i — -— Oldest Business Institution Back of the Mountain 75 YEARS A NEWSPAPER TEN CENTS PER COPY—TWELVE PAGES ’ Purcell Heads Group In Court, Along With 2 by Leighton Scott It was less like a protest, gathering — of around 70 people who knew each other and ‘flatly deplored the idea of a Harveys Lake Borough. It was quiet and brief (about an hour and a quarter), | a shared last-ditch stand of w timers and businessmen who would mean doubling of taxes res Surprised at the deep-seated and | possibly irrevocable progress of the | borough proponents, it called for | a leader almost before the meeting | began, Tuesday night. It found | that leader in William Purcell, a de- | termined and clear-thinking young | businessman and resident of Har- | veys Lake, who recently added the | former Harron’s Laketon Economy | Market to his gasoline sales enter- | prises. | Directing the meeting were Lake | Township Board of Supervisors, | Sharon Whitesell and Atty. Louis | Crisman the speakers, attended by | Lehman Township Board of Super- visors. Good-humored Desperation an It was an odd amalgam of good no and desperation, like people trapped together in a subway car during a power failure — gentle a Wise-cracking; a sober realization hat the other side may have al- ready won the ballgame; an ulti- mate belief that, in a showdown, the status quo would somehow pre- vail. Said a woman's voice in the crowd: “Can't the supervisors’ wives say something that will make a difference ?” Answer: “They do at home.” Said a voice that would be heard more than once before the battle | was over, revealingly: The borough | men have already pegged down a| majority of year-rounders’ signa- | tures in the Lake Township section | not have a copy of it, but that af- To File Exceptions Township Lawyers meeting than a neighborhood hat were principally Lake old- were certain that a borough with little increase in service. explained that a freeholder was 2 property-owner for life, but that only “resident” freeholders had a MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION Anti-Borough Forces Open Campaign At Harveys Lake Planning Joint Opposition Meeting, Friday, Nov. 26 = ~ Will Boro Be Toiled By Lehman Township? Will formation of a borough at Harveys Lake from sections of Lake and Lehman Town- ships be foiled by failure to get a requisite majority of resi- dent freeholders’ signatures in Lehman Township? Officials in a position to know have told the Dallas Post that they are certain that there is not a majority of borough right to petition. { There was question posed from ! the floor to the effect that some | signatures on the borough petition | were not by property-owners. Cris- | man said that the supervisors did | fadavits had been taken of each canvasser. Purcell, speaking for the first time and well prior to his nomina- tion as opposition committee head, asked: What would be the best way to fight the petition? Crisman then | proponents in the small mile- long segment of Lehman Town- ship involved. They say that a failure to get a majority here would foil the whole effort, and that there would be no recourse for the borough proponents but to start the whole petition over again for the Lake Township sector alone. Idea is that, though the year- rounder majority in Lake Township might favor borough formation, their petition is for suggested that the citizens and formation of a municipality township supervisors ‘file excep- comprised of sectors of BOTH tions.” ! townships. = Purcell asked if a property-owner who was only a summer resident would be considered a legal ‘‘resi- dent” for petition? Crisman opin- ed that you can’t have a residence in two places, thus excluding sum- mer residents. Purcell suggested the opposition committee be formed immediately. Kocher asked if the partition of the township would effect a rise in taxes in the rest of the township? The consensus was that it would. George Halowich asked if it would | be possible for a person ‘who had | already signed the borough petition | to take his name off? Answer: | File exceptions. The meeting push- | ed on the subject of retracting sig- | Playground Sewage May Hasten Move By Three Municipalities Guard Rails Promised For Carverton Road The seriousness of the sewage overflow at Shavertown Grade School, necessitating closing of a portion of the playground, will probably bring the sewage disposal problem to the point of action. A letter from Raymond Schiwall, Sanitary Engineer of Luzerne Coun- a police investigated. of the total watershed. Said a voice in the crowd, of the second protestors’ meeting, slated for 8 p.m. Friday, November 26, at Lake Township school: “Ask the ones who voted for the borough to be there to learn the truth.” The next meeting: was the result of suggestion by Crisman that there was a two-fold approach to fighting © the 1100-signature petition for for- | mation of a borough by those who claimed to be the requisite “free- natures from the borough petition. Someone shouted: ‘“Everybody’s afraid to say why they signed it!” | Further questions brought out that the early opposition petition | the Adar Title. ‘circulated by Supervisor ' Walter | Hoover showed a counter-opinion | but did not have legal weight. Also a witness, Richard Rank, was called | forward by Lake Supervisor-elect Alger Shafer, and Rank attested | that his signature on the borough petition was founded without prop- | holders residing,” circulated by vol- | unteers and members of the Har- | veys Lake Executive Association, er information, that he was requir- ed to advise his wife by mail from | Alaska whether or not to sign. He and now filed with the court for! also said that his canvasser had ty, to the Kingston Township Board of Supervisors led the board to | take action on Wednesday evening. | The group will meet with repre- | sentatives of the sanitation unit in It. was suggested by Mr. Schi- wall that State and Federal funds are available for the next two years I for sewage treatment for commu- nities needing financial assistance. He stated that without a proper sewage collection system the situation is more or less hopeless and must be directed to home own- | ers and business enterprises. A Feasibility Report prepared Dr. Mellman To Speak | On New Building Plan Dr. Robert’ Mellman, superinten- dent of Dallas School District, will speak on “Our Proposed Building Program” at a meeting of Dallas Jr. High School PTA on Monday | evening. | This particular subject concerns | every PTA member and tax payer in | this area and an invitation is ex- tended to the public to attend. Dr. Mellman will be introduced by William Price, vice president and program chairman of the organiza- tion. Mrs. John Rogers will pre- side. Mrs. Joseph Balavage is chair- man of the Tea honoring the teachers and held at this time in commemoration of Education Week. 9th grade mothers will assist. Coin-boxes Robbed Thieves broke into three vending machines and a kiddie ride coin- box at Dallas Shopping Center's Speed Wash sometime between 5:30 p.m. Tuesday and 7:30 a.m. yesterday, taking 50 to 75 cents from the machines inside and an | undetermined amount outside. Ruth Disque, manager of the 24-! hour laundromat which has seen a number of such robberies in its history, discovered it at 7:30 a.m. i yesterday, and Borough and State Rent Reduced In an effort to aid Trucksville | Firemen in their current drive to raise funds for a new tanker, the | board voted to lower their monthly | rental from $50 per month to $25 | for the coming year. President | Jacob Harrison = replied, “Every | little bit helps.” A rumor that rental was charged the WSCS for their Election Day | use of the new municipal building | oe Signs of Christmas already! Bearing glad tidings of great joy are the “three wise men’ again: Andrew Perranto, Street Superin- tendent, and Jim Davies and Kyle Pearing Glad Tidings Already Cundiff, men of the department. They are stringing ‘the traditional | Christmas lights. on Main Street, | and: Andy seems to be smiling a holiday ho-ho-ho to the Dallas Post ' Back Mountain Area Bmbulance Logbook Dallas Community Dallas Community ambulance took Fred Maiers, Haddonfield Hills, to Mercy [Hospital on Sunday, Don Shaffer, Robert Besecker, Jim Dav- jes, and Jim Faerber attending. Lake + Township Lake ambulance took Lawrence Wilson from Ruggles to Mercy Hos- | pital on Friday, John Stenger and Jim McCaffrey attending. Michael Walsh was taken from Morgus Convalescent Home to Vets --Season’s Greetings camera. | Borough Council has announced | that ‘the lights will be turned on the night before Thanksgiving, November 24. School Directors Seek Pointers Decision Must Come Soon On Architect Dallas District School Directors, who rhust choose an architect for | the proposed building program in {the near future, are covering | ground in determining important factors in both renovation and erec- tion of schools. On Renovations, New Buildings | Phillips, Mrs. Louise Steinhauer, Mrs. Ann Vernon, newly elected | directors Earl Fritzges, Harry Lef- ko and John LaBerge visited Tunk- ! hannock High School where ex- | tensive renovations have been | made. The problems of remodeling | old buildings was well presented Lin this case as the local directors | took a guided tour throughout. | A little earlier, Andrew Kozem- scrutiny and decision by the middle of December: 1/ File exceptions to show that there is NOT a majority of resi- dent property-owners in, favor of the borough (still in question around the Lehman Township lake- front.—Ed.) 2/ File exceptions to show that, majority of freeholders or not, a borough would not be in the best interests of tax-payers (many of whom do not own their own resi- dences and thus could not petition or refuse to). Too Late? It seemed almost too late for effective opposition. . The borough men had been at » | five years ago by Roy F. Weston, was denied by the board and future | Hospital, McCaffrey and Lee Zim- use of it specified for girl scouts, | merman as crew. fire company, churches and auxil-| Lehman Township iaries only. Supervisors asked that | the rooms be cleaned upon complet- ing use of the same. Everell Chadwick reported for the Beautification Commit ee that the current project would be the cleaning out of brush from the pine oak plantings along the highway in the Harris Hill Road sector, work to be done by the Boy Scouts. Faulty Plumbing Lehman ambulance took Andrew Kleban, Route 118, to Nesbitt Hos- | Lanceford Sutton attending. Franklin-Northmoreland Franklin - Northmoreland ambu- lance took two Swoyerville boys, David Mihulka and Joseph Mihulka, from accident scene in Vernon, 2:15 a.m. Sunday, after their car flipped, knocked out guard rails and landed against a utility pole, to Nesbitt Hospital, Stanley Weaver and Karl Besteder attending. Faulty plumbing work on the new municipal building and the seepage of water into the civil de- pital on Saturday, Lee Wentzel and | With an elementary - school to |chak joined the group in a close | be the first consideration and addi- | look at Lehman's new High School, tions to both junior and senior which was constructed several years high buildings planned within the | ago. next three years, most board mem- | Only by studying other structures bers feel that the best construction in other districts does the board for the least money seems to be hope to. have a clear picture of the order of the day. | what must be done to berfefit both A rapidly spiraling enrollment has | students and the taxpayer. precipitated the move to hasten It is expected that a decision the provision of more space. | may be forthcoming at the Decem- On Sunday, directors Walter ber meeting of the board. Rtom Lab On Misericordia Campus | indicated that the borough would | get Lakeside Drive widened (It is | a: state highway). | Mrs. Edward Crake, vehement | spokesman for the women in at- . tendance, asked if the issue would | be settled by one judge or the court en banc? Atty. Crisman was of the opinion that' it would be by the court en banc. A list was circulated to form a Lake Township citizen's comrx **ne, ‘and signers were Mr. and Mrs. | William Purcell, Richard Rank, John | Van Campen, Mrs. Joseph Desiderio, | Mrs. Louella Gosart, Mrs. Edward Crake, and Mrs. Bernice Kocher. A | committee from Lehman is to be | named. work for the better part of a year, with steady legal advice, lots of adamant and steadfast volunteer help (some of whom have been accused of ‘promising the moon” to prospective petitioners and virtually camping on doorsteps until petition was signed). They had the blessing of the - Pennsylvania Economy League, in- dependent consulting agency dedi- cated to improvement in municipal government. They also had a good deal of support emanating from various sources in Wilkes-Barre. Against this were people who re- coiled” at the idea of (e.g., Lake Twp.) a rise in millage from 4.1 to 9 or 10, and who further recoiled at the idea of what they felt were a lot of summer residents who came out once in a while to tell the establishment how to run Har- veys Lake, which is a bit of an overstated case. : With a characteristic combina- tion of impressive Harveys Lake background (five generations) and lack of understanding of the legal boundaries of forming a borough, one woman told of her daughter who owns property here but lives out of state and who is ‘against the borough.” Hitch is that the daughter, not residing at the Lake, does not have the status of “freeholder residing” in the affected area of Lake and Lehman townships. From comments at the meeting it was evident that many people were unsure of the area affected, the status of citizen involved, and how the whole thing would be re- solved, despite all the newspaper coverage. People And Questions “Mr. Chairman, what is a free- holder 2’, asked constable Jasper Kocher, getting the ball rolling at the outset of the meeting. Tt was Two Collide | Two cars collided on the highway in Dallas in front of Davis’ Market at 3:45 p.m. Tuesday, no injuries to occupants. Alan Covert, Star Route, Shickshinny, struck rear of car driven by Eula Meyers, Sun- set Street, RD 4 Dallas, latter being towed from scene. Borough police investigated. | Inc.,, for Kingston Township, and { Dallas Borough, and instigated at that time by the late Austin Line and William XKrimmel, supervisors of their respective communities, cites faulty on lot sewage facilities | throughout the Toby Creek water- shed, and will be studied. Roy Ziegler, chairman of the Kingston Township Board suggested that officials of the other two in- terested townships be called in for a joint consultation. Supervisors Shaver and Funke agreed. The unguarded drop-off area on | Carverton Road near the Frances | Slocum Dam site will be corrected i shortly advised Richard Staub, | Trucksville, who said he had con- tacted Rep. Fred Shupnik on the matter. There have been a num- ber of complaints on this built up sector left without protective bar- ricades for months. Dan Shaver announced that Shaver Avenue would be paved be- fore the weekend and Vine Street, with the township building lot also | expected to be completed before ! winter. fense room will be turned over to the solicitor. Contractor for the | former job will not receive full payment unless errors are rectified. Jacob Harrison reported a leak in the kitchen sink. A rise in grading will be undertaken by the super- visors and a run off area provided | to correct the basement problem. Bids for the new police cruiser from Luzerne Motors and Motor Twins were rejected and will be re- advertised. Frank Roginski reported the Civil Defense Unit had used the “Weasel” to bring out the lost West Wyoming tot found in.a coal pit. New police regulations will be studied before being accepted. Lehman Fire Co. To Tour Hayfield House Parking Lot Crash At 3:30 p.m. Monday, car driven by Evan A. London, Centermore- land, struck that of Warren Stanton, RD 3 Dallas, in the Acme parking lot, Borough police investigating. Post Office Closed The Dallas Post Office will be closed, on Thursday, November 25, (Thanksgiving Day) it was an- nounced by Postmaster Ed Buckley. There will be no City or Rural De- livery. Mail will be collected from the City Delivery boxes for dispatch to Wilkes-Barre Post Office at 5:30 p.m. Prepares For Vietnam AF 1/c Clyde Major, with the Members and guests of Lehman hall November 22 at 7 p.m. to tour Hayfield House, Lehman. Business meeting will be at 8:45 at the hall, following tour. Vhitesell Speaks Howard Whitesell, president of the Home Builders Association of Northeastern Pennsylvania, out- | lines the organization's Fall and Winter program at a meeting hosted by the Luzerne Electric Division of U. G. I. of which Richard Demmy, £ FA } At UGI Meet ing On HBA Program president in charge of the local operation. J. Russell Samuel, sales| Demmy. Demmy told the manager of the Luzerne Electric Di- vision, is seated between Mr. Dem- my and Mr. Whitesell. Members and guests were inform- : ed of the Luzerne Electric Division's extreme right, is executive vice- | new policy of free installation of : Eee i HE modern three-wire service by Mr. home | builders that the program will mean | savings of more than $100 for each customer requiring increased elec- tric capacity to operate appliances. Presently, some 16,000 | Fire Company will meet at the fire- | modern | Air Force for five and one-half years, will take survival training in Nevada, with further combat training in Florida, before heading for Vietnam in March. His wife and two small children, coming in from Offutt AFB, Nebraska recently, are i Major's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- lard Newberry on Main Street, Dallas. Dependants are not permitted to accompany young men in survival training. Now Rock 'n Roll Dances at Kunkle Community ing Day, continuing the following Saturday and every Saturday there- after; 8:30 p.m. One big change: For ‘the first Twenties, the dances will not be of “square dance” format. They will be rock’n roll, featuring the five Toronadoes. Sponsoring the dances, as usual, are the Harry Smith Fire Company and the Kunkle Community Associ- ation, alternately. Closing hour is 11:30 p.m. Reflecting on the change, old- time firemen told the Dallas Post, | a little wistfully but with optimism: | “Kids don’t want to farmer dance | anymore. They want to rock 'n roll.” It was the beginning of an era in the Back Mountain, as closing | the doors several weeks ago was staying for the present with Mrs. | Dance At Kunkle Center will resume on Thanksgiv-' time since the days of the Roaring | the end of one. The Farmer Dance | Se From U.S. Oak Ridge Installaticn | | | | The Oak Ridge Mobile Radioiso- | tope Laboratory visited College Eiligins campus November 8- 12 and 15-19, to present a two- week program for faculty members | and for advanced science students. The mobile raidoisotope unit was | sent by the Oak Ridge Institute of | Nuclear Studies of Oak Ridge, Tenn- ! essee, to provide a specialized train- | { ing in the techniques and applica- ' tions: of radioisotopes. | The mobile unit, operated for the | United States Atomic Energy Com- | mission by the Oak Ridge Institute | of Nuclear Studies, was built at a {cost of $75,000. It has a count- ing room and chemistry laboratory, | office space, two air conditioning and heating systems, its own water | supply and waste retention tanks, {and a storage locker for radioiso- ‘ topes. During the two weeks at Miseri- cordia, a series of laboratory ex- | periments and lectures was present- ed by Institute personnel. Lectures covered subjects as ra- —- and principles and practice of a wide variety of radioistope applica- | tions to chemistry, physics and bi- ology. Laboratory work and dem- onstrations deal with Geiger count- ‘ers, scintillation counters and spec- ' trometers, isotope dilution, radio- chemical separation techniques and biological studies. The mobile radioisotope labora- tory program began in 1958 when a mobile laboratory was designed by the Institute's Special Training Di- vision for the Atomic Energy Com- mission. + Two such vehicles were constructed and presented to the International Atomic Energy Agency by the Atomic Energy Commission. | The units have been used to pre- sent radioisotope techniques grams in Europe, Asia, and Central | and South “America. Three other | laboratories are now used in the | | United States College program. | ' Since 1959, when the program be- | ‘gan in the United States, approxi- | | mately 1,300 faculty members and | | students from 93 colleges in 31 of ‘the utility’s customers have the | had been famous over three coun- diation detection, instrumentation, | states have participated. | older two-wire service, I tics since 1927. nuclear theory, radiological safety, Lo TWO EASY TO REMEMBER Telephone Numbers 674-5656 | Land is owned by Police Chief Jo- { have a direct bearing on the matter. | | i | worked on “junkyard” legislation | that day. Supervisor William Sam- | any recommendations of the Zon- ‘Zoning Board were a creation of | | | | | | #4 | on road and conservation projects | at Lake Silkworth last month, no | pro- | | = | and ten per | Economic Opportunity Act (Anti- 674-7676 97 At Oak Hill Plead Against Land-use Change Fear Trailer Court | Along [Idetown Road If More Permitted | A delegation of Oak Hill people, | fearing property devaluation, pre- sented a petition of 97 signatures to the November township meeting, in effect protesting an outcropping of trailers on neighboring land. seph Ide. 2 They were told by the Board of Supervisors on Saturday that a new zoning ordinance now in form- ulation by the Zoning Board would A township official told the Dallas Post this week that the new zoning plan would prohibit “trailer parks’ in what are zoned as “residential” areas. Wording of the petition did not refer to the trailer matter itself, but merely requested the super- visors to allow no change in the | “use of the land’, specifically from | residential to commercial. Supervisors also emphasized that | { ing Board must be discussed in a public meeting upon proper adver- tisement, and the Supervisors will have a final vote. Group of wisitors said they wanted to attend the meeting of the Zoning Board the following day, but did not know when or where it would be. Secretary Michael Godek then called several members of the Zoning Board, one of whom was reached and who told him that the meeting was at a member's home, but that he did not think the public needed to be in attend- ance. Middle ground was reached when it was decided to send one of the petitioners, John Roehn, to the meeting. Soo The specific reference to trailers on the Ide property, object of every- one’s concern, was not made until the Dallas ‘Post suggested that threat of commercialization be made | a little more concrete. ; Later, an official cleared the mat- ter up completely. Three trailers were put on the T-acre Ide tract (which is ¢lassifizd as one lot). The third trailer is slated “to -be-inoved to a different location, still in the neighborhood. One of the trailers is rented; two are homes of mem- bers of the owner's family. Question arises as to whether, technically, | more than one trailer is allowed on | this one lot. ! Also complicating the matter is. that, legal or not under old zoning Jaw under the tenuous presumption that trailers are ‘commercial’ en- tities in a ‘residential’ area, the landowners have nevertheless not. procured proper septic tank per- | mits on the second and third trailers. , Mr. Roehn attended the Zoning Board meeting on Sunday, but it is reported that nothing was re- solved on the trailer matter. Board uel, of Lake Silkworth, recommend- ed that Mr. Roehn go to the meeting. The new supervisor, Clinton Smith, of Oak Hill, asked if ay the Board of Supervisors? Answer was “yes”. Smith then moved that | the Board order them to hold zon- ing board meetings in the firehall, with the idea of facilitating public | attendance. [ Mr. Samuels reiterated that Mr. | Roehn’s attendance at the meeting would be sufficient, and that it was | too short a notice to have the zoners change their meeting place, at least this time. ; A All supervisors were in agreement that a public meeting should be | held on the matter some time. Anti-Poverty Jobs : It was reported that the Board | of Supervisors has not yet heard | from the government in response to application for an allotment to | hire underprivileged local youth to | do up to 30 hours of work apiece to be financed 90 per cent federally | cent local under the Poverty). Wage is $1.25 an hour. Lehman has asked for 10 jobs; also participating are Jackson, Hunlock, Ross, Fairmount, and other town- ships. 3 Police report listed five burglaries arrests, and one ambulance call. Other Lehman police work listed one accident, one. arrest, and 42 | calls. | Roadmaster presented an exten- sive report. a a NOTICE Because of the Thanksgiving holiday the DALLAS POST will be published Monday, November 22 and be in the mail, Tuesday | morning, November 23. : et All correspomdents, ministers, publicity chairmen and organ- izations are asked to have their news in the office no later than | Saturday er Sunday morning. The full Post staff will be here Satur- day and Sunday to help you! i EAMES ERORMEET