mda be | Mew a LH LI — Awa tT ha se Bide ede Sea. ats ne sop en ¢ | 1 Bivins tn En SECTION B — PAGE 2 THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its Tlst Year” * \tED ° Member Audit Bureau of Circulations < Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association eo ADL 7, Member National Editorial Association he Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. y The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local hospitals. 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 “held for more than 30 days. National display advertising rates 84c per column inch. Transient rates 80c. Political advertising $1.10 per inch, Preferred position additional 10c per inch. Advertising deadline ¥onday 5 P.M. : Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged at 85¢ per column 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. Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subscription rates: $4.00 a year; $2.50 six months. No subscriptions accepted for less than six months. Out-of-State subscriptions: $4.50 a year; $3.00 six months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c. When requesting a chunge of address subscribers are asked to give their old as well as new address. Allow two weeks for changes of address or new subscription to be placed en mailing list. Single copies at a rate of 10c each, can be obtained every Thursday morning at following newsstands: - Dallas—Berts Drug Store, Dixon's Restaurant, Helen’s Restaurant, Gosart’s Market; Shavertown—Evans Drug Store, Hall’s Drug Store; Trucksville— Gregory's Store, Trucksville Drugs; Idetown—Cave’s Store; Har- veys Lake—Marie’'s Store: Sweet Valley—Adams Grocery; Lehman—Moore’s Store; Noxen—Scouten’s Store; Shawanese— Puterbaugh’s Store: Fernbrook—Bogdon’s Store, Bunney’s Store, Orchard Farm Restaurant. Editor and Publisher—HOWARD W. RISLEY Associate Publisher—ROBERT F. BACHMAN Associate Bditors—MYRA ZEISER RISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS : Sports—JAMES LOHMAN Advertising—ILOUISE C. MARKS Photographs—JAMES KOZEMCHAK Circulation—DORIS MALL'N _... A mon.partisan, liberal progressive newspaper pub- lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, __Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania. Editorially Speaking:.. Kunkle Falls Behind . _ The single community Back of the Mountain that is failing to meet its responsibility for Community Ambu- lange service is Kunkle. There the drive for funds will start on July 8 and if We are to anticipate public response on the basis of past campaigns less than $100 can be expected. Total contri- butions year before last were $274. Last year’s contribu- tions were slightly over $100. The Community Ambulance is available FREE for service to every family in the Kunkle community and there is no record yet that Kunkle people have refused to take advantage of that service in times of emergency. Harriet Thompson, chairman of this year’s ambulance drive, has announced that coin cards will be distributed July 8 by a group of eight workers: Mrs. Esther Haas, Mrs. Ellen Dietz, Linda Condon, Mrs. Jack Hiller, Mrs. Vergie Elston, Allen Brace, John Jerista and Elwood Condon. : : While the cards have spaces for only $3, all that is being asked of public-spirited Kunkle people is a contri- bution of $2.50. The cards will be collected later this summer, Mrs. Thompson has asked us to write this editorial because she is sure that Kunkle will meet its responsibility 88 s0On as it is aware that free ambulance service is de- pendent upon the contributions of every family. : * * * TO OUTLAW TREASON It has become apparent, after.322 major work stop- pages strikes and boycotts at 22 sites that have cost the US missile program 162,000 man-days of time and ex- torted uncountable millions of dollars from US tax- payers, that new, clear-cut legislation is needed to put the national defense program back on the track. Only the most forthright and specific legal restraints can put an end to the wholesale sabotage that has even so, for the most part, violated existing law. It should. be recalled incidentally that the builders of our missiles, rockets and guidance systems were among those who foresaw a year ago — in the agitation for legislation to legalize “common situs” picketing — what could happen to orderly defense progress, and urged that n.issile sites be exempted. Since that time a parade of defense witnesses has appeared before the McClellan Committee testifying to work stoppages designed to create overtime pay — as high as four times the base rate — that ran up one electrician’s wages to $748 in a single week, and gave 90 pipefitters and electricians at Vandenberg Air Force Base more pay than the commanding general. They testified to demands of construction unions that equipment fabri- cated in their plants by members of other unions must be dismantled for removal to the launching bases and re- assembled by members of the construction unions at ex- tortionate cost and perilous delay. Most celebrated, perhaps, is the case of “blessing the manifold” as related by Senator McClellan on the Senate floor. “We have all heard of manifold blessings,” he | Dave will return to take over the il said, “. .but I never heard of blessing a manifold until "this incident occurred.” . tion. - shall 1 | perro The manifold, fabricated of stainless steel pipe by union men in a missile plant, must be torn down and re- assembled at ‘the launching site by their men, said the construction union., It was protested that this procedure might damage this intricate device so'it would not func- The construction union ‘then devised the scheme of giving the thing a blessing and sitting down ... to draw their pay during that period of time, and then let _ the blessed manifold go on into place.” Today, the missile builders are pressing for revision of the Davis-Bacon Act which has been twisted and tor- tured out of original concepts to serve urion greed. It should now be amended, the industry insists, to establish equipment that may be placed in it or attached to it. - Superfluous as this might seem to any repsonable or pas _ triotic person, the industry firmly endckses the senti- ments of Senator McClellan, who sai: “I do not care what executivs, is issued and what no-sigie’ pledge is giver.” I hope] both of those things wg done ... but'l say to Sehators that we itt by th2 country or by the people if we i situation to occur again yout it being a he law of the lund"! = i { \ ‘| Fleet. | Looking at T-V EDITH ANN BURKE © Durward Kirby, who wasn’t even mentioned in the running, has been picked to succeed Arthur Godfrey next fall as host of Candid Camera, with Allen Funt still coming on for weekly explanations. Couldn’t be a better selection. As anyone who: has watched the Garry Moore show knows Kirby is | a very clever and amusing fellow. | He will still continue as Garry's | sidekick on his weekly variety show. Carol Burnett is another very clever member of the Garry Moore team. She is content to go on be- ing featured on the Moore show despite the honors which keep com- ing to her. Her part on the Moore show will be expanded next season. Man-In-Space.—The second Pro- ject Mercury launching from Cape Canaveral is due some time around July 18. All three networks are preparing for the pooled telecast. The networks learned so much from the first flight that this time the viewers will be able to “see” almost everything the astronaut does. There’ll be no chance of missing the “recovery” this time either. A silent automatic film camera lashed to the underside of the main recovery heliocopter and triggered by the co-pilot, will record the as- tronaut as he is picked out of the water. ; Let's say a prayer that this will be as successful as the first flight. Dave Garroway is being replaced by two men, John Chancellor and Frank Blair. The reason that John Daley was . not chosen was because he insist- ed on the same arrangement that Garroway had, complete control of the show, and the network would not agree to this. Chancellor, who is only 33, is considered one of the network's most brilliant newsmen. He joined NBC in Chicago in 1950, and moved to the central European bureau in Vienna in 1958. He was assigned to head the Moscow bureau in 1960. Robert Northshield, who left the show because of disputes with duties as producer. The present producer, Fred Freed, will move back to the news operation. Smiling Jack Lescoulie will re- tain the same position. He cer- tainly adds a great deal of light- ness to the show which might tend to get too serious without Dave. Adlai Stevenson will have a tele- vision show of his own come next fall. ABC-TV won such praise for its Winston (Churchill documen- taries = that it would like to con- tinue in that vein. Not only is it planning shows to be titled “The Eisenhower Years” and “The Roose- velt years,” but now it has arranged to run a special series of alternate- week half-hour programs will take U N Ambassador Adlai Stevenson. The Stevenson sessions, which are expected to be televised from the UN building every other Sunday afternoon, will comprise discussion in which the Ambassador will take part with diverse guests. Producer Albert McCleery in his testimony before the FCC describ- ed Dick Clark’s American Bandstand ag the “sexiest” show on television. American Bandstand may be cut way down next fall. ABC-TV is thinking about creating a news- and-feature series for youngsters from 8 to 14, to be titled Periscope and scheduled during a half hour of what is now part of the Clark inanities. No Wrestling Shows—A number of viewers have wondered about the sharp decrease in TV wrestling shows. Many stations have looked askance at wrestling bouts as video fare since those quiz-show hearings of a few years back. In other words, they're taking no chances . Edmund J. Yudiski On Mediterranean NORFOLK (FHTNC) — Today, with anti-submarine warfare be- coming increasingly important, many new types of submarines are being developed. An important unit of the crack anti-submarine task force Group Bravo, is the es- cort task destroyer USS Robert A. Dons operating out of Norfolk, B.S Serving aboard the Owens is Ed. mund J. Yudiski, draftsman sea- man, USN, son of Mr, and Mrs. Ed- mund T. Yudiski Dallas, R.D. 4. The Owens, flagship of Destroyer Squadron 36, along with four other destroyers from this squadron and the anti-submarine warfare support aircraft carrier USS Wasp make up Task Group Bravo, specializing in development of anti - submarine tactics. The task group departed, June 8, from Norfolk for an extended three-month midshipmen training cruise in the Mediterranean Sea as a unit of the Navy’s powerful Sixth Addy Gets Road Job The State Highways Department has assigned a $47,921 contract to Addy Asphalt Company to widen 10.85 miles of ‘Legislative Route 40115 between Alderson and Rug- gles. The contract includes a new surface. AN oR THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1961 From Pillar To Post . 1 by HIX They looked like blowgun missiles, tipped with a lethal smear of quick-acting South American poison, but it turns out that the little bottle contained nothing more deadly than porcupine quills | hot off the porcupine. Seems the original owner left them behind when he escaped through Mrs. Paul Dugan’s cellar window, and Mrs. Dugan felt it would be a pleasant thought to send them to the Dallas Post. And now let me tell you something about porcupine quills. I cautiously opened the bottle and spilled them out on my desk blotter, after being reassured about the possibility of their being blowgun ammunition. One of the slender little arrows fell on my lap, and so help me, it burrowed instantly, slipping silently right through the skirt “and the slip, and was just upending itself for a quick slither under the skin when caught in the act, and its war-head throttled. What did Mrs. Nelson Shaver do with that sixty-pound plus bunch of bananas she won from Charlie Gosart’s night? Being smothered to death in banana cream pie would be one of those accidents I would prefer to have happen to somebody else, given my druthers. The only personal relationship I have ever had with an entire stalk of bananas was way down in the heart of Texas about thirty- three years ago. Or was it thirty-five? Time has a way of telescoping itself. Anyhow, it had seemed impossible to keep abreast of the bananas, and my father, always a man of youthful demand for action, acted. He brought Papa "got the army home a stalk of bananas and hung them in the tool-room. The children were invited to for heaven’s sake get in there and fill up on bananas, and for once in a lifetime cease their clamor. Papa metaphorically washed his hands. : The bananas, under the red tin roof separating the tool-room from the Texas sun, ripened astonishingly. The kids did their best, but it was a losing battle start. They took aboard bananas morning, noon and night, eating faster and faster as the bananas turned from canary yellow to deep yellow, from deep yellow to brown, and from brown to black. striker to shovel the remains into the ash can and nobody asked for bananas for a long time. store Saturday from the “Could you give me an inkling of what it. is?” I inquired of Mrs. Dwight Fisher, after I had found an odd but attractive whatsit propped against my screen door. “I looked it up in the dictionary,” replied Mrs. Fisher, “and it was the very first word on the page. It's an abacus.” “Doesn’t it seem just a mite outsize?” “It’s probably for a game room, to hang on the wall and keep score with. Those big wooden balls, you just push them along the wooden rods. The dictionary says you can add and subtract and multiply on an abacus. It's the oldest counting device there is.” “This one, you could use to figure the national debt, Mrs. Fisher. How come you're willing to give it up for the Auction?” “Somebody gave it to me.” SUI 1] Rambling Around By The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters AIT cpa. In most Pennsylvania and the larger creeks were navigable for Indian canoes. Along these and also cross-country the Indians made a network of well defined paths over which runners passed silently and swiftly. The white men used trails and bridle paths and rough roads which were mostly narrow passages where trees had been cut down and brush cleared. Herds of cattle were driven lorg distances for a cash crop. Pub- lic financing of through roads was not an accepted routine. Then someone hit on the plan of a road built by private capital and paid for by tolls, The first turnpike in the U.S. was chartered in 1792 between Philadelphia and Lancaster. At in- tervals, long poles with sharp spikes were lowered across the road to force the traveler to stop and pay tolls — hence the name “turnpike” which has endured to this day. This was so successful that it was imitated all over the country, We had a local turnpike. The Dallas and Kingston Tunrpike Road Company was incorporated by the legislature in . 1870, the incorpor- ators being Charles Dorrance, Payne Pettebone, James Garrahan, Isaac Tripp, Albert H. Holcomb, Joseph Frantz, Abram Ryman, Z. B. Rice, Joseph Harter, Henry Coon, Samuel Hoyt, Samual Raub, Jacob Rice, and John Keller. This began at the old white mill in Luzerne, now Lu- zerne Lumber Company, and fol- lowed the old crooked lower road along the creek some years later taken over by the county. The toll was collected at a house near the present Continental Inn at the en- trance to the gap in the mountain. That location was called “The Toll Gate” in ordinary conversation. The new ‘Pennsylvania Turnpike” was the first of its kind, also. Pennsylvania also had the first National Road, or part of it, fathered by Albert Gallatin, a Penn- sylvanian. It was built from Cum- berland, Md. to Wheeling, W. Va. requiring seven years in building. The Pa. part was operated as a Pa. toll road for seventy years begin- ning in 1835. There was a hard struggle in Congress over this and suksequent national roads. Many liberal men honestly thought they places the rivers of freight carrier in colonial times and the original of the “Prarie Scho- oner” was developed in the Cones- toga Valley before the Revolution. Its boat-shaped body prevented freight falling out the tail gate | going up hills and some were caulked to ford rivers. While the very first train run by railroad was not in Pennsylvania, it soon became the leader in rail- roading. The first American rail- road actually surveyed was built in 1809-10 by Thomas Leiper near Chester. Early railroads used wood rails and horsepower. First steel rails made commercially were made in Cambria works. The Stourbridge Lion, built in England, was first used at ‘Honesdale on the Gravity Railroad Aug. 8, 1829. The first coal-burning locomotive steam engine was built by Phineas Davis in 1831 at York. He also built the steam engine for the boat “Codor- us” mentioned above. The first railroad tunnel in the U.S. was built near Johnstown as a p art of the Portage Railroad. The first air brakes were invented by George Westinghouse of Allegheny County. The first sleeping car in the 1 U.S., the “Chambersburg” was in- vented by Philip Berlin and placed in use between Harrisburg and Chambersburg in 1838 or before. The first commercial telegraph line was built along a railroad right-of- way between Lancaster and Harris: burg in 1845. It is said the first message read, ‘Why don’t you write, you rascals ?”. The first elec- tric street car in the U.S. was run in ‘Scranton in 1886. The long gone gravity railroads were interesting. The first in the western hemisphere was started at Carbondale in 1828. It ran 'to Honesdale to get coal to the D & H Canal. The Historical Society in Honesdale is in one of the last re- maining buildings. Another one was in operation from the lower Pittston Area to Hawley 1850-1884. The switchback at Mauch Chunk was a tourist attraction. Today all railroading in Penn- sylvania is a shrinking industry, autos, trucks, and planes having taken away much of the traffic. It is only a hundred years, or a little more, since we had an elaborate system of canals in Pennsylvania. ~~ ONLY YESTERDAY ir HAPPENED 3) YEARS Aco: Noxen had a real old-fashioned Fourth of July, starting with fire- crackers and scorched fingers at sun-rise, ending with watermelons and fireworks in the evening, taking in a parade at noon and picnics along the way. Luzerne County had a heavy ac- cident. list, with twice as many as in 1930. Lackawanna, where fireworks were banned, had only four such accidents. Two youngs- ters who got tetanus shots were Harry Derr, 9, of Dallas, burned when a skyrocket exploded; and a small visitor . from Long Island, visiting Dallas friends. Robert Pickett, 9, spent several days at Nesbitt, ‘recovering from injuries to his right eye when a torpedo ex- ploded. : Thieves broke into a Shaver- town store owned by F. C. Mal- kemes, ripping off a window screen and getting $6.50 from the cash register. 3 Shavertown took East Dallas 11 to 1 on the Fourth of July. Marjorie E. Schoonover became the bride of Fred (C. Dixon. YWCA Blue Triangle Lodge at Harveys Lake opened with a capa- city registration. Russell Case, Shavertown, was promoted to assistant manager of Spaulding’s Wilkes-Barre district. John Keating, 6 year old Pittston child, was seriously injured when struck near Wardan place by a car driven by Mrs. A. J. Sordoni. Both Segs were broken. Anna Miller and Lesley Lamore- aux, both of Dallas, were married in Tunkhannock by Rev. E. A. Ben- son. Service station located at Raub’s Hotel changed hands, when James Besecker sold his interest to James Coolbaugh.» Lucy Hoover, Ruggles, became the bride of Robert Traver, Noxen. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gosart, Shavertown, observed their Golden Wedding anniversary. IT HAPPENED 20 YEARS AGO: Noxen Tannery employees organ- ized a union. Col. Dorrance Reynolds posed with his horse “Lark” for a Know- Your Neighbor column about Good- leigh Farm. Dallas school teachers got an increase of $50 per year .. . . but this bonus came a long way from equalling what they are getting to- day in salary. Mrs. A. R. Holcomb of Dallas heard that her 10-year old grand- son Norman Keesler had plunged into a deep quarry near his home at Hastings-on-Hudson, and had been seriously hurt. The boy was a cousin of Glen Ide, a Dallas Post employee. In the Dallas area, 33 young men registered for selective service. Squire William M. Major, 78, suffered a fatal heart attack at his home in Lehman, Lake [Police were putting on a safety program against hit -run drivers. Speeding, said chief Ira C. Stevenson, was going to stop, or else. : Allan Kistler, stationed at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, dropped around to help mail the Dallas Post. He was formerly on the staff. Fireworks and a boat parade were highlights of a Fourth of July celebration at Harveys Lake. Robert Steinrock of Noxen, whose arm had been amputated in an industrial accident in New Jersey two. weeks earlier, injured the same arm again in an auto ac- cident. Ann Peterson and her mother flew to Canada to have tea with grandpa on Prince Edward Island. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Davis, Al- derson, were painfully injured when their car was struck by an- other in a rear-end collision on the new highway. Announcement was made of the marriage of Helen Grant of Trucks- ville, to Sgt. Terry Roche of Kings- ton. William Kishbaugh Jr. and Mary Alice Johnson became man and wife, Claudia Jones became the bride of Norton F. Montross. Helen Anthony was wed to Wil~ liam Carr. Admiral Harold Stark rated a units of anti-tetanus administered | $ Barnyard Notes Jared, as you probably don't know, lived to be 962 years old}, this constitutes a pretty considerable life time and you'd think the... man should be famous. But he never made the Hall of Fame. Why 2s Because his grandson lived to be 969 years old! Those seven extra: i. years made Methusaleh a legendary figure; he was tops in his line Noah, who lived 950 years, is remembered only because of his. 1, sailing adventure. His longevity never made the headlines! » The lesson is this spot of history that to achieve remembered. i greatness you have to be FIRST! Bis . . and every season when July rolls around again, the - Library Auction is FIRST in the hearts and minds of Back Mountain countrymen. dca 2 After fifteen years, it has lost none of its appeal for the young; |; at heart of all ages. x 3 What this appeal is, I have never been quite ‘able to fathom! “ For some it means hard grueling work—for others a holiday and; J} family reunion—and for still others—something nice to gripe about! But deep underneath everything, I believe, the appeal of the... auction is the opportunity to make new friendships and to work. 3 with others toward achieving a common goal. vi iin Without the funds raised at the Auction, the Library could not... exist. The ‘Auction is practically its only source of income. But there are many who work very hard to make the Auction a success, who don't give a hang for the Library.. . . in fact have never - entered it doors! But come the first week in July, the Auction hearts and minds of all of us . . . . And like the awakening miracle of spring—sprouts new workers’ and new enthusiasm—to replace the old. LE There is an immortality to the Auction never dreamed of by those who founded it fifteen years ago. So long as it continues, there" need be no fear of the future of the Library nor the worth of the community in which it exists. The Auction is bigger than any individual—any single worker — any single contributor. The Auction is the spirit of this community —of Christmas——of brotherhood—all rolled into one. > This year that spirit pervades an all new group of workers who. will make this Auction one of the finest on record, carrying on a“ ‘community tradition that gives immortality to some I remembers over the past fifteen years. ’ Ti I have compiled a list of some who were outstanding in adding + humor, color, sweat, brawn, brain and just good fun to make the Library Auction unique among fund raising events in the country.” Here once a year may their memories be ever green—may their spirit add to the Back Mountain community. Harry Ohlman, auctioneer without peer; Charles Wheaton Lee, £3) Library Director and spirited bidder. x Prof. Charles James, sweating chairman of the Barn; Norti Berti, good neighbor if there was one. Dr. Sherman R. Schooley, native son in a fur coat. 2 Mrs. Lewis LeGrand, Library Director and dreamer of dreams.: Murray Scureman, on a ladder untangling the loud speaker. system; my mother, who tolerated the encroachment of the Auction’ on her beloved flower beds. : Mrs. Albert Parrish, always in a front row seat buying toys for her grandaughter, Sharon. Herman Garinger, nearby, buying a pig. Mrs. William Bertels, of a summer evening saving the auc tioneer’s face with her cheerful last minute bid on the pony. : Mrs. Gale with her tantalizingly slow bids on a set of dishes that brought down the house. 43 Em Blackman, at the side of the auction block—shading her eyes from the sun—buying back her own dishes, given to the Auction by her daughter. pis Al Misson giving a hand every Sunday morning to the grounds committee. Ralph Rood, schoolmaster, gathering up all the broken bottles. Herbert Hill, florist, a clown in sheep's clothing. - Earl H. Monk, cigar in one hand and a load of stuff for. the auction in the other. £ George Schallenberger, bidding on antiques from the shade of Bh the tree. : Dyke Brown in his colorful jackets and vests, cigar in mouth x and riding whip in hand. \ Elizabeth Edwards, fair beauty flushed with excitement as she/ handles the old goods solicitation. A is first in the’ gi is Dorrance Reynolds, arms folded watching the sale of the bull calf he gave to the auction. C. A. Boston, my brother-in-law, chatting with a group of friends he brought from Nicholson. ! bt Raymond Kuhnert, schoolmaster and Library Director, bidding for the joy of it. L Gus Condaras, panting and hurried, finding a grill for the ham-' i burgers and hot dogs. my Burgess H. A. Smith, greeting old friends and he had hundreds. ‘ Billy Wilson, grandson beside him, offering old tools to the } auctioneer. f Nelson Shaver, Justice-of-the-Peace, enjoying the fun. i Mrs. Weir, Mary’s mother, receiving an ovation for her Mexican barbecue sauce. : Big Jim Robinson contributing all the coffee. & William Evans, Shel’s dad, greeting friends from near and far. ¢ } Gordon Hadsal and Mrs. Hadsal, never missing an auction and inviting friends to take part. My brother-in-law, Atty Leighton Scott of Easton, shelling out more funds for his boy to bid on a gun. Judge J. Harold Flannery, having the time of his life as Satur- day night auctioneer. : Sev. Newberry, painting his big oil cloth sign festooned across oA the barn. & And there were others—many others—whose contributions added to each Auction’s success. Others, long moved from the community, have played their part, Paul Warriner, first president of the Library; Charles Rinehimer, head of new goods, Fritz Hendricks, auction clerk with rain soaking down his coat collar; Al Gibbs, robust auctioneer; Ralph Davis, indefatigable new goods dealer; David Jenkins, always to be counted on; Sara Schmerer, Library Director and refreshments chairman; Dan and Ollie Robinhold, one sweating in the barn—the | other always making new and greeting old friends. : ‘And certainly never to be forgotten, Dr. Lanyon and the late @ Atty. Peter Jurchak who long before the first Auction provided the inspiration and the energy to form a Memorial Library in the Back Mountain eountry! E These have made the Library Auction first in the hearts of Back Mountain Countrymen! ik July State Parks Month Governor David Lawrence has proclaimed July Pennsylvania Parks Month. The Governor, in a statement re- leased last week, asked all organ- interest and Lake Jean Is New Angler's Paradise Lake Jean in Ricketts Glen State Park is one of the ‘hot spots” i= fishing in Pennsylvania, says Gor- were unconstitutional. Two presi- The Schuylkill dents of the United [States vetoed | srg. oonuy. Canal extending private line to his summer home at Lake Carey, the first ever in- izations and municipalities in the State to encourage tourists to visit don Trembley, chief aquatic biolo- gist for the Pennsylvania Fish road bills, one with a message sixty or seventy pages long. And he claimed he was personally in favor : of it. And whichever of the several claimants is accepted as the inven- tor of the steamboat, the honor goes to Pennsylvania. In 1785 John Fitch tested a steamboat and sub- sequently built four that were me- chanically successful but they were failures financially. Robert Fulton of Lancaster (County built the “Clermont” which he tested on the Hudson and acquired financial backing making it a success. He also invented diving boats, tor- pedoes, a power shovel, and canal machinery. Another Lancaster County man, William Henry, ran a stern - wheel steamboat on the Conestoga before 1765. The first iron steamboat the “Codorus” was launched on the Susquehanna near York by John Elgar in 1825. READ THE POST CLASSIFIED The Conestoga Wagon, principal northwest from [Philadelphia con- nected with the Union Canal at Reading; The Union Canal formed a waterway to the Susquehanna at Middletown just below Harrisburg. At Amity Hall a short distance above, canals joined from up and down the Susquehanna and the Juniata Canal was the waterway to the mountains. From Hollidays- burg to Johnstown boats were handled over the mountains by the “Portage Railroad”, thence by canal to Pittsburg, Erie, Youngstown and Cleveland, and via the Ohio River to a wide area. There were canals along the Lehigh and Delaware and at other places. Most dramatic and saddest mo- ment at any Auction was the after- noon when it was announced to the Auction crowd that Dr. Sherman Schooley had suffered a heart at- tack while attending a patient within sight of the Auction stalled at that resort by Common- wealth Telephone Co. Gerald Frantz, owner-operator of a store at Huntsville, opened a new summer market at the Lake. rr uarpeNED 1() YEARs aco: Dallas was preparing for its fifth Library Auction, with a list of new goods that occupied half of the front page of the Dallas Post. Roy Eliott was beginning work at Hall’s Drugstore. Dallas Borough-Kingston Town- ship Schools were preparing to open kindergarten rooms, and were ask- ing PTA organizations for equip- ment. Charles Roberts, Yeager Awenue, was the subject of a Know-Your- Neighbor, Robert Evans, his arm in a sling, his head in bandages, returned to Fort Dix after a motorcycle crash. The accident delayed his wedding grounds, to Betty Johnson. Evans hit a rut, Commission. { their public parks. He noted that a year ago 23,000,000 travelers visited Pennsylvania's parks. and turned over four times. David E. Ace, 69, former resident of Dallas, died in Buffalo. Geraldine Shirley Fischer became the bride of James E. Regan. Eleanor Tremayne was wed to S. Russell Maddox. Roberts and Schooley were out for Dallas Township school board in July primaries. Back Mountain Citizens Com- mittee for Better Schools proposed a platform of improvement. Mrs. E. B. Snyder, 94, died of old age at the Huntsville Nursing Home. Trucksville, Herbert Olver Sr., of died at 78. i Trucksville Mill Poultry Shop was doing big business. ¥ SUBSCRIBE TO ; Wednesday. Lake Jean was opened for fishing on June 17 for the first time sinoe 1958. The lake was originally de- clared off limits for fishermen bes cause it had too many undersized fish. Most of these fish were killed by chemical control, how- ever, and the lake has been com- pletely restocked with walleye, muskie, and bass. } Trembley said that walleyes measuring 13 to 14 inches an muskies up to 25 inches have al- ready been reeled in. “With more than 600 anglers at the lake opening day, and with most them catching fish,” he concluded “it is certain that the reclamation of Lake Jean has been successful.” Doris Sims In Hospital Doris P. Sims of Dallas was ad- mitted to Geisinger ~~ Hespital ¥ > 3 ES ARs eR e— a For Fe * EE ————— L ® L ¢ e @ € ” L « « « e « 4 e 4 L L L « 1 L L « ¢ 4 « 4 4 1 K { 4 : { { 4 4 3