) . - . . iors, painting, musical teenth Annual Back Mountain Memorial Library Auction. At left are Herman Thomas, former owner of Highland Acres farm, and the new owners, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Pearsall, West Dallas, and | Auction, Saturday morning. Oldest Business Institution Back of the Mountain 75 YEARS A NEWSPAPER A Remy Here are some random photos by James Kozemchak of the Nine- j daughter Yvonne, with others, and the Auction lamb, a tradition. The Pearsalls donated the lamb this year, as the Thomases did in years past. Mr. Kozemchak always takes an appealing picture of the Children’s Little hands bid on anything at any price. Not just kids bid on anything at any price—we take that back. Here principal purpose being to draw out the infinite possibilities of | the Auctioneers, John Vivian on the microphone, sell the lingerie, set of | Vivian's famous Auction Block wit. | which (and it wasn’t even a set) went for $26. Richard Post, the vet, and Richard Maslow, rather inflated the wvalue, | Spirited bidding by Dr DALLAS POST A A | John | Thousands at- | tended over three day period—an estimated 15,000 in all. : Photo at right shows crowd at the Auction block. TWO EASY TO REMEMBER Telephone Numbers 674-5656 674-7676 TEN CENTS PER COPY—FOURTEEN PAGES Latin Teacher *Appointed Here . Public Speaking Added ~ To School Schedule The opening for ‘a language teacher has been filled at Dallas Senior High School with the ap- pointment Tuesday evening of Miss Nancy Roberta Benn, Hollidaysburg, as a temporary professional em- ployee. Miss Benn who is certificated in Latin and German is a graduate of Pennsylvania State University. In other action the School Board approved the following course to be added to the Senior High curri- culum, Bookkeeping II and Public Speaking for all regular English classes to be given as it can be fitted into their schedule. Numerous bids on furniture, type- instru- ments, paving, window shades, win- low tinting, and rotary lawn | ( | Valley-Hunlock Creek “mower, electric typewriter and cal- culator were réad, consulting much time. Award for cleaning septic tanks | | men. | Hospital. at all buildings was’ given to J. A. Singer at only bid of $250. Arthur Hayston, Shavertown, received con- tract for painting exterior of Dallas | Elementary School at low bid of $743. Window shades for Dallas Borough, Westmoreland, Trucks- ville and Dallas Junior High build- ings went to Roberts and Meck at iow bid of $180.52. Maintenance of typewriters was awarded to Roland F. Smith at low bid of $4.50. Window tinting of 28 windows in the gymnasium went tc Sunex Glass at low bid of $369. Paving contract for Trucksville School, Junior High, Dallas Elemen- tary, the Senior High School and AP0X108 feet at Shavertown Ele- ‘¥mentary went to Dale Parry at plovest bid. Other bids were sub- ‘mitted to Property Committee for tabulation and study. Andrew Gallagher asked Board if any per capita tax exonerations were granted residents over 62. Chairman Jack Stanley said the Board usually recognized applica- tions for hardship cases and that applications must be refiled each year. Mrs. Vernon said the folks she was concerned about were those now on a fixed income since re- tirement. The former contract Supply Company for installation of a water storage tank was cancelled since the price set did not include a saddle and the order was then placed with Roat Supply Company. The board also approved the pur- chase of needed textbooks. with Mack gg | | Letters of appreciation were read | from Alice Howell, secretary of the Library Board for $1,000 check re- cently received for services, from Earl Phillips and Mrs. Phillips and | pelen M. Sliker, Zranted Sabbatical leave to study in France. Rev.. Robert Germond, Trucks- ville Methodist Church offered in- vocation. Present were directors Stanley, Richardson, Kozemchak, Vernon and E. Phillips. Family Of 4 Injured In Crash Near Chase Two cars collided on Mountain Road, Jackson Township, at 3:30 | p.m. Saturday, and four members | of a family injured. Driver Paul Wickham, 17, RD 2 Benton, was unable to negotiate a curve, struck the machine carrying Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Thomas, Hillside Avenue, Plymouth, and two children. Kingston Township ambulance to Nesbitt Hospital. had broken seat belts of the chil- dren. Jackson Township police in- vestigated. Injured were taken by | Force of impact | who has been | ANTIQUES SALES TOTAL $3,565, FREE AND CLEAR The Committee on Antiques for the Library Auction made $3,565, free and clear, with no expense to detract from the total take. A number of pieces which weuld have totalled at least an- other $500 were not sold, due” to lack of time over the block. Rain sent the crowd scurry- ing Saturday afternoon, and three hours were wasted, as serious bidders were slow to congregate again. The chairman is asking wo- men whose antiques were not sold, to take them home again for safe keeping. A telephone squad is in operation. = Hurt In Sideswipe Bonnie Dodson, 21, and Gary Mil- ler, 20, both of Hunlock Creek R. D. 1, were injured when cars they were driving sideswiped around 6 p.m. Tuesday on Sweet Road, near Roaring Brook. Miss Dodson was taken’ to Nesbitt Hospital for X- rays, complaining of pain’ in abdo- Miller was taken to General State police investigated. Lake-Noxen Toll Vote Still Open A total of 467 Harveys Lake- Noxen customers have voted in favor of eliminating the 15¢ toll charge to Kingston-Wilkes-Barre in the customer poll being conducted by the Commonwealth Telephone Company, J. N. Landis, District Manager, announced today. Landis noted that 213 ‘yes’ votes are still required if present toll charge is to be eliminated. He urged that all customers who have not yet returned their votes do so immediately. | at last report, and may be hospital- | Poll is being taken to determine | if the majority of the Lake-Noxen customers would prefer to have toll free service between | Harveys | Harveys Lake-Noxen and Kingston- | Wilkes-Barre, with increase in monthly local service charge. To date 730 ballots have been re- | senger side of the Stewart car. turned, of which 467 have voted in | favor. Landis stated that the change could not be introduced unless a majority of all Lake-Noxen cus- tomers expressed desire for it. Those | customers who fail to return their ballot will be counted as negative votes. Therefore, an absolute ma- jority of 680 votes is needed for | Commonwealth to: proceed. Probably Saved Boy From Death Doctors Believe She Kept Two-car Wreck From Being A Fatal At presstime, the chairman of the F saved the life of the 12-year-old son | of Mr. and Mrs. A. Lee Stewart, Jr., of Lower Demunds Road, follow- ing a bad head-on. crash in East Dallas on Saturday. Mr. Stewart is grateful to the nurse, who happened along, ordered by-standers to turn Alan Stewart on his'stomach, head depressed, to stop the bleeding from his neck. It would be much appreciated if the nurse’s identity could be established. ! Mr. Stewart happened on the scene of the accident himself, purely coincidentally. He had been taking a friend fishing, was returning’ from | buying : bait alesis lag Road; s thw flashing lights, dnd stopped. © Ambulance men had al- ready loaded in his son and were preparing to remove his wife as well, as he arrived. He told the Dallas Post this week that both the boy and Mrs. Ann Stewart are coming‘along very well at Nesbitt Hospital, and both will probably be discharged in the near future. Alan had about 80 sutures taken in his neck for a gash that just missed windpipe and juglar vein, after the family’s Opel sta- tion wagon was struck head-on by a sedan driven by Bernard ‘Bucky’ Buchman, Dallas RD 3, who has been charged by police with drunken driving, hearing last night. “Remun The hoy’s father said Alan’s re- covery has even the doctors stymied, and h~ was permitted to get up out of bed recently. - He also was su- tured for a gashed shoulder. Mrs. Stewart was still suffering dizziness ized a few days longer. Police reported the cars were ap- at East Dallas Church, Buchman car swerved to the pas- It was broad daylight, accident occur- ing about 4:10 p.m. Since both Dallas and Kingston Township ambulances were on call MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION Unnamed Nurse | Rain Briefly { | | | i When the rains came, some ran | and some shelved. . Intruding on Saturday's Library j Auction, wa evimated darse hours worih, | was a hard summer cloudburst. It | No Information | At prestime, the chairman of the | nineteenth annual Back Mountain | Memorial Library Auction, Merrill | Faegenburg, was: unable to give a figure on gross receipts of the three- day affair, and thus an estimate of | net was impossible. This is the first time since the Auction was started 19 years ago | that this figure wag not released to | the Dallas Post. Reason, Mr. Faegen- | more accurate picture of the library income, and’ all bills had not been | accounted for as yet. | (However, it has ‘always been | possible to guess the probable net, given the gross income figure, which | the Dallas Post has traditionally done until this year.) ' Dungey And Balavage | were thrown from their car in a | Phillipsburg, | crash at Pole 71, Harveys Lake, | at the time, Lehman and Franklin- | Northmoreland ambulances dispatched to the scene. got there first and took the patients in, accompanied by Mr. Stewart and were | neighbor, Mrs. John Costello. | mean that Kingston-Wilkes-Barre would be able to call Harveys Lake- Provision of this service would | Noxen without a toll charge. Auction Crowds; Checking Fallen Angel An | afternoon. crowd enjoys the | Thrown Out By Crash | proaching each other on the curve | and the | Robert Clark Dungey, 138 Lake Street, and passenger James Balav- age, Grace Avenue, struck by one attempting to turn into a driveway Tuesday afternoon. Boys were taken by Lake ambu- to General. Other driver, Mrs. Edith Muphy, 'Hilldale, who had been | burg said, was that the net gives a | | | Knapich is willing to accept a smal- Shavertown, | ler salary than she was receiving in | as cafeteria manager. | lance to Nesbitt Hospital, and Ba- has had long experience in staging Lehman | | church suppers, Lehman Fire Com- | lavage later transferred on request | ppers, Shelves Auction Business Ww N | scattered the crowd. | ‘Many people ran for their cars. | Others, like the young fellows in My about the most original idea. Those small enough lay ‘on the new Ruth Stolarick's Lake-Lehman School Board held its. first full-fledged meeting Tues- | day night, without benefit of Merged | Board or Joint Board meetings in advance... The nine directors, the administrator, the principal of the High School, the assistant admini- strator, and the secretary, met in the administration office downstairs, instead of in the library on the second floor. A body blow was resignation of Ruth Stolarick, Home Ec teacher, who has been with the faculty since 1948, first as Ruth Shellhamer, then as Mrs. Stolarick. For a few years during her early marriage she was out of the picture, but eight years | ago returned. Mrs. Beverly Williams Knapich, an experienced Home Ec Teacher, was hired by the board. Mrs. because of having married a man from Forty Fort and wishing to live in this region. Mrs. Dorrance Mekeel was hired Mrs. Mekeel pany dinners, and knows her menus. | Keeping within the budget for { | turning into the Cappelini property, | School lunches and still serving a and her two sens escaped injury. ‘spun the Dungey car around. In photo at right: proceedings at ‘the Library Auction, | tower fell on Saturday afternoon, in left picture. sion because the crowds are |angle. Fortunately, no crowd was checked over by Assistant smeziler and more leisurely, \ } underneath. One spotter, A spotter’s | Gruver, Jeff | master and spotter chief Jim Mc- was able to walk away | from the accident, apparently total- | Calvin Strohl. Bargains are al-| when the weight of two boys proved |ly unfazed. The other, John Kitchen, | way} available in afternoon ses-|too much for it at an outward | Fernbrook being | Scout- is shown here and mother, | Impact completely challenge. able to all school cafeterias. good meal, will be another type of Surplus food is avail- Resignation As Home-Ec Teacher Is Blow To L-L | | | goods shelves. Others got under the huge Auc- { tion Tree, under the Auction Block, cutting “ato business for' ihe picture, sought shelter, this be- | in the barn, in the concession tents, in the ticket. booth. —Dallas Post Staff Foto and even i Mrs. Mekeel will work with Mrs. Knapich. She will be in (direct charge of the Lake-Lehman kitchens. Edgar Lashford moved that tax- of the district, including Noxen in Wyoming County, be instructed to collect for the school board the tax for transfer of property, 1% of thesales price. It was voted to place school in- Money was at hand for payment of the $62,000 rental on the new building, and for July salaries. It sary funds would have to be bor- rowed. In his report, Supervising Prin- cipal Lester Squier said that all to be re-drawn, because changed status of the school district. Permanent contracts went to John J. ‘Andrusis, Florence L. Bill- ings, Margaret Bittner, Greskiewicz, Mary Alice Lukasavage, John C. Jenkins, Leonard J. Thres- Narkiewicz, all of whom had com- pleted their second successful year of teaching. Ken Kocher has recently pur- buses. the amount of $2,145.22. ~ Dallas Post Reporter, 1st Person ict At Scene, Takes Injured For Aid fo Passed by a speeding car on Car- verton-East Dallas Road Saturday night, a Dallas Post reporter thought to herself: “An accident about to happen.” Shortly after, she was transport- ing two injured passengers from the accident back to Dallas, where the Auction was in progress, to find a | doctor or an ambulance. Catherine Gilbert, Mount Zion, the | ! of letting building inspector keep | closely collectors of the constituent parts surance business with Robert Laux. | was foreseen that in August, neces- | contracts for employees would have | of the | Regina J. | ton, John P. Zlotek, and Edmund | chased two new 66 passenger school Bills were ordered paid in | VOL. 76, NO. 28. THURSDAY, JULY 15; 1965 ‘Boro Council Talk On Everything From Creek Smell To Barbed Wire Borough Council covered every- thing from A to Z in a meeting Tuesday night, touching on such topics as need for a Back Mountain sewer, legality of barbed wire fences around homes in Dallas, legality of shooting guns in Dallas, possibility of imposing a tax on utilities, need for new paving, need for’ zoned heating in the Borough Building. tually a road through Foster Street behind the new postoffice, trees growing around the honor roll. Relocation of traffic light now on government property, three sump problems and what Borough can do about them, Gas Company’s right to. continue putting in lines until it pays $450 inspection fee, status of Gate of Heaven's barricades on Spring Street when children are not at recess, and other items. Dr. F. Budd Schooley, for Back Mountain Protective , Association, submitted a brochure on how to get federal Appalachia funds and sug- gested that Borough get together with other local municipalities and use the old feasibility report, to plan a sewer line for at least the two Dallases and Kingston Town- ship. Council said it favored it back in the days when the report was made, and still does, and would be glad to cooperate, providing fed- eral money was available. Smell of Toby's Creek, possibility | permit fees for his trouble, park- ing on Machell Avenue on Sundays, Water Company's responsibility with ditches, air conditioning the State Store, whether there is ac- Bobcat Shot On Parrish Heights A bobcat was shot by Borough Assistant Police’ Chief Alexander | McCulloch near Davenport Street | iE residlonts bt corti of Street about 9 on Saturday night, and it | Jd Elizabeth Streot ho I was probably killed. | an 1Zape reels, *wido has a TET : , barbed wire fence on the corner McCulloch said he hit the cat | of his property to keep people from from about 50 yards, terming it al iting across it, wanted to know “lucky” “shot, on. the ‘Newberry | whether it were legal and why he property - close to Davenport and | 4 not been contacted personally" the Schooley property where it was | about the matter instead of “by first sighted. rumor” from somebody in another The area where the cat was hit| town. Council said it. was not legal, was combed on Sunday morning, | that it was not just rumor but had but there was no sign of him.. Mec- | been reported in the Dallas Post, Culloch is fairly certain thatl the | and that he had not been contacted cat withdrew somewhere to die. | because borough had merely in- The police officer said the shot | spected it to date. i could be heard hit the bobcat and | Council extended discount period | it jumped high on impact and ran | on municipal and county taxes to {off into the thick underbrush at | july 31. It also said Dick Disque, Newberry’s. It had come under | hyilding inspector since death of the wire mesh fence onto the | john Jeter, could keep fees: until next organization meeting, January, | since. he has “taken quite a bit of — ' on the job in past month. x | Inspector always got fees until Mr. Bus Inspection | Jeter, for special reasons, elected ! | to turn them over to Borough. School buses will be inspected at | Cruiser Is Coming Dallas Senior High School August | Borough cruiser, first’ in Dallas 12, 8-am. to 4 pm. | history, is expected to be delivered | Schooley property, 112 Davenport, | | and then gone back. Contractors from all public school [Foon | districts of the area are instructed | Council will contact Gate of | to cover the school bus signs while | Heaven to discuss parking for en route to inspection. Church on Machell Avenue and Ter- Other dates for school bus inspec- | Yace Drive and to discuss status of tion, open to any contractor for | barricades on traffic between school school-pupil transportation, are: | oe ereine lo when recess. is not Shickshinny, at the DL&W station, | #Ctually 1n session. August i Fort, Town Hall, | While discussion was heavy, like : 3 Fimo: ... | the humidity, actual motions were en Mae x fico One Se motion was to J nt Dallas : | pave Lincoln Street, off Orchard : Hens tundacd | (between highway and Pioneer), Revised IRM SangaTgs qmmy | cost $4200. No other new construc- be obtained from administrators of | tion could! be budgeted this: year | but there will be resurfacing on | Park, Parrish, Pincrest, and part of Despite pressure from | Councilman Thomas, Luzerne Ave- ‘school districts. | nue extension will not be built this State Liquor Store, big attraction find a doctor was to return to che | on Main Street, and felt by many Auction, they headed back to Dallas. | to be a real stimulus to Main Street Miss Banks, a practical nurse who | trade, is pushing for air conditioning [had been in an accident herself | next year, agreeing to pay $25 more | recently, kept watch of the pas-|rent to the borough each month | sengers and maintained a steady | until the system is paid for, then re- | iow of calming conversation with | verting to $105 a month. Bob | them. | Moore asked, why allow them to Back at the auction-school cross- | revert to the cheap rent after that |ing, the situation was explained | time, since they would still bene- { reporter and ‘first person on the scene on the old country road, and her friend, Christine Banks, Pittston, had left the Auction around 11 p.m. and were going to- ward Carverton from East Dallas on Sawmill Road near the junk- yard. On the curve below Culver’s, they came upon the car which had passed them, now battered and ly- ing across the road, two of three occupants wandering dazedly around. A reflecting flare was attached to the wreck until the driver and an- other motorist could move it off the road. Deciding that the quickest way to Coog and Noxen Assistant Fire Chief The boy was dazed and had a! bump on his head, and was finally taken to a doctor’s office by Lynn | Sheehan, Huntsville. West | | Telephone Company on Thursday, | briefly to the policeman on duty, | fit from the air conditioning ? Grace | who called Dallas ambulance which | Cave said it was because they could | took the boys to Nesbitt Hospital. | easily find other quarters if they The accident victims, Keith Wills | Wanted to. | and Louis Discatto, West Pittston; | It was decided that trap shoot- | were treated for injuries to the [ing on the Maslow property, 40 | head and arm respectively. Driver | acres, was legal because of ample | was Sanford Warshall, Pittston. The | ground. ! car, which traveled 117 feet on the {| berm before glancing off a tree and I y [ rolling completely over, is not ex- | ties brought a 4-3 vote, Wilbur footed tO recover. Davis making original motion, and | i Bob Post moved to form a commit- tee to study the legal problems, and | draw up an ordinance. Street Department was told to put more septic agent in Toby's Creek to beat the smell temporarily, Utility Tax An unstudied motion to tax utili- William R. Henschke, Hillcrest | Drive, New Goss Manor, observed 25 years of service with the Bell