ra 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 Vita Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association < S| Member National Editorial Association 2 x Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc, Cun Editor and Publisher Managing Editor Associate Editor Social Editor Mrs. DoroTHY B. ANDERSON Advertising Manager -....% 25.00 oa. Louise MARKS Business: Manager '............0%. | Doris R. MALLIN “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution” Editorially Speaking Sundown When a woman such as Eleanor Farley dies, she leaves behind her a heritage of far greater value than mere wealth. She bequeathes to her children and her grandchildren the high standards of her own life; the love for the beauti- ful; the appreciation of music and of winged words; com- passion for all small and helpless things; a serene accept- ance of whatever life may bring; a courage to rise above the storms of life, finding in each a renewed belief. There are those of us who from the beginning have watched the transformation of the hilltop at Beaumont, have been privileged to be accepted, over the years, as welcome guests, have seen the gradual mellowing of Fair- Lea and the growth of the family. The silent Quaker blessing at each meal, hands linked around the table; the quiet hour at sunset, the westering hills fading into the dusk of a summer evening; the heavenly scent of dew-drenched petunias; the wide and starry sky. 3 It was eminently fitting that quiet services be held for her, from her own home, at sundown, with night gathering, and the sure promise of a sunrise in the enfold- ing darkness. Sleep well, Eleanor. Tetanus A Real Danger Watch for small wounds this summer, especially when going barefoot around places where horses are usually found. Tetanus, says the Department of Health of the State of Pennsylvania, is a very real danger. Many women do not have immunization from tet- anus. Their babies have it, because it is customarily included in the standard inoculation which protects against diphtheria, whooping cough and tetanus. Their men-folks have immunization if they have ever been in the military services. Fewer than one-half of the victims survive. Small scrapes, small puncture wounds, can have deadly results. ; People are lazy about being immunized. Women who screamed about their fear of polio ten years ago, now go blithely about their business, failing to take their children to be immunized, and brushing off any possibility .that the disease can strike the mature as well as the young. In areas where smallpox vaccination is not one hun- dred percent, a devastating epidemic can occur. It has done so, right here in Pennsylvania, in areas where re- ligious opposition to vaccination is encountered. Safeguard yourself and your family against as many disesaes as possible. The means are now at hand. Someday, cancer will be added to the list. Again: watch those small summer wounds, and if you are not protected against tetanus, see your family doctor. \ = Bet You Can't Do It | The Dallas Post has had recently brought to its at- tention the gossip that has been going the rounds because somebody from an older generation is enjoying the Wainy and the Clam and the Mashed Potato, at a snack ar. All the Dallas Post can say is that any woman near- ing seventy who is able to shuck off forty pounds by going in for the modern dances, better keep it up, and more power to her. If she likes to mash a potato somewhere other than in her own kitchen, she is entitled to do so. Doubtless her detractors are motivated by envy, be- ing unable themselves to perform the accepted tribal rites because of excess poundage or fallen arches, or reluctance to throw their spinal columns out of joint. There’s nothing like a few limbering-up exercises. - Lady, we take off our hat to you. The Cherry Tree I It blossomed in the springtime With a beauty fair to see, And the promise of a harvest That would ripen lusciously; And it stirred anticipation In one beholder’s heart, Of resulting masterpieces In the culinary art. II The blossoms faded quickly But anticipation grew, With the nectar and ambrosia Of cherry pies in view; For the ancient gods ne'er tasted > In their dining halls on high, A morsel half as wondrous As a fresh baked cherry pie. III But this story has a moral Which is sadly now attached, And which, slightly altered, follows — “Don’t count cherries 'fore they're hatched.” ’Cause our feathered ‘friends’ were waiting And in flights and flocks and herds, They descended, and from then on, It was strictly “for the birds.” es nt, by Williard Seaman ~~ # ~ ws "THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 1965 Only | July 28: LBJ DOUBLES draft calls, says no present rea- | Yesterday | son to call Reserves. ABE FORTAS replaces former Justice Goldberg | Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years | Ago In The Dallas Post on the Supreme Court bench. JOHN CHANCELLOR heads Voice of America, ap- pointed by The President. 30 Years Ago | Igor Sikorsky, world famous air- plane designer, and Boris Sergiev- sky, well known test pilot, were guests of honor at Russian Day at Harveys Lake. Gir] Scouts of Dallas Troop 7 won a Post-sponsored prize of $5 for cleaning up an unsightly let in Dallas. | Two CCC camps were planned for this area. i Six local youngsters were attend- ing 4-H Leadership Camp at Camp: Brule. turned from their wedding trip. The | | couple visited New England and | Nova Scotia. Died: Harry H. Garrahan, 54, Dallas, prominent local figure in fraternal on situation. Vietnam. fade. and Mrs. Howard Risley ro-| in his presidency. GOVERNORS SUPPORT stand on Vietnam, with exception of Romney and Hatfield. ST ET HR In Es. July 29: GOVERNORS MEET with President for brief- Hatfield still nrotests. FIRST CAVALRY, based at Fort Benning, alerted for action in Vietnam and 101st Airborne lands in HORMONE TREATMENTS produce two sets of quintuplets, one set in New Zealand. MARS PIX from Mariner TV similar to that of moon, hopes for life on the planet indicate surface WHAT DO YOU BET Hoffa beats the rap again? ES lL A en mss July 30: MEDICARE BILL signed into law in library of Harry Truman, who first suggested such a measure STEEL STRIKE threatened September 1. ROA RR EE August 1: LBJ lashes out at GOP House leader Ford. land civic organizations; Ambrose | i West, Dallas. ot August 2: FORD LASHES back. says no leak from him. i Potatoes were 15. ]bs. for 17c, | DEAN RUSK suggests U.N. further explore possi- i cantalopes 3 for 25c. |; | 20 Years Ago Mr. and Mrs. Sev Newberry, Dal- | las, were among excited spectators | who watched an army bomber circle | through © New York City before | ! crashing into the fog-shrouded Em-- pire State Building. Donald Freeman, listed as miss- | ing in action in the Philippines since | 1942,wag declared killed in action. ! The family had hoped he was a| | prisoner. | o Hannah Culp was named first | grade teacher in the Lehman Town- | | ship schools. In the Outpost: Don Dunn, Dutch ‘ East Indies; Dick Phillips, SanFran- (cisco; Jim Evans, New York; Earl Taylor, Georgia; Jay Gould, New York; Charles Mahler, Italy; Warren | | Brown, New York; Robert Jones, Philippines. Decorated: Joseph Wallo, the Bronze Star. August was reunion time. The Smith family met at Sweet Valley, | the Frear-Parrish family at Ide- | town, and the Ransom family at! | Alderson. : Married: Arlene Eyet, Beaumont, | to Herbert Downs, Beaumont. * August 3: a hammer. SEEN AND HEARD morning. Seems the assistant man- things arranged after being on vaca- ‘tion and encountered complication | in opening the safe. | was averted twice over the week- end—once when the union em- I.ployees decided to wait til after bilitv of peace negotiations in Vietnam. RASH OF REPORTS on flving saucers. JUNGLE WARRIORS find extermination of guerillas as difficult as slaughtering termites with MARTIN LUTHER KING leaves picketing forces outside Girard College in Philadelphia, moves on to Washington for demonstrations. PENTAGON CALLS for 27,400 draftees in Sep- tember, 33,600 in October. Better Leighton Never | pictorial debut in the Dallas Post, day morning, adding a little bright- | | | i The burglar alarm at the Dallas including one which implied a little | Acme went off around 7:30 Mon- ‘professional jealousy about who was | and was not in the picture, the fact ness to. an : otherwise grim gray is that the cruiser went back to | the garage for installation of its ager came in a little early to get 360 degree flashing light. One wonders; after heaven knows how many years, it will take the | state to resurface Old Main Road : Threatened strike at Linear plant | between Pioneer Avenue and Mem- | orial Highway. This is one of the, world’s most busted pieces of con- | | Died: Corey A. Frantz, 75, Dallas, | pay-day and then again Monday gets oe I Sort of Sepa i bank president and civic leader, of morning. Ynes. i bs % fe a ron IBA { a heart attack; Charles Parrish, 74," It is fairly ‘well acknowledged ooo On this tank-irap slow to al- i Dallas. The boys were coming home. rests ought to be made. 10 Years Ago do my part by opening my driver's door abruptly in front of a racing | . The heavy drought threatened to driver just before he comes to pass | elose ‘the big Nexen tannery. my parked car, then pulling it shut Heat 1 f t- | i i : ang a > ein Se ok d lin the nick of time.) We shouldnt orial Highway and Says they're areas. Bowinhms ‘Credh wie a par: ‘have to’ resort to extra-legal 8reat protection against roc ks ; | . Bo sa p aE. {thrown up by the wheels of big | ticularly bad section. Four fire companies combined to | douse a large fire at the home of One of the girls from ‘the OES reports, it was a spirited auction William Ide, Idetown. this year, but notes the women will j State Senator Harold Flack was buy the darndest things (e.g. pitiful spectacle of all his fish float- | leading opposition to Gov. George screens without knowing the win- ing to shore and dying because of Leader's tax bill. | dow size.) lack of oxygen. “They used to say Married. Carol Huray, Shavertown, | Wayne King, at Meeker, put a toRobert Guyette, Trucksville; Mar- can out in his back yard during | garet McCuster, Shavertown, ‘to the weekend rain and says it meas- | John Mihalic, Dallas; Iva’ Derby, ured two and 5/16 inches. Dallas, to Ralph Coolbaugh, Trucks- | Installation of a sign marking ville. | Pioneer Avenue and Overbrook Died: June Oliver, 26, Edwardsville, | : | among those who have to live with | speeding on Main Street that ar- | (I always | most a complete stop all the way down the hill. A friend of ours who wears shat- ter-proof sunglasses as extra pre- caution on the shooting range at his. gun club wears them around | here too. He does business on Mem- | trucks. Ray Kuderka looked woeful over (at Fanti’s last week, watching the there weren’t any fish in the pond”, | he mused, with resigned humor. “Now they'll change their tune’. I suggested he make the best of it | ‘and throw a fish fry. | Road makes one wonder why it| Late bulletin: Two guys are said to have taken the police of - Polio * in Arizona; rs. Cora | wasn’t done a long time ago. | cruiser on a ride around the Steele, 83. Lake Township; Guy |: pig you know. dept.. Dead fish | block Tuesday morning, after | Blair, Hunlocks Creek. |' make the best fertilizer in the they found it parked on Main == | world. It is illegal to use fish not Street with the keys in it. They caught in quota as fertilizer. To Be Interviewed For T-V Appearance Debbie Rogers will = be 'inter- | viewed for possible appearance on the T-V show, “Jeopardy,” Monday morning, at the NBC studio in New | York City. Requirements are that any applicant spend a week in or near New York, with an interview | | a prime requisite. Nobody goes on the air without this preliminary. {| There are a great many appli- h car: disappeared after making its : by Debbie Pat - Holdredge, member of the | Cloverleaf 4-H Club, was one of While a variety of rumors drifted {around Dallas as to why the police then took the keys to the of- ficer on duty. “We pay taxes in this town,” one of them told an unimpeachable s source later, ‘Washington Less Symbol Than City Says 4 H Member After Civic Trip | young people were lucky enough HARDY PERENNIAL Dear Mrs. Hicks: A mere Thank You seems quite | small for the wonderful job you and | your committee did for the Auction this year. I am well aware of the long association you have had with | the auction and was not in the least | | surprised when you turned in the excellent results Committee, Your committee has long been a | main stay of the auction and this ' year was again a major source of income. Please convey my heartfelt thanks to the many people on your committee and a special Thanks to you. Kindest regards, Merrill H. Faegenburg EARLY HISTORY THERE | Dear Editor: 1 also am interested in the old | | cemetery in such a terrible state 1 of neglect in Dallas. it is important who owns it. In | olden days cemeteries were either in- the Antique I don’t think | | | | | { | set off at the laying out of the towns along with school and church | public | lands or else donated as property by ‘some civic minded in- | dividual. = A group of people from the community would be appointed | as a cemetery association and with- | out renumeration would maintain Jo Today people are too eager to | say the borough owns it, the coun- | ty owns it, yet complain of in- | creased taxes to cover these added | services. The pioneers who are buried a town meeting and set a time for there in their day would have called | | the local citizenry to in a coopera- | | tive effort renovate this cemetery. | | Why can’t we start such a project. | It would be a big job but once i done would require very little effort | | to maintain. people buried here— in Dallas. A devout patriot who . ’ . . ert) | enlisted in his country’s service in | | the Civil War. He took with him his sons George, John, Charles and Andrew. He had several more | sons killed in this war. His grand- | | daughter Liva Hughey Gordon, is now 92 years old. Her picture ap- peared two weeks ago in this paper in five generation picture. His son John and daughter Sara ! Fish are buried beside him. Doesn’t anyone care about such a ‘patriot’s grave? Peter Roushey was the first | tailor in. Dallas, and opened the first tavern. / Christian Rice was supervisor of the township in 1837. | i penter, Daniel Brown a farmer. Peter Ryman who died in 1838 was ' | the first lawyer in Dallas. | has many descendants here. In 1829 Lehman separated from Dallas. The following signed a peti- tion against this separation: Ephraim Moss, Elam Spencer, land Richard Honeywell. Most all of us who lived in the Back Mountain before World War | II have someone buried there. If your name or your mother’s or grandmother's maiden name was Spencer, Honeywell, Nulton, Barce, Kunkle, Hughey, Moss, Elston, Ohr, Brown, Roushey, Ryman, Lewis, | Anderson, Snyder, King, or Fergu- | | | | | | opened a sawmill on Toby's Creek. | Jesse Vausteemburgh was a car- | { As for a little more about the |. i 1 { | Isaac Hughey was a shingle maker | | | In 1818 he | He still | Stephen Brace, | Peter B. Roushey | + KEEPING POSTED =| Safety Valve From = DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Pillar To Post... By Hix There have been times when water in the basement was a major calamity, calling for acid comment on the early builders who pick-axed out the cellar, and later the rugged walls of native stone. builders who failed to waterproof There were times when it seemed exasperating to have to pull on galoshes in order to pluck a neatly stacked apple logs on the few sticks of firewood from the far side of the pond. There were times when it seemed that the pervading Ss rising from the sluggishly flowing stream moving across the: cella i floor seeped into every room in fhe house, giving even the bedrooms a dank atmosphere. But no more. There is water in the cellar this morning, moving toward the drain at the far end. Walls glisten with moisture. And hurray for our side. . It’s the first time we have ha for months. around the furnace, and more power to it. d enough rain to soak the ground It must have come straight from the East, to leak in It was a real pleasure: to go wading in the basement in order to turn on the furnace after : a weekend spent in Chautauqua County. H It rained up there, too, but it seemed too much to expect that ‘Northeastern Pennsylvania had been likewise blessed. Crossing each ‘ridge of the Allegheny Mountains on: Monday, I looked for puddles, and found them. When I turned into the driveway on Pioneer Avenue late in the afternoon, there was the grand-daddy of all puddles. ! So the lake in the cellar was no real surprise, but it seemed almost too good to be true. We could use a solid month of rain, beginning with a soft drizzle to make the ground receptive. Sheets of rain were gusting on Monday across the Kinzua Dain; but ‘tourists shrugged into raincoats and hustled the kids out of the car to pose them for snapshots against the construction work. When the dam is finished, and the gates closed, the land deeded to ‘the Indians will be submerged. It will take a lot of rain to fill those vast reaches. In the mean- time, every time it rains, thousands of tons of good topsoil go ov the drain. The Allegheny was boiling with mud, outcome of the bulldozer operations employed in’ levelling the floor of what will -be a lake. = The residents of surrounding areas call it the damn-dam, buy the chances are that when the tourists start to arrive, hot-dog stands™ will ‘spring up on every side road, be ancient history. planter Indians?" In the meantime, fill up the-Kinzua dam’s reservoir, everywhere in the Northeast. Folks will ask, “let it rain, and the plight of the Indians will “Just who WERE the Corn- let it pour,” not necessarily to but to bring relief to the farmers Civiletti Paints The Susquehanna And Blue Distances Of The Hills Vincent Civiletti, local artist, is | working on a mammoth painting | of the Susouehanna River, its flow picked { up by white herons, their wings wide-spread in the fore- ground, the river fading into the. blue distance of the encircling hills, ‘pierced by a distant and hardly | discernible water-gap. Viewing the picture, it .is im-, possible to refrain from wondering why Mr. Civiletti. does not go in for excution of murals on a large. scale, for the enrichment of public | buildings. The blues in the foreground are | as varied and iridescent as the blues and greens in a peacock's tail. The picture has been purchased | by Edward Welles of Wilkes-Barre, ! : who expects to hang it in a very | son you no doubt are a descendant | | of one of these people. We in the Back Mountain should be proud of the heritage these people left us. Let's fix up our | graves. Walter Darrow GET A HAWK | To the Editor: Regarding article, Page 1, “Still | | large room. The scene would dwarf any lesser setting. It has already been exhibited, but Mr. Civiletti is a perfectionist, and nothing he executes ever ‘en- tirely satisfies him, so he is working it over. It seems to: the layman, one who has no expert knowledge, that this is. almost a sacrilege. For a number of years Mr. Civi- letti did pot-boilers for magazine | covers and calendars after the Nor- man Rockwell style, with crisply | executed . small boys playing tor- | tured trombones, and dogs howling | to find the Senate in session and | Another Fruit Crop Cleaned Out; to hear New York Senator Robert | Total Loss Is Due to Birds” of July mournfully as an obligato. - No pin- | up girls. On an easel, half finished, is a! portrait of his two older sons, one, face almost leaping from the can- | vas, the other indicated by outline. | Why doesn’t he finish sh the portrait ? ! (its hill, in the setting sun, contrasted with | artist of perception. | Civiletti. He says there is no time. Then he turns, brush in hand. ‘to the compelling picture of the Sus- quehanna. Hanging in Luzerne National Bank there is a large Civiletti pic-, ture. its subject one of the rapidly vanishing bits of early Americana, the battered Lehigh Valley Rail road Depot of a bygone day. If Mr. Civiletti should ever de- cide to. go into murals, to depict Wyoming Valley and the Valley of the Susquehanna, there are many | appropriate subjects. Springing readily to mind is Veterans Hospital, standing high on its stark outlines glowing deep shadows, a composition of cubes, beautiful in its simplicity. And there is the UGI plant at Hunlock Creek, wreathed in morn- ing mist, its tall towers reaching for the sunlight, a subject for an Naked power, gentled by the sunrise. : But no matter what he accom- plished, it would never satisfy Mr. He would visit his murals later, and he would wonder why he had not brought out this or that. No. artist is ever complet i satisfied. } Professional men are afflicted » the same manner. They are never willing to say to themselves, ‘That was the perfect solution.” There is always something be- yond, something which eludes the grasp. It is almost good enough . but there is another peak to Seale. hig] | cants for the morning show, whic is taped in advance and broadcast at 11:30. The gimmick is this: Answers, not | | questions, are hurled at the con- testant, and in a category selected | by the previous contestant. | | | | | Children of the American Revolu- | Lewis Rogers III, who live on the |is writing a few feature stories, for | flection. People of eighteen or older are eligible. This strains out the infant prodigies. Categories questions must be nounced answers, include history, literature, Broadway, and politics. A buzzer cuts off too lengthy re- | in which appropriate fitted to an- Debbie, who has been employed sporadically at the Dallas Post this summer, and who regularly contrib- utes news about the 4-H Clubs and | tion, is daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | old Dr. Howell farm. She expects to go to Syracuse University in the fall, with an eye toward possible journalism. In the meantime, she is cutting her teeth on the Only Yesterday column, and | which she gets a by-line. Low man on the totem pole, she also gets to do some of the hack: | jobs, such as taking cuts off of; | blocks, burning her fingers in the: | process, but absorbing, by osmosis, { much valuable information Tl what goes into the making of al newspaper. Roof Overhanas Roof overhangs should be deep enough to protect windows and | sidings, but not so deep that they! | restrict the view. A rule of thumb: | Susan Wolfe and Mary Jane Spang- | county agentg | and Mrs. Chapman. i lasted one week, July 11 to 18. | course was a series of lectures on | the importance of good ciizenship. | extensive tour of the Capitol. , three Luzerne Couney 4-Hers se- | lected to attend the ‘‘Short Course bassador Adlai Stevenson. in Citizenship” offered by the 4-H| Another moving moment of the Foundation in Washington, D. C. | course was the laying of a wreath The course was given to approxi- on the grave of President John mately 400 outstanding 4-H mem- Kennedy. The presentation was ar- | ‘bers who gathered in the nation’s ranged by Representative McDade, capital from all over the country. of Scranton. Thirty two youngsters represented The 4-Hers days in Washington Pennsylvania. | were busy ones, and the nights were | The other Luzerne County 4-Hers active also. Every evening there was who went to Washington were a state huddle at which Pat got | together with others of the Penn- sylvania delegaion to talk over the | day's events. Other 4-Hers of other | | states were doing the same thing. While in Washington, Pat stayed | Besides tours and lectures the at the 4-H Foundation on Connec- | course offered discussion groups. In | ticutt Avenue with the rest of the | Pennsylvania delegation. The course Kennedy's eulogy to the late Am- ler. The trio was accompanied by | Barry Flinchbaugh : a model congress in which bills! were presented, debated, and voted | upon by 4-H senators and congress- men, signed into “law” by a 4-H president. One of the main features af the The talks given by 4-H officials and by guest speakers, covered such | areas as civil rights, and the 4-H in the world. When in Washington one goes | on guided tours, and Pat went on his share of them. Attractions vis- | ited by the 4-H group included the their own states and towns. ‘Washington Monument, the Smith- | When asked what impressed him | sonian Institution, the Washington most on his trip to Washington, | | Zoo, Arlington Cemetery, and the! Pat said it was that such prominent | Lincoln Memorial. "men as the Senate and House Perhaps the most exciting event Majority Leaders and Minority | ton, their chore of learning and prac- ticing the duties of democracy over, party. There was modern and square dancing. The next morning Pat and his fellows dispersed to of Pat's Washington stay was an! Leaders, and the other well known | In| federal officials he met or saw in addition to the regular tour, the| action were regular people with | Pennsylvania delegation visited; real personalities, not just images | Senator Clark’s office and was given on the TV screen. a talk on the many duties of a sen-| He said that the trip made him ator by one of his assistants. | see Washington not as a symbol The Luzerne County contingent| but as a working, functioning | plan overhangs so that a view from | visited Representative Dan Flood. | national capital, a busy city full of any standard size window reveals one-third sky. The 4-H group visited both the| busy people, all working to make House and Senate chambers, The America great, 4 LG nim mt tag mai | rem one such session the 4-Hers formed | On the last evening in Washing- | the 4-Hers gathered for: a final | | 29, 1965. Would suggest Mr. Re- | bennack secure a predatory bird such as Hawk for purpose of keep- | ing at bay seed-eating birds. | be caged or foot leashed. | Commission may provide bird. | George A. Skeeba, | Pole 136, Harveys Lake ‘Broken Heart, Courtesy 0f Andy Preslopski | Andy Preslopski is in again, this time with something which he hopes to peddle to “Believe It Or Not.” The object is a cross section of a small oak tree, sixteen inches in diameter. The slice is heart-shaped, and the heart is thrust through | | with a natural dagger. To wrap it all up, the tree was felled on Valentine's Day. ‘Summer Comfort For summer comfort inside the house, never set a masonry terrace | directly against house walls where it will hold heat against the house | and reflect it through windows. If | an attached terrace is desirable, | use wood, which does not conduct heat. Deborah Jean Goode Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Goode, | Meadowcrest, announce the birth of a daughter August2, at Mercy Hos- pital. Deborah Jean weighed in at | five pounds, eleven ounces. Her | brother Brian is one year old. Mrs. Goode is the former Lida Jean Hughes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Goode is son of Mr. and Mrs. Wal- ter Goode, Wyoming. | Goode Hughes, Trucksville. Mr. Of | | course, this predatory bird should | Game | | SWIMMING POOL SAFETY TiPS a x t least one hour after meals. days. Clogging of diatomite filters —the type used in most pools —can be prevented by proper precoating | I | Filters must ha clotried every 3-10 1 { I § with diatomite filter aid. Electric lights in %o pool area make | night swimmin, Whether ya: already own a pool, or, hope to build one some day (more and more .niddle-income families are taking the plunge), these protective pointers from Johns-Manville, producer of Celite filter aids, , may keep you from “‘getting in over your head.” 5 eep swimmers out of the pool for Always keep a life preserver handy — an inflated inner tube is fine. An adult should be present when- ever the children are in for a swim. For neighborhood kids, make an informal rule that all smal children must be accompanied by an adult. Keep. water wall-chiorinated to |i | fight wowth of 0 of algae and bacteria. |, i