SECTION A — PAGE 2 THE DALLAS POST Established 188 “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its Tlst Year” « \$ED ° - o Member Audit Bureau of Circulations & % Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association ) z Member National Editorial Association Coat Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc, g 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 Monday 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 previeusly 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; $5.00 six months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c. : When requesting a change 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. Editor and Publisher— HOWARD W. RISLEY Associate Publisher—ROBERT F. BACHMAN Associate Editors—MYRA ZEISER RISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS id Sports—JAMES LOHMAN ° Advertising—ILOUISE C. MARKS From Pillar To Post... by Hix A little fawn colored field mouse is pretty cute, as long as he stays outdoors. But when he starts moving into winter quarters in the basement, bringing with him his family, he precipitates problems. Along about the time the last maple leaves fall and the sun slants lower and lower through the southeast windows, I'm apt to find a chewed apple on the porcelain topped table, and behind the electric mixer a fragment of cracker. Then the cruel war begins. The enemy is an enchanting little creature with a soft white breast and a very long tail, with no possible resemblance to a town mouse. He has the brightest eyes, a sensitive and -quivering nose, and carefully groomed whiskers. He would make a lovely pet. But he never comes as a single spy. Where one mouse is, there is a neatly brushed wife, and at least four baby mice. Poison the family provider, and the wife will starve to death, the babies lose their plump contours and fade into grim little ghosts, Out come the poisoned wheat grains, and the waiting begins. The pan of wheat grains shows signs that the mouse has been around. [There is a scattered halo of wheat on the kitchen table. The next morning there is more scattered wheat. It will certainly be over without delay. How much arsenic-im- pregnated wheat can one small mouse take aboard without disaster? Maybe he is taking it home to his family, and it is the babies who have died. : It seems such a pity. I toy with the notion of keeping just one lit- tle mouse. A mouse, sitting on his haunches in front of an open fire, would be pretty cute. The drawback is that one mouse leads to more mice. More scattered wheat grains. The visitor has been greedy this time, and the entire contents of the pan has vanished. And there is the culprit, a victim of his own lack of decent re- straint, stiff and lifeless under the table. He is so pretty, and his honey-blond fur is so soft. A toss into the shrubbery, and it is all over. Now for the Mamma mouse. There mever seems to be more than one pair of field mice in residence at one time. Do mice, like birds, mark out definite boundaries for “lebens- raum 2?” And why don’t they stay outdoors where they belong? Is it more merciful to trap a mouse than to scatter poison? It is unthinkable to let anything suffer any longer than necessary. A trap can break a small neck in a flash, but what about that mouse that still haunts my dreams, the one that got caught by his hind leg as he was making his escape after sampling the morsel of cheese? It was impossible to kill the quivering creature, though instant death was what he was praying for with his beady black eyes and his scrabbling paws. I let him go in the garden, but it was a mistaken Kindness, prolonging his misery. It is doubtless not to be able, when necessary, to kill a mouse or drown a kitten, give the merciful coup de grace to an injured dog, or view dispas- sionately the soft and bloodstained plumage of a wild goose, stopped in its wild free flight across the trackless skies. It is fortunate indeed that such tender feelings do not apply to dealings with the insect world. I can spray flies with complete disre~ gard of their sufferings. Chickens are destined, from the egg, to have their necks stretched sacrificially upon the chopping block. Farm-yard animals go eventually into the pot. So why should I regret killing a mouse ? ; “. There's no accounting for it. Except I still think field mice are awfully gute. a reflections on anyone's strength of character | Vital Statistics Are Now Showing Health Picture In Pennsylvania Does the length of courtship have any bearing on ‘divorce rating in ment should review its procedures.” Statistics may even play an im- Pennsylvania ? Is there a relationship between the weight and size of an infant and the age of the mother? Do city residents die at an earl- jer age than rural residents. What's the cause of most sudden deaths? These are some of the interesting questions the Pennsylvania Depart- ment of Health is studying through its Division of Statistics and Records. Dr. Albert E Bailey, division dir- ector, said statistics paint an accur- ate picture of what is happening healthwise in the state. Death statistics, he said, show how many die, what diseases are claiming the most lives, whether a disease is more prevalent in male or female and at what age. Birth statistics, through birth cer- tificate information, indicate con- genital malformations, if the mother had difficulty in labor and if illegi- timacy is on the increase. - Death certficates can even indi- cate how hospitals compare, Dr. Bailey said, adding this explanation: “If our statistics show premature babies are dying at a higher rate in a particular hospital, it can be gdad dh ia ares QODALL= portant role in determining the causes of disease outbreaks. By questioning persons who have con- tracted certain infectious diseases, interviewers can determine where they obtained drinking water, the type of sewage disposal and the origin of foods they have eaten. “This information may give us clues in diseases like infectious hepa- titis,” Dr. Bailey said. There’s a vital statistic somewhere for all of us, Dr. Bailey contends. If you were born in Pennsylvania after 1905, you're a vital statistic in Harrisburg. : Before that, your proof of birth is either in county records or on a page in a family Bible, Doubtful Joe—Oh, I guess your rich aunt will remember you. You made a big hit with her by going inte mourning when her cat died. |[Jim—True, but listen; now the other relatives accuse me of poison- ing the cat to get the opportunity. Boss: “You're very versatile, Miss Smithers, I didn’t know anyone could be so inefficient in so many different ways.” is : £ Li Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post rr aappeNeD 3{) YEARs aco: Center Moreland Creamery de- cided to close, rather than to pay out $4,000 for improvements man- dated by the State. A. BE. Shook operated the creamery for the Dairy- men’s League. Abandonment of the creamery closed the only industry that Center Moreland had, and threw a number of people out of work. Arrangements were made for transportation of milk to Wilkes- Barre. Plans were okayed by Kingston Township school board to buy the Shaver plot for erection of a build- ing. : The fall season was the warmest on record, holdihg down sales of coal and clothing. Fog was given as the cause for a fatal auto accident, when a young ‘Wilkes-Barre woman was fatally in- jured on Parrish Heights. Eleanor Panzak, 22, suffered a fractured skull when the car in which she was a .passenger was struck by a car driven by David Lavelle of Dal- las. A Shavertown resident, Jack Guernsey, accompanied William Beebe’s expedition in study of the deep ocean floor. rr uappenep 2) YEARS Aco: Mr. and Mrs. Corey Frantz éeleb- rated their Golden Wedding with a dinner at the Country Club at- tended by their many friends. A -Noxen boy had a narrow es- cape when he fell from the roof of a barn. Charles Smith, 9, came out of the accident with only a broken arm. Norma Henning and Arthur W. Lindsley were included in Who's Who in American Colleges. Joseph F. Maher, Fernbrook, died at 59 after a brief illness. Red Cross classes were enlisting many helpers. Ray Shiber shot a nice red fox which ‘was running with a flock of sheep. Col. Thomas H, Atherton was head of the County Defense. George Stroh, 87, farmer of pion- eer ancestry, died after a long illness. rr mappened 1() vEARs aco: An overheated iron fired the John Henderson "home in Shavertown, dropping through the ironing board to set fire to rugs and furniture. Bishop Hafey dedicated the Gate of Heaven parochial school. before a capacity crowd of spectators. Russell Ruble resigned from the Lehman faculty. His place was filled by Larry Drabick. Albert J. Crispell of Noxen head- ed a delegation which attended the National Convention of the Prohi- bition Party in Indianapolis. He was elected secretary, and also sec retary of the Young People's Com- mittee. Three Sweet Valley hunters, Floyd Wolfe, Thomas Foss, and Howard Post, bagged a 235 pound bear on North Mountain. Ten years after the United States entered the war against Germany, three German educators toured schools in the area, visiting Lehman- Jackson-Ross High School and Trucksville grade school, escorted by principals Lester Squier, James Martin and Charles James, con- voyed by Luzerne County Superin- tendent of schools E. S. Teter. Marian Risco became the bride of Harold™ Holcomb. : Mary Teresa Whalen was wed to Paul H. Lauer. Mrs, Stella Williams LeVan, 81, native of Loyalville, died in Phila- delphia. Mrs. Valera E. Henry, who lived in Shavertown for many years, died at 83 ‘in Canton. Mrs. Agnes Harper, 51, formerly of Noxen, died at the home of her .| sister Mrs. Gomer Thomas. She was a Navy nurse. Glazed highways resulted in traf- fic tie-ups and a Trucksville-Luz- erne traffic jam. A snowfall fol- lowed by a sudden drop in tempera- ture was responsible. Many motor- ists spent two hours making the three miles. Farming News DEADLINE, NEARS FOR WHEAT, BARLEY SIGNUP One week remains in which grow- ers may file applications to take part in the 1962 winter wheat sta- bilization and feed grain program for winter barley, Howard R. Port- er, Chairman of the Pennsylvania Agricultural Stabilization and Con- servation Committee, reminded farmers today. The deadline is December 1. Farmers who take part in the programs will be eligible to receive special payments for diverting a part of their acreage from the pro- duction of wheat or barley, or both, and devoting that acreage to an ap- proved conservation use, and they will also qualify for price support on their 1962 crop. The 1962 wheat support is at a minimum national average of $2 a bushel. While the 1962 barley price support has not yet been an- nounced, it will be at a level not great less than for 1961. The national |si THE DALLAS POST, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1961 HER ERIE = = The English word “Square” (French, ‘“Place”) applied to an open or park like area in a town or city does not, in many cases, have anything to do with the shape of the plot. Many of them are not square. Most striking example is the string of “Squares” along Broadway in New York, which runs obliquely up- town intersecting the rectangular street plan at various points. These itersections ave all called “Squares”, most famous “Times Square,” but have no resemblance to a square. Boston and Salem in founding days used the word “Commos”. The two inland towns first settled, Con- cord and Dedham, had “Squares”. Many New England towns had “The Village Green” or more simply “The Green”. New Haven had a “Green” which also was square. The Con- necticut Township of Wilkes-Barre is the only one we ever encount- ered which had a Square and a Common, both public lands in the original town plan. The Greens, by whatever name, were not always laid out as public lands at first. At Lexington there is a marker stating that Nibor Muz- zy: deeded the piece of land for 16 pounds for the common use of all. The Green at Windham, Conn., was originally the home lot of William Backus. The Green was a town center, the location-of the pillory and stocks, meetings, drilling of militia or “Train Bands”, and usu- ally the church was located on or facing the green. Some had schools and other public facilities. Philadelphia had five ‘Squares’ which were square, or practically so. The Center Square is now oc- cupied by City Hall, so big that it has intersecting streets right through the middle and looks about the size of four city blocks. In four corners were, and still are, Squares now named Logan, Franklin, Wash- | igton, and Rittenhouse. An addit- ional “Square’ ’'was created when separate parcels of land were bought up to make a Square for the State House, now called Independence Square. Historical events in this square would fill a full column. Elsewhere in Pennsylvania squares are common Many, rather small, now are mot much more than traf- fice circles and we spin around portions of them looking for diverg- ing routes without noticing their true character. Some were donated outright by the Penns, some for special purposes. Many have histor- SAFETY VALVE | AN APPRECIATIVE WORD Dear Mr. Risley: The County Commissioners of Luzerne County sincerely appreciate the splendid public service which you have rendered on behalf of Valley Crest, the new County Home. Not only in connection with the dedication have you served the public well, but also throughout the years of construction and develop- ment of the institution and its program. We are deeply grateful. [Sincerely yours, Jarrett W. Jennings ! J. Bowden Northrup Local Authorities, Luzerné County Institution Districi Mrs. Edythe Swan Dies In Idetown Mrs. Edythe Verna Swan, resident of Idetown for the past thirty years, died Thursday morning at her hom after a long illness. f She was buried Saturday after- moon in Kocher Cemetery, 'Rev. Norman Tiffany conducting services from the Disque Funeral Home. | Mrs. Swan was born in Forty Fort, daughter of the late John dnd Amanda Belles. Moving to Idet in 1931, she joined Idetown Math- odist Church and its WSCS and Joy Class. She was a member of the WCTU. - She and her husband Oscar ob- served their 54th wedding anniyer- sary in April. Surviving in addition to her husband are these children: Mrs. | Dorothy Lincoln, Chase; Kenneth, Lehman; Preston and Earl of Ide- town; George, East Dallas; Mrs. Edythe Bonning, Jackson Township; Mrs. June Fisk, Sweet Valley, and Arnold, Grand Island, N. Y.; sister, Mrs. Vera Woodworth, Getzville, N. Y.; 15 grandchildren and two grandchildren, Rivals in Language Old Lady (in New York)—‘Isn't it wonderful how a single policeman can dam the flow of traffic?” Boy — “Yes, grannie, but you should hear the bus drivers.” Remote Control “That umbrella you lent me? 1 have lent it to a friend.” “That is very awkward. The man who lent it to my friend tells him that the owner wants it.” Money is a poor man’s credit card, Scientists are still debating whether or not splitting the atom was a wise crack. barley was 93 cents per bushel. Further details concerning these programs may be obtained by con- tacting your county Agricultural Stabilization and (Conservation Serv- ice office. There will be no exten- i average support price for 1961-crop |i in the December 1, 1961 dead- A Ral el) im Host mn ed i fh - 3 C30 EE ESC ES CUETO Rambling Around By The Oldtimer—D. A. Waters EL ER EL RE 2 EET STC ES ie THIS TTI ical interest. Some had frontier forts and old Inns. Many contained or were faced by the churches. Some were scenes of special markets and fairs. Today they are the most com- mon sites for monuments, particu- larly Civil War memorials. Where there is a courthouse it usually is on or facing the Square. The Square at Lancaster was the location of the Capitol of The United States for one day when the Con- tinental Congress met in the local courthouse. Likewise the Square at York was also the U. S. Capitol for a long period. Congress adopted the Articles of Confederation and made a Treaty of Alliance with France there. A cavalry battle was fought in the public square at Greencastle just before Gettysburg, and the Gettysburg battle raged through the town Square at Gettysburg as the federals withdrew to more favor- able positions. Chambersburg Square has Civil War history and monu- ments. In earlier days the Square at Eas- ton was the scene of peace councils and treaties with the Indians: The Square at Carlisle was the site of Fort Lowther and the scene of stir- ring events in the French and Ind- ian wars. The Penns donated a special square there in 1751 for the Episcopal Church. Bedford Square, also donated by the Penn Family, was right in the middle of frontier action. Other Squares in Somer- set, Hanover, Erie, are of interest. Harrisburg has a famous “Market Square”, scene of scales of farm produce. at the curbs for over a century, then bordered by old and famous inns. Reading has a square, also a “Penns Common,” also do-| nated by the Penns, one of the] few Commons we have encountered in this state. Scranton has a “Court- | house Square but this is little more | than a city block bordered by four | named streets, at least at present. ! There are Squares, or reasonably close plots, at Bloomsburg, Montrose and Tunkhannock, each containing the courthouse. Public Square, Wilkes-Barre, has | so much local history that it will | be the subject of a separate col-| umn. es sma = Outdoor Tips HUNTING Old-timers will tell you that deer don’t always see you or hear you even though you're in plain view. Some of these old-timers have proved this by experimenting. They have remained on a stand as deer walked directly under them. Then these hunters have dropped nuts or small objects down on the deer’s head. What happened? Nothing. Deer walking through woods are used to falling objects. The hunters were safe because the deer had not scented them. The hunters were DOWNWIND from the deer. Remem- ber that cardinal rule when you stalk your Mr. Big this fall: Stay Downwind! And here's a tip for pipe smok- ers: Don’t. Your favorite special blend of tobacco may be just the scent to send your buck over the hills away from you. Any ‘foreign noise’”” or smell will usually put a deer on its guard and many times send it running in the opposite direction. : CAMPING Milk, butter, and eggs are a lux- ury item on a camping trip because they are so hard to keep fresh. The next time you go afield, try this idea for an outdoor refrigerator. Dig a hole about a foot and a half deep in a shadyspot. Place your perishable camp goods in the hole and cover with evergreens. You'll be pleasantly surprised to discover that milk, butter, eggs, and such, will keep fresh for several days this way. A running stream will also sup- ply you with refrigerator facilities. Eggs, for instance, placed in a con- tainer and submerged n the stream will keep fresh for a few days. If the stream is frozen, chop into the ice until you come to the rumning water below. Don't throw away those plastic bottles. Cooking oil for camp can be put into just such a bottle with no fear of breakage or leakage. Don’t throw away the tin plates that TV dinners come in. These plates are easy to stack and carry for camping. Once you have used them at your campgrounds you can throw away or save them for the next trip afield. FISHING If you have been getting stuck up with fishhooks, here's a Ssure- For Your Cooking ... On a cleaner, cooler automatic GAS Range No Costly 3-Wire Necessary with Gas DALLAS. PENNSYLVANIA THANKSGIVING We thank thee for the harvest, Lord, Bd The ripened grain Thy fields afford; For hills and hedges gleaming white Beneath the star lamps twinkling light. We thank Thee for the kindly snow That blankets all the bulbs below, That in thy season they shall spring To lusty life, and with them bring Their notes of sunshine and of flame To swell the chorus of Thy mame. We thank Thee that the little birds ; Are fed according to Thy words That not a sparrow in its flight Shall fall to earth but in Thy sight; That small and furry beasts are warm Ini den and burrow, safe from harm. We thank Thee for the yellow square Of light that shows a window there, Where loved ones wait while loved omies roam Before hey turn their steps toward home. ® veuby BIRMINGHAM /) ; ABOUT HOW MUCH MONEY 5 SPENT ANNUALLY ON QUACK CURES ror ARTHRITIS 2 A. 4 252,000,000 B. § 52,000,000 C.$ 5200000 / / COPR. 1961 BY GENERAL FEATURES CORP, TM-WORLD RIGHTS RESERVED peroeinraowise DRIVERS UNCER 25 Have MORE ACCIDENTS THAN : OLDER PEOPLE A TRUE B. FALSE WHAT 1S THE UNFUELED RANGE oF Tic : a B-52 BOMBER? 7 om, ZN ETT & A 5000 MILES B.8,000 MILES C.I0000 MILES Soy ANSWERS: 8€ VT VI with the Gold Star Award % fire method to keep the hooks out | covering to insure you of hook-free of your fingers and in tiptp con-| hands. dition for the fish. Just a dab of | water the glue dissolves and the water-soluble glue on the tip of | barb is ready for the business of the the point will form a protective day. When the hook hits the GEER ARE] A cy You'll go right to the head of the class in meal preparation for family and friends with Service your comparison now ! ~ See Gold Star \ Your GAS Appliance Dealer CALORIC + HARDWICK % KENMORE % NORGE 1 : MAGIC CHEF % RCA WHIRLPOOL 4 ROPER TAPPAN % SIGNATURE % UNIVERSAL EASY TERMS.....FREE INSTALLATION PENNSYLVANIA GAS A and WATER Company the 28 Gold Star Gas Range features . . . Tops irperformance, automation and design. Make GAS Runes at O » Ld In YO a ee LY