Coyle Scores P-TA Search
For New School Revenues
The newly-announced effort
of county P-TA leaders to find
fresh sources of revenue for the
school system—aside from in
creasing real estate taxes—was
scored this week as a “point
less” political maneuver by a
School Board candidate.
In a sharply-worded state
ment, William E. Coyle of Sil
ver Spring charged that by ap
pointing a committee to seek
new school revenues the Coun
ty Council of Parent-Teacher
Associations is “obviously try
ing to bolster its political ef
fectiveness, by playing down its
‘spend and spend’ philosophy.”
Coyle Is the only county
resident who has announced
his candidacy for election to
the School Board this fall.
He said it is “pointless for
MCCPTA leaders to register
‘righteous indignation’ over
soaring county school taxes"
without recognizing, at the
same time, a need for sound
spending.
“All avenues to new sources
of revenue, including state and
federal aid, only lead in one old I
direction— to the people of'
Montgomery County, who are
entitled to a more responsible
spending and accounting of
their funds,” Coyle declared.
£.s an ex-P-TA president and
father of five, Coyle said, he
Laytonsville-Woodfield
Rev. Hart Leaves St. Paul’s
By Elizabeth M. Kile 1
WA. 6-1454 1
Sunday was Rev. Gilbert
Hart’s last day In the St. Paul 1
Methodist Church. He will be or- j
dained at the conference in '■
Buckhannon, W. Va., on June 1
10 and will serve In that area. 1
The Methodist Men held a pic- ]
nic in his honor at the Laytons
ville School on Thursday eve- :
ring' Mt. Talbot at Etchison, \
also served by Mr. Hart, gave a i
farwell party at the parsonage 1
on Wednesday evening and pre- 1
sented the Hart’s with a money |:
gift. The new minister will be!
announced at the conference in 1 1
Westminster, Md., on June 1011
and will be in the Laytonsville
pulpit for the first time on June j
17. | (
Mr. and Mrs. William Gough
and their daughter. Barbara
have returned from a trip to
Atlanta. Ga. They attended
the graduation from high
school of Mrs. Gough’s sister.
Miss Cordlna McConnell. Miss
McConnell returned with
them for a visit of several
weeks.
The Woodfield Junior-Senior
Girls 4-H Club met at the hall
on May 26 and planned for the
sewing school. The next meet
ing will be held at the home cf
Mrs. Harrison King at 4 p.m.
Tuesday, June 12, when Mrs.
Milmo Hambleton of the Home
Demonstration Office, Rockville,
will give a demonstration. After
the meeting they will have a pic
nic supper. Brenda Stup and
Susan Williams of the club will
will give general foods demon
strations in Rockville on June
17 at 3 p.m. in a run-off contest
to determine the county cham
pionship.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mason
of Rochester, Minn., are visiting
their son and daughter-in-law,
Rev. and Mrs. Lawrence Mason.
They will be here to see their
son receive the degree of Bache
lor of Sacred Theology on Mon
day, June 4, and his ordination
Into the Methodist ministry at
Westminster, Md., on June 10.
Julian King of Cedar Grove
will be the guest preacher on
Sunday, June 10, at Wesley
Grove Methodist Church. He
will speak on the subject, “The
Holy Spirit.” The Women’s So-1
ciety of Christian Service met
at the church hall on June 6.
There are six teams from the [
church calling on all the mem-1
bers of the congregation pre-1
senting the program of the
church and leaving a copy of
the budget. The senior high
young people of Wesley Grove,
Woodfield, and Salem, Cedar
Grove, will take part in a re
treat to be held at the West!
River Methodist Church Camp
near Church ton, Md., June 8
through 10.
Mrs. E. C. Madgeburger spent
the past week in Athens, Ga.,
where she went to attend the
graduation of her son, Robeit,
from the University of Georgia,
where he received the degree
of Doctor of Veterinary Medl- j
cine, on June 2. Mr. Madge
burger will return with his
mother for a short visit.
Mrs. Warren Howes was
given a surprise baby shower
by her friends Thursday eve
ning in the social hall of St.
Paul’s Methodist Church.
Mrs. Allen King of Holicong,
Pa, spent last week with her
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found news reports of the
Council’s concern over soaring
school taxes “an amazing turn
in the road for a group of P-TA
leaders who traditionally make
loud, uncompromising and
sometimes grandiose demands
that our people provide ‘more
and better schools’ at all costs.”
He cited past P-TA demon
strations in favor of what he
termed “reckless budgets” at
School Board hearings, and said
that “after such hoopla” the
Council's concern for rising tax
levels “comes a little late to
restore its prestige.”
The issue of steadily grow
ing school taxes will be a
major issue in the November
elections, Coyle said, adding
that the P-TA Council “recog
nizes a straw in the wind
when it sees one.”
The School Board candidate
warned that, without sound
spending policies, the Council's
“all-out support of an all-out
i spending program could pro
! duce not only more schools but
a bankrupt county for its ef
forts.”
“What is needed, in addition
to more vigorous leadership
by the School Board, is a dem
onstration of more responsible
statesmanship on the part of
all groups genuinely interested
in Montgomery County educa
tion,” Coyle said.
mother, Mrs. Lulu Fraley and
her sister, Mrs. Byron Allnutt.
The Howes family reunion
will be held at the home of G.
Leonard Daymude at Sandy
Spring, Sunday, June 17, at 12
noon. Everyone will bring a
picnic lunch. If the weather is
too bad for a picnic it will be
held the following Sunday, l
same place and time.
Charles Johnson is remodel- i
ing the former J. W. Howes
home and it will be rented as j
two apartments when com
pleted.
Lisa Kaye Williams, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Landsale Wil
liams, was baptized at the 10:45
service, Sunday, May 27, at the
Wesley Grove Methodist
Church. After the service Mr.
and Mrs. Williams entertained
at a picnic dinner the following
guests: Mr. and Mrs. George P.
Woodfield; Mr. and Mrs. George
P. Woodfield, Jr., and their
children, Mark and Martha; Mr.
and Mrs. J. D. Morris and their
children, Ronald, Donald and
Sally; Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Williams; Mr. and Mrs. Craw
ford Williams and their daugh
ter. Carol; Rev. and Mrs. Law
rence Mason and their children,
Carol, Alice and Bobbie; and
Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth King
and their daughter, Esther.
The Sunday School of St.
Bartholomew Episcopal Church
will close June 17 when awards j
for attendance will be given out. 1
The Laytonsville Elementary
School will hold their Spring i
Festival on June 8 at 7 p.m. on
the school grounds. Robert
Bradshaw and Caroline War
field of the sixth grade will
will reign over the festival as
King and Queen. The band will
play before the festival. The
kindergarten will depict “Our
Favorite Poems”; the first
grade, "Awakening of the
Flowers”; the second grade,
“The Court Jesters”; third
grade, “The Pirates”; fourth
grade, "Dances from Other
Countries”; fifth grade, “Events
in June”; sixth grade, “The
Palace Guards.” The school
chorus will sing the Emperor
Waltz and Ciribiribin. After
the program, the P-TA, under
; the chairmanship of Mrs. Craver
! Oland, will hold their only fund
raising event of the year with
a fancy table, auction, bake
j table, florist shop, attic trea-
I sures, etc.
Calling all Gaithersburg High
School graduates, classes 1920
through 1940. There will be a
reunion held at the Gaithers
burg Civic Center on Sunday
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DANCE-NARRATIVE — This trio of dancers,
from left, Ann Mason, Louis Tupler and Eva
Stunkel, will perform in a dance-narrative
“Secret Journey” that will highlight the June
18 final victory luncheon at Indian Spring
Country Club that will cap the “over the
top” accomplishment of United Jewish Ap
peal Women in this year’s United Jewish
Women Democrats
Must Next Week
The Woman's Democratic
Club of Montgomery County
will meet in the auditorium of
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Appeal. The luncheon will be sponsored by
the 1962 UJA Women’s Suburban Division
under the joint chairmanship of Mrs. Blaine
H. Eig and Mrs. Isadore J. Gromfine, both
of Chevy Chase. “Secret Journey” tells in
dance form the story of a Jewish family that
flees persecution to find haven in Israel.
de Klin Photo
the Maryland-National Capital
Parks and Planning Commis
sion, Silver Spring, Wednesday,
June 13, at 8 p.m.
The speaker will be Wilfred
C. Leland, acting chief of the
Lake States Division, Area Re
development Administra
tion, U. S. Department of Com
merce. He will discuss the ad
ministration’s program for de
veloping the economy in de
pressed areas of the country.
Detergents
May Affect
Water Purity
Housewives using more de
tergents for household cleaning
tasks may be adding to deteri
oration of water quality of
streams furnishing drinking
water to the Washington Metro
politan area.
The flood of detergent suds
generated by housewives is of
concern to the Metropolitan
Washington Council of Govern
ments Water Supply and Pollu
tion Abatement Committee be
cause: (1) most detergents con
tain compounds unusually resis
tant to current sewage and
water treatment methods, and
(2) most of the product con
sumed eventually reaches the
surface or gound waters of the
area.
In cautioning cons timers
against over-use of detergents,
the Council pointed out that
there Is no “serious local
threat now from the source”
but that the "potential for
trouble will grow with in
creased use of detergents” in
the home.
Since detergents are only par
tially removed during sewage
treatment, the Council urges
housewives to use no more de
tergent than is needed for the
RMHS Students
Attend Dance
In Bermudas
Members of the Key Club at
Richard Montgomery High
School sponsored a “Bermuda
Prom” May 18 in the school
gym.
More than 200 students, most
of them clad in bermudas, at
tended the dance, first of Its
kind held at the school this
year.
A limbo contest, complete
with bongo music, was the
main feature. It was the last
dance of the school year.
SENTINEL SSSra JuM T - m *
Guard Legacy of Freedom,
Prelate Tells 1000 at Mass
Americans must learn to rec
ognize as enemies those “who
would assault our freedoms
with ideas and words,” a prom
inent Catholic prelate warned
at Memorial Day Field Mass at
Gate of Heaven Cemetery.
The Very Rev. Msgr. Joseph
B. Coyne told nearly 1000 per
sons attending the mass to be
wary "as much of him who says
we will bury you.”
“If either one of these con
cepts is allowed to pursue its
goals without firm and resolute
opposition,” he cautioned, "it
would take from us the free
dom we cherish the legacy
given to us by the men of our
Armed Forces who died to cre
ate and preserve our nation.”
Msgr. Coyne, pastor of St.
Andrew the Apostle Catholic
Parish, Silver Spring, preached
at the Fifth Annual Memorial
Day Field Mass sponsored by
the Knights of Columbus Coun
cils of Montgomery County.
The Most Rev. Philip M.
Hannan, auxiliary bishop of
task and said directions of
manufacturers should be fol
lowed. Additions of larger
amounts for “good measure”
should be avoided and “thought
less dumping of unmeasured
quantities should be restrained,”
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Washington and World War
II Chaplain of the 101st Air
borne Division, presided. Cel
brant of the Mass was anoth
er wartime chaplain, the Rev.
Francis J. LauHois, pastor of
St Jude’s Catholic Parish,
Rockville.
Prayers for deceased mem
bers of the United States Armed
Forces were led before the mass
by the Rt. Rev. Msgr. James
H. Brooks, pastor of St. John
Baptist de la Salle Catholic
Parish, Chillum, and Catholic
Chaplain of the District of
Columbia National Guard. “The
Star Spangled Banner” also was
sung by the congregation.
Forming a Guard of Honor
for the ceremonies were uni
formed members of the Fourth
Degree Knights of Columbus.
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