KE ae Loi ~ Tournar¥ Community Affairs, sports show to sponsor open archery tournament The Eastern Sports and Outdoor Show working through the Archery Tournament Com- mittee, Roy Fisher, chairman, of Burnham, and Beverly Fisher, co-chairman, of Bur- nham, and Beverly Fisher, co- chairman, of Burnham, will again spar an Open Archery t. Exciting to com- petitors and interesting to spectators, this highlight of archery will be held at the State Farm Show Building, Harris- burg, during the 16th Annual Eastern orts and Outdoor Show, F&&. 8 thru 13, 1971. The Eastern Sports and Out- door Show archery committee will make all arrangements and assists. Interested competitors The Secretary of Labor and Industry is chairman of the state’s Manpower Task Force. Other members include the governor's secretary for ad- ministration and budget, the superintendent of Public In- struction, the chairman of the Commission on Human Rela- tions, and the secretaries of Com- merce, blic Welfare and Health, Tia: and Agricul- ture. ECKERT x TWEED POWEK' EQUIPMENT ® Toro ® Wheel Horse ® Hahn Eclipse ® awn Boy ® Yard Man ® Pennsylvania COMPLETE SALES & SERVICE Route 30 Dallas 695.1339 DALLAS AUTO and FURNITURE UPHOLSTERING sitchen Chairs © @ Truck Seats ~ ®Boat Tops @ Lawn Furniture Route 309 Across From Shady Side Lake : 675-5882 to shoot during one of the scheduled day rounds. There will be competition for both bare bow and free style archers. The range will open daily at 3 p.m. Daily class winners will be eligible to compete for show . class~championships on. Satur- day. An individual may win only one first place award in each division during the show except on Saturday during finals for show class champions. Addi- tional rules and regulations may be announced by the com- mittee and all decisions made by the committee shall be final. Men and Women, free style and bare bow, will all compete in their own separate class and division. made by the com- mittee shall be final. Men and Women, free style and bare bow, will all compete in their own separate class and division. P.S.A.A. or N.F.AA. field classification cards will be honored in determining class- ification. : The events will be A.I.LAA., American Indoor Archery As- sociation, 60 foot round con- sisting of three games, each of 20 arrows, five arrows to an end, four ends scored 5-4-3-2-1 on a 20” A.LLA.A. official face (100 perfect game, 300 perfect series). Archers need not be A.I.A.A. members to compete. Each day the two high scores in each class in each division in which there is competition will be awarded trophies. Plaques will be awarded to the class champions of the show in the finals. The high scorer in each class each day will be guests of the show for the finals Feb. 13, starting at 3 p.m. when the class winners of each division will compete for class champion of the Eastern Sports and Outdoor Show. There will be a participant registration fee of $2.00 for each event. Contestants will be re- quired to register at the archery range to receive a target assignment. Registration for each event will close 15 minutes prior to the starting of that event. A wide variety of archery equipment and accessories will be on display during the show. GR NWALD'S IN LUZERNE PLENTY OF FREE PARKING Hel VI Efe] - SHOPPING ENED lS OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS CENTER HOUSEWARE Easy Living In A Mobile Home DETROITER ” NEN MOON PRINCESS and other makes Also parts. aluminum awnings & accessories BRYANTS MOBILE HOMES Dallas, Pa. 18612 Phone 675-2447 Call for FREE Quotation /* ‘Why wait JOE SMITH PH. 298-2114 RT. 309 TUNKHANNOCK | = io a Duracleanr YOUR VALUABLE CARPETS-FURNITURE [1] No Soaking J No Scrubbing THE DALLAS POST, DEC. 29, 1970 In a recent ceremony at the Dallas Senior High School, the Dallas Rotary Club presented the Old Shoe Trophy to the Dallas football team. Presenting the trophy is Hanford Eckman, Rotarian, to Coach Jack Jones. Shown, left to right: Robert Richardson, Rotarian; Bruce Goeringer, Raymond Goeringer, Dr. Robert Mellman, superintendent of Dallas schools; Mark Steele, Donald Evans, yearbook advisor, Mc Fry, Mr. Eckman, Raymond Kuderka, Coach Jones, Kenneth Engler, Edgar W. Hughes, assistant principal, Edmund LaBatch, Gerald Stinson, athletic director; Dolbear, principal; Robert James Corbett, Gary Morris, Robert ongmore, Steven Withers. Pa. hunting calendar for next two weeks The hunting calendar for the next two weeks in Pennsylvania includes the closing of seasons for snowshoe hare, mink and Check for new listing before calling The Dallas Post. 675-5211 muskrat, small game and ar- chery deer. The closing dates of each season is listed here: Jan. 2 Snowshoe hare season closes. Jan. 10—Mink and muskrat trapping season closes. Jan. 16—Small game season closes. Jan. 16—Archery deer season closes. FROM FINO’S PHARMACY All Boxed Christmas Cards & Gift Wrap 1, OFF REG. PRICE AT THE LIGHT IN DALLAS—675-1141 Prescriptions filled promptly by your registered pharmacist sq 342-5111 Pruning Shearing Wilt-proofing Feeding Spraying Transplanting Cabling Bracing Aber 7. Surgery 501 Mears Building; Scranton; Pa. Complete Scientific Tree care for Utilities, Muncipalities, Business, Industry, and Home Owners —Consulting services and landscape and maintenance contractors Cavity treatment Tree & limb removal - Diagnostic economical Mechanical stump removal Land clearing & grubbing Tree, brush, and weed control. Dallas goes down to Coughlin High in non-league tilt by Jon Jay LaBerge Coughlin, with a 20 point third quarter, increased their one point halftime lead and went on to defeat Dallas last Monday, 67-57, in a non-League contest. Dallas took an early seven point lead midway through the first period only to have it cut to ane at the quarter. The game remained close through the re- mainder of the first half as the lead exchanged hands several times with Coughlin in com- mand 28-27 at half. Pesotski was the game’s lead- ing scorer with 21 on 7 field goals and 7 foulshots. Dallas was paced by Tim Fannick with 15, Labatch with 11, and Hoffec- ker with 10 Dallas was plagued with fouls as two Mountaineers collected five fouls and were forced to Pa. continues Although some unfounded doubts have been expressed about Pennsylvania’s standing as a big game state, a national compilation by the U.S. Fish ang Wildlife Service shows that the Keystone State is holding its own among the leaders. Because of varying season dates and complexities in setting up a national compila- tion, latest figures available are for last year. Last year 116,684 hunters reported harvesting whitetail deer in Pennsylvania, more than in any state other than Texas. However, the national deer leader produced some 2,500 fewer turkeys than the leave the game. The J.V. game also went to Coughlin as the Mountaineer J.V. team ended its exhibition season with a 4 and 2 record. The Mountaineers open up the regular season Tuesday night at home against Crestwood. DALLAS SCORING FG F- S Pts. Tim Fannick 6 315 Labatch 4°31 Hoffecker 3.54710 Riefenstahl 3.28 Tony Fannick 2.84.7 Kostrabala 3:06 21-15-57 Quarters 1 2 3 4 Total Coughlin Dallas 12 16 20 19 67 13°14" 7.23.57 PAGE SEVEN report cards due from deer hunters Successful deer hunters in Pennsylvania are again reminded by the Game Com- mission to return their report cards to Harrisburg. The Game Law provides that hunters who harvest a deer shall file a report on the white- tail taken. The report is to be filed with the Game Commis- sion. The report card is part of the hunting license, and should simply be detached, filled in and dropped in the mail. Postage is paid by the Game Commission. A penalty is provided for successful deer hunters who fail to report their kills. 2 men cruise on sailboat George Jacobs, 164 N. Pioneer Ave., Shavertown, left for a 16-week cruise of the Caribbean with Charles Malke- mas, formerly of Shavertown. They are sailing on Charles’ 26- foot trimaron sailboat. atop big game standings Keystone State, and only two black bears. Last year’s bear harvest was the second lowest in a half dozen years in Penn- sylvania, and was a factor in closing the bruin season in the state this year. Even so, the 295 reported taken here placed Pennsylvania 6th on the national list. No state that produced more bears than the Keystone State had deer and turkey harvests anywhere near comparable to ours. Pennsylvania, Alabama, Florida and Texas are the national leaders in turkey harvests traditionally, and last year Pennsylvania was ranked first with over 22,500 birds tagged. This figure includes the bearded birds taken during the spring gobbler season. Actually, the wild turkey is classified as a small game bird in Pennsylvania, but nationally it is considered to be a big game species. Insist On Original GENUINE VALSPAR 16 E. Center St. World's Finest Finishes for Over 160 Years! Valspar the symbol of fine finishes presents... SATINE INTERIOR LATEX The decorator's dream! Roll or brush on, clean-up with water . . . and it's dry in less than 30 minutes! Colors galore! Jan. 1 & 2 SHAVERTOWN LUMBER | 675-1107 Shavertown' CLOSED 1 7 P.O. Box 859 Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18701 Hunters often think of the western states as ‘‘the’” big game states because of the pre- sence of elk, moose, sheep, goats, etc. found there. How- ever, the national compilation shows there aren’t as many of these species harvested as some might suppose. For instance, only five states have elk harvests in excess of 10,000; none took more than 21,000. Only two states had moose harvests in excess of 1,000. Only two states had an- telope harvests above the 10,000 mark. As a big game state, Pennsyl- vania doesn’t have to take a back seat to anybody. esos {+ WANTED! FARMS HOMES Country Properties IF YOU HAVE ANY TYPES OF REAL ESTATE FOR SALE PHONE OR WRITE US. Ask about our guaranteed sales plan. 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