Field to be extended The Dallas School Board approved plans to extend « the center field on the senior high school baseball field . at its meeting held Jan. 9. The cost of the project, estimated at $1800, will be . federal government. Work is scheduled to be completed in the spring. egotiations begin Closed-session contract negotiations will begin today | ® of the non-professional staff. A representative of the Pennsylvania School Personnel Association will also . be present. Committee chairpersons for 1984 were named as education; Ernest Ashbridge Jr., finance; Donald R. Jones, personnel; Barbara Mead, policy; Tex Wilson, property; John George, student activities; Al Pisanes- chi, transportation; John George, negotiations. Tex Wilson will provide the committee report from West Side Vo-Tech meetings and Ashbridge from the Luzerne Intermediate Unit 18. Richard Huntsinger, Box 494, RD 1, Dallas, has filed a two-count lawsuit at the Luzerne County Courthouse. The suit, naming as defendants Paul Kurlancheek, Idetown and Ronnie Kurlancheek Zitofsky, 755 Milford Drive, Kingston. trading as Jacob Kurlancheek Furni- ture, Inc., Memorial Highway, Dallas, seeks $285.312 on each count, plus punitive Garages as well as interest and costs. Huntsinger’s suit alleges that he was hired by the defendants as manager of the firm’s Dallas Store and that he was to be paid a certain weekly salary as well as two percent of the gross profits. The percentage payments were to be paid on a weekly basis of one percent and on an annual basis of one percent. _ Huntsinger alleges the agreement was for his services until his 65th birthday anniversary but he was dismissed from the firm on Aug. 22, 1983. The suit alleges that he was dismissed without cause or justification and in violation of the contract: 1 Dogs shot, one dies Shadow, a 13-month-old Labrador Retriever went home Jan. 13 to his owners, Donna and Norman Walsh, of Harveys Lake, after spending three days at the veterinarian’s for treatment of gunshot wounds. Sable, a seven-month-old purebred German Shep- herd who also belonged to the Walshes, died Jan. 10 from gunshot wounds he suffered. The dogs were shot by an unknown person or persons. Mr. Walsh, 25, had been shoveling snow at the home of his in-laws, Eugene and Dorothy Lippi of Carver- town, and the dogs were playing in the snow. Walsh heard shot and ran to the rear of the house where he found Sable, his body dripping with blood and parly hanging on a barbed-wire fence. Shadow was found approximately two hours later, buried in the snow on a nearby hill. He is expected to recover completely from his wounds. Two inmates at the State Correctional Institute, Chase, were arraigned before District Magistrate Leonard Harvey on drug charges. Harry Pytak was . charged with Possession of Marijuana and Criminal Conspiracy with Intent to Deliver. Pytak was allegedly involved in a drug smuggling operation with suspended prison guard John Powell, who is awaiting trial. Bail for Pytak was set at $10,000 and he was remanded to prison pending a hearing Jan. 19. Another inmaie at Chase, Inman Jones, was charged weith Possession of Drugs which were allegedly hidden on his person. He too was returned to prison under $10,000 bail, pending a hearing before Magis- trate Harvey. Sefchik is charged A charge of Theft by Unlawful Taking has been filed against Robert Sefchik, 53, a former employee of Tammac Corporation, owners of White Birch Trailer Park, Route 309, Dallas. It is alleged that Sefchik altered contracts and/or sales agreements on a mobile home in order to retain $1,000 in cash. Sefchik was arraigned before District Magistrate Earl Gregory after he was picked up by Constable Douglas Smith in the Harveys Lake area when he was unavailable at his listed address of 309 Smith Street, Dupont. Bail was set at $1,000 pending a hearing in Magesterial Court. Horse ordered out As a result of court action, a horse and pony will no longer reside at the converted barn at 66 Main St., Dallas, where Gerald Reisinger maintains his home and office. Reisinger, who had been found guilty several months ago by District Magistrate Leonard Harvey of Keeping Animals in a Zoned Area, had appealed the decision in Luzerne County Court. Judge Bernard Podcasy, however, upheld Harvey’s decision and the original fine of $100 plus court costs. As a result of losing the appeal, Reisinger was ordered to remove the horses from his property prior to Jan. 6, a stipulation that he has compiled with, according to Dallas Borough Police Chief Edward Lyons. Station robbed investigating two separate thefts at Schmid’s Amoco Service Station at 155 Memorial Highway, Shaver- town. Four locked vehicles were broken into in the first incident with two dash clocks, assorted coins, a fishing rod and reel, an outboard motor, an equalizer stereo and a flashlight reported stolen. In the second incident five days later, several other vehicles parked at Schmid’s garage for repairs were also broken into and ransacked. Stolen were a CB radio, controls for a musical horn, a garage door box and tools, and a flashlight. Investigating officer is Kingston _ Township Patrolman Gary Beisel. Park vandalized Vandalism at Frances Slocum State Park is being investigted by James Balavage. Police report two loud speakers at drinking fountains detached, three skylights broken in the rest rooms and a toilet detached as well as a window in a telephone booth smashed. Kingston Township has been awarded a Department of Environ- mental Resources Stream Inprove- ment Project Grant for a 1,000 foot area of Toby’s Creek upstream from the Main Street Bridge in Shavertown. Contracts on the bridge itself were opened Dec. 15 by Penn State will hold State Secretary of General Serv- ices Walter Baran announced recently that an auction of surplus state vehicles will be held Thurs- day, Jan. 26, at 10 a.m., inside the Commonwealth Garage, 2221 Fors- ter Street, Harrisburg. Two hundred ten passenger cars, station wagons, trucks and other vehicles are offered on a “where is, as is’ basis. The auction is open to dealers, the general public and employees of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania with the exception of employes (or their agents) of the Department of General Services and other employes specifically restricted. Included among the vehicles is a large selection of six-cylinder low mileage vehicles. Many of the cars are equipped with air conditioning. There is also a variety of trucks. Dallas Post seeks info on Scouts The Dallas Post is planning, to publish special features on Boy Scouts in its Feb. 8 issue in honor of National Boy Scout Week. In an attempt to include all Boy Scout Troops of the Back Mountain we ask that all troop leaders contact our office and provide us with such sponsor. of the troop and names of leaders. The phone number: for The Dallas Post is 675-5211. Plan Money Market Rate Variable Rate Fixed Rate Certificate of Deposit SECURITY Minimum Maturity Opening Deposit 1 month $ 100 3 years $ 100 3 years $ 100 5 years $ 1,000 Rate 80 % 8.75 % 9.0 % 10.0 % FIRST ERSTERN BANK" Member F D.I.C DOT with the award scheduled to be made shortly. Actual construction will begin this spring under the Billion Dollar Bridge Program. Awarding of the clean stream grant was attributed by Kingston Township Manager Mark Kunkle to State Senator Frank O’Connell’s help along with that of Representa- bed will be cleaned out and the maintaining wall repaired after actul bridge construction is com- _ pleted. Complete rules and instructions be sold are available upon request Services, Bureau of Vehicle Man- agement, 2221 Forster Street, P.O. Box 1365, Harrisburg, PA 17105. For additional information, call 717-783-3132. NO WAX FLOORS + * Tarkett ® Mannington * Magee FREE ESTIMATES 318 Wyoming Ave. Wyoming KIELBASI DARING'S SCRAPPLE DARING'S LIVER PUDDING +%2.19 CHOICE RUMP ROAST CHOICE BOTTOM ROUND ROAST (CUT FROM ROUND) EYE ROAST TOP ROUND LONDON BROIL FRESH GROUND ROUND OR SIRLOIN PATTIES LEAN CUBE STEAK . .*1.99 SWIFT'S HARD SALAMI SWIFT'S PICKLE LOAF SWIFT'S DUTCH LOAF DOMESTIC SWISS CHEESE CRISP GREEN LETTUCE DANJOU RED DELICIOUS APPLES FRESH GREEN BROCCOLI