The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, June 02, 1961, Image 1

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Lake-Lehman Band Enters Contest
apind Charles Mannear, president of
ham assistant manager.
It Takes Four Years To Win A Curved Bar
72 YEARS A NEWSPAPER
Oldest Business Institution
Back of the Mountain
IT'HE DALLAS POST
TWO EASY TO REMEMBER
Telephone Numbers
ORchard 4-5656
OR 4-7676
TEN CENTS PER COPY-—TWELVE PAGES
Westmoreland Speaker
HERBERT HARRISON
Westmoreland high school, hold-
ing its third commencement June
12 at Irem Country Club, will have
as its main speaker Herbert Har-
rison, philosopher and humorist.
Mr. Harrison will take as his topic
“Live All Your Life.”
He will be introduced by Dr.
Robert Mellman, superintendent of
Dallas Schools, who = will sketch
briefly Mr. Harrison's background,
from his childhood in the shadow
of Ebbetts Field, Brooklyn, to his!
selection as Man of the Year in
Olean, N. Y.
The graduating class of 103 mem-
bers will be presented by high
school principal W. Frank Trimble,
the school board,
plomas.
Rev. Robert E. Germond, pastor
of Trucksville Methodist church will
will award di-
Back Mt. Garnishes Cemeteries
And Plants Flags For Memorial Day
It was chilly in all the ceme- |dictates of conscience. Then worship,
teries of the Back Mountain on Tues- | he said. Worship in the church of
day, and a brisk breeze searched out your choice, but do not fail to wor- |
unprotected ‘spots under the pine! ship. This country was built upon
trees; but graves were brave with reverence to God. It is now men
Alfred M." Camp willgplay the
organ prelude; the proces od
the recessional. The ass.
join in singing of the A}
The Girls Ensemble will be
accompanied by Carol Suttor
directed by Miss Louise Ohlme!
Hazeltine Wins Aw d
For 6 Years Of Safety |
Ralph Hazeltine, Trucksville, won |
a silver award yesterday for six |
years without an accident while |
driving for 6 Eastern Pennsylvania |
Supply Co., a recognition by Manu- |
facturers Casualty Insurance.
Presenting the award was PMA |
fleet safety engineer Gerard F.
Fritzen. Viewipg the eeremony well
William Blackman, sales manager; |
Guthrie Conyngham; assistant gen- |
eral manager; and John Conyng-
give both invocation and nih
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ys
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| fronted by
flowers,
and small American flags | aced by a country which holds mo
marked the final resting places of / allegiance to a higher being.
soldiers from the time of the Revo- |
lution down
and in Korea.
for Memorial Day. ‘
orial tablet and at Woodlawn Ceme-
tery marked the day.
The parade started at the Amer- |
ican Legion Home, with traffic de- | Anthem.
flected over Lake Street. {
In the line-up were Legionaires, | Harvey, shattered the quiet.
Legion Auxiliary members, Kunkle |
and Dr. Henry M. Laing fire depart- |
ments with equipment and march- |a deeper chill descended upon the
ers, Boy and Girl Scouts, Cubs and | cemetery.
Brownies. |
Westmoreland Band led off, im-
mediately behind cars containing
dignitaries. Fast-stepping Key Club
drill team maneuvered; Uncle-Sam
striped girls carried the big flag
down the highway, Junior High
girls in circular blue skirts and
white blouses demonstrated their
drill-skill. Dallas’ and Kingston
Township ambulances purred slowly
past.
At the Memorial Tablet, Rev.
Richard Frank, Gate of Heaven
Church, offered prayer. A wreath
was placed by Kathy Reese, repre-
senting Girl Scouts of the area, and
Jackie Mallin, Boy Scouts.
At Woodlawn, it was even chil-
lier than in central Dallas. Child-
ren, trying to keep warm, ran back
and forth. ‘Probably,’ ventured
Lewis LeGrand, “the folks who are
lying here, wouldn't mind at all
They'd be glad the children were
happy.”
Units formed in a hollow square,
the American Legion
Color Guard, American Legion mem-
bers and the Westmoreland Band.
Rev. Albert Reining gave the in-
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to those who gave their
their lives in the Second World War | young lives placed in their care.
‘Delinquent
Each cemetery was freshly clipped | “lead inevitably to dilinquent child-
| ren.” The challenge posed by Com-
In Dallas, ceremonies at the Mem- | Munism must be*met by a height-
| means,
vocation, The Westmoreland Band
directed by Lester Lewis played, |
and majorettes performed. |
Atty. Robert Fleming spoke. In a |
brief but telling address, he called |
upon his listeners to think deeply |
on the freedom which their fore- |
fathers had bought for them at
such a price, and asked them to |
bear in mind that freedom could |
Te lost unless [his nation, unige
God, should remain = constantly |
alert.
One of the freedoms, he said, is
freedom to worship according to
Weiter Lake or Lehman high schools,
Four years of fun and hard work | Mrs. Sherman Harter.
went into the curved bar award | At the ceremony, Mrs. Anthony
won by four girls in Trucksville Girl | Bogdon gave a brief outline of re-
Scout Troop 19. {quirements for the curved bar
Receiving the highest’ award in |award a coveted goal in Girl Scout-
Girl Scouting at the annual Mother- | ing.
Daughter banquet held in Trucks- Mothers pinned the awards to
ville Methodist Church were Susan | their daughter’s uniforms, a tradi-
Dingle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | tion in Girl Scouting, which seeks
Fred Dingle; Ann Woolbert, daugh- [to cement relationship between
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wool- | mother and daughter as girls come
bert: Jo Ann Norrie, daughter of | closer to the estate of womanhood
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Norrie; and! and community responsibility.
Jane Harter, daughter of Mr. and |
In Sherburne, N. Y. In Highest Class
ment Co. of Wilkes-Barre to bor-
row ten musical instruments, to re-
place instruments which are slight-
ly deficient in quality.
On Saturday, starting at 5:30 a.m.
from Lehman School, John Miliaus-
kas will take his 135 piece band to
Sherburne, N. Y., where it will |
enter concert and marching com- | Band Sponsors will defray cost of
petition with thirty bands, all of | transportation in four buses, ‘and
them except his from New York |the price of meals en route.
State. This is the first time a band | Fifteen members of the band
from Pennsylvania has been invited. | played in the West Side Band for
The Lake-Lehman band will enter | the annual May Fiesta in Public
concert competition at 10:30, | Square, practicing with the group
marching competition at 1 p.m, one night a week for three months
both challenges in the AA class the [in advance.
highest in the annual competition. | Students who participated are:
For the concert, the band will | Larry Carpenter, Stephen Arendt,
play the Military Escort march, and | and Jay Ruckel, trumpet; John Ba-
the Light Cavalry Overture. As |lavagg, Marguerite Hackling, and
marching selections, memorized and {Sandra Yellitz, clarinet; Sharon
given without a musical score, the Coombs, alto clarinet; Ronalee Ste-
hand will perform the Headway | panski bass clarinet; Ronald Daven-
March and the Service March. | port, alto sax; Beverly Lord, bari-
The band is up against exceed- | tone sax; sax; Timothy Swanson,
ingly strong competition. | Joanne Fielding, and John Landis,
To guard against every possible | trombone; Joanne Price, baritone;
complication, Mr, Miliauskas has Carol Drapiewski, flute.
arranged with the Delmcas Instiu-)
He called upon parents to realize |
responsibility toward the |
parents,” he said,
ened awareness of what freedom
The band played the National
The firing squad, under Leonard |
A bugler played Taps.
The sun went under a cloud, and
Valedictorian
JACQUELYN RUFF
Jacqueline Ruff was in the cor-
rect position, picture-wise, in an-|
nouncement of top ranking students |
at Lake Township, taking prece- |
dence over her runner-up, Donna
Meeker, but in the text of the story
in the May 25 issue, she wags out-
ranked, No mention was made of
valedictorian or salutatorian “in
by request of administration.
Award Winner
To Paint Chair
Ruction To Chance
Oft Boston Rocker
Mrs. Paul Gross is decorating for
the Antique Committee a Boston
rocker, to be chanced off at the |
Library Auction, July 7 and 8.|
This will be a very special offering,
as Mrs. Gross has recently won an |
award for which she has been aim- |
ing for many years, the Masters
Award in Chippendale. Only nine
members of the Guild of over 700
members from all over the coun-
try, have ever rated this distinction.
Years of paintaking work have |
gone into the achievement, as only |
two entries may be submitted each |
year. For each of her nine entries,
Mrs. Gross has won an A grading.
Categories which must be entered
before a rating of Master can be
obtained, include country tin, sten-
cilling, gold leaf work, free hand
painting, reverse painting on glass,
lace, working up by stages to the
most difficult in execution.
At Williamstown, Mass. where
the annual Guild meeting was held |
May 17,18 and 19, Mrs. Gross was |
honored by being elected to the |
Board of Directors, and presented |
with a scroll and an orchid.
Herbert A. Smith Jr., one
=n
0.
| away before he was extricated. He
Car Leaves Rear
Wheels On Tree,
Sails Over Wall
Three Youths Escape
Death By Miracle,
All Badly Injured
People who viewed the wreckage
down at Birth’'s garage could not
believe that three young men had
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escaped from it with their lives after |
the early morning crash on Satur-
day. It was delivered to the garage !
in fragments.
Cresting the hill beyond the Open- |
Air Theatre before the long de-
scent to Kunkle, the car left its
rear wheels on a ten-inch tree,
flew up a hill, crossed Bucky Nul-
ton’s driveway,
sailed over a stone wall and came
to rest in a tangle of barbed wire.
Before it took this fantastic flight,
it had careened along the highway,
travelling along the
shoulder, then crossing the
leaped a gully, |
right hand |
high- |
way. |
“Must have been going ail of 25
miles an hour,” dryly commented |
Bucky Nulton, who was awakened
at 4:30 by the jolt and the crash. |
It was a souped-up engine cap- |
able of making racing car speed. |
Birth says several young hopefuls |
have been around with intent to |
buy the motor.
former Dallas resident were badly |
hurt.
Earl VanCampen, 26, now of |
West Chester, was driving. First |
reports were that he might have a |
Jacerated spleen and a pelvic frac- |
ture, but later findings showed that |
he had only a compound fracture
of the left leg, broken in two places,
badly twisted, and contaminated by |
dirt and debris; numerous lacer- |
ations of the face and head and |
arms; extensive bruising of chest |
and abdomen. Pinned behind the |
broken steering wheel, he was
removed unconscious. f
Joseph Galagher, 31, Main Road, |
Shavertown, was so tangled in
barbed wire that it had to be cut
was deeply cut around the head
and nose, with many sutures nec-
essary. He remains at Nesbitt, along
with his cousin, young VanCampen.
Brent Yeisley, 20, the youngest
of the three, also a cousin of Van-
Campen, was transferred from Nes-
hitt.. to. Geisinger,,, where he had
surgery of the head. His skull was
badly fractured.
[Chief of Dallas Township Police
Irwin Coolbaugh, and assistant
Peter Lange, say the car travelled
a quarter-mile before it came to
rest. Uprooting the maple tree did
little to stop the headlong flight.
Dallas and Kingston Township
ambulances answered the call. Wil-
liam Berti, Don Bulford, Ray Titus,
and Jack Berti took Yeisley to Nes-
bitt; William Frederick and Arnold
Yeust took Gallagher and VanCam-
pen to Nesbitt, and later Frederick
and Ed Carey transferred Yeisley to
Geisinger.
Dr. Walter Mokychic of Lake-
Noxen Clinic, and Dr. Henry Gall-
agher of Dallas administered first
aid, Dr. Mokychic accompanying
the victims to Nesbitt.
The three were seen at Overbrook
Inn at 3:30, where Yeisley was not
served because he was under age.
Stork Alights Sunday
Night In Ambulance
A premature baby was born late
Sunday night in Lehman Township
ambulance, only seconds after the
ambulance had pulled away from
the Martin Cook home. Mr. and
Mrs. Cook, and a neighbor, Mrs.
Crane, had set forth in the am-
bulance, staffed by Chief Wentzel
and Roland Ide. |
The little girl, weighing only |
four pounds, was popped into an |
incubator upon arrival at Nesbitt
| Mrs. Edward Ratcliffe, Mrs. Ralph
Hospital. Realizing that speed was
essential for preservation of
MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION
Library Auction Refreshment Committee Lays Plans
Titus, and Mrs. Edwin Roth. Stand-
ing are Mrs. John Blase, Mrs. Nel-
son Nelson, and Mrs. John Rogers.
Other key people of the committee,
absent when the picture was taken,
are: Mesdames Kenneth Bayliss,
Jack Williams, Algert Antanaitis,
Lewis Wolfe, and Sheldon Evans.
Mrs. Torr is general chairman, as-
sisted by co-chairmen Mrs. Nelson
and Mrs. Blase, and advisors Mrs.
Rogers, Mrs. Ratcliffe, and Mrs.
Harry Ohlman.
for the refreshment
Mountain Memorial
Committee
| stand at Back
Two Shavertown men, and one | Library Auction already has the sit-
uation well under control, working
with the smooth efficiency necessary
when the goal is greater than it was
last year, when over $2,000 was
raised.
Seated at a table in front of the
stone fireplace at the Library Annex
are, left to right: Mrs. Robert-Hale,
Dixon, Mrs. Albert E. Torr, Mys.
Edward Bessmer, Mrs. Raymond
Winners At Open-House
Carrie Caperoon won the
stove at the three-day open-house
staged by Daring’s new store on
Memorial Highway Thursday, Fri-
day and Saturday. Bill Rood, dealer!
for Pyrofax, demonstrated it by |
cooking 1,500 hot dogs for the
throngs that attended the ceremon-
ies.
The silver service went to Mrs.
David J. Thomas, Shavertown Gin-| the pin by someone closely associa-
ny Roan won the doll; Francis | seq by family or long teaching: con- |
Schenck “of Noxery; the dium=set; | nections.
Betty Stash, Dallas, the carving-set; | Mrs. Gordon Dawe pinned her |
William Glahn, Shavertown, the mother Mrs, William Simms; Mrs. |
fry-pan; Mrs. Crawford Goss Manor, | Colia O'Leary gave. Arghur Curtis |
the waxer; Edward Sidorek, a cake; | his buttonhole emblem; Mrs. Doro- |
John Mulhern, thermos. Grocery | thy LaBar piined Mos. Ellen Cur- |
baskets went to Mrs. Emmett King, tis; and Janet Turner presented the |
Peter Roushey, Stephen Sedler, Mrs. [iE to Ms VanCampen {
Eugene Considine, Raymona Spen- : on ] |
cer, Mrs. George Bauman, Mrs. | Mrs. Alice Elston was to have
Dorothy Johnson, Gladys Hall, Dr. |°¢% honored by Miss Hannah Culp, |
R. M. Bodycomb, Lee Brobst, Les but had not been able to fly in
Warhol: : : | frcm Maine in time.
Mrs. Grace Martin gave the in-|
vocation; Mrs. Jean Moledor, Miss
Pauline Davies, and Mrs. Bethia
King, accompanied by Miss Jessica
gas
Four members of Lake-Lehman |
faculty, and one school nurse re-
ceived service pins at a testimonial |
dinner tendered them upon their
coming retirement at Irem Country |
Club May 23.
Each retiring member was given |
Brigadier General Doane
Dr. John Doane, Idetown, who
: : dicald Thomas, sang.
Totired four years 2g0 as medica | [Gifts were presented by Robert
Fhigetor pt Veterans Administra. Belles, supervising principal in
tion regional office in Wilkes-Barre, hirpeitol | dlementity | edutztion;
was promoted to Brigadier General |
May 17 by A. J. Drexel Biddle, ad- |
jutant general of Pennsylvania.
Veterans of both World War I;
Anthony Maréhakitis, high school
principal; and Lester B. Squier,
supervising principal.
Lake-Lehman Teachers Present
Service Pins To Retiring Members
| Army; truck driver for a Nanticoke
| Arthur, who lives in New Jersey.
| Lehman high school, she attended
and World War II, Dr. Doane |
served -at Indiantowngap and Camp |
Beauregard, La., before being as- |
signed in 1945 to Wilkes-Barre.
Mrs. Doane is a past president of |
Wyoming Valley Woman's Club,
and former Dean of Wilkes College.
The couple has four sons, all doc- |
tors and one daughter.
Drives Car Into Lake
Entertainment was by the Never- |
Home Four, a barbershop quartet |
named by their wives. Music during |
the dinner was in charge of Miss
| Davies.
| In charge of arrangements were
| Mrs. King and Mrs. Jeanette Wil-
liams.
Brief biographies of
en, seventh grade teacher at Noxen,
a graduate of Stroudsburg,
| Anthony’s Hospital
retiring |
members show that Mrs. VanCamp- |
took |
| extra work at Columbia University; |
taught for two years at a school for |
John Woloski, 29, of Plains |
Township, lost control of his car |
at Outlet Sunday morning at 4:30. |
He ‘waded ashore from the partly |
submerged car, scaled the three-|
foot wall which it had hurdled, |
and emerged without a scratch. |
life. | Police Chief Edgar Hughes arrested |
Mrs. Gross’ most promising pupils, | The Lehman ambulance made a fast| him for driving too fast for con-|
took a B rating in his entry.
pec
Seated at the head table at a!
testimonial dinner given by Lake-
Lehman Educatprs Association for
retiring teachers last Tuesday night
at Irem Country Club were: Super-
vising Principal Lester B. Squier |
| trip, arriving in Kingston at 11:10 ditions.
|
Lake-Lehman Educators Honor Retiring Teachers and School Nurse
delinquent children in’ New
York | Church and its WSCS: State Nurses |
(City; spent six .years teaching Eng- |
lish, mathematics and penman-
| Hopkins Hospital.
ship at Wilkes-Barre Business Col- |
lege; taught sixteen years at Noxen. |
Her husband is Herman VanCamp-| ji. Simms and Judy Dawe, both
en. The couple has a son, also a| of Lehman. Her pet hobbies
| reading, playing the piano,
| ming, and bird-watching.
teacher.
Mrs. Ellen Curtis, teacher of first
and Mrs. Squier; Mrs. Ruth Simms, | Belles; . Mr. .and Mrs. . Anthony | in from Maine for the event, but
Marchakitus, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur | will instead be awarded her ser-|
retiring school nurse; Mr. and Mrs. |
Alfred Bronson; Arthur Nuss, Mrs.
Mae VanCampen, and Mrs. Grace
Martin.
Standing: Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Curtis, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Lash- |
ford. |
Absent was Mrs. Alice Elston, |
whe was supposed to have flown!
vice pin at a future teachers din-
ner. i
Photo by Kozemchak PSEA and NEA.
|
VOL. 73, NO. 22, FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1961
|
Mrs. Dixon has charge of meat; |
Mrs. Nelson, milk; Mrs. Hale and
Mrs. Bayliss, paper supplies; Mrs.
Ratcliffe, posters; Mrs. Antainitis,
coffee; Mrs. Roth, sandwiches; Mrs.
Titus, Coca-Cola; Mrs. Wolfe, potato
salad, baked beans.
Mrs. Ratcliffe, personnel; Mrs.
Rogers, rolls; Mrs. Blase, ice cream;
Mrs. Bessmer, hot dogs; Mrs. Evans,
cashier; Bob Bachman, potato |
chips; Mrs. Rogers, publicity.
* Phto by Kozemchak |
grade at Ross, retires after 33 years |
of service. A graduate of Strouds-
burg, she began teaching in Nanti-
coke in 1916, remaining there five
years. She then taught in Wayne
County and Conyngham Township,
coming to Ross and spending most
of her life teaching small children.
Mr. Curtis teaches sixth grade at
Ross and’ has 31 years of service.
He also graduated from Strouds-
burg, graduating in 1916 with an
“All Branches’ diploma. He has had
varied experience, including that of
shipping clerk at Bethlehem Steel
Co. and personnel clerk for the U.S.
firm, and insurance agent for
Metropolitan, Life. He started his
teaching career in a one room
school in Wayne County.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Curtis are
members: of Nanticoke English Bap-
tist Church. They have one son,
Mrs. Ruth Simms has an impres-
sive record. Twelve years of service
in Lehman schools caps a career
that is outstanding. A graduate of
Wyoming !Seminary for two years,
then entered training at Johns Hop-
kins Hospital in Baltimore. Upon
graduation, she remained there for
a time, and was later employed at
the famed Mayo Clinic in Rochester.
She became a staff nurse for the
Detroit Public Health Department,
then worked as anaesthetist at St.
in Newfound-
land.
Returning to Lehman, she fur-
thered her education by studying
at Wilkes College, Bloomsburg, and
Pennsylvania State College. She is
a member of Lehman Methodist
Organization, and Alumnae of John
Her husband is Alfred Simms.
The couple has two children, Wil-|
are |
swim- |
Mrs. Elston, though not present |
at the dinner, is entitled to her |
share of the spotlight, in ae
of her formal recognition at some |
later date.
Mrs. Elston retired last year as
second grade teacher at Lehman. |
After studying at Pennsylvania
State College, she received her
diploma in 1916 ‘from Penn State |
Extension School. Her teaching
career began in a one-room school-
house at Idetown. For three years |
she taught in Lehman township, |
then eight years in Wilkes-Barre. |
Coming back to her home town, |
she taught at Lehman for thirteen |
vears. She and her husband Wil- |
liam, now, deceased, had four chil-
dren: Walter, a scientist with the
Hercules Co.; Thomas, an engineer
who is a world traveller; Mrs.
Charles Cook (Mary Lou), instruc-
tor of nursing at Bellefonte; and
Marcia, now Mrs. John Stahl, Old
Orchard Beach, Maine, with whom
she now makes her home.
She has been active in Lehman
Methodist Church, serving as super-
intendent of the primary depart-
ment, participating in WSCS, and
serving ao a member of the Of-
ficial Board. She is affiliated with
Vote Down Wage
Tax In Advance
Of Public Outcry
Lehman Directors Bow
To Tax-Payers Protest,
Face Millage Increase
Within five minutes after the
Lehman School Board met in special
| session Monday night, the unpala-
table salary and earned income
tax of 1% had been voted down
unanimously by the directors. But
the meeting lasted for another hour
and a half, while residents voiced
their disapproval of a measure that
had already been killed.
Bruce Williams, president of the
board, explained that millage
would undoubtedly have to rise to
fill the gap between income and
outgo, probably from the present
45 to an estimated 75 to 77.
Anthony Toluba, Idetown, speak-
ing for the Tax-Payers Association,
said that there were two classes
of citizens in Lehman Township, a
class taxed to the hilt, and another
class getting away with murder.
And he cited the case of the owner
of a $30,000 home, assessed at
$600. ‘Assessments, he said, were
very lopsided. It looked, he said,
as if there were considerable
feather-bedding.
Thomas Heffernan rose to state
that Luzerne County assessments
seem very inaccurate, and drew
| applause from 250 embattled citi-
| zens.
Mr: Williams replied that a year
and a half ago, the board had
urged release of reassessment, fig-
ures, again in January of this year,
| and yet again in May. No final
| figures
have yet been released,
though assessors have been busy
in the area.
Charles Miner, school board soli-
citor, stated that 590 school dis-
tricts in Pennsylvania and over
1,000 municipalities had already
passed a salary tax of 1%, and
found that it raised a substantial
amount of revenue without too
great hardship.
The murmur which greeted this
statement was indicative of the
fact that nobody was interested
in other areas, it was the Lehman
area which was being discussed.
And further, they wondered why
they needed a new school.
John Hewitt, Lehman School
Authority, stated that reports to
the contrary, the school which
had been designed was not an ela-
borate structure; that it contained
plans for no swimming pool, just
the facilities mandated by the State.
On June 6, he went on, the
Authority will open all bids, and
lay all cards on the table. There
would then follow sixty days for
acceptance or rejection of bids.
To a bitter inquiry, “Well, when
we get finished building this one,
will we find we have to build a
couple more?”
“Hope sp,” said Mr. Hewitt,
“hope this' area is going to keep
right on growing, with lots of peo-
ple moving out here from the city.
This is a good country, and we
want the sort of people here who
are interested in good schools and
good education.”
“What do you think about the
price of the land for the new
school?” was fielded neatly by Mr.
Hewitt.
“It’s not out of line at all,” he
replied. “Land values are my
business.”
Bruce Williams summed it up:
“If you people will keep on com-
plaining to the Court House, in-
vestigating at the Court House, and
airing your findings, maybe we can
get something done on reassess-
ment. Could be the State will offer
some relief on school expenses. But
you've got to bear in mind that
annual raises for teachers are man-
| dated by the State, and the State
requires a good school building if
| it is to go ahead with help in con-
struction.”
‘What nobody in the group men-
tioned,is something not generally
accepted by tax-payers confronted
with unexpected increases: Tax-
payers are the State; legislators are
elected by tax-payers. .
To a question, “How long will this
ban on levying of a wage tax last?”
Mr. Williams replied, “One year.
| The question may be raised again
next year. But obviously, Lehman
Township is not yet ready for a
wage tax.”
Did Anybody Take Movies
Of Last Year's Parade
Warren Mekeel, secretary of Back
Mountain Horseman's Club and gen-
eral chairman of the Fourth of July
parade in Lehman,” asks that any-
body who took movies of last year’s
parade, get in touch with him. He
would like to show movies at the
next meeting in the Fire Hall at
Lehman, set for June 13 at 8 p.m.
in order to obtain guidance for this
year’s line of march.
To date, entries include Lake-
Lehman band, antique cars, horse
drawn vehicles including the surrey
with the fringe on top, and for the
first time Back Mountain 4-H Horse-
shoe Club, which plans a mounted
entry and a iloat.