CTION A — PAGE 2 THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1064 DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA 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 No subscriptions accepted for less than Out-of-State subscriptions, $4.50 a year; $3.00 six Students away from home $3.00 a term; Out-oi- year; $2.50 six months. six months, months or less. Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post State $3.50. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c, 30 Years Ago | s Member Audit Bureau of Circulations Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association 3: Member National Editorial Association Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. | «to © oy 2 A oA 9% aN ~ Cunt Editor and Publisher Associate Editors— Mgrs. T.M.B. Hicks, LeiHTON R. Scorr, Jr. Social Editor... . iv. vuis Advertising Manager Business Manager Circulation Manager Accounting “eee «vv. MYRA Z. RISLEY Mgrs. DoroTHY B. ANDERSON Louise MARKS oo (oie re Rs Doris R. MALLIN AE AY Mgrs. VELMA Davis SANDRA STRAZDUS 7 “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution National display advertising rates 84n per column inch. Transient rates 80. Political advertising '$.85, $1.10, $1.25 per inch Classified rates 5c per word. Minimum if charged $1.15. Editorially Speaking New County Superintendent It couldn’t have happened to a better man. Wesley Davies, Overbrook Avenue, has been assist- ant superintendent of Luzerne County for many years. It was high time that he moved up into the top post, to fill the unexpired term of Eugene S. Teter, whose retire- ment becomes effective January 1. Mr. Davies is not a man who pushs his weight around. He goes quietly ahead, getting the job done. And as assistant superintendent, he is completely convers- ant with the demands of the position. : The shift will be made as if on ball-bearings, with no interruption of necessary procedures. Bad Accident Indicated Unless the highway department installs some direc- tional lights at the intersection of Pioneer Avenue and the main highway, there will be an ugly accident. The reflecting buttons which now point the way to Lehman turnoff, where route 118 leaves the Harveys Lake Highway towards Williamsport, have been of great assis- tance to motorists. They could not have been very ex- pensive, and they require no upkeep. Headlights pick them out without trouble, and an intersection which many out-of-town motorists could not find at all, is now plainly visible. At the Pioneer intersection there is a complex of roads, all of them plain enough by daylight, but sheer murder at night to any motorist who wants to make the left turn at the crest of the still existent hump near Duke Isaacs. Start up one of those crossings, and you find your- self facing south-bound traffic, up against a curb, with cars wildly beeping, and with good luck, stopping in time. Eugene Lazarus headed the Dallas School Board; Kingston Township | retained Howard Appleton as pres- | ident; Dallas Township reelected C. | J. Eipper. A poem, was published in The Commonweal, weekly review of literature. Luzerne Gas and Electric lower- ed its rates. Bobby Edwards faced death for the slaying of his sweetheart at | Harveys Lake. Scarlet fever only one new case. Rev! George L. Sweet, pastor of Meeker Methodist Church, used to be a tight-rope walker in a circus. Tiring of the Big Top, he studied for the ministry. Once in a while he demonstrated tumbling and rope walking. Coffee was 19 cents a pound; su- gar 10 pounds for 50 cents; stew- ing oysters, 2 dozen 19 cents; pork loin 14 cents a pound; chuck roast, end cuts, 7 cents pound; potatoes 10 cents a peck. 20 Years Ago Howell Rees, former editor of the Dallas, Post, was General George A. Acheson for his public relations work with the 15th Division in’ Italy. Arthur Lasher, Jr. was in the jun- gles of the Southwest Pacific, fight- ing rats and lizards as well as Japs. Herman Sands bought a new herd sire, Montvic Pathfinder Peitge. George E, Jacquish, son of County Farm agent and Mrs. Johnd, Jac- quish of Tunkhannock, was killed in action in France. Killed in action in the Back Mountain roster, 12; missing, 11; prisoners, 8; died in service, 5. Beaumont Union Church was re- | dedicated, Rev. John Ten Hove off- iciating. Heard from in the Outpost: Don Smith, Florida; Earl Williams, Geo- | rgia; Louis Achuff, Hunter Field; | Jack Carey, Arizona, Trebilcox, in the Mariannas; Dave Evans, Europe; Bob Considine, Belgium; Elmer Wy- ant, France: John Stofko, Belgium. Married: Alice Deater to Benjamin Badger Jr. Instantly killed when thrown from a bicycle on Carverton Road, | was Raymond Sherwin, 16. He was | hitching a ride behind a truck. 10 Years Ago There is absolutely nothing to point the way at night. Directional buttons would iron the whole thing out. | Antique Shops Cooperate To Stage Open House Friday And Saturday It was a horrible day for any kind of an open house on Friday, but the four Antique Shops which advertised an Open-House for the weekend were ablaze with lights; decorated for the holidays, and dis- playing the welcome mat. Nobody could deplore the wet weather, for the rain was too badly needed, but it held down the sight- seers on the first day. People have discovered that a Boston rocker is at home in a mod- ern setting, affording solid comfort’ and a tie between the generations, and that a bit of cranberry glass lights up the china cabinet: that a polished copper kettle beside the fireplace is a convenient place for | keeping small logs, and that a cherry secretary from the 18th cen- tury,” with its secret drawer makes a good conversation piece. The Powder Horn, on Main Street, Dallas, had a miniature village in © its window, and dolls hobnobbing over a cup of tea at a table set with tiny dishes. Inside, there was a wide selection of antiques. some of them designed for the delight of children. Mary Frantz says that the array of books from the Wide- Awake Book Shop is drawing many customers, especially’ in the chil- dren’s department. The fashion show staged here last month was a huge success. Francis Schriber, Overbrook Road proprietor of Stone Gateshas done the impossible. Without one sug- gestion of crowding, he has com- pressed into a doll-house sized space a remarkably fine collection of col- ored glass, bits of decoration suit- eye-level cubbyholes. From the red brick floor and the doors with their strap black iron hinges, to the low ceiling, the whole thing looks like a stage setting in minature. The shop was cunningly converted from a former patio. It was impossible to miss the Sil- ver Sleigh, just north of Corners. A curtain of evergreen branches cover ed the wide window, with small candle-lights picking out the hat- rack, the kind of fixture which used to hang in every hall at the turn of the century. Painted white and backed by Christmas greenery, it was breath-takingly effective. Polished copper abounds, and Gene Hanley and Bob Davis have gone | in for lighting, crystal chandeliers down the hill to lanterns. small pieces, suitable for Christmas giving to the discriminating. The boys expect to keep on with open house on Sundays, serving hot cof- fee to customers and browsers. Dale Myers, at the end of the line, far up the Thunkhannock high- way, was showing a lavish display of flat silver and cutglass. His shop was shrouded in fog by 4 p.m. on Friday, but the weather improv- ed on Saturday. A space that once housed a small restaurant is now devoted entirely to antiques. Dale even had some things piled outside the door, and protected with tarpaulins against the rain, items for the do-it-yourself finisher of antiques to gloat over, spool towel holders and such. Lying in wait was a scarlet ‘painted anvil, the kind that used to be seen at the village Lots of | able for any establishment, treas- ures to pass on as heirlooms. Wasting not one inch of space, but with the decorator’s touch, he has utilized small stone shelves for display, corner cupboards, under 4 Safety Valve A FINE EDITION Dear Mrs. Risley, 3 | This morning Dr. Gilbert brought a copy of the Dallas Post, 75th anni- | versary edition. When I offered to | pay for it, he said you had sent | it to me as a gift. black smith. Large, and exactly right for a small child to adopt as a horse. The flat field next door to Dale's each fall accommodates the Haymarket outdoor Antique show. |= cousins who lived in Dallas family, the Ziba Schooley’s and the Arthur Turners. people in Dallas so naturally T am interested in the Dallas Post. Dr. mine. With my congratulations and my thanks, I send my best wishes to you and the future of the Post. Cordially yours, you my deep appreciation and many | thanks. 1 congratulate you on a | splendid paper which I often enjoy as Dr. Gilbert brings me the paper For this gracious gesture, 1 send | | | | | [ Mond ornings. | . Uses The famous SY Ean ssh ATF Chief You do not know me but I did | Offset Pr. know Mr. Risley. I used to visit The Dallas Post many years, the Sherman Richards | I knew many | Gilbert is a very warm friend of | Mrs. William Stark Tompkins 1 Lehman football team won the | Bronze Shoe for the fourth time, | Edgar Lashford was elected pres- |ident "of Lehman-Jackson-Ross schoolboard. ‘ Dallas Senior Womans Club was first aboard the drive to purchase a Dallas community ambulance, with a gift of $100. : Jointure . of Kingston Township, | Dallas Borough, Dallas and Franklin | Townships, was thrashed out again, | with a final vote for the jointure, | the goal a new high school. The | sticking point was relocation of el- ementary school children, resisted by Franklin Township. * Dallas Borough “YY” canteen opened at Dallas Borough grade i school, sponsored by Dallas Rotary and Back Mountain YMCA. | Mrs. Maude I. Klug, 70 Shaver- town, suffered a fatal stroke. Janet Smith’s story hour attract- ed many children to the Library Saturday mornings. Robert Laux was elected pres- | iden of the Dallas Ambulance Asso- ! ciation. Lake School still closed, well, I down 150 feet, no water. Russell Edmondson resigned as | Shavertown fire chief. ; | Married: Eleanor Snell to Theodore | Biggs. Joan Williams to Edward A. Makowski. Anna C. Adams to Ed- | ward G. Clark. Frances Lorraine | Gettle to Malcolm Bulter. | Died: Charles L. Deats, 72, Harveys | Lake. | “Confession” by Sister | Miriam, College Misericordia, epidemic checked, , | was tough to keep from cussing the commended by | «+ KEEPING December 2: FORMER DICTATOR Peron refused admit- tance to Brazil, flies warm welcome. BOBBY BAKER inquiry. Theme, “You're a liar.” POSTED back to Spain, meets luke- December 3: plicated. REPUBLICAN GOVERNORS demand | change in party, in light of the recent debacle. December 4: FBI LINKS murder of three civil rights workers to KU KLUX KLAN; two lawmen im- * Weekend: SLEET, FREEZING RAIN, Schenectady area in darkness, bitter cold drives residents to school buildings. December 7: PEARL HARBOR DAY, 23rd anniversary. REPUBLICANS CLAMOR for Dean Burch’s scalp. BRITAIN'S PRIME MINISTER confers with Presi- dent Johnson. TSHOMBE ON WAY NBC SARNOFF protests barring of TV at trials. FOUR SHIPS TRAPPED in St. Lawrence Seaway, NX ice thickens. to United Nations. December 8: CONGO PROTESTS rescue of white hostages by Belgians and U.S. December 9: RAILROAD STRIKE again threatens, set for December 15. Better Leighton Never When the water started to run like a river down Main Street, it! weather. Water poured into my shoes, and the wet wind soaked my collar, ‘but I kept telling myself “You love it.” What a great day to settle down | with a good book, so I dropped over | to the antique shop, with a particu- | lar one in mind, figuring Mary | Frantz could get it from the down- | town shop, which she could, and proceeded to do. Well, then I got | so excited over the prospect of read- | ing the book, I decided to go get | it myself, right away. | Walking across Market Street | bridge in Wilkes-Barre not only | puts one in a reading mood, but was | an experience in itself, as it has ‘been about half a year since I saw any substantial rain hit the waters of the Susquehanna. Then at the book store, Mrs. | are in a rush all the time,” he re- plied. That's true. I never even notice ‘when people are brief with me, anymore. The only time a re- sponse registers on me is when the party is particularly polite and friendly. Christmas is a bad time to be in a rush. SECRET WEAPON Glancing at the town pavers, we | noticed quite a spread given to an- | nouncement ‘Saturday of the gift of Hayfield Farm to Penn State! Center. I would have been a little hurt by the same “news” release which we got in the mail two days later, if 'we hadn't broken the sub- stance of the story back in the Oct- ober 8 Dallas Post. Thanks to a Main Street tip-off. Anyway, at that time, I remember speculating on the size of Hayfield House with some of the hoys at lunch. Our modest estimate, with- (il, 1965, | assistant for thirty years, comes of | a family of educators. | Wilkes-Barre schools, closely asso- Howell. > | School, from® 1926 to 1930. the was active in athletics. | ucation Association N. E. District. | Evans sized me up as a likely cus- tomer for lots of other late offer- out having much idea, of the breath ings, all of which had only momen- tarily slipped my mind since last Sunday's Times perusal. She was absolutely right, and I only held off on most of the others as a bad bet financially, what with the shape of my wallet, the first of the month bills, the pound sterling crisis and | world finance, and all that stuff. ‘What the heck, you can only read one book at a time anyway. Seen And Heard Last week, the fire chief caught on fire. Don Bulford built a fire to get warm, out hunting, and a spark caught in one leg of his in- sulated underwear, and started burning up along the outside of his leg. He showed me the red mark on his ankle to prove it. | of the plant was something like 90 It's Ross Williams who's got the Sunoco station slated for above O'Malia’s, which gives him pretty tight quarters, smack against the mountain. Anyway, the corner will look just like old times. Is the window in the center of the new Kingston Township build- ing upside down, or wag it designed that way? “Is there really such a thing as: * ; the Christmas rush?”. I asked Ed|Will see fit to put up reflectors, so Labatch at the postoffice. “People! we can see our way. THE CHRISTMAS BALL : tunately without any big trucks on .ing in ceiling zero at Djibouti air- rooms and 20 bathrooms. The lat- ter feature appealed to my fancy, and I thought that if all the toilets were flused simultaneously, the US government could, at the ex- pense of blowing the bottom out of Lehman Township, intimid#te Red China into full surrender. FOG 4 Fog settled over the area Satur- day morning, so thick a bum couldn't see a silver dollar on the pavement, teaching us something else about the new highway. It's a good idea to have some kind of a divider in the middle of the road, but trying to find a crossover at major intersections is a real prob- lem in this kind of weather. Travel- ling south at 7 a.m., I wanted to get a cup of coffee at Orchard Farm, and finally made my left turn, for- my tail. But feeling out the cross- overs in the divider was like land- port. In time, I suspect, somebody by Juliette Pillarella, 9 I When I look in a Christmas ball I see myself so big and tall, And then once more I look to see - The candles glitter on the tree. II It’s fun to look at the Christmas tree, It’s a beautiful sight, we all agree, The candy canes and tinsel bright Will bring us joy on a Christmas night. A | | NEARER ER RE 5 a | EE EEE EES ESOS Ca Ea ES ES EE SESE 5 Wesley E. Davies | From — Superintendent Elected By Board, | Succeeds E. S. Teter Wesley E. Davies, assistant super- intendent of Luzerne County Schools moves up to the top post, appoint- ed by the County School Board to fill the vacancy caused by the re- cent resignation of Eugene S. Teter. The change takes effect January Mr. Davies, Overbrook Avenue, His father, the late Professor Gwilym Davies of Kingston, was for many years supervisor of music in ciated with former Superintendent of Schools Harry H. Zeiser, father of Mrs. Howard Risley. Many teachers at GAR. and Coughlin, now living in this area, have great regard for Mr. Davies. Among them are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mr. Davies, a native of Kings- ton, obtained his education at Bloomsburg State College, Pennsyl- vania State University, Columbia, and Syracuse. His first teaching assignment was at Forty Fort High For four years he was supvervis- ing principal of Nescopeck schools, | leaving in 1934 to take the position of assistant superintendent of Lu- zerne County schools. In his younger days he was called | “The flying teacher,” and elected | president of Wyoming Valley Fly- ing Club. During his college years | He is past president of Forty Fort- | | Kingston Kiwanis, of County Super- | | intendents of N. E. Pennsylvania, | and County Superintendents De- | partment of Pennsylvania State Ed- | Locally, he is on the official board | of Shavertown Methodist Church, | and chairman of its Commission on | Education. His wife is the former Gertrude Gordon, Forty Fort, a former Kings- | ton school teacher. A daughter, Mrs. John W. Klob, Willingboro, N. J., is married to the ‘controller | of Drexel Institute of Technology. | There are three grandchildren. | Art Show By Former Dallas Instructor An art show by J. Philip Rich- | ards, is now going on at Gallerie | 20, 20 E. Market Street, Wilkes- | Barre. Closing date is Saturday, | December 12. Hours are 7 to 10 p. | m. Recent oils and water colors are | included. . Mr. Richards, now art instructor | at Wilkes College, was former art instructor at Dallas Junior High School, where his enthusiasm for his subject sparked many a student into performing far beyond his | apparent capabilitie’s. Each sum- | mer the Library Auction shows | some of his work at the art booth | and he also exhibits at the Rotary | Fall Fair. On TV Panel ig Mrs. Lyle Slaff, Pioneer Avenue, | Trucksville, served on a panel over | Television Sunday afternoon, dis- cussing what can be done to halt the sale. of pornographic literature | to children. | Pillar To Post... What I want to know is, are the starlings eating everybody out of house and home ? Put out a tasty chunk of suet, wired to the bird feeder, and the starlings descend upon it, bill and claw, knocking the bird feeder galley-west in the process, while the chickadees wait hopefully in the lilac bush. I am purely sick of supporting a herd of starlings. The horrid things have no manners, they simply descend upoh the feeder in droves, and gorge. ' Chickadees and nuthatches, hairy and downy woodpeckers, tit- mice and cardinals politely take ‘their turn, but not starlings. They are as voracious as evening grosbeaks, without the good looks. At least evening grosbeaks are colorful, lending a very fancy touch to a winter landscape. If somebody could get a color photo of a blue-jay, a'cardinal, and an evening grosbeak against a back- ground of snow, it would be a marvel of color. Leave out the starlings. No pretensions to beauty at all. They look just exactly like scavengers, with as much appeal as a turkey Mountain Memorial | the notifications on overdue books, | and reduce errors which are a haz- buzzard. Where did they come from? Did the campaign against them in the city divert them to the Back Mountain? The city fathers should have blasted them with rock salt instead of simply frightening them away. 7 There must have been a population explosion to end population explosions in the starling hide-outs. Apparently nothing discourages a starling or cuts off its reproductive powers. Can't we import something that eats starling eggs, and leaves robin eggs and chickadee eggs alone ? Or do I have the only starlings in the Back Mountain? Library Will Change Its Loan Period, Beginning In January The system is in use in the ma- jority of libraries not using mecha- nical charging systems and has pro- ved most effective in reducing the It In order to speed up the process, of charging out books, the Back ! Library will change its loan period. All new books, both fiction and Wait for charging out books. | non-fiction will be loaned for 14 should be a convenience to the bor- days. All other books for 28 days. | rower and a help to the librarians. There will be no renewals. Because of the long holiday week- For the borrower this means that | ends this year the library schdule | they will no longer need to phone or will be as follows: Closing Thursday Dec. 24th at 5:00 P.M. Reopening system allows 14 days per book plus Tuesday Dec. 29th at 1:30 P.M. on renewal of 14 ‘days total 28 days. , Closing again Dec. 31st at 5:00 P.M. Beginning Jan. 5, 1965 all but| Reopening Jan. 5th at 1:30 P.M. By new books will be due 28 days later, | remaining closed on the two Sat- For the librarians this means | urdays for the long weekend a con- eliminating the constant interrupt- | siderable savings in heat expenese ion of telephone calls for renewals. | Will be possible. It will reduce by more than half come in for a renewal. The present Rubber Stamps | ard of renewing. Made To Your Design The Dallas Post PS... our most important product Bruce F. Slocum Insurance Agency “All Forms of Insurance” 48 Main Street Dallas. Pa. 674-3041 *. Personal Service FAMOUS CANDIES SERVING RESIDENTS OF THE GREATER DALLAS AREA FUNERAL DIRECTORS —al 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. HEINE Ie Fresh candy, FANNY FARMER of course, will make your home more festive over the holidays . . . no home should be without holiday candies, fresh FANNY FARMER Candies of course! Holiday candies help to meet the de- mand of families and friends for holiday goodies and delicacies. Stop in at EVANS DRUG STORE ond pur- chase your holiday FANNY FARMER Candies for gift giving, stocking stuffers, or just to fill your candy dishes with holiday energy and pure FANNY FARMER goodness. While you're at EVANS, be sure to see the new and different FANNY FARMER Two- Pound Candle Gift Box, at $4.25, the colorful Two- Pound Holiday Box at $3.25, and. the delicate Miniature Assortment at a low, low $1.95 a pound. ~~ Do you know there is a difference between FANNY FARMER Candies and other candies? FANNY FARMER Candies are as fresh as the pure newly churned butter and cream’ with which they are made daily. : Over the holidays, be sure to buy fresh FANNY FARMER Candies at EVANS DRUG STORE — your fresh candy center in SHAVERTOWN. Cal] 674-3888 and your selection will be reserved for you. % Iz sk ir. La FEN ae... CC C00 CO 033 CO C3 O03 ATT ETT CTE EO C3 PPE STITT ATES RCT ITT ED EVE EE YTV CAC 311