Page 16 The whisper of the wind and gentle roll of the sea can quickly turn into a stiff breeze and crashing surf. Softness can turn to anger. Lazy, drifting, soaring gulls can become enraged when the sea boils with fish. A visitor can find miles of undeveloped beaches to walk—with an escape from the hustle and bustle of everyday life. Those who have visited North Carolina’s famed Outer Banks would have it no other way. This is a land of legend, exploration, dreams and the conquest of new frontiers. The Outer Banks are a chain of narrow islands extending 175 miles from the Virginia line to Cape Lookout near Morehead City. Firsts are nothing for the Banks. Here the English colonists made their first set- tlement in 1585. It was here the Wright Brothers started man on his journey to the moon. It was here the nation’s first National Seashore--Cape Hatteras--was set aside so that future men might see a beach in its natural state. The remote beaches have been called ‘‘magnificent desolation” by many. To some people the idea of a nearly unin- habited beach is not enticing— but for those who like their beaches with a dash of ‘solitude and serenity, the Outer Banks will be to their liking. The Outer Banks resort areas, north to south, begin at Kitty Hawk, which was a tiny sound-side village when the Wrights first visited it in 1900. They still celebrate the Wrights’ first flight in 1903 every Dec. 17. The Wright Brothers National Memorial, at Kill Devil Hills, is an all-year attraction. Largest of the Outer Banks resort towns is Nags Head, with its beach stretching some 20 miles from Kill Devil Hills to the northern entrance of the Cape Hatteras National Sea- shore. According to legend, Nags Head acquired its name from the unscrupulous practice of residents who tied lanterns on the necks of ponies and mar- ched them along the high dunes if they saw a ship offshore. The lights swinging from the ponies’ necks gave the impressions of boats pitching in the water, thus deceiving captains into running aground on the shoals where the cargo of their ships could be plundered. GenealogyBuffs Can Join Club Residents of Dallas and the vicinity who are interested in genealogy or local history are invited to become members of The Genealogy Club of America. A non-profit, educational club, the organization helps to promote amateur genealogy and preserve local history. Genealogy today is America’s third most popular hobby, and the club has members in all 50 states. Club members are given pro- fessional guidance in tracing their ancestry and in preparing family and local histories. Books, pedigree charts, and other materials useful in this popular hobby are made available to members at con- siderable savings. Club members also receive a quarterly magazine with helpful articles by genealogists and historians, and other features of worth. Those interested in the club may obtain full details without obligation by writing to The Genealogy Club of America, Box L, Logan, Utah, 84321 Subscribe to the Post Nearby is Roanoke Island with restored Fort Raleigh. Here the firs English colonists landed in 1585, and this was the site two years later of one of history’s greatest mysteries— The Lost Colony. The puzzle of what happened to the settlers has never been solved. America’s first outdoor drama, ‘“The Lost Colony,” is presented six nights a week from late June to late August at the Waterside Theatre. The drama is the story—in song, dance and spoken word—of the first English settlement in America. Also at Roanoke Island is the Elizabethan Garden. It is built on 10 and one-half acres and is a memorial to the Elizabethan colonists. This is one of Eastern dens. The Cape Hatteras National Seashore preserves some 45 square miles of beach. Eight small villages, with tourist at- tractions, are within the boun- daries of the seashore. They are Rodanthe, Waves, Salvo, Avon Buxton, Frisco, Hatteras and Ocracoke Island. Cape Hatteras, long famous as the ‘‘graveyard of the Atlantic’’ because its Diamond Shoals claimed thousands of ships in the days before radio and radar, is the focal point of the National Seashore. The Cape Hatteras Light- house—tallest on the Amerian coast—is open to visitors and the energetic may climb its 268 steps for a panoramic view. Louden Hill Farm’ Stores, which last week carried the lowest regional retail milk prices in the last 20 years, was forced by a Commonwealth Court order to return to its pre- vious $1.15 per gallon price this week. The 31 Northeastern Pennsylvania outlets were selling milk for as low as 93 cents a gallon last week. The court injunction was handed down at the request of the Pennsylvania Milk Market- ing Board, which has steadily increased the price of milk in the Commonwealth since the mid-1950’s. Louden Hill has been attempting to lower the re- tail price of milk for the last seven years. Last week Louden Hill dropped the price of milk in light of a court decision in Harrisburg that rejected the milk board’s request for an in- junction against United Dairy Farmers Cooperative in Pitts- burgh. Friday, however, the court reversed its earlier de- cision in favor of the milk hoard, thus leaving the board with a clear means with which to move against Louden Hill. Louden Hill president Peter Sandfort Sr. told Greenstreet News that he will fight the move in a hearing scheduled Wednes- day in Harrisburg. He has maintained that the consumer was being cheated with the in- flationary high milk prices set arbitrarily by the milk board because he can show that he buys milk from Pennsylvania Board Budgie During Vacation A warning to bird-owning travelers going abroad—or to the southern California area’ Don’t take your pet bird with you, says the U.S. Department of Agriculture. If you do, you may not get your pet back home. Mynah birds or parrots, para- keets and other birds of the parrot family are temporarily barred from the United States because they might carry exotic Newcastle disease, an ailment (though not harmful to con- sumers). TECUMSEH, HUFFY diary farmers, processes it, and then transports it to his 80-odd stores in New Jersey where it retails for 96 cents a gallon at a profit. The dairy manufacturer maintains that he makes a reasonable profit at the 93 cent- a-gallon price in this region and that the milk board should lower the retail milk price throughout the state. ‘“There’s no more legality in northeastern Pennsylvania con- sumers paying exorbitantly Rural Developement A new comprehensive guide to federal programs which is useful in rural areas is now available, according to the End- less Mountains Resource Con- servation and Development Council. The book is titled, ‘Guide to Federal Programs for Rural Develop- ment.” It outlines all federally funded programs, eligibility, and qualification programs and where to apply for them. The book was originally published by the Independent Bankers Association of high milk prices than there is in Pittsburgh consumers being stuck with them,” Mr. Sandfort said in a prepared statement. “We have been awaiting action from the board since Fe- burary of 1971 when the court ruled that the state’s pricing order was improper and told the board to hold another hearing. After nearly a year the board convened a hearing in Decem- ber, but then adjourned because the old-line dealers said they Programs Outlined America and has now been re- published by the U.S. Govern- ment. It is for sale at a cost of $2.50 from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. 20402. The Endless Mountains RC&D Council feels that all township and borough offices and planning commissions should have a copy of this guide. It is a valuable reference book for rural communities in- terested in progressive develop- ment. weren't ready. At that hearing, we asked for a 93 cents a gallon price and had evidence to support it. That price is the only one on the record of the hearing. “Twice subsequently,” the retailer continued, ‘‘the board has set hearings and then post- poned them because in its own words ‘lack of cooperation of some of the dealers in supplying the board with needed financial information.’ “In late May,” Mr. Sandfort said, ‘‘the board called the 5, nearly a year and a half after the court had called its pricing order improper. All this time, the consumer has been paying outrageously high milk prices, along with skyrocketing prices for other foods.” The milk executive said that even in light of testimony during the last hearing indi- cating that consumers are being overcharged as much a $100,000 a month in the Scranton-Wilkes- Barre area alone, the board did not appear to be in any hurry to grant lower milk prices. Because of this, Mr. Sandfort said, “we have no recourse but to fight this injustice with every resource available to us.” d A Greenstreet News Co. Publication RAIN GUTTER WORK ALCOA GUTTERS & DOWN SPOUTS $2 PER FOOT INSTALLED JOSEPH & EDWARD WACHS PHONE 388-6719 FALLS, PENNA. YES!! YES! 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