he r- 1ts ir nse per 1 to not be .CO dd 5 Win the eep 1 do e | in nall s to & H nny our 10ss one- vay, six f ex- eral ping for by Hix Norway has simply got to be the cleanest place on earth. There lay Bergen, sparkling in the sunshine at the head of its crystal fjord, no smog to inter- fere with the view from the plane. We registered at a student dormitory, noted with delight the rolled-up edierdowns in their starched jackets, in- spected the plumbing (This got be a habit, for in each student dorm the facilities were differ- ent, though they all featured the main attraction, which was a flush tank with the lift rod pro- truding through the top, capped by a knob, no levers, no side arm gear where the suction can prevent a valve from nesting sdqgurely.) American manufac- turers take note. This is a fool- proof system, though dobutless hard on the plumbing profession i which is accustomed to answer- ing calls of “The water’s run- ning through and I can’t make it ” stop,” or ‘the wire dingus is broken, can you come?’ With direct lift vertically, the valve stays put, never any problem about seating it. The showers in the student dorms are designed for single occupancy of a room. With two people assigned to each room, asin the tourist season, the first customer at the shower has it all.kis own way. The tiled floor fli¥s, the drain gurgles, and the customer can step up onto the toilet seat for a basis for to- vying while the tide ebbs. The second person has the choice between wearing those green rubber skindiving fins or hip boots. In the first domicile in Sweden, there was a suggestion of a curtain which did little to deflect the cascade. From then on, there was no protective cur- tain, and you took your chances. Get up at five a.m. to beat your room-mate, or waken just in time for breakfast and swim for your life. There was an almost universal switch to sponge baths along the middle of Den- mark. Easier on the hair if you'd visited a damefrisor and parted with Kronen to get a shampoo and a wave. One dorm had a unique feature. The shower was loc ted 1 right over the toilet. We “dissed possible “procedure. “All suggestions were turned down as impractical, including the proposal that one foot in the john might be the solution. Any group which has been traveling togiather for some time is spt to be¥me a little earthy in its ap- proach to problems. You've heard a lot about lact of inhibition in Scan- dinavia. Pay it no mind. The young folks of Norway hike practically constantly, with fifty-pound packs strapped to their backs. Uphill they go, toward the source of the wild waterfalls, climbing over crags, hobnobbing with the reindeer, working off a load of potential sin in the course of a thirty-mile =REUPHOLSTERY: M. B. Bedding completely rebuilds your furniture then recover it . your choice of lovely fabrics and serviced it. SUCKER vICY B ow c oN 1 £ { 0 3 Special Care To Antiques ve Qwer 50. Years Dependable Service *M. B. BEDDING CO. 526 So. ‘Main nS ‘Wilkes-Barre — 822-2491 ad _—_ BUICK | T966 Buick Electra 2 door, hard top, V-8, automatic, power steering, power brakes, power windows, VERDI green with light green interior. We sold this car new One Owner—Locally Owned A-1 CONDITION — $1695.00 Better Now Car Deals At .. | COMMUNITY MOTORS 588 MARKET ST., KINGSTON Phone 287-1188-Open Evenings "til 9 day, registering at a hotel along toward eight o'clock, streaming with rain, blistered as to feet, hair both male and female hanging in dank strands, yearn- ing for nothing more than a hot bath, something to eat, and a toss in the eiderdown. Not a pre- nuptial toss, just a plain ordin- ary toss designed to restore energy for the next day’s thirty- mile climb. Bergen’s waterfront is filled with ships from every nation, including Russia. A hammer and sickle on a funnel looked odd at first, but its ap- pearance is standard in ‘any Scandinavian port. Remember that Norway is a seafaring nation, with tentacles reaching out into away-and-beyond. It was a seafaring nation before the United States was even dreamed of, and it goes steadily about its business of remaining a seafaring nation. You will find chunks of raw red meat in the fish market. It’s whale meat. And whale steak is utterly delic- ious, something which Hix, with memories of the whale meat in Cambridge during the first World War, is reluctant to admit, but let justice be done. We had a platter of whale steak with onion gravy dt the com- mons in Oslo, and it would have satisfied Nero Wolfe, Nobody could possibly de- scribe the scenery of Norway, though travel folders make a pale attempt. For one thing, it is clean, clean, clean. There are no anti- litter signs. Norwegians really love their country ‘and they would not dream of defiling it with trash. The absence of smog, considering what the Eastern Seaboard in this country has been up against for the past several weeks, is the main contribution to clean living. Hydroelectric power is the answer. With all that poten- tial power gushing down the mountains, on its way to feed the fjords, there is no need for other fuel for generators. Elec- tricity is cheap. Isolated farm- steads on the tips of rocky headlands have washing ma- chines, and electric heat. Thin power lines cobweb themselves out of the consumer, and when central ‘power: “is. lacking “a “Householder car ‘Harness ao waterfall for an independent supply. Farmers are subsidized, for production of food is all-import- ant. Education is also subsid- ized. These benefits are reflect- ed in the tax rate, which is a staggering fifty percent. But children have state dental and medical care, nobody goes hungry, any man who wants work can find it. It is a Socialist state even though it has a king. Those potato patches, bright green and luxuriant, alongside every rurual home in Norway, are a reminder of the Occupation during World War II, when Norwegians lived on potatoes and potatoes almost BUICK OPEL iN ERR ing lal : “But,” explained the courier, “the children’s teeth did not suffer. Potatoes have lost of vitamins and min- erals.” One of the group mut- tered, “Look, Ma, no cavities, but I gained thirty-five pound- 9 S. exclusively. That was Mrs. MacDuffy, who, as an instructor in home economics, was up on her calorie counts and her basic nu- trition chart, a wad of common sense and practically compres- sed into a small body which could dance rings around half the group and give the other half a do-si-do for its money. The entire roster of folk dancers on the tour was comprised of professional people, teachers, doctors, retired educators and such, welded together by a com- mon interest in preserving tra- ditional forms of folk lore. Not square dancing as such. Square dancing is related to folk dancing, but not per se folk dan- cing. Not country dancing, either. The correct term for country dancing is contra-dan- cing, a precise rendition of tra- ditional steps combined with tunes handed down over the ages, and differing in every land, but strangely allied in concept. The identical figures occur in many lands, interpret- ed according to native heritage. Good spectator sport as well as participant sport. Hix spectated, though she used to shake a mean leg. where's that dulcimer? page the carrier pigeon It was in Norway that the Odyssey of the missing dul- cimer began. Part and parcel of the props of the Folk dance group, it was a valuable piece of business. It had boarded the train in Bergen, slung from Margaret’s shoulder, and had been seen in the luggage rack by the dan- cers, who were then engaged in singing rounds, gathered about the seats of the leading singers. But nobody had seen it on the second train, the one which plunged on its silver rails down through tunnels and snow barri- cades, around dizzying hairpin curves, on its way to Flam, while crossing the spiny ridge of "the Norwegian ‘mountains. A dulcimer is not often en- countered these days. It is clas- sified as an ancient instrument, lies flat on the lap, and is cares- sed by the fingers of the music- ian, who uses it to accompany ballads and folk songs. Its loss would cancel out an interesting THE DALLAS POST, AUGUST 20, 11970 part of the proposed program in Denmark. ' The padded and embroider- ed carrying case was not among the baggage shuttled across the gangway between one steamer and the next on the fjord. It wasn’t in the dunnage delivered later in the day at the ski lodge high in the mountains. It wasn’t among the clutch of suitcases which reached the university dormitory in Oslo. A telephone call by the courier established that it had been taken from the train and delivered to the lunch-stop res- taurant at Flam, a village at the head of the fjord. It would be sent on along with the next group of tourist to cross the ridge. Further telephoning in Oslo yeilded nothing. Bus after bus pulled up at the University headquarters. Still nothing. This dulcimer was not just any run-of-the-mill dulcimer. It had been made especially for Mar- garet by her grandfather, with skill and with loving hands. Its loss was much greater than that of an instrument which could be purchased in a store. The last night of the stay in Oslo, the day before emplaning for Denmark, there was a phone call from the office. The dul- cimer had arrived, or some- thing which the switchboard op- erator believed to be a dul- cimer. Would Margaret come down to headquarters and iden- tify her property? Margaret flew. Ten minutes later she was back with the dulcimer, pre- pared to stage concerts all over the dorm. How did it come? The dancers were anxious to know. The dulcimer had become a vital part of their existence. It was THEIR dulcimer. They had lost sleep over it, followed its problematical journeys, and now they needed information so that the matter could be decent- ly buried. It would be fun to report that it came by carrier pigeon, remembering Mark Twain’s re- luctance to spoil a good story with strict adherence to the truth, but the fact is that it came on the shoulder of a girl on the back of a motorcycle, a girl in a crash helmet who was glad to hand it over. She had been; she said; under-the impression thats she wds transporting some sort of a ‘fancy bit of armament, probably a machine-gun. She had simply accepted responsi- bility for its delivery as a: matter of course, a courtesy from one world traveler to an- other. Scandinavians equate cleanest place on earth (with whale meat, yet) Americans with gangsters, gangster with guns. We wanted to ask if she had stayed at the fabulous ski lodge, but she was up and away, scorching down the quiet streets of Oslo, her hair streaming from beneath her crash helmet. The ski lodge had been the high point of the stay in Nor- way, with its huge fireplaces and blazing logs, its big dance floor for needed practice, and its entire second floor given over to the group. There were still ravines filled with snow on this high and forbidding plateau. Dag had stopped the bus, and we had tumbled out to snow ball each other, with Oslo, and the highest ski-jump in the world, still many miles away. We began talking about maybe buying a reindeer skin. Tourist-traps at the restaurant in Flam had been stocked with stacks of skins, and here in the mountains were skins, still in residence, still attached to the reindeer. Nice heavy fur, black and white and grey. Later, the stores in Oslo were crawling with reindeer skins, nicely tan- ned, soft to the touch, and not too costly—if you happened to want reindeer skin for in front of your fireplace. Most of us tossed a coin, reindeer skin or Norwegian ski sweater, the cost about identical. (I have a ski sweater in which I will doubt- less look like the Old Man of the Mountain, model. I felt I could get along without a reindeer skin, though it was tempting. Where else can you get a rein- deer skin except in Norway? But you can’t buy everything that you see in the stores, and a few pennies had to be saved for shopping in Copenhagen.) That’s the trouble with traveling, you see things you want, and if you pass them up you'll never see them again except in an American store marked ‘“Made in Japan.” And that’s a tag which is guaranteed to take the bead off the wine. On the way down the moun- tainside toward Oslo, Dag pointed out barn roofs with grass growing on them and an occasional small tree. He said that when the grass needed mowing, the farmer lifted the“ family goat up to the roof and let it earn its board and keep. When the grass was neatly clip- ped, he lifted it down again and milked it. Dag, with small confidence in tourists, didn’t let us out of the bus at the university dorms _a cet So. ms ——— P.O. Box 859 730 ON YOUR DIAL Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18701 822-6108 Serving Northeastern Pennsylvania On A Clear Channel Now we aren’t about to say that WNAK plays some of. the nicest music around, but a lot of folks Phones: (AC 717) 735-0730 WALL TO WALL CARPETING ~ OR ANY ROOM SIZE RUGS COMMERCIAL CARPETING FOR KITCHENS, BATHROOMS, OR HEAVY TRAFFIC AREAS WALKER'S THE REGION'S LARGEST RUG MART ROUTE 309 HAZELTON — ROUTE 6 EYNON 1-455-5879 PHONE COLLECT 1-876-2828 Open Every Night Until 9 NO DOWN PAYMENT— 3 YEARS TO PAY SAMPLES BROUGHT TO YOUR HOME PAGE FIVE Wyoming Nat'l. Bank names another director I. Eric Feldman until he had procured registra- tion and room keys for every- body. He said it saved time and complications to get these mat- ters out of the way, that he’d put our baggage in our rooms, right this way, please. And remem- ber to close the windows before leaving for dinner, as the rooms were on the ground floor and even in Oslo there was no per- centage in inviting trouble. And don’t forget to turn in your keys when you leave. Three days later, remem- bering to turn in our keys, we left for Copenhagen, accompan- ied by protests from other tour- ists, “Hey, have a heart, it’s Sunday morning. Cut the racket.” canning caution The pressure canner is the safest and best way to can low- acid vegetables, reminds Louise W. Hamilton, extension food and nutrition specialist at The Pennsylvania State Univer- sity. Ten pounds pressure gives . a temperature of 240 degrees which is necessary to process low-acid foods. The oven is not safe for canning. DALLAS AUTO Toad FURNITURE UPHOLSTERING ® Kitchen Chairs ® Truck Seats ®@ Boat Tops ® Lawn Furniture Route 309 Across From Shady Side Lake 675-5882 We'll find out if your oil burner is robbing you of heating efficiency. Our free Heating Efficiency Test provides a solid estimate of fuel The appointment of I. Eric Feldman, Wilkes-Barre, to the board of directors of the Wyom- ing National Bank of Wilkes- Barre, effective Aug. 7, brought the number of members to 21, it was announced by Hareld J. Rose Jr., president of the bank. Mr. Feldman is vice president of Standard Equity Corp., Wilkes-Barre, which operates a chain of finance offices in ‘Eastern Pennsylvania. A native of Swoyerville, he is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. S.M. Feldman. He is a graduate of Luzerne High School and re- ceived his B.S. degree at the University of Scranton. He served in the Army during World War II. Mr. Feldman is a director of Pennsylvania Consumer . Fin- ance Association; former vice chairman of the Wilkes-Barre Housing Authority; active in UJ.A. and Jewish National Fund drives; he has served on many committees with the Pennsylvania Consumer Fin- ance Association. He is active as a Mason and Shriner, holding memberships in Lodge No. 61, F & AM; a member of the Wilkes-Barre Rotary Club, and Jewish Com- munity Center. He is a member of Ohav Zedek. Other members of the Bank’s board are Noel B. Caverly, chairman; Bernard C. Banks, C. C. Groblewski, M.D., Thomas M. Lewis, H.M. Vivian, Sterling L. Wandell, Joseph H. Williams, Nathan L. Foreman, George L. Ruckno, Charles A. Shea Jr., Max Rosenn, Laning Harvey, Darrel Crispell, John Daugherty, Frank M. Henry, Roy A. Gardner, John N. Con- yngham, Edgar G. Scott, Harold J. Rose Jr., and Barry C. Boyer. 1967 fabrics act offers protection Consumers who take ad- vantage of flame-retardant fabrics can help reduce the in- juires and deaths that occur each year from clothing cat- ching on fire, says Ruth Ann Wilson, extension clothing specialist at The Pennsylvania State University. The Flammable Fabrics Act of 1967 provides for the elimina- tion of hazardous flammable fabrics used in wearing apparel and home furnishings. This act also gives the Department of Commerce the authority to es- tablish more extensive test standards for judging fabric flammability. Fabrics that do no meet flammability stand- ards must be either flameproof- ed or destroyed, Mrs. Wilson points out. Because of government’s con- cern for safety, fiber and fabric manufacturers are increasing their efforts to provide flame- retardant fibers. 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