A Sn” a “gu FROM PILLAR TO POST By MRS. T. M. B. HICKS Se We've had a number of mice as house guests during the past winter. There was the occasion when a young mother mouse was careless enough, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1952 BOX SCORE Back Mountain Highway Deaths and Serious Accidents Since V-J Day Hospitalized Killed DALLAS 10 | 38 J DALLAS TOWNSHIP E15 [| 8 : : LEHMAN 1 | 1 E KINGSTON TOWNSHIP i & | 5 : : JACKSON TOWNSHIP 2 MONROE TOWNGHIP 3 1 ROSS TOWNSHIP BE) MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION LAKE TOWNSHIP 12 1 2 FRANKLIN TOWNSHIP 2 TOTAL 76 26 VOL. 62, No. 30 8 Cents per Copy—Twelve Pages to get caught in the trap instead of licking off the bacon fat and leaving 1 the trap unsprung, as he ** Dallas Exchange Is Cut To Dial A. J. Sordoni Makes First Call To Governor Dia] telephone service became a reality in Dallas and the Back Moun- tain area Monday night at 11 when Andrew J. Sordoni, Sr., board chair- man, Commonwealth Telephone Company, and State Secretary of Commerce, made the cut-over to automatic service in a brief cere- mony witnessed by approximately 250 officials of other Pennsylvania telephone companies, community re- presentatives and executives of as- sociated companies, The first call over the new System was made by Mr. ‘Sordoni to Gover- nor Fine in Harrisburg. The cut-over to automatic service effected more than ‘3,000 subscribers of [Commonwealth’s Dallas Ex- change. The actual cut-over was pre- ceeded earlier with a dinner at Hotel Sterling for out-of-town guests. Seated at the speakers’ table were Andrew J. Sordoni, Jr., presi- dent, Commonwealth Telephone Company; Wilfred Gillen, president, Bell Telephone Company of Penn- sylvania; Henry T. Inman, vice pre- sident and general manager, The Bell Telephone Company; Harold Scott, vice president, Pennsylvania Company for Banking and Trusts; Harold H. Young, R. L. Bennett, A. F. Snyder, W. M. Wakefield, W. B. Jeter, Attorney William ‘A. Valen- tine, directors, Commonwealth Tele- phone Company; Loren M. Berry, president, L. M. Berry Directory Corp.; Clyde S. Bailey, executive vice president, United States Inde- pendent Telephone Association; Colonel Gustav Hirsch, consulting engineer, Columbus, Ohio; and An- drew J. Sordoni, 'Sr., chairman of the board, Commonwealth Tele- phone (Company. Chairman {Sordoni noted that the cut-over of the Dallas Exchange to dial service was the #limax of an improvement program begun in the Dallas and Back Mountain area in December 1950 when construction of the company’s new main and district office was begun on [Lake Street, Dallas. The main office was dedicated and formally opened last January and work was begun immediately for the exchange’s conversion to automatic service. Preparation, for dial involved installation of central office equipment, of approximately 3,000 dial telephone sets, rewiring of the subscribers’ premises and construction of cable and additional wire facilities, Chairman Sordoni pointed out mite Two days after she enriched the humus pit, baby mice came stumb- ling: out into the open, one from the fireplace, one from under the hot water heater in the kitchen, a third making it from step to step, down the attic stairs. Almost starved, all three of them, a mere wisp of grey fur. So we are accustomed to mice. But until last Tuesday night, we never saw one coming down the fireplace bricks, head first. This, we said to ourself, can’t pos- sibly be true. (Squirrels can shin up and down a tree, either standing on their heads or their tails, whichever suits them best. But mice, no. The arrangement of thelr claws is against it We closed our eyes experiment- ally. It's probably the heat, we re- flected. And it’s been a tough week- end, what with the auction and all. It’s an optical illusion. Comforted, we opened our eyes. There hung the mouse. He had braked to a full stop now and was resting, his eyes fixed on the lighted lamp. Then, as we watched him, he slowly extended a foreleg, unfolding 4 delicately veined black wing. He extended the other wing, folded both swings close to his flanks, shuddered slightly, closed his eyes, and went to sleep. We went out into the kitchen and got a ‘tea-towel, Then, remembering that bats have sharp little teeth, we substituted a turkish towel for the thin striped model. The bat quivered when shrouded, gave a muffled squeak, and sub- sided. Released outdoors, he flitted off into the thin drizzle. Wie felt better. The heat hadn't been playing us tricks. Mice don’t scrabble down a wall on their heads. We didn’t have bats in the belfry, Revived, we broke out the latest wodunit from the Back Mountain Library, poured :a glass of iced tomato juice, and settled down to catch up on our literature, neglected during the hectic period of the an- nual auction. that cost of the mew main office and conversion of the exchange to ! dial "ost mére thn $1,600,000. Siace World War 2, Commonwealth's im- provements, dial conversions and service extensions program has cost $5,000,000. The company’s plant valuation has today reached the $10,000,000 figure. The Commonwealth Telephone Company today has more than 25,000 subscribers and encompasses the largest area in the State served by an independent company. The territory served is approximately 100 miles from nerth to south and 60 miles from east to west, giving service in Luzerne, Lackawanna, Wyoming, Bradford, Sullivan, Sus- quehanna, Columbia and (Schuylkill Counties. Sports Car Road Races Start Saturday At Newell Wood's At 11 Road maces at Senator Newel. Wood's estate at Harveys Lake will start tomorrow at 11 a.m. The second is scheduled for 12:30, third 1:30, fourth and fifth concurrently at 3, and the sixth at 4 p.m. Each race consists of ten laps around the 3.5 mile course. Preferred parking space, open only to members of Giant’s Despair Hill Climb (Association, will be close to the pits, dug to the right of Senator Wiood’s home and below the starting line. Three other parking lots are open to the general public, sponsored by the Junior Chamber of Commerce. [Caldwell McClintock, Jr., is official time and score-keeper for both the Giant’s Despair Hill Climb contest and the road races. The Hill Climb classic starts this morning at 10, up until noon a run for record. Second run for record is scheduled from 1 to 5 p.m. Trial runs took place both at Giant's Despair and 'the road race course 'yesterday, also techmical in- spection for all cars entered. Sixty-five cars are entered for the road race, fifty-five for the Hill- Climb. Owners of all entries are members of the Sports Car Club of America .Cars are small, powerful, and acrobatic. Membership is still open in the non-profit (Giant’s Despair Hill-Climb Association, entitling the holder of a membership card to preferred park- ing both at Giant’s Despair and at ‘Bryinfan Tyddyn’. Cars for the Antique Auto Show Friday and Saturday, opening in Kingston Armory 1:30 to 10:30, have been coming in over the road since ‘yesterday. They are all in tip- top driving condition, polished until they shine like mirrors. Tomorrow night is the big Victory Dinner Buffet, starting at 7 p.m. at Irem Templé Country Club Pavilion. Awards and trophies will be pre- sented. The dinner is open to the public. DON'T LOOK NOW, BUT THERE'S SOMEBODY WHISTLING AT YOU Don’t look now. But if yowr young and pretty and somebody whistles it may be only Mrs. A. C. Devens’ mew female parrot, Polly, aged 40. Polly was purchased ‘a week ago in Forty Fort as a companion for Mrs. Deven’s bachelor parrot who travels under the misnomer Polly 0O’Boyle, aged 43. More dignified, he is not half as apt to whistle at the girls as his new lady friend. She learned the habit from her former owner, a music teacher, who also taught her how to sing the scale. First indication of the problems a Whistling parrot can cause came last week when Mrs. Devens’ daugh- Fort to bring Polly out to her new home. [Polly whistled at everybody on the street, but when they stopped at an ice cream store, Polly whistled so realistically that a girl on the corner ‘took her seriously and came right over to the car. She was a little embarrassed, but a good sport when she saw the fine feathered whistler, Polly and Polly O’Boyle are both excellent talkers with Polly having a little the edge in an argument. Mrs. Devens says that at 40 they are both relatively young, since parrots are known to live as long as 200 years. By that time probably Polly will no longer be interested ter, Mildred, went down to Forty |in whistling at the girls. Laing Firemen Test 3 Pieces Of Equipment Committee Plans To Draw Specifications And Place Order Soon Members of the committee to Henry M. [Laing Fire Company were thrilled this week with the performance of three engines sent here for demonstrations on the hills surrounding Dallas, The three engines, demonstrated on alternate days, were a Mack, manufactured in Allentown, and driven here by Berwick Fire (Com- pany; a Wand-LaFrance, manufac- tured in Elmira, and a Central, mounted on a (Chevrolet chassis. All three performed beautifully, Those who tested the apparatus were members of the new engine com- mittee headed by Henry Peterson and composed of Ben Edwards, [Fred Price, Norti Berti and Fire Chief James Besecker, The big white Mack truck was given a thorough pumping test, un- til officials of Dallas Water (Company asked the firemen to discontinue similar tests on all engines because of the shortage of water. The Mack was lequipped with a two-stage pump land carried a 500-gallcia booster tank. The firemen hooked up a 2% inch line and a 1% inch line and still had enough pressure to keep a fog line in operation. The truck was so equipped that firemen could. play a stream of water ion a fire from the booster tank while they were hooking up their other lihes. Then by turning a valve they were able to tie in their other lines without any interruption. It has been impossible to do this with their present equipment. The Ward-LaFrance carried a 750-gallon pump and a 250-horse power engine, providing tremendous power on the hills. In every respect if was more powerful and heavier than any engine currently being used in the Back Mountain region or in rural areas. The [Central equipment carried a 500-gallon pump and a 500-gallon booster tank, mounted on Chevrolet chassis. Within, the next week ‘the com- mittee hopes to have a demonstra- tion of American-LaFrance equip- ment also manufactured in Elmira. After having first hand demon- strations of as many pumpers as possible, the committee will draw up a list of specifications for an engine best suited to meet local needs and then select the equipment which meets specifications. The order for the equipment will be placed shortly since about seven months are required before delivery. About $6,500 hlas been pledged toward the purchase with $3,500 in hand, New equipment will cost ap- proximately $14,000. Contributions have averaged lower than antici- pated, the largest being $500. The company plans to retain its old Mack engine which has [been in service ’ ‘almost thirty years. It will be stripped of most of its equip- ment so that it can carry an aux- iliary water tank of greater capacity. The company will meet Monday night at the Library Building to dis- cuss further details and to hear reports from Harold Smith, general chainman of solicitation, Mr. Smith has urged all citizens who have mot been solicited to make their pledge or payments to W. B. Jeter, president of [First National Bank, who is treasurer of the fund. Contractor Injured When House Collapses David Ide’s home in Idetown, built by pioneer ancestors over one hun- dred years ago on one of the first land grants in the area, collapsed Wednesday around noon. The wreck” age, says Mrs, Ide, will have to be cleared away and a house built from the foundations. Much of the original lumber, hardened and seasoned by years, will be usable, but the loss is great. Operations were being carried out to ease tthe upper stories of the frame structure down to a new foundation, already built to take the load. The weight shifted, the structure buckled, and fell four and a half feet, crushing the new foundation. Ernest Fritz, Idetown, contractor, was trapped beneath the flooring in a shallowly excavated portion, -but was able to make his way to the main cellar and walk up through the outside entrance steps. Bruised about the back and neck, he was taken to Nesbitt Hospital for X-Rays and further examination. select a new fire engine for Dr. Circus Comes To Town . “Saturday is Circus Day in the Back Mountain’. This is the second year that the Dallas Kiwanis (Club and the Back Mountain YMICA have sponsored Mills Bros. Three Ring (Circus. Advance sale of tickets gives the treasury of these two organiza- tions the greatest incomé. Friends are urged to secure their. tickets = Some forty stores and offices in the Back Mountain area are sell- ing advance tickets. Any member of the Dallas Kiwanis (Club or Back Mountain YMCA has tickets to sell, The two organizations will play host to hundreds of special guests on Circus Day. Invitations for delega- tions from: (Children’s Service ICen- ter, Crippled Children’s Association, Georgetown Settlement House,: Old Ladies’s Home, St. Michael's Orphan- age, St. [Stanislaus Orphanage, Sut- ton Home and the West [Side Settle- ment House, have been extended. A matinee performance takes place at 2 p.m. with the doors open- ing at 1 p.m. The evening perfor- mance begins at 8 p.m. and the doors open at 7 p.m. LOCAL OWNERS WILL DISPLAY THREE ANTIQUE AUTOMOBILES Harry Ruggles, Idetown, is in charge of the antique automobile show today and tomorrow, Kingston Armory. The show is being held in connection with the Giant's Despair Hill climb and the road races at the “Brynfan Tyddyn” course around State Senator T, Newell Wood's Harveys Lake estate. Among the cars exhibited will be “‘America’s finest antique auomo- biles—owned by many of America’s ranking industrial and (business leaders,” according to Mr, Ruggles. Two are owned by Mr. Ruggles him- self. One is a 1911 Buick Roadster, white with a black top and black leather seats, brass trim:and brass headlights and carriage lamps. The other is a 1908 Thomas “Lan- daulet”, a small town car with black and maroon coloring and brass trimming, This car has been in Mrs. Ruggles’ family since ‘the fall of 1908, and Mrs. Ruggles has the letter written to the Thomas Com- pany ordering the car. . Mr, and Mrs. C. W. Bertels, Hunts- ville, will have on exhibition their 1927 Packard Touring car, painted gray with red trim and red leather seats. One of the most interesting cars will be a 1910 Matheson, made in Forty Fort, and believed to be the only one in existance. The car is owned thy Mr. and Mrs. Frank Matheson, who will dive it from Wayne, Pa. Mr. Matheson will be one of the judges for the show. On. July 11, Mr. and Mrs. Ruggles drove to Ithaca in their Buick to participate in the Show of Antique Cars held in Cornell’s Barton Hall. On September 24, they and Mr. and Mrs. Bertels will drive in the Glidden Tour of the [Antique Auto- mobile Club, Washington, D. IC. Where Raging Torrent Swe pt Three To Mother And Two Children Drown In Trucksville's Worst Tragedy A young mother, sleeping fitfully because of the heavy storm, mindful of the need for covering the children and closing windows against the shifting wind, stumbled from her bed shortly after four A. M. on Tuesday. She heard the roar of the stream and felt water on her bare feet. & v Dr. S. BR. Schooley Is Getting Better Specialist Advises Three-Month Rest The condition of Dr. Sherman Schooley who is a patient at Wilkes- Barre General Hospital shows con- tinued improvement. While still unable to sit up in bed or have visitors, his spirits are good and he is taking an active interest ‘| in the affairs of the community and the Democratic Convention. On Sunday Dr. Joseph Vander- veer, head of the cardiology depart- ment of the Benjamin Franklin Clinic, Philadelphia, examined him, and adwised that he remain quiet for a period of six weeks and then take a three months rest after which he might return to office practice. Dr. Vanderveer is assistant pro- fessor at University of Pennsylvania Medical Shcool and on the staff of the Pennsylvania Hospital. Dr. and Mrs, Schooley became acquainted with him when he spoke before the general practice group at Bedford Springs last year, During the period he has, been in the hospital, Dr. Schooley has re- ceived hundreds of cards and letters from his friends and patients. One was a cablegram from Wiliam Mac- Intyre in London. Many others were received from medical associates and old friends throughout the coun- try. 3 He takes a great interest in all of them and can’t quite understand why so much fuss is being made over him, He was especially delighted when he received a couple of gallons of drinking water from the spring on the old iSchooley homestead. “That's nectar for the Gods” was the way he received it. McCarty In Hospital IChief of Police Francis McCarty, Trucksville, is still at Mercy Hospital undergoing extensive tests and X- Rays, with no diagnosis up to date. He was admitted after two severe hemorrhages July 12. Up to date he has had five transfusions. Mrs. Lina Booth, 70, Dies At Loyalville Mrs. Lina Booth, wife of Earl Booth, Lake Township Supervisor, was buried in Maple Grove Ceme- tery Thursday afternoon, following services conducted at the Bronson Funeral Home by Rev. Ira Button, and Rev. Everett Lord. Born at Pikes Creek, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur ‘Wesley, Mrs. Booth had lived in Loyalville ever since marriage. There are two sons, Walter, Washington; and Clifford, Harris- burg; a daughter, Mrs. Lewis B. Thomas, Lake Silkworth; five grandchildren and one great-grand- child; two brothers, Ernest and Walter Wesley, Loyalville; and a sister, Mrs. Leona McHugh, New Jersey. Their Death The spot where Snake Run, swol- | isolating Mrs, Ben, Johnson and her bridge in the left foreground, only len with a flash flood, cut a new |two tiny children, and closing their |a few short feet away. channel early Tuesday morning, {only avenue of escape to the plank Photo by Paul Bieley A second later the cottage rocked on its foundations as something heavy struck the back porch a crushing blow. Mrs. Ben Johnson snatched up her sleeping children, shaking them awake, guiding their arms into their bathrobes, belting her own robe about her. The bridge was within a few feet of the front door, and that way, she thought , was safety. She lifted sleepy little Charles in her arms, took three-year-old Ellen by the hand, and stepped out on the front porch, closing the door care- fully behind her. There was water on the porch, and little Ellen started to cry. The rain came down in sheets, In between gusts that cut off vision in the dark of thehour and the raging storm, the bridge could be seen. Mrs. Johnson knew ‘that the water was over the driveway, but she knew she could make it. It couldn't be over her knees, she reassured herself, “Hold tight to Mommie’s hand”, she warned Ellen, “Just a minute and we'll be on the bridge and across.” Mrs. Johnson stepped down into a swirling horror of water. Instantly Ellen was torn from her grasp. The young mother struggled weakly to hold baby ‘Charles above the flood, gave one despairing shriek, and was swept away. And with her perished her unborn child, due in (September. That is the picture of Tuesday morning’s tragedy in Trucksville as read in the mute evidence of the deep gully cut across the yard by the torrent. The stream had leaped its banks, cut itself a channel along- side the house, undermined the ap- proach to the bridge, and washed out a concrete abutment. ‘A heavy plank bridge washed downstream, had struck the kitchen porch. When Mrs. Johnson stepped down into her side yard she stepped into five feet of rushing water, moving so swiftly that it dislodged rocks and tossed rubble around like sand. The concrete abutment, projecting at a sharp angle, lay in wait for its victims. It may comfort the family to know that the little child- ren and their mother died at once, that they never lived an instant to battle the smother of the flood. Neighbors, including Mrs. ‘G. L. Howell and Mrs. George Parry, re- port that they heard children crying and then a louder scream, high over the roar of the freshet. Mrs. Howell, looking out over her back yard to- ward the Johnson cottage, saw a waste of water extending as far as her tennis court, high above any previous high water mark. . Ben Johnson, on might shift at Diamond Manufacturing (Company, Wyoming, tried to telephone his mother, Mrs, Catherine Johnson, at rthe height of the storm to ask if his amily were safe, but without making connections. Mrs. Johnson, awakening to the sound of water and the terrific thunder claps of the night-long storm, heard the child- ren cry out, but when she investi- gated she could see no traces of the little family, so assumed that she was mistaken. Ben returned home at 7 am. found water still running through the house, and thought the family had found haven with a meighbor. Operations for recovery of the bodies were not started until 9 am. How- ard Woolbert set wheels in motion. Shavertown and Trucksville vol- unteer firemen, and many recruits from the community kept watch along the banks of Toby's (Creek, Shavertown under direction of R. W. Edmondson, Trucksville under William Long. At 11:20 the first body, that of little Ellen, was recovered from Toby’s Creek just below Shaver’s Store, by Rev. Robert Webster, who was carried under by the torrent, and made the bank with difficulty, bearing his pathetic burden. By noon the twenty-five year old mother had been found, having been swept down stream and through the conduit. Hours later, at 7:45, the body of two-year old Charles was found in the impounding basin at Pringle. State Police assisted local police and citizens in their grim search for victims of the worst tragedy the area has suffered in years. All three of the drowned will be buried in Edge Hill Cemetery this afternoon, following services conduc- ted at 2 by Rev. Russell Straw and Rev. Robert Webster from the Fred- erick Funeral Home in Plymouth.