of quickening life and rising sap. Bare branches are mot so clearly etched against the sky. There is a softening of contours. Crocuses in protected spots are already in bloom, and Easter bou- quets are ready, at the merest hint of warm wind and sunchine, to throw their banners wide. The flor- sythia is budded, pussy willows have shed their soft grey fur. And the peepers are peeping like mad in the swamps. Legend has it that peepers freeze out three times before spring is actually here. We have seen them liquefying in a driving rain, their bodies trans- parent jelly, their embryonic legs dissolving, their shapeless forms sinking into the earth. The rains cease, and the jelly shows signs of life, Five more minutes and the tiny frog takes shape, distends his throat, and pipes his nostalgic plain, Twice the peepers have joined in a full-throated chornas this year. Once more, and spring is an ac- cepted fact: It's not only the swamps that are peeping, it’s the Post-office. Back of the mailboxes there are: card- board pullmans for peeps, each pullman crowded with fluffy yel- low chickens, all of them vocal and inquiring about ‘the brooder and the chick mash. It is a happy sound. They are not really hungry, just interested. There is nothing urgent in their voices, purely conversation- al. They have enough contained egg yolk for another twenty-four hours, and they will not be feel- ing desperate for forty-eight. There's a cardinal on top of the maple tree, his feathers ruby red in the light of the. setting sun He dence. This evening there is a lilt to his song, and the throws back his head with abandon. There is an answering whistle down in the oak tree. ‘ Robins bustle about in the flower- beds, and there's a sudden flurry of bees about an opening crocus. A threatening cloud veils the sun, and there is a brief snow shower. Nothing can stop it now—no searching wind, no unseasonable backlash of snow. [Spring is here. Helped Take "Old Baldy” With the 2nd Infantry Div. in Korea—John L, Bronson, son of Mrs. Beulah Bronson, Route 1, Har- veys Lake, wag recently promoted to sergeant first class while serving with the 2nd Infantry Division in Korea. ~The 2nd Division captured ‘‘Heart- break Ridge” in October 1951 and took ‘Old Baldy” last July. Sfc Bronson, an assistant platoon sergeant in (Company F of the di- vision's 23rd Regiment, has served Gir] Scouts of Back Mountain Troops are here shown inserting letters in envelopes for the current Cancer (Campaign. Sitting at the table fin Back Mountain Memorial Library are J. HOUSTON DAY J. Houston Day has accepted the job of general chairman of the Cancer Crusade for the Back Moun- tain, it was announced by Mrs. Harry Ohlman, area commander. During this weekend, 2,000. letters will be sent out from Back Moun- tain Cancer Information Center. Typing, filling and mailing the let- ters was accomplished by the Cen- ter volunteers. assisted by a group of Girl Scouts. April has been designated by an Act of Congress as Cancer Crusade month, Mr. Day pointed out. “The failed to respond to the appeals of humanity, must contribute its gnota of $2,500 to the County goal of 40,000 if local cancer work is rontihue.” "Mrs. Ohlman emphasized that the American Cancer Society is the only voluntary health agency which sponsors a program of service, edu- cation and research, with the bulk of funds spent for service. Mr. Day, 50 Terrace Drive, Shav- ertown, is married and the father of three small children. He has contributed time and effort to sev- Réd Cross and Community Chest drives, as well as serving as treasurer of Georgetown Settlement and in various activities of Wilkes- Barre Rotary Club. Mrs. Day has been active in local Cancer work since moving to the Valley. She is chairman of dressings for the Back Mountain Center, organizing and supervising several dressings groups. Mrs. William Thomas, Center chairman, has announced that the Center will not be open’ Good Fri- day. Regular hours will be resumed Tuesday. in Korea since last July, He attended Mansfield State Teachers College, before entering the Army in October 1951. Do Their Part To Aid Canc (from left to right): Jean Franklin, Mary Evans, Barbara Hirleman, Carol Rudy, Zelphia Carter, Lynn Schoffhauser, Betty Long, Beatrice Ell, Nancy Jones, Patty Hemenway, Carol Thomas Sally Hetrick. > Blood Donor Day At Misericordia Nets 138 Pints Students And Sisters Contribute In First Of Semi-Annual Days Blood Donor Day at College Mis- ericordia last Wednesday netted 138 pints, collected by a staff of twenty-nine, working from 1 to 8:45 P.M. [College students from freshmen to seniors contributed, with parental permission. Fifteen sisters also donated. According to Sister Annunciata, Blood Donor Day will be a semi- annual feature of student life, with even moore impressive results to be expected. Many students who had planned to contribute were dis- qualified [because of spring colds. The staff from Wilkes-Barre, Grey Ladies and assistants from the Back Mountain, were served meals in a private dining room in relays, that donaticns might proceed uninter- ruptedly. College Misericordia was vented from participating in the February 2 Dallas Blood Donor Day in honor of Dr. Sherman Schooley, by students’ absence during mid- year recess. At that time, arrange- ments were made for a later dona- tion, with the Bloodmobile going directly to the school. Heart Campaign Goes Over Top Goal Exceeded, Twice Last Year's Results of the recent Heart Drive were announced Thursday night at a dinner held at Hotel Redington. Chairmen for Back Mountain area, Mrs. Robert Maturi and Mrs. Harold Flack, announced that more than double the amount raised in 1952 was (collected, with the goal of $500 exceeded by $229., bringing the total to $729. Winners, milk bottle: envelope collection, were Jack Evans, Dallas Dairy, $75.90, maker, Shadyside, $60.85. War Bond, $25, went to Evans, War Stamps, $10, to Shoemaker. This method of collecting, by tags at- tached to milk bottles, was new this year. (Collection totalled $288.12 [Committee members were Mrs. A. Hardem Coon Jr., Mrs. Wood- worth B. Allan, Mrs. William R. Wright, Mrs. James Gates, Mrs. Sheldon Evans, Mrs. Thomas Shel- bourne, Mrs. Jonathan Valentine. Back Mountain Lumber Constructing Addition Back Mountain Lumber & Coal | Company this week broke ground for a 25x50 foot two-story addi- tion to fits store in IShavertown. er Campaign PHOTO BY HUDSON Standing are Mrs. Robert Morgan, Mrs, Clarence Laidler and Mrs. Wal- lace Gavetit. Among the many who expressed their delight this week with Dr. new American LaFrance pumper was State Secretary of Commerce Andrew J. Sordoni, largest single cash contributor to the pumper fund. Here Mr, Sordoni is shown just before his departure for a ten-day trip to England. With him 1 font of the new Commonwealth Building is his son, Jack, and Fire Chief James Besecker. The beautiful new pumper which has made the hearts of every fire- man beat just a little bit faster, golt its first baptism of fire Sunday afternoon when it answered a call View. Driven by assistant chief Norti Berti, accompanied by Drivers Donald Bulford and ‘Al Shafer, the | | { So famous have Charles Long’s annual auctions become that mo matter what the weather large 8 Cents | pumper headed a procession of vol- | unteer fire fighters who were anx- | action. | Most of them knew, for repre- | sentatives of the Middle Atlantic | Fire Undenwriters had given it an | exhaustive three-hour test at Har- |veys Lake on [Friday and pro- | nounced it tops. In one half-hour test at 150-pound pressure the en- | gine pumped 854 gallons per min- | utes though it is rated at only 750 | gallons per minute. It was also run | at 200 and 250 pounds pressure for half hour intervals and developed | were tested at 750 pounidis pressure. Interested observers at ‘the test were: Danliel Richards, president of the company; Harry L. Ohlman, | past president; Henry Peterson, | numbers of farmers come from all parts of northeastern Pennsylvania. 1 Shown here is a part of the throng per Copy—Twelve Pages | treasurer; Donald Bulford and [Chief | Besecker, All of the drivers have expressed | their complete satisfaction with the | way the equipmenlt handles in tight i places, and with the operation of | the pump. Drivers are James Gan- | sel, Howard Johns, Donald Bulford, i Alvin Shafer, Norti Berti and James | Besecker. Shortly after the equipment was officially placed in service Friday night Chief Besecker announced | that both pieces of apparatus, the ‘new pumper designated No. 2, and the old truck designated No.1, will respond to all alarms in Dallas ! Borough amd Township. For all out- of-town calls, only ithe new pumper will resopnd with truck No. 1, standing by in Dallas for home emergencies, afield as Harrisburg, Lancaster, Williamsport, and Binghamton, as well as those from the Back Moun- tain comprised the largest crowd ever seen at Charles Long's annual auction of farm machinery ion Sat- uriday. Perfect weather, combined with farmers’ inability to get onto the wet fields, brought out buyers and spectators, Ladies Aid of [First Christian Church did a land-office business in refreshments, clearing over $400 from a gross of $730, The swing is toward heavy ma- chinery, states Charles Long, with more and more farmers realizing the advantage of green forage cut- ting as a means of making silage at the peak lof vitamin and protein content, without the hazard of bad weather to delay haying. To a ques- tion ag to whether such machinery was within the means of the aver- age farmer, Mr. Long said that long term payments were usually arranged, and the savings in labor cost as well as improved feed were notable, In many instances, he went on, a large scale farmer would fi- nance equipment, and smaller scale farmers would make use of his ma- chinery at stated ftimes, either pay- ing for such service or trading work for it. The auction itself is a big ‘thing. For seven years it has been held annually toward the end of March or the first of April, though the first auction was in 1943, ten years ago, Used equipment is handled, machinery that has been tumned in as down payment on new, or brought by farmers for sale in or- der to raise money for replace- ments. Cultivators, plows, seeders, tractors, go over the block to the highest bidder. Sterling Barnes Gives Up Grocery Business [Sterling Barnes, Huntsville mer- { chant for the past eight years, is liquidating his stock and has joined his father, Ernest Barnes and his brother, Charles of Lehman as brick masons with the William Heck Company in Wilkes-Barre. He started work three weeks ago. The store will remain open until the stock is sold. | | |Children of Dallas Borough and Kingston Township, pre-school and up to and including the sixth grade, will have an Faster egg hunt on Westmoreland school grounds to- morrow at ‘9:30. Children are asked to assemble on ithe football field in advance of starting time, but not to go to the front of the school until the hunt starts. Boy and Girl Scouts will mark and hide eggs provided by mothers and friends, boiled and colored in advance. The hunt is sponsored by Kingston Township and Dallas Bor- ough police departments. Special prizes will be given ait Shavertown Honor Roll at di. Busses will cover their regular routes at 9 AM. Two Busses will leave Dallas Borough school at 9 AM. Transportation will be pro- vided by GC. L. Myers, I. Li (Coursen, Donald Piatt, and Leoyy Emmanuel. Parents or friends of; the children were asked fto conftribute six eggs apiece, boiled and dyed, delivering them to any one of the four schools by Thursday. They were handled at the [(Shavertown Fire Hall by a staff of volunteers. Undyed eggs were colored by members of (Sha- vertown [Fire Auxiliary, working with Fire Hall equipment. Members of the cooperating pol- ice forces are: Arthur Smith, direc- tor of Kingston Township police; Jesse Coslefit, patrolman, general manager of the hunt. Evan Evans, Herbert Jenkins, Joseph ILalyaou, Herbert Updyke, Kingston Town- ship patrolmen; Russell Honeywell, Dallas ‘Chief of police, and Lester Fiske, assistant. Businessmen, contacted by pol- ice officers, contributed enoufh money so that each (child is assured a small prize. Bill Guyette is ar- ranging for a loud speaker system ‘as his contribution. WARNING Pay The Penalty Dallas Bank Purchased By Miners Bank Sale Has Been Under Consideration For Two Years Announcement was made yester- day that purchase of First National Bank of Dallas by the Miners Na- tional Bank of Wilkes-Barre has been approved by the diredtors of both institmtions. The announcement was not a complete surprise in financial and business circles for the purchase has been under consideration since April 1951 when a similar agree- ment Was negotiated but failed later to win the full approval of the Dallas Board of Directors, The sale is now subject only to tthe approval of the (Comptroller of the [Currency and the gtockholders of First National Bank of Dallas. Consummation of the transaction is believed to have been hastened by the announcement that Wyoming National Bank of Wilkes-Barre is seeking approval of the Comptroller of the Currency for the establish- ment of a branch bank in Shaver- town. In making the announcement W. B. Jeter, president of the First Na- tionia] Bank of Dallas said: President's Statement “I am pleased to be able to an- nounce that at a special meeting of ‘the Board of Directors of the First National Bank of Dallas, held March 31, 1953, it was unanimously resolved to recommend to the stock- holders the consolidation of the First National Bank of Dallas with the Miners National Bank of Wilkes- Barre, subject of course to the ap- proval of the (Comptroller of the Currency. “Inasmuch as a similar agree- ment for the consolidation has al- ready ‘been passed by the Board of Directors. of the Miners Naltional Bank of Wilkes-Barre, a meeting of tthe stockholders of the First: National Bamk of Dallas is being called for April 20, 1953 to vote on ithis resolution. “As ‘you know, our two banks have been in negotiation regarding such a merger for the past two years and it is a source of great satisfaction to all the officers and directors of the First National Bank of Dallas that the arrangements have now been consummated, “I am sure that with our in- creased facilities we can give our friends in the Back Mountain Area even greater service than in the past.” Largest Shareholder Approves A. C. Devens, vice president, and largest single shareholder, in the Dallas institution, said: “I have been associated with the First National Bank of Dallas for very many years, Its welfare and the service it can render to our friends in the Back Mountain Area have always been a matter of deep personal concern to me. ' “ I am entirely in favor of the consolidation with ‘the Miners Na- tional Bank of Wilkes-Barre be- cause I know that ‘this way we may draw on ‘a greatly increased loan capacity to care for the rapidly growing needs of our Back Moun- tain community. “TI should like to make it very clear that the character of our bank here in Dallas will in mo way be changed. The same personnel will continue to render ‘the same friend- ly and personal service to our neighbors but with increased finan- cial facilities.” No Change In Personnel Under terms of the purchase there will be no change in the per- sonnel] of First Naltional Bank. Mr. Jeter while remaining adminfistra- tive head of tthe bank, will also be- come a director and vice president of Miners National Bank, Frederick J. Eck, cashier, will become assist~ ant vice president of Miners Bank while continuing in his executive position in Dallas. The present Board of Directors will compose the advisory committee of the Dal- las Bank, Established 1906 First National Bank of Dallas was chartered April 16, 1906 and opened for business on August 27 of that year in its new building now the Harveys Lake Light ICo. on Church Street. It was then capitalized at $25,000 with a surplus of $6,250. In January 1932 it moved into its present quarters on Main Street. It has grown steadily with the de- velopment of the Back Mountain x (Continued on Page 8)