ON A — PAGE 2 year; $2.50 six months. months or less. — Member Audit Bureau of Circulations Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Member National Editorial Association Publishers Association Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its 75th Year” A non-partisan, liberal progressive newspaper pub- lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, Lehman Awenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania. We will met be respensible 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 > be placed on mailing list. of address o new subscription The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local nospitals. 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 "as 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 10¢ per inch. Advertising deadline Monday 5 P.M. Adverising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged at 85c 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— cet ee eee Myra Z. RisLEYy Mgrs. T.M.B. Hicks, Lei¢gutoN R. ScotT, Jr. Social Editor... .......... Businegs Manager Circulation Manager \ Accounting Advertising Manager eee en. ee en ®ve 8 0s een .Mgrs, DoroTHY B. ANDERSON ee Doris R. MALLIN Mgrs. Verma Davis SANDRA STRAZDUS Louise MARrks ce see e Alexander Kocher lests At Ruggles plexander Kocher, 70, R. D. #1, ey’s Lake, who died Thursday png in General Hospital was a g resident of the Lake area. vices were conducted Satur- afternoon from Nulton Funeral Moe with Rev. Fred Ejster officiat- ing. Interment was in Kocher Cemetery, Ruggles. In fairly good health until he suffered a fall at his home on Christmas Day, Mr. Kocher never recovered from ‘the ‘paralysis which followed. ' ; The son of the late James and Fanny Lier Kocher, he is survived only by several nieces and nephews. He had been employed by the local railroad end later by the State Highway Department. He greatly interested in hunting az fishing and always maintained a gardén bordering the family - homestead in which he had always lived. James E. Brown Rites On Friday Release from months of suffering came Tuesday . afternoon when James E. Brown, 69, Joseph Street, Dallas, passed away in Nesbitt Hos- * pital. To ; Born in Noxen, son of the late walter and Mary Blossom Brown, Mr. Brown was well known through- out the Back Moutain area having resided in Shavertown for three de- cades before moving to Dallas seven yars ago. In 1960, just four years ago this month, he retired as an employee of the Wilkes-Barre Transit Com- pany after having served 43 years and receiving a commendation from he company for his loyal service. He had started with the company in 1916, then left temporarily to join the 311th Field Artillery Divi- sion overseas in 1918, during World War I. Upon his return he again took up his duties with the company, His son, Alfred, fought over much of the same territory when he was engaged in the Battle of the bulge some years later and was taken prisoner. Mr. Brown was an avid sportsman, enjoying each opportunity which \ presented itself to hunt or fish. He was a devoted father and took great delight in his grandchildren, of which there are eleven. Each sum- mer a lovely garden flourished un- der his careful touch, He had undergone surgery eleven years ago but had recovered; re- turning to work after four months. Mr. Brown was a member of Shaver- town Methodist Church. He is survived by his widow, the former Anna Keiper; children, Alfred and Arja, both of Shavertown; Mrs. Eleanor Montross and Mrs. Shirley Bunny, both of Dallas; four broth- ers: Ralph and Amos, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Victor, Highland Park, N. J; Burton, West Wyoming. Services will be conducted from Disque Funeral Home, Memorial Highway at 2 tomorrow with Rev. Robert Yost officiating. Interment will be in Chapel Lawn. Friends may call this evening from 7 to 10, Loyalville Emily Hedden, Carlisle, spent the Christmas Holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Raymon Hedden. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Anderson, Jr. and their two sons of Amherst, Massachusetts, spent Christmas week visiting Mr. and Mrs. Frank Anderson, Sr. Mrs; Mary Nienius had as guests for Christmas, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Darnell and children of Hazlett, New Jersey and Staff Sgt. William Nienius, Pease ‘Air Force Base, New Hampghire. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Klingerman had as guests last weekend Mr. and Mrs. William Helvig and family, Emmaus. ol Mr. and Mrs. Raymon Hedden entertained several guests on New Year's Eve. Mrs. Melvina Scott, wife of Rus- sell Scott, Sr., returned home on New Years Day from General Hos- pital, after being troubled by a serious heart condition. She spent Christmas in the hospital, and is now allowed to move only occasion- ally at her home. On Honor Roll The name of Eric Dingle was omitted from the Dallas Honor Roll. Eric is an eighth grade gtu- dent. Dallas | Chorale, Mrs. William Caroll, director, extreme left, and Mrs. David Carey, accompanist, pre- sented a group of Christmas carols and holiday songs in the main lobby of Miners National Bank, Wilkes-Bajre, a8 part of the bank's i E DALLAS POST Established 1889 || Better Leighton Never Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1889. Subscription rates: $4.00 a No subscriptions accepted for less than six months. Out-of-State subscriptions, $4.50 a year; $3.00 six - Students away from home $3.00 a term; Out-of- State $8.50. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c, : by Leighton Scott People are still asking questions about the Huntsville fire that killed all five of the Harden Coon, Jr. family, and their questions will un- doubtedly stay mnanswered and un- answerable. nz pit What we cannot ever really un- derstand is that these facts of life sooner or later drop a viel of mourning on the history of every community. How many headlines of disasters in North Dakota and Mis- issippi did you gkip over with a raising of eyebrows? It seems, of course, that we in the Back Mountain have had more trouble in the last year or two than in any time in recent history. I guess it always seems that way. That this was unquestionably the worst single day in the past year, although by time's bitter irony, it happened on the first day of a new one, is witnessed by casual conver- sation at each crossroads. People politely wait for you to finish what- ever you've been talking about, and then come back to the fire. At a Brownie meeting in Leh- man, the leader tried in vain to bring the talk away from the sub- ject. And a little voice added: “I don’t have anyone to play with anymore.” SEEN AND HEARD The Lehman Township Board of Supervisors = meeting has always been the best-attended, with pos- sible exception of Kingston Town- ship, of any in the area, in respect to interested citizens who just like to see how a township is run. With a switch of time of meeting to 9 a .m. Saturday morning, that in- terest may suffer, At least a part of the police force, for one, won't be able to make it because of work. As we daily pass the scene in lower Trucksville’s Birch Grove, where giant Euclid-dumps rumble up and down the work road direct- ly over the famous ‘hanging wall,” - | which has/ somehow held the moun- tain off the highway for years by leaning against one [-beam imbed- ded in the ground, we recall a quote. Said one company superintendent about the heroic buttress; “That I-beam ain’t holding anything up.” Dallas and Lehman fire com- panies are likely to change chiefs, both by resignation, if what the present leaders have said to friends eventualizes. Dan Richards and Lee Wentzel have been exemplary chiefs, logging a lot of miles in voluntary service to the communities, and are owed a vote of thanks. An advance word: Hopes that Dallas Borough might get another full-time policeman, a cruiser, and a radio system, will have to wait un- til 1965. Among items tentatively agreed on for this year’s budget at a private session of the Council this week was a plan to curtail some use of extra police, in effect lengthen- ing Chief Honeywell's hours. Huntsville Fire (Continued from Page 1 A) clamshell lifting one brick at a time upon demand, or ruthlessly attacking an entire section of wall. Bricks spraying from the on- slaught. A pause as men again grope among the ruins, find a fragment, and bring it out shrouded in can- vas ,their boots smoking. Spectators were urged to go home. Firemen would remain all night, but in lessened numbers. The gutted garage wing across the breezeway remained standing. By mid-evening the ambulance rolled silently away with what had been found and identified. On Saturday morning, five caskets were buried in Forty Fort Cemetery, the mortal remains of: A. Harden Coon Jr., 42; Polly, his wife, 34; Ann Dudley Coon, 9; Dana Wynn Coon, 8; Alfred Harden Coon, III, 4. traditional yuletide gram, Members of the Chorale who sang at the Miners National Bank are left to right, Mrs. Paul Laur, Mrs, Joseph Bolavage, Mrs. Ralph Fitch, Mrs. Joseph Kaytl, Mrs. Albert season pro- * THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1964 0803030030 A 3 HK A A HH KHER ENE H KHAN KHKBKS PRA RRRNERS Rambling Around By The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters A NS RS ER RS RN EE A RE NE HR WY In old Kingston Township, which extended from the River to include part of the present. Shavertown, there were eight school districts in 1834, the year the school act was passed, several in our area as fol- lows: No. 5, Upper Mountain Dis- trict, Carverton, number of child- ren 77, share of public money $52.44; No. 6, Middle Mountain District, Harris Hill, number of children 49, share of public money $39.49; No. 7, Lower Mountain District, Trucksville, number of children 19, share of public money $12.34; No. 8, Hollow District, Mill Hollow (Luzerne), number of child- ren 47, share of public money $44.42. The public money mention- ed was derived from certain lots of public lands set aside by the proprietors for the sole purpoge of school suoport. Later these lands became valuable and much money was derived there from The proprietors held school meet- ings and appointed school commit- tees, ordered buildings built, teach- ers hired, ,etc. One minute book goes back as far as 1795. In my own time there was still standing a one- story wooden schoolhouse along the creek just above Luzerne Junction, about where Luzerne Motor Co. is now. It was marked by a sign read- ing “Island School” built in 1813.” My grandmother attended this school. Why it was called “Island” was never clear to me unless the creek had an island there when it was first built. Township proprietors under the Connecticut system 1a use’ here also hired preachers and arranged far services in the schoulhouses. Scheolhouses were common piaces 2? worship for all denominations for many years, and no one thought of court action to stop it. Kingston Township School No. 7 stood rncar Tobys Creek above the intersection of the road to Harris Hill and the creek road. Within the past hundred years or so, there were a number of schools in the rural pert of the township away fiom Tolys C eek. There was a schoo 1 along Abrahams (re:iz along the road from the Carverton area to Trucicsville There were schools within about half a mile southeast and northwest of Carverton Chuich. There was a rural school at Harris Hill. The so-c:lled Shavertown or Sha- ver school formerly on Overbrook Avenue was in Dallas Towns'p A one rootn school on Center Street, Shavertown was later doubled then taken out of school service and re- placed by a two-storied frame building. This ' is relatively new, maybe thirty or forty years old. , The two schools are also comparatively recent. The Westmoreland Building built for high school purposes is about thir- ty years old, maybe a little older. The elementary building” replaced an older one which was destroyed by fire. As far as I have ever heard, Frank- lin Township never had anything larger than one room schools. In earlier days there was one up near Lockville called Diamond (Dymond) Hollow. Half a mile or so south of Orange, on the road toward Ketch- am, the Flat Rock School was lo- cated. There may have been one in the village of Orange, but not to my knowledge. There were schools in the general area of Memorial Shrine Cemetery, before the Cemetery was located there, one on the road toward the ncrth called the “Good” School (probably from a local family), a later one a little farther south called Mountain School. North of Orange, one of the more recently operated schools was named Forest Grove. On the road crossing south of Per- rings Marsh there was a school named Michigan, sometimes pro- nounced Michi-gan’, accent on the last syllable. ; Now for a few corrections on items in this column recently ques- tioned. Most of these were not written as they appeared in print. Mary Gregory, who is my cou- cin, is the wife of Claude Shaver. There was NO school in Dallas Township near Alderson. I verified this by Zel Garinger before the col- umn was sent in. On the Cornplanter Reservation a two-story brick schoolhouse is boarded up and abandoned. The maiden name of Mrs. Robert Fleming was Duncklee. .The missing words regarding school taves were written to read, “But the cold, ,dollars and cents, arguments mailed out by the tax collectors, . . ” Was in Accident Clinton Brobst, Sr., called to say he “was on John Gregeri's sled the time John was hurt. John was rid- ing belly-flopper and Clint was kneeling at the back of the sled. Clint was not seriously injured, be- ing thrown through the picket fence and falling in Honeywell's side yard. He sustained a couple of skinned fingers and some bruises in the back. . «+ Safety PROUD TO BE A’ NEIGHBOR Dear Editor: The recent and terrible tragedy which occurred at Huntsville, Jan. 1, and took the lives of the entire A. Harden Coon family, causes one to pause and reflect on the stark realism of these everpresent poten- tial tragedies. It also causes one to pause for a moment to be thank- ful for his family and himself in the face of such tragedies. This, then, brings out the point I am trying to make in writing this letter. The gallant but vain efforts of the volunteer firemen who worked to the point of sheer exhaustion; whose ‘guts were torn apart” in their anxiety to recover the family alive; whose courage bordered on heroism; who inhaled enough smoke and fumes to make some of them ill but would not give in; who gently combed with fire rakes, tons of debris to recover the bodies of the victims; whose actions demon- strated more than professionalism; and who in their efforts brought Dallas Chorale Entertains In Miners Bank Lobby For Holiday Turner, Mrs. Charles Mahler, Mrs. William Walp, Mrs. Merle Safford, and Mrs. Harry Spare. \ Miners National Bank, with one of its six offices here in Dallas, also had the Kingston High School Valve . . out the meaning of co-operation and Democracy in action; they were beyond expectations. For the police who controlled the scene with. great efficiency, and for the women eof the auxiliaries in their efforts te make the tasks of the men a little easier; for all of these people, I have the most pro- found respect. “We, the people of the Back Moun- tain area, should get down on. our collective knees and thank God for men and women of this calibre and courage who are the Guardian Angels of us all. We should! I know I do. I am extremely proud to know and be a neighbor of these worthy people. RICHARD H. DISQUE, Deputy Coroner at the Scene. “People who have no money to speak of just have to do their own talking.” About the time you catch up with the Jones’, they refinance. 3 Glee Club among the choral groups in addition to the Dallas Chorale during the Christmas Season. Ralph Paul presided at the organ in the main lobby throughout the Christ- mas holiday programs. 3 in Trucksville | Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post 30 Years Ago Wyoming Motor Club was spear- heading the drive for the short- cut which would bypass Luzerne Business District on the new high- way. John Hewitt resigned from the Jackson School Board. This was well before Lehman and Jackson formed the first jointure iwi came the basis for Jackson-Ross joi recently, the Lake n joint Wesley Himmler and Peter Clark assumed their offices as Borough Councilors. No new cases of scarlet fever were recorded, A cast of 100 was preparing to present the comedy “Heads Up” for benefit of Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Company. Ralph Rood as prexy, was the star . Noxen clobbered Dallas in the Rural League; Lehman took Lake: and Trucksville licked Orange. Buckwheat coal was $4.75 per ton. Times were slowly improving; and the man in the White House was more popular than when he was inaugurated in March, 1933. (Inauguration used to be in March, not January.) 7 The Dallas Post was still a four- page issue, with very little spot news, still struggling along, using artificial respiration to get from one issue to ‘the next. / 20 Years Ago A young man from Kunkle was missing in action in Africa. Clif- ford S. Nulton, 33, had been miss- ing since November. 26, 1944. He was with the motor transport ser- vice, Harry B. Hoover, 81, a leading stone-magon of the area, died of a heart attack on New Year's morn- ing at the home of his son Russell at Outlet. Sgt, Ernest King was wounded in action in Italy, two weeks after he had written to the Dallas Post de- nouncing those at home who com- plained about hardships while the boys overseas were up to the neck in War. Heard from in the Outpost: Carl Roberts, Great Lake; Frederick and, Hawaii; John Borton, Oakla- homa; Charles W. Kern, Turner Field, ,Georgia; Lewis Button, Ran- dolph Field; Herb Jones, (Atlantic Fleet; August Walters, Maine; Wal- | ter: D. Fine, Florida; Harry C:" Sny- der, Texas; George H. Ray, South Pacific; Bill Dierolf, Kansas; James Trebilcox, Bradley Field; John Rice, in ‘hospital at Fort George Meade; Paul Nulton, Fort Myers. Married: Irene Oney to Jasper Kocher. Anniversary: Mr. and Mrs. Theo- dore S. Jones, Noxen, Golden Wed- ding, 10 Years Ago Ross Township elementary school was dedicated with an open house to which all residents of the Leh- man-Jackson-Ross Jointure were in- vited, Over 1,000 people inspected the new building. ; Defective electric wiring caused fire which destroyed a barn on the old Wilcox place. Chief of police Edgar Hughes, with public sentiment behind him following the tragic death of Mrs. Joseph Gilhool, stated that he would crack down on taverns, and they could close at legal times, or else. He added that maybe most of the offenders got plenty to drink in town before visiting local pubs, but that it was the last couple drinks that did the damage. Murders gave the Lake a bad name. Howell Rees, former editor of the Dallas Post, more recently pub- lic relations man for the Bahamas, was made vice president of the Kelly Advertising Agency in New York, Hunlock Creek decided to follow the lead of Ross Township in clos- ing its one-room schools. George M. Dallas Lodge F&AM held its first meeting in the new building on Main Street. Married: Sally Ann Lasher to to Frank Wagner Jr.; Mary Patri- cia Wilson to Robert Harris; Pat- ricia Ann Nieman to ‘Charles Bige- low; Ruth MadMillan to George Jur- ista; Barbara Sweezy to William Vogan. Died: Herbert R. Williams Sr., Justice .of the Peace for 22 years, Trucksville; Earl TLamoreaux, 47, Forty-Second Street; John M. Rob- inson, 56, Country Club Road; Charles A. Hilbert, ,79, Beaumont; Mrs. Louise VanNorman, 78, Sha- vertown; James and Fred Crispell, four days apart, brothers, James, Noxen, was 83; Fred, Lake Town- ship was 77. Frank Jackson was groping his way out of the dark after a year of blindness following an operation on his eye. Called the Post to say he could see the grosbeaks on the bird-feeder, and for the first time in a year, the numbers on the tele- phone dial. Word From The Monkas It's been a long time since the Dallas Post had word of the Joseph Monka family, former residents of Shavertown, who moved from this area ten years ago. . San Francisco and completed classes Received in the mail on Tuesday Iwas a bill dated June of 1955, ac- From— Pillar To Post... By y { Hix Somebody did not read my letter to Santa Claus with any de- gree of comprehension. Or else of humor. highest bidder. * * "Does anybody have any dope Those Jordan almonds somebody has a perverted sense are going begging. Going to the %* on reversing the downdraft of a Joe Hoeg had what it took, but Joe has mighty lungs, and he can whoosh into a Franklin stove so powerfully that the sparks go up the chimney instead of sailing out into the room. ; oe Must write a note myself: Remember to burn trash every single day in that Franklin stove, so that the chimney will never com- pletely cool off, thereby insuring an up-draft. Never haye been quite sure whether I was looking at a hairy #* or a downy woodpecker, but now I know. Both species appeared together on the suet feeder, and a little later along came their wives, with the same difference of size range, but without the red spot on the back of the neck. And is it imagination, or is the red-breasted nuthatch really smaller than the white-breasted, or is it just neater? And how can you keep a squi of the suet? rrel out of the bird-feeder or out There was a great whirring of wings one morning, and a large ruffed grouse took off from the stone steps leading to the kitchen porch. I've never been as fond of a grouse since finding that it’s a ruffed and not a ruffled grouse. It was Ed| Johnson that disillusioned me. He said, ‘For pity’s sake, Mrs. just think it IS a ruffled grouse?” Hicks, can’t you spell, or do you Yes, Ed, I really thought it WAS a ruffled grouse, and I don’t care to find that it doesn’t wear a frill. I had envisaged it with a white collar, lace edged. It is just as disillusioning as finding the correct pronunciation : 3 of bushranger in the dictionary, a discovery which practically under- mined the foundations of my being when I was ten years old. Volunteers To Devotion Anybody in the Back Mountain who has ever been lukewarm about contributing to the annual drive for funds for the fire companies and the ambulance associa- tions of the area, should take a long hard look at the loyalty shown by those hardworking men on New Year's Day. Giving up their holiday, they flocked to Huntsville to stage the heroic struggle to recover bodies of victims of the blaze which took five lives, an entire family of father, mother and three little children. > Long after any possible hope of rescue was gone, something which happened in the first five minutes of the battle, these volunteers clung doggedly to their posts, risking their lives. All the fire companies worked together without jealousy, each member doing his job without hope of reward, or even of success. It was their job, and they did it. : They painstakingly sifted ashes for evidence, work- ing in a degree of heat which was unbelievable, heat which would be expedted if a bri®k' kiln, but not in"a burned structure. Eyes streaming from smoke and vapor, boots melt- ing, they took it in shifts. The fire companies spelled each other, realizing the hazard to the rest of the Back Mountain. They worked together like a well-oiled machine, insuring fire coverage for the rest of the area while ; in Huntsville. the major battle was fought Ambulances and crews stood by. As walls were pulled down, there was constant danger of serious injury. That none occurred, is a tribute to the knowledge of fire-fight- ing possessed by these friends and neighbors. Each household in the Back Mountain is asked to make a small donation each company which protects it. year for support of the fire It is incredible that some residents feel that the small donation is too large. Where else can you get such, serv- ice from a five dollar bill? Receives Promotion FRANCIS J. GERRITY Francis Joseph Gerrity, Mt. Airy Road, Shavertown, will be advanced to Petty Officer, 3rd Class Elec- tronics Technician, on January 16. Gerrity, a graduate of Lake-Leh- man High School, class of 1962 took his basic training at San Diego and was stationed at NAAS Fallon, Nevada for further indoctrination. He attended Electronics School at there with a 76% average. He will go to submarine training school at New London, Connecticut follow- ing leave at home. companied by a check for a sub- scription. It isn’t often that a busi- ness concern receives a payment so completely out-dated. The Monkas live at Hampton Falls, New Hampshire. Anybody have any up to date news? The Monkas were a very nice family, interested in all the community activities. The typical family man has a billfold of pictures and no money. Only way to get along with some people is to get along without them. Sign Contracts in the local system. 7 Mr. Hinkle asked about shelter for the duck and weasel, stating that old sheds in rear of fire hall had been donated by the fire com- pany for this purpose. A. suggestion that they might be erected on town- ship land near the Parrish home was favorably received. Goeringer Road will be maintain- ed by the township although it has not yet been accepted as a township road. OR State Highway Department will be reminded of their obligation to maintain roads under construction, with pot holes now present and en- trances to Pioneer Avenue and Cen- ter Streets posing difficulty to motorists. > ~ Ziegler and Richards will be bonded in ‘the amount of $15,000. Monthly meetings will remain scheduled for the second Wednes- day of each month, Checking account was transferred to the Wyoming National Bank. Allen Nichols was elected chair- man, and Ted Poad, secretary at a meeting of the township auditors following the supervisors meeting. Fred Eck is the third member of the group. ! : Enjoys Florida Life Mrs. Joseph Battisson, one-time resident of Sweet Valley, writes from Palmetto, Florida, that the family had Christmas dinner on the patio of their home on Manatee River, and took a ride down river in their boat in 70 degree temper- ature. Mr. and Mrs James Hutchin- son, of Frostproof, Florida, also for- merly of Sweet Valley, were their dinner guests. Thanks A Million To those kids who shoved my Austin out of the ditch New Years Day, a whole flock of Thanks. Tt was impossible to wait to give them a word of appreciaion, not to men- tion something more substantial, because a whole line of cars was panting in the rear, their drivers anxious to commit suicide on the slippery road. \ : ol b : DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA - stovepipe that connects directly with a refrigerated outside chimn v7 TON 7 Editorially Speaking: DAL i The 100. 0 i their i Ladies persor ‘end i Firemd cent fi RE,