SECTION A — PAGE 2 THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1889. Subscription rates: $5.00 a year; $3.00 six months. No subscriptions accepted for less than six months. Out-of-State subscriptions, $5.50 a year; $3.50 six months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15¢. Member Audit Bureau of Circulationg S12 Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association < Member National Editorial Association < : Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. teu Editor and Publisher... .......350 0 ‘Myra Z. RisLey Associate Editor .......5 0... ..\L.. Mes. T.M.B. Hicks SocialiEditor ..........0.. Badbloid Editor .............. 5, Advertising Manager ............... . Louise MARKS Business Manager. ....v.......0.... Doris R. MarLLIN Circulation Manager ......... Mus. Verma Davis, A non-partisan, liberal progressive: mewspaper pub- lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania,’ 18612. “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution” We will not be responsible for large “cuts.’t If your organization wants to pick up its cuts, we will keep them for thirty days. One-column cuts will be filed for future reference. We will not be responsible for the return|of unsolicited manu- scripts, photographs ard editorial matter tinless self-addressed, stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case/ will this material be held for more than 30 days. i The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local hospitals. If you are a patient ask your nuyse for it. We can give no assurance that announcements of plays, parties, rummage sales or any affair for raising money will appear in a Mrs. Dorota B. ANDERSON CATHERINE GILBERT Editorially Speaking We Say It's Hideous We say it’s hideous, those scorched earth patches where green foliage by the roadsides is sprayed by chem- icals. So, maybe it's efficient. So would a food capsule be efficient, eliminating a lot of cooking, and a lot of pleasant living revolving around the kitchen stove. Swallow a capsule, and there you are, no muss, no fuss, no pans to clea, no dishes to wash. And in times to come, no young husband saying wistfully, “Mom used to make the best pancakes.” Nice br eak for the new - bride. Push him a pink capsule for breakfast, a green one for lunch, and a hearty brown one for dinner. Plenty of things are highly efficient, but they lack soul. % Like those burnt brown bushes where the birds used to build their nests, and feed their brood. Where the cottontails found refuge. Where the busy life of a small and seldom noticed world burgeoned in the spring, where all the tiny sounds of nature joined in a summer chorus. Where the first frost of autumn turned the sumacs red and slashed a blazing yellow across the saplings. The hideous shrivelled corpses of the leaves hang from the withered branches, a sacrilege to a green coun- tryside. Here in the.Back Mountain we have beautiful wind- ing roads. We have a heritage that we should preserve. We cry out against billboards. We cry out against litter. : We think that a man with a scythe and a pair of hedge clippers could keep the saplings and the berry-bear- ing bushes under reasonable control. Birds need those wayside bushes for their winter food. Birds don’t pav the phone bill or the light bill. but they give an unestimated amount of pleasure to those who write the checks. Felks On Farms Eat The Dallas Post is watching with concern the disap- pearance of the dairy herds from this county. It would like to know how many young men realize what a fantastic investment there is in a modern farm, its heavy equipment and its herds. It would like to know how many sons are going into business with their fathers, keeping up the herds, spray- ing the orchards, turning the soil, harvesting the crops upon which our nation depends for its very life. It would like to know how many new herds have been started in this area. There is one thing which a good many people who are on unemployment hand-outs forget: Farm labor is scarce. . and folks on farms eat. That's What Libraries Are For Sally Otto, the lovely copper-haired girl who greeted borrowers at the check-out desk of Back Mountain Memorial Library for a time, sent on a clipping from Canada, relative to the drowsy habits of people in li- | braries. present librarian, with the note: out of this.” The West Suffolk County Council | in England has passed a bylaw for- bidding people to sleep in local libraries. The Times calls the legis- chairs, or snore loudly, or have vi- lation “savage,” and rightly so. |olent nightmares or sleepwalk, A library should be more than sleeping readers should be let lie: simply a building in which to keep | ———— books or read them. Public libraries are for sheltering from the rain, | or spending a few moments in quiet contemplation. Providing a spot for “Dear Sue, thought you'd get a kick they sneak up behind them and | So long as they don’t fall off their Mrs. Meighan Dies Mrs. Thomas Meighan, Carpenter Road, Harveys Lake, died Li Only Yesterday 30 Years Ago Long -article from Dallas, Texas, Dispatch, with lowdown on the as- sortment of towns sharing the name. Scattered across the country, from- Dallas, Oregon, of dried prune industry, Angora | goats, lumbering; to Dallas, Florida, | no listed population, railroad ciding turpentine industry. retary to Dallas Boro School Board, reconsider. 400 pupils in. Boro schools, 44 from out of town paying tuition, $28.75 in grades, $50.80 in high school. ment. Board hoped for Federal help in building Junior High, WPA pro- ject to renovate Trucksville Grade. Editorial noted that only Xings- ton: Twp.. and Lake Twp. schools had’ phones; other districts plead economy. Post “favored ownership of phone requisite for candidates for public. office. ! Curly - haired + Allan Sullivan, straight-haired Jimmy Gansel, front page Baby Contest pix. Wyoming County. Fair in Tunk- hannock promised ever. First 3-mile ‘stretch of Dallas- Tunkhannock highway opened from Evans Falls to Sugar Hollow “Y”. Plans for next three miles, to Eaton- ville, awaited approval in Harris- burg. Prepare now for winter: snow tires $7.95. $19.50 innerspring mattress on sale, $13.95. Studio couch; $16.95. Carverton-Franklin Twp. Branch, No. 80, Luzerne County Unem- ployed League Inc. thanked public for support at recent dance. Dallas Junior Woman's Club voted to provide milk for under- nourished children at Dallas Boro and. Twp. schools; Bingo: party to pay’ for - it. Died: Mrs. Fred Honeywell. 50, Kunkle. Jay C. Major, 61, Dallas native. 20 Years Ago Suggestion of an auction sale next Spring ' enthusiatstictlly re- | © Poultry prices up, supply down. Let Them Sleep, Says London Times, scream? The ‘idea is preposterous, | an unplanned mid - afternoon doze should be another function of the. library; for bums just as much as for scholars. It happens to the best of us. Stu- dents studving dull tomes or elderly people reading magazines. should be | excused if they drop off to sleep’ for a moment. Karl Marx spent whole days in the reading room of "the British Museum and it may be! assumed that even he dozed off! once is a while. How would librarians enforce a no-sleeping law? How would they tell if a scholar was in a trance of genius or sound asleep? How would | they’ keep people awake—by stick- | | morning at Nesbitt Hospital, where | she had been admitted August 27. Following a Mass of Requiem at, Gate of Heaven Church, she was buried Wednesday morning in St. Mary's Cemetery. Mrs. Meighan, the former Eliza- beth Farrington, was born in Forty | Fort. She was a member of Our Lady of Victory Chapel and its Altar and Rosary Society. She leaves her husband; four | children: Helen, at home; Thomas Jr., Luzerne; Mrs. Michael Dean, H azelton; Mrs. Francis Britt, Kings- ton; eight grandchildren and four | greatgrandchildren; a sister, Mrs. ing pins in the readers or blowing | Walter Hughes, Kingston; a brother, a giren every 15 minutes? Or would Thomas Farrington, Forty Fort. Library Auxiliary. | Russell Race, | badly: shaken and cut, but retreived | | all ‘chickens scattered when North | Star Farms truck he was driving | was demolished by Greyhound at | | Kingsley. | responding to increased demand | since = restoration of | ceilings. Back Mountain Kennel: Club set | | date’ for first AKC point. show since | preaw ar: days; -Nov. 17, Kingston | Armory, postponed - from July by | | rabies. quarantine. Henry M. Laing Fire Company I tested new hydrant on Lower Main. i Trucksville Fire Company pur- | chased $500 worth of new equip- | | ment; hydrants .and better water | supply urgently needed. | Mrs. Daniel Shaver carted per- | sonal fund-raising campaign for | Kingston . Township Band; Verus | Weaver new Music Supervisor. | State approved construction of | | Dal'as Airport. | Pennsvlvania Week, Sent. 17 to | 22. proclaimed by Gov. Martin. | Dallas Boro, Dallas Twp. | Kingston = Two. officials | public discussion of common sewage | disposal problems. | Married: Anne Cynthia Poad to | William Nicoll. Alice Lorraine Davis [to Ernest Reese. | Died: Infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Newhart. William Jones, 91, Noxen. Mrs. Ida Nuss, 66, Lehman. 10 Years Ago f Robert Jewell appointed speech { therapist by Luzerne County school { directors, initiating correction pro- {gram in the schools. ‘Dallas Area School Board saw | aerial views of four proposed sites for new high school. Raymond Kuh- nert named Principal, James Martin Supervising Principal. William A. | Austin Elementary Principal. i Back Mountain police, officials, physicians, met to cordinate better | traffic control, aiming at eliminat- ing fatalities and drunken driving. Howard Risley outlined problem, re- | viewed causes; Clifford Bigelow of Motor Club explained difficulty in getting convictions. Kingston seaman, 18, gheared | off light pole trying to elude police ! after Main Street fracas. Kingston Twp. Police entertained 400 to 600 youngsters in annual outing at Harveys Lake. Postal authorities warned against | newly red-white-blue mail boxes. Dr. L. E. Jordan won 20 blue ribbons iat Elmira Dahlia Show. Harrisburg told Lehman-Jackson- Ross, Lake-Noxen to make solid efforts toward jointure or lose more revenue; restoration of last year’s avpropriation offered ss bait. Married: Ruth M. Schietrump to Robert C. Henney. Georgiena R. De-, Witt to Charles L. Love. Mrs. Lela Siglin Peterson to Donald Wall, to be Piggest depositing snakes. trash or snow in | (pp. 2,975) | annual rainfall 41.75 inches, center | all that remained from logging and Daniel Waters resigned as sec- which hoped to persuade him to! KT planned to relieve crowding | in fourth and fifth grades by having a divided class in Shavertown base- | ceived by Back Mountain Memorial | Centermoreland, OPA meat | | and & scheduled THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1966 KEEPING POSTED September 6: LBJ ASKS SUSPENSION of investment tax, pledges to cut spending on low priority pro- grams. NE WIN, BURMA’S 200% neutral visits Wash- ington. , SENATE FILIBUSTER on Civil Housing continues. September 9: AUTO SAFETY and Highway Safety bill signed. GEMINI FLIGHT DELAYED. Fuel line leak mend- ed with waterglass. in Atlanta. SNCC CARMICHAEL arrested for inciting ‘to riot THIRD SOLDIER convicted for refusing to go to Vietnam. September 10: ance bu-s. GEMINI DELAYED again, booster guid- VIET CONG TERRORISM aimed at discouraging voters in forthcoming elactions, MISS OKT. AHOMA j3 Mica Amarica for 1967. September 11: ARMORED BUTLDOZFR storms throuch barbed wire, carryine four adults and one child to aafetv in Weet Rerlin, VIOI ENCE TN ATLANTA follows shooting of teen- acer bv white man. VIETNAM RIRCTION hrines ont a 759% vote. FRENCH EXPLODE nadlpaw.devics, VIETNAM DFT, TA VILLAGE destroyed by terror- ists, DOO wounded. Septemher 12: MOB REATS UP 200 children in Granada, Miss., in Rocalonea. when schonl is intaorated. Atlanta. Race ‘war flares New Orleans. WORT D JOURNAT, TELEGRAM starts nuhlication after 141 dav strike in which the Herald-Tribune waa a caanaltv, FARTHOTITAKTE in Nevada, California. STOCK MARKET RISES. HURRAY, Gemini flicht on. astronauts off . st,ace. dock, Septemher 13: SPACE turns. VORSTER, . into Rendezvons with Agena, first time around, aapavate. doclk acain, WAIK exhausting, blinded by sweat, attaches tether to Agena, astronaut re- NEW PREMIER of South Africa, re- nlaces the assassinated premier. NAVY FLIER, prisoner in North Vietnam. down tn OR naunds on eercape. Relates torture methods. MISSILE VASE in North Vietnam pounded seventh dav in a row. EX-PRIFST BROADCASTS from Moscow, assail- ine the TTnited States. davs earlier. M-CORMACK WINS in Massachusetts, in Minnesota. Defected to Russia several Rolvaag DIRKSEN DISCLAIMS reenonsibilite fav stalemate on civil riehts housing hill, Savs LR.J has a ma- iowityv in both Senate and House, what's the sweat? Rill is probably hreathine ite lact. September 14: ASTRONATITS CATAPULTED 853 miles ahove earth. over Australia. Return to 180 miles. for nower. usin~ Agena rocket Report the view of the southern part of the lobe as maenificent. | Flies To France PATRICIA A. BAUMAN A graduate of Dallas ‘Senior high | Patricia A. Bauman, | School, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bauman, Woodecliffe Drive, | left September ‘11 from . Kennedy | Airport for the home of Andre Kaeminerleu,. 68 Bitschwiller les Thann, France. Patricia, who is a Rotary Ex- i change Student, will attend Lycee | Schwrer Kestner School where she will study the French language. | She was an honor student at Dallas High and active in various | Or ganizations. Miss George Dallas, | Cocoluschy Craftsmen Cocaluschu Craftsmen of Luzerne County will meet Saturday, Septem- | | ber 17 at 2:30 p.m. at the home of | | Helen Gross, Huntsville. Mrs. Gross, | who has received national recogni- | tion for her skill, will discuss deco- rated metal, wood, and ‘pottery items and other crafts with which | she lives. Craftsmen will tour the Wrkihos and learn more about the process | of applying paint and using stencils. | The co-operative organization, | takes its name from the first syl- | lable of the four counties repre- | sented, Columbia, Carbon, Luzerne and Schuylkill. Its aim is to promote | interest in crafts and to help crafts- | men improve techniques and pro- | ducts. Programs already held by the local branch include trips: to | Stroudsburg and Old Mill Village | at New Milford. Attendance at ‘Saturday’s session is’ not limited to craftsmen. Coca- luschu associates are encouraged to invite their friends. However, those | planning to attend are asked to | report the number coming to Janet | Crosson; phone 675- 3197. Ancient Pine Had Weathered 9250 Years This huge oldster of a pine which | has watched many a changing scene farm the huge tree stood, decided and offered shade during the hot to have it timbered along with sev- | Russell Ide, Meeker, upon whose summer finally gave up the ghost eral others to give light and air on Friday when it was cut down by to surrounding woodland sentinals. Ted and Tex Wilson, Dallas lumber- | men, Mrs. Sophie, § Skok to Too Layaou. Nearly 250 years: old, the tree ‘had begun to rot at its base, al- | Margaret Edwards to Russell Case. | Dorothy Belles James J. Martin. Died: Mrs. Alice Sweezy, 81, Kunkle. Philip Stash, 3 weeks, Jackson Twp. Kenneth L. Terry, 52, Lehman na- | tive. Mrs. Evaline J. Yorks, 66, Trucksville. to Airman 3/c| | ~— | though green branches still denoted | life. starting branches of the family in | this area. | the house where he still resides, Mr. Ide, whose great- grandfather | came to Idetown in 1801 from Conn- | | ecticut, brought with him six sons, | son of the late Mr. ward Ide. The old tree he says was | | DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA From— Pillar To Post... by HIX “I did NOT bite the dog. The dog bit ME,” I explained over the telephone. “It isn’t cricket to sympathize with the dog.” “Well, if you did bite it, it will probably die. Was it frothing at the mouth 2” “No, I'm the one who is frothing at the mouth. And I ask you, is that any bedside manner, when I call you up to see if I need to be cauterized.” “The only thing that is important is the dog. He'll have to be tied up for a week.” “And then?” “If he gets sick, he can be shot and his head sent to Harrisburg, and then we can see if he's got rabies.” “And then?” “Well, after we get a diagnosis, we usually have time to start treatments.” “Aw, come OFF it. I tell you I've been dog-bit.” “Better you than the dog. I hate to think what would happen to a dog if you ever sunk your teeth into him.” “When I bite a dog,” I responded tartly, “it is invariably fatal. To the dog. Shall I, or shall I not, come around and get cauterized ?”’ “If you want to get cauterized, I'll cauterize you. I can also use three kinds of acid on you, which is just what you deserve after that postscript t6 my last bill. Illegible writing indeed!” “It was illegible. I couldn’t make out whetherr it was for fifty dollars or five dollars. If it was for fifty, friendship ceases, as of this moment. Also any professional connection. ARE YOU GOING TO DO ANYTHING ABOUT THAT DOG BITE?” “Come around and get cauterized ‘if you want to. You can't be bad off, considering your frame of mind. Much of a wound?” “Well, judging by what I can see in the full length mirror, it's two places, about seven inches apart.” “Must have been some dog,” my favorite doctor admired. “It was some dog. A police dog.” “You're old enough to know better than to go around annoying police dogs. What are our senior citizens coming to?” “Lookit. This dog was chained up with something that could have moored the Queen Mary. He was guarding the alley.” “And what were you doing prowling up an alley?” “I was going to deliver a cane-job, and it was in my car, and the workshop was locked, being Saturday afternoon and all, so I left the chair in the car and started walking up the alley.” “You should have taken it aloong for protection. Don't you know that all wild animal trainers carry chairs?” “How did I know it was a wild animal? Anyhow, there was this creature, barking like crazy at one end and wagging at the other, and how was I to know he had a business assignment? I'm not afraid of dogs. I just told him to shut up, he was disturbing the Saturday afternoon calm, and walked on past him. “His chain was long enough so he could leap from one side of the alley to the other. I took him a little while to make up his mind. T was almost out of reach when he decided. Lucky he didn’t jump sooner, he'd have had my arm off to the elbow. As it was, he had to take what was handy. on i “Well, where DID he bite you?” “What do you care? All you're interested in is the dratted dog, and he is intact. I did not stick around to bite back.” “Come on, give. WHERE did he bite you?” “You want me to start blushing over the phone?” “Oh-oh.” “Where do you think he got me? Right in 7 stern. He couldn't miss it, all things considered.” “It would be hard to miss.” “Now I ask you, is that any ‘comforting beside manner ? Next time I see him, I'm going to bite HIM. My favorite doctor, not the police dog. We have an understanding. We exchange insults, but when there's an emergency, he’s right there on the job, in there pitching. | and Mrs. Ed- standing before his forebear came to this vicinity. {| One hundred feet tall, the old pine came down in a short time after a wedge was placed in its girth and chain saws applied. tree, and Ted Wilson sees to | everything is ready. Earl Daily, | workman, stands behind Mr. Ide. Russell Ide was born | photo by James Kozemchak Jr. 4 ANNOU NEW ELECTRIC BILL PAYMENT CENTERS IN DALLAS-SHAVERTOWN AREAS NCING been in th Effective September 15, 19 Pharmacy, Memorial Highway, pharmacies will be open seven (7) days a week to accept your payments. Please note that Harvey's Lake Light Company will not accept payment for UGI bills after this date. You may pay your bill in person at Fino’s Pharmacy or Evans Pharmacy, or pay by mail, using our return envelope which is sent with your bill. For your convenience, two new collection points have established for payment of Luzerne Electric service bills e Dallas-Shavertown areas. 66, Fino’s Rexall Pharmacy, Main Road, Dallas, and Evans Shavertown, will be UGI’s new collection agencies. These THE UNITED GAS IMPROVEMENT COMPANY LUZERNE ELECTRIC DIVISION Mr. Ide stands to the left of the Tex Wilson tightens the rope | it that | land Briarcrest Road, Dlacitorped ! Old Lake Road, graded 711, cleaned | | 708 after storm, cleaned flower beds RESPONSIBLE young family, ¥0 children, wishes to rent 5 or 6 | damages on Cease Street and wid Back | ened curve on Sando. Street. | were being stolen frm the inter- | | Section near Bob Disque’s place. | ton: Township and Dallas Township ‘To Late To Classify LEHMAN TOWNSHIP (Continued from 1 A) Lost i Alan Major, roadmaster, reported o that crews had cleaned ditches near | | BRAGLE Joseph Park's farm, blacktopped shoulders on Oak Hill, repaired berms in front of Donnelly House, cleaned ditches on the Rinken Spur i cense number 287 9177. Wanted To Rent— - = at Lehman Center, repaired water, room house or apartmen, | Mountain area, Call 824- 7008. He nlso reported that stop signs Letters were received from Kings- “It's the talk of the town” Supervisors signifying their inten- tion to discuss dumping facilities | wth the Lehman Board. ALLEN GILBERT Insurance Broker and Consultant “A Tax-Free Life Insurance Trust Estate for Your Family” is their best pro- tection against the problems * created by infla- - tion, and federal income and estate taxes. 288.2378 and it's coming from the Telephone Company female. Lost on Friday be- tween Orange and Center More- land. Black, brown and white. Li- 18968. Reward. Call INVEST? YES Who, Me? Yes Call or Write HENRY H. OTTO, JR. Your Local REGISTERED REPRESENTATIVE For J. H. Brooks & Co. 15 So. Franklin St. - Wilkes-Barre, Penna. Member of the New York Stock Exchange since 1905 Phone 823-3131 or 675-1265