Oldest Business 72 YEARS A NEWSPAPER Institution Back of the Mountain THE DALLAS POST TWO EASY TO REMEMBER ORchard 4-5656 Telephone Numbers OR 4-7676 TEN CENTS PER COPY—FOURTEEN PAG GES MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION VOL. 74, NO. 28, THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1962 Everybody Has A Good Time At Happiest Auction 4 Ee TARA This is the festive view that greeted visitors as they walked down Lehman Avenue toward the Auction Grounds. . One of those visitors was a Philadelphig contrac- tor attending his tenth Auction. Thomas Hillyer Collapses As He Drives Car Turns Off Ignition fis Car Drifts Down Hill Into Woodland Victim of a heart attack, Thomas E. Hillyer, Machell. Avenue,. was discovered in his car Tuesday morn- ing at 8:45. The 1960 Buick, its rear window smashed, was wedged so tightly between trees in the woods bordering Schooley’s Hill on East Center Street, Shavertown, that it had to be towed into the open before the body; lying on the front seat, could be reached. Mer. Hillyer, driving up the steep grade “toward [Zhavertown, had ap- parently been able to turn off the ignition before collapsing. The car, its windows slightly lowered against the chill of early Torning ¥drifted down the hill and into the woods. Deputy coroner Richard Disque, - summoned by Kingston Township police chief Herbert Updyke, esti- mated the time of death at ap- proximately 7:30 a.m. The car was first observed by special officer Joseph Layaou. It was not until Clyde Birth’s wrecker released the car that doors could be opened and death of the driver established. Cards in the wallet showed that the victim was a Dallas resident. Updyke called Dallas Borough Chief of police Russell Honeywell. State Police and Charles Connolly, chief of Luzerne County Detectives, as- sisted = Kingston Township and - Borough police. Bearing in mind that his partner, the late Fred Palme of Kingston, had died six months ago from a heart attack, Mr. Hillyer, 57, had recently taken a physical examina- tion, passing without trouble. He was owner of the Mahaffey Oil Company in Luzerne, after five years as general manager. before Mr. Palme’s death. Before that, he had been manager of the Wilkes- Barre territory for the Atlantic Re- fining Company, having been trans- Arnaud, ferred from Philadelphia. A brother Robert is distributor for Atlantic in Troy, N. Y. and a son-in-law, Peter is wholesale salesman for * Atlantic in Wilmington, Del. A native of Moorehead, Minn., before going into the oil business | he was on the faculty of Wyalusing | High School, after having served as | supervising principal of (Canton schools. During the recent Library Auc- tion, he had lent trucks and person- nel to assist. Mr. Hillyer was a member of Wiyalusing Masonic Lodge, Caldwell Consistory, Bloomsburg; Irem Tem- ple, Wilkes-Barre;> Dallas Rotary Club, Franklin Club, Wilkes-Barre; Prince of Peace Church, Dallas; Oil- man’s Club and Kingston Business and Professional Men's Association. He is survived by his widow, the former Virginia Farquhar of Wyalusing; a daughter, Mrs. Peter Arnaud, Wilmington, Del.; two sons: Thomas Martin: of Idetown on cruise ther Robert, Troy; two sisters: Mrs. Harriet Austin, Ohio, and Mrs. Joe Austin, Kentucky. are scheduled with the Coast Guard Re- | serve; Robert, of California; a bro- | ing He told Fred Howell one of the | cided to turn off and visit Dallas Auction pioneers, that he learned of the Auction ten years | ago when he and his wife ‘saw ‘an Auction poster while - they were driving along. Route 6. ‘They de- first | and its famous vendue. They have returned every year since during the week end after the Fourth of July. Beautiful weather, warm pl Joseph Polacky Suffers Fatal Heart Attack Was Postmaster Of Dallas For Nearly 25 Years Joseph J. Polacky, Postmaster of Dallas for nearly twenty-five years, died last Thursday ‘ afternoon at Mercy Hospital, where he had been admitted by ambulance that same morning, suffering from ‘a fatal heart attack. He was buried in (St. ‘Stephens Cemetery Monday morning, follow- ing a Solemn High Mass of Requiem celebrated by Rev. Francis A. Kane at Gate of Heaven Church. “Assist- were Rev. Richard Frank as deacon, Rev. Michael Rafferty as subdeacon. Mr. Polacky, 55, resident of Dal- bas fox thei past forty years, . was much more than a faithful civil servant. He was a master crafts- man, who could turn out a base- ball bat from stout ash wood, ‘or beautiful cherry woodwork for his own home. He and his family built their home on Huntsville Road, de- lighting in the construction. Mr. Polacky had a well equipped work- shop, in which he fashioned on his lathe many of the bats used by | Bialogowicz, Dallas baseball players. was talented in painting in oils, and | | friends, in designing and architectural draw- | ing. Sixteen years to the day before Mr. Polacky died, his mother, the late Mary Gibba Polacky, passed away. Mr. Polacky, a native of Pittston, belonged to Gate of Heaven Church and its Holy Name Society. He ‘was a member of the Postmasters. As- sociation. ; His wife, Skvaria, is a lay teacher at Gate: of Heaven School. His. eldest daugh- ter Lt. Mary Polacky, trained at Mercy Hospital, and is stationed at the Naval Hospital at St. Albans. His son Joseph Jr., recently gradu- ated from Bucknell, started ‘work with IBM less than a month ago. Also surviving are daughters Carol Ann, Patricia and Jeanne, at home; sisters: Mrs. Mary Breeza and Mrs. Joseph Wallo, Dallas; Mrs. Joseph IC. = Simalchik, Pittston; | several nieces and nephews. Judy Searfoss Named AB Women’ S Chajyman Funeral services for tomorrow afternoon at 2, Rev. Ralph A. Weatherly officiating from the Hughes Funeral Home, Forty Fort. Burial will be, at | Chapel Lawn. Friends may call | tonight. When Calling Police While Kingston Township Chief of Police Herbert Updyke is on va- cation this week, residents are ad- | vised to call police by contacting | Assistant Chief 6£96-22217, | Jesse Coslett at | Her JUDY SEARFOSS Judy Searfoss, loan teller at Dallas | Branch of Miners National Bank, has been named Women’s Committee | Chairman of Wyoming Valley Chap- | ter, American Institute of Banking for 1962-63 ) { As chairman she will do con- | siderable travelling, visiting other | chapters and attending conventions. fellow-workers are especially (Continued on Page 2 A) the iormer Catherine | | driver's The dark narrow road that leads | from Kunkle past Lake Catalpa to |valeski’s, starting home shortly be- | rushed the three shocked sur vivors | the Directors Tuesday night follow- | to Nesbitt Memorial Hospital. Demunds is hard to follow with the | eye. By -car. it sounds | mostly like crickets, only by occasional traffic. you hear screams coming from the | road, it means that somebody in | one of those cars has made a mis- take. It was like that a little after mid- | night; - Sunday, - when Tex Wilson | and Mrs. Wilson came home from | the auction. Tex runs the lumber mill out there. He heard girls that and cool nights, contributed to the | they were more comfortable and | | the Auction’s success. At no time was there a cloud in the sky during the ; Record for attendance was Saturday | Frantz, three nights and two days. the auction moved more smoothly. | silver punch bowl were sold | | under the Chairmanship of Charles by Robert Bachman who Al- | | night during 1958 when the First | had come back from Georgia to auc- though crowds were big, they were | Esther Williams Swimming Pool Gk | tioneer. no Nar ger than previous years, but | LEIGHTON SCOTT they By At. 11 returned to Ko- | fore the accident. ‘Cookie’ Nancy, known as by her friends, was driv- after midnight. (Suggestion was | {made that Marjorie, the oldest, | drive. Cookie said: “The car’s only | insured for me.” Rose laughed and said: “Maybe 1 better walk.” But | she didn’t. Just past the Wilson saw-mill to- {ward Kunkle, Rose remembered she had forgotten her coat. | Tragedy Stalks Lake Catalpa Road As Robert Block and Lane Jarrett, Dal- las: Borough Police officers Jack interrupted | | ing with a Junior-permit, which re- | Berti and Ray Titus assisted Chief When | quires the |driver to stop driving | Frank Lange, Assistant Chief Stan- ley Gardiner, Officers Albert Hoov- | er, Frank Wagner, Sr. and Frank { Wagner, . Jr. at the . scene. State Police also investigated. Rose. was popular, and had a Ipleasant personality. Earlene | Layaou and Marjorie Bynon des- |cribed her as “a lot of fun, and well-liked”. She was athletic, and | screaming, told his kids to stay in { Nancy turned the car about in a log {loved to dance and swim. A com- the ‘truck, and ran up to the road, | road, and, started back toward De- | mercial where he found a Plymouth Station | munds. ‘According to police, the | student at Dallas { School, she had given up school Wagon overturned. Next to it lay | car began to stagger back and forth | { this May" after her Junior year, and | Rose Spencer, dead, her feet still in | Earlene | said: “Let go of the wheel, and the | eral Cigar Company. But her sister, | the left rear window. Layaou, 16, Marjorie Bynon, 18, | and’ Nancy Bialogowicz, 16; were | | | ing: running ‘around. in the woods cry- “She's dead, she’s dead.” | Tex held up traffic, and covered | the body as quickly as he could. It was some time till he could find | The windshield was splintered, and | a anyone to go down to get Mrs. Wil- son to call police and to bring a | | sheet. | Early. Saturday evening, Nancy | Harvey’s Lake, drove | in Beaumont. Her | He also | to Ma's Diner all Dallas residnts, | there. They decided to go to Ko- { valeski’s bar at Demunds drnes | and then to visit friends in Luzerne. | {across the road. One of the girls | sarwillustraighten out’. It didn’t. It drifted across a small {ditch to- the right, and up on a mound of rocks which silently | flipped the car upside down. None of the other girls were thrown out. {the roof somewhat caved in, but | the car was still: driveable. Jean Alice Spencer, an olin sister, was also at Kovaleski’s that | night. She had a car, and offered | to take Rose home a little earlier. | she had come with the kids, might | as well go home with them. Dallas ambulance, manned by | Valley, were | Rose shrugged off the idea — said | 19:30 in Gate of Heaven Church, of ‘had taken a summer job with Gen- [ Jean, said ‘she was thinking of re- { turning to ‘school this fall. She is survived by her parents, Mr. “and Mrs. Daniel Spencer, 100 Claude ‘Street, Dallas, another sister, Mrs. Robert Jones, Tullytown; Jean; brother, Daniel, Jr.; paternal | grandmother, Mrs. David Spencer, | Dallas, and maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. George Tylutki, Dallas. Funeral was held yesterday at 9 from Bronson Funeral Home, Sweet with a Requiem Mass at which Rose was a member. She | was buried at Mt. Olivet Cemetery, Carverton. Harveys Lake Lions Install Officers New officers of Harveys Lake Lions Club were installed by Ben Banks, club sponsor at a dinner dance held at Twin Lakes. Joseph (G. Schappert was Master of Cermonies and Rev. John [Stahl gave the invocation and benedic- | tion. Jones, past President and by Ben | Banks. . { New officers are: Leonard Bruce, | | president; Steve Glova, first vice president; Joseph G. Schappert, | second vice president; third vice | president; Robert Pilger, secretary; | Francis ‘Smith, treasurer; Roland ! Ritts, Lion tamer; Edward Kanasky, { right, Ra tail twister; Francis Schuler and Andrew Lavix, directors. In the picture are, seated left to Frank Bialogowicz, Steve Glova, Leonard Bruce, Joseph G. | Schappert, Robert Pilger. Standing, — left to right, Edward Kanasky, Francis Schuler, : Brief talks were given by Harry! Library Auction Highlights By closing time Saturday night, it looked like over $22,000 gross, and something over $16,000 net. At the chicken barbecue Thurs- day night, 999 customers were fed. Keyettes made a big hit, with their trays of corsages donated by Hill the Florist. From the block, Dick reminded men who had not yet bought gardenias, that their position in society demanded it, their wives expected it, and it was all for the support of the Library. The ticket booth looked like it- self again with: Mary Weir and Pat Reynolds sitting under the gaily decorated canopy, handing out tickets for the refreshment stand. General chairman Dick Demmy, perspiring in shorts, revised esti- ; mated figures on gross and net It was the hot Library Auction, with temperatures zooming into the nineties Saturday afternoon. On Sunday, when workers started cleaning up the grounds which looked as if a herd of ele- phants had passed, the temperature skyrocketed, and a torrid breeze stirred the dust. receipts as the auction proceeded. Richard Garman, Brown Manor, a member of Back Mountain Civil War Round Table and probably its next president won the Ford Fu- tura awarded Saturday night at the Auction, : One of the special offerings, held for Saturday night for optimum response, was the wall-to-wall car- peting, bought by Fred Jennings at a time when the crowd was at its height, and no parking nearer than central Dallas could be found. {A popular award was that of the Pennsylvania Dutch bench to "Mrs. Arthur Dungey. Chances on the] bench brought’ approximately $700. Happy spectators always hope | that a pig will get loose. This year, | they were. not disappointed. The small pig, squealing and kicking, | was cornered in the Risley yard. {Continued on Page 7 A) High | Andrew | | Lavix, Francis Smith, Roland Ritts. | Raymon Hedden displays the | |. painting * ‘Winter Scene” by Gray- Hin Mayer which he successfully | bid in at slightly less than $100. |The Art Exhibit, a relatively new Sutton Made President; Hogoboom Youth ful Driver Loosens Grip On Wheel Appointed To Lake-Lehman Board Willard Sutton, vice president of® Lake-Lehman School Board was | | elected president at a meeting of | ing the resignation of Edgar Lash- ford who is leaving this area. Charles Frantz was elected vice president to succeed Mr. Sutten. Mr. Lashford earlier resigned from Jackson Township School Board and Richard Hogoboom, [Sutton Road, has been appointed to complete his unexpired term. Mr: Hogoboom is. manager of Kidder, Peabody & Company, in- vestments, ‘with offices in Miners | Bank Building, Wilkes-Barre. He | has taken an active part in com- munity life, and civic organizations and was elected a member of the Board of Directors of Back Moun- tain Memorial Library on the same night that he first served on the Lake-Lehman Board. ' At their meeting Lake-Lehman Directors adopted a record. $744,- 721.80 Budget. Included this year, however, is the purchase of a new 66-passenger school bus from Lu- zerne Motors, all costs of transpor- tation, all rentals and some money toward the creation of a new Lan- guage Laboratory in the new high school. Because Ross Township furnishes about one fifth of the students and has an unusually low assessment, it is likely that school millage will have to be increased there. Contracts for supplying pea coal to’ Noxen building were awarded to Ralph Cornell at his low bid of $11 per ton, and to Vito Pilosi for furnishing buckwheat coal to Leh- man and Ross Building at his low bid of $10.20 per ton delivered. J. B. Post received the contract [for supplying oil to the high school and Lake Building at its low bid of 110.35 cents per gallon. Bidding was very close R. A. Davis having | submitted a bid of 10.46 cents per | gallon, | Cutten Gas Company was | awarded the contract for gas at its low bid. of 16c per gallon at the high school bulk tank and $4.75 per | tank at the other schools. Next [lowest bidder was $6.25 per tank | | and 25¢ per gallon. Bids for "general supplies were submitted to the Supply Committee for tabulation and evaluation be- fore awarding to the lowest bidder. Motorcycle Cut Off James Fry, 18, Dallas, received severe injuries when his motorcycle | bit the side of a car on Route 115! above Trucksville Saturday after- noon, He said, the car, driven by Robert Perina, Long Island, N. Y., did not signal for a turn before re- | turning to the right lane. Narrow Escape From Fire Et Arthur Steinhauer's {Awakened Tuesday at midnight | [ by the smell of smoke drifting into their bedroom window, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Steinhauer went outside, and found a ring of fire surrounding the base of a big pine tree at the corner of their home in West Dallas. garden hose and With a 3 d a sprinkling can, they extinguished the blaze. The thick covering of Paul Eckert’s peat moss surround- ing the base, had held the flames from reaching the tree. IA visitor whose own factory had been gutted two weeks earlier, and | who was arranging with Mr. Stein- | hauer for lumber in order to get it | back into production, had tossed a | | cigarette butt aside when he: left | earlier in the evening. | Last year, the Steinhauer home twas struck by lightning, which | knocked out electric appliances as lit hit the T-V antenna. Lashford Resigns As President Of Lake-Lehman Has Headed Board 9 Years In Original And New Jointure Edgar Lashford, mainstay of us} Lake-Lehman joint school board, and president for nine years during the original Lehman-Jackson-Ross jointure and the newer Lake-Leh- man jointure, tendered his resigna- ction Tuesday evening 4% a meeting of the board of directors. Monday evening, he resigned from the Jackson Township Board. Mr. Lashford, treasurer and gen- eral manager of the Hardie Manu- facturing. Company on South Main Street, Wilkes-Barre, a concern which manufactures ‘orchard and citrus spray equipment, will go to Philadelphia: early in August.’ The plant, owned by a New York Group, has facilities in Philadelphia which | can accommodate the operation. The move is already under way. Mr .Lashford has always been in | the forefront of any move for pro- gress in his school district. He | says, “The thing that really bothers | me the most about this move, is that I will not be instrumenta] in | opening the new high school. But I will be here in person, no matter | It is a good | and we are all very proud | where T am located, school, of it. fication to be able to work for its construction.” supervising prin- Lester Squier, | cipal, had been informed two months | earlier that Mr. Lashford might be | transferred. Mr. Lashford succeeded Laing Coolbaugh as president of Lehman- Jackson Ross soon after the new elementary school opened in Sweet Valley. When the | new Lake-Lehman jointure was | formed four - years ago, he was | elected president, During his years on the school boards, he has spent countless hours in furthering the cause of good edu- cation. “It is important to remember,” he says, “that education is costly. It cannot be had on the bargain counter. Anything that is worth | having is worth paying for. Incorrect Headline A story pertaining to the installa- tion of officers by Noxen Lions Club | In last week's issue was incorrectly headlined as Harvey's Lake Lions Club. An account of the Harveys Lake Club's installation appears in this issue. More Contributors There are many more names to be added to the list of new goods contributors to the Library Auction which came in after last week's Post was published. These will be published just as soon as time and space permits, No Stamps At Jordan's A missplaced line in Jordan's ad in last week's Post stated that Jor- dan’s Gives Green Stamps. This was incorrect. The popular men’s store in Narrows Shopping Center sells quality merchandise but does not give stamps, It has been a source of grati- | building was | feature of the Auction. was one of | this years most attractive features under the chairmanship of Mrs. De- | ‘Witt Smith. PHOTO BY KOZEMCHAK School Districts In State To Get Additional Fund Pro-Rata Share Of Over 3 Million To | Be Distribuied Dallas School directors had | trouble obtaining a quorum Tues- | day evening, members being reluc- | tant to tear themselves away from | the pioneer Telstar program which | will revolutionize world comminica- | tion. The meeting started half an hour late. Routine matters were handled, and the final cafeteria report of the year studied. A consistent loss in the cafet: “ia is expected to be reversed in the fall, when an additional five cents wil “be charged for each meal served ‘to the secondary students and adults, the price for elementary children remaining the same as it was this year. Dr. Robert Mellman states that | reimbursement from the State’ for school lunches is far less than it once was, and that operating ex- penses are higher. The only solu- tion is to raise the price of school | lunches. Based on an average daily par- ticipation of 805 secondary students | and 49 adults, a total of 854 lunches { daily on which the increase of five | cents per lunch will be charged, the | increase in income for a period of | 180 days would equal $7,686. {~ Ini the red for the past year, | figures show a loss of $5,269.75. { REIMBURSEMENT BONUS Directors were handed’ a gift | from the State, an amount yet to | be determined. Mrs. John Stahl | read a communication from the De- | partment of Public Instruction in { Harrisburg: Each school district in Pennsyl- | vania is eligible to receive addition- | al reimbursement during the school | year 1962-1963. ; | Payment of this additional reim- | bursement is in accord with the Mec- | Cann amendment to the 1962-1963 | General Appropriation Bill. The amendment provides that 92% of all general fund revenues | actually received during the fiscal | period 1961-1962 in excess of the { official estimates be specifically ap- | propriated to the Department of | Public Instruction for the purpose | of - making additional payments to | all of the school districts of the ! Commonwealth. Each school dis- | trict will receive a prorata share of | the entire appropriation based up- on its 1960-1961 district teaching ‘units and its 1961-1962 reimburse- | ment fraction. There will be avail- | able $3,413,103.84 for such distri- | bution. The Department of Public Instruc- tion: will begin computing the pay- ments immediately so that each district will receive its additional reimbursement at the earliest pos- sible date. Lacerates Head In ‘Plunge Down Stairs T. M. B. Hicks, on a business as- signment in Baltimore, plunged down a flikht of steps at the Staf- ford Hotel Friday afternoon, and was rushed to Maryland General Hospital by ambulance, bleeding profusely from a jagged laceration in his forehead. Sixteen sutures and sixteen hours later, after spending the night in the emergency room, he started back for Dallas, driven by his wife, who for the first time in sixteen years passed up the Library Auction. (Tom, will you PLEASE making headlines?) stop | | 3