a Soe Editorially Speaking: The Battle Has Been Joined But Not Lost The results of the heaviest Primary Election in Dallas Township in sixteen years are not as decisive as might first appear, nor are they any clear mandate that the majority of parents favor present School Board policies. Mr. Chamberlain and Mr. Moore carried the Township against their opponents Mr. Roberts and Mr. Schooley by no overwhelming majorities. / 99 votes separates Mr. Moore, the highest man, from Mr. A difference of only Roberts, the lowest man; but only 24 votes separate Schooley and Chamberlain. The presence of Mr. Laidler, an independent candidate, in the field, complicates the decision. The real issues of the campaign were exemplified by Roberts and Schooley on one side and Chamberlain and Mocre on the other. and received 72 votes. Mr. Laidler took a middle course— Seventy-two votes on one side or the other could have made a whale of a difference and cor’?! have helped to register a clear cut decision— wletner a majority of Dallas Township voters favor one side or the other. Then, too, there was another group of about eighty voters who actually had no voice in the outcome of the Primaries. They were the registered Democrats who had no local candidates and could not express approval or dis- approval of present Board policies. Those who registered a protest; wrote in the names of Schooley and Roberts— giving them the Democratic nomination—if they care to oppose the Republican nominees in the General Election. Schooley and Roberts received their main support from the Dallas Township members of the Back Mountain Citi- zens’ Committee for the Schools and from the Indepen- dent Republican organization. In the North and Middle districts where most of these members live, they made their weight felt. It was in the Fernbrook district where Marty Walsh, tavern keeper and county machine leader, wields most influence that Schooley and Roberts suffered their greatest set-back. Mr. Walsh has taken an active interest in the schools and county politics for years, so that the Citizens’ Committee faced not only organization money, but a skilled operator on election day. It is doubtful, however, if Mr. Walsh and his subordinates in that area know more about the welfare of the kids who attend Dallas Township schools than the parents on the Citizens’ Com- mittee. Mr. Schooley and Mr. Roberts put up a good fight and a clean campaign—although Mr. Roberts’ efforts were de- layed at the start by the machine's attempts to have his employer force him out of the Primaries. this did not come to pass. Fortunately Neither Schooley nor Roberts wanted to run for office but did so only because they worked on the Citizens” Committee, and became convinced that present policies of Dallas Township School Board are splitting the commun- ity apart with resultant ill effects upon education. They should not be discouraged with Tuesday’s results, but should continue their battle in the General Election on the Democratic ticket. The price of Democracy is eternal vigilance and the fruits of victory come only to him who fights! Too Much Speed Residents of Pioneer avenue are disturbed over the ex- cessive speeds at which automobiles are being driven over that thoroughfare since its resurfacing by the State Department of Highways. a Much of the sp$ding i% being done by teen-agers and out-of-the-community drivers who are now taking the Pioneer Avenue route as a fast short cut to Dallas and Harveys Lake. Speeds of sixty to ninety miles an hour are not uncommon many residents report. Thursday morning only a miracle prevented a disas- trous accident at the Center street interesection near the Methodist Church in Shavertown when a car, reported to be driven at ninety-miles-an-hour, barely missed one driven by a Dallas man. Pioneer Avenue is a residential area and the little chil- dren and home owners who live along it deserve a better break than this. The solution is continuous and effective patrolling and a strict enforcement of the speed laws. Right now is the time for Kingston Township and Dallas Township police to become concerned and do some- thing about it. Ninety-Eight Men Are Named On Mills Circus Committees Circus advance men have no snap job, members of Dallas Ki- wanis Club and Back Mountain Y. M. C. A. are learning as they pre- pare for the showing of Mills Bro- thers Circus here on August 31 at the show grounds on Harveys Lake Highway just beyond the golf driv- ing range. Ninety-eight men are now hard at work on the committees that will have charge of tickets, parking, publicity, concessions, grounds and transportation. Members of all these groups met last night at Irem Temple Country Club to receive assign- ments and to keep the ball rolling until the big top goes up and comes down on August 31. Committees will continue to meet every Wednesday evening at 7:30 following the Kiwanis meet- ing at Irem Temple Country Club’ to keep fully informed on develop- ments and to help bring about the 100% cooperation needed to as- sure a 100% financial success. Committee members and chair- men are: General Committee, Fred Ander- son and Lewis LeGrand, co-chair- men, John Churry, Ralph Garra- han, Mitchell Jenkins, Robert Flem- ing, Treasurer; James Graham, E. “Tug” Wyant, Clyde Cooper. Ticket Committee, Robert Flem- ing chairman, John Henninger, Le- Roy Troxell, Clyde Cooper, Henry Peterson, Robert Yost, Mitchell Jenkins. Parking and Traffic Committee, Harold Smith, Chairman, Louis Banta, Primo Berrettini, Lowther Brown, Walter Brunges, Wesley Cave, William Dierolf, James Dick, David ‘Evans, Harold Flack, Thomas Garrahan, Ralph Gearhart, James Gansel, Joseph Hand, Sherman Harter, Charles Hauch, Joseph Ide, Charles A. James, Charles Kish- baugh, Clarence LaBar, Melvin Mosier, William Reniska, Kenneth Rice, L. L. Richardson, Warren Taylor, William W. Thomas. Publicity and Advertising, Thom- as Shelbourne and Howard Risley, co-chairmen, Robert Bachm a n, James. L. Brown, Bernard Bush, James Culp, Sam Davis, William E. Davis, Arthur Dungey, George Dy- mond, Elmer Evans, Charles Hart- man Ralph Hazeltine, Wilfred Ide, Stanley Jones, Allan Kistler, Ray- mond Kuhnert, Fred Merrill, Gil- bert Tough, George Montgomery, Richard Morgan, Harry Ohlman, Russell Race, Russell Ruble, L. B. Squier, George Taylor, Lew Ide. Concessions Committee, William Wright, chairman, Arthur Ellum, James Huston, David Joseph, Or- man Lamb. Grounds Committee, Warr en Evans, chairman, Donald Arnold Corey Besteder, Lee Brown, Robert Clark, Robert Disque, John Dona- hue, S. N. Goss, William Guyette Jasper Kocher, W. R. Lohman Ed- ward Oncay, John Parsons, Albert Pesevanto, Joseph Petrik, John Roberts, William Sarley, Ray Sear- foss, William J. Thomas. Transportation Committee, Clyde Birth, chairman, Samuel Thompson, Donald Harris, Ralph Garrahan, James Martin. Insurance Committee, Ralph Gar- rahan, William Wright. All Stars To Play Back Mountain Little League is entering the first round of the na- tion-wide elminination games, Its All Star team will play Ashley ‘Little League All Stars next Friday evening, August 3 at Ashley. Tue Darras Post MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION DA Vol. 61 No. 30 3 New Rooms Near Completion At Lehman School Work On Schedule School Opening To Be September 10 Work is going according to sched- ule on the new addition to Leh- man-Jackson high school, with plastering about to start on the three rooms remodelled from the old gymnasium, and bulldozing done to level the grounds over the newly installed drains and septic tanks. School will start on September 10, the Monday after Labor Day, according to Lester Squier, Super- vising Principal. Home Economics classes and shop classes will be housed for the first month in tem- porary quarters, as steel beams needed, for these rooms and the new gymnasium will not be avail- able until September 15, The gymnasium will be com- pleted and ready for use, according to the: contractor, Raymon Hedden, by late November or December 1st. The structure will be:concrete block faced with yellow brick to match the present high school building, and the new rooms will form a court enclosed on three sides. Fire escape for the older frame building will be installed as soon as steel is available. The walls have already been prepared for its reception. Umpire Struck: By Thrown Ball Coolbaugh’s Nose Broken, And Left Eye Injured Irwin. Coolbaugh received pain- ful injuries to the eyes and nose Friday night when he was struck by a thrown ball while umpiring third base during the Carverton- Dallas: Little League Game at Shav-' | ertown Field. . . a Irwin was intent on watching a fast play at third when the ball thrown by the catcher hit him be- tween the eyes, fracturing his nose and rupturing a blood vessel and nerve in his left eye. He was treated by Dr, J. C. Fleming of Dallas who stopped ‘the bleeding of the retina, but has been unable to set the nose for fear of further bleeding. Both eyes are badly swollen and blackened, but if no complications set in his seeing will not be im- paired. Future Farmers Purchase Pig Duroc Boar Son Of Champions Members of Blue Ridge Chapter, Future Farmers of America, Leh- man-Jackson High School, will have the benefit of a registered Duzoc- Jersey boar pig when agriculture classes start in the fall. Lewis Disque, president of the chapter of 1951-52, Anthony Cas- per, chairman of the Swine Club, and Russell Ruble, adviser, motor- ed to Wyerstown to purchase the three-month old pig from Horst Brothers, Pennsylvania breeders of outstanding Duroc swine for the past several years. The boar is from the Grand Champion Duroc Gilt of last year’s Pennsylvania State’s farm show. The sire was Blender Model, Grand Champion boar at the 1950 State Duroc Show at Reading. Beaumont Votes For Jointure Votes Dry In Very Light Poll Beaumont, in a very light vote on Tuesday, with 215 ballots cast out of a possible 500, decided that the Township should be dry, and expressed itself in favor of school jointure. ° With no opposition for school directors, C. W. Smith and Alden Dietz were reelected for another term. Jointure has been in the wind for some time, with opinion divided between Lake Township and Tunk- hannock possibilities. With the vote in favor of joint-. ure, school directors will now undertake a study to determine the most advantageous move. "Nuss 191; and Richard’ | Lake Silkworth- 1745 FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1951 Elbert Martin, 42, Killed In Collision At Kunkle $ Albert Martin, 42, unmarried son of Supervisor and Mrs. Charles Martin of Dallas Township, was al- most instantly killed Wednesday afternoon at 5:30 when the 1935 Dodge sedan pictured above was crushed beneath a heavily laden gasoline transport tractor trailer in front of his brother Kenneth'’s gasoline station on Route 309 at Kunkle. Charles Wertman of Kunkle one of the first on the scene pulled Martin's body from the wreckage and Dr. Sherman Schooley who ar- rived shortly ordered the injured man removed in Howard Woolbert’s ambulance to Nesbitt Memorial Hospital where he was pronounced dead upon arrival. Crowds soon gathered and Char- les Tregaskis directed traffic around the wreckage until the arrival of Chief James Gansel of Dallas Town- ship police and Pvts. Sicora and Sinkivich of the State Police. Shortly prior to the accident Martin was seen seated in the front seat of the Dodge which was park- ed ‘on a grade back of Jack and May’s Inn. According to neigh- bors the car was not in operating condition and was without a key, battery or fuel. In some manner the brakes must have become released and the car eased down the driveway and out on Route 302 where it was struck broadside with terrific impact by the Tunkhannock bound tractor- trailer coming down grade. The impact pushed the Dodge 100 yards before both machines left the pave. Driver of the tractor-trailer, own- ed by Montour Transport Company of Montoursville, was Bernard C. Speary 34, of Muncy Valley. He 8 Cents Per Copy—Ten Pages was arraigned later before Justice of the Peace Thomas Robinson, Dallas Township, and released on $2,500 bail on a charge of invol- untary manslaughter. Bail was pro- vided by his firm. Mr. Martin was a lifelong resi- dent of Dallas Township and was employed on his father’s farm. He was well known as a hunter and trapper and was a member of Kunkle Methodist Church. Surviving besides his parents are brothers, Ernest, Elwood, Charles: Jr., Howard and Kenneth, and sis- ters, Mrs. Minnie Prutzman, Mrs. Vera Conden, and Mrs. Edith Weaver. Funeral services will be conduc- ted Saturday afternoon at 2 from Nulton Funeral Home in Beaumont with interment in Warden Ceme- tery, Dallas. PHOTO BY KOZEMCHAK Back Mountain Highway Deaths and Serious Accidents Since V-J Day DALLAS KINGSTON TOWNSHIP ~_ ROSS TOWNSHIP Charles Nuss Terminates Long Term Presidency Of Lehman School Board In a closely contested Lehman Township election * on Tuesday, Charles” Nuss stepped down from a twelve-year presidency of the school -board, three years as presi- dent of the joint Lehman-Jackson district. : S. W. Rhoads was given 228 votes, 9rnan Lamb. 212, Charles Directors retain their offices until December board meeting, so com- pletion “of the school building will be made under the present board. Mr. Nuss has served as president under three school regimes, first with Austin Snyder, then with Howard Hendricks, and currently with Lester Squier, Supervising Principal. He has given unstint- ingly of his time and his abilities, backing community betterment to the limit. It has been his privilege to pre- sent diplomas on graduation from high school to his three boys, Char- les, Arthur and Ronald, a distinc- tion seldom attained by a school board member. Twelve years, says Mrs. Nuss, is a long time for a man, no matter how civic minded, to devote him- self so completely to his commun- ity, sidetracking most other inter- ests and subordinating his private Morgan life to his public office. Mr. Nuss, she says, felt an obligation to run again, because of the building pro- gram and the enormous obligations taken on by the authority in be- half of expansion; but she is not sorry that he was not reelected, because this development will give the family -more time to be to- gether. : y Mr. Nuss is Comptroller of the Northeastern Pennsylvania Hospital Association, with headquarters in the Bennett Building. Ornan Lamb has been a resident of Lehman for three years, having purchased the home vacated by the Nusses when the new Nuss home was built. He is a former resident of Syracuse. ~ Both Mr. and Mrs. Ornan Lamb are civicminded citizens, much in- terested in the schools and the Back Mountain Library. Mrs. Lamb served on the antique committee for the Library Auction this July. Robert Underwood On Dickinson Dean List Robert Underwood, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Underwood, Shaver- town, June graduate from Dickin- son College, made the Dean’s List during the spring semester. Natona Stages Big Clam-Bake Entertains Guests From New York Natona Clam-Bake at Pine Brook Park last Saturday, staged some unusual entertainment, such as an egg-throwing contest in which the John Gallagher-Arline Siglin team won by keeping the egg in motion without breaking longer than the’ other twelve contestants; and designer and ‘model contest which Mrs. Jennie Steltz as de- signer and Mrs. Francis Hoover as model won first place, utilizing newspapers and pins to the best advantage. Three hundred and fifty members and guests of the union were pres- ent, including seventeen from New York. President and Mrs. Leo Birnbaum and Vice President and Mrs, Gustaf Gerstle, of the parent Native Lace organization, were among the out of town guests. The clambake started at noon and continued until midnight. Sack races, horseshoe pitching, egg and spoon race, tug of war, nail-driving, and other athletic events were on the agenda. Committee was headed by Char- les Rinehimer, assisted by Mrs. Marian Tryon, secretary of the union; Mrs. Ethel York, vice-presi- dent; Arline Siglin, John Judge, Stanley Krawchek, & Carl German. Six-Room Fargo Home Priced At $8350 First of several proposed dwel- lings, the six-room ranch-type house shown here in picture and plan, is being opened for inspection Saturday and Sunday at Idetown, just off the Dallas-Harveys Lake Highway beyond Castle Inn, by Keystone Homes Company. It is known as the Fargo and is one of three model National Homes which are now built along the old Harveys Lake highway in a beautifully wooded section. The house is priced at $8,350 and may. be bought for $1,700 down and $50 monthly for twenty years. Monthly payments include taxes | Flush-Type” doors. If desired a garage and large cellar can be added to the house at additional cost. The long low lines nestle into and insurance. the landscape, giving an air of spacious comfort. The homes have rich two-tone exterior finishes and are completely insulated and have an integral vapor barrier which assures the owner of complete summer and winter comfort. Each has a Mediterranean bath, Youngs- town kitchen, and large outdoor dining terrace attractive against a natural setting of evergreen trees. Front entrances have ‘Decorator Interior doors come in new natural finish. Doors and windows are weatherstripped. Screens and screen doors are in- cluded. - The project is not being built as a development and the homes can be built on individual lots or any building site that can be ap- proved by FHA. The new National Homes are built to the buyer's order with a variety of floor plans, exteriors, elevations and color schemes available. At the above price the house is complete and ready to move into and the lot is graded, seeded and shrubbed. in BOX SCORE Hospitalized Eied » — Boles rom] an] = T AL Democrats Show Some Life In Dull Primaries Chamberlain & Moore Win In Township; Nuss Is Defeated In Lehman With the exception of Dallas and Lehman Townships where there were hot contests for school direc- tors and supervisors there was only an indifferent interest in the Pri- mary Election in the Back Moun- tain area. In Dallas Township incumbent director Floyd Chamberlain and Thomas Moore defeated Charles Roberts, Harry Schooley and Clar- ence Laidler by comfortable major- ities. - Veteran supervisor Charles Martin was defeated by Philip Kunkle and George Prater retained his Justice-of-the Peace post by defeating George Shupp with the highest plurality of the day. It was the heaviest vote in Dallas Township in several years. Roberts, Schooley have indicated that they ‘may run again in the General Elec- tion. In Lehman veteran school direc- tor Charles Nuss, who did little campaigning, was defeated by Or- nan Lamb, In Dallas Borough, where less than 50 per cent of the electorate went to the polls, Joseph Mac- Veigh, Raymon Hedden, Severn Newberry and Timothy LaBar re- ceived the Republican nomination for Borough Council and Dr. R. M. Bodycomb and L. L. Richardson, also unopposed, were nominated for school board. Democrats, however, presented a full slate of write-in candidates. For Council H. W. “Chick” Smith, O. K. Harrison, Robert Brown and Richard Owens; for school board, D. T, Scott Jr., {and Donald Clark. In Kingston Township a mis- take on the voting machines cre- ated some confusion in the super- visor contest where Ralp Sands was running for a six-year term and ‘Isaac Elston was a candidate for the two-year unexpired term of William Miers. gave the impression that they ‘were opposed and that only one was to: be elected. Elston and Sands, however, defeated the write-in candidate, Theodore Hinkle, four to one. Daniel Shaver and William Mannear, Unopposed, received the Republican nomination for school board. 4 Throughout the Back Mountain area. Louis Banta, native son can- didate for sheriff received a flat- tering vote running three to one in a field of five in his own town-. ship. A k ; Drilling New 3 Well In Dallas Company Hopes To Increase Pressure Dallas Water Company yester- day started drilling for a new well on the Frank Brown property near the Lehigh Valley Depot in central Dallas. The well is expected to increase water pressures through- out the Borough. Operations are in charge of Cres- well Drilling Company and will probably reach a depth of 300 to 400 feet before the well is com- pleted. Many new properties, among them the new Gate of Heaven Parochial = School, have recently been added to the company’s Bor- ough lines and the new well will help to take care of this added E demand. A big turbine pump will . be installed in a new pump house to be erected over the well. Within recent weeks the com- pany has been installing new 6- inch lines in the Heights section. More than 350 feet were laid on Davenport Street a month ago and now 450 feet are being laid across Hunt street to tie in Parrish street mains with those on Davenport Street. LIONS TO SELECT “LADY OF THE LAKE" Harveys Lake Lions are fever- ishly planning their second annual “Lady of The Lake” Beauty Con- test for ‘both single and married women. Last year 30 single girls entered. Miss Rene Janoski was winner. Henry L. Deater and ‘Fred Allen co-chairmen, have announced the site for this year’s contest as Sun-~ set Park on Sunday, August 19th and Sunday August 26th. On the latter date a new Hudson convert-- ible will be given to the holder of a lucky ticket. Applications may be procured from H. L. Deater, Fred Allen of H. L., or Dean Shaver Idetown. pa * 3 Yiag ov 3 Nk W The machines oe