The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, October 13, 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: $5.00 a
year; $3.00 six months. No subscriptions accepted for less than
six months. Out-of-State subscriptions, $5.50 a year; $3.50 six
months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c.
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations 110,
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association “4 %
Member National Editorial Association , LI
Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. tua
Editor and Publisher
Associate Editor
Social Editor ca. .5 2.
Tabloid Editor... ... 00 Re So 5
Advertising Manager, . 5... ch iu. o00 Louise MARKS
Business Manager: . so... it isis Doris R. MALLIN
Circulation’ Manager ......... Mrs. Verma Davis
A non-partisan, liberal progressive mewspaper pub-
lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant,
Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania, 18612. ‘
“More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution”
We will not be responsible for large ‘‘cuts.” If your organization
wants to pick up its cuts, we will keep them for thirty days.
One-column cuts will be filed for future reference,
We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu-
scripts, photographs ard editorial matter unless self-addressed,
stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be
held for more than 30 days.
Single copies at a rate of 10c. Thursday morning at the follow-
EA Ra dt ST TE Myra Z. RISLEY
J CAS a EAR SR Mgrs. T.M.B. Hicks
Mgrs. DoroTHY B. ANDERSON
CATHERINE GILBERT
ing newstands: Dallas — Town House Restaurant, Daring’s Market,
Bill Davis Market; Shavertown — Evans Drug Store, Hall's Drug
Store; Trucksville — Cairns Store, Trucksville Pharmacy; Luzerne—
Novak's Confectionary; Beaumont — Stone's Grocery; Idetown—
Cave's Market; Harveys Lake — Javers Store, Kocher’s Store;
Sweet Valley — Adam’s Grocery; Lehman — Stolarick’s Store;
Noxen — Scouten’s Store; Shawaneses — Puterbaugh’s Store; Fern-
The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local
hospitals. If you are a patient ask your nurse for it.
We can give no assurance that announcements of plays, parties,
rummage any affair for raising money will appear in a
Editorially Speaking
sales or
Forever Valiant, Forever Young
The mystery of the disappearance of Amelia Earhart
in her flight across the Pacific in search of a microscopic
speck of earth, is something which has challenged the
imagination of the world for almost thirty years.
It seems completely incredible that if she had lived
out her years she would have been nearing seventy, white-
haired"and suffering the growing infirmities which age is
heir to:
To the world which loved her, for which she was
- the symbol of high adventure and gallantry (in a worn
leather jacket and goggles) she will always be that eager
counterpart of Charles Lindbergh, forever valiant, for-
ever young.
What brings her disappearance to sharp focus again,
is publication of a book called ‘The Search for Amelia
Earhart” written by Fred Goerner, based upon years of
patient examination of records capped by a flight to Sai-
pan.
The Back Mountain Memorial Library has the book,
one of the latest acquisitions.
Never had there been such worldwide dismay, nor
so widespread a search for any one person lost at sea.
For in 1937, Amelia Earhart stood for intrepid gal-
lantry, as ten years earlier Lindbergh had typified the
highest aspirations of the youth, the hope of the world.
Reaching for the stars, both of these magnificent
people, citizens of the world.
Had they been born thirty years later, they would
have worn space helmets and the complicated gear of the
astronaut, instead of flying on silver wings.
Or perhaps not. They were both essentially lonely
people, their cropped and unruly hair, their lean and vi-
brant frames alive with aspiration for far horizons, their
nature impatient with regimentation, their keen eyes fo-
cused on something above and beyond.
It is possible to envisage them taking off in a rocket,
but completely impossible to imagine either of these rug-
ged individualists submitting tamely to the de-briefing,
the security precautions, the tiring preparations, the
wearing delays.
The fiery re-entry through the atmosphere would
have been a breathless challenge, joyfully embraced.
All the panoply of fame would have been endured,
but with a backward look of pure regret at the lost hori-
Zons. :
Read ‘the book. It is not among those reserved for
the Book Club, but on the open shelves, available to all
borrowers.
Like A Cat Chasing Its Tail
It’s like a cat chasing its tail, this wage-price spiral,
round and round and getting nowhere.
The ‘pay envelope looks fatter, but what does it buy?
With luck, just about what it did before, consider-
ing the cost of food, the taxes, the mounting prices of
everything needed in a household.
For those whose monthly income does not increase,
the only answer is to buy less food, or cheaper food.
With one face, the Government says cut non-essential
spending to the hard core of necessity.
With the other, it plunges deeper and deeper into
debt to finance projects which seem, to a lot of us, of
doubtful value.
For those of us who have lived through the first
World War, the Stock-Market crash, the Great Depres-
sion, and the modern wars, this seems to be establishing
a formidable pattern. ;
We were asked to go without enough heat, enough
food, enough clothing during the first World War. We
were glad to do this. We were aflame with patriotism.
This was the War to End Wars.
During the depression, we supported WPA projects,
and while tightening the belt another notch, tried to find
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, OCTQBER 13, 1966
Only
Yesterday
It Happened
30 Years Ago
Peter Culp’s absence was felt, as
Huntsville Christian Church ob-
served its 93rd anniversary. Mr.
Culp, present at the dedication in
1843 as an infant in arms, was the
| backbone of the church, the oldest
| in the Back Mountain. For years
he was the only one who could
recall the early days. The Civil War
veteran died in February of 1936.
Rev. Charles H. Frick was pastor
in 1936.
Borough Council rejected the
| WPA bid of $1.500 for paving of
Elizabeth Street. Too high.
Satirical essay on Brotherly Love
on the front page. An excerpt:
“The Brotherly Love bug has even
eaten into ‘thee WPA. If one worker
breaks his shovel by leaning on it,
a brother worker will promptly
give. him his.”
(The WPA kept a lot of families
alive, but nobody could .say. their
efforts were efficient or their .re-
sults spectacular. One stone in the
curbing on a street which chall be
nameless got located six times, as
one worker after another grabbed
for it. This is history.)
Dallas Borough High: School and
Dallas Township High School had a
guarded agreement: Dallas = Twp.
dtudent who wanted a business
course could take it in the Borough;
Borough
study agriculture could do it at the
Township. Payments reciprocal.
Mrs. Donald Innes was the first
woman to serve on a confined jurv
case. The famous Jennings trial,
concerning ~dynamiting of Judge
Alfred Valentine.
FDR gained one state. in a news-
paper poll, Alf Landon seemed
safely ahead.
Page of views of old Dallas. See
iissue October 9, 1936.
Dallas Post again asked for opin-
ions on Local Option.
It Happened
20 Years Ago
Back Mountain Memorial Library
reported 10,000 volumes on hand.
Miss Miriam Lathrop ) reported
Book Club membership of 160.
Game Commission released wild
turkeys.
College Misericordia was receiv-
ing its 22nd freshman class.
Halloween parade prizes were of-
fered in a specialty section includ-
ing those on horseback or with
pets, bringing the number of cate-
gories up to five.
Sloppy Tony's tavern at the Lake
was destroyed by fire, apparently
starting in an outside sign.
FFA at Dallas Township took in
36 new members.
First killing frost
Nothing escaped.
Sugar shortage was still acute.
a
October 13.
Midnight bus for Goss Manor
| residents.
| Died: Dimetrio (Mike) Hallowich,
| Harveys Lake. George Hunt Sr., 70, |
It Happened
10 Years Ago
help, ‘turning out precision-molded
seals. J. Henry Pool and Jackson
the new plant to Dallas.
ing resulted in a deadlock when
Kingston Township declined to ac-
cept Butcher and Sherrard as a
bonding house. Issue, the history
of that company in the matter of
Meadowecrest.
Lehman and Ross okayed
ture with Lake - Noxen, still
action from Jackson.
join-
a fatal heart attack.
| from Post's animal hospital,
mer resident of Dallas. J. Willis
| Hawley, Florida. Mrs.
Brian Ray. Trucksville.
Married: Bina Dendler to John Hold-
redge. Alicia Keaney to Robert
| Moran.
TAKE IN THE EXHIBIT
See Janet Crosson’s exhibit of
weaving and art obiects in the
Kennedy Lounge at College Miseri-
students who wanted to |
no |
Grace Patton Brace, 69, suffered |
Butch was able to walk again, |
24 days after being stung by yel- |
| lowjackets. About ready for release |
Died: Mrs. Ida Parrish, 83, Mount |
Zion. Susie Nulton Smith, 80, for-
Lucy Cool- |
baugh, Orange. Mrs. Maude Reese, |
Lehman. Henry Rolison, Fernbrook. |
near Qui Nhon.
Gulf.
*
escapes.
plan, different suit.
*
since November 1963.
*
Congress. -
U. S. there now.
China.
winter.
likely to explode
skid.
I~ A scrap-book containing almost
| everything about the Dallas Post
| Office has been assembled by Ed
| Buckley, the present Postmaster.
It starts off with a history of
| Dallas Post Office compiled by Dan
Waters, and a picture taken long
l'ago of Central Dallas’ when the Le-
| teh Railroad was doing business;
*
October 6: LBJ EXTENDS visit to Far East, will take in
Thailand, Malaysia, Korea, as well as Australia,
New Zealand, Philippines, Oct. 17 to Nov. 2.
HURRICANE HEADS for Yucatan, buzzing like an
angry hornet in a bottle in the Gulf. Brownsville
BRITISH PROPOSE six-point peace.
*
October 8: COMPLETE SHUTDOWN of Chrysler averted.
LBJ SUGGESTS cautious troop withdrawal on
both sides of Iron Curtain.
FROST IN THE PLAINS.
* *
October 9: BALTIMORE ORIOLES have it, all the way,
great shenanigans in the clubhouse.
nothing in World Series.
* *
October 10: LBJ, GROMYKO, talk at White House. Gro-
myko dinner guest at Dean Rusk’s.
great ice jam is cracking.
HOME RULE for District of Columbia killed in
GROWING DISSATISFACTION
land station and freight sheds oc-
cupying space which is now the site
| of the new Post Office.
The names of all postmasters are
| licked, beginning with Jacob Huff
| in 1828, and coming up to the
| present date with appointment of
| Edward M. Buckley, first as acting
Postmaster in 1962, then as perma-
| This appointment was signed by
| President Lyndon B. Johnson, after
| Senate for confirmation.
| The old Railway station,
| nent Postmaster December 2, 1963. |
KEEPING POSTED
October 5: BUFFER ZONE BOMBING eases off, ground
fighting intense, Communists suffer heavy losses
INEZ HITS CUBA for third time, bounces toward
*
Same old
KENDRA in the making east of Puerto Rico.
* *
October 7: STOCK MARKET TUMBLES to lowest point
*
*
Dodgers get
*
Could be the
INEZ GASPING ITS LAST in the mountains of
Mexico, leaving 30,000 homeless, uncounted dead,
immeasurable property loss in its 18 day rampage,
the longest-lived hurricane in history.
TROOP BUILD-UP IN Vietnam, 325 thousand
in
with Mao
Red Guard like the Genie let out of the
bottle, impossible to curb.
LBJ ASKS troop cut in Europe.
: x *
October 11: CHICAGO RACE incident again, young gang-
sters arrested. Looked for awhile as if the long
hot summer was going to merge into a long hot
*
U-THANT PROPOSALS for peace considered.
* * *
October 12: McNAMARA in Vietnam, meets with Am-
bassador, key men in armed services.
PREMIER KY’S cabinet torn with jealousy, seems
two weeks after formation.
Southern and northern representatives have little
in cultural backeround.
STOCK MARKET nibbles its wav up the scale
again, small gains hailed with relief after long
HURRICANE KENDRA dies, still-born.
COLUMBUS DAY. Supporters sav he did so, dis-
cover America, away with the Vikings.
Ed | uckley’s Scrap-Book Contains
Information On Dallas Post Office
are snapped, blue shadows on the
snow as concrete for footings is
poured.
Crowded conditions in the Post
Office on Lake Street, mail stacked | we're ready for this respite, it isn’t
high.
Spring, and the construction that we realize we've missed these
gathers momentum. Pictures of both | young people.
exterior and interior.
Headlines: “Dallas Post Office To
Be Ready In Month.” °
Hedden's
torn down.
Milt
Construction
Perrego,
buggy, retires.
a “time capsule” for insertion in the
corner - stone, along with official
Philadelphia firm with $2 million | assassination of President John F. | documents.
payroll rented the Fernbrook Mill. | Kennedy, who had originally sub-|
Linear was to employ 60% male mitted Buckley's name to the U. S. peotore the holidays.
Delays. No chance of occupation
Happy news. The so-called “frills”
' slate of
|
used | topsy-turvy shelves they leave be-
for supply quarters for Raymon | hind—these are the things we sud-
Company, | denly find we've missed.
carrier for fifty tions a library makes to a com-
years, starting with a horse and | munity, this must be the most im-
Copy of the Dallas Post goes into | wide for eager young minds—to
|
|
|
| The scrapbook notes the various| were to be restored after being
with quarters of its own.
| Bird were instrumental in bringing stages which saw Dallas Post Office | ruthlessly axed.
| evolve from a counter in a country |
Dallas Area school board meet- store to a full fledged Post Office |
Ready to go.
| A For Rent sign hangs on ‘the
former Post Office building on Lake
| A good bit of interesting corres- Street, and employees are settled in
pondence is included in the scrap-| the new building June 23, 1966.
bock, and reams of cuttings from |
the newspapers relative to recent
events, a high percentage from The
Dallas Post.
| A milestone
| Misericordia Post
was
Office,
| customer Mother
pictured
attire.
There is a front page picture of
Sheldon Drake retiring after thirty-
Much interior work remains to
| be done, but the building is in
{ working condition.
{ And now the dedication date is
opening of | set for October 22, 1966.
its first |
Mary Celestine, | book will be kept uv, keeping the
in the now out-moded | news of the Post Office for pos-
black habit which has recently | terity.
made way for the more comfortable |
Ed Buckley's red leather scrap
It is loose leaf, so that more
pages can be added.
The items and pictures on the
dedication should swell the volume
eight years of service as a rural considerably.
Ostrum, retired
years as clerk.
the Dallas Dairy building, several
years after ‘the transfer from the
inadequate quarters on Main Street.
fast in the scrapbook, as Federal
carrier, and one of Mrs. Josephine |
These pictures were taken at what |
was then the “new” Post Office in| Government to grind out a Federal
Now, clippings mount thick and |
funds were sought, purchase of al
It is almost two years since
after thirty-four | ground was broken; three years
since the Post Office was a project.
It takes a long time for the
| building, but Ed is a patient man,
and he expects to be around to
| that scrap-book to capacity.
Carverton Tn Dedicate
site for a permanent post ottice| New Hymnals Sunday
Bird Club To Elect
Officers Temight
Back Mountain Bird Club will |
elect officers Thursday night, and |
discuss a change of meeting night |
from the second to the first or |
third Thursday, the hour to remain |
the same, 8 p.m., at the Library |
Annex. |
Edwin Johnson will present the
officers. William Evans
will preside. |
w= Be
Signs of Autumn
|
Chrysanthemums and asters, |
Maple leaves of gold:
Autumn's but an infant |
And summer has grown old.
Grass a-turning brown.
Pods in the mimosa,
Frost upon the ground.
Firethorns in orange,
Geese in V formation, |
Honking overhead.
And deer a fleeting shadow,
From the hunter's stealthy tread. |
The little birds have flown away |
To their Southern kin. |
Autumn, oh yes Winter,
Is flying with the wind.
Mariana Heim
a
Miss Beinert's Cookbook
Is A Gourmet's Delight
Those who knew and loved Mrs.
Emma Beinert, for thirty-five years
owner of the Wide-Awake Book-
shop when it was located on South
Franklin Street, will be delighted
that her daughter Frederica L.
Beinert, has recently published an
important new book, entitled, “The
Art of Making Sauces and Gravies.”
Miss Beinert will be at the Wide-
Awake in Sterling Hotel tomorrow
from 10:30 to 4, anxious to meet
old friends, and with pen in hand
for autographs.
Alice Evans issues a cordial in-
vitation to drop in and talk.
For any one who delights in
gourmet cookery, the book is al-
most a must; with its traditional as
well as modern short-cut approach
to meals with character.
Library Swarms
With Children
by Mrs. Martin Davern
Fall announces itself in many
ways. To us at the library the
starting of a new school semester
is the high point of this season,
and once more we welcome the
classes from the Dallas Elementary,
School. Each year we say good-
bye to them in June and quickly
adjust to a more leisurely pace dur-
ing the summer months. Even the
adults desert us to ‘a certain ex-
tent while they garden, golf, swim
and indulge in all the other de-
lights of summertime.
But even though we may feel
until school re-opens in the fall
Their enthusiasm,
their insatiable curiosity, their: al-
most unanswerable questions, their
very voluble love of books, the
We feel that of all the contribu-
portant—to open intriguing doors
supplement, even ‘in this small
measure, the work being done by
the school and its teachers.
For the half-hour each class is
with us, we are on our toes mental-
ly and physically, but as the chil-
dren line up to leave and a chorus
of young voices calls out, “Thank
you for the books,” we weary dis-
pensers of entertainment and
knowledge look at one another—
and smile!
Westmoreland PTA
Hears Talk Bbout TV
Westmoreland PTA members
heard a talk on Educational TV
Tuesday evening, given by Bruce
Davis, supervisor for Channel 44,
the new television station designed
to give educational material to
schools and to the general public.
Daytime programs, he said, are
aimed primarily toward class-rooms;
evening programs, 7 to 11, toward
adult viewers, presenting general’
information over a wide range of
subjects.
A good crowd attended this first
meeting of the season. George
Stolarick presided.
Mothers of children in the three
first grades at Westmoreland were
hostesses.
It was #énnounced that 4th, 5th,
and 6th grade pupils will again sell
Christmas candy to raise money
for the annual 6th grade trip in
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
From—
Pillar To Post ves
We've had a lot of complaints about mischief from the small
fry, and those not so small, prior to Halloween.
It does seem as if the kids are starting a bit earlier than usual
this year, but maybe not.
Halloween, to the average adult, is one of those things you
live through, resignedly washing the soap off the windshield and
the house windows on the first of November.
: Looking back at it, it used to be fun. Maybe it still is fun, and
we've just lost touch. y
But it used to be that when the kids.rang the doorbell, they
had something to offer in compensation for their hand-out.
Instead of stating firmly “Trick or Treat,” and holding out an
open sack for a donation, they inquired politely, “Want any singing ?
Want any dancing 2” ;
Invited into the house, they went through the dance routine,
sang the song they had learned in school, and accepted the candy
and doughnuts, whisking away to give place to other small goblins
and witches with broomsticks.
We used to put on an act, down in Kingston, One of us stood
on a chair, draped in a long sheet, and topped by a skull. This, in
the flickering light of an alcohol flame, shielded by a screen, looked
uncommonly like a very ‘large edition of a ghost, especially as it
emitted, from time to time, a mournful wall.
Combined with a well-spaced clatter of tin pans and lids rolling
from behind a half closed door, this led to shrieks on the part of
the visitors, and pushing of’ the panic button.
They gathered outside, hair rising; on the backs of their necks,
and dared other more hardy souls to step inside.
The door would open, and a meek little head would peer inside.
A wail from the ghost would cause the door to close in a hurry, as
children waited with fearsome delight for somebody else to brave
unknown dangers.
It was usually good for half an hour, with the crowd growing
larger and larger on the lawn, and tall tales of terror freely trans-
mitted from ear to ear. :
At abqut this time we usually broke down and served refresh-
ments, but it was a shattered lot that stumbled down the street
in search of the next hand-out.
The way we figured it, we deserved some slight return on the:
soaped windows. There were some other tricks that usually brought
down the house, but the power of suggestion is strong, and there
is no percentage in tempting providence. .
There are also some tricks which should never be countenanced, NX.
perpetrated usually by kids who have outgrown kidhood and its
prerogatives, and are asking to get their faces pushed in.
“Worse than Harlem,” announced one voice on the telephone
the other day.
“Come, come, HARLEM ?”’
“Yes, Harlem.” ’ J
It was impossible to pass up. “Seems like a solid idea, then,
to go back to Harlem.”
“I NEVER lived in Harlem.” :
“Well, give me an inkling about who's talking, and maybe I
can make some constructive suggestions.” }
“I wouldn't want my name used. But these kids are really
running riot. They tear across the lawns, and they're doing all
sorts of damage.”
“If it’s big kids, call the coms.
be over. Even Halloween doesn’t last forever.
I never heard they had any lawns in Harlem.”
“What burns me up,” said the voice, “is that the kids’ parents
actually take the kids around in cars and wait for them while they
visit houses. Imagine!” ; :
“Just think of all the shoe-leather they save on this deal. ‘And
some of those costumes are pretty thin.” :
I bet that man has a little dog, with a sweater, that he takes
out on a leash. One thing for sure, he doesn’t like kids.
&
If it's little kids. it will soon
And about Harlem,
Anonymous Letters
We thought we had said it often enough, and firmly
enough, but here it is again: ;
Unsigned letters to the editor will not be published.
Too often a writer is ashamed to sign her name to
a diatribe. It is her way of venting spite against a per-
son or a municipality, using the paper as a means of let-
ting off steam. : :
If you have something to say, say it, and sign your
name.
If it is worth saying, it is worth standing up and
asknowledging. : :
Untold damage can be done by anonymous attacks:
We want a name and an address, not an initial.
If the material. upon investigation, proves worthy
of being used, it will be used. And in such a case, we
will, upon request, withhold the name.
But we have to know who is speaking.
Capacity Crowd Enthusiastic At
Theatre-Three Presents Ballet
bevond control.
The audience sat without a sound,
barely breathing as the dreadful
tale was written on the sands,
erased by the advancing tide, and
written once again. A tortured
soul faced the gibbet and the cuft-
tain fell.
With the intermission, and a
change of pace, the audience breath-
ed again, slipping out into the lobby
for a cigarette, returning to ap-
‘plaud a Grand Pas de Deux from
Don Quixote. presented in Spanish
costume by Eleanor D’Antuono and
Bruce Marks, characterized by
Spanish movement and rhythm,
and again, superb showmanship.
The orchestra responded to an
ovation from the audience. The
music throughout had been difficult
and expertly performed, /
The reaction of an audience to
a production is as interesting as
the production itself. and so it
proved on Mondav night. when a
capacity crowd greeted the New
York Ballet. firet of the three sched-
uvled Theatre-Three offerines spon-
sored by College Misericordia.
It was easv enough to pick out
the ballet students in the audience,
the young ones and the more adult.
Their faces showed the hallmark
of the ballet, the rant and listening
look, their hair snugly coiffed after
the fashion of a prima ballerina.
They approved the classical in-
troductory number, with chore-
ography by George Balanchine.
Classical costumes, classical lifts and
carries, combinations of steps
familiar to them in their nractice
sessions, executed superbly, as
understandable as a primer of bal-
let, requiring nothing of the viewer
except a delighted acceptance of
a story retold, the pursuit, the re-
buff, the capitulation, in liquid mo-
sentation; to the tragic discords
demanded of the Fall River Legend,
and the staccato tempo of the Span-
ish dancing.
ranging 4
from the light airs of the first pre 8
tion.
They were stunned and breathless
Now it was called upon to per-
form a robustious accompaniment
x
work that needed doing on our homes to provide employ- was okayed, and ground broken, |
Carverton Methodist Church will
ment.
We sent our sons to the Second World War, rationed
our gas and our food, bought bonds.
We do not understand exactly why we are now being
asked to hold down spending.
Our courses in economics taught us that money in
circulation is the only money which is of any value at all.
Hold down spending for what you need, and who
, goes out of business?
Your neighbor goes out of business.
And because he must go without buying what he
needs, the grocery store owner suffers.
In a society such as ours, interdependence is the
foundation stone. What affects one, affects all the rest.
Ne
Gl
cordia, starting tomorrow. Nice stuff.
Legal Notice —
Notice is hereby given that the
appeal of Miss Louise Ohlman, 100
North Lehigh Street, Shavertown,
from the decison of the Kingston
Township Zoning Officer will be
heard October 24, 1966 at 8 p.m. at
the Kingston Township Municipal
Building.
Miss Ohlman is requesting a side-
line set-back veriance.
Spencer Martin, Secretary
Kingston Twp. Board of Appeals
Spencer Martin, secretary
(
tafter
Mrs. Millie Devens LaBr.
A score of pictures of the ground-
breaking ceremonies December 12,
color photos.
The scrap-book proceeds with
pictures of the old Lehigh Valley
Waters contributes his bit of
history.
The old freight station gives up
the ghost.
Wintry weather as the firgt pic-
tures of preliminary construction
WA
“
condemnation proceedings |
went through on land owned by dedicate its new hymnals on Sun-
194, including newspaper pix and |
Railway station. And again, Dan |
i
day at the 9 a.m. worship service.
The covers are red, imprinted in
gold with the name of the church,
as in the case of most of the
| churches which have already dedi-
cated.
Carverton hymnals were financed
by members who took this means
| of commemoration. The last “new”
hymnal was issued in 1935.
OFFSET PRINTING
IN MANY DESIGNS
- The Dallas Post
the spring.
Christine Louise Rmold
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Arnold,
Carverton Road, announce the birth
of a daughter, Christine Louise,
their first child, August 20. The
baby weighed seven pounds, ten
ounces, and is flourishing. Mrs.
Arnold is the former Louise Sutton,
dauhgter of Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Sutton, Hillside. Mr. Arnold is a
welder with Climate Control.
IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE
5
at the sight of a gibbet in the sec-
ond part of the ballet.
They were not prepared for the
horrifying frenzy which unfolded
in the scenes of the Fall River Leg-
end, each episode melting into the
next without interruption, scenery
adroitly maneuvered to build the
tragedy from start to finish. It was
suggestive. of a Walpurgis Night,
fantasy battling with reality, a split
personality dominating the action,
a dream world giving way to reality,
with the reality itself becoming a
dream, a ‘revelation of the sub-
conscious hounded by circumstances
to a cowboy ballet, horses nicker-
ing in the corral, bucking under the
rein of the rider, rope throwing,
scuffling, riders thrown, a cowgirl
reaping the scorn of her more fem-
inine friends, thumbing her nose
in disdain, and standing forlorn
while her companions go on to the
dance at the ranch-house.
Nuns from College Misericordia,
in their new and more modern garb,
silently joined the home-going
throng. Three busloads of College
students started for Dallas, and the
most successful opening night of
Theatre Three was history.
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