The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, November 12, 1964, Image 2

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    _BECTION 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-oi-
State $3.50. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c.
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association
Member National Editorial Association
Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc.
National Advertising Representative
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1964
Only
Yesterday
Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years
Ago In The Dallas Post
30 Years Ago
Dallas Township voters approved
| $25,000 bond issue for a school
addition by 38 vote margin.
Local option question in Lehman
Township was defeated by 2 votes;
(INR) american NewspapER REPRESENTATIVES nc.
ATLANTA e CHICAGO eo DETROIT ¢ LOS ANGELES eo NEW YORK
| tomato juice,
Link First With
Disposal Plant
Sewage Unit Makes
Near-pure Effluent
A Harveys Lake businessman,
John Link, Warden Place, has re-
sponded to the problem sewage con- |
tamination at the lake by being
the first in that community to in-
stall a complete home disposal unit,
the Spencer Sewage Treatment
Plant, company officials announced
at the Lake Supervisors meeting
Saturday.
Mr. Link, who owns and operates |
Link’s Tavern there, has installed |
a 200 gallon unit, the middle plant |
in the Spencer line. The Spencer
plant, presently being distributed
with great success in this area, as
well as homes, developments, and
institutions in many other places, !
renders sewage almost completely
pure.
J. J. Marsh, of Dallas, District
Manager of Tri-City Equipment,
which distributes the unit, and re-
gional men from Williamsport, ex-
plained operation of the plant to |
the supervisors meeting.
| shoulder
| when he was thrown from his 1955
| before he pulled onto the
The Spencer unit completely oxi-
dizes and purifies sewage by use
of a patented aerating device, the
men explained, and all Spencer
units installed thus far, in areas all |
over the east, for schools, homes, |
institutions, and communities, have
received absolute approval from the
health department.
|
Following Collision
Schooley Hospitalized
Robert Schooley, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Schooley, Davenport
Street, Dallas, suffered leg and
injuries Monday evening
Plymouth as a result of a collision
near O‘Malia’s Laundry on Memor-
tal Highway.
Schooley, 17, is a patient in Nes-
bitt Hospital where his condition
wag reported satisfactory at press
time.
Schooley reported to police that
he had driven into a lot to turn
around and return to Trucksville
and did not see any car in sight
high-
way.
Eugene Keithline, 50, George Av-
enue, Parsons, the other driver,
stated he was driving south when
Schooley pulled out in front of him.
| Maple Grove and Carverton,
| WGY.
14 cents a pound.
Dallas Birthdays
Birthday greetings to the follow-
ing: Irma W. Culp, Ralph Chambers,
Betty Wertman, Edward Hopa,
Meryl Wagner, Jean Edwards, Au-
drey Ide, Gina Major, Robert Rave,
James Harris, John Devlin, William
Glahn, Mrs. Allan Johnson, Walter
Elston, Mrs. James Wertman, Allan
Mosier, Robert E. VanHorn, Gerald
Brunges, Richard Bayliss, Kathie A.
Maury, Herbert Marley, Donald
Evans, Jr., William Lancio.
Both cars were towed away.
Two Collide
Cars driven by Frank Geskey,
Dallas RD 3, and Mary Derhammer,
Dallas RD 1, collided around 6 p.m. |
Monday on lower Demunds Road in |
front of the Harry Goeringer pro-
perty. Mrs. Derhammer was ac-
companied by children, Mary, 13,
Martha, 7, and Donald, 2. No one
was injured.
Editorially Speaking
HIDE AND SEEK
We are loathe to be critical of the Borough police,
and Council, but isn’t it about time they catch up with
this so called “prowler” who makes repeated visits to
homes and housewives on the hill? Or prove that he is
a phantom!
His routine is fairly consistent and should not be
difficult to piece together: A tall, long-legged man who
skirts fences, stone walls and ledges with the speed of a
| many failed to vote on the issue.
Back Mountain went strongly Re-
| publican, although Democarts carri-
ed most of the state.
The Crispel Sisters, formerly of
sang
on the General Electric Hour on
Butter was 2.pounds for 59 cents;
5 cents a can; pork
loin, down 1 cent from last week,
20 Years Ago
+ KEEPING
® eo
POSTED =
~ @®
November 4: CANDIDATES DRAWING first free breath
for weeks. Goldwater licking his wounds in Cali-
fornia, LBJ flexing h
election.
publican contender.
November 8: DROUGHT CON
November 9: MACK TRUCK
November 4: BLATT DIES HARD, still contesting Scott's
November 4: UNOFFICIAL FIGURES give Ohio’s Sena-
tor Young a narrow margin over Robert Taft, Re-
November 6: FORD WORKERS stage a 25,000 walkout.
is muscles at the ranch.
TINUES over most of nation.
union strikes plant.
November 10: BURBANK CLOUDBURST causes mud |
slides, woman killed.
November 10: NEGRO MUSLIM LEADER convicted of
inciting to riot in August Philadelphia troubles.
November 10: BOSTON AREA to try cloud-seeding to
relieve drought.
November 11: MORE SEVERE RAIN IN BURBANK
AREA.
Back Mountain gave : Dewey |.
strong support as Roosevelt was |
re-elected. The editorial expressed
concern for the President's health
as the fourth term began.’
A series of robberies in .Shaver-
town was solved with apprehension
of three young boys. : ;
Joseph Wallo and Frank Kamor
met on an Italian airfield.
In the Outpost: Johny Miles,
Hawaii; Bob Considine, Rus
Bertram, Larry Lee, France; Will-
iam Swartwood, Germany; Dick
Phillips Little Creek, Va. . George
Steltz, Jr., Camp Peary, . Va.;
Clarence VanHorn, Camp Barkley,
Texas.
Tomato Juice cost 10 cents and
30 points a can.
10 Years Ago
Harry Ohlman bought D. L. Ed-
wards Insurance Agency.
Eleanor Galka, Noxen WAC, was |
flown to Walter Reed Hospital for
heart surgery. re
Lehman-Jackson-Ross School
Board enjoyed dessert prepared by
the eight grade Home Economics
class at their meeting. ;
Edward Edwards, was injured by
the same shot which killed ‘a grouse.
Walter Roberts, proprietor. of !
Roberts Oil Company, Trucksville,
died at his home in Forty Fort.
Married; Christine Crispell and
Robert G. Lewis, Dallas. FIR
Joy Lou Steele, Sweet Valley,
Duane Wickard, Omaha.
Marian G. Parsons, Kunkle, and
William G. Eckert, Jr., Lake Cdt-
alpa.
Mrs. Addie Mathers
her 95th birthday.
celebrated
SAFETY VALVE
IT WASN'T THE CABBAGE
Editor
Dallas Post
Dear Myra,
Who wrote the notice on the
front page of the paper about the
police? The police were called not
to watch Neuman’'s cabbage patch
as there is none to watch. J
They were called to watch ‘Neu-
man’s orchard nights before to keep
+ the high school kids from pulling
up Art’s poison signs that surround
our orchard. These are state de-
manded. The first night we put
young deer; light rain coat and white hair, probably some
sort of head gear, since he is too agile to be middle aged;
noisy in his goings about with a special yen for roofs and
porches; doesn’t mind working in the light of the moon
or the street light; never seems to have a car; brazen
enough to turn on the electricity when he finds no one
home; overlooks money that he stumbles over; pretty
well completes his operations between eleven and five.
What is he after? How does he manage to elude the
police who are supposed to be patrolling the roads on
the kill or to outstrip them in a foot race!
One officer says, “Oh he’s just a nut. Don’t be afraid
of him!”
Who isn’t afraid of a “nut”?
HOMAGE TO STEPHEN FOSTER
It is a trifle ironic but rewarding for the millions
who love and sing his songs that Stephen Foster, who died
a century ago this year with just 38 cents in his purse,
is honored now with so many splendid memorials.
If you are in Bardstown, Kentucky, you can visit the
beautiful mansion where a dubious legend says Foster
may have spent part of his honeymoon but which he defi-
nitely visited during his life because it was owned by his
relatives. This shrine is called “My Old Kentucky Home.”
If you are in Pittsburgh, you can tour the Stephen
Foster Memorial at the University of Pittsburgh. There
you can see the vast collection of Foster material collected
by the late Josiah Kirby Lilly of Indianapolis. This in-
cludes first printings of Foster's 201 known songs and
all manner of relics, including the purse with the 38 cents.
If you visit northern Florida, you can see the most
spectacular Stephen Foster Memorial of all “way down
the Suwannee River.” Rising in the Okefenokee swamp
of Georgia, this stream winds through wooded country in
north and west Florida, then flows into the Gulf of Mex-
ico. Another Suwannee, the legendary river of Stephen
Foster’s music, has been described as rising “in the highest
mountains of the human soul . . . flowing through the
pleasant, sunny vales of memory . . . and emptying into
the glorious oceans of unfilled dreams.”
These two streams figuratively merge at White
Springs, where Highway 41 crosses the actual river and
not far from interstate routes 10 and 75, to provide a fit-
ting setting for Florida’s tribute to the composer. This
is a park with both a museum and a 200-foot, 97-bell
carillon tower.
Four concerts are presented daily at the state-owned
and operated memorial. Entertainment includes Suwan-
nee River boat rides, a Conestoga Wagon tour on park
trails, and both covered and uncovered picnic areas. There
also are historical musical instruments and animated, three
dimensional dioramas. Once a year they choose a new
“Jeannie With the Light Brown Hair” to preside at a ball.
It is too bad that Foster didnt live to see it.
di
them up some one pulled the stakes
out. :
All through the orchard it is
sprayed with rat and mice poison.
If the kids should eat those’ apples
it could be dangerous; so all farmers’
take state precautions for safety to
trespassers. I called the junioriand |
senior high schools and asked the
principals to announce this warn-
ing all over the school system.
If the police had said they were
asked to patrol our orchard against
ripping up those poison ‘signs it
would have helped through the
hunting season as well.
The farmers have to pay hun-
dreds of dollars a year just to keep
people off their property and then
there are claims when they do and
people get hurt.
Things can’t get much worse for
we are no longer free people.
Thanks,
Jennie Neuman.
. This is
VETERANS DAY
This is the day when somber mem'ries
Crowd the mind,
the day when war’s futility
Is underlined.
As bugles blow again their sad farewell,
In Arlington, in fields where poppies blow,
“Across the bleak hills that show
The scars from war's remembered hell!
This is the day of memories that
wh “Bless and burn.”
thoughts of “Blood and Sweat and Tears”
Know brief return.
As, faintly echoing across the years,
The ghostly sounds of battle rise and fall
O’er bloodu beach and over mountains tall—
And, on this day stir vague and anxious fears!
When
This is the day when love, with misty eyes |
Enshrines her dead.
- This is the day when prayers for peace
World-wide are said.
"But through the rows of crosses, little winds moan low
Of distant strife and stir the sleepers there,—
2 PL, from the sleeping ranks comes wet ‘another prayer—
“Hold hiah this dau the peace, for if you fail
; “We too shall know.”
Ray Lane Dies, 81
ship and West Nanticoke schools.
—WILLIARD G. SEAMAN
In San Antonio |
“Ray :T. Lane, 81, Tunkhannock, |
R. D. died Tuesday afternoon |
at: the home of his daughter, |
Mrs. Marian Jenkins, San ‘Antonio,
Texas.
Son of the late Edward and Etta
McDavitt Lane, he was born at Har-, |
veys Lake. . Other survivors Are, |
Mrs. Norma Hodgson, Factorywille;
Raymond T., Madrid, New York.
Services = were held in Tunk-
|
|
hannock.
|
Former Teacher Shultz |
“Word has been received of the |
death, November 10, of Horton R. |
Shultz, 80, at Nanticoke Hospital |
where’ he had been admitted Oc-
tober 28.
"Services are scheduled from the
Bronson Funeral Home Saturday
afternoon -at 2. Burial will be in
Mossville. = Friends may call Friday
night.
Mr. Shultz, resident of Muhlen-
burg for the past eleven years, was
a former teacher in Salem Town-
Principal of Millville High School,
he: retired ten years ago.
"7A 'native of Sweet Valley, his
parents were Samuel and Euphania
Rummage Shultz. His wife, the
former Stella Long, died in 1960.
He leaves a daughter, Mrs. Edna
‘Whitesell, Muhlenburg, and a son,
Arthur, Berwick.
Editor’s note:
The Post
heard the police say they were go-
ing-to-check out Art Newman’s cab-
bage patch for halloweening. Any-
Sorry, Mrs. Neuman.
| under 21 must
Bloodmobile Is
Set For Linear
The American Red Cross will hold
a collection at Linear Inc., on Mon- |
day, November 16 from 12:45 to
4:45 pm.
Quota will be 90 pints and is
the only collection for! this point
during the year.
Those interested in donating be-
tween the ages of 18 and 60 are
asked to contact Mrs. Phyllis Ide,
at the personnel office. Any donors
have permission
from their parents, forms may be
obtained from Mrs. Ide. |
List Burial Services
For Arthur J. Webb
| ‘People in the area who remember
| Marie Gebhart with affection, will |
| be grieved to hear of ‘the death |
(of her father. |
| Arthur J. Webb, 83, Orange, died |
| Tuesday afternoon at General Hos- |
| pital, where he had been admitted
[two days earlier by Franklin Town- |
ship ambulance. y
He will be buried from the family |
home Friday afternoon, his pastor |
Rev. William Reid officiating. Ti
Burial will be in Orcutt Cemetery. |
Mr. Webb was born in Vernon, |
son of Henry and Clara Daley Webb. |
Former resident of Wyoming, he |
{ was a foreman at the Shovel Works
| before opening a service station of |
his own inh Wyoming. : I
He retired twenty years ago.
Church affiliations were with Or- |
ange Methodist; Masonic connec-
1
|
|
i
tions with Wyoming Lodge, Wyo- |
ming Valley Commandery, Knights
Templar, Irem Temple and Pitts-
ton Royal Arch. i
He leaves his widow, the former |
Daisy Ryman; a granddaughter,
way, somebody's got a cabbage
patch up that way. /
Mrs. Daisette Jones, at home.
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"SERVING RESIDENTS OF
THE GREATER DALLAS AREA
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
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A funeral home should be carefully selected . . . before
the need arises. Back Mountain residents are invited
to compare Snowdon facilities . . . services . . . prices.
HAROLD C. SNOWDON
HAROLD C. SNOWDON, JR,
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Safety Valve
Dallas Post,
Dear Editor, |
Following a conversation with the |
secretary I
the Dallas Post.
have
Board about the situation of the
school bus stops, but nothing has
been done as yet.
article will help.
include an article for
Many complaints
been given to the School
I hope this
Ask Help Of School Board
Another accident occurred at
Kunkle on Route 309, Shady Side done.
Lake (Same spot where old Marty
got killed a couple of years ago) |
and could have ended up tragically
without the agility of Mrs. Eugene with the assessors.
Kocher to jump back.
Car skidded out of control in at-
| tempting to avoid hitting another ' businessman
which appeared to be stopping for either he or his wife had been in
a school bus of Westmoreland Ele- | the store every day from opening
mentary School, swerved around it ' until closing time, and no appraiser |
scratching a telephone pole, by a lever came around.
mail box and ran over Mrs. Kocher's| The capper, he
property where she was standing |
to take her child across to the bus. | Mountain, adjoining a trailer resi- | Township building
No one was hurt.
With so many stops within 100
feet made by the school bus motor-
ists complain they are confused in
their reaction.
Order had been given previously
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
I wag interested in what Cal Mec-
Better Leighton Never |
| scrubbing down hose. The younger
Hose, who knows his taxes, had to | members of Kunkle Fire Company
tell us about the reassessment pro- |are really well-drilled -on.-their hose,
gram in the county.
Some of the results that he
pointed out tend to show a some-
what less than perfect situation.
For example, many of the assess-
ments taken lumped wall a man’s
properties together. This can't be
Each deed has to be as-
sessed individually.
| He named a couple of families
who had either brief or no contact
One farm was
| appraised by a man who just sat
“in his. “car. well-known
las seen when they charged that
fire at Centermoreland.
| What a week. I'm so stuffed
{from the OES turkey dinner and
| the Huntsville Christian Church
soup supper that I. can't move.
Thanks to the OES for the tickets,
really appreciated. = = *
| Seen on Market ‘Street, Noxen,
| one recent Sunday: Kids would roll
| something onto the road, cars
‘would squash whatever. it was with |
a pop and crunch, and. the kids
| would jump up and down gleefully
Another
‘told McHose that and gather it all up. Pretty clever:
| walnuts. &
| Building along at a speedy pace:
gas station above Natona Mills,
| sporting goods store annex in
| Shavertown = and his neighbor
Gavy, and the Kingston
on Carverton
continued, was
{the one eighth of an acre on Sorber (new)
{dence site, valued (by somebody, Road.
Lanyway) at $3280. | Lynn Sheehan will be working
| SEEN AND HEARD {temporarily as. a Santa Claus in
| The highly entertaining visitors | Wilkes-Barre, or will "the Coast
to the farmer dance on Saturday Guard get him first?
| night were members of the “Stop | A lot of kids in the bleachers
by state police that the bus driver. ’'n Go. Motorcycle Club”, who ap- sort of razzed the Northwest Band
eliminate one stop. It was followed | parently specialize
for two weeks and put back by Mr.
Austin, principal of Westmoreland
in doing the for their new running step at the
Irish Jig. | game Saturday, but some ‘other
| Words can’t express how glad we | spectators wondered if the new
School before the accident occurred. are to have genial Al Coury of Har- | spiffy outfit wouldn't be right up
| veys ‘Lake back from a long virus | there in quality with Lake-Lehman
Today again State Police of Wyo-
ming investigated and tried to per- |illness at Vets Hospital. Al says he in a year or two.
suade Mr. Austin of the danger of
the situation and ask for the re-
establishment of the previous plan
for school bus stops that satisfied ' page.
It's easy to be
‘wag woke many. a time by nurses |a wise guy, but nobody will clap
| who then. gave ‘him a sleeping pill. | for you.
Check that picture on -the front Said principal Frank Trimble as
A fire chief and and. assist- | the players were introduced with
both traffic and the safety of the ant chief are grinning pretty broad- | their parents, and each turned a
pedestrians for twenty years.
Sincerely yours,
Helen Kocher
Dallas R. D. 1, Pa.
ly about that ax. | little red as mom gave him a big
Dallas firemen had such a busy] buss: “We understand that if you
{time of .it last Wednesday shat don's kiss your mother, you don’t
they spent much of that night | ply in this game.”
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