The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, December 14, 1961, Image 3

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DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
: Added To Substitutes
Added to the substitute list by
Dallas directors at ‘the December
meeting were these four names:
Mrs, Marilyn J. Rozelle, Shaver-
town, elementary teacher; Francis
L. Ambrose, Elmcrest, secondary
teacher; Mrs. Marjorie E. Connelly,
Dallas, school nurse; Robert C.
Williams, Harveys Lake, custodian.
LUZERNE
THEATRE
t¢" “Angel Baby”
GIFT NIGHTS
FRIDAY - SATURDAY
Spencer Tracy
The Devil
At Four 0Q’clock”
7 SUN. - MON. - TUES.
(Continuous Sunday 2 to 11)
Susan Hayward
John Gavin
“Back Street”
Dallas Senior High basketball
squad brought its exhibition record
to 2 wins against 1 loss by down-
ing West Pittston at home Tues-
day night 65-57.
With coach Clint Brobst using
his starting five all the way for
the second straight game, Dallas
overwhelmed West Pittston in the
overtime period, outscoring the
Rams 12-4 after the regulation game
ended 53-all,
sks EAR
FORTY FORT
THEATRE
TONIGHT
FRIDAY - SATURDAY
Audrey Hepburn
Breakfast
At Tiffanys”
SUN. - MON. - TUES.
(Cont. Sun. 8 to 11)
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elcome Xmas Gifts
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DUNCAN SPORTI
EVERY NIGHT
Dallas Topples West Pittston
Lake-Lehman Loses To Wyoming
Junior Tommy Gauntlett contin-
ued his torrid scoring as he tossed
m 26 counters to give him a
total of 77 for 3 games.
Also scoring in double figures
were Letts and Mosier with 12 and
Carey 11. The other starter Belles
chipped in with 4.
Rutledge and Fogli with 14 and
Demboski 12 led the visitors.
Last Friday Dallas stopped North-
west at home 60-51 as Gauntlett
poured in 23 points. Letts
scorers were Carey 8, Mosier and
Gardner 7.
Dallas meets Forty Fort at the
Daltas Senior high gym Friday |
night.
second Loss
Lake-Lehman lost its second
straight exhibition game losing a
heart-breaker to Wyoming 46-43.
A poor second period was the
12 to hold a 31-20 half-time advan-
tage.
- Ellsworth led the scoring for the
Knights as he tossed in seven field |
goals for 14 counters. Bob Rogers |
chipped in with 12,
Myra's New Desk
By Rev. Charles Giibert
office force. The desk had just
crawled out of its cardboard pack-
ing and lay there speechless on
its side on the floor. Howard was
trying to get it to stand up; he was
thinking of the late Norti Berti
there was son, Billy Berti, bolting
the legs on. The last nut was turned
tight.
“All right, up with it”. Berti and
the girls got around to coax it to
its feet. Howard was on one side,
who shouldn’t be lifting. They told
him but that was all the good, it
‘did. Me, I tried jostling for a pos-
ition to get my hands under but
they said, “Reverend, they are all
younger than you are.” ‘Snort’!
says I. But far be it from me to
discourage youth's friendly defer-
ence to century-bound age. Youth
should respect their elders, I was
told in my youth.
0.K. the new desk without a groah
| got to its feet. I don’t believe it was
| very heavy anyway. Bet I could've
histed it up by myself! There it
rolled into the place where Myra
would be using it. Was she beaming
| with delight over her mew toy?
She was not. She was sputtering,
1.“T didn’t want a new.desk. I liked
the old one. I was used to it.”
I know, I know. My old desk at
| home has been taken down and
reassembled in many a parsonage
through the years. It is an heirloom.
Goes back to a school teacher uncle
of mine. One man told me once
desk for purposes for which boys
used to be laid across desks. I have
quite a time keeping house in and
| on it. Cleaning it is a major prod-
| uction not hastily nor often come at.
| There was Myra’s new steel desk.
| The desk drawers were on rollers.
| They can store lots of things that
| have to be kept in a newswoman’s
| desk, How will she find anything for
. | the next few weeks! That old desk
did all right. Our Catherine has
avowed that she learned more about
NG GOODS
NAREOWS SHOPPING CENTER KINGSTON
also-
lent support with his 15. Other |
biggest downtall for Lehman as the |
Redskins outscored the Knights 22- |
“You came just too late to help |
with this new desk!’ Joshed the |
who was always around to help. But |
that my uncle laid him across this |
¥
Dallas Directors
Reelect Mannear
To Presidency
Dr. Bodycomb Named
Vice President By
Reorganized Board
Dallas School Board reorganized
| Tuesday night, electing incumbent
Charles Mannear to the presidency.
Dr. Robert Bodycomb was elected
vice president,
Valentine reelected solicitor,
liam Wright was elected to repre-
| sent Dallas on Wyoming Valley
| Technical- Institute Board, Earl
| Phillips alternate.
| Mr. . Phillips,
"at large, and Mrs, Paul Steinhauer,
elected by Franklin Township.
Atty Jonathan |
Wil-
taking the chair |
pro tem, made his first official duty |
administration of the oath of office |
to Mrs. Thomas Vernon, director |
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1961
300 Pound Pig Crash Victim
A 300 pound pig, dashing across | front bumper, the grille, and the
Route 309 north of the Open Air | radiator, and threw the car out
Theatre Thursday afternoon at 5, of alignment. |
tangled with a red Plymouth con- Mrs. Yatsko, the former Marie
vertible driven by Mrs. George Yat- | Wahlgren of Shavertown, taken to
sko of Center Moreland. | Noxen Clinic by her husband, was |
The porker, an escapee from Shel- | checked over for possible shock |
don Mosier’s field, caved in the! which might affect ike health of an |
NEW LOCATION
Have Moved My Garage
FROM VANECK(Q’S SERVICE STATION
TO THE HAROLD MAJORS GARAGE
IN LEHMAN. |
board. Mrs. John Stahl acted as
| teller for the secret ballot required |
Elevation of Mr. Phillips to the |
chair pro tem, ended official parti- |
| cipation of retiring members of the |
by law for election of president and |
vice president.
Retiring members James Hutchi-
son, William Clewell, Henry Hess,
and Don Hislop left the Senior
High School library after election
of officers. Not in attendance were
four other retiring men: Lewis Le-
Grand, Philip Cheney, Walter Mohr,
| and Francis Ambrose,
Big High School Enrollment
In making his report, superin-
tendent Robert A, Mellman stated
that enrollment next year would
be approximately 90 students more
than this year, and that every room
was already scheduled.
He foresaw the need for four more
teachers: one teacher of art, hold-
ing certification also in English and
social studies; one teacher of music,
who, he explained, might be on a
part-time basis, for chorus work;
one teacher of chemistry and
physics; and one teacher of mathe-
matics.
William Davis called attention to
rising millage necessary when
teachers are added to the staff.
Dr. Mellman countered by stating
that Harrisburg could not give the
green light to a program which
added ninety pupils to an enroll- |
ment already dangerously near
overcrowding of classrooms, with-
out more teachers.
To Earl Phillips’ suggestion: that
it is the smaller children who need
special attention, rather than those
of high school age, Dr. Mellman
replied that elementary school
children, contained in a single class-
room get far more actual guidance’
than high school. students who
constantly change classrooms, and
that it is the more demanding high
school subjects which require added
attention.
He also cited the need for an-
other special education class, one
in the senior high school, to supple-
ment one already in operation at
Junior High School and the special
classes at Westmoreland elemen-
tary, z
Cafeteria
Frank Hemingway, he said, is
much better organized. In a re-
port issued for November by busi-
ness manager Thomas Jenkins,
1,191 employee lunches.
cluded 110 cases of turkey, 75 of
apple sauce, 62 of tomatoes, 42: of
apples, 59 of cranberries, 35 of
flour, 23 of ground beef.
All commodities are used.
| in Luzerne County.
- Personnel
Permission was granted to Wil-
liam A, Austin to attend Elemen-
tary School Arithmetic Workshop
Dec. 14 in Berwick; to Miss Esther
Saxe National Council of Teachers
-of Mathematics in San Francisco
April 1 to 18; Mrs. Rachel Porter
18 - 21.
Lester Lewis will take six stu.
dents to the District Band in Hones-
dale January 18 to 20; Mary Ben-
nett, Judy Williams, William Coo-
William Welch.
serve on the visiting committee at |
Athens Area High School, March |
20 to 22.
J. Philip Richards, art teacher,
lectured at Keystone Nov, 28.
Snow Removal
Employed for snow removal will
| be: at Dallas Elementary, Caddie
| Caddie LaBar;
| School, Thomas VanHorn.
| Alternates for all schools, Emer-
| son Evans and Kenneth Martin.
{ All men have up to date equip-
that old desk and taking directions
English teacher and never got over
times over. I should say it has al-
ready done that.
The old oot desk should have |
a pension now, even if Myra doesn’t |
get one.
fangled desk. It never was a tree.
|
|
{
|
|
|
It doesn’t know anything yet. But
Ee will in ine with Jom Toms
The cafeteria under direction of |
35,208 student lunches were served,
Surplus commodities received in-
In |
|'spite of surplus food received, the |
| cafeteria continues to operate at |
a loss. Administration sees ways of |
tightening the operation. This is |
the first time that a satellite hot |
lunch program has been attempted |
to be absent without pay December |
per, John Wardell Thomas Pierce, |
Clinton Brobst has been asked to |
| LaBar; Shavertown, Philip Walters; |
Dallas Senior High |
| ers and will give schools priority.
| English comp while working across |
| from Myra Risley in writing and |
| proof reading. Myra used to be an |
| it. If that old desk could talk—or |
write—it could fill the Post many |
ies HURRY IN . . . THEY'LL GO FAST
CADDIE LABAR'S
MAIN HIGHWAY
|
Myra, do be kind to the new- |
1 Appreciate The Patronage of My
Former Customers And Trust I Will
| Be Allowed To ‘Continue To Serve
| Them Together With New Customers
| At My New Location.”
LEONARD DERBY
SNOW THROW Model 415 make
a snowfall fun for all!
® Compact unit does big job of
snow clearing. Has winterized J
Reo engine. i
® 2-way snow chute controlled from
rear by convenient lever. Blasts |
snow up to 20 feet. |
e Automatic clutch keeps rotor from
revolving when engine idles for
complete safety. Starting's easy.
Less Than $2. & Week
Full I-year guarantee
by Motor Wheel Corporation
AND ALL
Of TOYS
Resignation Accepted
Frederick J. Case has tendered |
his resignation as coach of Dallas |
Junior High School basketball team.
expectant mother. The verdict was
OK.
The pig was a total loss.
Mrs. Yatsko was going home from
| Commonwealth Telephone Company
{ where she is employed. Her hus-
[basd, also driving home, arrived at
| the scene of the accident just as
bystanders were separating the pig
| from the ‘radiator.
SECTION A —PAGE 2
Relief Teachers Needed
Dr. Robert Mellman, superinten-’
dent, placed before the school board
Tuesday night the need for relief
‘teachers in the elementary schools.
Principals of these buildings, he
pointed out, are never able to
leave their classrooms to visit others,
and free time is needed for duties
expected of a principal.
One full time relief teacher, he ?
said, could relieve principals in
grade schools of teaching duties one
afternoon. a week.
BACK MT.
PICK - UP
BU 7-7636
Season's
S&H
GREEN
STAMPS
NOW
Gifts For
SANTA
Candycanes
DAN KOZICH
SERVICE
BEER — SODA
Dallas Luzerne Highway
All
IN THE STORE
DEC. 14 & DEC.
THURS. & FRI.
For All Children With Parents
BEVERAGE
DRIVE-IN
OPEN 9 to 8
a, io
Greetings
S&H
GREEN
STAMPS
OPEN
The
will be
Family
5
NIGHTS 710 9
& Lollipops
CARDS
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On
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All Your Christmas
5-10 BEN FRANKLIN 5-10
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Shopping
DALLAS
10°
Sus
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While They Last
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