ET. iwhat use will be made of the other "modeling the kitchen, and installa- & a . the restaurant line for some seven- Oldest Business Back of the TEN CENTS PER COPY—TWELVE PAGES "Marie's" To Be A Delicatessen Kozick Names Plans For Lundy Building New owner of the Lundy Build- ing, Michael Kozick, Harveys Lake, | says he intends to run it as a quality eating place for families and banquet, and will start a deli- catessen in the corner store which was formerly Marie's, Plans are still indefinite as to empty store in the building. Presently operating a number of restaurants with a bowling alley chain, Mr. Kozick will give up that line in order to run the new busi- ness himself. 73 YEARS A NEWSPAPER Institution Mountain The restauranteur settled on a, price with the owner the day after | the ill-fated public auction the week | before last. Mrs. Herbert Lundy had come up from Florida to see her building sold, and when the high- est bid, offered by Kozick, was only $26,000, the sale was stopped. Mrs. Lundy amd her attorneys would not consider sale for less than $30,000. : Mr. Kozick declined to say what he finally paid for the property. Immediate plans are for re- tion of a new roof, but the bar will be opened as soon as the transfer license is received. The new owner, who has been in teem years, says he and his wife are strongly considering occupying the large penthouse apartment in the building. New Location For Stones Grocery Stone’s has moved to a new lo- cation on Route 309, Beaumont. The new store is located on the former Charles Goodwin place near the Seventh Day Adventist Church and across the highway from Mon- roe Baptist Church. : Dallas Posts may be picked up at their mew location. Plus 16 Page Tabloid Idetown Bnnual Festival | diag 0m by Paramount Studio Paul Doris and William Motyka, co-chairmen for the Jonathan R. Davis Volunteer Fire Company Annual Festival, announce that only one week remains to purchase chances on the five prizes to be awarded Sunday, September 1. First prize will be a 21” color TV set, second, Hi-Fi Stereo; third, Electric Bar-B-Q; fourth, Clock Radio and fifth, Electric Fry Pan. Tickets can be purchased from members of the Fire Company or from the girls competing for the title of Festival Queen. The Festival will be held on August 30, 31, and September 1, the Company Grounds at Idetown and will feature nitely entertain- ment and a parade Saturday, August 31 at 1:30" p.m. Ed Gilmer, president of the Fire Company announces that there will be a meeting of all®Festival Committees at 9 Friday evening. Jackson School Board To ‘Meet Friday Night Jackson Township School Board will hold a meeting for general purposes at 8 tomorrow night at the Fire Hall. ‘Adoption was postponed due to hospitalization and illness of secre- tary Vernon Cease. Final adoption of the 1963 bud- get will take place. The regular meeting will also be held at this time. Petition For Lights A petition will be circulated. by Harveys Lake Business and Profes- sional Men’s Organization to see if lake-front property-owners would favor installation of 100 mercury vapor lights around the lake road at an estimated assessment of ten cents a foot front. Admitted To Hospital Mrs. Myrtle Rice, Main Street, Shavertown, was taken to General Hospital in the Kingston Township Ambulance on Friday evening. Dallas Summer Reading Clinic Progress Reviewed; Local Educator Sees New Program As Valuable by William A. Austin | Coordinator of the brand- new Summer Reading Clinic, William A. Austin, evaluates the ‘course here for the Post’s school issue, and tells what the program was trying to accomp- lish. Note the remarkable at- tendance, unusual, as Mr, Aus- tin says, for a summer school. Ed. Educational research shows that there is a tendency for reading dis- abilities to occur among one third of the school population regardless of the method of basic reading in- struction employed. These reading problems seem to be much more prevalent among boys. In order to meet the needs of these pupils and facilitate their academic progress in the future, the Summer Reading Clinic was established. Our immediate aim was to pro- vide imtensive instruction in the fundamental reading skills (ie. word attack skills, word recognition) and in the improvement of reading com- prehension. The ultimate objective is to im- prove the quality of reading in- struction throughout the Dallas School District ‘by helping the class= room teacher with the more serious reading disorders. It is hoped that this program will help to improve not only the children’s reading abil- ity but their attitudes and study habits as well. The pupils enrolled in this pro- gram were originally referred to us by their classroom teacher. The cumulative record folder containing results of achievements and mental | ability tests was consulted to de- termine whether or not each child had the capacity to display an im- provement in their reading. A total of 159 children were invited to par- ticipate in the summer program. Of this number, 90 accepted our in- vitation. Final enrollment reached 125 pupils, with about 110 pupils in attendance daily. Such attendance is somewhat unique for a summer Ambulance Calls Dallas Ambulance made the fol- lowing calls this week: _ Mrs. Harry Swepston, Sr. crest Drive, Hospital, 7:30. a.m. Thursday, Bob Besecker and Don Bulford attend- ing. . Charled - Carl, Monroe Avenue, was taken to Mercy Hospital Thurs- Elm- day, 11:20 a.m., Besecker and L. R. Scott attending. Mrs. Margaret Jones, Pioneer Avenue, was taken to and returned from General Hospital Friday morn- ing, Besecker and Scott attending. Charles Carl was returned home Tuesday afternoon, Scott, Hayden Richards, and Charles Youngblood attending. Earl Bennett, Pinecrest Avenue, was taken to Veterans Hospital yesterday, 3:30 p.m., Jim Perkins and Bill Berti attending, - ER was taken to Nesbitt | program in the elementary. During the week of July 8, each child was administered an individual diagnostic reading test, a group in- telligence test, and a reading test. On the basis of the information ob- tained, each child was assigned to’ ome of fourteen different groups. The parents were informed of: (1) the reading level on which the child | was functioning, (2) his specific | disability, (3) the type of instruct- ion he was to receive. Teachers were provided with the latest materials available for the teaching of reading. These included: The Controlled Reader, Reading Ac- celerator, SRA Reading Laboratory, Webster Reading Laboratory, and charts, flashcards and patented ma- ! terials for the Phono-visual ap- proach to reading instruction. In ad- | dition to the devices used by the teachers in providing individual in- | struction, a ‘complete set of basic readers which have here-to-fore not been used in the Dallas School Dis- trict was made available. A colorful paper-back library containing books of high interest at various reading recreational reading materilas. These books proved to be very popular with the students who attended our program. | In order ‘that these children will not be deprived of reading materials in the future, arrangements" have been made with the Back Mountain | Library to obtain library cards for | each of our ‘graduates’. Instruction consisted of 40 min- utes per day of individual instruct- Ion and 40 minutes of direct reading activities. A daily record was kept 2 lof the specific skills the children | worked on, and a continous program of evaluation wag in effect. | Through the cooperation of vari- | ous school personnel, a team teach- ling situation was employed. Faculty | members participating in the pro- 'gram were: Mrs. Thelma Lamoreux, | Mrs. Joyce Gordon, Mrs. Arlene i Rood, Miss Georgina Weidner, Mrs. Nancy Sloan, Mrs. Ann Pfautz, Mrs. Antoinette Mason, Mrs. Margaret | Hughes, Mrs. Janet Smith, | John K. Thomas, Psychometrist; William ‘A .Austin, Coordinator; Miss | Tomato Packers Forsee Harvest As Satisfactory BR Week's Cold Snap Delays Major Work At Process Plants Mountain surveyed the green to- mato crop prospects for this month with mixed sentiment, as {one of the area’s biggest industries again swings into action. S. T. Abood saw the crops this summer as ‘good, if the weather holds up”, and Ivan Sponholtz de- scribed them as “fair”. A mild cold snap has slowed the business’ down, but Mr. Abood thought things would be in full swing this coming week. ‘“We can sure use the sun”, he noted. Even green tomatoes have to ripen some, and although many big semi-trailer trucks are drawing loads for the markets out of Centermoreland, these are strictly first of the crop. (See pictures, this page.) Severe frosts this past spring did mot damage the overall A harvest picture, according to Mr. Sponholtz, since farmers had enough time to replant, olina and Florida truck companies Cross-country trucks from Car- are now lined up at Orchard Farms Restauramt and up and down the Centermoreland-Falls road, hub of the industry. Sponholtz Corporation is doing fairly brisk business in the early crop, and many buyers and trucks are in evidence. Unlike Sponholtz, who packs and ships green tomatoes from a num- ber of smaller independent farms in the Orange - Centermoreland - East Dallas area, Abood does most of his own growing, and has been holding off for a week for this warmer weather. GREAT NATIONAL HARVEST Back Mountain's green tomato industry is part Bf a great east coast crop, harvest of which takes place eight months out of the year in Florida, and moves up north during the summer. Hun- dreds of local people find tempor- “jary employment, either in the fields of those smaller farmers who do not use migrant help, or in the packing houses of Abood, Dymend Brothers, and Sponholtz. Hundreds more migrant worltirs, hired in crews, every year under the same fore- men by the same famers and pack- ers, travel to .this area. Their children have been offered school and recreation for the last two years at Centermoreland and Orange churches, supervised by the State. Buyers of tomatoes wait at the packing houses for crops to come up from the fields, then agree on a price verbally with the packer, prices fluctuating up and down with the quality of the crop. Very little buying is by mail-order. ‘When a buyer has a load of to- matoes to go to the market or the warehouse, he contacts a broker of trucks, who, chances are, will also be close-by the warehouse. The broker will then contract one of those trucks, usually independently owned and driven, who await orders at such places as the Or- chard Farms depot. STAGGERED CROPS Because of the varying planting times each crop has its own ripen- ing time, assuring a continuing flow of fruit from the field to the pack- ers. Only at the end of the season is it possible to properly evaluate the harvest. } Last year ‘a bad drouth killed some ‘twenty per cemt of many of the crops. Little Miss Lady Ann Kitchen, 9, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Kitchen, Demunds Road, was Little Miss Lady of the Lake in the fourteenth annual Lady of the Lake contest Sunday. A Harveys Lake summer resident, Marianne Grohowski, 19, Brooklyn, N. Y. won first place of a field of eighteen contestants. Other local entries were Linda Rice, Orchard Farm, and Rosemary Scavone, Sweet Valley. In The Hospital Mrs. Jean Kuehn, Machell Ave- nue, has been a patient at General | Hospital for more than a week. Two major packers in the Back: many regularly Tannery Sale Still Pending Legal Hitch Conclusion of a contract of sale of the empty Armour Tannery plant at Noxen continues to hinge on a fine legal point in the contract of sale, asked clarified by the buyer's attorney. Recent contact made with Ralph - Deemer, manager of Armour’s Real Estate Division in Chicago, revealed that wprk on the point in question was continuing, but had reached no conclusion. Deemer told the Post in early July that negotiations leading to sale of the plant, once Noxen's principal ' source of employment, would be just a matter of time. He said that, the buyer was not a dismantling firm. Meanwhile the Lehigh Valley rail- road has been negotiating with prospective buyers of the stretch of | etre from Alderson to the picnic grounds, part of the old line to Noxen, which serviced the tannery. Local Winners At Bloomsburg Horseshoe 4-H Club Sweeps Big Meet Back Mountain's Horseshoe 4-H Club cleaned up at the 1963 Junior Achievement Horse Show, Monday at Bloomsburg Fair Grounds. James B. Post was judge, and Anthony Bogdon ringmaster, for the show, which involved 4-H and F.F.A. clubs from Luzemae, Colum- bia, and Montour. counties. Affair ended yesterday with a large live- stock and dairy show. Class I — Grooming and Show- manship, 10-14 years, Connie Bog- don, second. Class IV — Bareback Equitation (English ; and Western), 10-21 years, first through fourth: Leslie Vivian, Connie Bogdon, Erica Vivi- an, and Debbie Post. Class V — Pony Pleasure — 14 hands and under, 10-21, Debbie Post, fourth, Hunter Seat — 10-21 years, first through fourth: Connie Bogdon, Leslie Vivian, Erica Vivian, and Debbie Post. ° ’ Class X — Pony Driving, and rig, 1% ls Debbie Post, first. -Class XII — English Pleasure. 10- 14, first through fourth: Erica Vivi- an, Connie Bogdon, Leslie Vivian, and Linda Mekeel. Class, XX — Hunter Hack (Eng- lish) 10-21: Leslie Vivian, first; Connie Bogdon, second; and Debbie Post, fourth. Class VII — English Equitation |. ROBERT C. CICON CAROL PALERMO THE DALLAS POS MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION TWO Te ANN W. PFAUTZ SYLVIA PRICE School Tabloid This week the Dallas Post in- cludes a sixteen page tabloid insert, contributions - to which were made by students of all surrounding ‘schools. Cut Your Weeds Pails, resident should cut their weeds in compliance awith the ordi- | nance, according to Mayor Thomas Morgan, as they constitute a fire hazard and a health menace. Other- wise, the borough will cut them. Dallas Area Boost At a recent meeting of the Dallas | Area Booster Club, committees were set up to aid in the program for the coming fall athletic events at Dallas Senior High School. A general meeting, in which the public is invited to attend, will be held Tuesday at the American Le- gion starting at 8 p.m. A profes- sional football film, released by the National Football League, will be | shown and possibly a film of the: Gator Bowl. | Plans for the upcoming ‘Meet | The Team” night were not definite | at this time, but will most likely be held either August 29th or 30th. Watch next week's paper for defi- nite details. The ‘program at the school would consist of a general orientation for football fans. A scrimmage will be held, showing equipment used in the sport along with opportunity to meet the players and personnel at- tached to the football program at the Senior High School. Starting September, the Booster club will hold meetings the second Thursday of each month during football season. | Various committees picked were as follows: Membership chairman, Dick Far- ley; Program chairman Don Smith, | co-chairmam George McCutcheon; Project chairman is Art Sinicrope assisted by Jim Haines, Jack Port- er, Andy Victor and Ed Brominski; | Publicity include Lawrence “Cap” Jones, Tom Heffernan Jr, and Jim Lohman. Primary purpose’ of the Project | committee is to investigate examine various suggested and spon- | juntil - midnight Sunday John Sheehan's). i Fla., er Club Elects Committees To Aid In Program sorship endeavors requiring funds. Project should be of a mature that will be beneficial and of value to these participating athletes and the athletic program of the school. Their recommendations are to be submitted to the board of directors for approval. Parking committee is set up in two groups with Justus Letts cap- tain of group 1 and Bob Bachman captain of group 2. These men are donating their services for the pri- | mary purpose of raising funds for the Booster Club. The men will take all contributions offered them in conjunction with ‘getting each car parked, but it is not manda- tory. Let's help the Booster Club to a banner year in it’s first season by having some change handy at all games. I Officers of the Lettermen-Booster Club are: president-Robert Amder- son; 1st vice president-Lawrence “Cap” Jones; 2nd vice president- Donald Smith; secretary-Carl Kas- chenbach; treasurerJim Haines. Ambulance Crew Les Tinsley’s Crew for Dallas Com- munity Ambulance remains on duty (formerly Next week: Bob Besecker, captain; | Ralph ' Fitch, Don Bulford, Gilbert Re William Berti. “Chick” Smith Will Winter In Florida Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Smith, Ma- chell Avenue flew to St. Petersburg, yesterday, where Mr. Smith will spend the winter. bustling green toriato - industry, \ : : : £ by i + da levels provided the children with | Marsha Lawry, Clerk. Back Mountain Tomato Harvest Now Underway Familiar signs of Back Mountain's | along local by-ways. | On the left, migrant field hands | 7 | (see full story, column four). The tomatoes are washed, graded, sorted | At right are the huge semi-trailer | rigs waiting at the junction of’ for a call to load ie at the packers, Behind the crates of tomatoes, ‘center, workers thread through the which comes to lif, every - August load trucks with crates of the fruit, | and boxed at packers’ plants in the | Route 118 and 309, Orchard Farm, | fields which line Route 292, Center- i] 4or about a month, are seen here bound for markets all over the east | Orange- -Contormoreland area. moreland down. to Falls, { Harris Hill Light To Be Removed Terrace Avenue Water Problem T 0 Be Solved Request for nobay of the traf- fie light at Harris Hill Road was presented to the Kingston Towwship Board of Supervisors recently by Arthur Smith on behalf of Coon Construction Company. fox All members approved the action, with - Supervisor Hauck assenting reluctantly. Action was urged to enable construction crews to lay pipe under the intersection, but will predispose pedestrians and motorists to danger, leaving busy intersection unguarded. Thomas Electric ‘was approved to remove wiring and light. Board unanimously agreed to make Harris Hill Road a one-way thoroughfare to Oak Street in an effort to help traffic problems. Supervisor Smith informed his associates that am automatic “walk” or. ‘don’t walk” signal would be placed later on a wire above the roadway to control ‘traffic accord- ing to the state plan. 'Austine Line, former supervisor, suggested that Board check into possibility of treating lights like township building and seeking pay- ment for same. The Board voted unanimously to write Highway Department urging that overpasses or underpasses be constructed at Center Street, Harris Hill and Carverton Road. Chairman Ziegler made the motion, seconded by Hauck, who has been deeply concerned over ‘the lack of proper safety provisions at these points. Richard Mathers, reporting for the Zoning Commission, questioned whether such a group was needed since a recent permit charge ‘was dismissed. Hauck answered that this nation had remained great because the two main bodies of government, administrative and judicial had functioned seperately. Mr. Hauck informed the board and visitors that the recent article published in another paper was false. He stated that, ‘My reason for wishing to resign from the board was not over the approval of paving for Carverton Heights, but due to the tremendous amount of time this job requires away from my family.” He explained that he was not in favor of such a committment be- cause it is not fair to those who have resided for thirty years in the township and have been offered mo such proposition. Hauck reported on the critical water problem on Terrace Avenue. He described the street as a mess with contours all mixed up. He urged that the street be placed on the top of the list for major over- haul this season. Pavement will have to be tom up, lower side of road raised and gutters redone. He said, “The matter had been kicked around long enough.” Police were commended for the fine job they had done in maintaiin- ing traffic flow since construction began. Chief Updyke reported the township building had no water Fog) oY 674-5656 in, ; VOL. 75, NO. 34 THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1963 Fourteen New Faculty Members Join Staff; Nine Instructors For Grades And Junior High } Phillipsburg High School, Phillips- EASY TO REMEMBER lephone Numbers 6747676 Q Dallas Pupils To Meet Teachers September 4 Students returning for the fall opening of classes will find a num- ber of new ‘teachers waiting to | greet them. Mr. Robert C, Cicon, Exeter, was graduated from East Stroudsburg State College, and is certificated to teach social studies and English. i Mr. Cicon will teach English and social studies in ‘the Dallas Junior | High School. : Mrs. Carol Palermo, Kingston, was graduated from College Miseri- cordia, Class of 1963, and holds a B.A. degree in elementary educa- tion. Mrs. Palermo is an accomplished singer and a member of the Ameri- can Federation of Musicians. She will be assigned to teach fifth grade in the Dallas Elemen- tary School. Mrs. Sylvia Price, Machell Aven- ue, Dallas, was graduated from Bloomsburg State College and is certificated to teach all subjects in | the field of elementary education. She will teach third grade in the Dallas Elementary School. Mrs. Ann Williamson Pfautz, Harris Hil Road, Trucksville, was graduated from Cedar Crest College, Allentown, and holds a B.S. degree in elementary educa- tion, Mrs. the School and will teach first grade. Mr. John W. Baur was graduated from Westmoreland High School with the Class of 1954, and received his A.B. degree from King’s Col- lege in June, 1958. Mr. Baur taught one year at Pfautz will be assigned to : burg, New Jersey. Since 1959, Mr. Baur has been associated with a nationwide ‘ chain of department stores. He is'a resident of R.D. #3, Nazareth, Pennsylvania, an formerly employed in Easton, sylvania. was eon- Mr. Baur will teach Sathimaties. | in the Dallas Junior High School. Mrs. Mary Ann Sigworth, R.D. #3, Dallas, has been employed as a fulltime substitute teacher of English in the Dallas Semior High School during the 1962 -1963 “schoo! upar, She is certificated to tes English, mathematics, French, biological science. : " Mrs. Sigworth will teach develop- i mental reading in the junior high school for year. Mrs. Mary Ruth Kleinginna, Wyo- ming Seminary, Kingston, Pennsyl- vania, was graduated from Wilkes College, and holds certification in English amd social studies. - She will be assigned to the Dal- |] las’ Junior High School and will | teach English. hg Mrs. Barbara Erwin, Wilkes- 5 Barre, was graduated from West Chester State College with a B.S. degree in Education, She is certi- the 1963-1964 school | fieated to teach all subjects in the ! elementary curriculum. ; Mrs. Erwin will teach indore garten in the Westmoreland Ele- mentary School. Mrs. Francis Klaboe, Stang Street, Shavertown, Chester State College with a B.S. degree in elementary education. She is also certificated to teach all subjects im the elementary curricu- lum. 3 Mrs. Klaboe will be assigned to teach third grade in the Shaver- town Elementary School. New members of the Dallas Senior High School faculty appear on page 15T in this weeks Tab- loid section. Police Charge Manslaughter LaBar, 20, Died From Injuries Two charges were preferred by Assistant Chief Jesse Coslett ‘before Squire Frederick W. Anderson last ‘evening. Fi Carl G. Bartashunas, 17, 19 Mar- ket Street, Pittston, was charged with involuntary mandaughter in the death of Theodore K. LaBar, 20.5 1000Summit Street, Pittston, Pa., on { August 10 on Carvertan Road. Mr. LaBar died at Nesbitt Hos- pital August 17, following severe injuries suffered when a car driven by Bartashunas struck the motor- cycle on which LaBar and Rupert Crawford, 15, R.D. 1, Harding were riding. i Edward A. Andrusick, R.D. 3, Dal- las, was charged with reckless driv- ing by Anthony Dennis, husband of . Mrs. Susan Dennis who suffered in- juries on the morning of August 11 near the Woodland Inn in a two car collision. Bail was set and hearings will be held in the near future. supply in July due to tearing up of road in front of building. : Board approved the matter of gas company getting no permits for Midway Manor and tearing up new roads ‘there to Solicitor Mitchell Jenkins for the addition of an ad- (Continued on Page 3 A) hg Westmoreland Elementary = graduated from West E