a beautiful sunny land of Hawaii for a while. The ice and snow will surely be melted by the time you return. 50 Years Ago - February 9, 1934 Plans for a community athletic field ‘were presented by. I.A. McHenry at a meeting of the Dallas Borough Council. The plans to be further discussed at a special meeting of the Borough Council the following week. A plan to construct an addition to the rear of the Dallas Township High School was discussed by members of the school board and taxpayers at a meeting of the hoard. A ruling by the Pennsylvania State Department ‘of Justice brought an abrupt end to the plans of Kingston Township School Board to.construct a new $100,000 building. The legendary big fish in the dark and ice-cold depths of Har- veys Lake played! among the sparkplugs and gears of a truck which broke through thin ice in the middle of the lake and disappeared in 80 feet of water. Andrew Diamond, 23, of Tunkhannock, driver of the truck, grasped a loose floor board which floated up and clung to it and the edge of the solid ice until rescued. Deaths--John Neuer, Noxen. You could get--Flour, 24 1b. bag. 97¢; doz. eggs, 27¢; layer cake and doughnuts, both for 33c; lima beans, 2-2 1b. cans, 29¢; Chase and Sanborn Coffee, 27¢ 1b.; mixed pickles, gt. jar, 21c. 40 Years Ago - February 11, 1944 The Back Mountain Region was again treated to an exhibition of America’s growing air strength when 20 army planes marched across the morning sky at minute intervals. The string of planes coming out of the east and heading west was led by a single fighter plane whose roaring motor an- nounces ‘‘planes over Dallas” and brought many citizens to their porches. Dallas Township Honor Roll Board Association perfected plans for a drive extending from Feb. 15- 28 for funds to make im- provements on the Service Roll. Acting on the suggestion of Dr. F. Budid Schooley that there was any number of local men who would like to join a community musical organization, Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Co. appointed him general chairman of its band and orchestra organization committee. Deaths--Ira Lamoreaux, Jackson Township. Married--Lt. Antonia Kozem- chak to Cpl. Robert Lee Dolbear. You could get--Potatoes 15 1b. bag, 49c; oranges, doz., 25c; beans, 2-12 oz. pkgs. 15¢; Palmolive toilet soap, 3 bars, 20c; cleanser, 2 cans, 9c; shrimp, 37c 1b. 30 Years Ago - February 12, 1954 Theodore MacHenry, Center- moreland, night watchman at Fernbrook Mill, was attacked and beaten by a man who leaped into his car and vanished immediately after knocking MacHenry down and injuring his left eye. Dr. Eugene Hammer, speaking on findings of the Anthracite Institute school study foundation, set forth the ideal school program as developed for consideration of Back Mountain schools. Atty. Mitchell Jenkins, Davis St., Trucksville, accepted appoint- ment as area chairman for the $2,500,000 Development Fund Campaign being conducted for Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn. Deaths--Alexander . Ballantine, Pikes Creek; Caspar Wall, Wilkes- Barre, formerly of Dallas. Married--Marie Helen Fenimore, Wilkes-Barre, to George Kostenbauder, Courtdale. You could get--Powdered milk, 3 1b. can, 89c; 46 oz. can pineapple juice 30c; grapefruit sections, 2-16 oz. cans, 29c¢; Supreme bread, 2 lvs., 27¢; doughnuts, pkg. of 12 1%. 20 Years Ago - February 13, 1964 The burning question of suf- ficient heat at Ross Township Elementary School was solved by a switch to pea coal and a changed procedure in handling the furnace, according to reports received at the Lake-Lehman school board meeting. Two Plains men were injured in a scuffle at a Demunds tavern when they were assaulted by a party of six local men, ac- companied by three women. George Bednar, son of Mrs. George Bednar, Hazletine St., Shavertown, signed with the St. Louis Cardinals to play professional football. Married--Regina Ricci, Center Hill Road, Dallas, to Darrell Cystian, Reading. Deaths--Arthur Cobleigh, Pikes Creek; Ralph Nathaniel Cease, Muhlenberg; James Franklin Hill Sr., Hunlock Creek; Josephine Miller, Dallas; Mrs. Esther M. Long, Trucksville. You could get--Bananas, 10c 1b.; steak, 79¢ 1b.; French fries, 1% 1b. plastic bags, 4 for $1; soup, 4 pkgs. $1; ketchup, four jumbo bottles, $1; franks 59¢ 1b. 10 Years Ago - February 7, 1974 While Gov. Milton Shapp and other state and national officials met in Washington to discuss a solution, independent truckers in Northeastern Pennsylvania joined a nationwide shutdown and vowed to keep their rigs off the road until the government and oil companies met their demands for a fuel price ceiling. As potholes on state-maintained roads became more numerous and deeper, state legislators remained cemented in a controversy over how to fund $100 million for road resurfacing. Deaths--Alexander formerly of Dallas; Rinehimer, Dorrance. You could get--Red potatoes, 10 1b. bag, $1.49; Coca-Cola 2-48 oz. bottles, 68c; Kraft cheese, 12 oz. pkg., 78¢c; hot dogs, 79¢ 1b. ; Morton pot pies, 5 for $1. Library update Johnson, Infant It’s tax time! (EDITOR’S NOTE: Between now and April 15, income tax is first and foremost in most of our minds. In an effort to make filing income tax forms a little easier for our readers, The Dallas Post is publishing tax tips each week for five weeks. This week, the third of the series, the tips are entitled, “Singles may have more tax breaks than they realize.”’ The tips are furnished by the Pennsylvaniat Institute of Certified Public Accountants, Philadelphia.) If you are single and treat your 1983 federal income tax return like an unwanted houseguest you can’t wait to get rid of, you may miss out on some good opportunities to save money. Most singles file a short form and claim the standard deduction, or the zero bracket amount, of $2,300. That's because they usually don’t amass more than $2,300 of deductible expenses and it doesn’t pay to itemize their return. If that’s your situation, you may still find ways to save on taxes without itemizing, says William L. Smith, Jr., CPA, President, Northeastern Chapter, Pennsylvania Institute of Certified Public Accountants. At the bottom of the 1040 long form there’s a section called “adjustments to income.” That can be the route that will enable singles to lower their taxable in- come without the paperwork of itemizing. Let's say you moved to a new location in 1983 to start a new job, an the new job is at least 35 miles further from your old home than was yourold job. You can subtract from your gross income the cost of moving all your personal effects. You can also subtract up to $1,500 for the cost of house-hunting trips and any temporary housing and meals until you were settled. In addition, you can reduce your taxable income by any fees or commissions paid to real estate brokers. However, there are limits on these indirect expenses associated with moving, so check the IRS rules. Another way to reduce your taxable income, within the ad-. justments to income section is to subtract: any unreimbursed business expeses. Include meals, transportation, lodging and any incidental costs incurred while you were on an overnight business trip. If you hold two jobs, you can include the cost of traveling from your first job to your second job. Do not adjust your income for the cost of commuting from your home to your primary job. Perhaps the most common method of reducing taxable in- come is making contributions to an Individual Retirement Account (IRA). About a quarter of those eligible maintain IRA accounts. A single person can contribute up to $2,000 a year to an IRA account and reduce taxable income by that There are differing opinions on whether a young single person should opt for an IRA. If you put $1,000 a year in an’IRA, it will be worth $216,565 in 30 years, based on the prevailing 10 percent yield compounded quarterly for a “conservative” IRA. That sounds great, but young single people have other factors to consider. If after five years of $1,000 con- tributions to an IRA you decide to withdraw the money to take out a home mortgage or to buy a busienss, you must pay a 10 per- cent penalty for withdrawing before age 59%. You may want to consult a tax advisor on your personal situation before opening an IRA. CPAs say the very best wya to save on taxes is to plan ahead and combining your tax deductions is an effective tax strategy for singles. Think about this for your 1984 and 1985 taxes. If your itemized deductions and the standard deduction are about the same, try to combine two years of itemized deductions in either 1984 or 1985 and claim the standard deduction the other way. Let’s say you are a single person with itemized deductions of about $2,300--the same as your standard deduction. But maybe you can defer payment ‘of $1,500 of those deductible items until 1985 and claim the standard deduction for 1984. Then, for the two years, you get deductions totaling $6,100. That’s the $2,300 deductions in 1984 and $3,800 of itemized deductions in 1985--your usuall $2,300 plus the $1,500 shifted from 1984. Thus, you increase your total 1984-85 deductions by $1,500-- from $4,600 to $6,100-and you've saved yourself a substantial amount of tax dollars. Tax planning is a year-round necessity. Guest editorial By EDWIN FEULNER deeply into our day-to-day affairs, congressional liberals are report- edly readying legislation that could result in federal bureaucrats decid- ing how much we should earn in the private sector. The legislation, rumored to be nurturing in the office of Senate Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), calls for the establishment within the U.S. Department of Labor of a national ‘‘pay comparability’’ panel, board, or office modeled after the Equal Employment mission wouid be charged with determining ‘how much a certain secretaries; or whether nurses are worth more or less to society than zookeepers. In other words, the new ‘federal authority would be charged with setting wge scales, in the process voiding labor-manage- ment contracts, and creating chaos within the economy. The ‘‘equal pay for comparable work’ scam - long on the radical feminist wish list - was given a big boost by a recent federal court decision which ordered Washington state to increase the pay of some 15,000 state employees, mostly women. The ruling will cost stage or more over the next two years. But, the issue is not a feminist one; and be forwarned, it is a two- ernment or courts assume the various jobs, it is by no means certain they will decide you're being paid too little. You could find you're being paid more than the bureaucrats say your job is worth. Let’s face it: no two jobs or careers are completely alike, just as no two individuals are alike. Different jobs require different skills, education, risk-taking, etc. The market thus determines, con- sidering the supply of workers in a particular category, how much a job is worth. Nurses, for example, used to be paid meager wages hour; most cities report shortages of qualified nurses; and trained nurses are hotly pursued by ‘‘head- hunters,” who are prepared to offer them all sorts of bonuses and inducements to take jobs which now go begging. Comparable pay is not a legiti- mate feminist issue; it has nothing to do with gender bias. Adopting this radical idea carries the clear and present danger of economic regimentation, bureaucratic regu- lation, lowered productivity, ployment, higher tax burdens, and less freedom for us all. That is too high a price to pay to try and placate the demands of a small segment of the ‘‘working” population. based public policy research insti- tute.) 25¢ on newsstand J. Stephen Buckley. Rick Shannon Bill Savage Dotty Martin Mike Danowski Sheila Hodges BY NANCY KOZEMCHAK A picnic in the winter? Sounds unusual and itis. Jerry Fritzges is acting as chairman of the 2nd annual Auctioneers Mid-winter Picnic to be held at the Irem Temple Country Club on Friday, February 10 beginning at 7 p.m. The event promises to be a lot of fun with the cost being $5.00 per person, payable at the door. Proceeds from this event benefit the Back Mountain Memorial Library. Dress 'is casual and the community is invited to attend. A lot of fun and surprises should make this winter picnic special! Remember the thrill you had as a youngster when you first discovered that you could learn to mount butterflies, built a fot, or make a wonderful doll out of cloth and a clothespin just by: following easy-to-read text and illustrations in a book? It was fun, too, wasn’t it, when you succeeded in digging out just the facts you needed to write a paper for school...But what happened to your thrill of discovery, to your conviction that books ‘‘know everything worth knowing,” since you became an adult? Your library challenges you to recapture the same thrill books first gave youas a youngster! Visit the library today--then use it regularly. Recapture the won derful world of books! New books at the library: “Hard of the critical years in America’s X foreign policy. Ay By CLYDE DUPIN The outstanding high school stu- dents in America are becoming more religious. Over the past 14 years, the students. who make ‘“Who’s Who Among American High School Students’’ have become more interested in religion. The survey reveals that these top students are less interested in sex, beer, and marijuana. In the most recent edition of ‘“Who’s Who Among American High School Students,” 5,000 were selected from the 375,000 listed. More than 2,000 responded to the survey form. During the past 14 years, regular church attendance has climbed from 59 percent to 4 percent. Sixty-eight percent of these high achievers attend church because they feel a need for a spiritual uplift. The majority, 85 percent, would like to see prayer in public schools. It is thrilling to see these outstanding students with high moral values and purposes for their life. There is also a revival of reli- gious interest on the college and university campuses. According to a US. News and ‘World Report story, students on campuses are flocking to prayer groups and Bible study sessions. According to the report, at some universities, the number of religious students has doubled or tripled. A new report by Gallup notes that college students who say reli- gion is important has grown over percent to 50 percent. Students are increasingly in search for a quiet, secure, supernatural faith in God. This may be the most encouraging sign of our day. (Clyde Dupin is the author of a religious column, entitled ‘Reli- gious Viewpoint.”’) By CLYDE DUPIN “71t has ‘been’ 11 years and 15 million legalized abortions since the Supreme Court decision of 1973. As our society continues to tolerate abortion, people are becoming uncaring and less respectful of the handicapped and elderly. When the sanctity and dignity of human life is destroyed, our total value system is endangered. The pro-life movement is growing stronger and more young people are joining the movement. The huge rally in Washington, D.C. on the 11th anniversary of the Supreme Court decision spoke vol- umns. Even our President in his State of Union message spoke out strongly against the cruel evils of abortion. The tide seems to be turning against abortion on demand. Many people who have experienced the sorrows of abortion are telling their stories of the tragic after effects. Many churches are beginning to education their people on the value and sanctity of human life both before and after physical birth. The two major obstacles that being repealed are Planned Parent- hood and the big business abortion multi-million dollar business. In vided 80,000 abortions in 36 clinics. (Clyde Dupin is the author of a religious column entitled ‘‘Reli- Congressman Frank Harrison announced recently that four libraries within the 11th Congressional District have been awarded grants totalling $51,746 out of Federal Library Services and Construction Act Funds. The Hoyt Library in Kingston has been chosen to receive $10,000 to establish a basic collection of video cassettes composed of curent popular movies, educa- tional programs and documentary and travel programs. The video cassette recorder also will be pur- | chased for loan to community groups. : P