PAGE EIGHT L-L board \ conguers lengthy agenda The calm, deliberate pace which typifies meetings of the Lake-Lehman School = Board prevailed Feb. 10 as members of that board unanimously ap- proved all items on a lengthy agenda as well as a request from a student's father for payment of medical bills total- ing $20. The latter request was made by Frank Kosak Jr. on behalf of his 12-year-old son, a student at the Gate of Heaven School who is transported to school on buses operated by the Lake-Lehman school dis- trict. - According to Mr. Kosak, his son sustained head injuries when reprimanded by Paul Fedor, a school bus driver, for misbehaving on the school bus. Mr. Kosak maintained that his boy was pushed abainst a brick wall by Mr. Fedor, causing scalp lacerations. The father sought and received a promise of reimbursement for medical bills from board presi- dent Edgar Lashford, who stated that the school board would discuss the incident with Mr. Fedor and would assume costs of an X-ray and doctor's ex- amination providing these charges were ‘‘within reason.” Recommendations from the education committee included a plan which would assure the school district of a librarian after Dorothy Landis, present school librarian, retires in 1971. Supervising principal Robert Z. Belles suggested that a qualified librarian resides now in the community and might be amenable to an offer from the board to act as a permanent substitute teacher for the coming year. ‘‘In this way,” Mr. Belles said, “we could be assured that she will be available in 1970 for ihe librarian’s position.” The board indicated tenta- tive approval for the idea and Mr. Belles agreed to work out a more fully detailed plan for consideration at a later time. Additionally, the education committee recommended that the school board accept the resignations of David Price, high school social studies teach- er, who will retire at the end of the school year, and of high school secretary, Sandra Hoo- ver who is resigning as of April 1, to marry. Recommendations affecting non-professional employees. in- cluded a provision for 10 days of non-accumulative sick leave and a pay increase for secre- taries and custodians. Permission was granted to the high school’s Lettermen’s Club to attend the PIAA Wrestling Finals at the State Farm Show Building, Harris- burg, scheduled March 14. The lettermen will travel on a district-owned bus or buses and will finance the cost of the trip themselves. School insurance and parental per- mission will be required of all » students attend the tourney. Florence Gensel was hired | by the board to prepare: the fire hall each morning for ‘the kindergarten in that building. Mrs, Gensel will check the heat, clean the floors if necessary, and re- main at the fire hall each day until the teacher arrives. Careful scrutiny of a check in the amount of $10,657.29 from the commonwealth re- vealed that the school dis- trict had been overpaid by $1578.31. The board approved refunding this overpayment upon receipt of a letter from Harrisburg asking for repay- ment. Personal leaves of two days each were granted to Bonnie Holmes and Freda Partchey. Mrs. Holmes cited the death of her father as reason for her request and Mrs. Partchey informed Mr. Belles that her mother had been hospitalized in serious condition during January, necessitating that she spend two days at her bedside. Representatives from Lake- Lehman school district to the annual meeting of the Penn- sylvania School Counselors Association scheduled for March 12, 13, and 14 at Hershey will be Mary Ann Berger, Hazel Baer, and Sylvia Bator, mem- bers of the guidance staff. Approximate cost for the trip, including registration, travel, lodging and meals was put at $175 by Mr. Belles. Lady Toby Lodge’ has anniversary The Lady Toby Rebekah Lodge, 100F, Lehman, will ob- serve its 23rd anniversary at a dinner Feb. 21 at 6:30 p.m. in the Lehman Fire Hall. Speaker for the evening will be W. J. Robbins, whose topic will be “The American Indian-Life and Their Religious Beliefs.” Honored guests will be Grayce Brodeech, past president, Re- bekah Assembly of Pennsylvan- fire damages |detown home A stubborn fire in the newly purchased home of R. C. Mal- inaro, Briar Crest Road, Ide- town, was extinguished Feb. 14 by the combined action of firemen from Jonathan R. Davis Volunteer Fire Company, Idetown; Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Company, Dallas, and the Lehman Volunteer Fire Com- pany. The blaze was first reported at 7 p.m. and it has been in- dicated it started in an over- stuffed living room chair. Smoke damage was extensive and a portion of the floor was burned away. It is reported Mr. Malinaro reentered his home in an at- tempt to rescue some clothing and fell through the living room floor into the basement of the dwelling. He was unin- jured but the clothing was ruined. Firemen remained on the scene for several hours. WYOMING VALLEY INTERIORS, Inc. TI WALL COVERING COMPLETE LINE OF: ® Wall To Wall ~ Carpeting ® Linoleum ® Ceramic Tile 208 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming Phone 693-0426 Open Evenings 7-9 Daily by Appointment ia; Mary Shaver, district deputy president; and Byron Sleppy, secretary to Ben L. Jenkins, Chapter 100F, Welfare Bureau. Officers of the lodge are Ruth Disque, M.G.; Vera Hoo- ver, V.G. ; Mildred Baker, treas- urer and Margaret Robbins, secretary. Anyoneinterestedinattending should contact Mrs. Joseph Ellsworth, Lehman or Mrs. Wil- liam Robbins, Trucksville. getting around How can you hang wallcover- ings around a wall fixture with- out making a mess? Simply cut a large X in the paper before the strip is hung— then slide the covering over the fixture and trim with a Accutron® | World's Most Accurate Wrist Timepiece Wh = ACCUTRON / ry | ACCUTRON CALENDAR “A” FROM $110.00 UP The Accutron movement does not depend on watch- works. Instead, an elec-{}|| tronic-powered tuning forki|| keeps precise time through}! vibrations. In fact, Bulova guarantees monthly accu-' uracy to within 1-minute. | HENRY'’S JEWELRY Cards and Gifts MEMORIAL HIGHWAY SHAVERTOWN 675-1202 See: Joe, Charlie or Louie section housed photo by John Loy Allen Trucksville man general chairman of annual concert Joseph W. Fry, 113 Davis St., Trucksville, is general chair- man for the 18th annual ‘‘Pa- rade of Quartets’ concert to be presented March 7 by the Wilkes-Barre chapter, Society for the Preservation and En- couragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America. William A. Zdancewicz, Ed- wardsville, president of the Wilkes Barre chapter, an- nounced that the musical will be held in the auditorium of Kingston Area High School with curtain time set for 8 p.m. Commenting about the show’s " format, chairman Fry stated that the singing organization will feature the local chorus in several production numbers and its quartet ‘‘The Natur- DALLAS SCHOOL MENU MONDAY: Grilled hot dog with cheese as sauerkraut, assorted vegetable, potato chips, fruit cocktail and milk. TUESDAY: Meat loaf, whole parsley potatoes, glazed carrots, homemade rolls and butter, vanilla cake, milk. WEDNESDAY: Spaghetti with meat balls, tossed salad, vienna bread and butter, chocolate cake with vanilla icing, milk, THURSDAY: Veal parmesan, mashed potatoes, garden green beans, white bread and butter, jello with topping, milk. FRIDAY: Grilled cheese, junior, senior and intermediate schools; peanut butter and jelly, elementary; green beans, hot cin- namon applesauce, cake and milk. When illness strikes, you can turn to us for the finest in sickroom supplies to aid the patient's comfort . . . precision-filled prescriptions. At The Light In Dallas Phone 675-1141 hb. y IN | and fast delivery of Kunkle WSCS met Feb. 11 The Kunkle United Methodist Church WSCS met at the home - of Mrs. Fred Dodson Feb. 11 at 8 p.m. Mrs. Charles Mitchell was co-hostess and Mrs. Dan- iel Meeker presided at the business meeting. Two new members, Mrs. William Miers and Mrs. Ray- mond Hoyt, were welcomed in- to the society. als.” Two registered quartets, ‘The Oriole Four” and ‘‘The Classics,” of the Mid-Atlantic District will headline the show. They have scored well in Inter- national SPEBSQSA compe- tition. Committeemen assisting Mr. Fry include division chairmen John J. McCloskey, Mountain-, top, tickets; Wallace Durand, Wilkes Barre, program ; Phillip L. Brown, Shavertown, patrons, and Mr. Zdancewicz, staging. Tickets are available from members; from King’s Inn, Kingston, and from Donachie’s, Trucksville. Betsy Smith, daughter of Harrison H. Smith, Dallas, editor of the Wilkes-Barre Record, walks away from an over- turned jeep she was driving below the grooved section of Route 309 approaching O’Malia’s Laundry. There were no injuries reported. Did you know . . . About three percent of Alaska (about 20,000 square miles) is covered by glaciers. SELINGO SIGNS ® Signs ® Truck Lettering e Art Work e Sign Cloth © Sho-Cards A Business with No Sign Is A Sign of No Business HUNTSVILLE DALLAS 674.8126 For Complete here. N.E. Penna. Kos 0s COME TO WILKES-BARRE DOWNTOWN SALES DAYS shopping convenience Shop all five floors for hundreds of sale values for your entire family and your home! Visit our Lodion department Lor a preview of Spring! Maxi? Wid: ? Mini? the answer is Park, Shop and Eat under one roof at the Boston Store. The only com- plete regional shopping center in stray dogs to be taken to ASPCA Mayor Stephen Hartman, Dallas Borough, has an- nounced that Dallas residents must keep their dogs tied and not allow them to run loose. A borough ordinance which in- curs a fine of $10 or 5 days in jail is being strictly enforced. The mayor feels this action is necessary because local school children have been ter- rified by stray animals molest- ing them and a mailman has been bitten twice. In addition, roaming dogs have invaded coops and killed eight prize pheasants being raised by a local resident. The ASPCA picked up sev- eral animals this month and a state dog official will be in the area this week at Mayor Hart- man’s request. It is expected that he will assist pat®flmen in locating stray animals and unrestrained pets. The mayor hopes that all dog owners will cooperate by keeping their animals under control for the safety of school children and the betterment of the community. i HUT Card and Gift & ® Greeting Cards American hs For-Get-Me-Not™ ® Toleware Hand Painted ® Emkay Candles Dinner-Gift ® Distinctive Gifts DALLAS SHOPPING CENTER 675-5677 10 to 7 Mon., Tues., Wed. & Sat. 10 to 9 Thurs. & Fri. James B. and Cynthia Davies 3rd The hairstyling “STARS” of tomorrow are learning Empire Beauty School's PIVOT POINT method TODAY! ® Low tuition rates and pay-as-you-go terms @ Free week of advanced training after graduation ® Course on wigs ® Text book and complete training kit included in tuition ® Your own mannequin FREE! WRITE OR CALL NOW FOR FREE MINI-SESSION! | Empire 5 + SCHOOLS 115 South Main Street Wilkes-Barre 823-5987 ways available. STERLING MA DE RN alfon 1922 10 ORDER PROGRAM Limited offer Now till March 2nd you can order many Sterling Silver de- signs made by Amer- ica’s leading manu- facturers. The Annual-Made- To-Order Program makes it easy to fill- in ior ‘add to your treasured pattern. This program is your assurance that when your Sterling comes from Clark’s its al- Mother's 1875 So don’t delay. Phone Aes 822-7156 or come in WEENIE =a 5 Shamrock V 1931 March 2nd is the deadline! Rose Marie 1933 Payments may be arranged FRANK CLARK, Inc. Jeweler MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY 63 South Main Street — Wilkes-Barre T Store Hours 9:30 fo 5:30 — Thursday 9:30 to 9:00 PEAR