with Antiquing Joel Sater ig y = ee? AW BORN, i Po OTCEN, Paivaied (3500718 The original of this restored patent 5774-X is in color and shows that the early inventor was already thinking beyond the confines of his invention toward a powerful brochure to sell the product to + the public. “Early Patent Papers Ripe For Researchers” Though many antiquers like to set fe year 1830 as the dividing ¥point between hand crafting and machine manufacture, the records of the United Wc Patent Office make it quite clear that Americans officially registered their interest and enthusiasm for mechanical improvements as early as 1790. In 1836 fire destroyed, ruined or spoiled most of the patent records and drawings. Up to that date 9,802 patents had been issued. Many were real artistic beautues inscribed with beauti-- ful hand lettering, colorful three: dimensional drawings, whim- sical decorations and Madison Avenue sales talk. A congres- sional act in 1837 authorized restoration of the damaged. pieces and over the years much was accomplished in that direc- tion so that today many are available in the National Ar- chives iflanyone has the time "and starnina to dig through them. Great treasurers of American lore lie there crying to be researched. The Patent Office carted fifty-four volumes of restored patents to the NationaR@Archives since 1960. And I'm literally itching to get “down there and look them over. - Most of the patented in- ventions never got very far off the drawing board. So one cannot study them with the idea of learning what was actually made and what was not. The Patent Office only issues the patent. agents must build the product - and promote it in the market place. The history of patents shows that as a rule the inventor benefited the least from his in- vention. There are of course great exceptions like Edison, McCormack the reaper man, Wrigley tide Chewing Gum man and ChaMes Goodyear. But more often than not the inventor The inventor or his. was a quiet little guy with a mil- lion ideas for improving every- one’s way of life. After he got his patent the promoters got him! They would buy it for a song and everybody’s way of life would be improved but his. The old patents show that American’s have been materia- lists from the beginning. Way back then they searched for magic gimmicks to ease the world’s burdens and make the inventor a fortune at the same time. Americans took to the machine age with a vengeance which proves that our love for gadgets, appliances, power tools, electric toothbrushes is honestly inherited. By 1847 almost 600 machines to lessen the housewife’s load had been patented and of them 228 were washing machines. Piano inventors claimed 49 patents between 1830 and 1847. In 1835 Benjamin Morris of Richmond, Ohio, patented the first ‘“‘sofa-bed.” He combined various features to make it serve as a trunk, sofa and bed- stead. And just four years earlier in 1831, William Wooley of New York anticipated the later famous “Murphy” folding bed by designing a pull-out model which he called a “Secret bedstead” which could be hidden in most any type of furniture that had spare space inside. Old patent papers allowed for artistic freedom which sadly is no longer the case in the cold blooded standardized engineer- ing drawings of the Twentieth Century. Today they all look “alike. (Send large self addressed envelope with 12 cent stamp for free list of hundreds of good books on antiques. Joel Sater, in care of this newspaper.) The June meeting of the Ladies of Kiwanis proved to be a very informative one for all, according to members present. John Sheehan, a member of Ki- wanis, presented a program en- titled “Year of Challenge-Year of Choice.” Mr. Sheehan showed slides of the 1970 elec- tions, courtesy of the Common- wealth Telephone Company. ‘The regular business metting followed with Mrs. Frank ‘Mathers presiding. The Ladies of Kiwanis held their annual picnic in July at the Pine Brook Inn grove. A large * group attended. The meal was covered dish style and all pre- sent agreed that the ladies out- did themselves once again. Games were played and the Ladies of Kiwanis have busy season success of the gathering was evident to all. The Ladies of Kiwanis had a farewell party July 29 for Mrs. Frank Mathers III, president, who will leave for Germany next week. The affair was held on the patio and lawn of the Robert Maturi home on Sutton Road, Dallas. The yard was complemented by a widely ar- ranged smorgasbord prepared by the club members, whose husbands returned after their regular meeting to join the group. The Ladies of Kiwanis wish to congratulate Leo Corbett, Clearview Avenue, Trucksville, the new lieutenant governor of Kiwanis. Bickings observe silver anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bicking, Memorial Highway, Dallas, ob- served their 25th wedding an- niversary July 25. They were entertained by their family and friends at the Brothers Four. The couple was married in the Stella Presbyterian Church, Forty Fort, by the late Rev. Kippel. They have two children, Altar and Rosary At a recent meeting of the Altar and Rosary Society of Our Lady of Victory Church, Har- veys Lake, Mrs. John Stenger, president, appointed Mrs. Fred Laux chairman of the campaign for trading stamps. The stamps are to be given to the Sisters of Good Shepherd at Lourdsmont, Clarks Summit, for use in ob- taining a school bus. Mrs. Laux William and Keith, a senior at Dallas Senior High School. Mrs. Bicking is the former Jane Jones, Kignston, daughter of Mrs. William Hughes and the late William Jones. Mr. Bicking is owner and operator of Lee’s Floor Cover- ing, Dallas. to collect stamps will call for stamps or books of stamps if contacted. Ushers at the church will also accept them. Mrs Michael Clark is heading the blanket collection campaign being conducted currently for the migrant workers in the Back Mountain area. Mrs. Clark, if called, will arrange to pick up blankets or quilts. Mrs Jeffrey Alan Holmes Hudaks observe 25 th anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Anthony W. Hudak, Overbrook Avenue, Dallas, will observe their silver wedding anniversary Aug. 9. The couple was married Aug. 11, 1945, in St. Stephen’s Church, Plymouth, by the Rev. Stephen Gurcik, present pastor of that parish. Mrs. Hudak is the former Katherine R. Elenchik, the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. John M. Elenchik of Jackson Township. j Mr. Hudak, the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Anthony A. Hudak, Dallas, is self-employed in the swimming pool and contracting business. Mr. and Mrs. Hudak will be guests of honor at a poolside dinner and party given by their five children, Catherine, Carol, Theresa, Geralyn and Anthony John. PAGE NINE Linda Jean Culp The First United Methodist Church in Dover, N.J. was the setting Aug. 1 of the wedding of Linda Jean Culp and Jeffrey Alan Holmes, both of Dover. ‘The bride is the daughter of Mr. .and Mrs. Lewis M. Culp Jr., 163 Grant St., Dover, N.J., and the -granddaughter of Mrs. Floyd Bogert, Dover, formerly of ‘Church Street, Dallas, and of Mrs. Lewis Culp Sr., Dover, formerly of Huntsville. The Rev. James Cooper per- formed the double ring cere- mony which was followed by a ‘reception at Perona Farms, Andover, N.J. The bride, escorted by her father, wore a gown of white silk organza over taffeta with bishop sleeves and a high neck- line. The A-line skirt, bodice, neckline and cuffs were embel- lished with venise lace. The high-rise wastline was accented by organza daisy appliques. The detachable chapel length tubular train was also trimmed with venise lace. The matching custom Camelot headpiece held a three-tiered elbow length veil of illusion. She carried a colonial bouquet of white roses, white miniature carnations, stephanotis, and pink sweet- heart roses. Deborah Tice of Ironia, N.J., was maid of honor. She wore a candied pink A-line empire gown with baby doll sleeves trimmed with venise lace at cuffs, neckline, and waist. She married in N.J. carried a colonial bouquet of summer flowers. Bridesmaids were Judith Siani of Mine Hill, N.J., and Mrs. Richard Still of Highland Park, N.J. Their gowns of pale pink were styled identical to that of the maid of honor. Their ‘headpieces consisted of match- ing bows and four-tiered should- er length veils. The flower girls, Ruth Melissa Holmes, Columbia, S.C., niece of the groom, and Valerie Ann Schmidt, cousin of the groom, wore floor length gowns to match those of the bridesmaids. Their headpieces were matching bows. Brides- maids and flower girls carried colonial bouquets of summer flowers. Richard Still of Highland Park, N.J., served as best man, and ushers were Glen Segond, Dover, and Peter Drench, White Meadow Lake, N.J. The bride attended the College of St. Elizabeth, Con- vent Station, N.J., and in Sep- tember will be a senior at the University of Southern Calif- ornia. Her husband, a graduate of Princeton University where he received a degree of Bachelor of Science in Engineering with highest honors, will pursue graduate studies at California Institute of Technology as a Woodrow Wilson Fellow. After a wedding trip to the Hawaiian Islands, the couple will reside in Pasadena, Calif. Donna Smith feted A bridal shower honoring Donna Smith was held recently at the home of Mrs. Walbridge Leinthall, Harveys Lake. Miss America’s gourmet chefs enjoy cooking In sitting-room, dining-room, kitchen complex by William Pahlmann With the ever-increasing interest of Americans in gour- met food, with males especially going in for virtuoso perfor- mances as amateur chefs, the evolution of the kitchen tends toward the arena. Cooking the food provides an important part ‘of the entertainment, so that arrangements have to be made for spectators. This evolution, which was sparked by the disappearance of domestic help, has pro- gressed from a pass-through opening between the kitchen: and dining area, through the eat-in kitchen, keeping room and family room adaptation, to a sitting-room plan where family and guests can watch the cook work. Watching a good cook produce his specialities, accompanied by the mouth- watering odors, is a good show and solves most of the problems of contemporary entertaining. Kitchen elements, appliances and housewares are now so decorative that they meld with most interior design schemes. This white-and-brown Kitchen complex in the country house of John Scoville in Greens Farms, Conn., is a good example of the kitchen trend. In this beautiful and casual vacation house, made from a converted New England stable, the small, highly organized kitchen is divided from the dining and viewing area by a coun- ter. Stove, sink, dishwasher and other necessary equipment are stowed behind this counter so that the cook faces his audience most of the time. Wall ovens are incorporated in the opposite wall, which has a built-in side- board, with drawers and cab- inets for storage and a couter top that is useful for service as well as display. Walls are off-white, Theatre 3 group attends session at College Misericordia campus A report session on the bene- factor campaign of College Mis- ericordia’s Theatre 3, 11th annual session was held recent- ly, when a group of Back Moun- tain area volunteers gathered in Kennedy Lounge Merrick Hall on the College campus. George L. Ruckno, Shrine Acres, Dallas, chairman of the . first Theatre 3 season, and Mrs. Ruckno reviewed the progress Residents of the Back Mountain attended a Theatre 3 report ses- sion at College Misericordia recently. Shown above, left to right, seated are: Mrs. Harry Gallagher, Lake Street, Dallas; William J. Stewart, M rs. Stewart, Shrine Acres, Dallas; Joseph Yan- chunas, Meadowcrest, Trucksville. Standing: Dr. Gallagher; Mrs. George L. Ruckno, Mr. Ruckno, Shrine Acres, Dallas, and Mrs. Yanchunas. of the campaign which enlisted individuals in support of the cul- ‘tural program and scholarship and building programs at the college campus. > William J. Umphred, Dallas, is Theatre 3 chairman for the 1970-1971 season which begins Oct. Teicher. The Bayanihan Philip- pine Dance Company will ap- pear Dec. 8 and Atlanta Sym- phony Orchestra, March 3, 1971. All presentations will be in Irem Temple, Wilkes-Barre. Benefactors contribute $100 annually in support of Theatre 3. Patron and subscription memberships afford others an opportunity to participate in the series. Sunset Beach Assoc. to meet The Harveys Lake Sunset Beach Association will hold a business meeting Aug. 7 at 8 p.m. under the pavillion at Sunset. Refreshments will be served. : ap- 14 with Ferrante and pliances are brown, wood ele- ments are stained a dark black- brown. A pair of fruit and veget- able still-life paintings from the Connecticut River Valley School are hung above the side- . board and lighted from above. ~The area is between two open’ terraces, so that this compact kitchen opens on to a terrace for additional service. Directly opposite the kitchen unit is the sitting room, which carries out the brown-and-white theme. Walls are off-white, wideboard pine floors are polished and bare. A comfort- able sofa and two lounge chairs are upholstered in chalk-white Belgian linen. The sofa is flanked with a pair of old pine tables, supporting white lamps with brown shades. These tables also service the arm- chairs. A round pedestal table placed before the sofa (tea- A ; table height) is used as a coffee table. Stools, for additional seating, can be pulled up to this table. The piece de resistance of this complex is the wall of lighted shelves, floor to ceiling, behind ‘ the sofa, on which is stored a rich and splendid collection of brown Bennington ware. The Bennington is massed rather than displayed—an enormous quantity and variety of beauti- ful shapes and striations of gold- to-brown coloring—which achieves a spectacular effect. The Bennington is in constant use and is fuctional as well as beautiful. Two pairs of New England portraits flank the shelves, hanging above the table and armchair on each side of the sofa. To the right of the sitting room area, as you look toward the kitchen, there is a long window wall, which looks out on another terrace. A fine oval dining table is placed before this big floor-to-ceiling window, for the accommodation of a small group for dining. This table serves as a buffet table for larger parties. Although cooking, serving and washing up must all be accomplished in this single area, the whole complex achieves an air of true elegance and dinner can be as formal as the host chooses. This is one of the most . ingratiating rooms in which it "has been my privilege to dine. Mr. Scoville is a gourmet cook and watching him produce his miracles, while carrying on a witty conversation;’is a source of unending fascination to me. (I am not a gourmet cook, I'm just a gourmet eater! It takes quite a lot of room for me to at bridal shower Smith, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Donald D. Smith, Country Club Road, West Dallas, will be married Aug. 29 to Donald Hol- man, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Holman, Gibsonia. Hostesses for the shower were Mrs. Leinthall, godmother of the bride-elect, and Sharon and Terry Leinthall. The table was decorated with a pink umbrella as the center- piece surrounded by smaller pink and white umbrellas filled with rice. Those attending were: Mrs. Raymond Garinger, Mrs. Richard Searfoss, Mrs. Joseph Rauch, Eva Allen, Mrs. Burton King, Mrs. George Searfoss, Mrs. John Baer, Mrs. Harvey Kitchen, Mrs. Lynn Sheehan, Annabell Selingo, Mildred Schray, Mrs. Donald D. Smith, Pauline Davis, Laurie Schray, Virginia Glenny, Mrs. Wal- bridge Leinthall, Sharon Lein- thall, Terry Leinthall, and the guest of honor. scramble an egg and I am always dropping the dishcloth.) There is no question that watching the cook is one of the new spectator sports and, if you have the flair, this kind of kitchen complex could make you famous. A brown and white kitchen, dining, sitting-room complex be- comes a stage setting for the gourmet cook.