The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, February 14, 1963, Image 1

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    man Miles Shales,
*Board Studies
@ntives
_ cents on each utility pole and one
* township.
73 YEARS A NEWSPAPER
Oldest Business
‘ Back of the
Institution
Mountain .
TEN CENTS PER COPY—FOURTEEN PAGES
Citizens And Sportsmen Help
In Stocking Nice Trout Crop
Sheldon Hoover
Was Victim Of
Shotgun Blast
Took Precautions
Not To Implicate
Others In Tragedy
~ Dead by his own hand, with no
possibility of foul play, Sheldon W.
Hoover, 47, resident of Trucksville,
was found on the back seat of his
car Sunday morning at 11:10. Time
of death was estimated at 9:30.
The victim had left his home on
Maple Street at 7 a.m., and had
apparently driven around until he
had found a suitable spot, taking
all precautions to insure that no
one else should be implicated.
Drawing off the side of Green
Road under the line of sheltering
Silkworth Receives
3000 Mixed Trout
Lake Silkworth was stocked with
trout yesterday afternoon, in a con-
tinuation of Pennsylvania Fish Com-
mission’s 1963 stocking program for
Luzerne County:
{Scheduled for the lake were 1500
brook and 1500 rainbow trout, to
be brought from the state hatcher-
ies, Bellefonte.
Special Gifts
trees, and following somebody else’s
tire tracks through the snow, he |
had entered the rear of the car, |
and arranged a shotgun in such a
manner that the blast could not
fail to kill him instantly.
He had expected to attend the
Men's Breakfast at Trucksville
Methodist Church, where he was
planning to help serve, and later
to act as usher at the morning
service. His wife, attending the !
i
service, had expected him to join | i
her. He had not been in rugged !
health, but had not seemed de-
ypondent.
The discovery was made Ty
Kingston
ownship. Coroner Stephen Glova
and Dr. Benjamin Groblewski certi-
fied to cause of death. Investigat-
ing also were Kingston Township
Chiefs Herbert Updyke and Jesse
Coslett, and State Police.,
Mr. Hoover, son of Ira and Guida
Alpaugh Hoover, was a lifelong i
resident = of Kingston Township,
where he belonged to Trucksville
Methodist Church, Trucksville Fire
Company, and its bowling team.
An employee of George B. Stein-
hauer Co., he belonged to Painters
and Paperhangers Union Local 41.
He leaves hig widow, the former
Theda Anderson; three children:
Mrs. Gail Kistler, Sandra and
Sheldon Jr.; and his parents, all of
Trucksville; two brothers: Lincoln,
Somerville, N. J., and Raymond,
Succusunna, N. J.; a sister, Mrs.
Emma Eicke, Shavertown,
Pallbearers were: William Smith,
David Hopkins, ' Harry Bowman,
Richard Harrison, Richard Mathers,
Russell /@oolbaugh. *
He was buried at Cedar Crest
Wednesday afternoon, following
services conducted by his pastor,
Rev. Robert Germond, from the
Disque Funeral Home.
*Transient Fee
Lehman Police Chief
Voted Raise In Pay
Problem of transient merchants
in Lehman Township came under
consideration when Board of iSuper-
visors discussed license fees at the
February meeting Thursday night,
and the inequity of levying a $25
per month fee on route-salesmen.
Referred for further study was a
request by Russell A. Ide, Meeker,
superintendent of Lehman Ceme-
tery, for the Board to assume some
support of a very old section for
which there are now no living rel-
The Board also passed an ordi-
nance levying a tax of twenty-five
dollar on each mile of wire in the
Police Chief Joseph Ide’s salary
was raised $140 to $3,600 per year.
President Michael Godek said the
Roard could not get down to a rate
on the licenses, since it did not want
to dissuade regular transient mer-
chants, such as bread salesmen,
frem coming into the township.
Lehman, however, was also one
of ‘those townships picked as a
likely area by several unauthorized
and suspicious salesmen last sum-
mer, who were subsequently ex-
pelled by poice.
The code Sopiie a fee of $25
per month, “or any part thereof”,
and it has hon. referred to Bolici-
tor William Valentine to determine
whether the law means “part” of
the fee or “part” of a month. If
it is determined that “part” of the
fee is intended, then the law would
not be so stringent on regular sales-
men.
All reports were approved and
bills order paid. Godek, Allan Major
and William’ Samuels attended.
Van Skids, Hangs
Over Toby Creek
A Norwalk cross-country van
skidded out of control leaving Linear
Corporation’s parking lot, Fernbrook,
Tuesday at 4:30 during the height
of the snow storm, and narrowly
missed plunging down an embank-
ment into Toby Creek.
RAYMON R. HEDDEN
Raymon R. Hedden, chairman -of
Special Gifts for the Back Mountain
Heart Fund Drive, has been work-
ing for three weeks on this assign-
ment. To date, receipts amount to
$554, with forty-five replies to date,
some from people who had already
subscribed.
Asked for a thumbnail sketch of
his activities, Mr. Hedden, one of
the busiest people in the Back
“Mountain with a mammoth - con-
tracting business specializing in pub-
lic buildings and schools, said he
didn’t do anything at all.
It’s the busy people like Mr. Hed-
den who can take time out to help
Heart Fund collection.
Mr. Hedden, resigning some years
ago from Dallas Borough, soon
after the resignation of Council
President Joseph MacVeigh, was a
distinct loss to the body. Mr. Hed-
den formerly lived in the Borough
before puschasing areage in Loyal-
ville and building a modern home
clinging to the side of a steep hill
with a stupendous view. He served
on the Dallas Building Authority
at the time of its founding, in an-
ticipation of building a new senior
high schol.
Early Arrivals For
Library Auction
The Library Auction has already
received a truckload of furniture
from the home of the late Mrs.
Margaret Dykman, and on Monday
it had a bonus from Bob Eipper,
who delivered to The Barn a genu-
| Ine Jenny Lind cord bed with spool
spindles.
It's the used furniture and the
occasional “find” in antiques that
keep customers glued to their fold-
ing chairs at the July auction. The
Library Auction is a country auc-
tion, with the atmosphere carefully
fostered. A cord bed that goes
for eight dollars and fifty cents
keeps the audience on its toes, in a
mellow mood for bidding on ithe
latest thing in. lawn furniture or
the annual car.
along a worthy project such as the |
Fast Even Dispersal
| Bround Harveys Lake
| Five green tank trucks led a
parade of fishing enthusiasts around
Harveys Lake Thursday and Fri-
| day, and when they left, the lake
was 18,900 trout richer.
It was estimated of the 1963
stocking that it would number one
fish every five feet along the shore-
line; and nary a one to catch be-
cause trout-through-the-ice season
closed January 31.
Even so, local sportsmen and
Harveys Lake Rod and Gun Club
members waited at the Post Office
at 1 p.m. to give Fish Warden Jim
Yoder and Club Fish Committee
head Clem Rinken a hand, and to
sneak a peek at April's prospects.
They were not disappointed with
what they saw. Many of the rain-
bows were expertly judged at six
and seven pounds, although Thurs-
day’s ‘‘brookies’ were not excep?
Ntional even considering their tender
age.
Another ' 3000 rainbows, sched-
uled for Friday's event, failed some-
how to make the trip, but Yoder
assured fishermen that they would
be brought. The truck that never
came was only part of the Friday
stocking’s ill-fatedness. Icy winds
lashed the lake and on-lookers that
day, and another truck suffered
engine ‘trouble in transit, near
Warden Place.
Rod and Gun Clubmen helping
were: Rinken, Ralph Dula, and
George Ladamus. Superyising with
Yoder were Steve Shabbick, Wyo-
ming County Fish Warden, and
John Lukavitch, assistant Luzerne
Fish Warden. !
Early in the morning Dula cut
holes in eighteen-inch ice at the
many spots agreed on by the
warden and the club.
Stocking is spread out over all
the shoreline, chiefly to silence
those who would scream favoritism.
Actually very few fish stay in the
same place, and it is well known
that rainbows head for inlets and
outlets of lakes. Fishermen are
elbow to elbow at Outlet at season’s
open.
Even so, fishermen crowded in
around Rinken and Dula as they
poured trout into the icy holes,
and’ made mental note of where
their ‘‘baby” was put.
After the trucks arrived Thurs-
day following a. four and one half
ride from Bellefonte hatcheries, it
took a fast one hour and twenty
minutes to disperse the load around
at ten spots. Next day was slightly
faster because of the missing truck
and cold wind.
Stocking this year and last has
been one month earlier than usual
to get the fish acclimated to their
surroundings. But many expert
fishermen claim that they never
get acclimated, but rather are eaten
by bigger fish before they get a
chance.
Common answer is:
| are the ones who didn’t get any-
thing last season.’
Next chance to try is April 15.
Safe-Driving Award
Dinner Postponed
Jack Landis announces for the
Commonwealth Telephone Company
that an award dinner scheduled for
| Tuesday night in honor of nineteen
employees living in the Dallas area,
has been unavoidably postponed by
heavy snow until next Wednesday
night at Hotel Sterling. At that
time, winners of safe-driving certi-
ficates will be honored.
“Those guys |
—_—n.
Accused of assault on a step-
child, John Backo, Meadowecrest,
was returned to Luzerne County
Prison Monday evening, when bail
bond was not forthcoming.
Held on charges of assault on a
seven year old girl, assault and bat-
tery and surety of the peace, the
27 year old Trucksville man had
a preliminary hearing before Justice
of the Peace Frederick W. Ander-
son, Shavertown.
First charge was preferred by-
Chief of Police Herbert Updyke,
latter two by the defendant’s wife,
Mrs. Marlene Backo.,
Bail on ‘the assault charge was
set at $2,000. Bail of $500 for the
assault and battery ‘charge; and
$1,000 on surety of the peace.
Mrs. Backo fled from the home
early ‘Sunday morning to seek aid.
The defendant was captured by Chief
| of Police Herbert Updyke and Spe-
cial Officer Paul Sabol in Bunker
Hill woodlands.
He was sent to prison by Squire
Anderson since no hearing could be
held on Sunday. Case will be pre-
sented to the grand jury.
Area Men Meet
At Dragon Hotel
Dan Flood Delivers
Parcel To Anderson
Several well-known Back Mount-
ain names were on the register of
guests at a reception in the Dragon
Hotel, Taipeh, Formosa, for Wyo-
ming Valley residents of Taipeh.
Frederic Anderson, Jr., Shaver-
town, serving at a Lutheran miss-
ion post in Taichung, was surprised
two weeks ago to receive a note
from Rep. Daniel J. Flo od, who
was visiting the island.
Congressman Flood, who was in
the Far Eastern land as guest of
the China Chapter of Asian Peoples
Anti-Communist League, delivered
the address at the Freedom Day
Dinner January 23.
Contacted by Fred's parents,
Representative Flood carried a
package of much needed material
to the boy working in Taiwan.
Fred made the trip into Taipei
and was a guest of Congressman
Flood at a reception given by him
at the Dragon Hotel, for Wyoming
Valley residents living «in that city.
Among the guests, he met By-
ron Ash, Kingston, manager of the
Foremost Dairies in Formosa and
a. brother of Harold Ash, Shave:-
town.
Fred received a number of invi-
tations from local people but had to
return to his duties in Taichung.
He' was most grateful to Congress-
man Flood for his interest and ef-
fort in his behalf.
The following letter from Con-
gressman Flood, now back in the
States, was received by Fred's par-
ents last weekend,
Dear Mr. and Mrs. Anderson:
I received your kind letter of the
27th. You can be sure that I was
more than glad to be able to help.
I did see. Fred, Jr., and he came to
a little party I had for several Lu-
zerne County people, who were in
Taipei.
He looked very well, and was on
his way to a Chinese New Year's
Dinner. He sends his love to all
of you.
Sincerely yours,
Daniel J. Flood, M. C.
Meeting Postponed
Due to illness of LaRoy Ziegler,
a meeting of Kingston Township Su-
pervisors scheduled for Wednesday
night has been postponed until Sat-
urday morning at 10.
Clyde Birth with wrecker and
Norwalk driver
erable overhanging the
stream.
position
the entire congregation.
Standing in ‘the chancel at Dallas | present because of not having com-
Methodist Church on Boy Scout | pleted requirements for First Class
Sunday are five young men who won | Scout, were Joseph Goode, Charles
the God and Country award, pre-
William Burke | sented by pastor Rev. Russell Lawry |
pulled the big truck from its mis- "in the presence of their parents and |
Eligible Scouts
| Gattis and Allan Brown, who will
receive the award. later,
‘Standing in the first row are Boy
Donald Bulford, David Ko-
ialso to receive the award, but not petchny, Arthur Miller, Jr., Marshall
Five Scouts Win God And Country Awards
Rumbaugh, and Bruce S. Davies III.
In the second row are Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Bulford, Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Kopetchny, Mr. and A Mrs.
Arthur Miller, Dr. and Mrs. Marshall
Rumbaugh, and Mrs. Bruce Davies.
Rev. Lawry stands in the back-
ground. Photo by Kozemchak.
/
1 supper
"THE DALLAS POS
' MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION
| Lacks Bail, In Prison
On Charge Of Assault
dogs last week.
The dog-poisoner is working again.
y
Constable Traver Models Poisoned Bait
Constable Mike Traver handles with exceeding care the seven
pound chunk of poisoned rump that was exposed as bait for Noxen
Former members of the Dr. Henry
M. Laing Fire Company Band, now
defunct, who are enthusiastically
supporting the new Community
Band each Thursday night at Dallas
Senior High School, include How-
ard Cosgrove, band director during
World War II; Don Cosgrove, bass;
Ken Cosgrove, baritone; Richard
Aliver, bell lyre; Dr. David W.
Kunkle, saxophone; Peter L.
Roushey, Cornet; Albert Ide, drums.
John Miliauskas, first cornet,
director of Lake-Lehman High
School Band, directs the old guard,
plus recruits Marguerite and Gary
Hackling, Michael Brody, Robert A.
Stair, R. Dana Ide, C. Jarett iMiler,
Sheldon Ehret, Willis Gentile, Philip
Veterans Of Dr. Henry M. Laing
Band Support Community Band
Amico, Wayne Thomas, and Bud
Nelson.
Dr. F. Budd Schooley, who for
years permitted use of the upstairs
room in his large garage on Lake
Street as practice room and storage
space for uniforms, instruments and
music, attends practice sessions as
often as possible. “It takes a long
time to get your lip back if you've
stopped = playing the horn for
awhile,” he says, “but I could work
it up again.”
More band members could be ac-
commodated. Anybody who plays,
from Ross Township, Harveys Lake,
Center Moreland as well -ds the
Dallas area, is invited to join up.
Borough Refuses
Police At Plant
Sales Tax Dispute
Still Under Study
Dallas Borough Council quickly re-
ferred to its secretary for a reply
in ‘the negative a request by Linear
Corporation for a policeman on duty
during afternoon rush hour at its
entrance within the Borough limits,
at a meeting Tuesday night.
The letter from Linear stated that
Dallas Township, within whose con-
fines the plant itself is located, re-
fused also.
Secretary Robert Brown said that
the question of $4500 tax on Natona
Mills sale, disputed by the Township
and the Borough, is still being studi-
ed by solicitor Robert Fleming.
Patrolman John Berti was dis-
missed from the police force, since
he is now a resident of Trucksville,
and David ‘Spencer, schoolguard, is
being replaced with regular police
officer Cliff Foss, effective Monday.
It was announced that Chief Rus-
sell Honeywell is taken ill this week,
and Foss is doing the chief’s day
duty.
Al] reports were accepted and bills
ordered paid.
Ambulance Meeting
Dallas Community Ambulance As-
sociation will meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at Borough Building.
All officers and members of the
board are urged to be present.
Ambulance crew this week will
be Capt. Edwin Roth, Charles Flack,
Robert Block, Tony Zocharys Lane
Jarrett. :
John Ferguson, 86, |
Dies In Shavertown
Word was received at presstime
that one of the old settlers of the
area had died, John Ferguson, 86,
Lawn Street, will be buried in
Warden Cemetery Saturday, follow-
ing services conducted by Rev. Rus-
sell Lawry at 2 p.m. from the Disque
Funeral Home.
@
Car Cuts Pole 20,
Dives To Lake Ice
Power was uninterrupted Satur-
day night when George Laverick,
West Pittston, escaping serious in-
jury, sheered off Pole 20 and four
guard-posts with his car and plung-
ed fifteen feet to the ice, which
held. Lehman and Lake Township
police investigated.
Church Pancake Supper
Men’s Class of East Dallas Meth-
odist Church will serve a pancake
Thursday, February 23,
starting at 5 p.m.
Ordinance Forbids Trailer
Site In Kingston Twp.
Board of Appeals of Kingston
Township heard two cases Monday
evening.
Mormon Church elders were
granted permission to hold church
services at temporary quarters on
Lehigh Street, Trucksville,
Appeal of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin
Miers to place a trailer home on
the property of the latter’s mother,
Mrs.. Kenneth Crocker, Main Street,
Shavertown, was refused. Town-
ship ordinance states all such must
be set up on a trailer lot, none be-
ing available at this time in the
township. Couple was permitted to
place a trailer on the proposed spot
for six months.
Milton Evans presided. Spencer
Martin and Richard Mathers com-
prise the remainder of the board,
with Chief of Police Updyke as zon-
ing officer.
Catches First Smelt
Fish Warden Jim Yoder saw one
angler get an eight and three
eighths inch smelt at Harveys Lake
Sunday night, near Link’s, using
red-worm. He says the fish have
no particular cycle of reappear-
ance, e, contrary top to popular belie’, © belief.
N
DALLAS, LAKE-LEHMAN,
TO WRESTLE TONIGHT
TO HELP HENNEBAULS
+ Dallas and Lake-Lehman
High School wrestling teams
will compete tonight at 7:30,
Dallas gym, proceeds to provide
a special fund to allow injured
Lake-Lehman wrestler Fred
Hennebaul’'s family means to
visit him at Johnstown Re-
habilitation Center.
Sponsored by the Athletic
Council, the event is designed
tg provide funds aside and
apart from the existing Fred
Hennebaul Recovery Fund,
which covers only the eighteen-
year-old boy’s medical expenses.
Noxen Poisoner
Still At Work
Now Has Seventeen
Dogs To His Credit
The Noxen dog-poisoner now has
seventeen victims to his credit.
Starting over a month ago he has
left a trail of dead and dying dogs
in his wake, including a dog so old
and feeble that he always had to
be helped down the steps, a large
yellow dog that was the school mas-
cot, family pets, strays, starved
puppies.
Last week, after a brief let-up
following warnings in the Dallas
Post, he struck again.
The bait was a spectacular piece
of rump, apparently product of a
home slaughter house, and an ac-
companying slab of kidney fat.
Both baits were injected with
poison. The seven-pound chunk of
rump, dropped on Main Street,
Noxen, got its victim within fifteen
minutes.
Constable Mike Traver brought
the poisoned beef to the Dallas Post,
where it sat for its portrait.
Traver reported that he had vis-
ited every place in the area and
up toward Tunkhannock that cus-
tomarily did any slaughtering, and
that all butchers were cooperative.
Their opinion was that the rump
came from a heifer, and from the
color of the meat, might have been
either Holstein or Black Angus.
Included among dog owners who
have lost dogs are: Homer Skelton,
Cecil ‘Traver, Warren Newell, John
Hallock, Warren Hubbell, Cal
Strohl. The Fritz dog, missing for
some weeks and presumed poisoned,
was found dead in the snow under
some shrubbery mot over two blocks
from his home, victim of the first
wave of poisoning.
Chet Wisniewski was asked to
put out of its misery a dog belong-
ing to Cecil Traver, which was
! writhing in agony after sampling the
bait across from Newell's Store on
Friday.
A number of appetizing Tittle
packages of meat, including bolog-
na, have been spotted around Noxen.
State Dog-Catcher
Coming Here Soon
Tomorrow and for an unspecified
time thereafter is the time set by
the state dog-law enforcement offi-
cer for rounding up unlicensed dogs
in the Back Mountain.
~ Responding to police complaints
in Dallas, Dallas Township, and
Kingston Township about large
packs of dogs roaming their juris-
dictions. Thomas Marshall, Dushore,
will check for owners of unlicensed
dogs, and will prosecute them with-
out exception. Minimum fine is five
dollars and costs, of prosecution, and
maximum is $100 and “Osis, or thir-
ty days in jail, or both.
\
Victim Of Idetown Fire Battles
For Life Under Oxygen At General
Forced out into a night of sub-
zero temperatures, whie in a weak-
ened condition, an Idetown fire vic-
tim is fighting for his life.
Emory Lozier, 54, was rushed to
General Hospital by Dallas Ambu-
lance crew at midnight last Tues-
day. A cold following exposure to
the bitter elements had quickly de-
veloped into pneumonia.
Upon arrival, he was immediately
placed in an oxygen tent. Private
nurses are required round the clock
and. his condition remains critical.
Four years ago, Mr. Lozier under-
went surgery for removal of a can-
cerous lung and he has required
‘frequent hospitalization.
Formerly employed at Devens
Milling Company, he has been un-
able to return to work. The family
has been hard pressed by misfor-
tune, and the loss of everything
they owned on the evening of Jan-
uary 28, when fire leveled their
rented home, capped the climax.
Mrs. Lozier had dashed back into
the flames and smoke to snatch her
coat ‘so ‘that her ill, pajama-clad
husband might have protection
against the piercing winds.
The couple have resided since the
fire with their son, Earl, Park Street,
Dallas, Mrs. Lozier and her son
spend every possible moment with
Mr. Lozier, going to the hospital
every evening when Earl comes
home from work.
True To Form, Butler's Scouts
Camp Out In Sub-Zero Weather
Parents of John Butler's Scout
Troop 232 had no cause for con-
cern last weekend as temperatures
plummeted and brisk winds
whistled about their temporary
quarters.
Anchored firmly at the lower end
of Shavertown Shopping Center
parking lot, the two tents found
the lads nestled comfortably in
sleeping bags resting on mounds
of straw and clustered about pot
bellied stoves in the center.
Flaps firmly secured kept the
out the weekend camp-out.
Explorer scouts prepared tasty
stews in a huge container atop con-
crete blocks.
On Friday evening, boys served
‘hot coffee and doughnuts to all
comers. Their adeptness at First
Aid and Rope Making drew many
spectators while music furnished by
Bill Guyette’s sound truck added
a festive atmosphere.
John Butler, scout master su-
preme, was assisted by Jim Mec-
Coog. This is the 18th year of
temperature comfortable through- scouting for popular John Butler.
4
TWO EASY TO REMEMBER
/ Telephone Numbers
674-5656
EE A FE BRET
VOL. 75, NO. 7 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1963
=
Despite Storm
674-7676
School Board
Shows Quorum
Dallas Directors
Eye Proposed Pay
Hike For Teachers
Dallas School lirectors eyed an-
ticipated raises in salary for teach-
ers at Tuesday night's meeting in
the Senior High School Library,
estimating the increase in ‘terms of
millage.
Discussion of the PSEA requested
salary schedule, with regular incre-
ments of $300, resulted in approval
for purposes of budget estimation.
Dr. Robert A. Mellman reported
that High School principal W. Frank
Trimble and John Rosser, and guid-
ance counselor George McCutcheon
were in favor of a proposed sum-
mer schedule offering sixty hours
in these areas: English, mathematics,
history, science, conversational
French and Spanish. Ninth graders
who enter from other schools, it
was pointed out, frequently lack the
basic drill of conversational lan-
guages. 4
The superintendent's report rec-
ommended employment of one
choral music, and a teacher for ad-
vanced placement, also a clerk’
book-keeper for office of the secre-
tary, anl a clerk-stenographer for
the elementary office. Directors
adopted the recommendations for
a tentative budget.
Unexpected Response :
To a questionnaire sent home
with sixth grade pupils, 77 students
brought back enthusiastic response
to a proposal to offer violin instruc-
tion. Dr. Mellman explained that
parents would have to rent ~r fur-
nish the necessary instruments,
though this was specifically stated
are not 77 violins to be obtained
except through private
to violins.
of a practice teacher from College
Misericordia, Loraine Rowe, who
man, musical instructor. Response
outweighed expectation, the number
twenty.
Driver Training Sd
of actual back of the wheel instruc-
to accommodate the 188 high school
students who have signed for driver
training. ‘Supervised driving has
been completed by 71 students.
The board voted to continue train-
ing during the summer, as with even
the best of weather only 71 more
students will be able to complete
requirements by the end of the
school year.
creased high school enrollment. The
Junior Class last year numbered 109,
teen are eligible for driving train-
ing.
Practice Teachers {
Twelve seniors from College Mis-
ericordia are already teaching at
Dallas ‘Schools: Frances McFadden,
Carol A. Zionce, Maureen Moore,
Josephine Eggleston and Anne Wills
at the Senior High School; Sara Ser-
vin and Anita Rhatigan at Junior
High School; Sara Gregory and Phyl-
lis Howe, Westmoreland building;
Mary Ann iSladzinski, Dallas Bor-
ough; Lorraine Rowe, at all schools.
Miscellaneous
Lester Lewis and four students,
John Wardell, Leo Phila, William
Cooper and Richard Ratcliffe, will
attend PMEA District Band at East
Stroudsburg March 7, 8, and 9;
Kathy Maury, Paul Haradem and
Thomas Houlette, PMEA District Or-
chestra, Mountain View High School
March 21, 22 and 23.
program was approved for all grades.
Mrs. Grace B. Lord’s resignation
was accepted, also Mrs. Marlene
Holly.
Mrs. John Griffiths, Forty Fort,
was employed as a full time sub-
stitute, to teach mathematics in
Junior High ‘School.
Mrs. Doris Sutton resigned from
full time work in the cafeteria, was
placed on the substitute list. Mrs.
fuil-time basis, and Mrs. Joanna
Smith replacing Mrs. Smith as part-
time cafeteria employee.
Mrs. Marjorie Krimmel's name
was added to the list of available
substitute clerk-stenographers; Mrs.
Jean M. Thomas to the list of sub-
stitute nurses.
The rate for salaries of play
coaches for next year was increased
from $100 to $150 for each pro-
fessional person assigned. 3
Interested teachers will be. per-
mitted to attend Lehigh University’s
urday, March 30. Elementary Su-
pervisor William A. Austin stated
that he considered this an extreme-
ly important conference, drawing
enthusiastic support from Dallas
Schools.
ermo were authorie to attend
the Biological Curriculum Study at
State Universary March 16.
Fourth annual Reading Conference
at College Misericordia is slated for
March 22 and 23. Last year this
met with great response.
teacher of stringed instruments and
on the original questionnaire.' There
sources.
Seven children already have access
Driver training requires six hours
tion. There are not enough hours
in the day betweer now and Jung
Alan D. Husband and Louis Pal-
having been placed at perhaps =
this year 220. All students of six-
\
¥
Helen Smith was employed on a
3
The idea sprang from employment
collaborates with Miss Louise Ohl-. |
The log-jam is created by in 3
Proctor and Gamble Dental Health na
12th annual reading conference Sat-
ra
(