SECTION A — PAGE 2 - THE DALLAS POST Established 1889) r “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution £2] Now In Its Tlst Year tol oie, i Member Audit Bureau of Circulations - Ne of Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association KX 2 Member National Editorial Association i si Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. Eospitals. _ The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local 3? If you are a patient ask your nurse for it. We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu- scripts, photographs and editorial matter unless self - addressed, stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be J held for more than 30 days. National display advertising rates 84c per column inch. Transient rates 80c. vionday 85 P.M. \ Political advertising; $1.10 per inch. Preferred position additional 10c per inch. Advertising deadline Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged at 85¢c per eolumn inch. Classified rates 5c per word. Minimum if charged $1.00. Unless paid for at advertising rates, we can give no assurance that announcements of plays, parties, rummage sales or any affair 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. i Editor and Publisher—HOWARD W. RISLEY Associate Publisher—ROBERT F. BACHMAN Associate Editors—MYRA ZEISER RISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS Sports—=—JAMES LOHMAN Advertising—LOUISE C. MARKS 9 Photographs—JAMES KOZEMCHAK Circulation—DORIS MALLIN : A mon.partisan, liberal progressive mewspaper pub- fished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania. Editorially Speaking: Help The Blind Luzerne County Federation of the Blind is making its annual appeal for funds the sightless. wl to support its work among Frank Lugiano, executive secretary, says; “It is a terrific job to buck the scores of campaigns, all led by prominent people. Add to this the worst winter in history, and many people out of work, and you can readily guess ‘that we are having a rugged time, with contributions far below last year’s modest sum.” : Mr. Lugiano is State president and national delegate to Federation of the ~ ... exploitation of the blind. Blind people do not wish to Blind, in the forefront of the program to stamp out ignorance, discrimination, and Reoognition that the blind can do many things even better than those blessed with sight, is badly lagging. be a burden to the tax-pay- ers or wards of the State. They need opportunity. All officers of the Federation are blind. They are serve without pay. They all say, “We know from our own experience that blindness need not mean dependence. - With your help, we can help other blind people.” . « . Safety Valve . . . - MANY ATTENDED Dear Editor: Our “Open House” at Retreat State Hospital on May 7 was a tremendous success, _ ~ The event attracted 2529 visitors and we feel the publicity with the accompanying photograph stimu~ % » lated much interest in your com- 3 # munity as we had quite a number ¥ of Dallas visitors. , Miss Mabel Jones, publicity in- formed me of the courteous service . she received when she visited your office. ; Dr. Butler, Superintendent. and the entire staff wish to thank you for your cooperation. Ir Sincerely yours, Mrs. Harvey A. Sherman Chairman Dear Sir: A I am sending you a poem which I feel is most appropriate -as our country enters ‘the “Space Age” The author, 19, was an American volun- teer with the Royal Canadian Air Force. He was killed in action on = 3 Dec, 11, 1941. The New York Herald 4 Tribune printed his poem: gat High Flight by John Gillespie Magee, Jr. Oh, I have slipped the surly bonds of earth, Br And danced the skies on laughter- nd gilvered wings; me Sunward I've climbed and joined ~ the tumbling mirth. Of sun-split clouds and done a 4. hundred things You have not dreamed of-wheeled and hoared and swung High in the sunlit silence, Hov'ring wn there; I've chased the shouting wind along ithe flung 7 My eager craft through footless halls of air. Up, up the long delirious, burning lue 4 .. I've topped the wind-swept heights ‘with easy grace, Where never lark, or even eagle, flew; And while with silent, lifting mind I've trod The high untrespassed sanctity of space, Put out my hand, end touched the seis face of God. hy Sincerely yours With flags flying, Helen R, Conrad. > 3 GRA gr a ron 5 Ferny porn APPRECIATION PUBLICITY |. 77 Dear Editor: Hae” I want to thank you and your staff for the excellent publicity you , gave us during the filing period. "Your continued publicity enabled == “us to reach many taxpayers, making them aware of the filing require- ments and helping us to dissem- _.... inate tax information of interest and ~ value to the public, hos Your cooperation has contributed immeasurably to the success of this year's taxpayer essistance progr | Amstérdam,Netherlands. and I hope it will prevail in our future relations. Sincerely yours, £ John H. Rauen, Jr. Acting District Director LOUSY SPORTS The 1Idetown boy who shoots orioles is not even a good sport. He should try hitting crows, English sparrows or starlings, That would be better proof of his marksmanship as a native American song bird is so trusting and sits so quiet that any baby could kill one, Come on, let the song birds alone! Be a good sport! Dallas nature lover Rotary Exchange Student Coming From Netherlands Dallas Rotary Club has been as- signed an exchange student for next year by the District commit- tee. She will be Elsbeth Gerrits from She is 18 and will attend the new Dallas High School. Elsbeth has been an outstanding student in her school and has many hobbies. She is a member of the Remonstrant Church of Holland. Her father is a physician and a member of the Rotary Club of Amsterdam, South. She hag tra- velled in Belgium, France, Ger- many, Switzerland, Italy, and Aus- tria, but this will be her first visit to the United States. Your Health “I wish I was me again!” Psychiatrists have heard this plaintive plea. Plastic surgeons and psychiatrists share a joint bodily appearance with personal identification. There is an interdependence be- tween mind and body. Persons with facial or bodily dis- figurement have a deep and ‘some- times desperate need for reconstruc- tion through surgery. Even though surgery may attain the objective sought, there is often an emotional aftermath in the per- son who has had plastic surgery. The new features are somewhat strange to the individual and he may feel a sense of confusion or uncer- tainty about his new appearance. There are those who regret the alteration and w undo that which they so definitely desire before. Plastic surgery widely varies from the popular rhinoplasty which is the formation of a new nose, to birth- mark removal. Breast surgery includes proced- ures aimed at reducing ponderous breasts or improving nature's deficit. Dermabrasion is the removal of scars by the use of e rapidly revolv- Cl Gatos Lic ie ONLY YESTERDAY Ten and Twenty Years Ago In The Dallas Post 1m HAPPENED 3() | YEARS AGO: Dallas Borough Council elected El- wood Elston to serve as Chief of Police until October, leaving Wesley Daddow to devote his entire time to duties of Street Commissioner. Workmen were refurbishing the pavilion of Fernbrook Park, gett- ing ready for Memorial Day opening. Excellent street-car service added to the appeal of ' the best dancing pavilion in the area. Shavertown baseball team won the bi-county pennant for the sec- ond consecutive time when it de- feated Beaumont. for laying of a new sidewalk in front of ‘the Payne property on Lake Street. East Dallas was setting a fast pace in the Rural League. Dallas Borough and Dallas Town- ship were planning for their first graduating class exercises, with fourteen and sixteen graduates. Kingston Township had a senior class of thirty-two; Lehman, six- teen; Monroe Township, seven; Noxen, seven; Lake, fifteen. Adijah Baird, 77, died at his home in West Dallas, Michael Sisco, 60, died at his home in Ruggles. A high mass of requiem was celebrated by Rev. J.J. O'Leary at St. Therese’s for Mrs. Charles Kern of Alderson. Bessie Carle Peterson, formerly of Dallas, died in California, IT HAPPENED 20 YEARS AGO: Plans for Memorial Day obser- vance at Lehman outdistanced all expectations with parade sched- uled for morning, dinner at noon, William B. Jeter sat for a Know- Your-Neighbor pen portrait. Residents hoped for opening of the new Dallas-Trucksville high way by Memorial Day, regretted postponement of construction on the Lake highway. : ‘Mrs. George Bronson, badly in- jured in an automobile accident sev- eral weeks earlier, was making good progress. Dallas Borough was expecting to graduate 23 seniors. Professor T A. Willliamee was supervising prin- cipal. Ruth Stevenson, daughter of Chief of Police and Mrs. Ira Stev- enson at Harveys Lake was named valedictorian at Lake School, George Kuchta salutatorian. Aliens smspected of bein fifth columnists were rounded up in an internment camp at Missoula, Mon- tana, confined in country club surroundings and scenery, a con- trast to internment and refugee camps abroad. A.J. Sordoni was named regional head of Defense Contract Service. College ' Misericordia’s May Day attracted a huge throng. Willard Newberry, native Beaumont, died at 74 in Iowa. John C. Harris, 81, Dallas, was buried at Warden Cenetery. Chuck roast was 17 cents per pound; fancy seedless raisins, cents a box: bread, two loaves 15 cents. Rev. CH, Frick, for the first time since he went to Indiantown Gap as chaplain with the 109th, visited Huntsville. Mrs. Harvey; Kitchen, after thir- teen years as Sunday School super- intendent of the primary depart- ment at Alderson, resigned. ano 1() vears aco: Little League opened the season at Shavertown Little League Ball of out all six teams. Bands from Dal- las Borough, Dallas Township, and Kingston Township, participated. Ann Peterson, Norton Avenue, was selected president of the Nat- jonal Committee of the National Students Association at Pembroke College. A crash at intersection of Harveys Lake Highway and 42nd Street sent four injured passengers to Nesbitt Hospital, None of them were local residents, The accident happened within a stone’s throw of the place where young Earl Lamoreux was killed in 1950. Stephen J. ‘Tkach, Goss Manor, Time-light. Wedding bells for Gloria Sickler and George Parrish. Mrs. Cora Rust, stepdaughter of Mrs, Jane Stroud, Dallas's oldest resident, died at 85 in Seattle. Mrs. Rust was half sister to Mrs. AH. Van Nortwick. Albert C. Groblewski, 53, Trucks- ville, died after surgery. Five teams were tied in the Bi- ‘Orange, and Vernon, ing wire brush, and the face lift operation is designed to reduce wringling by removing excessive skin. Baggy eyelids are n operated on to remove excessive skin. Cleft lip and cleft palate, as well as protruding ears, can be corrected by surgery. One of the truly vital plastic sur- gical benefits is in the treatment of burns. Plastic surgery really came into its own during World War II when many service men disfigured in | battle were amazingly restored in appearance and function. g oy} Wo ©38UIED [UONIBU ‘TBM JOUj0 -ou uw Buide 8) Awdme onseld highways, : rd Es Excavations were going forward tas top of the hill are not good. The 5 : | getting much less than the “decent sometimes | r THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1961 Ss) Flirting with death or, at the least, serious injury, a couple of hundred school children are comp- elled to run the gauntlet at the top of Huntsville Street hill every elec- tion day, which is twice a year. Some of them pass four times a day. Only the protection of Divine Prov- idence, or miraculous good luck, has averted a tragedy so far. And with more children, more autos, and more election activity, the danger has built up ‘about to the breaking point. It may be next November that the whole town will be thrown into a state of shock as ambulances rush half a dozen of our little ones to hospitals or maybe to the under- taker. It will be too late to do any- ( thing then, Something must be done now. : Under the most favorable circum- traffic conditions at the pavement is wide enough for two carefully operated autos to pass. If one of them is a wide truck hoggish of the road, the clearance is close, If both happen to be trucks, the extreme edge with perhaps some overhang is required. And ‘twenty-four hours a day, three hundred and sixty-five days a year, speeding is practiced. In ascending the grades up the hill on both sides, drivers naturally accel- erate. They have to. But when the flat is reached at the summit of the hill, they do not reduce the fuel enough, With the grade passed, the cars jump like a jack rabbit and practically fly across the flat, which is only a few hundred feet long. There are no side walks south of the schoolhouse corner. Mrs. Nellie Ritter and Mrs. Josephine Norton have fairly adequate walk- ing space along the east side of the road along their properties, which space is continuous to Par- rish Street. They maintain the hill section in passable condition, and the flat portion on top of the hill is not too bad. South of Par- rish there is no safe place for anyone to walk, anytime, day or night. At present the small building on the Cenetery property is in use Rambling Around By The Oldtimer —D. A. Waters Ae as a polling place, It has been for years, but not continuously. For many years the former Block- sage barber and printing build- | ing was used, and for a few years (part of the Harry Smith store | building. Both are vacant now. The election activity greatly increases the traffic problem and “danger to the school children. Of course the election board members must get to the polls but they are not to blame for traffic con- gestion, = Few, if any of them, park a car there. Most of them walk. { Voters driving up must park their { cars while voting, but this takes only a few minutes, and perhaps not too many are actually on hand in the few minutes required for "the children to pass, four times daily. The real culprits are the so- called “workers”. Half of them stand around handing out cards, which activity is probably utterly useless anyway. And they all seem to have cars parked in front of the polling place, in the only space along the actual pavement on both sides, where pedestrians must walk, including the school children. And if the election is controversial, = there are several additional people in and around the polling place classed as watchers, checking lists and observing the procedure. These probably serve a useful purpose. And then in a contested elec- tion there are a lot of additional “workers” assigned to drive back and forth, hauling voters to the polls sometimes, but other times only stopping to see if the vote is heavy, if their friends are rep- resented and being taken care of, if their “workers” are on the job, duly obstructing traffic and bother- ing the voters, etc. stop absolutely long time parking, by officials, “Workers”, or any- one else; secondly, stop the speed- ing; thirdly, keep away from the polls all those simply messing around and doing nothing of any real benefit. polling place, and do it now. Notice Smorgasbord will be sponsored by Maple Grove W.S.C.S. Satur- day, May 27, in the Church Hall, Pikes Creek. Serving begins at 5 P.M. Rotary Dinner Tonight Dallas Rotary Clufgwill hold its annual Father-Son-Daughter Din- ner this evening at Prince of Peace Church. Relief Checks Are Less Than Living Costs Public Assistance payments are meeting only two-thirds of minimum standard costs of living for most of the needy, the Department of Public Welfare reported today. Secretary of Public Welfare Mrs, Ruth Grigg Horting said this means that 384,000 needy persons are and healthful standard of living” mandated by the legislature in the public assistance law. The 384,000 include 131,000 on general assist- ance, the 234,000 on aid to depen- dent children, and the 19,000 on aid to the disabled. For the 50,000 dependent aged on assistance rolls the grants nearly balance, with minimum standards, having been increased in 1958. More than 17,000 blind persons receive pensions of $70 a month as fixed by law and are allowed other income of up to $2,040 Park, with a parade, which brought | a year. A typical family of four can get an average assistance maximum of $156 a month, compared to the $240 needed to maintain a minimum standard of health and decency. The same family, with the wage earner working, has a living cost of 1 $420 a month. ® The Governor's Budget, now before the legislature, would provide funds for a $2 monthly increase for food per person for those in the 18-65 age bracket on assistance. Only old age assistance, which pays a maximum of $145 a month to a dependent couple, comes near the minimum standard of $147 a month costs for two old people living together. This compares with $240 a month spent by the typical self-supporting elderly couple. The average maximum monthly allowance for a typical family of four, (with the “minimum standard” cost in parenthesis) is: Food, $84.00 ($106.76) ; clothing, $20.00, ($36.20); incidentals, $8.00 ($29.70); fuel and utilities, $14.60 ($16.00); shelter $29.80 ($51.00). Incidentals include such items as personal care, house- hold supplies, recreation and miscel- laneous. Total: $156.40 ($239.65). For a man and wife, both over 65, on old age assistance, the comparable amounts are: Food, $58.00 ($55.95); clothing $12.00 ($13.15); incidentals $16.00 ($17.50); fuel and utilities $14.00 ($13.80); shelter, $4450 ($47.00). Totals: $144.50 ($147.40). Tn 1781 Duncan Phyfe, one of the most famous of American furniture makers, set up shop in New York. Furniture and furnishings manufac- turing today~is big business — as shown by the fact that over $11% million. worth of national advertising was placed in newspapers in 1958. Subscribe To The Post v Jims Ae Fl a hn | pla Looking at | T-V With GEORGE A. and . EDITH ANN BURKE | i GROUCHO MARX hasn't a show lined up for next season. “You Bet Your Life” has been dropped because ratings showed the nov- elty had worn off. Groucho made a pilot film for a new series at NBC. It was titled “What Do You Want?” and was very similar to his present show. The network wasn’t able to sell the show to a sponsor and its option dropped on Groucho’s services. Groucho says George Axelrod wanted him for a play which he wouldn't consider because he didn’t want to live in New York, Groucho is unable to explain why his rating dropped. It could be that viéwers didn’t care to watch week after week contestants who stood a great deal of ribbing to make a small sum of money and then didn’t make it because the questions asked were too difficult for their ability. It added up to a frustrating show. And the faithful fans of years knew them! One rumor has it that Groucho will replace Jack Paar one night a week next year. Groucho denies this rumor. There - would seem to be a place in television for Groucho and we hope the network finds it. Replac- ing Jack Paar seems like a good idea to us, should make for an interesting program considering some of Paar’s guests, 5 STEVE ALLEN, who took a year’s vacation from television will be back next Fall with a one-hour show on Wednesday from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. The sponsors have already signed on dotted line. ( JAMES HAGERTY announced plans for a mew program aimed at young people. It will be a regular weekday feature of the American Broadcasting Company Television network in the Fall. It will be on the air every evening about 5 p.m. Students will work in the produc- tion of shows as well as on camera. Occasionally, student heads of col- lege radio stations or newspapers will be invited to give commentary. NBC recently announced plans to televise weekly news programs for youngsters from 8 to 18, Their’s would be a once a week program of longer duration and would be pre- sented n Saturday. JACK WARDEN, who stars in “The Asphalt Jungle” is a graduate of the popular Mr. Peepers series which ran for 3% years in earlier TV days. You may recall him as the humorously stuffy gym teacher. A native of Newark, N. J. Jack ‘reached theatrical stardom the hard way, During World War 11, he was an Army platoon sergeant in the 101st Airborne Division. Prior to that, he had fought a few profess- ional fights as a middleweight boxer under the name of Johnny Costello; he worked tugboats as a deckhand "duty. Several steps are required: first, 1 The real answer is to change the | [ must go Grouch’s remarks before he made | Vet's Questions Q. I am on active duty in the Army with a part time job when off If I am disabled or killed on that job, am I or my dependents eligible for compensation from the | Veterans Administration ? A. Yes. If you should be killed accidentally, through no fault of your own, your dependents would be eligible for death compensation under the pregent law. If you should be disabled, you would become eligi- ble for compensation after your separation from the service. Q. President Kennedy recently asked the VA to pay 1961 GI insur- | ance dividends as soon as possible. When will this be completed ? A. Payment of the 1961 dividend was completed by March 17, 1961, with the exception of some veterans not reached because of address changes, etc. Q. 1 have found an error in my World War II service record. When can I get it corrected ? A. Submit proof that your record is incorrect to the service involved— Army, Navy, Air Force or Coast Guard — immediately. Generally, application must be made within 3 years after discovery of the error or before October 26, 1961 whichever is later. Q. Is there a simple way to determine whether a veteran or dependent is . eligible to receive pension under the old or new pension laws? A. Yes. The magic date is June 30, 1960. A veteran or dependent receiving and entitled to receive a pension from the VA on June 30, 1960, is eligible to receive pension under the old law but can elect under the new law. Those who be- came entitled after June 30, 1960, must come under the new law. Q. I am the widow of a World War II veteran who had six months of overseas service. Will I get a pension under the new pension law that went into effect last July 17? A. [It appears that you may be eligible for a pension, but you will not receive one unless you apply for it. Contact the nearest VA -office. The contact representative will help you make out your application. Q. Can I apply to the Veterans Administration for a headstone for my husband’s’ grave? He was a World War II veteran, A. Yes, Headstones are available for eligible deceased veterans of World War II. Although applications to The Quartermaster General of the Army, any VA office will provide information and other assistance in filing the application. | Q. Which VA domiciliaries have accommodations for women veterans to live there as members? A. The domiciliaries at Bay Pines, Fla.; Dayton, Ohio; Los An- geles, Calif.; and Martinsburg, West Va. . Why are some veterans’ “children” receiving pension even though they are elderly persons? A. [Pensions to veterans’ children usually stop at age 18 or 21 if attending school or when the child marries, In the case of children who become mentally or physically un- able to provide for themselves before they reach age 18, and who remain single, the pension is continued as long as this condition lasts. Q. Iam a 62-year-old World War I veteran Can I enter a VA domi- ciliary when I'm 657? ‘A. There is no age ‘limit. A veteran must have a disability that incapacitates him from earning a living and must meet certain other medical and legal criteria, to be admitted for VA domiciliary care. Q. Has the War Orphans Educa- tion program now been extended to include children of some deceased peacetime veterans? A. Yes, «Children who have lost a veteran-parent through death that resulted from a service-connected injury “or illness may benefit from the Orphans Education Program, even though the parent concerned served only in peacetime. Q. What deadlines have been established for the expiration of GI Loan rights for veterans? A. Applications by World War II veterans for GI loans must be re- ceived by the VA from lenders before July 26, 1962. Veterans with service during the Korean Conflict period have until January 31, 1965, to obtain GI loans. Q. Where should a veteran write regarding mustering out pay? A. Queries should be directed for the branch of the Armed Services in which the veteran served. on New York's East River; he was a bartender in San Francisco and a bouncer in a Manhattan dancehall, and he served for a while in the Merchant Marine. After the war he studied acting for five years. : “Peepers gave me my first big break,” he recalled. “Up to that | point, I was playing strictly heavies and I hadn’t done any movies.” Now: he lives in a lovely Malibu Beach, Cal. home but he still pays the rent on a small $76-a-month apartment in New York’s Greenwich Village, the site of his early strug- gles. LORETTE YOUNG who wouldnt be on television next year since her series wasn’t renewed plans on mak- ing a movie, It is something that she has been hoping to do for the last couple of years. Now ‘it is just the matter of finding the right story. BOXING FANS According to a recent survey, women make up 40% of the television aud- ience of ABC*TV’s ‘Fight of the Week.” This came as no great surprise to Harry Markson, boxing promoter of Madison Square Garden, home of the weekly televised fight. He says that women write a goodly portion of the mail received each week. § Barnyard Notes Pa TN 7 This will be the spring to be remembered as having awakened without the blessed warmth of sunshine in er eyes and yet the orioles arrived on schedule and sing as beautifully as ever in the apple blossoms where bumble bees rape every flower. i The cat bird has returned to her nest in the tangled thicket beyond the unfolding grape arbor and scolds in alarm as Black Killer crouches through the brush pile in search of a nest of baby... ” rabbits. There has been much argument that the tangle of blackberry canes and dried Burdock should be rooted out to make way for ® more civilized cover of lawn, but so long as the cat bird returns to her nest and baby rabbits cuddle there, I think this part of the property shall remain uncultivated. 5 While I have unwillingly been home the past three weeks re- charging the batteries, I have had opportunity to observe the ST things about me and I have found, as I long suspected, that th are in reality the things most worth while—that have eternal vale when the chips are down—that cost the least and afford the greatest rewards. * It is so with the sunshine that could make this a glorious spring but has withheld its warm grace from all of us, denying fragile May Queens and their colorful courts the brilliant warmth that would make their reigns one of splendor. / 4 How can spring stir hot young blood or agitate the sleeping energy of the tiny prisoners caught in a classroom while the sul plays hide and seek. Only for a moment does it show its tantalizing face, then heavy clouds blot out its smile, the air is chilled and the moment when the May Queen’s crown sparkles, passes. Robert Frost has a verse for it. He speaks the lines (from Tramps in Mud Time”) “The sun was warm but the wind was chill: You know how it is with an April day When the sun is out and the wind is still, You're one month on in the middle of May. But if you so much as dare to speak, The cloud comes over the sunlit arch, Tw * tot Tyne Sd blog A wind comes off a frozen peak, From Pillar To Post... by HIX And youre two months back in the middle of March” Lad - - £ a “4 CRRA ERS Never have the lilacs been so beautiful for Memorial Day. Ancient bushes, planted when the country was young, and men, the Blue and the Grey, marched away to fight for their convictions in the War Between the States, still send forth their vigorous young shoots, stemming from the gnarled roots, and still scent the breeze with their young blossoms. The Civil War veterans are all at rest. The Spanish war veterans falter in their footsteps. i 4 23 The world is ever young and ever old. Generations come, gens " erations vanish. And each year comes the grass, covering and the lilacs blooming in the dooryard. Your great-great-great grandfather the scars of winter— fought in the Civil War His thoughts turned to his far away home as spring advanc along the Potomac. Lilacs there, and wisteria. Would the late frost cancel oul the promise of the lilac buds at home, along the Susquehanna, or in the blue hills? Would he ever see the lilacs bloom again? Would he be shattered in body, limping painfully home through the gate in the picket fence under the guarding lilac bushes? Would he languish in prison, dreaming Brora at hopelessly about the child whom he had never seen, picturing his son playing under the lilacs ? The fragrance of spring in the northern hills . . . it must et J¥ “4 been almost unbearable to these men, that the spring was returning to the hills, and that they were not there to sense the miracle. { That the acreage along the creek was not planted, that the furrows remained unturned, their promise hidden under the gree A % ing sod. That it would be many a weary month conflict was over. before the dreadful Would they ever see the lilacs bloom again? ; Little League Will Open 12th Season Saturday At 3 At Field Little League will open Saturday at 3 p.m. at Little League field in Dallas Township, the tweneth sea- son of organized ball for young- sters in the Back Mountain Area. Opening ceremonies will be fol- lowed by three two-inning ball games, with each of the six teams playing, Duke Isaacs vs. Daddow Isaacs Legion post; Lazarus Depart- ment Store (Dallas Boys) vs. Hart- ers Dairy, and Back Mt. Lumber Co. vs. Gosarts of Dallas. Music will be provided by the Dallas Junior High School Band under direction of Alfred Camp. The band will lead off with the National Anthem and then play several other numbers during the opening. The Westmoreland Key Club drill team and the Westmoreland Keyettes ‘will perform. These high school boys and girls have won fame throughout the state and local com- munities for their fine performances under direction of George McCut- chen. Back Mountain baseball for boys is made up of teams from Trucks- ville, Shavertown, Fernbrook, Dallas, Lehman-Jackson and Westmore- land. The Trucksville team is spon- sored by Duke Isaacs and managed by Don Hinkle and Ed. Teifer, ‘Shavertown is sponsored by the Back Mountain Lumber Company and managed by Hank Leibald and Cecil Sutton. Fernbrook is sponsored by Char- ley Gosart and managed by ‘Panky’ Martin and Stanley Dorrance. Dallas is sponsored by Lazarus Department Store and managed by Bob Brown and Art Dennis. = Lehman-Jackson is sponsored by Harter’'s Dairy of Trucksville and managed by Bob Disque and Bill Sponsellor, Harters Dairy ‘was last years Champions. ; Daddow Isaacs Legion Post is managed by Keith Yeisley and Jack Bestwick and B. Petroski. These teams make up the Major League of ninety boys in uniform, They play twice a week at 6:30 at the Little League field. The minor league is sponsored by the Miners National Bank, consists of six teams. Supervising the boys are: for Dallas—Bill Baker, Wilbur Davis, Bob James; Lehman Jack- son—L. Yascar, Russ Bertram; Fern- brook—Art Bellas and Tex Wilson; Shavertown—Elwood Swingle and ‘Bob Wade; Trucksville—Ed Teifer Leo Corbett and George Parks. These minor teams play every Saturday 10 a.m. to 12 noon and 2 pm, at the Little League field. Over 120 boys participated in this league. : : At the start of the season the league officials announce everything in readiness. The field has been regraded, dug-outs painted, and other items improved. 1 We are in need of umpires. ANY person willing to give one night a week should contact Bob Parry by phone OR 47206. Umpires are Bili Roberts, Harry Peiffer, Dale Zi&Z% merman and Dan Bellas. Officers of Baseball for Boys in the Back Mountain are Bob Parry President; Leonard Dorrance Vice- President; Paul Steinhower Secre- tary; and Elmer Evenson Treasurer, The baseball program includes Teen- age and also Senior Teeners. The Teen-age league will open in Mon- day June 5th at the Junior High School field. The Senior Teeners will play all their games Saturday nights at the Junior High School field. SPRINGTIME By Eric Mayer, This is the time of year I Tike, anf 1 do wish it would stay, Winter is behind and summer on the way. The woodland creatures are out onoe more, Above the forest birds now soar, They perch on every bow and branch of every woodland tree, : And each and all do sing their joyful melody. / The moss is springy underfoot To cover the woodland it was put, Tall ferns away in the breeze and green leaves rustle in all the trees. ; Flowers blooming along the brook, And in each and every forest nook. This is the time of year I like and I do wish it would stay, Winter is behind and summer on the way. Editorial Note: ‘ Eric, son of Mr. and Mrs. Graydon Mayer, is graduating from Miss Louise Colwell’s fourth grade at Dallas Borough School. He had help in typing, but not in composition of the poem. \ and Don Hinkle; Westmoreland ( : Ey a a