~mountain «period THE POST, FRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 1951 Erosion of our lands though not always seen by the untrained eye, sometimes takes on the mantle of catastrophe, such as floods, caused by rapid drainage of our barren lands, or dust storms that are agi- tated by a shortage of water on land ‘that is improperly cultivated. Several years ago an example of visible erosion could be seen above Noxen where a large portion of the slid into Bowman's creek. More recently a slide . of land that could have been a catas- _ trophe if a train were in the area, or motor traffic heavy, occurred just south of West Nanticoke on U. S. Route 11. Thousands of tons of earth and rock rumbled down from the side of what appeared to be a perfectly solid mountain. Several more slides of smaller di- mension could also be seen along ~ Harvey's Creek, on the West Nan- ticoke-Lake Silkworth road. Another example of what quick drainage can do is visible on a farm at Vosburg. A torrential storm removed all top soil from several acres of good tillable farm land and left clay and boulders exposed on never-to-be- reclaimed farm land. Going back many years to a per- iod when the nomadic Susquehan- nock Indian travelled the eastern Pennsylvania, our valley of Wyo- ~ ming was a great lake from moun- tain to mountain, formed by the mountains crossing the present Gorge from West Nanticoke to the Honey Pot or East Nanticoke side and extending as far north as Pittston. After many centuries of water wear, the softer shell rock gave way and drained the valley! of water: The level of soil being per- “haps fifty to seventy-five feet be- low our present elevation. The shell rock wearing so gradually left a natural span of Pottsville Con- glomerate rock across the river to form what was considered one of the wonders of this area. This bridge was used for many years by the Indians and was the cross- _ ing point of Warrior Run or Saug- e-an Maus-ke-hanna Trail. "The bed of the river during this ran through the valley starting near Forty Fort Airport and travelled south down our pre- sent Wyoming Avenue, After many years of erosion at the span ends of. this bridge the weight became so great that it col- lapsed into the river channel form- ing a dam that caused inundation of our valley once more. Sand and soil settled into the bottom of the second lake and when the rock that formed the breast of this lake wore through enough to drain the water, the ground level was raised to our present elevation. The river channel however had moved some- what to the east and travelled through the valley starting at the Sgarlet gravel pits in Forty Fort and south through the part of Kingston that is still known to some of the older residents as the Blue Ponds. Many more years of bank cutting erosion caused the gradual shift- ing of the river to the easterly side of our valley. Wyoming, or Maugh-We-o-wam- ma, a Mohawk Indian sentence meaning foggy broad plain, was settled by several tribes of peace- ful Indians who were content to farm the level lands of the valley, land that after many generations is still so fertile that many of our truck farmers are reaping good crops of early top quality vege- tables. (To be continued) Staub And Lyons Home From Camp Breckenridge Two young men from Kingston Township, Richard Staub, Trucks- ville, and Robert Lyons, Shaver- town, are home from an eight month tour of duty at Camp Breckenridge, Kentucky, where they trained with the 101st Ajr- borne. Both Lyons and Staub served five years in World War II, Lyons with the 93d Artillery in the Euro- pean theatre, Staub with a chem- ical warfare division, also in Europe. They both belonged to the reserves, and were called on active duty with the minimum of notice. They are now released from ser- vice, probably permanently, as of August 1. At Breckenridge, master sergeant, Lyons sergeant first class. In civilian life, Staub travels for the American Chicle Staub was a Have You oe Made YOUR Deposit in the ¢ Red Cross Blood Bank? Ask or Write For Your BARK BY ~ MAIL Envelopes Main Office Market and Franklin Streets Wilkes-Barre ‘sidered NE a Wholesale Killings Must Stop Dear Editor: To the average uninformed mo- torist, an unposted highway means a 50-mile an hour speed. Trucksville, Shavertown, and Dallas were a few years ago con- “Back Mountain Commu- nities.” They were served by an electric trolley and a winding nar- row road leading to town. Today the picture is different. These same: towns have grown to suburban proportions. We call them built-up areas. The narrow winding road has been superseded by a three and four lane State highway. With the advent of the modern concrete road came an in- flux of .new arrivals. Homes were built by the hundreds and business establishments came to meet the public demands. Schools have al- ready coped with the needs and churches have enlarged their buildings for the additional members, The “Back Mountain Area” is now ready to say— ‘POST THE HIGHWAY AT 35.” We are a con- gested area—we admit it. There- | fore Township Commissioners and State authorities—take heed. The question is—How many lives must be lost, including innocent lives, due to a 50-mile an hour speed through' the heart of our Commu- nities? The ‘Red Tape’ must be cut by the scissors of common sense. The Rev. Frederick W. Moock, Jr. On Dean's List Two Back Mountain area stu- dents were named to the Dean's List for the second semester of the 1950-1951 school year at King's College in Wilkes-Barre. They are John Comer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Polk, 51 Parrish Street, Dal- las, and Joseph Bower, son of Dr. and Mrs. E. J. Bower, Noxen. Comer is majoring in accounting at King’s College and Bower is en- rolled in a science course. company, Lyons represents DuPont in technical service. Mrs, Staub is advertising for a small house in this issue, hoping to make the Back Mountain the fam- ily’s permanent home. Richard was brought up in Trucksville and at- tended Kingston Township schools. The Lyons are newcomers to the area. | mail box. “Second. in. Wm CO MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP. Your Nearest MAIL BOX Summer Banking Save time, effort, trouble . -. . avoid driv- ing, parking your car, standing in line . .. by making your deposits to The Second National Bank, or its Kingston Office at your nearest MAIL BOX. The Second National Bank has special Bank-by-Mail envelopes with deposit slips. You simply fill out deposit slip, enclose your endorsed checks, and drop in your Your deposit receipt will be mailed to you, along with another Bank- By-Mail envelope. of banking by mail. Makes EASY Enjoy the convenience Kingston Office Went Avenue 0 nis ize IL growing’ a community institution” ESTABLISHED 1889 Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers’ Association A non-partisan liberal progressive newspaper pub- lished every Friday morning at the Dallas Post plant Lehman Avenue, Dallas Pennsylvania. Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa., under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 a year; $2.00 six months. No subscriptions accepted for less than six months. Out-of state subscriptions: $3.50 a year; $2.50 six months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 10c. Single copies, at a rate of 3c each, can be obtained every Fri- day morning at the following news- stands: Dallas—Berts Drug Store, Bowman's Restaurant, Donahues Restaurant; Shavertown— Evans’ Drug Store, Hall’s = Drug Store; Trucksville, Gregory’s Store; Shaver’s Store ;Idetown, Caves Store; Hunts- ville, Barnes Store; Alderson, Deater’s Store; Fernbrook, Reese’s Store; Bloomsburg Mill Cafeteria; Sweet Valley, Britt’s Store. When requesting a change of ad- dress subscribers are asked to give their old as well as/ new address. Allow two weeks for changes of ad- dress or new subscription to be placed on mailing list. We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manuscripts, photographs and editorial matter un- less self-addressed, stamped envélope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be held for niore than 80 days. National display advertising rates 63c per column inch. Local display advertising rates 50c per column inch; specified position 60c per inch. Political advertising $1.00 per inch, Advertising copy received on Thurs-, day will be charged at 60c per column inch. . Classified rates 4c per word. Mini- mum charge 75c. All charged ads 10c additional. Unless paid for at advertising rates, we can give no assurance that an- nouncements of plays, parties, rum- mage sales or any affairs for raising money will appear in a specific issue. Preference will in all instances be given to editorial, matter which has not previously appeared in publication. Editor and Publisher HOWARD W. RISLEY Associate Editors MYRA ZEISER RISLEY MRS. T. M. B. HICKS Sports Editor WILLIAM HART Advertising Manager ROBERT F., BACHMAN ONLY YESTERDAY From The Post of ten and twenty years ago this week. ‘| wages and spend it. From the issue of August 15, 1941 The crime wave at Harveys Lake was terminated Tuesday afternoon with the apprehension of three small boys at the picnic grounds. Chief Ira Stevenson made them re- turn the forty cents. William Brickel is the third teacher to leave the Dallas Bor- ough high school since June. He will be with the Scranton Country Day School at a substantial in- crease in salary. Governor James has inspected the proposed site of a state park at Ricketts Glen, but purchase is still uncertain. Nine offenders of the sanitary code have been made to clean up their property at Harveys Lake, and two camps have been warned. Kiwanis and Rotary clubs will sponsor formation of school sa- fety patrols, decision following showing of a safety film by the State Police. A barn floor collapsed on Ed- ward Mokychis, employee of Wil- son Ryman, East Dallas, on Tues- day. His chest was pierced by a tooth of the cutting bar of a mower. He is at the Nesbitt Hospital. A road construction worker was stabbed in a drunken brawl Sat- urday night by Friend Mitchell, Hays Corner. Marvin Kunkle Ryman, 86, ve- teran of the lumber industry, was buried from his home in Maryland, July 30. As a young man he worked in lumber camps all over the Back Mountain district. Local dairymen have been paid 30% increase for their milk this year. Margaret Louise Culp became the bride of Robert C. Hull, Washing- ton, D. C., August 8. Catherine Davis will marry Ho- ward Tinsley on Saturday. Meeker WSCS Invites Other Three Charges Meeker WSCS has issued an in- vitation to the other three chur- ches in Rev. Henry Kiessel’s charge, Mooretown, Maple Grove, and Loyalville, to join in a WSCS meeting on Wednesday at 8, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Dra- bick. Members who expect to at- tend are asked to inform Mrs, Dra- bick or Mrs. Morton Connelly in advance. Family social night for the four charges will be held at Mooretown Thursday night at 8 in the church hall. Eighty were present at the last family. night. = THE DALLAS POST y Bin, Gur SAFETY VALVE | or oo || TOUENOW NE Al, Himself BN BS We stupid some persons elected to high offices think the general public is. The latest gem from some of our not too bright Senators down in ‘Washington, according to the news- papers, is a plan to raise the per- centage of taxes in the lower in- come groups in order to stop in- flation. They say that thet man getting low wages actually spends all he makes—thus, draining off more in his taxes would produce a direct - cut in the spending that tends to boost prices. Then these Senators continue with the theory that the higher paid group bank some of their money so they won't raise their taxes as much because saving money tends to lower prices. Well, we never claimed to be much of a financier, but we can’t see where this idea would stop spending. If Uncle Sam in getting this extra money from the poor would save it, yes, but he can spend it faster than any poor guy we know that is working for a few dollars a day, so the same amount often wonder just how of money will be distributed, there- |. by endangering the country toward inflation, as it would if the poor man were allowed to keep all of his The only dif- ference’ would be that if Uncle Sam spent it, the low wage bracket man would have less food in his stomach. Then take the idea of not taxing the "higher paid man so much because he banks some of his wages. Do these Senators think that banks place these savings in vaults and let it lie there? They do not, they loan that money out to suckers like us, and we spend it. In our opinion, some of these Senators, with their silly ideas are driving the country closer to in- flation than the common ordinary guy with a take-home pay of thirty bucks or less. Now, let’s skip from Washington up to Harrisburg. There's another group who thinks it’s kidding the public. The first thing Governor Fine did was cut off the one cent a bottle soft drink tax before he knew where his other tax money was coming from. He acted just like a man chucking up one job before he got a new one. The soft drink tax hurt very few per- sons. The next thing he did was appoint two men at high salary jobs to plan on the defense of our State in case of war. May we ask just who held down these jobs when the country was at war with Germany, Italy and Japan, and just what was their salary com- parable to that of the men in those jobs now? It seems to us that if war does come that we have enough patriotic citizens in this State to volunteer their services for its defense. We know money is getting scarcer. We find it just as difficult as Harrisburg and Washington does to raise enough to meet these spir- aling prices, but we are not kidding ourself about it and we resent office holders trying to kid us. The business men at Harveys Lake are having their troubles, too, when it comes to selling enough of their wares to meet expenses. The weather hasn't been too kind to them on Sundays this summer. We talked to a few this week when we were endeavoring to sell tickets to the Alderson Methodist Church flower show being held this Wed- nesday at the Lake school. One merchant told us that he saw a father slap one of his kids because the boy demanded a double dip ice cream cone when the parent thought one ball of cream was all he could afford. Yes, things are tough, but we can all still have fun. We've got the lake, a good school, some fine churches, and the sun- shines on week days. Flowers grow, thanks to the Sunday rains and a little sweat, so let’s all go to the school this Wednesday after- noon and evening and enjoy the flowers that nature has provided. The W. S. C. S. of the Alderson Methodist Church has plans for 28 sections which will accommodate 334 different displays of flowers or vegetables, including special ar- rangements of wall niches, Beside displays by amateur adults the program allows for arrange- ments for children under eight years of age and from eight to twelve. Corinne Gregory Weds’ Lt. G. Guthrie Conyngham Announcement has been made of the marriage, July 13, of Miss Cor- inne Gregory, daughter of Mrs. Benjamin F. Gregory, Hanover Township, and Lt.” G. Guthrie Conyngham, son of Mrs. William H. Conyngham and the late Wil- liam H. Conyngham of Hillside Farm. Rev. E. B. Wallin performed the ceremony. Mrs. Conyngham is a graduate of Meyers High School and has been employed by Fowler Dick and Wal-: ker. Lt. Conyngham is a graduate of Yale University and was assis- tant manager of Eastern Pennsyl- vania Supply Company before his recall to military service, He ex- pects to leave shortly for service with the First Marine Division in Korea. § Barnyard Notes Virginia is still my favorite vacation spot. I can say that after spending Saturday, the hottest day of the year, in Williamsburg. So don’t let hot weather keep you away from the Old Dominion. Virginia is the site of the.first white settlement in America, the scene of her early colonization, an important battleground of the Revolution, and the major battlefield of the Civil War. Even without its background of history, Virginia would still hold a charm for the Northern visitor. Right now the crepe myrtle, in all its varied shades of red, is at its height along Virginia’s highways and in her dooryards. The holly berries are, a lush green, and -the last of her flaming trumpet vines, so profuse from the first to the fifteenth of July, are blooming along her fences and hedgerows. Cardinals and mocking birds sing from every shrub, and from the tall turpentine pines, vultures flap lazily down along well-travelled highways or along the desolate sandy stretches of red earth that lead back to James River plantations. Perhaps it is because I discovered Virginia later in life—long after I had enjoyed New England,—that it has so much appeal for me; for Tidewater Virginia—the area between the James and Potomoc Rivers, and back to their fall lines—is rich country for the student of history, a high road to adventure and romance. There are somehow, places where it is easier to be a good Amer- ican than others; Monticello shortly after sunrise is one of them; the Lewis and Clark Memorial in Charlottesville; the old church at Jamestown on a summer evening when the frogs croak and a Vir- ginia deer timidly crosses your path. You get the same feeling walk- ing along the Confederate lines at dusk at Gettysburg or looking out over the quiet waters of Lake Champlain at sunset from the battlements of Fort Ticonderoga, or on approaching for the first time the South Carolina monument at Gettysburg. Virginia is like that everywhere. It does something for you if you are of the breed who reads history on winter evenings. To visit Virginia only for a good place to eat, sleep, swim and relax—Vir- ginia Beach for example—is like going to a movie in New York City when you could see the same picture at home a week later. And to drive only over her main highways—like US No. 1—is no different from any through highway in any other State; the shortest distance between two points, but revealing nothing. To enjoy Virginia— take the bypaths. Unless you do you will never see plantation homes like,” Shirley, Carter’s Grove or Brandon. The men who built those places travelled by river boat, horseback and carriage—not by motor car. ; My travelling companion will journey any distance to see an old home and its gardens; but she rebels at “looking at a spot” or redd- ing a monument or ‘roadside marker. Fortunately the Virginia De- partment of Highways has taken care of that problem very prettily. It has issued a booklet giving the text of every roadside marker in the State. As you speed by an historical sign, just yell to your companion, “What was the number?” Then at her leisure let her look it up in the book and read it to you. By that time you will have passed another. Virginia is covered with highway markers. Outside of Richmond—at Seven Pines—the scene of McClellen’s early Peninsula campaign to take the city—there are seven in one row in a distance of not more than twenty-five feet. Last winter in this column I mentioned a five-day trip to the historical Shrines of America which I would take if I were the father of a boy. It would of course be mostly in Virginia with important stops in Pennsylvania and Maryland. But if I were to take him to one place and no other, it would be Williamsburg with surrounding trips to Jamestown, Yorktown and then home by way of Route 17 to Wakefield, Washington’s birthplace; Stratford, Lee's birthplace and Mt. Vernon, Washington's home. No where can ‘you obtain so much concentrated history. where can you get sn much for so little. No- eo INCOME TAXES Money when you need it Convenient Monthly Payments TH LTE] LE FOR MEDICAL—DENTAL BILLS ‘e HOSPITAL CHARGES e STORE BILLS, ® IMPROVEMENTS eo CONFIDENTIAL * SERVICE e INSURANCE PREMIUMS e EDUCATIONAL TUITION e PROPERTY AND HOME QUICK [J (0{0)8):4 0101] LJ WYOMING NATIONAL BANK OF WILKES-BARRE SUMMER TIME IS SAFE DEPOSIT TIME "«.. for that’s when doors and windows are left open. That’s when you are out of the house more, and that’s when more thefts take place. The cost of safe deposit protection in our vault is only $2.50 a year, plus tax and up. Open Friday Afternoons Until 5 P.M. For Your Convenience. “Ye KINGSTON NATIONAL BANK AT KINGSTON CORNER, FOUNDED 1896 Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation : Ue