(= — i FATAL AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENTS AND INJURIES SINCE JANUARY 1, 1957 ee TT i 1. Dallas Twp. i 6 | Franklin Twp. | 3 | | | Lake 3 i | Kingston Twp. 2.01 ail LE GT oxen 4 ss 14 | FT 37 Total MOTOR LAW VIOLATIONS Arrests Convictions CEE a Dallas Twp. | | Franklin Twp | | Lake Monroe oxen | Ross _ | Total NUMBERS 'mbulance .....cccccceecereeee 4-2121 HO neeeieeeceena=- ate Police .....cce...e BU 17-2185 (For, other emergency calls bnsult Telephone Directory un- br Police Calls and Fire Calls.) ONLY ESTERDAY 'nd Twenty Years Ago h The Dellas Post Issue of January 2, 1948 Kingston, fatally injured ray accident a week earl- without regaining con- two days before Christ- Imously proud of his band e fourteen year old boy n it, with fellow band Pi pallbearers. Parents are Mrs. Thomas Kingston, b1tz, 53, dies the day be- as at Nesbitt Hospital illness. James Hilbert fservices from Alderson Church. ealth Telephone Com- an expansion program, puildings at Clarks Sum- las. Scho of os pL, 198%, burgess-elect of h. Smitice Monday night take oftyn meeting of the ganizatioyeceeding Harold founcil, sudgey, tax collec- itthur Dunfhew four-year art his kK will replace es Frankliy did not seek hmler, whak and Morgan Peter Clarjtake the oath ected, will ivating for a ier is exco Main Street, theatre on pure will cost . The struc’400 patrons. 1 will seat jpment will and equtlay to $25,- jstimated c zerne By-Pass tor the Luworthy events t of note closely by the followed y Republicans made ki overwhelming 4n face oon of the na- complexs the disastrous otesich caused great THE DALLAS POST, FRIDAY, JANUARY Looking at T-V With GEORGE A. and EDITH ANN BURKE T FIRST BOUT OF 1958 in thé weekly ‘Gillette Cavalcade of Sports’ series will be a rescheduled 10-roun match between Johnny Busso Brooklyn and Paoli Rosi Bronx at Madison Square Garde ‘Friday, January 3 (10 p.m.). The two lightweight contenders people who make and drive them; will be told on “Wide, Wide Worl The 90-minute show will start with the covered wagons that wefre the first wheeled vehicles to pufsh across the country and will finish with an experimental, turbine-pofw- ered, radar-directed motorcar trajv- eling the electronic highway of tie future. - Dave Garroway, host of the pifo- gram will guide viewers to these locations: To Flint, Mich., to visit the cfity that has made more motor vehiclles than any other city in the worjld. | will see the world’s longest assemlbly line in action. { To Phoenix, Arizona, where pupils in the first three grades of elem#n- tary grade school iearn highway safety by driving miniature cars {on miniature streets, complete wiith signs, crosswalks and police offi cers.” f To Warren, Michigan, to visitf an | automotive research and styling clen- | ter and see the development of a car of the future, from drawing) hoard to the finished prototype 5 will steer itself along a stretchi of! the “Highway of Tomorrow.” (NIBC- TV, Sunday, 4-5:30 p.m.). LORRAINE BENDIX will hiv a| featured role in this week’s stiory. | Both the Riley and Gillis household | reel under the romantic involve- | ment of a guest who becomes knpwn | as “Little Awful Annie.” Lorrhine Bendix will be “Awful Annie”! on NBC's “Life of Riley.” I JACK LEMMON stars as a man who has lost his will to live—at | least until his life is mystericusly threatened in a teleplay titled “The Victim”- on the Goodyear Theater's series Monday, January 6 (9:30 p.m., EST). The victim of personal tragedy, Ashley Cooper (Lemmon), closes his home, boards out his 10-year-old daughter and withdraws from his family and friends. One day he notices he is being trailed by, two! menacing characters. Then he is! aware he is being watched from an | apartment directly. across his court- suddenly precious to him. CHET HUNTLEY didn’t start out to be a newsman. But it took only until high school to give him his first nudge. Up until then, Chet was going to | be a doctor. When he won a de- | bating contest in high school, how- ever, he began to think about ex- pressing ideas vividly. In Montana State College, he con- tinued a pre-med course for three years, but also tinkered more with | public speaking. When he won a National Oratory Tournament iri however. As a result the rejmaining / 3, 1953 mmm a 9 - ® 9 Huntin & F Ishin with “SQUIRREL” by EARL McCARTY Zr Happy New Year A RL er 22 & = 3 This column is composed of comments and stories by the writer and material taken from contacts with the Pennsylvania Fish and Game Commissions. Strange Things Are Happening — To Deer . . . Stealing” road-killed deer has be- come quite a practice in some parts of Pennsylvania. Before a Game Protector can get to the spot where a deer lies dead along a highway, sometimes only minutes after the collision, the carcass has ‘disap- peared.” There are indications that some persons consider this illegal practice safer than the spotlighting method. Other motorists are misguided op- portunists who suddenly are seized with ‘an urge to obtain the wild meat “for free” with little effort. No one knows how many of the “deernappers’ are frustrated when they get the ill-gotten carcass home only to find that much, or all, of the venison has spoiled and the risk and trouble were for naught. One thing is almost certain. When a person is found in possession of a road-killed deer, or parts of it, his bland defense will be: “I didn’t kill the animal. What's wrong with pre- venting the waste of good meat?” The answer is this: The Game Law says that wildlife is the property of the Commonwealth, that it must be lawfully taken in open season, and that game birds and animals in good condition, seized by Game Protec- tors, and edible wildlife they other- wise acquire in performance of their official duties, shall go to a charit- able institution. When a new weapon is introduced in warfare a defense is devised to offset it. Similarly the state’s wild- life authorities are preparing a “secret weapon’ to catch a higher percenta of violators who take dead deer’at rosdside Tha Commission issuegfi-hif warninjg in connection with tf illegal pragtice: Taking deer othegfhan in the open season, in the medfaer prescribed by an law, subjects thf offrnder and all who participateffin the act {to a HOF | 11 as THREE - YEAR fJUSPENSIO the customary Pennsylva: tails proph mission’ a great © a final count, The: appears to be no #lat th: herd was well | DALLAS, PENNSYLVA} From Pillar To'Post . . .| by Mrs. T. M. B. Hicks Beginning with this Christmas, we're going to make it an annual custom, and call it The Burying of The Christmas Tree, to follow Rosey upon the Hanging of the Holly, and the Burning of the Yule og. > We had really expected to trim the tree after the conventional pattern, tinsel and colored balls and a star at the top, but things didn’t work out quite that way. We shopped for the tree at Huntsville Nursery the day before Christmas. A small blue spruce, on the hoof, we specified, with a mental ‘eye on a bare spot in the back yard. Jack Stofko, one foot planted in a mountain stream, dug up the spruce, the seventh in from the aisle. He splashed back along the row of baby trees, the spruce firmly grasped by the neck, its roots encased in dripping burlap. “Now look,” he instructed, “You can’t expect a tree to go right outdoors after you've had it in a hot room. Let it cool off.” Put it down cellar for awhile, and then put it on the back porch, aad then get it used to the outdoors gradually, and you better tip a bushel basket over it for a few days after you plant it in the yard.’ It looked as if it would take some time to turn the Christmzs tree into an ornament for the yard. Jack went on: “You ought to get it used to the heat, too, tefore you start trimming it. Stack up some wet leaves around the base, and don’t let the tree dry out.” Tom and I looked at each other. enough to trim it that evening? It was beginning to get dark when we turned into the driveway after a trip to note progress of the Jackson institution. It woryd be OK to leave the spruce in the trunk compartment until dinn*} was. over, and then we’d bring it up on the back porch as a firs §step toward acclimating it to the indoor temperature. About that time the twenty-four hour bug started to che on both of us. Wan‘and weary, interested only in the palest of tea and a nibble of dry toast, we sat and stared into space on Christmas Day, rovsing ourselves only to cut another string on a Christmas package. By three o'clock we had burned the wrappings, doing it by easy stages. And then we remembered the Christmas tree. It was still in the car. It seemed inordinately heavy, considering its size. Tom, said he thought he was just about able to dig a hold if he [could find a soft spot in the yard. Otherwise, the tree could coftinue | to wrap itself in its burlap until spring, wheni he might be suffiCently recovered to exert himself. Tom spooned out the dirt, and I dragged the tree to the hcle by its burlap skirts. We collaborated in tramwing down the mud, and returned to the kitchen to brew anotheff pot of tea. There’s a spot on the other end of the flower bed, where a small blue spruce would balance the design. Next $year we’ll bury ancther shristmas tree. '. . . Safety Valive . . . to be a rich experience. Could we heat the trze up | has proven My normal sistant to tthe Base Chaplai—per- Enclosed is a check for a year’s | forming Beessary clerica) subscription to the Post. and nimeroys other jobs. My off- When my mother sent my Christ- duty time is occupied with laying mas package she also sent a number the oygan fort three services ol Sun- of back issues of the Post and they day fr directing the Junio and Chaplain’s Assistant Dear Mr. Risley: proved so interesting that I then de- Seni r Choirs. Also I have has cided to receive it regularly. servifng as a Lay-spepkex/ asmal Methdbdil i , My mailing address is: fpurchyy. i A-1C {John BE: rreckling ! a HEDRON ‘820th ABGRU (SAC) | Plattsburg Air Force Base New York Military life here at Plattsburg ) céreay in sl Fond John E Graphic Arts Services INCORPORATED PHOTO-ENGRAVING Offset Negatives and Platemaking Screen Prints, Art Work Phone VA 5-2978 Rear 29 North Main St. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 1932, that about finished let's ¥ the death’ of As 3 a sl ~ me” Bl ambitions. schoglfiip to the Cornish Loan Seattle as his prize, | deer will have more of the @vailable fo a foods, per animal, this win- | ter and crop damages and the num- i ber of vehicle-deer collisions will be on to study drama tained his B.A. degree | beattle Star hired him over a local station, lly launched on a full | career. Huntley has | several major honors, | hrge Foster Peabody | 42 and 1953 and the t Award in 1956. t, 46-year-old Hunt- terate reader away | bm chores. He reads. erything” both for | jrofessional enlight- p a fisherman. is wife, the form- i and their two York City. The and Leanne, 15. Program Club Center More- years has will speak fof the Back rsday eve- ry Annex. Ih a wealth lird clubs, bojects for ggestions cople in d pro- esident, nce of pmbers y be ew of bird- | materially reduced. fier a year at Cornish, | Pennsylvania Game News— to Washington Uni-| A Year Around Gift . . . The Game Commissions publica- tions section has been busy these days, mailing holiday gift subscrip- | tions for PENNSYLVANIA GAME NEWS. About 1200 outdoorsmen have been sent the good word re- cently. The monthly publication of this state’s wildlife authority is highly rated among magazines of its kind published in this country. GAME NEWS does not compete with nationally-sold sports maga- zines; it is all Pennsylvania. Its 64 pages contain no advertising, only feature stories, photos, and news of interest to Keystone State hunters, nature students, teachers, sports- men young and old—in short, all those people interested ia outdoor recreation. Wild Turkey’s Hunter Appeal . . . Hunters displayed more interest in seeking wild turkeys diring Penn- than during any previous season. Hunting pressure on hese birds was high in many places. The Game continue to observe, th: effects of gunning pressure on tie flocks of the much-sought turkey. As a part of these observations, hinter checks were carried on in several regions of the state during the 1957 season. Final reports from these areas have not been compiled. However, infor- mation from the Lycoming-Clfiton County stisdy area showed hat hunters from 24 other Penns ia counties, find from Maryla nd New Jer;fly as well, hunted his area. al | nla ent; hunting g ns classia v ey Under sylvania’s recent small gime season | Commission has watchel, and will " e ble hy mor Here’s a hearty welome to little °58. May this New Yiar be really great. And hre’s wishing for you the very best. May you and yous be trufly blessed With happiness, helth and fll the rest. INSON SERVICE Mildred A. VALL] duties entail bing as-- tasks. emt
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers