SECTION A — PAGE 2 THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1962 LN DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA aa = scripts, photographs and THE DALLAS POST Established 1389 oe “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its 73rd Year” A mowpartisan, liberal progressive mewspaper pub- lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania. Member Audit Bureau of Circulations Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association Member National Editorial Association Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. Entered as second-class ;matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subecription 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. We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu-~ editorial matter unless self-addressed, stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be held for more than 30 days. 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 mew subscriptions to be placed on mailing list. The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local hospitals. If you are a patient ask your nurse for it. 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 ina specific issue. Preference will in all instances be given to editorial matter which has not previously appeared in publication. 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 sonday 5 PM. 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. . Single coples at a rate of 10c can be obtainei every Thursday morning at the following newstands: Dallas ~ - Bert's Drug Store. lonial Restaurant, Daring’s Mark: Gosart’s Market, Towne House Restaurant; Shavertown — Evans Drug Store, Hall's Drug Store; Trucksville — Gregory’s Store, Trucksville Drugs; Idetown — Cave’s Maket; Harveys Lake — Javers Store, Kockers's Store; Sweet Valley — Adams Grocery; Lehman — Moore's Store; Noxen — Secouten’s Store; Shawnese — Puterbaugh’s Store; Fern- brook — Bogdon’s Store, Bunney’s Store, Orchard Farm Restaurant; Luzerne — Novak's Confectionary. ; { Editor and Publisher—HOWARD W. RISEEY : Associate Publisher—ROBERT F. BACHMAN Associate Editors—MYRA ZEISER RISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS Sports—JAMES LOHMAN Advertising—LOUISE C. MARKS Accounting—DORIS MALLIN Circulation—MRS. VELMA DAVIS Photographs—JAMES KOZEMCHAK Editorially Speaking:.. ® Cb SPE LE PRR TY A Ed = + good losers at Williamsport as the All-Stars were at Med- . -.. ford. It is just as important to learn how to lose grace- Strife Forgotten, Friendship Gained It was unfortunate that this community wasn’t in- formed that the Pitman, New Jersey, Little League Baseball team would pass through here late Saturday afternoon. : We would have given them a royal welcome and shown them that this great Back Mountain country bears no ill will because its own All Stars were defeated at _ Medford, Massachusettes. ‘We hope that those swell Pitman kids were jist as FOE PIER ROR AER fully as to win magnanimously. : ) That’s a lesson some of their elders haven’t learned yet, but its a good one to learn early—and to retain ._ through life even though we all want to be winners! Looking at T-V With GEORGE A. and EDITH ANN BURKE © FIVE LUCKY CITIES — Viewers in Baltimore, Boston, Cleveland, Pittsburgh and San Francisco may “be able to see six Broadway plays free of charge. The Westinghouse Broadcasting Company expects to televise the productions at the same time opening night theatre- goers are watching the shows in New York. The shows wil be taped in a television studio a few days be- fore the Broadway openings. Westinghouse would provide most or all of the show’ backing for the right to televise them. . - There will be live pick-ups in the theatre before curtain time, at the intermissions and after the curtain calls. These periods would be used for commercials. The shows would not be interrupted with messages ; _ from the sponsor. Warren Caro, co-administrative director of the Theatre Guild is quite enthusiastic about the idea. He said, “This will create a mew and fruitful liaison between the stage and television. We hope to do this on a long-range basis. Westinghouse will have options to telecast other guild plays in the future.” © “Musicals have their major sources of investment capital largely through the record companies that finance plays in return for the right to put out the show's album. “The straight play, unless it has a pre-production movie sale, has no source of substancia] financing. "The plays that are being con- ‘sidered include: ~~ “God Bless Our Bank,” starring Ann Sothern. The guild and Joel Schenker are producing the show. The New York opening is for Nov. 26. \ “The Masculine Principle,” to be presented by the guild and Subber late in January, The play is adapted from a gtory by Frank O'Connor. So far the cast hasn't been selected. “The Mackeral Plaza,” based on the novel by Peter De Vries is scheduled for the Spring. No cast has been decided on as yet, Each play is figured at $125,000. Donald H. McGannon, president of Westinghouse, said, “We are try- ing hard to make this merger e re- ality, Through the concept of Broad % way opening nights on telvision, it is {my conviction that we shall enrich | the television program structure by | bring new and outstanding Broad- | way productions to the audiences in {our five markets. One producer, David Merrick said televised on opening night. He ad- mitted it could mean the end of a Broadway run in a few nights if the show proved to be weak in parts. But the money received would be the equivalent of a year’s royalties. But with a good show the publicity received from the televised opening would be a tremendous help. Initially the shows will be done in black and white. C.B.S., through Columbia Records, has invested in a number of musicals, including “My Fair Lady,” “Camelot” and ‘Kean.” C.B.S. also plans to put up the entire backing of $165,000 for Sidney Kingsley’s “Night Life.” REACTION— Two objections came from Broadway producers, Leland Hayward and Arthur Cantor. Each thought ‘that it was not a good idea. “I don’t think it’s a good idea,” said Mr. Hayward, who until recently was associated with the Hartford, Conn., pay TV experiment. “If it were pay TV it would make more sense. I don’t know why they would give away a show that is being sold for box-office prices in New York.” Mr. Cantor called the project “an act of desperation” for people who can’t raise money elsewhere for their productions. He noted ‘that a lot of business comes to New York theatres from Baltimore and Boston and that the telecasts would hurt ‘that trade. Motion picture exhibitors and the home offices of producing companies generally conceded that such an ex- periment might adversely affect movie box offices in ‘the cities where telecasts were made. But they also felt until the project got started with more formidable properties, there was no cause for concern. Sponsors will be the least of West- inghouse’s problems. The Dallas Fair The first Dallas Fair opened in 1886 mear the site of the present Dallas Senior High School. Sponsored by Dallas Union Agricultural Asso- ciation, the grand event of the year was headed by such famous Back Mountain citizens as William K. “Uncle Billy” Goss, Philip T.Raub, Albert D. Hay, William J. Honey- well, C. D. Honeywell, Jacob Snyder, Dr. C. A. Spencer and William P. Kirkendell, The last fair was held in 1916. { he hopes to have one of his shows | Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post IT HAPPENED 30) YEARS AGO: Jane Corson, a former resident of the area, now of Tunkhannock, was badly injured in a traffic acci- dent at Harveys Lake. She was hurled through the windshield. Frank Morris, 78, a former prin- cipal of Dallas High School, died at his home in Dallas. In the early days, school teachers got $12 a month and boarded around with pupils’ families. © When times im- proved, Dallas directors paid his board, and Mr. Morris then moved to the Dallas hotel. Mt. Greenwood Kiwanis Club sponsored a drive to can food for the needy. Requests for donations of vegetables and fruit were being made. ‘When a kerosene lamp exploded in her home in Franklin Township, Mrs. Mary - Natt, 40, was fatally burned. ; Contract for 2.21. miles of maca- dam road between Noxen and Bow- man’s Creek was awarded to the Spooner Bridge Construction Co. of Albany, N. Y. Plans called for two steel bridges. A petition - that Miss Ruth La- moreux be reinstated by Kingston Township school board was success- ful. She was assigned to teach the fifth grade. The AF of L predicted that 13 mil- lion people would be out of work by the winter. The Meridian Club was building a fireplace out of anthracite coal. Both the coal fireplace and the field- stone fireplace on ‘the lower level were the work of William Wilson, of Dallas. John Sullivan was pro- prietor of the new night club. You could get 7 pounds of sweet potatoes for 15 cents; two large cans of pineapple for a quarter; ring bologna 10 cents a pound. rr HAPPENED 2() YEARS Aco: Residents were beginning to feel the meat shortage, viewing the sad: offerings at the local stores with distaste, but figuring the boys in the service and the training camps needed the beef and the butter. Thomas Watkins of Nesquehoning, elected to direct Dallas Township School Band, backed out because of uncertainty about military service. Rumor that Willard Shaver and his cousins Ellwood and Willard ‘Whitesell might be seeing action in the Solomons, was confirmed when Mrs. Shaver received a letter from Willard, her first in three months. Andrew Bittenbender ‘drove. one of Dallas Township’s new school buses home from the Midwest. Featured on the front page were wartime infant evacuees taken from London to country estates. Heard from in the Outpost: Olin E. Weber, . Richmond; Walter De- Remer, Submarine Depot, Fort Mon- roe; Leg of lamb was 35 cents a pound, if you could get it. Cheese was 33 cents a pound. ‘ Married: Mary Alice Edson to Charles T. Sayre. ‘Alice Hand to Robert L. Hughes. Contact for Service Men, a new department, carried newsy items of the boys. Died: Mrs, 63, Dallas. Alderson. Nellie VanNortwick, Mrs. Lucy Altemus, 86, rr uaPPENED 1() YEARS Aco: Area schools were about to open. Rabies appeared again. Jacob Stash, feeding his hunting dogs in Orange, was bitten by a rabid dog, and took rabies inoculations. Westmoreland team was minus seven crack players who graduated in June. They were John Richards, Eddy and Glenn Carey,Bernie Sher- rin, John Garrah, Bill Fine and Bill Oney. Herbert Jenkins succeeded Fran- cis McCarty as Kingston Township Chief of Police. Little Leaguers, narrowly missing play in the Little League tourna- ment, attended Williamsport for finals in the World Series. Married: Ann Mae Shaffer to Paul B. Kelley, Audrey LaBar to Joseph Lewis. Tomato prices were low, light. Mrs. Ray Searfoss won third place in the cow-calling contest as Tunkhannock. Died: Mrs. Sarah H. Flack, 80, Dallas. Mrs. Margaret Bush, 59, Shavertown. Mrs, Alfarata Os- borne, 71, Noxen. crop Lake-Lehman Elementary Enrollment May Hit 870 Lake-Lehman elementary schools show a probable enrollment of 870. Lake building, with seven teachers, will have 210: Kindergarten, 20; first grade, 30; second, 33; third, 34; fourth, 27; fifth, 40; sixth, 26; ‘At Lehman, with thirteen teach- ors, there are 37 children registered for kindergarten; 51 in first grade; 48 in second; 65 in third; 62 in fourth; 58 in fifth; 57 in sixth; a total of 378 students. Noxen building, with four teach- ers show 18 in the first grade; 13 in second; 18 in third; 15 in fourth; 22 in fifth; and 26 in sixth, a total of 112 children) At Ross, with six teachers, there are 170 pupils: 26 in the firgt grade; 29 in second; B4 in third; 25 in fourth; 28 im fifth; 8 in sixth, SCC CECE 33g 8 Rambling Around = 5 By The Oldtimer—D. A. Waters : ICE EE 3S CS EE ET EES Recently we were handed a copy of Wilkes-Barre Record dated Mon- day, June 29, 1896, 12 pages, priced 2 cents, on trains 3 cents, June 1895 circulation was shown as 9109. The ‘entire front page, several columns inside ,and the leading editorial covered the mine accident at Twin Shaft, Pittston Jet. in which about a hundred men were en- tombed, the exact number not de- termined, as some mine and muni- cipal officials were included. Trou- ble had been anticipated and the men were putting in additional bracing when “several acres” of the roof fell upon them. There was a simple location map, no pictures. This was a terrible blow to the Pittston area and the Valley in gen- eral and fully justified the space alloted, but to us the same paper is of more interest for the changes shown over sixty-six years. A lot of space was devoted to politics. The official] committee that day was expected to meet William McKinley at his home at Canton, Ohio, and notify him of his nomin- ation by the Republicans for the presidency. “Major McKinley's ac- ceptance speech was eagerly awaited. The Democrats had not met and were torn by controversy on the free silver issue, with full columns quoting national figures pro and con, the latter predicting dire conse- quences to the party if adopted. The classified column contained a long list of “Candidates cards”, all read- ing “subject to the decision of the Republican County ' Convention”, there being no primaries then. Even the Dallas Borough news was headed by politics. “At the Republican Caucus Saturday night, Dr. James G. Laing was elected to the Sena- torial Convention; William H. Pealer to the District Convention; and George Hileman to the County Con- vention . . , . Dr. C. A. Spencer and W. H. Capewell were elected Viligance Committee and P. T. Raub District Committeeman. There was a greater number of votes polled (29) than ever before at a Repub- lican Caucus in Dallas Borough’. Another Dallas item fixes the be- ginning of the street cars here. “John B. Reynolds, president of the Wilkes-Barre and Northern Rail- road; says they will be ready to com- mence laying tracks ih a few days. Our people are hoping that the road may be in operation by Fair time”. Some brands now common were advertised: [For example, Gold Medal Flour, Carters Little Liver Pills, Lydia Pinkhams Vegetable Compound, etc. Last adv. in the paper covered “The Keeley Cure”, a Scranton institution for those un- able to stop excessive drinking, Some business firms still with ®udl . . « « Safety THEY LOVED THE EDITOR? June 8, 1962 Dear Editor, “Publishing a hometown news- paper has many compensations,” writes Editor Ray K. Dover of THE VALENTINE (Neb.) NEWSPAPER, “but being well-liked is not one of them. Everyone,” he says, ‘‘hates the editor.” More specifically: “An editor who takes a firm stand on controversial issues, and tries to print all the news in an unbiased manner, may be respected (in a fair-minded community), but he will never be popular. “Sooner or later,” promises Mr. Dover, ‘such an editor will tread on the toes of every- one who reads the paper, be he friend or foe, neighbor or stranger.” i This editor lists as the “prime ‘sources of an editor's woes” wed- dings, obituaries and court news, noting such pitfalls as failure to describe grandmother’s dress in the wedding story or to include Uncle Joe's favorite poem in his obit. Those whose names appear in the court news, he says, come in two types: the abused, who suffered rank injustice; and the noble, who admit their guilt, but wish their names withheld to protect the sen- sibilities of others. “We have often pointed out,” he writes, “that we don’t make the news, we just print it. All anyone needs to do to keep his name out of the court news is to stay out of court. “Other ways to incur the wrath of readers are: Disagree with them on a school issue; misspell their names; give an- other church more space than you do their church , . , etc. ete. ete. “We sometimes think,” con- cludes Editor Dover, “what really irritates readers is the crusty old editor's refusal to drop dead. That seems to be the only way to please a big majority at one time.” Mebbe so. Certainly the thing most wrong with this strife-torm world of ours is the people in it. But, let the hometown editor drop dead and what happens? Grief is manifest on all sides. The Text from all pulpits is We Mourn Our Loss, The Marts of Trade close their| doors for the Funeral. And in their hearts the gripers of all species know the town will not be quite the same again. There is no hatred to- ward him, people were merely being their selfish selves. Come to think of it, they loved the Editor! Sincerely, Bob Taylor McLean, Va. ‘ advertised then. Vulcan Iron Works offered light locomotives. Penna. Supply Company, 60-64 Canal St. is Now Eastern Pennsylvania Supply Co.,, the street, now Pennsylvania Ave, Lost and found reported cows and horses, strayed in Wilkes-Barre, returnable to city addresses. R. E. Wallace manufactured carriages and business wagons, and there were" similar advertisements. Isaac Longs 73-75 Public Square, had a sale of piece goods, shown for the purpose intended, as “dress patterns”, “shirts patterns” ete. Last item, “Every piece of muslin undrwar must b sold—this means no regard to price”. The Boston Store had a furniture sale, each item described with about an inch of space. Parlor suits, 5 pcs. ma- hogany frame, plush upholstery $14.39. Three better grades ran up as high as $58. Bed room suites, 8 pes. described in detail, $7.39 to $21.98. Rockers, 98c to $1.58. Couches $600 to $14.50. There were no illustrations in the adver- tising, plenty of adjectives such as “elegant”. > 4 A short baseball column gave schedules and scores in the Eastern League, National League, and State League. Boarding houses advertised meal tickets, 21 meals $3.50. The Grand Opera House had, “Edisons marvelous Vitascope and High Class Vaudeville.” Prices 10c, 20c, 30c, matinees: children 10c, adults 20c. Shirt waists sold for 39¢, 49¢ to $1.00, summer corsets 50¢, childrens parasols 75c. There was a three column feature story inside, with crude picture, re- garding American horses sent over- seas, being much preferred to the local stock for drawing trams and other work requiring high training. There were several columns by regu- lar columnists on all kinds of things, including a column and g quarter by the "well known “Wouter Van Twiller” (pen name of a writer whose real name I have forgotton). Most of the last two columns on the last page was occupied by railroad time tables. Nothing was said about any changes and this was evident- ly a regular feature, at least part of the time. Lehigh Valley, Penn- sylvania, Delaware and Hudson, Montrose Railroad, N. Y. O. Q. W. RR, Jersey Central, D. L. & W., N.Y. S. & W. and W-B and E. The last stated, ‘departs from depot at west end of Market Street Bridge.” About three inches was’ given to timetable and few fares of “Electric Street Cars’. Today there is not a single passen- ger train or electric car on any railroad serving = Wilkes-Barre. Certainly times have changed. Valve . . . APPRECIATE PUBLICITY Dear Editor: Woman's Auxiliary of Nesbitt Memorial Hospital takes this oppor- tunity to thank you and your staff for your fine cooperation in giving such wonderful publicity of our 50th Anniversary Festival. Much. credit is due you and your paper for the great success we now enjoy and may you feel you have had a part in helping to furnish the new addition to the Nesbitt Nurses’ Home, since the proceeds from the Festival will be used for this pur- pose. Mrs. Carl N. Brown, Better Leighton Never by Leighton Scott HE WHO GETS BURNT Know what keeps Lehman police ‘busy for a couple hours every day? Chasing people out of the new high school building. 7 It seems that one high-ranking school official invited people through the news papers to look over the place and see what they thought. But, by law, the contractor still owns the building, and is liable if anyone gets hurt. And there's no place better than a construction area to get hurt in. I That reminds me of a Back Moun- tain case several years ago, where some kids fooled around a road- roller parked in the contractor's yard. They crossed the wires to start it, and thereupon lost some fingers in the fan pullies. Tough darts. But the judge saw it otherwise. It was an ‘attractive nuisance” that the nasty old con- tractor had left in his yard. How do these judges do it? I remember the days when you learned, as a boy, that fire was hot by getting burnt—not by getting paid. Things are getting to be such in this: country that I'd rather take my problems to a'judge than to a psychiatrist. Court costs are cheap- er than doctor-bills. POLICE DEPARTMENT ‘When the Republicans and Demo- crats start playing political hand- ball, our police departments feature more scene-shifting than “Anthony and Cleopatra”. Back Mountain chiefs become Back Mountain In- diang, and vice versa. Not only that, but Supervisors who never seem to be around when appropriations for caution signs are needed pop up like a white tornado when close friends get tagged for running stop-signs. For this reason a number of police-chiefs . who hold constable badges prefer to work as constables. It allows them freedom that their police badge does not. * As it turns out, the people are quick to reelect an efficient officer, whereas poh- ticians prefer teamwork, Con- stables are elected. Incidentaally, a constable can make arrests anywhere in the state, in or out of uniform. FAIR TIME The Bloomsburg Fair isn’t too far in the future, Lots of Back Moun- tain folks go every year. Their at- tendance is welcome by my old boss, Pat Reithoffer, Dallas ghowman. And they always find one of the best county fairs in the east. The only trouble is, the fair isn’t in Luzerne County. This county could use commercial stimulation, | and county fairs do a lot to help business. The old Dallas Fair, which died in 1916, was Queen of the to see it, and were never 'disap- pointed. It came to an end because atten- dance slowed down. But now our population vaults every year. and there might be quite some demand for a fair, if someone got to work on it, Plaudits to the Idetown Fire Com- pany for attempting to raise money these past few years by some other means than having an auction, Keep an eye on their festival (starts to- morrow), and see if such an enter- prise doesn’t show possibilities of what a fair could do for the Back Mountain, and for Luzerne County. Hospital Patient Johrd Hennenger, Druid Hills is a Mrs. Abram Nesbitt II, surgical patient at Nesbitt Hospital. I By Edward Collier When 50,000 dogwood trees bloom at Valley Forge, nearly as many visitors converge on “the most famous military camp in the world,” where in 1777 Gen- eral Washington and his be- draggled army endured a bitter winter of privation. Our Magic Circle auto tour starts at Washington’s Head- quarters, focal point of Valley Forge State Park. Colonial fit- tings and furnishings of the 1760 stone house are intact, even to the fishnet canopy over Martha’s four-poster bed. A blue and gold uniform hangs over a ladder- back chair, as if just discarded. The real feeling of Valley Forge emerges at the inner entrench- ments and the soldiers’ earth- floored log huts. Facing the parade ground is lovely Wash- _ington emorial Chapel, with a Copyright, 1962, Ethyl Corp. 56-bell carillon that plays the Star Spangled Banner at a hushed moment at sunset. The route of history is to Potts- town, iron production center since Colonial days, and its fully-pre- served, showplace 17562 Potts- grove Manor. Northeast is Quakertown, its old Meeting House still in use. Tiny Liberty Hall, today a barbershop, was a hiding place for the Liberty Bell —now in Independence Hall in Philadelphia—to keep the British from melting it down for can- nonballs. As you continue through pho- togenic green hills, there is a short side trip to Ringing Rocks, a strange garden of boulders, each emitting a different musical note when struck. The final stop is at Doylestown, famed for Mer- cer Museum of early American county. Families wagoned for days | Ev SE NENE NENA NE EERE NANA S AEA N ERATE un § Barnyard Notes ZAMNNNNEENEENSNSNNSNERNERENNSNNNEENEEBARREREEENEA CLAM—any of various mollusks, especially of certain edible species. The two common clams of the Atlantic Coast of North America are the round or hard clam, or quahog having a thick shell of rounded outline, most abundant from southern New England southward, and the long or soft clam having a thin elongate shell and long siphons, whose range extends further north, and which burrows in the mud, where it is taken by digging at low tide. The quahog does not burrow and is usually taken with rakes.—Webster’s New International Dictionary. It was Jim Lohman’s first trip to New England. He and I had nicely settled at a window table in Mother Carey’s Seafood House at Point Judith, Rhode Island, where we could watch the seagulls diving in the surf, when he spied steamed clams on the menu. “That's just my dish” grinned Jim who hates every vAriety of fish served on Fridays. So loosening his belt and settling back with a satisfied smile at the pretty little waitress, he ordered “Steamed Clams. I love steamed clams.” : There was a bustle at a nearby table as four men, obviougly! from New York or Philadelphia, found their seats. Not familiar with Rhode Island menus, they had the waitresses running in circles explaining the nature of each kind of fish. Finally they, too, settled on ‘steamed clams”. ‘ so ’ Tr) ~~ It wasn't long until the waitress brought Jim's order in two agate dishes—and placed beside them on the table one of the biggest bowls’ of drawn butter that Jim or I had ever seen. He was elated. “Gee, they never give me butter like this at home”! "Then he looked suspiciously into the agate dishes and tackled the: clams with some misgivings. “These are the darndest clams I ever saw. They're all out of shape, covered with seaweed and look like garbage”, but he was game! gr | . “How do you eat these things?” he asked innocently, as he care- fully examined the. protruding long black tipped necks, looking for all the world like a shrivelled Woolly Bear or chicken’s boiled wind- pipe. For anybody but a native New Englander the fare certainly was repulsive! The tremendous appetite was beginning to vanish! x Then I remembered. I had forgotten to warn Jim that clams in ‘New England bear little resemblance to the clams served in taverns and at clambakes in Pennsylvania. - Years earlier I had gone through a smiliar experience with my: mother, when on a trip through New England, she had innocently ordered “steamed clams” at an inoffensive little shore restaurant Her injured pride expessed itself in no uncertain terms: “You , should be ashamed to sell such things as clams” ghe indignantly told the incredulous proprietor. | Then it was I learned that the seafood New Englanders love as fried and steamed clams are in reality true clams—soft shelled, and that the clams Pennsylvanians and Marylanders love to steam are in reality quahogs. Ask for quahogs in any New England restaurant, and you'll get what you want—the hard shelled variety and possibly larger than the Little Necks so popular in the Middle Atlantic states. Jim never did finish his soft shells, carefully covering one agate dish with the other when he had finished half of them. “Darned if I can do it” he said regretfully. Then wishfully looking at that full bowl of drawn butter he added, “They never do give you enough butter at home, and up here where you can’t eat the clams look how much they give you!” ‘As we paid our check and departed sullenly from Mother Carey’s establishment we could see over our shoulders that our friends from Philadelphia,” or maybe it was New York, were also learning the hard way—that when a New Englander says; “clams” he means soft shells and what a Pennsylvanian really wants, are quahogs! vd tools, utensils and machines. , From Pillar To Post... by Hix : In case you see Hix limping along on foot instead of driving the English Austin, think nothing of it. The English Austin is in the hospital in Richmond, getting its clutch removed, and a new clutch! installed. From all the frenzied phoning back and forth, you'd think it was in the operating room, attended by a pair of Dr. Kil- dares equipped with retractors and head mirrors, masked to the eye- brows, and breathing painfully under a general anaesthetic, with nurses around the clock lying in wait. : It turned out to be a pretty expensive vacation,” It probably would have been cheaper to check in at the Ritz, with hot and cold running servants and breakfast in bed. * But there were a lot of compensations. And after all, the vaca- tion was all but over when the car gave up sixty-four miles south of Richmond, within stone-tossing distance of the spot marked with a black X on my map, where disaster struck about fifteen years ago. (Or was it sixteen? How can anybody keep track of time?) This time, the car didn’t go off the road and climb a telephone pole. It just quietly died. It followed the tow truck into Richmond with ‘great docility, rolling,up the expense as it trundled along. But, as noted above, there were compensations. Going down to Charleston, there was that delightful ferry trip across; the mouth of Chesapeake Bay, where huge equipment is already anchored and bridge construction well under way. Some- thing over twenty miles of bridge and tunnel will eventually put the ferries out of business, but at this point they are making hay. Everybody wants to have a look at the mammoth undertaking. Miss a ferry these days, and another will be right along. To be sure, by water it takes a lot longer than it will take when the bridge is open, but the breeze on the upper deck is a welcome relief after a hot day of driving along Route 13 down through Delaware, Mary- land and Virginia, to Cape Charles. 3 Virginia Beach doesn’t look like it used to. It was a quiet homelike beach before progress caught up with it. No possible reason for lingering there. Twenty years add up to many changes. | Tom and I went on through Norfolk, negotiated the turn onto Route 17 south, and kept going. There would be a nice motel any minute. ] There is a motel proprietor down thataway who coins money late at night. He makes no effort to catch his clientele until after dark. Then he sits out front with a crab-net, catching cars as they hurtle out of the fagtnesses of Dismal Swamp. For miles and miles of lonesome road there isn’t a thing. A driver begins to wonder if all the motels have rolled up the sidewalks, and when lights show up dead ahead, with the welcome Vacancy sign blazing, it seems like- tempting providence to keep rolling, Who knows when the next motel will appear? { The proprietor claims he does very well indeed, late at night. As we registered, two more cars rolled thankfully into the com- pound, and by three o'clock in the morning all units were filled, and Mr, Whozit tured off the lights and turned in. He catches up on his sleep in the daytime. It was an easy drive to the Tsle of Palms, near Charleston, on Monday. and the swimming was superior all week. Next time, we'll remind ourselves to get going on Friday instead of tempting pro- vidence by waiting until Saturday. Garages have a way of closing at noon on Saturday, and at noon, all was still going smoothly. | It is just as well to draw a merciful veil over the rest of the weekend. Garages not only close at noon on Saturday, they remain closed until Monday morning at 8. And on Monday morning I wag due back at the Dallas Post . , . and got there on schedule. giv | - ete raat &