PAGE TWELVE pony and children highlight show More than 3,000 persons attended the fifth annual Idetown Horse Show each day at the horse show grounds, Lehman, Aug. 15 and 16. Those in at- tendance at the affair sponsored by the Jonathan R. Davis Fire Company, had the opportunity to view performances by the Northeastern Pennsylvania Ripcord Sky Diving club. The Ripcords are among the finest para- chutists in the Country with each of the three men averaging 800 jumps. Another highlight of the show was the presen- tation of the dapple grey pony, saddle, bridle and breast collar which were chanced off by the fire company and won by Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bicking, Dallas. The Bickings turned the pony over to the show to be auctioned off. A proud grandfather, Byron Kester, Demunds Road, Centermoreland, purchased the little animal for two great grandchil- dren, Roger and Susan Belles, children of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Belles, Centermoreland. The high point Western Trophy, which consis- ted of a Western saddle, bridle and breast collar, was won by Lisa Gilbert, York, who rode Tweed Coat. The horsemen and spectators were kept busy with contestants in classes in both English and Western categories. Idetown Horse Show chairman Ed Gilmer said he extends thanks to everyone who helped during the show. They did such an outstanding job. PARK NEARS COMPLETION (continued from PAGE ONE) on Phase I of the project for adequate parking. Some suggested that since at present there is unused space on the site of Phase II, the area across from Phase I on Burndale Road, it could be temporarily used for parking. Mr. McCutcheon read the Grant Contract which is drawn up between Pennsylvania State Re- creation Division, Harrisburg, and the Borough Recreation Board. It was stated in the contract that Dallas Borough had been granted $13,255.00 for the Phase I of the recreation project. The total cost of construction on the 175x250 foot site is $26,510. The contract, which terminates Dec. 31, also stated that there was to be no discrimination; that records of ‘everything pertaining to the program are subject to audit prior to final reimbursement, and that the board must repay any of the amount not used. Two youths, Arlene Kozick, Machell Avenue, and Peter Shiner, Sterling, were present at the meeting and will serve on the board in the future. A meeting of the Recreation Board is scheduled Aug. 27 at 7:30 p.m. in the Borough Building at which time bids on athletic equipment will be re- viewed. TEACHERS PROTEST (continued from PAGE ONE) Mr. LaBerge said that several points in the letter are in conflict with what actually happened. He said it is the responsibility of the board to set the school calendar and that the teachers knew the board was considering modification of the school day and school calendar. Earl Fritzges, board member, said he was ‘‘not going to abdicate my responsibilities to the teachers.” He said he felt his responsibilities as a member of the board and as a representative of the taxpayers. Mr. Helgemo said he understood the teachers were to have voice in how the additional time was to be used and that the teachers did not know there would be two additional teaching days. Mr. LaBerge replied that this matter had been dis- cussed. checks distributed The Dallas Post (ALEX REBAR) THE DALLAS POST, AUGUST 20, 1970 Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bicking are shown at left after winning the dapple gray pony at the Idetown Horse Show. The Bickings of- fered the animal for auction and Byron Kester, center, bought it for his great-grandchildren, Susan and Roger Belles, astride the pony. Ed Gilmer, show chairman, stands at right. Pioneer Avenue scene of benefit magic ‘dog’ show Debbie Prater and ‘‘com- pany,” put on a Magic Show Tuesday which included all the neighborhood dogs they could possibly round up. The young people gathered all the patrons they could find to attend the show at 75 cents a head. All proceeds went to the Crippled Children’s Association. Debbie is the daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. John Prater, Pioneer Avenue, Shavertown. picking flowers Pick flowers during morning or evening hours instead of the hottest part of the day, advises W. R. Fortney, extension flori- culture specialist, at The Pennsylvania State University. Flowers picked in the morning Harveys Lake man jogets Fulbright award The Fulbright Scholarship program, as is everything else, is feeling the economic belt grow- ing taut about its academic waistline. There have been fewer awards made in recent years with greater screening of the initially stringent applica- tion qualifications. So when a Fulbright covering a full year’s expenses abroad is awarded there is just provacation for rejoicing. Wyoming Seminary, Kingston, has received word from the Dept. of Health, Education and Wel- fare that Herbert Quick of Harveys Lake, RD 1, has been awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to teach in England this coming year. Mr. Quick is chairman of the language department at Wyoming Seminary. He will take a year’s leave of absence from teach- ~ ing responsibilities under a newly inaugurated sab- batical program recently passed by the ged school’s Board of Trustees. Y/ In announcing Mr. Quick’s Fulbright award, Wallace F. Settler, president of Wyoming Semin- ary, said, “Residents of the Back Mountain area have still another reason for taking pride in their citizenry. We at Seminary are confident that Mr. Quick’s experiences during the coming year will not only be rewarding to our school and its faculty, but to the community whose standards the Quicks’ exemplify.” Mr. Quick and his wife, the former Gwen Evans, will leave for England at the end of the month with their daughter, Kathryn. They will live at Crediton, Devon, in southwestern England, where he will teach French at Queen Elizabeth’s School. His wife is a former Fulbright recipigxt, having taught in France in 1959. The Fulbright Scholarship program in which Mr. Quick will participate is one of six areas, allge- signed to, ““. . .increase mutual understanding be- tween the people of the United States and people of other countries.” General eligibility requirements of the Fulbright Program include the equivalent professional status of the Ph.D., and at least three years teaching experience on the secondary level. Mr. Quick is a native of Endicott, N.Y. and a graduate of Wyalusing High School and Wilkes College. He studied at McGill University and the Sorbonne, and received the Master’s degree in French from Middlebury College. He taught at Thurmont High School, Thurmont, Md., and at the Ecole Nouvelle, Chailly-sur-Lausanne, Switzer- land, before joining the faculty of Wyoming Semin- ary in 1957. major air pollutants In recent years the devastating effects of air respiratory tact. Use chitis and irritation of thlupper Water pollution control specialist Paul Koval of the Penn- contain the most water; those sylvania Department of Health, Kingston, holds a vial of sewage water he obtained July 10 on the proposed Dallas Park land, Luzerne Avenue and Burndale Road. A state health department laboratory analysis of the specimin indicated ‘high fecal content.” Arthur Miller at Norfolk, Va. Navy PO 2.C Arthur R. Miller Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Miller St., 162 Huntsville Road, Dallas, is now serving aboard the attack aircraft carrier USS Forrestal, cur- rently undergoing repairs at the Norfolk Navy Shipyard, Ports- mouth, Va. The ship will remain in the yard until mid-September when it will rejoin the U.S. Second Fleet in the Atlantic. largest session at Bloomsburg Over 1100 undergraduate stu- dents completed registration - for the three-week post session of summer classes at Blooms- burg State College Aug. 10. These, along with the 275 graduate students who re- gistered by mail over the past several weeks, gives a total enrollment of over 1,375 students, the largest number of students to attend a post session in the history of the college. RE-UPRHOLSTERY Factory re-built, not just re-upholstered. picked in the evening have the greatest food reserves. Cut flowers with a sharp knife and cut on the slant. Cutting with shears often crushes the stems. COME DANCE WITH US EACH TUESDAY ; 8-11 PM BEGINNING SEPT. 15 | Classes in Western Square and Round Dancing For information YW-YMCA Call: 675-5037 WILKES-BARRE for Police Pension Checks totaling $13,199,877.30 have been mailed by the Dept. of the Auditor General, Harris- burg, to 795 municipalities for Police Pension Funds, accord- ing to an announcement made recently by Robert P. Casey, auditor general. It was the largest distribution in history, totaling $1,661,898.27 more than last year. Luzerne County received a total of $292,096.31, with $2,647.22 going to Dallas Borough; $6,364.87 to Kingston Township, and $2,700.31 going to Lehman Township. The largest single payment, $2,500,952.14 was made to the city of Philadelphia. The second largest was in the amount of $2,201,241.01 to the State Em- ployees’ Retirement Board which will be applied toward the pension benefits of the Pennsyl- vania State Police. ) The annual distribution is realized from a two percent tax upon the gross premiums re- ceived by foreign (out-of-state) casualty insurance companies. Mr. Casey said $111,579.68 is being withheld from municipal- ites pending correction of viola- tions of regulations established for the administration of these | funds. FURNITURE GREENWALD' IN LUZERNE PLENTY OF FREE PARKING GIFTS ESE SHOPPING [dI ~ HOUSEWARE Hi OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS We restyle! Renew! Latest fabrics avail- able in stock. Decorator consultant at no charge. Shop-at-home service. Pick up and deliver. Call for estimate.’ “since 1914” 822-2491 Boyd R. White APPLIANCE & FURNITURE Union & Tener Streets Luzerne 288-8535 675-1642 is open for business. More merchandise coming in each day for some Hello’s and a lot of Good Buys! See Boyd at his new Luzerne location. MILE POINT SPEEDWAY MODIFIED - SPORTSMAN AND LATE MODELS AUGUST 22nd 7:30 P.M. 50 LAP MODIFIED SPORTSMAN UTICA CLUB TROPHY RACE $1,000 to the winner $750 regular prize plus $250 sponsors award $500-2nd; $350-3rd; $250-4th $3270 feature purse no increase in admission Adults $2.50 Children Under 10, With Adult, Free Action Every Saturday Night Located at Kirkwood, Intersection Routes 81, 17 and 11 pollution have contributed to increased lung-cancer and respiratory diseases and cost this country yearly an estimated, $11 billion. ..The pollutants are based on information contained in docu- ments published by the National Air Pollution Control Adminis- tration, Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, and from reports prepared by Litton Industries, Inc., under NAPCA contract. Series 1—ARSENIC AND ITS COMPOUNDS—A brittle, very poisonous chemical element. Major sources are: smelters . processing gold and copper; cotton ginning and the burning of cotton trash; use as pesti- cide; combustion. Effects on humans, animals .and plants—Arsenical dusts may produce dermatitis, bron- medicines containing arsenic has produced growths and cancers of the skin. The rela- tionship of arsenic to other types of cancer, partigalarly lung tumors, is uncertais:. Her- bivorous animals have been poisoned after eating plants contaminated with arsenic compounds. Abatement and Control Methods—1. Use of air cleaning devices to remove particulates from smelters and cotton gins. Equipment must operate at temperature low enough (100 - degrees centigrade to condense arsenic fumes. Electrostatic precipitators, cooling flues, bag houses, especially those using wet scrubbing vacuum pumps instead of fabric filters. 2. No methods available to control emissions produced by burning cotton trash. 2 KINGSTON TOWNSHIP ORDINANCE NO. 1970-3 OUTRAGEOUS ACTION BE IT ORDAINED by the Supervisors of Kingston T nship, under the authority of Clauses XLI and LXII of Section 7&2 of the Second Class Township Code, that: SECTION I. OUTRAGEOUS ACTION: Any person who shall unlawfully and wilfully engage in or commit any disturbance, loud or unusual noise, or shall use profane, scandalous, obscene, lewd or indecent language to another person or in the hearing of another "person, or shall make any immodest, lewd or indecent sign or . gesture, or shall do or commit any other immodest or indecent act to or in the presence of another person, or shall abuse or annoy . another person in any area, except within the privacy of his own home, within the limits of the Township of Kingston, so as to violate and endanger the peace, good government and welfare of the Township of Kingston or any part thereof shall be guilty of the offense of Outrageous Action. SECTION II: PENALTY : Any person who shall violate Section I of this Ordinance shall upon conviction therefor, before a gustice of the Peace or Magistrate, be sentenced to pay a fine yy not exceeding $300.00, and in default of the payment of the fine or penalty imposed and the costs, the defendant may be sentenced and committed to the County Jail for a period not exceeding 30 days. SECTION III: The adoption of this Ordinance is determined by - the Supervisors to be expedient and necessary for the proper management, care and control of the Township of Kingston and for ' the maintenance of peace, good government and welfare of the Township of Kingston. SECTION IV: This Ordinance shall take effect on the 1st day of July, 1970. Board of Supervisors of The Township of Kingston EDWARD W. HALL Chairman Attest: MICHAEL J. STANLEY Secretary W.RICHARD MATHERS Vice-Chairman EDWARD RICHARDS Supervisor { 1