The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, July 28, 1950, Image 11

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    TERMITE CONTROL
MOTH PROOFING
ANTS & SILVERFISH
Rid Your Premises of All De-
structive and Disease Carrying
Insects and Rodents with Our
Sanitary Service or Supplies.
For Estimates and Consul-
tation Without Cost or
Obligation
Call J. C. EHRLICH CO.
718 Market St., rear
| Kingston, Pa.—Phone 7-1974
Harveys Take Women :
| SHAVERTOWN
FIRE COMPANY
Field Bay
August 3-5
Ladies Auxiliary will serve
Meat Loaf Dinner
THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 5:30
ADULTS—T75 cents
CHILDREN under 12, 45 cents
William G. Lloyd
Electrician
House-Wiring and
Appliance Repairs
Shop at 120 N. Main St.
Shavertown, Phone Dallas10
Residence Over Shoe-Shop,
! Dallas
1941
CHEVROLET SEDAN
4 Door
Fully Equipped
{ $375.00 down
trade accepted
R. E. PHILLIPS Sr.
| Overbrook Road
\ Dallas 562-R-2
PICK UP YOUR
FREE
WNBF
TV Schedule
at
| TRUCKSVILLE
RADIO
Main Road, Trucksville
Bill Guyette
Phone Dallas 286-R-9
Your summer ward-
robe is safe when sent
| to
DRY CLEANER
CALL
HECK
H.L. 4256
Prompt Delivery Service
Men's Shirts Laundered
NN AS ATS AT
(of. RAF
YOUR NAME PRINTED
ON EACH CHECK
*NO REQUIRED BALANCE
*NO CHARGE FOR DEPOSITS
OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT
WITH ANY AMOUNT AT
ANY TELLERS WINDOW IN
ae]
WroMINe FrpoNAL BANK
QF WILKES: BARRE
114 YEARS OF BANKING SUCCESS AT
_ Sorner Plaka & Franklin Strests
~ Bember Fed. Depasit Insurance Gorp'n,
To Hold Party Tonight
Mrs. Lee Zimmerman and Mrs.
Gilbert Carpenter will pour at the
card and bingo party to be held by
Harveys Lake Woman's Service
Club in the Lake Township High
School this evening, Friday at 9
p.m.
There will be door and game
prizes.
Patrons will be Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Isaacs, Mr. and Mrs. Mor-
gan Bird, Mr. and Mrs. Alan Kist-
ler, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Fiske, Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Rood, Mr. and Mrs.
Malcolm Nelson, Mr. and Mrs.
Peter Kuchta, Mr. and Mrs. Tony
Javers, Mr, and Mrs. Joseph Rauch,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Allen Jr., Mr.
and Mrs. John Edwards and Mr.
and Mrs. Delbert Winterstein; Mrs.
David Geraghty, Mrs. David Mor-
ris, Mrs. Henry Deater, Mrs. Carrie
Rood, Mrs. Kate Schultz; Ethel
Woolert, Eleanor Humphrey, Paul-
ine Davis, Eleanor Puterbaugh,
Louella Gosart and Patricia Gosart;
Jack Cosgrove, Jiggs Elston, Jack
Nothoff, Aldo Franconi, Lee Hon-
» eywell, Ralph Flanagan, David Deat-
er and Wilson Flock.
Dry Leaders
Open Campaign
State Candidates
Will Speak Here
Dr. Richard R. Blews, Prohibition
nominee for Governor of Pennsyl-
vania, will be the first of three
leaders of the party to be heard in
this area in a series of five Prohib-
ition lectures. Dr. Blews, a District
Superintendent in the Free Meth-
odist Church and Chairman of the
Prohibition Committee of Pennsyl-
vania, will speak at the Dallas Camp
Grounds tomorrow at 2:30 p.m.
Dr. Blews completed work for his
A.B. at Greenville College, his A.
M. at Columbia, and his Ph.D. at
Cornell University where he later
served as a member of the faculty
for a number of years. He has
served as Dean of Greenville Col-
lege and President of Evansville
College. He is the author of a vol-
ume of biographies entitled ‘‘Mas-
ter Workmen”. Dr. Blews has done
research work at the University of
Berlin and is an authority on Ro-
man Law.
Other prohibition leaders to be
heard in this area are National
Chairman Virgil C. Finnell; and Al-
bert J. Crispell, nominee for Lieu-
tenant Governor of Pennsylvania.
Mr. Finnell will be coming to this
area from Boston, Mass., and will
give his first political speech in
Wyoming Valley on Monday even-
ing, and his concluding speech
at the Bowman Creek Free Meth-
“odist Church on Tuesday evening,
August 1, at 8:00. Following his
Tuesday evening speech a Wyoming
County Prohibition Committee will
be formed.
Mr. Crispell will speak on Tem-
perance Sunday, August 6, at
Trucksville F. M. Church at 9:45
and at the Dallas F. M. Church at
10:30 a.m.
All of these five meetings are
open to the public. It is expected
that the W.C.T.U., Y.T.C., and other
organizations interested in the
cause of temperance will be repre-
sented in this series of meetings.
The State platform of the Pro-
hibition party calls for a minimum
teachers salary of $2,400., and a
state Prohibition amendment.
Kunkle Ladies Are
Hostesses To Neighbors
Members of Kunkle W.S.C.S. en-
tertained members of Orange W.S.
C.S. at a tenth anniversary party
in the Comunity Hall Wednesday
afternoon. Ladies from Orange
brought a beautiful birthday cake.
Entertainment was furnished by
Mrs. Daniel Meeker, reading, and
Mrs. George Ellsworth, vocal solos.
Present were: Mrs. Arthur Gay,
Mrs. Mary Emmanuel, Mrs. Flor-
ence Roth, Mrs. Morris King, Mrs.
Myrtle Kunkle, Mrs. Elizabeth Dy-
mond, Mrs, William Perrigo, Mrs.
Cecil Sickler, Mrs. Horton Bell,
Mrs. Fred J. Risch, Mrs. A. J.
Webb, Mrs. Hugh Gebhart, Mrs. J.
J. Parry, Mrs. Ira Frantz of Or-
ange, Mrs. George Ellsworth,
Wilkes-Barre; Mrs. Lewis Nulton,
Mrs. James Miers, Mrs. E. R. Ker-
lin, Mrs. Albert J. Myers, Mrs.
Austin Wertman, Mrs. Jack Birn-
"stock, Mrs. Russell Miers, Mrs. Dan
Meeker, Mrs. George Landon, Mrs.
Stella Isaacs, Mrs. A. C. Devens,
Mrs. Charles Wertman, Mrs, Ray
Henney, Mrs. Ralph Elston, Mrs.
Victor Rydd, Mrs. Leona Jones, Rev.
Ruth Underwood, Mrs. William
Brace, Mrs. Gideon Miller, Mrs.
Fred Dodson, Mrs. William Eckert,
Mrs. Julia Kunkle, Mrs. Phillip Ells-
worth and Mrs. Ralph Ashburner.
Camp Meeting Opens,
East Dallas Thursday
Starting next Thursday and con-
tinuing for ten days, camp meet-
ing will be held at Dallas Free
Methodist Camp Grounds, East
Dallas. Daily Schedule of services
is as follows: Prayer meeting, -6:30
a. m.; missionary advance, 9 a.m;
Bible Instruction in charge of Rev.
W. V. Miller, 10:30 A.M.; chil-
dren’s meetings, 9 a.m. and 1:30
p.m.; visual preaching with Rev.
Julian Rose, 2:30 and 7:45 p.m.
YPMS, except Saturday, 6:45 p.m;
Sundays, love feast 9 p.m.; Sun-
Reading left to right: sitting,
Walbridge Leinthall.
Mrs. Henry Butler, Mrs
Joseph Rauch, Mrs.
ing, Mrs. Eldridge Shaver, Mrs. Clarence Oberst, Mrs. John Schappert, Mrs. Malcolm Nelson and Mrs.
Burke's Bar-R-Cue
SUNSET
HARVEY'S LAKE
at the sien of the flashing pig
DeLucious BARBECUES
FisH and CHIps
The home of the Ranchburger
Telephone H. L. 3756
Open All Year Round
CALL
FOR A PAINTING ESTIMATE
Leland A. Honeywell
Phone H. L. 3567 or 3043
Address, Pole 155 Harveys Lake
Quality paint and
skilled mechanics
Harvey Kitchen; stand-
IN SCOUT WORK
Bad Tolz, Germany, July 5, 1950
—Two former residents of Dallas
are presently engaged in Boy Scout
and Girl Scout work in Germany,
Headquarters, 1st Infantry Division,
has announced. Master Sergeant
Fred A. Butcher, Personnel Ser-
geant Major with the 18th Infantry
Regiment, and his wife, the former
Lois Maish, are both helping to ad-
vance Scouting in Germany.
Mrs. Butcher is the active leader
of Girl Scout Troop 11, whose mem-
bers are daughters of 1st Division
personnel stationed in the Bad Tolz
area of southern Bavaria. Sergeant
Butcher devotes some of his spare
time to work with a Boy Scout
troop at Lenggries, near Bad Tolz,
where he is stationed. Both Ser-
geant and Mrs. Butcher were active
in scouting in Dallas before coming
overseas.
Mrs. Butcher, the former Lois
Maish, was formerly employed by
the Visiting Nurses Association of
Kingston, working as a nurse in
the Dallas area. Sgt. Butcher's last
assignment in the states’ was at
Wilkes-Barre, where he served as
an instructor with the Organized
Reserve Corps. He has served in
Panama and in the Pacific Theatre
during the war, He holds the bronze
star medal.
‘ Since coming to Germany, where
they expect to remain another two
years, the Butchers have visited
France, Italy and Switzerland as
well as places of interest in Ger-
many. They intend to see. the Pas-
sion Play at Oberammergau in the
near future.
Edward K. Scott Reunion
Mrs. David Felterman was elec-
ted president and Mrs. Arthur
Scott, vice president, at the annual
reunion of the Edward K. Scott
family held at Benton Park Sun-
day, July 9. Other officers: Mrs.
Clarence Searfoss, secretary, Mrs.
Paul Scott, treasurer, Mrs. M. A.
Scott, historian, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Scott, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Scott
Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Scott,
recreation committee.
Gifts were presented to Boyd S.
Scott, Berwick, oldest member
present; Edythe Ann Goss, Sweet
Valley youngest; Mrs. Minnie
Sabor, Towaco, N.dJ., coming
farthest; Mr. and Mrs. Leon Goss,
longest married, forty-nine years;
Willard Goss, largest family pres-
ent, six.
Present were: Mr. and Mrs. Al-
fred Baker, and family, Sweet
Valley; Mr. and Mrs. Willard Goss,
and family, Mr, and Mrs. Leon
Goss and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ray-
mond Scott and family, Boyd Scott
of Berwick; Mrs. Minnie Sabor,
Towaco, N.J., Mr. and Mrs. Wil-
son Felterman, Mrs. David Felter-
man and family, Newmeda; Mos.
Minnie McCarthy and children,
Catawissa; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Searfoss and son of Moosic; Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Scott and family
of Shickshinny; Theodore Bear,
Danny Reese, Elain Miller, Jack
Scott and Barry of Reyburn;. Mr.
and Mrs. M. A. Scott, Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Scott Jr. and children, and
Mrs. Helen Siley and children’ of
Dallas.
Entertain at Tea
Miss Anna, Miss Ermine and Miss
Caroline Kutzner were hostesses at
a lovely tea at their home on Briar
Crest road, Idetown, last Thursday
afternoon. Proceeds were for Dallas
Methodist Church W. S. C. S.
Present were: Mesdames L. W.
LeGrand Sr., Herbert Griesing, H.
H. Zeiser, John A. Reedy, Will J.
Smith, Donald Frantz, Charles Moy-
er, Morgan Wilcox, J. Stanley Rine-
himer, Charles Gregory, Clyde
Veitch, LaVerne Race, Arthur Mil-
ler, William Baker Sr., Ray Shiber,
David Evans, Amanda Yaple, Ger-
ald Dettmore, Sterling Machel,
Fred Gordon, W. M. Williams, Pet-
er Clark, Elmer Parrish, Arthur
Dungey, Wesley Himmler, R. L. Hal-
lock, Z. E. Garinger, James R. Ol-
iver, B. B. Lewis, Ellen Beechey,
Ralph Brown, Myrtle McCulloch,
Leamon Mintzer, T. Sterling Wil-
liams, A. W. Brown, Edward Stair,
C. S. Hildebrant, Floyd Ide, O. L.
Harvey, Edgar Brace, Arthur Dun-
gey, Joseph Schmerer, Stanley Dav-
ies, Clara: Yeager, Estella Goldsmith,
day School 1:30 p.m.
FORMER DALLAS RESIDENTS
Thompson of Wilkes Barre,
lies in the Weiss family plot at
Fern Knoll Cemetery.
IN GERMANY
= |
Poet's Corner
WAR
War ? We ask this humble question,
What does this small word mean?
Does it go to make us happy
Or does it make us mean?
Does it mean, we send our sons
away,
For vacation and for fun,
Or, does it mean to hunt and kill
And fear the sight of gun?
We ponder long and seriously
And wonder what it’s for,
And then again this tho't it comes
What means this small word—war ?
Can mothers who sent sons away
A few short months ago,
Explain to us the meaning of
The word we want to know?
O, no their hearts too heavy are,
Some sons did not come back,
And they are wondering still in fear
Of what became of Jack
Or Jim or Joe, or Bill, or Sam, and
if he’s under sod,
Or if he will return again
And learn to trust in God.
We listen, as we kneel to pray,
We hear an’ airplane soar,
And wonder if it’s filled with boys,
Now being sent to war.
O, leaders of great nations,
Please tell us what it’s for
To send our sons, away to kill,
And call this small word—War.
M. L. Scovell
199%. S. Hancock St.
Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
Veteran Nurse
Of 3 Wars Dies
Mrs. Etta BR. Roach
Lies At Fern Knoll
With the passing of Mrs. Etta
Reese Roach, 79, Trucksville, one
of the last survivors of the gradua-
ting class of 1892, first group to
finish training at Wilkes-Barre
General Hospital, has put a final
period to fifty-eight years of nurs-
ing. She served in the Red Cross
in three wars.
During the Spanish American
War, she travelled on Governor
Daniel Hasting’s train to bring
back typhoid sufferers from Chick-
amauga, boys who were stricken
in camp and never saw active ser-
vice.
During the First World War Mrs.
Roach organized the Trucksville
unit under Miss Maude Brother-
hood, head of the Wyoming Valley
Red Cross, taught first aid, and was
alerted to go overseas when the
war ended.
Second World War saw Mrs.
Roach again in charge of the home
front in Trucksville, responsible for
bandage and sewing projects.
In addition to private practice,
Mrs. Roach held a position for
twelve years, 1921 to 1933, with
the Lehigh Valley Coal Company
in Hazleton and Mahanoy.
In failing health since Thanks-
giving, Mrs. Roach has been des-
perately ill for three weeks prior
to her death on Sunday. Not able
to lie down because of a heart
condition, she passed away in her
easy. chair.
She is survived by a sister, Mrs.
Harvey Weiss of Trucksville, with
whom she made her home; two
brothers, Sterling C. Reese, Trucks-
ville, Clinton H. Reese, Cresco;
three half brothers, Ross H. Lloyd,
Cleveland, Gordon H. Lloyd, Wilkes
Barre, Lynford Lloyd, Mountain
Top; three nieces and nephews. .
She was buried from her home
on Wednesday, with private funeral
services in charge of Dr. H, E.
and
-—
Dig Your Garden
Betore Building
That's Advice From
The Lester Squiers
The Lester Squiers of Lehman
have a good garden well under way
«
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Hospitality
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“XK
7
(UL
RK City 24
o! Manage,
in the back yard of what will be
their new home. When Mrs. John
Curtis, who lives just across the
street from the school, found that
the Squier family was having a
garden plot ploughed and harrowed,
she sent over what it takes to
make a garden grow, a whole load
of manure. Mrs. Squier says that
due to this shot in the arm, her
gladiolus is already over a foot
high.
The house will be of ranch type
construction, a large living room,
dining room, and three bedrooms in
addition to the usual utility rooms.
Joseph Franks of Wilkes-Barre is
the contractor. Outside finish will
be brick and white siding, garage a
separate building. Ground was
broken on June 18, and the family
expects to occupy by Thanksgiving.
The two boys have already had
a chance to live on the new prop-
erty, for their parents pitched a
tent for them away back when the
garden was first getting under way,
before excavation for the founda-
tion of the house started.
The location, on the same street
as the school and almost next door
to it, will be convenient for the
supervising principal, within quick
walking distance instead of car dis-
tance. There is almost an acre of
land, enough for a large garden
and a good lawn.
The Squiers picked up a pair of
beautiful brass andirons, modern
type, brand new at the Library
Auction for their new fire-place.
Dickinson College in Carlisle was
the twelfth college chartered in the
United States.—PNS.
HEAR DYNAMIC
PROHIBITION
MESSAGES
+ > &
DR. R. R. BLEWS
Pennsylvania State Chairman
Nominee for Governor of Pennsylvania
DALLAS CAMP GROUNDS
Saturday, July 29, at 2:30
#
VIRGIL C. FINNELL
National Chairman
Luzerne Methodist Church
Monday, July 31 at 8
BOWMAN CREEK F. M, CHURCH
Tuesday, August 1 at 8
(Wyoming County Organization
| meeting follows)
VOTE DRY IN A DRY PARTY
ON NOVEMBER 7, 1950
CHURCH ST.
Freddy Mintzer and the hostesses.
Read The Classified Column
JOIN THE CROWDS—ATTEND THE DALLAS
BIBLE AUDITORIUM
Tonight, Friday, 7:30 P.M., July 28
“Astronomy and the Bible!”
Enjoy the Beautiful
Sunday Night, 7:30 P.M., July 30
“THE DEVIL TAKES A HOLIDAY”
When Will He Take It?
Will Sinners, In His Absence Become Saints ?
Hoffman Gives the Bible Answer!
Where Will He Spend It?
Tuesday, 7:30 P.M., August 1
“Who Are the Angels?”
Thursday, 7:30 P.M., August 3
“Where Are the Dead?”
Are They in Heaven, Hell or Purgatory?
Don’t Miss This Comforting Bible Message!
Friday, 7:30 P.M., August 4
“Spiritism!”
Who are SPIRITS of SPIRITISM?
Is Spiritism real ot trickery?
Can the dead come back and talk?
Hear Hoffman — Sing With Fearing
EVERY NIGHT
BIBLE AUDITORIUM
DALLAS, PA.