HS ———— pu he x Champion Major Dies Sunday Afternoon At 80 Champion Major, 80, died at his home in Huntsville Sunday after- noon after a prolonged illness. A member of Lehman Methodist Church, he was buried Wednesday afternoon in Lehman Cemetery, following services at 2' conducted by Rev. Frank K. Abbott. He was born in Plymouth, De- cember 29, 1870, but spent the larger part of his life in Hunts- ville. His wife, the late Lydia Gar- inger Major, died October 2, 1937. Two children of the couple died in childhood. Five sons survive: Ralph, Lehman; Albert, Shaver- town; Elmer, Homer and John, Trucksville. There are 12 grand- children and two great grand- children. : Mr. Major's father was Boswell Major, his mother Arsenith Bouse Major; grandfather and grand- mother were John and Anna Case Major. John was the second child of Thomas and Mary Britton Major, who came to America 130 years ago from England with eleven chil- dren. A twelfth child died in Eng- Jand, a thirteenth was born upon arrival in America. . Pallbearers were Bud, Corey, and Bryce Major; Thomas Watkins, Willard Cease, and John Garinger. ECRVECRVEVELRVEVDEVDELLR BE STRONG BY MALTBIE DAVENPORT BABOCK Be strong! We are not here to play, to dream, to drift; We have hard work to do, and loads to lift; Shun not the struggle—face it; ’tis God's gift. * Be strong! Say not, “The days are evil. Who's to blame?” “And fold the hands and acquiesce —oh shame! Stand up, speak out, and bravely, in God's name. Be strong! It matters not how deep intrenched the wrong, How hard the battle goes, the day how long; Faint not—fight on! comes the song, Tomorrow This poem is the fourth of a series to be used in this space each week. Presented by .. . ‘Stephen M. Glova FUNERAL DIRECTOR Harveys Lake H. L. 4000 Parsons Serves On Destroyer Navy Course Takes In Summer Cruise Midshipman David E. Parsons, 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. John F. Parsons, Dallas RD 1, has finished a six weeks cruise on Destroyer USS Gyatt, berthing at Norfolk, and taking in points from Cuba to Labrador. He returns immediately to University of Idaho where he is a Junior in Forestry, a Sophomore on a four-year scholarship in the Navy. Before starting on the sum- mer cruise late in July he had worked on a conservation project in the Idaho forests. Parsons took first year college work at Wilkes, then took compet- itive examinations for Navy scholar- ship, and on winning was stationed in Idaho where he .could follow both courses, with equal opportuni- ties for both forestry and a navy career, When graduated, he will serve two years in the Navy, start- ing as an ensign. On Arctic Mission William B. Russell, seaman, USN, of Route 3, recently participated in the annual set resupply mission to the Canadian Arctic regions in sup- port of the Joint Weather Station Program which is being carried out by the governments of Canada and the United States. The program was initiated. to provide meteorological observations required for more accurate short- range forecasting, and to accumu- late research data necessary for the solution of long-range fore- casting problems. The sea resupply mission was carried out by four U. S. Navy ships—the icebreaker USS Atka; the cargo vessels USS Wyandot and Achernar; and the tanker USS Nespelen. ORDER SOME DELICIOUS Dolly Madison HIGHWAY LUNCHEONETTE Main Hgwy., Trucksville FRAN & JIMMIE TREBILCOX 3 Lowl OTES OF BOSTON A ’ Black or Brown Suede ¥ SANDLER sling shot makes you the target for admiring glances . . . a soft, softer, softest kind of shoe with lows go heel and deep cut lines. And you needn't shoot your bankroll either . . . only SHOE SALON - - $7.95 - Main Floor, rear So A i, A GREAT STORE IN A GREAT STATE + WILKES-BARRE, PA. ok Local Boy Trains On Gun Crew THE POST, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1951 Rough and ready, from dungarees to the smudge of grease on his upper lip, here is David E. Parsons, Midshipman, aboard Destroyer USS Gyatt, on a six weeks training cruise somewhere in the Atlantic. - - = Know Your Neighbor (Continued from Page Two) abandon the weaving of crepe and broadcloth and georgette, and re- turn to school in preparation for the ministry, the manager offered him a much better position to re- main, but his mind was made up. Entering Wyoming Seminary at 20, several years beyond the usual age, and with five years of produc- tive work behind him, he realized the value of an education and ap- plied himself. As he phrases it, he “worked his way through at the end of a bell rope and a shovel”. We inquired particularly about the bell rope. The shovel was self explanatory. It developed that on Mondays the bell had to be rung 16 times, from rising until retir- ing time, and it was Fred's job to ring it. Dr. Sprague also as- signed him classrooms to clean, and there were the inevitable tables to wait on. During his senior year he filled the pulpit at Thornhurst. But with all the extra-curricular work and the hard study, Reinfurt had time to play in the school band and be president of the Debating Team. He says he still uses Galen's principles in building his sermons, employing thesis, antithesis and synthesis. One of his most prized possessions is the Nesbitt medal for oratory. After graduation from Seminary, he entered Dickinson, and here again he was on the Debating Team, It was when a freshman at Carlisle that he competed in a regional track meet, winning a medal for his half-mile work, and here also that he developed tech- nique in tennis and: ping pong. He still takes on all comers at ping-pong, and up to date the only contender hereabouts who has been able to floor him is Wilson Garinger, an ex-champion at Penn State. : Rev. Reinfurt did not develop those huge shoulders by playing football, because football practice takes up too much time. them by working on the railroad and in logging operations in the sub-zero woods, as well as by sum- mer work on State road construc- tion. At Drew Theological Seminary he travelled 300 miles each week- end to serve two charges in Jack- BLOOMSBURG FAIR Six Big Days and Nights September 24 THRU September 29 Elaborate Night Show Sept. 24 and 25 Spectacular ice Revue Sept. 26 thru 29 TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY FIVE DAYS OF HARNESS RACING $50,000 STAKE RACING TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY Championship MIDGET AUTO RACING Saturday, Sept. 29 HORSE and MULE PULLING CONTEST Admission 50¢ plus tax CHILDREN UNDER 14 FREE PARKING ON GROUNDS 50c (No Tax) He got With Bombardment Wing 2nd Lt. Clayton L. Cairl, son of Mr. and Mrs. William F, Cairl, Cemetery street, Dallas, has recent- ly been assigned to the 92nd Bom- bardment Wing at Fairchild Air Force Base near Spokane, Wash- ington. Lieutenant Cairl attended Dallas Borough High School. He enlisted in the Air Force at Wilkes-Barre, in June 1943 and was commis- sioned at Napier Field, December 1944. The Lieutenant is married to the former Dolores Douglas of Tunk- hannock R. D. son and North Jackson, Susque- hanna County. He was one of two in his class who "graduated with a Magna Cum Laude. When he was pastor at Mel- bourne, Florida, he wrote a weekly column for the Melbourne Times, captioned, “The Parson Edits the News.” He recollects with a chuckle that writing a review of the Eng- lish version of “One Foot in Heaven’ was funny, because English taboo prevents the use of the word “Heaven”. “One Foot In Trouble”. He is the author” of ‘Dark Churches”. During his pastorate in Dallas he has built up the church from a moderate sized congregation to 715, a gain of 425 new members, pre- ponderantely adult, one of the most spectacular growths in the district. Last spring he was accorded the signal honor-of being named special speaker for the Harold Stassen Committee of Internation Council of Religious Education on publica- tion of a new revision of the Bible. He is chairman of Worship Com- mittee of United Churches of Wy- oming Valley. He was elected President of the Wilkes-Barre District in 1950, For three years he served as chairman of ‘the Hemmelright Award, the committee which votes on the Man of the Year for the Back Mountain region. His wife, the former Catherine M. Partridge, is active in church work, but preeminently a home- maker for her husband and three children. Charlyn, 14, the eldest, will en- ter Wyoming Seminary this term. She won the American Legion award upon graduation from the eighth grade, Dallas Borough Schools: in June. Donald, 13, is in the eighth grade and plays in, the band. Frederick Junior, five plus, will be entering school this fall. Rev. Reinfurt likes to hunt and fish. Until recently he has emula- ted the late Calvin Coolidge in dangling the angleworm before the hungry trout, but has lately turned to fly-casting, a sport in which he is picking up technique. Two years ago he satisfied what was practically a life-long ambi- | tion, and now goes careening about the countryside on his Harley- Davidson motorcycle, accompanied, one at a time, by his family. Asked why he didn’t add another wheel and a flying bath-tub to the motor- cycle in the interests of taking them all at once, en famille, he said side cars were sissy, and the family could just hang on to the driver’s waistline. ; The title came out,’ : Church News ST. PAUL’S CHURCH St. Paul’s Lutheran . Church, Shavertown, announces its sched- ule for the week of September 16. Sunday 9:45 A. M.—Sunday School. 11:00 A. M.—The Service. The pastor of the Church, the Rev. Frederick W. Moock, Jr., will con- tinue the “Home Coming” theme with a sermon on “Lord, Increase Our Faith.” 7:00 P. M.—“Doggie Roast” for the members of the Luther League and their parents at the outdoor fireplace of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gerlach. Tuesday “Harvest Home Baked Ham Sup- per’ at the Church. The Ladies’ Auxiliary are responsible for this project. Wednesday 1:00 P. M.—Ladies’ Auxiliary meeting. Mrs, E, R. Marley and Mrs. John Malkemes are the hos- tesses. 7:30 P. M.—Luther League Choir rehearsal. 8:00 P., M.—Senior hearsal. Friday and Saturday Third Annual Stewardship meet- ing at Trinity Church, Reading. St. Paul's Congregation will be represented by the pastor and Mr. Richard M. Rudy. Choir re- DALLAS METHODIST “How Big Is My Church?” will be the basis for discussion in the three adult classes on Sunday morning at 10.. (The Bible reference is in Acts, Chapters eleven and fifteen, and in 1 Second Corinthians 9:1-5.) Youth Division will elect repre- sentatives for the Youth Council in the Sunday School hour. The council will include a boy and girl from each department, one repre- sentative from Woman’s Society of Christian Service, and Methodist Youth Fellowship Evening meet- ing counselors. : ~The minister will speak on “When The Expert Failed” in the Morning Worship. Mrs. Ruth Turn Reynolds will be at the organ. Parents of pre-school children are invited to leave their children in the Church Nursery. Finance Committee will meet after the Service to elect a chair- man and to discuss certain items of business. Following are mem- bers, Paul Phillips, Ray Evans, Peter D. Clark, Mrs. Stanley B. Davies, David Evans, Floyd Ide, Floyd Bogert, and Lawrence Up- dyke. \ Youth Council “will meet at the home of Mrs. Louise Colwell Sun- Lee Landmesser Has Surprise On Birthday Lee Landmesser, Pikes Creek, was so completely surprised when forty-eight friends gave him &n unexpected birthday party Satur- day afternoon, that he construed the long line of approaching cars as evidence of a fire, and stepped outside to inspect the roof. The party was engineered by his sister-in-law, Mrs, Arthur Land- messer, Wilkes-Barre, and the el- aborate cake came from Allentown under convoy of Andrew H. Land- messer, Lee’s brother. day evening at 7 to organize the youth program for the year. Country Couples Club will hold their monthly meeting Sunday eve- ning at 8:15. Officers will be elec- ted. Miss Frances Dorrance, Libra- rian. of Hoyt Library, and a life- long student of Wyoming Valley history will speak. Troop 281 will meet Monday at 7 P. M. Plans for fall will'be made. Brace Bible Class will hold a Corn Roast at Butternut Grove, Lake Street, Tuesday, 6:30 P. M. Wives and friends are invited. Eleventh Annual Fall meeting of Wilkes-Barre District W.S.C.S. will be held at Firwood Methodist Church, Wednesday. Luncheon res- ervations can be made with Mrs. R. E. Kuhnert or Mrs. Z. E, Gar- inger by Friday, September 14th. Wilkes-Barre District Missionary Institute will be held in the same Church on Wednesday. Rev. Charles R. Britt, missionary in Liberia and the Rev. Dewey D. Etchieson, sup- erintendent of Oklahoma Indian ‘Mission will be the speakers. Choirs will rehearse on Thursday. Junior Choir, 4:15; Youth Choir, 6:30; and Senior Choir, 8. This is the first meeting of the children’s and youth choirs. All those interested are urged to con- tact Mrs. Ruth Turn Reynolds. 8TH ANNUAL ANTIQUE SHOW WAVERLY COMMUNITY HOUSE Waverly, Pa. SEPT. 17-18TH 11 a. m.—10 p. m. Snack Bar and Dinner Adm. 50c, tax incl. expert compounding. PHONE 278 key 10 happiness “WITH HEALTH, everything is a source of pleasure; without it, nothing else, whatever it may be, is enjoyable. It follows that the greatest of follies is to sacrifice health for any other kind of happiness, whatever it may be—for gain, advancement, learn- ing, for fame, let alone, then, for fleeting sensual pleasures,” advised Arthur Schopenhauer. As pharmacists, we are constanily alert to forward measures important to public health. In our pre- scription department we have assembled the im- portant drugs from all over the world. These medic- inal supplies represent the community’s arsenal against disease. Bring your prescriptions to us for HALL'S PHARMACY Delivery Service isd eo SHAVERTOWN BABY TALK . Blackie! . what manners! I know that PURVIN’S MILK is delicious and taste tempting! For Regular Delivery in : . 49 . by PURVIN But let's get an even start. the Back Mountain Area—Call Wilkes-Barre 2-8151—Collect msm, x [ Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Drabick PAGE FIVE ie Lehman Mrs. Gordon Dawe, Phone 362-R-10 distinc have moved to Lake Ariel, where Mr. Drabick has accepted a posi- tion as agricultural teacher in the high school. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Dawe and Billie have just returned from a trip to Newport News, Va. and Nag’s Head, N. C. Miss Barbara Gregory of Kings- ton spent last weekend with Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Simms. Mr. and Mrs. Ornan Lamb have just spent a week in Atlantic City. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Rood re- cently visited Luray, Va. and toured the Skyline Drive. Miss Blanche Taylor is recover- ing at her home from an appen- dectomy. Miss Priscilla Abbott is spend- ing a week with her parents, Rev. and Mrs. F. K. Abbott before re- turning to Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College. CA RR RS RR. a, EVANS DRUG STORE PRESENTS Wo , Big Value POCKET WATCH Tested for accuracy, unbreakable crystal $1.98 * | ALARM CLOCK Dependable 40-hr. Alarm Movement $1.98 * GUARANTEED Certified FEVER ‘Thermometer Will Be Replaced For Any Cause Except Breakage if om 98¢ * PENCIL BOX With Ruler, Crayons, Sharpener, Pen Holder. 25¢ * CANDY Over 60 Kinds In 1 Bags and Boxes To Choose From. 5c to $3.20 P.S. All Guarantees backed by Evans Drug Store SHAVERTOWN Phone 222