The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, June 02, 1966, 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, 15¢.
Member Audit Bureau of Circulationg
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association
Member National Editorial Association
Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. vel
Editor and Publisher ©. . os. od. i0i0h Myra Z. RisLEY
Associate ‘Editor: oJ. rast Mrs. T.M.B. Hicks
Social Editor. .... . 50%..5 Mrs. DoroTHY B. ANDERSON
Pabloid Editor .... ion vd... CATHERINE GILBERT
Advertising Manager Louise MARKS
Business Manager .u ian. hia Doris R. MALLIN
Circulation Manager ......... Mrs. VELma Davis
Accounting ..o. 0,0 SANDRA STRAZDUS
A non-partisan, liberal progressive mewspaper pub-
lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant,
Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania, 18612.
w paper, £ Conmeiity; Institution”
Edito rially Speaking
“More Trak A "Ne
Pride Is A Potent Drug
This area needs a ‘community building.
It has been needing a community building for at least
twenty years, but to date the movement has fizzled out.
Federal funds are available, needing only to be tap-
"ped, if the community will get back of the proposition
and start pushing.
A look into the future shows that this area will keep
on expanding.
The main talking point to people who are consider-
ing this region as their future home, is cultural advantage.
Good schools, good library, thriving churches, en-
thusiastic civic organizations, recreational facilities.
We have the most beautiful scenery in the country,
mountains which are easy to live with instead of rising
in forbidding peaks.
We have everything . . .
Everything but a community building.
A community building brings to a focus everything
in the community.
Properly designed, it provides meeting rooms, large
and small, for every conceivable activity.
No one sect, no one faith, no one organization con-
trols it. It is for everybody.
The nearest thing we have to it is the Back Moun-
tain Memorial Library, and there, the two buildings which
originally served as meeting rooms for any organization
which applied for such use, has been outgrown.
A community building would pull the area together.
. The instant a building is on the drawing board, en-
thusiasm starts bubbling.
Churches find the same phenomenon. Housed
unsuitable or inadequate structures, a congregation fac-
ing the challenge of a new addition or a new and beautiful
edifice, suddenly awakes to the realization that a dream
can become a reality when everybody shares the load.
The money comes from somewhere.
People have even beén khown to cut down on their
daily cigarette consumption, putting the savings into a
small glass jar where they can watch it grow.
In this area, it is not actually a problem of guns
versus butter. Almost all of us can squeeze out a little
more if the need is apparent.
With the goal of a community building in sight, who
says it cannot be financed?
It could have been financed at any time during the
past twenty years.
Pride in the home town is a very potent drug.
in
* * hee
Happy Vacation
Before you go on your vacation, make a list of the
drugs to which you are allergic, and carry it in your wal-
let along with necessary medication information.
If your child is sensitive to, bee stings, he should al-
ways wear about his'neck a locket with the correct anti-
dote in it. :
Watch that impulse to drink from a pump at a farm-
house under the impression that all country water is pure.
It is all too often polluted. The residents may be accus-
tomed to the assorted flora and fauna:in the well, immune
to infection, but a stranger may be affected.
And fasten your seat-belts.
You have had it dinned into you for years that when
you become over-tired at the wheel, you are a menace,
no matter how alert you think you are.
Watch it.
Happy vacation.
* * *
If Your Child Is Lost
If your child is lost, call not only the police but the
Dallas Post.
The Dallas Post has a web of soriatbandenty stretch-
ing the length’and breadth of the Back Mountain, and it
can swing a phone squad into action in five minutes.
The thing to be borne in mind, is that the instant a
child leaves his own yard, he is completely invisible unless
he is crying or standing in the middle of the street.
Nobody notices a child. He is part of the scenery un-
less he asks for help.
If he is wandering from his own neighborhood, anci-
ent instinct tells him to take cover, to accost nobody, to
become further invisible.
* * *
Novis With Special
Forces Of The Navy
Tri-County Library
Is Seeking Assistant
The Bradford-Sullivan-Wyoming
County Libraries regrets the loss of
its Assistant, Mr s. Myra Durand.
Taking off for his second five-
week training course at Camp Le-
Jeune, N. C. is Kenneth Novis, bas-
i 30 Years Ago
{of te Lehman school board.
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 1566
be? Bete ed ol pn Tel ol of
Only“ KEEPING POSTED =
Yesterday feck lilt tins niin dann Be
| May 25: GUYANA emerges as hew country, to remain
under protection of Britain for 314 years. Duke
and Duchess of Kent top figures at ceremony,
Soviet declines’invitation, Red China not invited.
PREMIER KY seems firmly seated, riots continue,
U. S. Information Building in Hue is burned.
CASUALTIES MOUNT to 146 in week. Ground
: action slackens.
Mrs. Edna Hannon Alderson, died HELICOPTER TRAINING in Chicago.
by her own hand. She had been Sm * x 2
ployed at the Dallas Postoffice when Mav 96: TARDY SPRING SUDDEN SUMMER
ir ay 6 4 Xy .
Je AMERICANS EVACUATED from Hue, U. S. Con-
Legion membership in Dallas was |
up 100%. .sulate closely guarded.
Lehman was graduating 32 sen-|
iors Howard Crosby was president
| Governor George Earle was com- INDONESIA, "MALAY, extend cautious peace
| mencement speaker at College feelers.
| Misericordia. There were forty-three HOUSE PASSES inintnlli whee Vi Bad Jods
seniors. *
Twelve seniors for Laketon, all to Senate. £ * %
{ set for the Washington trip.
| tion. which made it one of the finest
! without ever seeing a case of diph-
| theria, typhoid, or mastoiditis. Mir-
| dry by firemen.
Mrs. Durand 1 ned this month!ed in Rhode Island with a Fleet
in order to operate the Chuldren’s | Postoffice tag. He is with the special
Shop in Towanda which she recent- | Navy forces, comparable to the
ly purchased. | Army’s Green Beret.
The loss of this staff member will | Kenneth, educated in California,
be particularly keen because of Mrs. | and now 24 years old, is son of
Durand’s recognized ability in the| My ‘and Mrs. Lee Novis, Dallas
field of publicity. The library is| RD 1. Hi h 1 irl
seeking to fill the vacancy. It is| is mother, ca docal git],
hoped that this will be possible | graduate of Kingston Township
before autumn in order not to cur- | High School is the former Eleanor
tail the familiar service to the pub- | pryshko,
lic of the three counties. Inte rested |
applicants may write to the library
at R. D. 3, Troy, Penna.
Hut in Kunkle.
at College Misericordia.
— READ THE TRADING POST wa
who operates the Poodle
His father is chef
IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE
May 27: SIX REGIMENTS of North Vietnameses mass-
ing behind the Cambodian border.
DEAN RUSK SAYS U. S. will keep military forces
up to strength in West Germany, hopes that NATO
can be revamped to be useful after withdrawal
Hassle still went on in court over
removal of Dinger and the knotty
problem of millage and the budget.
Judge John Fine was to decide
The' identity of Kingston Town-
ship's May Queen was still a closely of Pranie
guarded secret 4 3
Whole page of sheriff's sales May 28: BUDDHIST NUN i lat h It ih Hus:
ee etl Alles y 28: immolates herself in Hue.
i Te CHINA CLAIMS U. S. bombed fishing boats.
JUAN BOSCH the favorite in forthcoming Domin-
ican elections. If you are over 70, you lose your
ballot in a country where 60% are illiterate.
ANOTHER NUN and a Buddhist priest burn them-
selves as protest against Premier Ky.
FIVE BATTALIONS tied up in Saigon because of
riots. U. S. running into same problems as France
did in the same areas.
| acle drugs. * Xe *
A. D. Anderson home on Bunker May 30: PRESIDENTIAL WREATH on tomb of the Un-
Hill levelled by fire. ‘Well pumped known Soldier. :
SURVEYOR ROARS TOWARD MOON, hopefu] of
a soft landing with T-V cameras grinding out pix
of the surface and of the earth.
NEGRO SOLDIER killed in Vietnam, finally rests
in a National cemetery in Georgia after being
denied interment in Alabama. Full military hon-
ors, as green beret joins the Stars and Stripes on
his casket.
HOLIDAY DEATHS over the Nation, 519.
|
|
| * * *
|
20 Years: lg O| May 31: HABIT FORMING: fifth death by fire in thrée
days, among Buddhists, leaders say STOP.
20 MULE TEAM on way ‘from California to North
in the state.
Mastoiditis,” which took
the life of nine-year old Norman
Walters, is one of those things
which, thirty years later is seldom
seen. Many doctors live and die
buildings
Prcgress:
Police chief Leonard Kane said
| no more parking in the triangle
' formed by Kunkle and Lake roads
in central Dallas.
You could get
| electric range for
George Deiter, 58,
| home in Trucksville.
a Westinghouse
$99.50 cash.
died at his
| James Waters, Dallas senior, won
| the Hemelright prize for his essay
lon the importance of playing fields. Dakota. 3 ;
| Marie Rebennack was valedictori- MISCHA ELMAN, 15, plans for his 5000th con-
| an at Lehman, Helen Maznick salu- cert.
| tatorian. IN BANKOK, Indonesians and Malaysians sit
Carverton took Dallas 10 to 3 on down affably at the conference table.
Memorial Day. * * *
fe ile granite shaftimesl “June 1: U.S. CONSULATE at Hue burned by mob.
. Glenn Kitchen was admitted to GEMINI 9 READY to go, weather permitting.
State Game Commission Training RECORD COLD for first of June.
SURVEYOR NEARS MOON.
School.
TRLTLVCALALILRCDCTLI CDC TCC Cane
Joseph H. Woodford, father of
Better Leighton Never
Mrs. T. A. Williamee, lost his life
in a flood in Tioga County when
EA rr A Rr de ar cia]
End Of The Road |
the Tioga River went on a rampage.
The. end of the road begins =n |
Conjecture was that he had been.
s*ruck in the head by wreckage
when he waded out onto his back could walk into a let of places and
Wave of advertising contract
cancellations had Wall Street on
edge. Strikes. shortages, responsible. |
Henry Headman, 82, Jackson |
Township, died |
S. R. Spencer was discharged
from the Navy.
10 Years Ago
Sandsdale Dandy Dewdrop, son
destination, and hoping to pick up |
such 2 tan that we'll be refused |
service in Georgia.
The decision to stop news-gather- |
ing and begin post-graduate work |
was not an easy one, nor made |
suddenly, but with the painful
knowledge that my ambitions lay |
| somewhere else, the good life in | ed me. I hope I can reciprocate by |
Dallas” notwithstanding. For this’| teaching your kids history some |
| reason, by the same token, I expect day.
| to be spending a lot of weekends| May you all prosper with the
in Dallas, and I have a firm promise | Back Mountain, Luzerne County's
the famous. Molly, was sold to from a friend to write me the date | boomingest area, and a nice place]
artifi- of the Kunkle Fireman’s Clambake. | to live 00,
| Last week some nice things about | Yo tren
Area school valedictorians Ashel me were written in this paper, ad And now this item, too late for |
Sutliff at Lehman; Elwoor Floyd what the guy did not say was that | last week's column: from out Noxen |
Patton, Dallas Township; Margaret (I was a lousy newspaperman be- | way, where a couple of guys have!
Ann Weigel, Westmoreland. | cause I had an exaggerated respect ' developed prevarication into some-
A showing of Mrs. Dwight Figh- | for other people’s business. Walk- | thing of a folk-art.
er's miniature rooms brought $500 ing on a tightrope of confidence and |
| for the Wheel-Chair Club and Crip- ' duty to publish knowledge. TI leaned.
pled Children. | toward keeping my mouth shut
Rev. Russell Lawry and Rev. Wil- ! when in doubt, and this not only
| liam Heapps exchanged pulpits, | inevitably led to bigger and better
| Lawry coming to Dallas. | stories when the time was ripe,
| Little League was ready to open ;
| with a parade and an exhibition
game.
Dr. H. A. Brown was gravely ill |
at Nesbitt Hospital. | JULY 8, 1965 :
Folks missed the Sweet Valley! Impressive list of new goods for
Memorial Day Parade, which bad the Library Auction. Ditto antiques. lini, -up instead of
beccme a community event. Lehman Horse-Show big success. | Golden Quill award.
The area was atomic fall-out Starlings eat cherry crop in | Died: Ira Frantz,
conscious, Warning signals were de- | Jackson, threat to area fruit busi- | {land. Tracey Harvey, Tunkhannock.
me ‘a good scoop with the
promise of anonymity, I owe a
special debt of gratitude.
To all my friends in the Back]
| Mountain, I have
association more than you will
know, and what I have learaed of |
human nature has never disappoint- |
of
Curtis Candy Company for
cial breeding.
was such a selective snob
after he had treed the coon,
look him over, and if the hide |
wasn t worth much, he’ d walk. away.
Carverton dam nears completion.
Hix makes it again, this time as
winner
vised. shelters marked. ness. | Leo R. Jacobs, 59, Shavertown. Mrs,
Married: Charlotte Devens to Lloyd Married: Sandra abr to Carl | Emily Lyons, 51, Noxen. Clifton
P. Hughey. | Lindstrom Becker. Jacqueline Dis- | King, 78. Shavertown. Mrs. Laura
| eT | brow Fay to Robert L. Casselberry. Sreltz, 87, Shavertown. Mrs. Anna
; : | Jane Edwards to Kenneth Woolbert. Heckman, 74, Sweet Valley. Os-
Oak Hill 4-H Club
Newly Organized
A new 4-H Home Economics Club |
of Kunkle. Major Hillman Dress,
| Beaumont. Michael J. Groblewski,
| 15, Shrine Acres. Pearl Welsh, Dal- Dallas. Mrs. Gertrude Brunges, 75,
Hos eon 1 4 at -Oak Hill. and | lag native. Mrs. Alice M. Borton, native of Center Moreland.
as been formed at Lak LI, UNCEL | 76 Harveys Lake. Constance Nor- Married: Louise Sutton to Richard
leadership of Mrs. Paul Hession and | y,,14 geet Valley. ! Arnold. Ruth E. Beagle to Bradley
Mrs. Ralph Godleski, both of Oak | JULY 15
HL 5, 1965 V 3
Library Auction, Lehman Horse-| Mrs. Liva Gordon, 92, Pikes
The first project is ‘‘Adventures | Qhow over, Back Mountain draws Creek, shown with five generations. |
with Food.” and members have al-! 5 long breath. Rain for both fes-| JULY 29, 1965 ;
ready had their first experience— ! {jvities, but not too much. Official map of proposed Lake |
peanut butter and honey balls. | Died: Fannie E. McMichael, 78, Borough, front page.
Elected to office were: Mary Hes- | Muhlenburg. Mrs. David Blocksage, Dallas Borough buys police car.
sion, president: Karen Debold, vice | 87, Long Island. Mrs. Thelma Bige- Frank Trimble dies, leaving post
president; Diane Godleski, secre-|low, 47, Buffalo. Benjamin H. Han- | of Dallag High School principal!
locks Creek. Florence Griesing, 59,
JULY 22, 1965
Auction net estimated at $14,000.
Protective Association pushes
sewage system, hoping for Appala-
chia aid.
Lake adjudged clean, to date.
Usual rash of weekend accidents
lon the highway, none fatal,
Sha AR
verton. Mrs. Nellie Matthews, 77,
Hunlock Creek. John D. Edwards,
47, formerly Shovertown.
AUGUST 5, 1965
. Noxen holds up free dialling to
Wilkes. Barre, time for return of
Lake-Noxen ballots extended.
Lake Lions drop annual beauty
Property owners of Evergreen
Cemetery will meet Sunday, June
12, at 2 p.m., at Snowdon Funeral
Home, Shavertown,
Atty. Mitchell “Jenkins will at-
tempt to solve the burial plot di-
lemma at this time.
but, more important still, I. felt I
porch. other. By the time you read this, | be counted a friend first, and a man |
Jackson Township team, made up Red Carr and I will be swinging | in business second. :
largely of war veterans, was cham- southward, island-hopping on the| To these friends who then said:
pion of the Valley League. | coast, with Mexico the ultimate | “He has to eat too”, and slipped |
tacit |
The man tells of a coon-doz that |
that, |
he |
would walk all around the tree to |
More Footprints For 1965 . . .
of |
86, Center More- |
Died: Charles Ellsworth, 71, native borne Benscoter, native of Roaring |
Brook. Clifford Wildoner, 53, Hun-'
| Ide. Ann Morgan to George Haines. |
tary; Marlene Debold, games leader; | kin, 59, Harveys Lake. Mrs. Aaron vacant.
Debbie Elley, song leader; Nikki L. Parks, 77, Miami. Mrs. William | Wild life decimates fruit crop,
Belasco, news reporter. Roberts, 79, Sutton Creek Road.|birds and deer a menace to
The club meets Thursday after- Mrs. Anna Silvik, Dallas R. D. Mrs. | economy.
noons, 3 to 5, at the home of Mrs. Alice Race, 81, Harveys Lake. | Married: Linda Fay Morris to John
Hossion, George L. Blizzard, Luzerne, Adolph Shypulefski. Mrs. Bettie Beck to |
Zwolinski, Harveys Lake. | Howard Isaacs . ’
Married: Marjorie Davis and Ross Died: Mrs. Victoria Miller, Shaver-
EVERGREEN OWNERS TO MEET | Walker, in Australia. | town. George B. Pollock, 98, Car-
Librarian Resigns
MRS.
RICHARD DALE
| Mrs. Richard Dale who became
head librarian at Back Mountain
Memorial Library two years ago,
is resigning her
effect September 1.
| She is due a month of vacation,
| which means that she will leave
| her desk on the first day of August.
| Mrs. Martin Davern handled the
| Library as librarian pro-tem during
| the interim between the resigna-
tion of Mrs. Albert Jones in March
| of 19664, and the date when Mrs.
| Dale assumed her duties.
Nobody has yet been named to
| fill Mrs. Dale's place.
During Mrs. Dale's tenure, a num-
| ber of small changes were made,
| such as shifting of library hours to
| open one half hour earlier and close
| correspondingly earlier.
Books were issued for 28 days in-
stead of fourteen, to cut down on
desk work and telephone calls
when renewals became necessary.
| No renewals were permitted on this
| basis.
| Books on the Book Club shelves
| have remained on a fourteen-day
withdrawal period.
For some weeks recently, Mrs.
Dale contributed a regular feature
story on the library to the Dallas
Post, pointing out facilities and
mentioning new books.
Miss Miriam Lathrop was the first
| librarian, . living in an apartment
above the reading room, in the days
when the Library had not outgrown
| its quarters and expanded both to
| the second floor and to the present
| Annex.
Safety Valve
| GUARANTEED MILEAGE
Dear Hix:
|
{
|
i
Let me say I have read your col-
{umn for many, years and, do so
| thoroughly enjoy each and every
| one.
Please refer to Motor Twins re-
cent ads in your paper .They state
| “Guaranteed Mileage’. We guaran-
tee that the mileage showing on the
appreciated the | qometer of all our used cars to be
| the same as when traded from the
previous owner. In other words we
| guarantee just what you are plead-
| ing for in your column of May 19.
| I hope we can be of gervice to you.
| Very truly yours,
Motor Twins, Inc.
Chuck
Charles S. Frantz
| Vice President
late, Chuck. Should have seen
earlier. Guaranteed mileage is
one of the strongest points a firm
can offer. HIX
| You should advertise oftener.
| Too
| you
Monday May 9
Dear Mrs. Anderson
The very complete coverage the
| | Dallas Post gave the Prince of Peace
Antiques Show was a major factor
in making it a tremendous success.
Mrs. Hick’s coverage of the show
in progress should bring us many
new visitors next year.
Thank you so much.
Cordially
Dot Ross
position, to take '
From—
the same without his exuberance.
The snap, crackle, pop of his
song of the wheels.
will no longer be a feature of the
chak. takes up the burden where
Pepper, the little dog across
sedately on a leash by her small
will be the gain of the teaching p
to be gained in that field than in
center of a community. Once you
log of any rural community. !
The people whose forebears br
children to the one-room schools,
to wrest a living from the soil.
Here in this area, history was
the West, made its stumbling way.
Here,
roamed.
History is here.
prominent businessman ?
It is because she is a part of
We are part of history.
into it the magnificence of life, as
lenges.
+ widening concepts;
Time and space . .
What to do with a robin’s nest
of bird eggs blocking construction . .
that was the problem of the Sor-
doni Construction Company on the
Royer Foundry job in Kingston, Pa.
last Thursday. : ]
The forces of ate pulled |
heavily on the heartstrings of the '
men on the job and supervisors
alike. All paused at busy points in
time to solve a problem that could
not be referred to the architect, |
engineers, industrial relations men
or the computer center of the com-
pany.
Finally the nest was gently re-
contest. \
Fanti’s Pond loses many, fish to
lack of oxygen. Rains relieve con-
dition somewhat. :
Joe Park loses eight cows to
lightning. j
Start of drive to get signatures
for formation of Lake Borough.
Died: Dr. Benjamin Groblewski, 40,
: Lake. Mrs. Eugene Farley, Lake and
' Wilkes-Barre. Mrs. Mary Breza, Dal-
las. Mrs. C. L. Hosler, 64, Dallas.
| Mrs. Ethel Isaacs, 75, Loyalville
| native. William Shaver, 82, Hunts-
| ville native. Samuel Hu mphrey,
{ Harveys Lake. Dean Osborne, native
| of Beaumont. Mrs. Christine Berry,
| Meeker native. Ignatius Gallagher,
| Dallas.
| AUGUST 12, 1965
§ Document box containing August
5 copy of Dallas Post sealed into
Post-Office cornerstone.
Public school administrations
wrestle with problems caused by
legislation requiring them to fur-
| nish transportation for private
school pupils.
Petitions and counter-petitions in
Lake-Borough controversy at Lake.
Anniversary: Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Bennet, fiftieth, Mr. and Mrs. Otis
Allen, 54th. Mr. dnd Mrs. George
Dendler, 61st.
Hap Hazard says, “After you get
‘a lawn mower motor going, don’t
let it stop unt) youve: finished |
Mongo eT a
Girl Scout
News
Penn’s Woods Girl Scout Council
offers three summer sessions dt its
established Camp Onawandah, on
the Susquehanna just below Tunk-
hannock on route 309.
The program is designed for eight
and nine year old Brownies, for
Juniors, Cadettes and Seniors as
well as for non-scouts and out-of-
council scouts of comparative age
levels.
Camp brochures which discuss in
detail the camping program are
available at the council office, 383
Wyoming Avenue, Kingston.
First session at Camp Onowandah
is slated for July 6 through 16;
second session, July 17 through
July 30; the third is scheduled for
July 31 through August 13.
Activities at Camp Onawandah in-
clude swimming, canoeing, hiking
crafts, games, nature study, living
in tents, meals in the dining hal |
and cookouts. Special activities ol
fered for various age levels are
waterfun, rambler, heritage tr
canoe trip, advanced aquana
gypsy caravan, program a'de, J
C. 1. T. and Senior C. I. T..
Miss Lois Young, Field Di
Penn’s Woods Girl Scout Cor
moved by the rugged hands of
steel painter high in the ceilin®’
DALLAS, PENN SYLVANIA
Pillar To Post. Ses
by HIX
The office doesn’t look the same without Scott, nor docs it sound
electric typewriter is ‘no more. It
has been replaced by a beat-up model of ancient vintage.
His. desk chair no longer scoots in and out with that shrieking
Noxen knows' him no more, and the red car no hi circles
Harveys Lake to pick up the bits and pieces of news:
The ready camera at the scene of a highway accident has stilled
its shutter, and three column cuts of the remains of a wrecked car
front page unless Jimmy Kozem-
Scott laid it down. 1
the street which is tbrought ou
mistress ‘for-a walk to case the
telephone poles before school, and thereafter romps free as a bird,
in and out of the office at the Dallas Post, goes about inf a mournful
fashion, sniffing hopefully at the chair where her idol ‘used to sit..
Scott's decision to complete his graduate work and teach history,
rofession. There is perhaps more
asmall weekly newspiper, though
there are imponderables to consider. ;
A weekly newspaper is a true grassroots organization, at the
have been a part of a small news-
paper, you belong to it always, no matter how far you travel.
You find yourself identifying with the “little people,” the back-
oke the sod on their stony acres,
cleared the land, erected the gristmills, built the churches, sent: their
,and farmed fom dawn until dusk
made, as the slow migration from
the comparative security of the East in search of the anknown in
in these very hills and valleys, “the silent Indians once
+
Have you ever wondered why a woman of ninety whose an-
cestors were among the first settlers, rates a fuller obituary than a
history. Her grandfather and her
great-great-grandfather were the God-fearing men who: opened thal
country so. that in future generations the businessmen could flourish.
History is on every side, in the schools, in the country villages,
in every aspiration of man toward something wider and better.
{
And history, as taught in these days, is not the dull account
that it was when many of us went to school.
. It has Had breathed
it meets greater and greater chal-
At no time has life as lived on earth changed so Eri as it
is. changing now, with exploration of Space in .prospect, and the
likelihood that there is sentient life on other planets.
History, reaching into the future, and demanding of its teachers
. ‘inseparable.
* * *
Bird's Nest Versus Construction Company
Zz
| joists of this sprawling industrial
plant. Men worked fichly around
the area...and then...the n
| was robhiced in its: old tion,
Today as shown here, the con-
struction people have a happy fam-
ly of baby birds, with worms be-
‘ing flown into the: building every
few minutes by mamma robin.
Harold Hoover To Head
Becounting In Ontario
Harold L. Hoover: (Jim) is being
transferred to Ontario. where he
will head the accounting depart-
ment for the new RCA plant in
process of construction. He has
been with RCA for seventeen years.
Mr. Hoover has lived in Dallas |
since 1960, when first assigned to,
the accounting department in the)
‘RCA plant at Crestwood..
The new building at Midland, |
Ontario will manufacture color |
tubes for TV. It will open Gg
tober 1, but Mr. Hoover is leavi
Dallas in mid-June to get the ace
counting department set up.
His home on Sterling Avenue has!
already been sold, and a new home
purchased. in Midland, directly
across the street from the high
school. There are three children
in the family.
Legal Notice —
Estate of Elizabeth Zelinka, late
of the Township of Hanover, Ashley,
Pennsylvania (died April 20, 1966).
Letters testamentdry have been
granted to Anna M. Tomascik, 15!
S. Franklin Street, Wilkes-Barre, |
ennsylvania. All persons having
aims or demands are requested
i to 1 ake known the same, and all
ns indebted are requested to
ke Duysaants without delay:
\ pica
: 3 ! Cl
a a HFIS nd
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