Member Audit Bureau of Circulations oa Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association = a: | Frog legs were in season, and Member National Editorial Association Nl o | many frog-catchers were sold solid Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. Coa’ | on the time honored lure of a bit Fh le — le Of red flannel offered on a = A non-partisam, liberal progressive newspaper pub- | barbed hook. After frogs legs quiet lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, | down in the frying pan, they're yl Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania. | superb eating. fees We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu- | Mrs. Stella Fiske, wife of the ew. scripts, photographs and editorial matter unless self-addressed, | former Dallas Constable Edward “* stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be Fiske, died at her home on Parrish vas held for more than 30 days. Heights. ———- When requesting a change of address subscribers are asked | hig Ch ; 3 Wow = swe mp give their old as well as new address. [ne aS ID ° ———" | lector Milton Neyhart, died aged _———: Allow two weeks for change of address or new subscription 76. 2 be placed on mailing list. Helen England resigned from oe The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local Kingston Township faculty, Sarah | —_ hospitals. If you are a patient ask your nurse for it. | Pfahler was appointed. Unless paid for at advertising rates, we can give no assurance Dallas firemen were ready for i that announcements of plays, parties, rummage sales or any affair the four day carnival on the Adel- a for raising money will appear in a specific issue. man plot. Nightly dances, a mid- Preference will in all intances be given to editorial matter which | way, an air circus, and suppers | ; as not previously appeared in other publications. ore on the, spead. Sons di ~ 8 gy . y. . eunion oO ertram, Sl Sy vee rates 84c per column inch. Elston families at Huntsville. Political advertisi 85 $11 A 5 Tuna. fish was two cans for a al a vertising $. 5 $1.10, $1.25 per inch quarter, coffee 21 cents a pound. Preferred position additional 10c per inch. Advertising deadline And no farmer could get rich on , Monday 5 P.M. butter at two pounds for 55 cents. i Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged Classified rates 5c per word. Minimum if charged $1.15. 20 Years Ago on Single copies at a rate nf 10c can be obtained every Thursday ; morning at the following newstands: Dallas — Bert's Drug Store, Russell Houser, Jr.; 17, member of Towne House Restaurant; Shavertown — Evans Drug Store, Halls Wyoming Seminary swimming team, ad ant; Luzerne — Novak's Confectionary; Beaumont — Stone’s Grocery. | broke his neck in a fall into a Wap- Colonial Restaurant, Daring’s Market, Gosart’s Market, wallopen stream when the bank 4, Drug Store; Trucksville — Cairns Store, Trucksville Pharmacy; gave way... os Sd Idetown — Cave’s Market; Harveys Lake — Javers Store Kocher’s Ann Griffin, 19, Pioneer Avenues, @ pa iii oid Faw re Lo FREER A AOE ERE BOR EEE WEEN EERE Sree .EEY MEER EE EAE EER EE VE EEE ENE we eae EE TARE Ew war SECTION A — PAGE 2 Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1889. 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. Students away from home $3.00 a term; Out-of- tate $3.50. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c. "THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 Only Yesterday | Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post 30 Years Ago THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1964 This Was When The Library Was Young St. Bernard dog, enjoy the mornings in the Library? thered in the main library building, which used to Story Hour Saturday Those | were the days when moppets ga- Remember Dusty, the mammoth | but the Story Lady was the same, | Mrs. H. W. Smith. Pick yourself out of the mob. back when! Lehman Township was part of 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- at 85c per column inch. Editor and Publisher .... Associate Editors— ve... MYRA Z. RISLEY Mrs. T.M.B. Hicks, LeicuroN R. Scott, JR. Social Editor Advertising Manager Business Manager Circulation Manager Accounting Mgrs. DoroTHY B. ANDERSON Louise Marks Doris R. MALLIN Mrs, VELMA Davis SANDRA STRAzZDUS “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution was killed in a highway accident. Lt. Peter Skopic was held by the Germans after his plane was down- ed by Nazi fighters. Two airborne men were wounded in France the week after D-Day. William Glenn Knecht was a glider flight officer; Jack Evans a para- trooper. Robert Norman Smith, Huntsville was appointed to Annapolis. Mrs. W. B. Sutton, Carverton, 74, suffered deep lacerations when injured in a car driven by her 16 year old nephew. Mrs. Sutton went National Advertising Representative (NR) AMERICAN NEWSPAPER REPRESENTATIVES e. ATLANTA eo CHICAGO DETROIT o LOS ANGELES ¢ NEW YORK Editorially Speaking They Take Things For Granted See that the kids employ the buddy system swimming. And remember this: the risk in the water. Small children do not realize If a playmate goes under and stays there, they think he is playing, and that he will come up Soon. Small children are faced with unusual things every day of their lives. They take things for granted. Exposed to tragedy on TV, they simply do not rec- ognize it as part of daily life, something which could happen to Johnnie, or Susie, or to themselves. ; Be sure that there is somebody with common sense in charge when your small children swim, and don’t leave the entire responsibility to a baby sitter. Baby sitters are very convenient institutions, but their attention can be diverted just long enough for Johnnie to slip under the surface and drown. It's A Safety Measure Construction on the new highway from Luzerne to Dallas has been exceptionally free of headaches for the _ motorist. \ There have been rough spots in the roadbed, and single-lane traffic at times, but this inconvenience is noth- ing compared with what it might have been if the road had been completely closed and all traffic diverted. * Now that part of the new roadway is nearing com- pletion, residents and visitors are complaining that the No Passing signs are still posted. They see no reason why they should not speed and pass, especially on the . section between Dallas Township and the junction of Pioneer Avenue with the highway. There is a good reason, which thinking motorists are already taking into consideration. : The lack of painted white lines could easily be a death-trap. The lines will be the final step, after the median bar- riers are in operation. Safe entrance and exit roads are not yet completed. It wastes very little time to observe that 35 mile an hour speed limit and to remain in line. There are bottlenecks down below Trucksville, and a bottleneck approached at speed can result in a wreck. Take it easy. It won’t be long now. Retired Retail Credit Man Makes 200 Stout Litter Bags For Auction Richard Rees, Trucksville senior citizen who retired three years ago from employment with the Retail Credit Bureau based in Atlanta, Georgia, after forty years.in its service; has an unusual hobby. Mr. Rees makes litter-bags for cars. He has 200 all made up, ready for the Library Auction. They are small sacks fashioned of odds and ends of plastic seat- cover material, in a variety of colors, measuring roughly 10X7%% inches, $7 They hang .on the dash by means of a grommet. The wire stiffener { | | Rees’ contribution to clean road- sides, and this July, to the Library Auction. He says that his wife describes the needlecraft which holds the sides together, as a blanket stitch. He learned recently that the hole worked in the top flap is known technically as a grommet. Mr. Rees says makers of seat covers supply him with scraps for free, and that he uses a stapler to make the hem. Hemming, he says, is not his line. He was born in Tioga County, son of a minister. His father was for a number of years pastor of the at the top permits them to hang | Bethesda Congregational Church in open for easy stowing of chewing gum wrappers, and sandwich bags. Edwardsville. He is widely related to the Kunkle family in this area, Making the litter bags is Mr, | a cousin of Wardan’s, through the windshield. Coach Tinsley left Dallas High for a better job at Sharon High. In the Outpost: Ralph Whitebread, India; Thomas Batey, England; Bob Grose, Sampson; Charles. Gordon, Virginia; = Edward Tutak, Walla- Walla; Gilbert Husted, Jacksonville; Ray Pritchard, England; Walt Schu- ker, China; T. Jefferson Miers, on a speck of land in the Pacific; John Youngblood, Bedford Springs; Jim- { mie Trebilcox, Hawaii. Pearson, 80, Outlet. | Belles-Shaver-Compton, reunion. Married: Louise Space to James C. Lurba. Betty Marie Staub to | Christopher M. O'Conner. Virginia | Miller fo Thomas Casterline. 10 Years Ago Nancy Wood was going over the jumps on the front page, and an impressive list of new goods for the Auction was printed. The Eight Annual Auction was imminent. Franklin Firemen served 700 din- ners on the Fourth of July. More of Stefan Hellersperk’s rem- iniscenses about being a captive of the Russian. Harold Lewis, Franklin Township, was elected president of the joint Dallas-Franklin Board. Married: Peggy Lou Helfrich to Peter J. Gaughan. (Carol Luella Harding to William C. Reese. Schooley Memorial © at General Hospital reflected the love of for- mer patients. z Mrs. Millie Evans, 30 Center Moreland, was killed in a car crash. Brakes failed. Seven children were in the car. Big article on how to keep chil- Died: Alice Major, Lehman, Mary ! the Connecticut Township of Bed- ford, excepting the small piece ex- tending to Harveys Lake. 'It was part of the new Township of Dallas established in 1817 and was made a separate Township in 1829. The Ide family was prominent among the first settlers and also in the development of schools. The first schoolhouse was built of logs in 1810, near where W. H. Ide later lived. Early teachers were J. I. Bogardus, Obed Baldwin, Julius Pratt, Burr Baldwin, a Mr. Perry, and Elijah Worthington. In 1836 Daniel and Oliver Ide built a school- house at Lehman Center, the first teachers being Ellen Pugh and Maria Fuller. Exact location of this build- ing is not known to me, but there has been a schoolhouse. at or near the intersection of the Lehman- Idetown and Lehman-Outlet roads for maybe a hundred years. Nathan and Oliver Ide built the West Lehman schoolhouse in 1842, a couple of miles or a little less, west of Lehman Center on the road to Meeker. time, and was probably removed when the school still standing near Meeker Church was built. The Ide School was well named, as it was located in a village named Idetown and always included num- erous children of Ide descent its enrollment. '‘At the fork where the road from Huntsville separates to go to Idetown and Lehman, op- posite the present Huntsville Nurs- ery, stood the Linskill School, nam- ed for prominent John Linskill liv- ing nearby. ; At the opposite end of the town- ship, near Smiths Pond, stood the Forest School, and near the north- west corner, on present route 29, about halfway between Pikes Creek and Lake Silkworth, there was a school, still standing, called Ruggles School, from a local family of that name. Recently, the 30 Years Ago column in THE POST reported a contract for $3,495 for such school. In a plan of gradual consolidation, the school directors closed the one- room schools and moved pupils to the village of Lehman. After a jointure agreement with Jackson Township, all the schools in that township ‘were also closed and pupils moved to Lehman. In a later three-way jointure, high school pupils from Ross Township dren out of abandoned refrigerators. were also included at Lehman. The We Wish The Back M¢. Memorial Library This steod. for..a long! in ; Rambling Around By The Oldtimer — D. A. Waters Lehman school was enlarged sev- eral times to accommodate these changes. It is said the first school in Lake Township was taught by Jonathan Williams in the house of Otis Allen in 1842-44. was built on the farm of Henry Ide. Half a century later there was a school in Bear Hollow, called Allen, a little south of the road between Loyalville and the Outlet corner of the Lake. School was conducted by a Mr. Williams, maybe not the same one, at the West Corner in 1848-49 in the home of Nathan Kocher. A schoolhouse stood on the road lead- ing to Loyalville. There were schools called Outlet, a mile or so from the actual outlet of the Lake, also at Ruggles and Loyalville, or in the vicinity of these places. always in the same location were sometimes called Maple Grove. Lake Township made a jointure agreement with Noxen in Wyoming «County, which was subsequently eombined withthe prior: jointure-of Lehman-Jackson-Ross, now com- monly referred to .as Lake-Lehman. Shortly after the combined jointure had erected, under the authority of financing, a new high school on old i component districts voted separate- Is to change the jointure into a union or merged district. All ap- proved ' excepting Lake Township, which leaves a somewhat confusing situation. -- Obviously Lake Town- ship will have to continue its pupils in the new Merged District, but the exact conditions may require some complicated accounting and ‘admini- stration. Following a note in this column on Franklin Township Schools, my attention has been called to a school built in 1815 in Orange Village, which was not called by that name then. Early teachers Amarilla New- berry, Ambrose Fuller, a Miss Har- ris, William Calkins, ‘George Ochmig, Susan Farver (Mrs. Daniel Lee), Henry Osborne, James Dickinson, and a Mr. Herring. TOWNSHIP CLASS 1954 Class of 1954, Dallas Township High School, reunion committee, will meet with Mrs. Jane Owens Stair July 15 at 8 p.m. at her home at 66 Davenport Street. An Outstanding Successful Auction Thutsday, Friday And Saturday July 9, 10 And 11, 1964 t route 115 near Lehman Center, the | | | | | This is the way you looked, away ] In 1844 a schoolhouse | The schools at Pikes Creek, not ; 1 | Falls From Clift Near Bering Sea Local Airman Takes | 200 Foot Plunge Full details are lacking in the | | narrow escape from death of a | Harveys Lake airman, when he | plunged from a 200 foot cliff six i miles from his base at Driftwood Bay, Alaska. A/FC Richard Rank, on.a hunt- ing expedition with two fellow air- men near the Bering Sea, June 27, slipped and fell in wild terrain, breaking four ribs, a lumbar verte- bra, and suffering a compound frac- ture of the right arm. One companion remained with him, while the other went for help to rescue him from an almost in- accessible position. took turns carrying Rank the six miles to the air base, twelve hours of gruelling travel over nearly im- passable country. He is in the hospital at Anchor- age. He is with the 7th 14th AC&A Squadron. Rank has been in Alaska since October. His wife, and five chil- dren, the oldest eight, and his mother Mrs. Edith Rank, remain at Harveys Lake. Twenty airmen. Better Leighton Never The past weekend was blessed in varying degrees with fair wea- ther and my return. I note with a small amount of satisfaction that many people didn't know I was missing. Y In case you didn’t recognize me, I was the very last fireman in the Lehman Horseshow parade. No oth- er fireman can make that state- ment. Rather be the last in that parade than the first. George McCutcheon turned a little pale when notified by the parade marshal that the marching units were positioned right behind the horses. “Oh no”, said George, “that’s the worst place they could be!” “Don’t worry’, was the reply, ‘we have clowns to sweep the road up.” 3 ‘What little rain fell was also a blessing, wetting down the track and grounds, and helping to keep things cool, so that the veteran horseshow-goer didn’t have to feel like Lawrence after-a hard day in the Arabian desert. Congressman Dan Flood, an an- nual visitor to the Lehman Horse- show was remarking to Shel Evans and me about the splendid success yedr after year of the horseshow, particularly as a community endea- vor. He mentioned to Myron Baker the possibility of getting federal funds to help build a permanert horseshow set-up in Lehman. Another thing the Congressman did was to presage the cloudburst by about one minute or less, by glancing over his shoulder and ob- serving, ‘Say, that’s a nasty look- ing thunderhead over there.” And in short order, we were all under cover. A telegram was received from a long-time: exhibitor, = Maj. Lee White, unavoidably detained in Virginia, expressing regret at not being able to attend, and calling the Lehman event “possibly the best one-day show of its kind in the country’. THEN COMES THE AUCTION Then comeg the Library Auction, and early this week chairman Frank Huttman was amazed at the in- flux of all kinds of things at the barn in the preceding few days. Every year there is a time of magic, when a near-empty barn is filled under a moonless night, it seems, by donors who silently come and go. 'A conclave of laboring auction chiefs Monday commended the new grounds committee chairman Ed Brominski for doing a great job. It is estimated that the grounds chairmanship demands three weeks Horseshow Parade Gets Off To Slow Start, Waiting For Sun DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA From— LJ l r f Pillar To Post... By Hix ‘By tonight, the Eighteenth Annual Library Auction will be going full tilt, and the Lehman Horse-Show will have passed into history. Keep your fingers crossed for good weather. For this weekend, better to fry than to drown, though goodness knows the area needs rain, and badly. That little thundershower we had last Wednesday caused the tide to rise in the A&P parking lot, and timid dogs to retreat under the couch, but it did very little to freshen the gardens. It was nice while it lasted, however. : ¢ Caught by the rain while checking out of the grocery, it was a real pleasure to me to wade though an ankle-deep flood and three minutes later turn the key in the front door while dripping buckets on the steps. But let's be sensible about this thing, weather-man! Let's have our rain after midnight from now until the auction. is over, and then let it pour all next week if it wants to. Postponing an auction is like trying to warm over a last year’s romance. : It lacks the essential spark. Don’t worry about a place to sit at the Auction. The barn crew always brings out a flock of beat-up chairs and sells them off for a quarter apiece, or maybe six bits if it’s a hot day and people’s dogs are beginning to bark. Most folks don’t bother to take home, unless they have value as something for the home do-it-yourselfer to scrape and paint. They abandon them on the grounds, and come midnight, a busy crew picks them up and returns them to. the Barn, all ready to be sold again on the following day. : You can insure yourself a lot of comfort for a very modest sum. Or bring your own folding chair, staking out a claim for it on ° the bank early in the day, where there is a good view of the ‘Auc- tion block. Don’t miss it. Sounds like a good auction, in line with eighteen years of auctions which have been the main support of our Library. It got off to a slow start because Ernie Gay displayed the new Ford of a morning drizzle which let up shortly before 10 a.m., but when the Lehman Horseshow parade finally got rolling, spectators had their money’s worth. A small, but eye-catching feature, was Uncle Sam tootling along on a small garden tractor, with a mini- ature float of Betsy Ross in tow. Uncle Sam was Herbert Ward, for- mer manager of Dallas Acme; Betsy Ross and her helper, Peggy Stritt- matter and Margery Helm. Damp Cub Scouts from Lehman under convoy of Judy Simms, wore paper mache heads, showing Bear, Bobcat, Lion and Webelos, fearfully and wonderfully made. Tatoo 41. Lake-Lehman Band, in a salute to the hot weather, were outfitted in dazzling white shirts and black underpinning. Decimated by vaca- tion, the remaining members under John Miliauskas gave their usual sterling performance. Lehman officer Richard Morgan, and Noxen’s Assistant Chief Bud Weaver got a big kick out of de- touring a State Police car. Mrs. Thomas Heffernan, complete with cane, wondered where all the cars came from that parked on her property and menaced her oat field. One car led to another. One little boy on a pony, and one very small horsewoman on a very large horse, stood out among the riders. Dallas Junior High Falcons model- led their red skirts and white blouses, but left off their candy- striped hats for fear of a sudden downpour. ~ American Legion Daddow Isaacs Post, led off, with Commander Cave, Curt Bynon, Warren Cease, and Dick Prynn as standard bearers. Dallas Kiwanis Junior Rifle Team trotted briskly down the road, and a whole herd of Brownies sat on their feet in a station wagon. work ahead of the event and ons week afterward. The Auction heads were on T-V on Monday afternoon to plug the event, and it is said that Harry Lefko immortalized a Roto-Tiller by not knowing what it was, there- by rendering it perhaps the most prestigious item on the block. Note: unauthorized youngsters Falcon, to be chanced off at mid- night on Saturday at the Library Auction. Friendship Class of Lehman Methodist Church showed the world in miniature, featuring a modest hula dancer in a substantial grass skirt, posed against a replica of the ‘world with no insides at the World's Fair. Many folks in this area had never seen a car with a rumble seat, but there it was, with small children exposed to the elements while their parents nested cozily on the front seat. Sweet Valley firemen demon- firemen trotting along on foot to man the pump and direct the stream of water, a contrast to modern equipment closely follow- ing, from Sweet Valley, Jackson Township, Lehman, Lake Silkworth, Kunkle, Kingston Township, and Dallas, all flashing their red lights. The last fire truck passed, with a happily resurrected Scott hanging to the rear, and the lines of parked cars started the half hour job of disentangling themselves. By that time, it had decided not to rain, and clear weather with i falling temperatures was assured for the afternoon and evening at the : Lehman Horse-Show Grounds. Safety Valve Good Samaritan Sought Dear Editor: My son, Leroy and daughter, Judith took a bicycle ride from our home in Noxen to. their grand- parents residence at Harveys Lake on July 1. 3 After they started home, several hours later, Judy had an accident. Her brother heard her cry out and went back to her, but by that time a man had stopped his car and of- fered his help. He took her back to her grandfather’s who brought her to the doctor's office. but we would like to thank him for his generosity and kindness. We hope he will let us know someday who he was. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Scott found on any floor in the barn will be sold as slaves to the highest | bidder. Noxen, Pa. READ THE TRADING POST We heartily commend the citizenry for their continued interest in such a worthy cause. } BEST OF LUCK TO ALL ..... We don’t know the man’s name strated their ancient hose-cart with- ” ——