, contest promoter, and Back Mountain athletic booster, presents a transistor radio to the first winner of the Gosart’s Appliances football contest, Raymond McClary, Claude Street, a tenth grader. ~ Open to anyone, the contest’s object is to guess scores of up- coming football games. | The world's fastest toll road is also the least expensive! ~~ Lets you cross the country in moments... For a cost you'll hardly notice! "Millions of people use this fast, low-cost route at the ~ same time...yet enjoy uninterrupted privacy for as long as they talk. That's the magic of long distance. It’s your low-cost direct line to everywhere. Be sure you use it often and call station-to-station. Business or social, you'll reap lasting dividends in time, money, and just plain pleasure. See for yourself. GT COMMONWEALTH ,, TELEPHONE 7 COMPANY 8) Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post It Happened 30 Years Ago The new Gospel Tabernacle in Noxen was preparing for its dedi- cation, with Pastor Harry Rundell making arrangements. Politics were in the forefront of the news, with primaries over and the community looking forward to election. Pinchot-Fine organization polled pluralities in the Sixth Dis- triet. X Odd Fellows purchased a burial ground at Fern Knoll. A committee of protest was form- ed on quantity and quality of water available to Dallas consumers, with A. Shindell carring the ball. B. B. Lewis was the attorney for an ap- pearance before the PUC in Harris- burg. Public ' schools of Pennsylvania estimated cost of tuition per pupil per year to be $85.73, approximately one dollar less than elsewhere in the country. Results ‘of Free Methodist Con- ference showed Rev. [H. M. Faulkner assigned to Dallas; Rev. Russell Steele to Noxen. Harter’'s All-Star bowling team defeated Dallas Rotary. Pure vanilla. extract was 15 cents a bottle, and fancy sweet potatoes seven pounds for 19 cents. And you could still get two pounds of butter for 49 cents. It Happened 20 Years Ago Robert Currie headed the Back Mrs. War Chest Drive for the Mountain. Letters from a Monroe Township boy who starved in a Confederate prison at the age of 20, came to light in an attic in Idetown. Rufus Parrish’s letters. were lent to the Post by Mrs. E. R. Parrish, at the time she learned of her own son Ted’s arrival in North Africa. The Control Center in Dallas was on the verge of closing because of lack of funds. William Misson, 70, retired stone- mason, died at his home in Shaver- town. Men were to have their spot in the sun at the Food for Freedom Fair at Kirby Health Center, with a special section reserved for their canned goods. Heard from in the Outpost: Tommy merer, Texas; Alfred Swelgin, Shreveport; Evan H. Evans, Puget Sound; Robert B. Price, Africa; Ros- well Murray, Fort Canby; Harley Misson, Fort Canby; Elmer S. Hunt, Memphis. Lt. Arvilla Swan left for the service. Married: Dana Pace to Jack Dungey. Died: Mrs. May Thompson, 82, Al- derson. It Happened [0 Years Ago A happy Back Mountain was get- ting ready to close the books on daylight saving. That was in ‘the days before they extended it to in- clude all of October." First frost of the season Septem- ber 18 missed many sections en- tirely, did little damage. George Taylor resigned as super- vising principal at Lake-Noxen, go- ing to South Middleton Schools in a similar capacity. James C. Kibler, 47, Pikes: Creek, died of heart attack while buying a new car. Sgt. John Vavrek, released from Korean prison camp, was reluctant to talk about his experiences upon return to Demunds. Evans, North Africa; A. E, Kem- : THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1963 3 a A RN RE RE RR EE RR RE HN RN RRR NN Rambling Around By The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters a a A I RN es Almost anyone who was around this area fifty years ago could write a good column about Dr. Henry Mor- ris Laing (1862-1923). Anecdotes about him were common conversat- ion for years. Just recently an area woman, well along in years, told me of an instance when their very small son cut off part of a finger in a lawn mower. The father grabbed up the boy and the finger part and hurried to Dr. Laing. The Doctor said it was already amputated, but may- be could be sewed on. It was very small but finally it was sewed on. The Doctor charged $2. Today that boy is about fifty years old and using finger right along. Dr. Laing must have been brought here by his parents Dr. James G. Laing and Charlotte Lee Morris Laing while a small boy. His office contained the usual array of diplo- mas, etc., but after seeing them for years, T do not recall where he was trained. He practiced for many years in the same office as his father in the big house on Lake Street owned for many years by the James Oliver family and presently occupied by James Besecker. There was a running debate for years whether the father, Dr. James G. Laing, was the better doc- tor because of his long experience, or whether the son rated that standing because of his more recent and more complete training. Com- monly they were spoken of as, “The Old Doctor” and ‘The New Doctor”. This manner of address was par- ticularly resented by his mother. Dr. Henry Laing was married to Harriet D. Wheeler (1869-1927), a former nurse, who was particularly helpful to him. In this area he was the origi- nal of the man who was ‘Distincti- vely Individual’, being personally very eccentric. ; Sometime after Mrs. Ira D. Shaver died in 1902, Dr. Henry Laing pur- chased the property, which is now the Borough | Building, and after some remodeling opened offices in the side now occupied by the liquor store. All that part of the present building adjoining the bank was added many years later. In Laing’s time it was a nice big white house. Our family knew Dr. Laing well. After ill health made my father quit as a rural carrier in 1916 (Carriers Will Franklin and Earl Machell hav- ing died), he worked that winter for Doctor Laing taking care of the horses. Dr. Laing drove one of the first automobiles in Dallas, I believe it was a Maxwell, but kept horses for emergency use. Later my sister worked there a short time. For a couple of months before entering the army in 1927, I served as clerk for Local Board 5, U. S. Selective Ser- vice, of which Dr. Laing was a mem- ber and had offices in his house. Mrs. Laing gave my father numerous small articles after the Doctor's death, including his office chair, which is a few feet away as this is written. ' Soon after the Doctor had open- ed his new offices, I was seated near the door one morning when he came in from the residence. He looked at me and said, “What is the matter with you? I said, “Adenoids”, He said, “Open your mouth wide”, A fourteen year old Beaumont boy was badly burned about the face by refrigerator fluid while help- ing the family pack for a move to Factoryville. David Cook faced the | possible loss of one eye. Married: Doris Kirkendall to Ray- mond Myers. [Patricia Galbraith to Herbert Webster. : Anniversary: Mr, Frantz, fifieth. : Died: Charles Minnick, 84, recluse of Chase Road, on his way to the hospital by ambulance, Harry M. Crispell, 54, Lehman, heart attack. William S. Lee, Trucksville. Mrs. Albert L. Jones started work and Mrs. Ira as library assistant. More and more KUNKLE tell us: Saab is our kind of car! Winter or summer, in snowdrifts or mud, a rugged SAAB with front wheel drive pulls its way out of snowbanks or muddy patches... up narrow hilly roads or across a pasture. The engine is up front, too... transmitting every bit of power right to the front wheels. Come Sunday, you'll find SAAB a pleasure to drive, too. On the open ‘road, it's fast, restful and quiet. The comfortable five-seater interior is roomy, attractive, safe—even the instrument panel is safety-engineered. Full-sweep visibility: 345° from the driver's seat. High-capacity heater: ventilator . . . complete comfort without fogging the windshield or win- dows... odorless, carbon-monoxide-free heat. oli See the lively, economical SAAB soon. Find out why the sturdy, low-cost SAAB was built with the rancher, the farmer—the rural user—in mind! SAAB . . . built so well that it has a 24,000-mile/24 month written warranty $1895 P.0.E. (little enough for one of the world's hest engineered cars) DAN MEEKER, Prop. KUNKLE BK, MTN. people Sr. sryusn- wv MOTORS Si and before I realized what was go- ing on he thrust in.his long bony finger with a big nail and removed them. As I dashed out bleeding, he said, “That's all” and told the next patient to come on in the inside office. When I was about twelve, I broke my left forearm in the middle of the forenoon. The doctor did not arrive until several hours later at which time the arm was painful. He put me down on a couch and pulled and worked on the arm, finally deciding it looked all right. But it measured longer than the other and he said “Not right” and started in to do it again. I objected. Thereupon he dug around in his second bag and came out with a cone and a bottle of ether. After a few whiffs I shut up. Almost every year I had some- the common run of colds, etc. I recall measles, pleurisy, chicken pox, hives, poison ivy, a badly crushed finger, a small rupture, a bad cut under a big toe when I stepped on something sharp in the swimming hole at “The Old Meadows” and a black eye. | Shortly before his death he sent me { to another surgeon for a resection of the septum. He said, “They have a new method for that now in which I am not qualified . I am not going to start now, as I am too busy as it is”.Other members of the family had services of Dr. Laing on many occasions, some for serious accidents and illness. When I was about nineteen, I went in complaining of indigestion and general upset. With no examination he said, “You do not need medicine, what you need is a pain of glasses”. I told him I could see better without glasses than he could with his. Said he, “Don’t argue with me. You came is what you are getting. Get the glasses”. He was right. Mrs. Laing kept him supplied with good tailor made suits and would send them to the cleaners, change the weight, etc. when needed and he would never notice the difference. She kept his books and did most of his routine work on the draft board. He refushed to enter into any social activity, and I never heard of him taking a vacation. Al- though his parents were active and devout church members, he would have nothing to do with it. He said he had been subjected to too much religion in his childhood. It was like medicine, if you kept spooning it down a child, he would turn against it. Mrs. Loing was active in the Lad- ies Aid Society, the Red Cross, and other things. Dr. Laing enjoyed a very high ‘standing in his profession and was an exceptionally hard worker, par- ticularly in times of epidemics. Stationed In Korea PFC ALBERT DENDLER Pfc. ‘Albert Dendler, son of Mrs. Eleanor Dendler, 72 Wellington Avenue, has left for Korea after a two week furlough at his home. A graduate of Westmoreland High School, class of 1960, the young soldier took special training at Camp Devens, Mass., and Fort Gor- don, Ga. [He is serving with the thing requiring his attention. Besides in here for medical advice and that |’ Better Leighton Never by Leighton Scott HIGH COST OF LIVING Six of one, half a dozen of the other, I'm sure, which party it would be, but it happened to the Republi- cans last week. ‘At a rally-dinner at the Country Club, good party mem- bers, many dependent on the organ- ization for relatively low-pay jobs, shelled out for one or two tickets at $50 a plate, settled back and ordered drinks to ease the pain, and discovered another precedent bro- ken: Liquid is now extra. SIRENS UNLIMITED The Dallas curfew has been very successful, according to Police Chief Russell Honeywell, who told Coun- cil recently that he had found prac- tically no violations. It is Russ, by the way, who pushes the siren but- ton faithfully at, or around, 9:45 every evening. I'll admit I felt originally that a “get off the streets” siren was out and out effrontery, but you get used to it. The ones who don’t get used to it are the volunteer firemen who automatically vault out of their TV chairs when they hear it go off. EYESORE ? Eyesore” seems to be the com- monly used descriptive for the two railroad station buildings these days, and I heard it again while talking to Herman Rapport, grovermnment's legal expert with the GSA, who walked around the station grounds with me recently during site investi- gations for the new postoffice. It turned out that the next day I happened to be at the Haymarket Antique Show, Evans Falls, and saw a painting by Graydon Mayer of the station on a winter day, building and a lovely box car speckled with snow. Needless to say, it was sold, but if it hadn't been, T would have bought it. It’s hard to explain, but I've never looked at the station as an insult to the community the way some of my friends do. As Dan Waters noted a while back, Dallas and the railroad did a lot of work together at one time, and that still stands for something. But small com- munities which want to grow can’t afford to be nostalgic, I guess. I just like old railroad stations. BIRCH GROVE BRIDGE Birch Grove is getting a new con- crete bridge to replace the old wood- en one across the creek. Part of the many side benefits of the new high- way. Reputed cost: $87,000. The old bridge, which for some reason people automatically assume is rickety, is actually a good solid old thing, and recently took in stride a large track- mounted crane used for drain-work. Hospital Auxiliary * To Meet On Friday First fall meeting of the Shaver- town Branch, Nesbitt Hospital Aux- iliary will be held Friday, October 4; at St. Paul's Lutheran Church at 1:30 p.m. Mrs. Ella Long, Central Supply, will be guest speaker. All members are to bring a non perishable item for the food basket ta be chanced off at the Card Party. Articles for the white elephant or old jewelry table are also needed. Mrs. Leon Beisel will preside. Hostesses will be Mesdames Clara Letts, chairman, Bertha Anderson, Albert Armitage, H. W. Appleton, Gordon Austin, George Bessmer, Morgan Bevan, Helen Elston, Clar- ence Elston, Walter Davis, George Dodson, Harry Carson, John Cort- right, Robert Dickenson, Edgar Brace and Miss Margaret Brodell. U. 8. Army in the Army Security Agency Division. Private Dendler, who was well known locally for his prowess in baseball, was active in Little League and later played on the High School team. He has continued participa- tion in his favorite sport during his tenure in the military. He enlisted in the armed services September, 1962, and will be sta- tioned in Korea for twelve months. Mr. Dendler was an X-ray tech- nician at Schenectady prior to en- tering the service. JU EE EE En OE EI EE ES I EE BSE EE I Heating Special CONVERT YOUR HAND FIRED FURNACE TO I YOU GET: / Only AUTOMATIC OIL HEAT Vv OIL BURNER Vv RELAY v THERMOSTAT © / 275 GAL. OIL TANK Vv OIL GAUGE You Can’t Afford To Pass Up This Opportunity. Limited Time Only! GAY-MURRAY CO. TUNKHANNOCK / s109 > | From— : : Pillar By coloring of the trees. until early October. the edge of the smoking black-top. in October is a mystery. haps does not take in. of Autumn glory. are already strewing the ‘country of the Atlantic seaboard. a scale for comfort. . nothing to relieve them. DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA To Post... Hix That first frost almost two weeks ago certainly speeded up the Seldom do we have as much color as this Remember. that year when a sudden snowfall caught the trees by surprise and the: ground. splashed with crimson maple leaves? An artist immortalized the lovely accident in a picture of crisp sng splashed with red and yellow, maple trees shuddering against a b sky, and a soft promise of Indian Summer in the snow melting along It's the first sign of color, that completely unexpected splash of red or yellow against the green, that makes me draw a startled breath each fall. The first coloring is like the first crocus, a treasure. “Later, the hills are almost too lovely. There is too lavish a dis- play, a surfeit of beauty, more than the eye can compass. Why anybody travels to New England to admire the hard maples The hills of home are equally beautiful. Travel these roads day after day from early spring until the leaves turn, and you note something which a casual motorist per- In the early spring there is a pastel promise of the fall, muted red at the tops of the maple trees, smoky yellow, al purplish haze anticipating the purple hills of Indian Summer, a delicate preview The pageant is well under way. Silent golden showers of leaves roads. At Pikes Creek there is a maple which is worth a ten-mile trip to see, and at Harveys Lake the still water reflects the glory of the surrounding trees. This is what people who move from the East to the Pacific Coast long to see, hard maples against abackdrop of evergreen, the badge Pacific Northwest scenery is hard to live with. When Mt. Rainier goes on parade, it is too staggering a sight reflected in Lake Washington. Usually it is veiled in mist, with its snow-capped peak " floating high above the earth, catching the last rays of the sinking sun, long after darkness has crept across the lowlands, detached from earth, isolated in its encompassing cold. Trees are too big. The whole Pacific Northwest is on too vast And there is little fall coloring. The firs dominate the mountain slopes, and the tops of the treeshundreds of feet below as the high- way winds over ‘Snoqualmie Pass, up and up to the snowline and down again into a different world, are green the year round, with Pennsylvania hills are easy to live with. No snowcapped peaks, no glaciers. Pastures of brilliant green cut out of the flaming hills with a pair of scissors, mathematically exact. Cattle gathered at the bars or crossing the highway to the barn as cars obediently wait. the air. to the full. There is nothing quite like Pennsylvania in the fall. Golden corn and orange pumpkins, sunshine and shadow . . . * the black and white days are here again, and winter is already in Savor it Baer Reunion Is Held At Ide Home First annual Reunion of the Wil- liam Edward Baer family was held at the home of Gilbert Ide, Idetown on Labor Day. Officers elected for the coming year were Ernest Baer, president; Gilbert Ide, vice president; Mildred Thomas, secretary; «Mary Booth treasurer; Helen Hoover, games and program chairman. Prizes were awarded to Edith Boice, oldest woman; Jesse Boice, oldest man; Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Boice; oldest couple; Mr. and Mrs. David Ide, youngest married couple; Mich- elle Walker, youngest child; Mr. and Mrs. Galen Walker and family came 258 miles and traveled longest dis- tance; Mr. and Mrs. Earl Booth, lar- gest family presemt. Reunion will be held again next year at the Gilbert Ide home on Labor Day. Present out of 119 members were Mr. and Mrs. Earl Booth, Nancy, David, Ireme, Martha, James; Mrs. Audrey Booth, Cassville Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. Galen Walker, Kevin, Michelle, Maryland; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Baer, Edward Baer, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Mills, Debbie and Kathie Johnson City. N.Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Boice, Buffalo; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hughes, Jeanne amd Cyn- thia, Kingston; Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Meadway and Jay, Vesta N.Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Boice, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Hoover, Mr. and Mrs. David Ide and Wayne; Mr. and Mrs. Gil- bert Ide and Rita; Mrs. Russell Spen- cer Mrs. John Paul, Judy and Jane Two Local Girls Are “University Scholars" Designated among 52 Susquehan- na University students as “Univer- sity Scholars,” are two local girls, Marilyn E. Eck, and Nancy Lou Elston. Miss Eck, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Eck, Shavertown, and Miss Elston, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Elston, Shady Side, are both liberal arts majors in the sophomore class. Drops Power Rate James Brownlee, vice president of cently announced reduction in -elect- ric rates for home and water heating, outdoor lighting, and reduction in the last step of general residential rate from 1.8 to 1.5 ‘cents per kwh. U.G.I, Luzerme Electric Division, re-| | Hall's Has Exclusive Russell Stover Agency One of six stores in Luzerne County to be granted an agency for famous Russell Stover Candies, Hall's Pharmacy, Shavertown, celebrating the good fortune by in- viting the public to stop in and ask The for a sample ‘taste treat.” Back Mountain is also fortunate to have been chosen by the Russell Stover Candy Co. as a location for their especially delicious candies. John Fedock and Roy Elliott, pro- prietors of Hall's Pharmacy ‘are anxious that the public be made aware of the large variety, and that the policy is very rigid that candies be kept fresh at all times. Did You Read The Trading Post 1°12° vaLue GOLF BALL onl 16 y § with any § drycleaning order while the supply lasts Get this top quality U.S. made golf ball for 50¢ every time you use our professional Sanitone dry- cleaning services. Call on vs today! ; ar %, _ FREE PICK-UP and DELIVERY 288-1496 Ent. 1-0843 'Malia’s LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING Luzerne-Dallas Highway is ’ i Oo > = ’ la 0 JOB ATE 0] @®