po - SECTION A — PAGE 2 THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its 13rd Year” A non-partisan, liberal progressive newspaper pub- lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania. ‘ 9, Member Audit Bureau of Circulations < Ih: Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association A EF 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. Subcription 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, 15¢c. 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. When requesting a change of address subscribers are asked to give their old as well as new address. Allow two weeks for change of address or new subscription 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 ay affair for raising money will appear in a specific issue. ~ Preference will in all intances be given to editorial matter which has not previously appeared in other publications. National display advertising rates 84c¢ per columa inch. Transient rates 80. Political advertising $.85, $1.10, $1.25 per inch Preferred position additional 10e¢ per inch. Agvertising deadline Monday 5 P.M. Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged at 85c per column inch. Classified rates 5¢ per word. Minium if dhinrged $1.15. Single copies at a rate of 10c can be obtained every Thursday morning at the following newstands: Dallas — Bert's Drug Store, Colonial Restaurant, Daring’s Market, Gosart’'s Market, Towne House Restaurant; Shavertown — Evans Drug Store, Hall's Drug Store; Trucksville Cairng Store, Trucksville Pharmacy; Idetown — Cave’s Market; Harveys Lake — Javers Store Kocher's Store; Sweet Valley — Adams Grocery; Lehman—Stolarick’s Store; Noxen — Scouten’s Store; Shawaneses — Puterbaugh’s Store; Fern- brook — Bogdon’s Store, Bunney's Store, Orchard Farm Restaur< ant; Luzerne — Novak's Confectionary. Editorially Speaking: A Vanishing Breed? Sez Who?! People in the larger cities, sadly lacking in grass- roots knowledge, deplore the passing of the old fashioned general practitioner and of the rural editor. To this, we make the simple statement, Bushwah! . Folks in the Back Mountain may rest secure in the knowledge that they have general practitioners, plenty of them, and also a newspaper that is rolling right along in spite of many tribulations during the past year . . . a newspaper that carries news of the community, the small but extremely important happenings which do not make front page news in the New York papers, but are of vital interest to our residents. ‘Judging by the cars which the general practitioners are running, the profession is flourishing. And judging by the ads which The Dallas Post is carrying, the rural newspaper which carries tidings of life and death, and marriages and birth, is also feeling no pain. This is a good community. It deserves good doctors and a good newspaper, and it has both. But in case you don’t have the lowdown on rural newspapers and their value to a community, tune in next Tuesday evening at 10:30 to Channel 16, and hear about a grass-roots newspaper down in Kentucky, when the McLean County News and its editor Landon Wills sit - for their portrait on “A Vanishing Breed.” (Who says it’s vanishing?) | A Great Crusade Begins By Mgrs. FREDERICK W. ANDERSON April is with us again. Harbinger of new life and promise, it serves a dual purpose. : For as all nature swings into a lovely growing season and its sunlit days signal death to winter, so we, too, must labor that 88,000 among us may not die. We are in the opening days of a great Crusade and from every street in every borough and township, an army is massing its forces. The banner it follows indeed bears the symbol of a mighty sword but in this war it is a weapon of mercy and not of destruction. Its soldiers are unskilled in the techniques of battle but throughout its ranks there are none more dedicated to a cause. So that others might live, free of the great scourge, they march. And their foe is Cancer! ‘Why do they march? In hope that an additional 4700 children may not fall victim again this year; that 250,000 mothers will not have died in vain; that 300,000 fathers torn from their needed families will not have made the supreme sacrifice. The foe creeps insidiously among us, respecting no one. Rich and poor, young and old, white or black, Christian or Jew, it claims with unrelenting i invasion, one every two minutes. The American Cancer Society needs your support. By research, education and service it can conquer. Open your doors and your hearts to its volunteers. Rural Republicans To Meet At Hunlock's Chairman of the Fourth Legisla- tive District, James Cooke will pre- side at a joint meeting of the Re- publican Women of Hunlock Creek and the Rural Republican Club Tuesday, April 23 at 8 p.m. at the Fire Hall Hunlock Creek. Co-chairmen are Mrs. Edgar Sor- ber, Mrs. Florence Cragle, and Wil- liam Goss; on the refreshment com- mittee are Mesdames Frances Sut- ton, Florence Cragle, Ronnie Sutton, Doris Roberts, Erma Zika, Beatrice Hummel, and Ida Roberts. The Rural Republican Club com- prises these areas: Lake, Ross, Union, Hunlock, Fairmount, Hunt- ington, Conyngham, Salem, Lehman, and Slocum Townships, and Shick- shinny and New Columbus Boroughs. ~ Save On Your Printing Have It Done By The Post Whittaker Member Of Pershing Rifles Cadet Corporal William A. Whit. taker, sophomore at Pennsylvania Military College at Chester, is now a fully accredited member of the famous Pershing Rifle Drill Team, according to word received at Easter time by his parents Mr. and Mrs. Alton Whittaker, Church Street. Bill, a 1960 Dallas High School graduate, said here on his spring vacation, that one of the thrills of a lifetime was taking part in the drill team meet at Champagne, Illinois, March 8 and 9, where the Pershing Rifle Drill Team took top National Honors. The first American artillery shot of World War,I was fired Oct. 23, 1917, by Battery C of the 6th Field Artillery, Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post Ft Happened 30 Years Ago Back Mountain teams were all set to open the baseball season of the Bi-County League. Large sums collected in land re- turns by county commissioners were I not being claimed by local commu- nities. Robert Laux needed twenty su- tures to close the wound in his arm suffered when a truck sideswiped the vehicle in which Bob and his father were riding near Birch Grove. Mt. Greenwood Kiwanis Club scheduled a large card party to raise funds for their Underprivi- ledged Children’s Fund. The organ- ization paid for tonsil operations on 39 children last year. ' Young people in Dallas were com- | pleting plans for a tennis court to be erected on Lehman Avenue be- tween Anderson and McCarty prop- ‘erties. © @& Early pletion of local folk ap- peared in this issue loaned by Wyo- ming Valley Motor Club, a Dallas Post customer. John Hanson, general manager, Harvey's Lake Picnic Ground, was planning new improvements to the recreation park. Superior chicks, blood tested, were selling for eight and nine cents a chick. Marriage: Martha Oney, Trucks- ville, was married to Fabian O’dell, Shavertown. "Deaths: Purcell Johnston, 67, Shavertown; S a mu el Griffith, 76, Dallas; Emma Major, 55, Lehman; Phyllis Benscoter, 16, Muhlenburg; John Sheridan, 76, Dallas; Charles | Randall, Loyalville; Hattie Wilcox, 60, Huntsville. It Happened 20 Years Ago Gold Star parents unveiled a beautiful Honor Roll in Trucksville. OPA officials investigated black market sale of gasoline ration cou- pons in Back Mountain area. Clean Up Week. was proclaimed in Dallas beginning April 26. Dallas Township began collection of 235,000 pounds of scrap for the war effort. ‘A picture taken in Iran and sent to the Dallas Post revealed the loca- tion of James Harris, Alderson, stationed with the Armed Services ‘Weddings: Marian Remley, Shav- ertown, to Marsellus Hubschmitt. A lovely doe amused local young- asters when she swam for an hour in Harvey's Lake, slowly sauntering through the yard of Frank Jackson before reentering the woodlands. Bobby Snyder's pup was the 7th dog in the Back Mountain area to enter the K-9 corps. Died: Doris Pealer, Sweet Valley; John Sutton, Beaumont; Mrs. Olive Scot, Lehman; Mrs. Anna Sutton, Beaumont. It Happened i0 Years Ago Little Guy Zerfoss, Shavertown, wag seriously injured by a hit and run driver, near his home. Infant Cindy Haddle, Kunkle, was saved from suffocation by Jason Kunkle and Fred Dodson using new resuscitator mask of Harry E. Smith Fire Company. Shavertown Fire Company pon- dered dilemma of worn out fire truck. James and Kenneth dropped the Hudson car agency. Herbert A. Ward assumed man- agership of the Dallas Acme. Roger Paget, Yeager Avenue, Dallas, was awarded Wyoming Sem- to Europe. ‘Weddings: Grace Marie Laux, Shavertown, to Robert Gardiner, Trucksville. Died: Harbert Hill, Shavertown, well known Back Mountain florist and civic leader, died in General Hospital following a stroke suffered several days previously. Mr. Hill was working among his beloved plants and flowers shortly before he was stricken. Granville Sowden, Jr., 23, Wes- leyan graduate, died at his home following several months illness. Mrs. Calista Dymond, 73, Chase. Embulance First Aid Course In Session First Aid classes for ambulance crew-men began Monday night at the borough building, William Wright instructing. Those in attendance received manuals if they wanted to buy them, and heard Bill Wright speak briefly on the aims and goals of first aid instruction. Standard and advanced first-aid will be taught during the sixteen hours of course, at the end of which members will be tested for qualifi- cation. Those registering were: Robert Besecker, Gilbert Morris, John Carey, Hayden Richards, L. R. Scott, James Davies, Leslie Tins- ley, Don Shaffer, Leonard Harvey, William Wright, Charles Young- blood, Robert Block, and Charles Flack. Meetings are at 7 Monday nights, excepting the fourth Monday of every month when the class will [moet at 6:88, - | drug store at Alderson. Oliver inary ‘Scholarship, a six week trip: THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, APRIL 18, 1963 Rambling Around By The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters A RN NN NN NN TY Dr. James Rowley Lewis, first physician back of the mountain, is] said to have located in the wilder- ness in the Carverton area in 1831. In 1833, he purchased a homestead in 'Trucksville where he practiced over half a century, being the oldest practicing « physician - in Luzerne County at the time of his death Nov. 2, 1883. He was about 29 years old when he settled in Trucksville and his first wife died the same year, possibly before he came here. His second wife was Mary Ferguson, daughter of Alexander Ferguson of Dallas. Their children, most of whom lived to very old age, were: Thomas H. B., Jeanette, Margaret, James M., Esther, Sylvia Jane, and Mary. Small-pox was a dreaded disease in Dr. Lewis’ time. Levi, Hunt of Dallas died of it in 1828-29, caught while on a rafting trip down the river to Baltimore, said to be the first death from ‘that disease in Dallas Town- ship. Jacob Miers also caught it on a similar trip and died not long afterward. . A Doctor John Smith served as a viewer in 1831 when Monroe Town- ship was cut off from Northmore- land and Dallas and other parts of adjoining townships. This was prob- ably the Doctor John Smith of Wyoming, a grandson of one of the original Susquehanna Company pro- prietors, who was active in politics. He started in Wyoming in 1815. The first doctor in Dallas Town- ship is said to have been Doctor Thomas Henry Nutt. He was so assessed in 1844, the year after Franklin Township was cut off. The next was Doctor Isaac Whipple, who came to Dallas about 1844-45. For generations, up ‘to fairly recent years, Dallas was known as a two- doctor town. There were other doc- tors scattered around in the smaller villages, a few miles apart, in the horse and buggy days, but usually only one in a place. In earlier days doctors learned to practice by train- ing with a practicing doctor, like lawyers learned law in the office of a lawyer. One such doctor was Doctor Da- vid M. Silkworth (1820-1890) who came to Monroe Township area in 1862. To him is credited the name, “Beaumont,” meaning, in French, “beautiful mountains.” After prac- ticing in several other states, he came here during the Civil War and shortly thereafter served with the 53rd Pennsylvania Volunteers as a physician, After the war he returned and resumed practice, also keeping a drug store and post office. Much later, Doctor Lorenzo Byron Avery, kept a general store end He was trained as a physician but practffed very little. He was commonly called “Doc” Avery and was a very well read and popular man at the Lake. He wrote prose and poetry and was a regular contributor to THE DAL- LAS POST for many years. One of the early professionally trained doctors, well known all over | the area, was Doctor Joel Jackson Rogers of Huntsville. He was of a pioneer family, in the country, and in the Valley. The pioneer from England was Joseph Rogers, whose son, Hope, was the father of Josiah (1720-1815), who came to the Val- ley in 1776. He fled after the Mas- sacre, his first wife dying in the Wilderness less than a week after the battle. After the war he re- turned to the Valley and was the father of Jonah and grandfather of Rev. Joel Rogers, a Baptist preacher and teacher, Rev. Joel Rogers had three wives and five children, in- cluding Doctor Joel. Doctor Joel Jackson Rogers (1818-1902) . was trained in New York City. He came to Lehman in 1846 and moved to Huntsville in 1847. He lived in the white house, first on the right leaving Huntsville toward Dallas, overlooking the gorge, said to have been built by Burr Baldwin in 1831. He extensive- ly remodeled it on his marriage to Sarah Caroline Rice, daughter of Rev. Jacob Rice and his wife, Sarah Cook, Mayflower descendant, of Trucksville. Since Doctor Rogers and wife were both children of preachers, they were highly regard- ed as members of Huntsville Meth- odist Church for over half a century. There were community leaders in other respects, such as debating classes, and similar activities of the time. My father grew up at Huntsville with the children of Doctor Rogers, and I knew personally several of them and also his grandchildren, one of whom, Alfred Rogers, still lives at Huntsville. Doctor Rogers was the first of four generations of doctors. His son, Doctor Lewis Le- onidas Rogers, was located in the first block of Wyoming Avenue, Kingston. His grandson, Doctor L. L. Rogers, Jr. practiced in Wilkes-Barre as does his great grandson, Doctor L. L. Rogers, 3rd. This started out to be a survey of all the older doctors in the area and the surface is barely touched. There were several doctors in the Lehman area and also in the gener- al Centremoreland-Franklin Town- ship area, as well as in Dallas, Trucksville and Shavertown. We may have space for the late well known and highly respected Doctor Sherman Schooley (1899- 1952) who was cut down in the prime of life at 53 by a heart at- tack. He was our own family phy- sician at the time. Doctor Schooley came of a family in the country over three hundred years, pioneers in this ‘area. He was not of the horse and buggy days, but worked just as hard as the doctors did then, always cheerful and efficient at any time of the day or night. This will be continued. Dallas Township Pioneers Spend Day Clearing Tract, Never Find It Again The following items of interest concerning the origin of Dallas Township were gleaned from the early “History of Luzerne County” found recently by Joseph Chisko, Dallas. DALLAS TOWNSHIP Dallas Township was formed from Kingston in 1827 and embraces a portion of one of the certified town- ships called Bedford. It was named in honor of Alexan- der J. Dallas of Philadelphia. The first log house was erected on the present site of Dallas Borough in 1797 by Ephraim McCoy, a Rev- olutionary soldier. A small log cabin had been previously erected which was supposed to have been a hunt- er's abode, Constructed without floors it showed evidence of stand- ing for several years. The second residence was built soon after by William Briggs. Daniel Spencer, John Wort and John Kelley, Revolutionary soldiers, Elam Spencer, J. Mears, John and John Honeywell, Jr., William Hon- eywell, Isaac Montanye, and the two Ayers brothers were among the first settlers. In 1808, William Honeywell came | from New Jersey and bought 500 acres of land. On it he completed a log house which had been partly built. A year later, he built a frame addition which was ‘the first frame dwelling in Dallas. The carpenter work was done by R. M. Duffy. [The first saw mill was erected by Judge Baldwin on a branch of Toby’s Creek in 1813, the second by Christian Rice in 1818, which was in use "until 1875. Almond Goss built and conducted the first store about 1840. Charles Harris and his father made the first clearing. They came from an ad- joining section, found a desirable tract, chopped one day and returned home. They were never able to find the place again. The first school house was erect- ed in Dallas (now Dallas Borough) in 1816 of hewn logs by William Honeywell, Philip Shaver, William Hunt and John Honeywell. Site was given by Shaver. In 1848, Edgar Marsh built the first tannery. It burned and a new one was built by John Lawler, who manufactured large quantities of leather, Peter Roushey operated the first tavern situated at the forks of the village and sold grog. Jacob Miers and Miles C. Orr also opened like establishments, Henry Hagaman was the first post rider, © carrying the mail from Wilkes-Barre to Bowman's Creek. J. Wesley Kunkle became the first postmaster at the Kunkle Post Of- fice, Sanford Morse the postmaster at Ketchum postal quarters. The latter branch was named in honor ° of W. W. Ketchum, Congress. Peter Ryman opened offices as the first pettifogger and was ex- tremely successful. Thomas Irwin was first justice of the peace. The first painted house was owned by Jacob Rice, the first spring buggy also ‘was acquired by him. Abram Honeywell was the proud owner of the first cast iron plow and William Honeywell, the first patent wagon brake. Farming and lumbering were the chief occupations in the district, much of the land being cleared and cultivated. The area is twenty-one square miles. Among the pioneer preachers were Marmaduke Pierce and Ben- jamin Bidlack, the latter a Revolu- tionary soldier. Services were held in the rude residences until the schools were built. No account of the early office holders is available nor that of early member of township meetings, all records hav- ing been destroyed. | Noxen Fund Drive Still Needs Boost Chairman of Noxen Ambulance Fund drive Dave Fritz extends thanks to committee members who have given whole-heartedly of their time and energy, and asks anyone in the area not called on to come forward and help. Every year a certain portion of the fund is set aside for the pur- chase, some day, of a new ambu- lance. This year the committee hopes, with the aid of those who may still come forth, to double that amount set aside over last year. Committee members are: Roger Opdahl, A. E. Ruff, Alan Kitchen, Ed Condon, Elmer Race, Arlie Har- vey, Spencer Holmgren, and Oscar Fish. To date they have collected $950.45, and last year’s campaign brought in $1015.05. Anyone who has not yet con- tributed can give whatever he likes to Dave Fritz. Catalogues - Brochures Try Past Offset SR p Io ry Josie Better Leighton Never by Leighton Scott LAKE BUSINESSMEN At least one Harveys Lake busi- ness-owner is getting more and more put out every fishing season. Perennially, the opening of season denotes a brand new year to those who have just held their own, stay- | ing open through the hard, unprofit- able winter. Now, and for the last several years, push-cart and hot-dog truck peddlers have invaded the area, set- tling down right next to the water. Nobody's going to walk for a sandwich on opening day if they can get one without pulling out their line, even if the nearer sandwich doesn’t taste like much. Now a lot of fishermen will go to the established businesses only to use the rest-rooms. Even the ped- dlers use them. What the business-owners need is a stiffer transient merchants license, especially with seasonal as- pect of business at the Lake. Problem is, as one supervisor sees is that signs warning peddlers must be put at every road into the town- ship, and this would run many hundreds of dollars. WE DIDN'T SAY THAT I was rather amazed last week to note an interesting twist given to our little story about the sale of Noxen tannery. More amazed, probably, are exec- utives at Armour Leather in Wil- liamsport, who by this time must have set up barbed wire and Bren guns in front of their offices in order to hold off indignant reporters righteously demanding to know who bought it. It’s no trick for a paper or a radio station to borrow another's mate- rial, and, in fact, it is reciprocally practiced all the time, with the help of “rewrite men”. I'll never forget the time we wrote about a quiet pastor’s wife modest- ly going about some man-sized con- struction chores for the good of her husband’s flock, and we’commented “Who says the pioneer spirit is dead in America?” The next day I was delighted to find elsewhere that she had been quoted as ‘asserting ‘The pioneer spirit is dead in America’. Well, this time everybody (and you all know your names), decided to emphasize the tail-end of our story to wit: “Word from Wil- liamsport has it that official decla- ration can not be expected until next week at the earliest.” ‘We had phoned the company, stated ‘the nature of the call, and were told that no one could even talk to us on that subject until next week. - Hence the “at the earliest” part. Deducing that. a little outfit like the Post wouldn't waste money | phoning Williamsport, the others, I guess, figured the “word from Wil- liamsport has it” part to mean that the foremen had been sent back to Noxen by the plant manager with a sealed promise on the part of the| company to declare their purpose this week. We didn’t say that. DANCES (RESUME Tt was gratifying to see attend- ance so good at the teenage dance Monday night at the Legion Post Home. The dance had stopped for Lent. From here on, the event will be held, as before the season, Saturday nights. We wanted to do our part to help these dances by giving them publicity for the opener Monday, and had set the story in type, ready to go. It was then that the occasional and unforeseeable space problem arose, and we had to do some fast cutting of material. Actually, the note about the dance should "have been given priority, since the upcoming event was the following week. But in the mad last- minute dash to throw some news in | the path of wildly vegetating Easter advertising, it must have gotten overlooked. Community Concert To Close List April 27 Membership in the 1963-1964 Community Concert series will be closed Saturday, April 27. Admis- sion is by membership card only. The campaign is now going on, Mrs. | John Bennett of Kingston is chair- man. : Four top concert attractions are scheduled, with Robert Merrill, opera baritone, heading the list. Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra directed by Maestro William Stein- berg, returns after an absence of two years. Completing - the season will be Lorin Hollander, young American pianist, and the Schola Cantorum of New York City. Many residents saw on TV the iSchola Cantorum on the program at the gala open- ing in New York’s Lincoln Center, when it was directed by Leonard Bernstein. Moved To Valley Crest Mrs. Emma Gensel, 90, was mov. ed from Mercy Hospital to Valley Crest Tuesday by Dallag Ambulance. Mrs. Gensel, who lives with her daughter, Miss Catherine Gensel, 211 Hellers Grove, Trucksville, fractured her hip election day and ‘has been a medical patient at Mercy Hospital since. Manning the ambulance were William Kreischer, Kingston Township and Bob Be- | sacker, Dallas. From— : DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Pillar To Post... By Hix Joe Hoeg dropped around Easter evening to discuss this and that before returning to University of Maryland ‘after the spring vacation, and the talk turned on the lost submarine. ‘Joe has been doing some boning up on stresses and strains in metals, the changes that take place when a welding job is done, not in the weld itself, but in the surrounding metals. Almost at once I was far over my head in technicalities, but bits and pieces came back from a childhood spent in boundless admiration for a surgeon father who could do everything just a little better than anybody else could do it, and who held that surgery was simply ap- _ plied mechanics, Watching Papa fashion a special surgical instrument, one de- signed for a specific job, I learned quite a bit by indirection about metals. Papa explained that it was the rate of cooling that did the trick, that if you wanted a soft result you cooled it slowly, and if you wanted a good hard brittle job you plunged it sizzling into cold water, and the larger the job the more difficult it was to control the cooling temperature. Papa hammered delicately, shaping his instrument on the anvil, and plunged it into the tub of water. Then he hammered out the other piece, and when he assembled the thing, it was a rib-cutter with a particularly vicious snap to its jaws, in a baby size, just exactly right for the very small baby he was intending to use it on, a far smaller model than could be purchased at that time. After the operation was successfully performed, Papa sent the rib-cutter to be plated. There wasn’t time to do anything in ad- vance except fashion the life-saving bit of metal. It probably looked odd, sterilized with all the shiny clamps and scissors scalpels but it did the trick. Joe listened with interest, and then he returned to the sub- marine. If it could be snared at the end of a towing cable, he thought, it could be jockeyed up to the Continental Shelf into shal- low water and examined more minutely than would be possible while resting deep on the ocean floor. “Nobody would ever sell me a bill of goods on signing up for submarine duty,” I ventured. “You'd be caught like a rat in a trap if anything went wrong.” “Now Mrs. Hicks, don’t give me that stuff, you'd be the first to go down, and you're not fooling me a bit.” A horrid memory reared its head. It was in the harbor at Annapolis at least a hundred years ago. There was the submarine, fresh from the Spanish American War, one of the first models; lying at anchor off the Naval Academy, its oily surface lapped by small waves. And there was my great-aunt Delphine, gathering her volu- minous skirts about her, and shaking her white curls, insisting upon climbing down the hatchway. It wasn’t a conning tower in those days, just a small blister on the cigar-shaped surface. Aunt Delphine could always be depended upon to make a diver- sion. On this occasion, she was restrained from boarding the sub- marine by a scandalized officer who clearly considered that elderly women should remain in the kitchen, doing whatever it is that elder- ly women do in kitchens. I was terribly disappointed. I had planned to slip aboard the submarine in Aunt Delphine’s wake, after she had successfully nego- tiated the narrow ladder, but it was not to be. And since that date, my enthusiasm for submarine has suffered a steady process of attrition. I could say with perfect truth Sunday night, and mean it, “No, Joe, you'll never get me on a submarine, go pack up your persuasive powers and get out of here, you have to go back to college tomorrow and bone up some more on metals. Who knows, maybe you'll be able to spot what was wrong, with that welding job.” And off Joe galloped, the best yard boy I ever had, and a boy the Back Mountain will beproud of some day. Joe is going Places, a ‘fine “advertisement for what Dallas schools can do. Guard The Arbrutus As housing developments spread farther and farther afield, and woodland hills are shorn of their trees, the region is in grave danger of losing one of its treasures. Year after year the trailing arbutus, is disappearing, and when it goes, it never returns. Tt is impossible to transplant successfully. It resents interference. Children are not the only ones who tear it up by the roots heedlessly. “Well, it’s GROWING there, isn’t it, and it isn’t doing anybody any good, why shouldn’ t1take it home?’ protests the picknicker with her hands full of the fragile pink blossoms. She crams the beautiful fragrance and the shell-pink loveliness into a vase, and two days later all that is left of the trailing arbutus is a smallbunch of dry twigs. Throw it out. It was pretty while it lasted, wasn’t it? T Once, passenger pigeons darkened the sky. Un- counted millions were trapped for food. The supply was endless. There would always be passenger pigeons. Came a spring when the flocks were not so large. Another spring when the flocks were perceptibly smaller. A spring when there were no passenger pigeons, and an- other spring when a substantial reward was offered for just one pair of passenger pigeons. The reward is still offered, but nobody has ever col= lected it. Hopeful bird lovers have responded, but the passenger pigeon is now extinct. Here in these hills we have a heritage for future gen- erations.: If you know where there is trailing arbutus, guard the secret from careless hands. If you pluck arbutus, pluck only a little, and take it with a sharp snip of the scissors, not tearing it up by the roots. Its woody roots extend under the surface. Disturb the roots, even by a gentle pull, and that portion will die. New System Will Ease Detour Travel Mrs. Newman Needs Early Pix Of Area ways this summer will no longer have trouble with “Detour Signs,” thanks to the ingenuity of George Bennett, traffic engineer in the De- partment, Detour signs will be replaced by new markers, announcing “Road Closed—Follow Red Arrows.” An- other sign above the announcement will show a sample arrow. Red arrows will then point out the motorist’s route, indicating whether he should turn right or left. Two will often be used to make sure a turn is not missed. The end of each detour will be marked “End Detour.” Robert J. Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Phillips, Burndale Road, announce the birth of a seven pound, four ounce baby | +t boy, Robert John Jr., their first child. or Mrs. Phillips is the former Pa- tricia Ann Wybersky of Wyoming. Every contributor to CARE’S Food Crusade gets a receipt that| shows the countiies whose people will be helped. Motorists touring the State High- | Mrs. Arthur Newman, who is collecting material for a scrapbook for the Library Auction, would ap- preciate pictures, preferably of the early days of the century, showing the lumber industry at Stull. She needs pictures of the open street- cars which used to serve Harveys Lake, and of the Lake steamboats. Does anybody in this area know when the last streetcar ran to the Lake? Who was the motorman? Anybody who has a retired street-car man in the family is asked to get in touch with Mrs. Newman. With the new highway about to change the face of the Back Moun- tain even more drastically than changes in the past, it is important to preserve the history of the re- gion. Things which do not seem of his- torical significance now, may wells prove of great value in the future. 64 Donors At Linear Tuesday's Bloodmobile collection” at Linear saw 64 candidates offer- ing their blood to keep their or ganization eligible for transfusion through the Blood Bank program, -