i Fas Ty A es ell ¥ 3 PAGE FOUR Wins Trip To Chicago William J. Dagostin of Route 1, Berwick, receives congratulations from I. F. Pierce, regional manager, American Oil Company, after winning first place honors in Pennsylvania for his activity, leadership and outstanding record in the 4-H Tractor Program. As an award for his accomplishments, young Dagostin won an all - expense trip to Chicago to attend the 36th National 4-H Club Congress. American Oil Company sponsors awards in the 4-H Tractor Program in twenty-two states in the east and south. The Cooperative Extension Service conducts the tractor program nationally, and five other oil companies sponsor awards across the country. THE DALLAS POST, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1957 Lehman-Jackson- Ross School Activities at its meeting on Friday, announced that it will sponsor a Record Hop on Friday, January 31. Special feature will be the presence of Jim Ward and Dave Teig as disc jockers. Christmas Dance Freshman Class will sponsor .a dance tonight, December 13. They will have a band on stage playing farmer, modern, and polka dances, | Donation 50c. Basketball | Don’t forget the basketball game | with, and at Harter High tonight, December 13. There will also be a wrestling match here with North- | west Jointure on December 17. Science Barrier Assembly “Hair colors so natural only your beautician really knows.” This advertisement holds true through- out the nation but not in our school. During a special assembly last Mon- day morning, ultra-voilet rays caused bleached and dyed hair to glow like bright fluorescent or neon Give her CASH Next Christmas EVERY WOMAN loves money to buy the things she wants—things you'd never think of. Why not give her cash next Christmas—a crisp new $50 or $100 bill? Open a Christmas Sav- ings Club here right away and accumulate the cash you want for next Christmas by making weekly deposits of 50c, $1, or more. LUZERNE NATIONAL BANK NR | UB MAINST...LUZERNE- | Hewbon Todenal Doposit Insunasece long. FREE PARKING lighting in the semi-darkness of the gymnasium. This discovery was the point of several entertaining ex- periments which proved science could mean fun as well as hard work. Another experiment dealt with the principle of the electric chair. The capable Dr. Parkerson success- fully showed the students and fac- ulty the disintegrating powers of high voltage current upon an ordi- nary piece of cloth, rather cloth than the students, please! Those interested in travel in outer space were ‘shook” by the suspect- ed effect of Martian atmosphere upon the human voice, we would all sound like “Donald Duck.” The effect on “Rock and Roll” would be drastic and the general opinion would be to stick to our own planet and atmosphere. Perhaps the funniest point in the program was a demonstration of the effect of flickering light on animated figures. We don’t know if this program encouraged anyone toward work in a scientific field. It is assured, how- ever, that many now look wupon science as a subject which can and does prove fun. Social or Personal Anthony Marchakitus, Lehman- Jackson-Ross High School principal, is planning to go to Harrisburg De- cember 26 and 27 to attend the P. S. E. A. Convention. Paid On By Effective JANUARY 1st, 1958 2? VL percent SAVINGS ACCOUNTS WYOMING NATIONAL BANK TUNKHANNOCK, PA. All Accounts Insured Up To $10,000 Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Future Teachers of America Club | \ NE Ya To Celebrate Birthday DELMAR SHUPP Delmar Shupp, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Shupp of Kunkle, will celebrate his twenty-first birthday anniversary in Japan on December 24, one day before Christmas. Del, a graduate of Dallas Town- ship High School, entered service with the Naval Reserves at Phila- delphia in October 1955. From there he went to Norman, Oklahoma, to Memphis, Tennessee, and then to Japan in May of 1956. He has been promoted to AD 3. He expects to be out of the service in the summer. Dallas Borough PTA Program On Monday Dallas Borough Elementary School P. T. A. will meet Monday evening at 8:15 in the school auditorium. Mrs. Robert Parry, program chair- man, announces a special Christmas program, featuring Mrs. Ord Trum- bower in several (Christmas read- ings, and the Dallas Woman's Club Chorale singing [Christmas selec- tions. First grade mothers are hostesses. Mrs. Ralph Fitch, chairman, names her committee: Mrs. Robert Lesser, Mrs. Sam MacKenzie, Mrs. James Lacy, Mrs. Donald Chamberlain, Mrs. John Churry, and Mrs. Donald Bulford. : The (Christmas Tree ‘Kitchen Shower” is being held on Monday || night and those who have volun- teered gifts for the tree are urged to bring them. Bible Church Women Hear Missionary Ladies of the Shavertown Bible Church held their Monthly Mission- ary Meeting Monday evening at the home of Mrs. John Allen, Center Street, Shavertown. Speaker was Miss Sallye Higgins, a missionary to Africa. The meeting was enjoyed by: Mrs. J. J. Jones, Mrs. Stanley Davis, Mrs. Eugene Kocher, Sallye B. Higgins, Carol Fitzgerald, Martha Fitzgerald, Erma ‘Garnett, Mrs. Floyd Hoover, Mrs. Ruth Ide, Mrs. Roland Bulford, Mrs. Lydia Meade, Mrs. Walter Meade, Mrs. James Brace, Mrs. Sam- uel Keast, Mrs. Elmer Hoover, Mrs. Russell Edmondson, Mrs. Ernest Bell, Mrs. John Allen, Mrs. Dayton Garn- ett, Mrs. Albert Agnew, Mrs. Samuel Higgins. Mrs. Mary L. Sutlitf Mrs. Mary Sutliff, Bloomingdale, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Russell Bilby, in Bloomingdale Wednesday morning at 2. Rev. William Howe, pastor of the Bible Protestant Church, conducted ser- vices from the Bronson Funeral Home. Mrs. Sutliff, 70, was born in Ply- mouth. Her parents were the late Jasper Newton and Melissa Har- rison Culver. Her husband; Eugene Sutliff, died some years ago. A member of Bloomingdale Bible Protestant Church, she was active in its organizations, and was a trus- tee for some years. She was the last charter member of the Willing Hand Missionary Society. She be- longed to Bloomingdale and Pomona Granges. : In addition to her daughter, she is survived by three grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Township Board Splits Over Its Two Candidates (Continued from Page 1) until a program of lighting for the gym can be carried out. Cost of complete gymnasium and stage lighting is estimated at $1,000. Enrollment Rises Seventy-four extra pupils from Meadowcrest have to be accommo- dated with school bus transporta- tion. In order that C. M. Myers may arrange his bus schedule, a sug- gestion was made that Trucksville grade students might have their lunch hour cut to half an hour, with dismissal at three o’clock to com- pensate. This would not affect any other elementary school. Enrollment in area schools, Mr. Martin reported, shows an increase of twenty-five to thirty over Sep- tember figures. Social Security for teachers and other employees of the jointure will be retroactive to January 1956, with contributions from School Board and individual employees due shortly. # What Others ZONING CAN DEGENERATE Ever since World War II, this country has been a battleground between the home builders and the zoners. The battle lines have been thrown into disarray by. a ruling of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court that it is unconstitutional for a community to require a one-acre- minimum building-lot size, with a 150-foot frontage on a street. “A zoning ordinance in a resi- dential district,” said the court, “which makes it financially impos- sible for the vast majority of our young married couples or for people of medium incomes! to purchase or own a home in that district is con- trary to our nation’s ideals of liber- ty and private opportunity. “Where the zoning ordinance is not . . . reasonable and clearly necessary for the health, safety or morals of that community, it is unconstitutional.” Never before has any important court so explicitly limited what zoning boards can do under the police power. Fifteen years ago, in a case often cited as a precedent, the Massachusetts Supreme Court approved a one-acre-minimum lot size, citing the ‘health-promoting features and amenities” of that sort Say ... of restriction. Since then, courts have gone much farther. Until the Supreme Court speaks with finality, the legal stat of Zoning Digest, which tries to keep up with the major decisions in the field, reports rulings in almost every issue. Min- imum lot sizes are only one of the problems involved. The whole field of zoning, from restrictions against home trailers to variances for in- dustries in residential areas, seems to have everyone baffled. Most reasonable people believe that zoning and planning are essen- tials for any self-respecting com- munity. The city which does not segregate its industries and busi- ness from its homes is going to have a mess on its hands. The subur- ban town which lets itself be in- undated by new housing develop- ments, without regard to water, sewer, street, sidewalk, school and other considerations, is going to wake up sorry some morning. ‘What worries some people is the tendency of the planners avidly to extend their scope of operations. The purpose of planning and zoning is supposedly ‘“to protect the public health, safety and general welfare.” But when the “general welfare” is ‘DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA zoning is going to be confused. The | contradictory court F ellowship Hears Talk On Racial Relations Christian Women’s Fellowship en- joyed a Christmas program and re- freshments at the home of Rev. and Mrs. . Charles H. Frick, Huntsville Christian Church, Tuesday evening. Mrs. Earl Griffen and Mrs. Harold Phoenix, at the invitation of Elma Major, came from Wilkes-Barre to speak on racial relations. The group accompanied a tape recording of the choir’s singing of Christmas carols. Mrs. Walter Covert presided, and Mrs. Jack Roberts and Mildred Major poured. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Covert and Mrs. Milton Culp. : 2 Present other than those ment- ioned were: Rev. Frick, Milton Culp, Mesdames William Eckert, Marcus { Ide, Frances Culp, Kenneth Brobst, { Percy Wagner, Ralph Eipper, Miss | Addie Elston. 1 interpreted to mean that a person has to buy five acres if he wants to build a house, something is wrong. Zoning should be a means of pro- moting the “health, safety and gen- eral welfare” of society. It should not be a tool used by a few theorists who want to enforce their pet ideas on everybody else or to deny to many citizens the opportunity to live in a congenial environment. —From the Saturday Evening Post, December 7, 1957. HIGH FI ® Automatic 4-sp e Diamond stylus. ber. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers