The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, May 14, 1964, Image 2

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    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, 1889. Subscription 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. Students away from home $3.00 a term; Out-of-
State $3.50. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c.
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations Sd,
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association
Member National Editorial Association
Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc.
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A non-partisan, liberal progressive newspaper pub-
lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant,
Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania.
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
#0 give their old as well as new address.
Allow two weeks for change of address or new subscription
‘0 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 10¢ per inch. Advertising deadline
Monday 5 P.M.
Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged
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 mewstands: Dallas — Bert's Drug Store,
Towne House Restaurant; Shavertown — Evans Drug Store, Hall's
ant; Luzerne — Novak's Confectionary; Beaumont — Stone's Grocery.
Colonial Restaurant, Daring’s Market, Gosart’s Market,
Drug Store; Trucksville Cairns Stere, 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-
at 85c per column inch.
Editor and Publisher
Associate Editors— :
Mrs. T.M.B. Hicks, Leicaron R. Scorrt, Jr.
MyYRA Z. RISLEY
© ee 0s sees seen
1
Social Editor ........... in ¥ Mrs. DoroTHY B. ANDERSON
Advertising Manager .................. Louise MARrks
Business Manager. ..............:... Doris R. MALLIN
Circulation Manager .............. Mgrs. VELMA Davis
Accounting ...... SANDRA STRAZDUS
“Mere Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution
Editorially Speaking
Always Ready
Your ambulance and fire engine are both on tap, day
or night, at the other end of your telephone line.
Volunteers, your neighbors, are ready to help when
you need it most.
The coin card distribution has already started.
Be generous. J
Volunteers expect no money, but apparatus has to be
maintained. The ambulance and the pumpers must be
kept in condition to start at a moment's notice,
Support of fire apparatus and the ambulance is a
community project, for YOUR benefit.
The Magic Wand
If you could wave a magic wand, and help a person
who has walked in darkness to see the light of day, would
you wave the wand?
_ If you could help a blind man to throw away his
white cane and march across the street with confidence,
would you stretch out your hand?
You can do this magic thing.
You can sign a little card which says that after you
no longer need your eyes, they may be used to restore
sight to somebody else.
You can insure that the most valuable of
sessions will not be wasted . .
will be used by skillful surgeons
less gift, sight for the sightless.
The Lions Eye Bank is making its annual appeal for
pledge cards.
Sign one and carry it in your wallet.
. _ When night falls for you, the dawn will break for a
blirid person who isgroping toward the light.
William H. Hanna, Jr.
Services for William H. Hanna, |
94
your pos-
. that your precious eyes
to bestow that most price-
November. He had resided in Levit-
town for the past ten years.
¢ | The son of Mr. and Mrs. William
Jr., 35, Levittown, who died April | Hanna, Summit Street, he was well
6 at Lower Bucks County Hospital, | known in the Back Mountain.
were held Friday afternoon in
: : He i ived b i i
Bible ' Presbyterian Church, Levit- | oe i
town. |
14 | children, David, John and Rose-
Officiating was Rev. Paul Gilchrist. | mary, a brother, Kenneth, Dayton,
Interment was in Beverly National | Ohio.
Cemetery, N.J. |
Born in Blakeslee, Mr. Hanna CARD OF THANKS
: |
grew up in Shavertown and gradu- The family of the late Hugh Hum-
ated from Kingston Township High | mell wishes to thank friends and
School. During World War II he | neighbors who expressed their
served in the U.S. Navy. sympathy at the time of the recent
First stricken ill eleven years ago | bereavement in so many kindly
he had continued to work until | ways.
HOTEL
JEFFERSON
ATLANTIC CITY
NEW JERSEY
Central location overlooking Boardwalk and cenvenient to Piers,
Churches and Theatres — Near Rail and Bus Terminals — Inviting
Lobbies and Parlors — Closed and Open Sun Decks Atop ==
All Rooms Delightfully Furnished — Modified and European Plans
— Conducted by Hospitable Ownership Management that de
lights in catering to the wishes of American Families.
Write for Literature and Rates
Hotel Jefferson
Atlantic City, Now Jersey
Yesterday
Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years
Ago In The Dallas Post
30 Years Ago
Late primaries were approaching,
the Republican and Democratic or-
ganizations slugging it out with re-
newed vigor. Very few local con-
tests of any moment, but the coun-
ty was simmering. A Shavertown
man who received $54 for two
weeks pay, was supposedly forced
to contribute $25 to the Gifford
Pinchot war chest for governor.
It's called macing.
Mrs. Grace Wiese, Shavertown,
headed the Shavertown Branch
Nesbitt Auxiliary.
St. Therese’s staged a gala wel-
come for their returning pastor,
Rev. John J, O'Leary. Father
O'Leary had recently returned from
Florida, where he had been recover-
ing from an illness. Injured in
World War I near the Argone
Forest, Father O'Leary, then a
chaplain “with the armed forces,
had = suffered such serious head
wounds that a metal plate had been
used to mend his skull. The wound
pained him until the day of his
death. It was Father O'Leary's
consuming urge to establish a
church in Kingston Township that
resulted in construction of St.
Therese's. Father O'Leary celebrat-
ed a Christmas midnight Mass be-
fore the church was completed.
James A. Martin was again elect-
[ed to head Kingston Township
school system as ‘supervising prin-
cipal, with an increase in salary
from $2,100 to $2,400. Teacher's
salaries were commensurable. They
hovered around the thousand dol-
lar mark, with an art supervisor
well under that figure, the rest a
little over.
the same princely salary.
Thirty new members joined the
Trucksville Fire Association. Ralph
Hazeltine was elected president.
Farm work, delayed by cold
weather, wag speeding up under
bright sunshine and maderating
temperatures.
Admiral Byrd was at the South
Pole, ice box of the world.
20 Years Ago
Claude Wardan turret gunner on
a flying fortress, was at home in
Shavertown after completing twen-
ty-six bombing missions over Ger-
many. He wore the Air Medal, the
Distinguished Flying Cross, and sev-
eral bronze stars. “Roaches Ro-
dents” were the crew of the Tag-
along.
A visiting soldier on leave swiped
a watch, a pair of pants, a jug of
liquor, and some oher items from
a family on Parrish Heights which
had befriended the stranger. The
soldier met a tree in Tunkhannock,
and was picked up by Staties.
George Hackling, engineer of The
‘Jersey Bounce won the Air Medal
for bombing missions, based in
England.
Two Back Mountain boys were
listed as missing in action: Robert
Ressigue, East Dallas, on a torpedo-
ed ship in the Mediterranean; and
Elwood Blizzard, Noxen, missing in
Italy, presumably a prisoner of war.’
Heard from in the Outpost: Joe
Wallo, Italy; Bill Dierolf, England;
Stacy Schoonover, Italy; Herbert
Uskurait, Pacific; John E. Evang,
Virginia; Bob Neimeyer, California;
Irma Goldsmith, England; Walter
Mead, Fort Bliss; Herb Updyke,
Camp Edwards; Harold Dymond,
Cherry Point; Omar Wyant, Fort
Bliss; V. F. Spaciano, Italy; Don
Metzgar, England; Glenn Kocher,
E. Ray, Pacific Fleet. :
Married: Jean Bogert to Lewis Culp.
Martha Mueller to Thomas Drop-
chinski. ;
Times-Leader and Wilkes-Barre
Record printers were on strike, pub-
lication was suspended.
Dr. Lewis T. Buckman gave an
address on the dangers of Social-
ized Medicine.
Died: Martin Lutkavage, 75, Lake
Silkworth. Hanna Lyons, formerly
of Sweet Valley.
10 Years Ago
The Dallas Ambulance Association
selected a used 1949 Cadillac Su-
perior instead of the Buick they
had practically been decided upon.
Larry Drabick resigned from Leh-
man-Jackson/Rass to take his Mas-
ter's at State University. Triple
jointure was hunting for another
instructor in Agriculture.
Back Mountain was preparing for
the opening of the Little League
season.
Delbert Garinger was pinned un-
der a power mower and his cloth-
ing drenched with gasoline, Del
had sworn off smoking at Christ-
mas time, so all he got was brysh
burns instead of am obituary,
Lake, Noxen, Franklin, Dallas and
Monroe Townships were again dis-
cussing a five-way jointure.
Dick Disque built his own funeral
home on Memorial Highway.
Died: Mary B. Sowden, 47, Shaver-
town. Mrs. Rose B. Waltman, Nox=
en. Mrs. Hazel Major, 56 Shaver-
town. Edwin H. Kern, 50, Idetown.
Mrs. Francis Kyttle, Mooretown.
Married: Louise Miller to Curtis
Protherve.
Full-page political ads for Harold
Flack and Newell Wood.
Only |
Janitors received about |
Arkansas; Foster Sutton, CBI: Ww.
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1964
oy
By The Oldtimer
The following notes on the Civil
War are selected from actual sol-
diers letters, which give on the
spot accounts. The Battle of Spot-
sylvania was fought just 100 years
ago, May 8-19, 1864.
Nov. 13, 1862 Camp near Deals
Station, 8 miles south of Catletts
Station. We have been on the
march nearly every day and some
nights. We crossed the Potomac
at Berlin Station on the B&O RR,
the music playing, “Carry Me Back
very much out of place. We have
to carry our knapsacks 60 rounds
ammunition and 3 days’ rations and
it has me gbout bushed. I haven't
got rid of the chills and fever yet,
but I am bound to take no more
quinine. These small tents and
single blankets are a poor substi-
tute for a house and bed in a snow-
storm. We encamped ‘last Friday
day about an inch deep.
Dec. 6, 1862. I am sitting in our
little tent size 5X6 and have got
quite ‘chilly. I am taking medicine
all the time for ague and I have
a touch of the rheumatics. Our or-
ders ' for marching were counter-
manded perhaps on account of the
snow storm. We are about 6 miles
from Fredericksburg, Va.
Jan. 16, 1863. Army of the Po-
tomac, General Burnsides Hq. I got
the letter and the reseit - (receipt)
but the box I haven't got yet. I
need tobacco. There is none here
and if there was I have no money.
We think there will be another big
fight in a few days. We are all
ready for a fight if it is needed. I
don’t know how soon we will get
our pay. I am writing in John's
tent, he is roasting corn for din-
ner.
corn to eat yet.
May 19, 1864. Behind brestworks
one mile north from [Spottsilvania
CH, Va. We arrived here on the
16th. Have not been engaged\yet.
Yesterday we lay three or four hours
shelling.
Lee in a tight place but time will
tell.
Erastus Waters, half-brother to
my father, who was killed at Spott-
sylvania Court House, about a
to Old Virginia,” which we thought
near Warrentown and snow fell that}
We have something besides |
supporting a battery under sharp |.
It is thought we have got |
Rambling Around
— D. A. Waters
| month before his death, wrote down
and sent home the following song
in use on the southern side, tune
“Bonnie Blue Flag:” (Chorus omit-
ted.)
‘Oh yes, I am a Southern girl,
I glory in the name;
And boast it with far greater pride,
Than glittering wealth or fame.
I envy not the Northern girl
Her robe of beauty rare
Though diamonds grace her sunny
neck
And pearls bedeck her hair.
The homespun dress is plain, I know,
My hat’s palmetto, too,
But then it shows what Southern
girls
For Southern rights will do.
We've sent the bravest of our lads
To battle with the foe;
And we would lend a helping
hand—
We love the South you know.
Now Northern goods are out of
date.
And since Old Abe's blockade
We Southern girls will be content
With goods that’s Southern made.
We scorn to wear a bit of lace,
A bit of Northern silk,
But make our homespun dresses up
And wear them with much grace.
. We've sent our sweethearts to the
war,
But dear girl never mind,
Your soldier love will not forget
The girls he left behind.
A soldier lad is the lad for me,
A brave heart I adore.
And when the sunny South is free
And fighting is no more—
I'll choose one then, a lover brave
From out that glorious band,
The soldier lad I love the best
Shall have. my heart and hand.
And now young men, a word to
you,
If you would win the fair.
Go to the field where honor calls
And win your lady there.
Remember that our brightest smiles
‘Are for the true and brave,
And that our tears fall for the one
Who fills a soldier's grave.
SEEN AND HEARD
Borough road crew is perplexed
over continual disappearance of
their morning paper, a Wilkes-Barre
daily, from the Borough Building.
Pete Ambrose is incensed, to say
the least, after losing his German
Shepherd when it was run over by
Sunset, Harveys Lake, restaurant,
last week. According to Pete, the
bus driver never bothered to stop.
I saw something wild on my way
through Bear Creek area on Route
ing backwards down a hill after its
emergency brake apparently let
loose. The driver was down below
putting. out ‘‘caution” reflectors
after parking it half on the road,
half off with a flat tire or some-
thing. He ran about 150 feet up-
hill and caught it before it finished
its jackknife. You should've seen
his face.
Incidentally, if I'm still limping,
Services Today For
Mrs. Myra Sutton
Services for Mrs. Myra Sutton,
Harveys Lake, are scheduled for this
morning at 11 from Nulton Funeral
| in Shaw Cemetery, Conklin, N. Y.
Rev. Paul Hosier ‘wil officiate.
"Mrs. Sutton, 41, died Tuesday
morning at General Hospital where
she had been admitted March 25 to
the medical service.
The former Myra Louise Mat-
thews; daughter of Clarence and the
late Bertha Lewis Matthews, she
was born in Hickory Grove. She
attended Bowmans Creek Free Meth-
odist Church.
She leaves her husband Robert;
her father; a daughter Carol, at
home; a son Robert Jr., Somerset;
sister Mrs. Ruth Stolarcyk, brothers
James and Lawrence, all of Bing-
hamton, N. Y.; Cliford, Hop Bottom;
Maurice, Harveys Lake.
Get Chest X-Ray
Mobile Chest X-Ray Unit will be
stationed in front of The Town
House Restaurant, Dallas Acme
parking lot, Monday from 10 a.m.
te 4 p.m.
Wyoming Valley Tuberculosis and
Health Society's modern unit offers
annually an epportunity ta all resi-
dents of the area to get a chest
X-Ray for an extremely modest sum,
and with no delay, no time-con-
suming trip to town, no parking
problems.
Physicians agree that a chest
X-Ray once a year is a safe-guard,
and advise their patients to have it
done. At a hospital or private lab-
oratory, the procedure is expensive.
The T-B unit charges only for the
film.
On the board are a number of
Dallas area people. They include J.
F. Sallada, newly elected president;
Dr. Robert A. Mellman, superinten-
dent of Dallas schools; Rev. Robert.
D. Yost, pastor of Shavertown
Methodist Church; Charles Man-
near, former president of Dallas
Bhool Board; Dorothy Shepherd,
an empty school bus in front of his
115 Sunday: A tractor-trailer roll-'
Home in Beaumont. Burial will be
Better Leighton Never
it’s because TI twisted my ankle
‘climbing around the Carverton park
site.
Also seen limping: John Vivian,
well-known bon vivant and dele-
gate to the national convention,
ever-popular auctioneer for the Ii-
brary, and ardent horse-fancier,
. who lost a little prestige as a rider
after being bucked by a small
Yamaha motor scooter.
Never saw a table cleared quite
so fast as at the Auction Kickoff
Dinner. In fact, I stepped out for
a minute while there was still a
line, and when I got back, Nothing.
No line, no food. :
Anyway, George Jacobs set me
right on how to keep my tie from
going in two directions at once.
(Whoever heard of a newspaper-
man with a neat tie?)
The spark behind the Lehman
Township Beach project was Super-
visor Mike Godek, Oak Hill. There
have been strong opinions pro and
on the beach, especially from the
standpoint of practicability, but you
have to hand it to Lehman. How
many other townships did you ever
hear of that had their own beach?
SR
pv ALE
breil
y > APPROY ED
(sanirong)
sEpvict
.
| 288-1495
for many years with the Blue Cross.
Wel
tionally, and return everything
Sanitone clean, luxuriously soft and
FREE pick up and delivery
MAIN PLANT and NARROWS SHOPPING
CENTER BRANCH STORE
/ of
| O'Malias |
. Laundry & Dry Cleaning |
Luzerne-Dallas Highway
Day Camp Director
54
Miss “Maggie” Jacobs
Margaret Jacobs has been selected
by the Back Mountain Branch
YMCA Day Camp Committee as the
new director of the 1964 Day Camp
to. be conducted at Melody Park,
July 6 - August 14. Miss. Jacobs
was selected after:a very thorough
search that extended over two
months. ]
Maggie, ag she prefers to be called
hails from Canada. Her parents live
in Montreal, and she is going into
her senior year at Carleton Univer-
sity in Ottawa. Maggie has close
ties to the Back Mountain area,
however. Her sister and brother-
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Sam-
uels and their two children have
been residents for several years.
Maggie spends some of her vacations
here and is well-known in the Val-
ley.
Maggie is majoring in English and
plans to enter the Peace Corps after
graduation. She has been a camper
for the past twelve years and ath-
letic instructor for the Jewish Com-
munity Center Day Camp in Wilkes-
Barre. She has also been a cabin
counselor , tripper and tennis in-
structor at a large private camp
for three years. One of her most
valuable experiences occured two
vears ago when she was a unit
leader of some forty children at a |
camp for problem children, ages 9
to twelve, In this experience, Miss
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
From— :
Pillar To Pest...
By Hix
After publication of that tabloid last week, there is only one
thing left for Hix to do, and that is to paint the fence.
And ‘if there is any time left over, weed the garden.
Appearing in green ink, high on an extension ladder, is testi-
mony to the fact that some years ago she was able to get up there
and wield a dripping paint brush; but times have changed, and Hix,
at this point, stays off ladders.
It used to stop traffic.
The bus drivers changed their point for fare collection slightly,
in order to give the travelling public a good view of that old biddy
up under the eaves. The .0ld biddy should have known better.
It was a lot of fun. Perfect strangers leaned over-the fence
and made inquiry.
It took forever, especially around the window frames.
of the panes needed puttying, and that was a mess.
There was a willow tree alongside the back porch, and the willow
tree had those wretched little bugs on it that turn purple when
squashed. They kept brushing off into the paint, along with willow
twigs.
The willow tree is gone, praises be. The small bugs exuded a
sticky sort of a glop which attracted swarms of yellowjackets, and
the yellowjackets were always in a harried state of mind.
Taking down the willow tree left the kitchen porch naked to
the public, and a hasty planting of shrubbery was necessary.
The pink dogwood tree which looked so small when it was
first planted, has been moved twice, and the curving flagstone
moved to accommodate. It now looks as if it were espaliered on
the porch screen, and is reaching its branches up past the sleeping
porch, on its way to the moon.
The’ riot of blossoms from spring to fall in Pillar to Post's yard,
lives, regrettably, only in the imagination of Mrs. Anderson.
Now lookit, Dorothy: You've let me in for weeding that side
flowerbed, the one that got the well rotted manure spread on it
last weekend.
Never let it be said that Hix did not at least get A for effort
in living up to what is expected of her.
But Hix does not stand on her head as gracefully as she did
at the time when she was mounting ladders with aplomb (and
also with a bucket of paint), and weeding is one of those things
which requires deep bends.
There's also that mental crisis, ‘Ts that a weed, or a budding
bleeding heart ?
Some
‘Advise from somebody who can distinguish a weed from a
flower would be helpful at this point, and assistance from somebody
who can lean over to do a spot of weeding without getting dizzy.
Anyhow, the grass has been cut.
Jacobs was also responsible for the |
supervision of five counselors and
programming.
An active participant in many
campus organizations, Maggie is a
member of the Crimson Key Honor
Society - a service organization
working with the Administration.
She is also hall advisor and a mem-
ber of the women’s residence ex-
ecutive council and an orientation
leader for freshmen women. In this
capacity, Maggie is responsible for
both the academic and personal
welfare of the new students.
In athletics, Miss Jacobs has not
been on the sidelines. She is a mem-
ber of the intercollegiate basket-
ball team, volleyball and ski teams
and the university Badminton Team.
Not content just to participate in
university sports, Maggie also writes
about them, in her job as women’s
sports editor and columnist for the
university newspaper. Maggie has
maintained a B average throughout
her college career.
Barbara Lawry Hurt
Barbara Lawry, seven-year-old
daughter of Rev. and Mrs. Russell
Lawry, Parsonage Street, recently
suffered cuts and bruises of the leg,
resulting from a bicycle mishap,
requiring medical attention from Dr.
H. G. Gallagher.
Guard your fine
woolens against moth
damage—at no extra cost.
mothproof them uncondi-
new looking, Get this
complete, professional
service today!
Enterprise 1-0843 |
A AR
|
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L
PES mE me ERS SE EERE SEE EEE GOERS EE EE S|
SANDY
BEACH
Fri. - Sat. - Sun., May 15-16 - 17
Double Feature
“yi p'sy
Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton
Fri. and Sun. - 8:30 p.m. — Sat. - 10:00 p.m.
Fri. and Sun. - 10:30 — Sat. 8:30 p.m,
“Mail Order Bride”
Buddy Ebson Keir Dullea
MERCHANDISE PARTY
SUNDAY — 2 P.M.
I.
at
Lewis -
Duncan
Sporting
Goods
Store
GET READY
FOR
SLEEPING
BAGS
ideal for Boy Scouts
CAMP
TRUNK"
Steel - Reinforced /
$9.95
Reg. $2
(69X27)
Plastic
AIR
MATTRESS
only $1-19
:
TENNIS RACQUET REPAIRS
$5.00 up
$1.95
Restringing - -
New Leather Grips -
Complete Selection Racquets
and Wearing Apparel.
Narrows Shopping Center - Kingston
288-3204
.
»
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—— “gr
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