Taylor Hose and Engine Co. No. 1 and its auxiliary have completed plans for the 44th annual convention of Northeast- ern Pennsylvania Volunteer Firemen's Federation to be held in Taylor Sept. 6 and 7. The federation has more than 160 members companies from Lackawanna, Luzerne, Wayne, Wyoming, Susquehanna, Monroe, Carbon and Pike counties. It also includes seven companies from New York State. Officers of the federation are Walter Sawchak, Olyphant, president; Joe Rusay, Clarks Sump first vice-president; Wall Hartman, Olyphant, second vice-president; Paul Lukus, Forest City, third vice- president; James Jumper, Nicholson, fourth vice-presi- dent; James Ryan, Clarks Summit, secretary; Elmer Daley. Dallas, treasurer; Bill _ Bohrer, Scranton, chief; and dward Kulas, Dickson City, fire marshall. larry Armstrong is conven- tion chairman. Major David Noskes and Edward Kania Jr. are co-chairmen. Adeline Arm- strong will serve as chairlady and Eva Goble, co-chairlady for the Ladies Auxiliary. Floyd Walters is publicity chairman. The convention will open Sept. 6, with registration of delegates at the Riverside High School auditorium from 6 p.m. lo 8 p.m., followed by a session al 8 p.m. in the auditorium. Hospitality night will be held at Hose Co. No. 1 at 9:30 p.m. Sept. 7 activities will include regis- tration at the school auditorium from 8:30 a.m. to 10 a.m. The second session of the convention will be held at 9 a.m. at which time voting and election of officers for the year 1974-75 will be held. At 11 a.m., memorial services will be held at the First United Methodist Church of Taylor. Thomas Day is chairman of the Memorial Services, assisted by Nate Bettachini. The N.E.P.V.F.F. Ladies Auxiliary activities will begin Sept. 7 at 9 a.m., meeting in the First United Methodist Church of Taylor. The Ladies Banquet will be held at noon Sept. 7 al the Taylor Hose and Engine Co. No. 1. A parade is sel for Sept. 7 at 2:30 p.m. Approximately 20 musical organizations and some 75 or more fire apparatus will participate. All units will assemble at the picnic grounds at 2 p.m. The parade will start promptly at 2:30 p.m. Parade prizes awarded to bands and ladies auxiliaries, and marching units. - Taylor Hose and Engine Co. No. 1 held their first meeting Oct. 24, 1894 and were chartered in July in 1895. They purchased their first hose wagon Feb. 22, 1896. The first hose house was on High Street in 1900 and moved to Main Street Nov. 23, 1913. The company moved lo their present site in August 1971. The first fire (ruck was pur- chased in 1917, a second in 1923, and a third in 1941. In 1971 a new 65 foot aerial ladder truck was purchased. will be With the opening of school just around the corner, the Lake-Lehman Board of School Directors approved a number of administrative proposals at the meeting Aug. 13 which are necessary for a smooth back-to- school operation. Of pgimary interest to the direc®s was a briefing con- ducted’ by Solicitor Charles D. Lemmond Jr., concerning the status of on-going contract talks with the district’s teachers. ‘The board negotiators are continuing to meet with the district’s teachers. “The board negotiators are continuing to meet with state mediator, Anthony Andriole,” Atty. Lemmond informed the director, ‘and are confident that a -fair agreement will be reached before September.” The nex! joint meeting of the negotiating teams and Mr. Andriole is scheduled for Thurs- day at the high school. The directors accepted the resignation of elementary school teacher Janice Rae Camin and named Debra Rinkeny a June graduate of WilkeglCollege. to fill the vac- SHOP AT ancy caused by Ms. Camin’s resignation. Miss Rinken, a resident of RD 4, Dallas, holds a B.S. degree in elementary education. Also submitting resignations were Robert Varlas, the district career guidance counsellor, and home economics teacher Virginia Knapich. In addition to'these vacan- cies, openings exist in the high school faculty for a reading teacher and audio-visual materials co-ordinator. Extra duty assignments were approved by directors including the naming of head teachers of the elementary schools. Head teacher of the Lake School will be Bethia King; at the Lehman- Jackson Building, Jeanette Williams, Noxen Elementary, David Harris; and. Ross Elementary Bettie Strawser. The naming of head and assistant basketball coaches was deferred to a later date. Following considerable discussion and a 5-2 vote, milk supplier contracts were awarded to Dallas Dairy and Chase Dairy. The contracts name Dallas a suoplier to Lake and Noxen Schools and Chase as supplier to Ross, Lehman-Jack- son, and the high school. Voting against this plan were directors Donald Jones and Gilbert Tough, who argued that the division was inequitable. New custodians hired on a six month probationary basis were Frank Reakes, RD 5, Shaver- town, and Leslie R. Sutton, RD 4, Dallas. Both men have been working on a per diem basis for the district during the summer. A ditch for the football field at the high school which was to have been installed last yearby Lewis Naugle, will be dug by Carl Cook, RD 4, Dallas. Nr. Naugle; although com- missioned project, never began the work. The proposal submitted by Mr. Cook estimates the costs ta be $640.00. To wrap up the school year, June 5, 1975 was chosen as the date for commencement, and Donald ~"R. Bashore was retained as ‘graduation speaker. Commencement activities will again be ‘held at the Irem Temple Country Club. John Frankowski, Sid Sweetman, and During the month of August, the Pennsylvania County Fair season switches into high gear. By the time it reaches the grand finale, the State Farm Show in January, 104 separate fairs will have been held in the state. County Fairs are one of the most important, time-honored traditions of our great farming state. Fairs give farmers a chance to show off the products, livestock, and a diversity of crafts grown, raised and made on their farms, while encour- aging youth to continue with farming as a career. Fairs are a vital link of rural- urban understanding. To help fairs in their premiun payments for exhibitions, contestants, and agricultural the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture reimburses fairs for about half their costs with money derived from harness racing revenue. Last year the Commonwealth's share amounted to $1,464,645.27. Pennsylvania is a great agri- cultural state. There are It Pays To Advertise 9,900,000 acres of farmland in the State with 71 thousand farms, averaging 139 acres each. Cash income from marketing farm products in 1973 was $1,349,500. Pennsylvania leads all other states in the production of mushrooms, cigar leaf tobacco, sausage products, scrapple, pretzels, potato chips, planta- tion grown Christmas trees and apples, state graded for pro- cessing. It ranks among the top five states in the production of milk, eggs, sour cherries, ap- ples, grapes, peaches, pears and maple syrup. “Should you be young enough to eat cotton candy without feel- to pay off. ing conspicuous, or should you be steadfast enough to have ment equipment along the mid- way without losing your lunch or pocket change or should you be a parent who has sweat blood over a 4-H project along with a procrastinating kid, and stand by nervously while the judges asked him questions you're not sure you could answer, you can’t miss the fair. For a free listing of the Fairs in Pennsylvania from August to the end of 1974, write to Fairs List, Pennsylvania Bureau of Travel Development, B-03 South Office Building, Harris- burg, 17120. For Pollution Zero industrial pollution in 1985 is the goal of the Environ- mental Pollution Agency ac- cording to Dr. Martha C. Sager, chairman of the Effluent Stand- ards and Water Quality Information Advisory Commi- ttee. Speaking at the 46th annual conference of the Water Pollu- tion Control Association of Pennsylvania, Dr. Sager said, “The committee hopes to im- plement an alternative guide- line to take into account indivi- dual industrial differences and still be a national guideline as proposed by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).” EPA’s first proposed guide- line was based on a single national average evaluation favoring large, well-equipped plants. The committee’s matrix system is an equation allowing for differences in: waste treat- ment technology; production characteristics of each in- dustry; geographic climatic conditions; and econo- mic equity. Recycling Drive Set for Saturday The Back Mountain Environ- mental Group is sponsoring a recycling drive Aug. 24 from 9 a.m. until noon at the Shaver- town United Methodist Church upper parking lot, located south of West Center Street on Pioneer Avenue. Magazines, newspapers, cardboard, green, brown or clear glass bottles without metal tops, will be collected. No metal, tin or aluminum will be accepted. The Environmental Group asks that magazines, tied, boxed, or put in paper bags for easier handling. Money from this project is used in improving areas in the Back Mountain. mind to... Cable TV. the Pennsylvania Turnpike. Parsons Manor, you can write: 1000 First National Bank Building Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18701 Manor. depend on it. Guidelines “Economic equity is a hum- said. ‘‘Consider two soap manu- facturers. One plant is 15 years Does the 115 year old plant forego stock dividends to catch up with the younger plant? The matrix considers economic variables such as plant age.” Dr. Sager said the matrix ‘uses ‘‘mathematical quan- tion”” that bogged down the EPA's first efforts at a national pollution guideline. : “All of the first 27 basic in- system,” she said. ‘However, ~many immediately filed briefs against the EPA because they later.” effect. The conference was held at sity Aug. 7-9. Air Force ROTC...The college scholarship program with sky-high benefits. Some people might need to be coaxed with more than a full college schol- arship to enroll in the Air Force ROTC. So, if free tuition, lab and incidental fees aren't enough... .the Air Force offers a monthly allowance of $100.00, tax- free, in your junior and senior years, even if you are not on scholarship. And flyinglessonstothose qualified provide the most exciting benefit of all. Interested? Contact. Wilkes College 137 S. Franklin St. (Kocyan Hall) ‘Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18703 PUT IT ALL TOGETHER IN AIR FORCE ROTC