” a SAREE FOR SALE SAVINGS! on all Interna- al Cub Cadet lawn and g den = equipment. AF Itersg Memorial Hwy., Dallas, u : 26-tc-c AKC REGISTERED 3 year old ale basset hound. Phone 675- 43-tf-c MccuLLOCH and Homelite Chain Saws. Sales and Ser- “vice. AF. Walters. Phone 675- 1869. iis 48-tf-c Ere ‘apples. { Harold Brace, ‘Orange. 6 333-4236. 4 48-4-¢ i LIONEL—AMERICAN FLYER #8 LOCOMOTIVES, cars, 4 transformers, accessories, switches, track, Plasticville ete. bought, sold, repaired. a Hal’s Electric, 113 E. Center - ~ Shavertown - 696-3395 - Mon. - i Fri. 9:30-5:30, 6:30: to 8. Saturday 9:30 to 5:30. i 51-1-¢ fr BED single axle trailer for race car. Equipped with electric brakes and control for tow car supplied. Has springs and four shock absorbers to limit side sway. Full fendered with running lights that ex- ceed highway standards. 2000 miles on new tires. Zero miles on spare. Asking $350.00. Call 675-2335 anytime. 4 : 51-1-p HELP WANTED 560 or 639-1885. 50-tf-c CLEANING LADY one day a “week. Phone 696-1404. WHOM 8 APPLIANCE REPAIRS: Small appliances, sweepers, tools, radios, washers, electric dryers and ranges repaired - all makes, reconditioned sweepers sold. Hal’s Electric, 113 E. Center St., Shavertown. Phone 696- 3395. 51-1-¢ BACK MOUNTAIN Area. Mo- dern sanitation service. Rub- bish and garbage removal. Commercial and residential. Reasonable rates. Phone 639- 5859. = 16-tf-c G DONE at my yours. Elmer Swelgin. Phone 675-1647. Eni & fast with GoBesdf" Tablets & E-Vap “water pills’’. Stapinski Walgreen. g 47-6-p ., and Service. Snowmobile’ % arts, snowblowers, Horse tractors. Toro lawn- “mogwers and parts. Lawn- ‘mowers sharpened, saws retgothed and filed. Call 287- , ask for Bill Eckert. - Bookkeeper, typist in pergon at Brink's tronics, ! Valley. Elec- Main Road, ' Sweet 50-272 the proposed budget for Dallas Boro for the year 1973 is avail- able at the office of the secre- tary at the Dallas Boro Build- ing, and will be available for public inspection for a period of 10 days. Ralph Garris, Sec- retary. Mr. Ralph Garris LEGAL Notice is hereby given that Monday night January 15, 1973 at 7:30 p.m. in the Dallas Town- ship Municipal Building, to act on the application of Russell G. Newell, of RD 1, P.O. Box 478, Dallas, Pa. for permission to operate a Bulk Fuel Oil Supply ed on Route 309, Dallas Town- ship. This comes under section 4.09 of the Zoning Law, as part of this land is in an A-1 area, which is listed as Agricultural. Fred E. Dodson Dallas Boro Building ZONING OFFICER Main St. Dallas, Township Datas Pe. Sia LEGAL NOTICE mission. the following items: PREAMBLE Statement of Objectives ARTICLE I - TITLE Definitions Reference Conversion of Dwellings sale Already Begun Road Frontage Required Time Limitation Notice Of Starting Work Types of Districts “C-1"’ - Conservation Districts “R-1"’ - Single and Two Family Residence Districts “R-2"’ - Apartment Residence Districts ¢P.12 g “B-2"’ - Highway Service Business Districts ““M-1" - Industrial Districts Amusement Centers Welfare Center Drive-In Theatres Home Occupations Hospitals and Related Uses Motels Solid Waste Disposal Areas Sewage Disposal Plants Tourist Home Existing Lots of Record Yards Organization Procedure Hearings Court Review Adshinistration Schedule of Fees Enforcement General ARTICLE 11 - DEFINITIONS interpretation Validity Repeal Effective Date Ralph Garris Dallas Borough Secretary .51-2-¢ (continued from PAGE ONE) election and to continue to serve, makes no sense at all.” He maintained that school boards, under existing law, are experiencing difficulty in achieving sufficient continuity in membership to effectively evaluate the accomplishments of educational professionals. Concerning school financing, call the state’s current school subsidy system ‘‘one of the best in the nation.” Under the system, the amount of state re- imbursement which a district receives is based on a compli- cated percentage-equalizing formula utilizing, among other Buckley (continued from PAGE ONE) Ed has a long list of accom- slishments present and past. He s a treasurer of the Dallas American Legion Post 672, an active member of Gate of Heaven Church and the VEW in Kingston. He is past president of Lions. Club, past state chairman of the Boy Scouts, past chairman of District 12, American Legion. Ed and Jean live in a modest white frame house on Daven- port Street in Dallas where they moved in 1948 when Ed began his work with the post office. He is proud of his association with the post office and asked that the Dallas Post extend his thanks to all the people in Dallas for their cooperation during his years of work. He also said that the boys at the Dallas Post Office comprise a “very good work force.” Ralph Goss, Berwick, replaces Ed as postmaster. New Scout Troop Forms in Huntsville Scoutmaster Willard Russell of the newly-formed Troop 242, Huntsville, . has reminder to all interested boys between the ages of 11 and 16 that the troop will hold its first meeting Dec. 27 at 7:30 p.m. in the Huntsville Christian Church. This will be an organizational meeting for boys and their parents. Everyone is urged to attend so that a full program can get underway as soon as possible. Mr. Russell is hoping for a good turn-out but anyone who is unable to attend or wants further information may contact him at 696-3145. LEGAL Notice is hereby given that the Zoning and Hearing Board of Dallas Township Planning Commission will hold a Public Hearing at 7:30 p.m. on Monday night, January 15, 1973 in the Dallas Township Municipal Building to consider the appli- cation of Evan R. Brown Jr. to place a house trailer on his lot of four acres in the Roushey Plot. This is not in keeping with the Zoning Law section 6-231. Fred E. Dodson ZONING OFFICER Dallas, Township 51-1-C LOANS to WOMEN A Friendly, Confidential, Understanding A vi PHONE 288-4535 FAIRWAY FINANCE CORP. LUZERNE | factors, the district's assessed valuation. The association how- ever, calls for a thorough study “of the influences that have brought large increases in costs while school populations level off, or decline.” Total funding from the state ‘‘is not recom- mended. Local communities should continue to play a major role in determining the level of expenditures to be made and the revenue from which such expenditures are to be de- frayed.” Assessment ratios on property, the PSBA maintains, “should be uniform at 100 per- cent of market value.” School boards, says the PSBA, are ‘primarily legis- lative bodies and should con- tinue to expect that the superin- tendent and his supporting ad- ministrative staff will be held accountable for the day-to-day operation of the schools. Build- ing principals and other school middle management personnel should be provided job security through an employment con- tract or commission for a fixed period of time, rather than through tenure.” Concerning Act 195, which gives public em- ployes, including teachers, the right to collective bargaining, the school boards association recommends no changes at the present time. ‘‘Administrative- ly,” the statement continues, College Launches Giving Campaign College Misericordia’s Alumnae Association will solicit its membership for $35,000 from January through June 1, ac- cording to Janet Wills, director of alumnae affairs, as the Association kicks off its annual Giving Campaign. Officially beginning Jan. 1, the annual drive will be con- ducted by Mary King Ginn, a Misericordia graduate from Baltimore, and a volunteer staff of alumnae. Initially, the over 4,500 Misericordia . alumnae residing in the U.S. and abroad will be contacted by mail, Mrs. Ginn said, with personal con- tacts to be used as a follow-up. Money resulting from the campaign will be donated to the college to be used as required. Kingston Twp. Board To Hold Reorganization Kingston Township Board of Supervisors will hold a reorganization meeting Jan. 2, 1973, at 8 p.m. in the Kingston Township Municipal Building. The Inglennnk THE ULTIMATE IN FIREPLACE EQUIPMENT The Biggest Little Fireshop in N.E.Pa WE SZREEN UNUSUAL FIREPLACES Specializing In - Custom Screens (Brass & Wrought Iron) & Glass Enclosures FRANKLIN STOVES & - FREE STANDING FIREPLACES {ELECTRIC & GAS {LOGS ANDIRON, : ,FIRESETS & SCREENS] Readibuilt Fireplaces And A Complete Line of Butcher Bloc Furniture Candles from all over the world. | 106 Depot St. 587-4811 Clarks Suminit Open Daily 10 to 6 Mon. & Thurs. ‘til 9 « HELP WANTED Salad Maker WILL TRAIN! BUS BOYS 16 and over Call Laura Groden Newberry Estate C.C. Phone 675-4207 PHONE 388-6719 FALLS, PENNA. . $18,950 Only $200 Down . $45 to $138 Monthly .Annual Percentage Rate 1 to 71% . Depending on your income Up to 33 Years to pay . Larger Houses Available .No Flooding . $5.000 Flood Forgiveness “efforts should be made to better balance the general public interests against the in- terests of employe groups.” Regarding teaching staffs, the PSBA recommends ‘‘great- er flexibility and less restrictive certification regulations...to improve the overall educational program.’”’ The association terms tenure ‘‘perhaps the single greatest deterrent to im- proved staff effectiveness. Tenure has outlived its usefull- ness.” It attacks class size re- duction as being ‘‘designed to benefit employes and their or- ganizations, not students. Such further reductions,” the PSBA maintains, ‘‘are not war- ranted.” Falls (continued from PAGE ONE) initially that flood plains should be cleared of residences in urban renewal project areas, the federal agency appears to have altered its stance somewhat in recent weeks. He noted that Exeter Township residents had received a questionnaire concerning redevelopment, and that the returns indicated that ‘‘some people want out, and others want to stay.” The goal of the township should be, he suggested, to ‘‘develop a plan of action...that the majority of the people could live with.” No plan, he cautioned, would “please everybody.” In a conversation with Greenstreet News Tuesday, the planning consultant pointed out that Exeter Township is the only Wyoming County com- munity to have been earmarked for federal urban renewal funds to date. Preliminary ap- plication for Tunkhannock and Meshoppen was made months ago through the redevelopment authority, Mr. Lonergan said, but to date no replies from HUD have been received. i (continued from PAGE ONE) A check for $275 was ap- proved and a special note of thanks extended to Dr. Lewis B. Thomas, attending physician at the school’s 11 football games during the 1972 season. Attendance by members of the teaching and administrative staffs at professional confer- ences was approved by the board. John Miliauskas will attend the Pennsylvania Music Educator's Speech Scheduled Feb. 14 Donald Barr, whose Nov. 30 address at College Misericordia was postponed because of bad weather, has been re-scheduled to speak at the college Feb. 14. Author of Who Pushed Humpty Dumpty, Mr. Barr claims to be a spokesman for the conservative element among educators. At Misericordia, he will speak on the topic of ‘‘Real and Fake Educational Reform,’ questioning some of the most recent developments in education. Mr. Barr's address at Misericordia will be held in the college’s auditorium at 8 and will be open to the public at no charge. Educators Association confer- ence in Lancaster Jan. 4, 5 and 6 at an approximate cost to the district of $100. Charles James will attend the six day con- ference of the National Associa- tion of Elementary School Prin- cipals in Detroit, Mich., April 14-19, 1973. Mr. Marchakitus will be in Dallas, Texas, Feb. 2-7 for the annual meeting of the National Association of Secon- dary School Principals and Supt. Robert Z. Belles will at- tend the conference at Atlantic City, N.J. which is sponsored by the American Association of School Administrators Feb. 24- 28. Atty. Lemmond advised the board that his inquiries at the State Department of Education in Harrisburg pertaining to the district’s obligation to provide round trip transportation had yielded conflicting opinions, but that a later inquiry satisfied him that the school board was not obliged to undertake the transportation. A request from Mr. and Mrs. Jachimovicz of Jackson Township has pre- cipitated the solicitor’s inquiry. Maryan Yurko, elementary teacher at the Ross Elementary School, submitted a letter of application for a maternity leave effective Jan. 26, 1973 until Sept. 1, 1973. The board approved the request. 24 Hour Call 477-5067 BODY TRUCK AND NOXEN, PA Tel: 298-2347 With The Dallas Post 41 Lehman Ave. Dallas, Pa. Phone 675-5211 Pride The Abington Journal 415 S. State St. Clarks Summit, Pa. 587-1148 No Obligations RINTING The Mountaintop Eagle Box 10, S.Mountain Blvd. Mountaintop, Pa. 474-5921
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers