~ 1 |¥ F { PAGE EIGHT \ reesnienms Bake Sale Tomorrow Junior Womans Club will hold a bake sale tomorrow at Boyd White's, beginning at 10 AM. Mrs. Clyde Brace and Mrs. Charles Ni- cols are co-chairmen. Silver Leaf To Meet Hostesses for Tuesday evening's meeting of Silver Leaf Club, Kun- kle, will be Mrs. Ralph Ashburner, Mrs. Frank Boston, and Mrs. Rus- sell Miers. For the best IN DRY CLEANING THINK HECK PHONE H. L. 4256 Men's Shirts Laundered i Service. Nursery for THE POST, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1952 s News of the Churches THE DALLAS METHODIST Sunday, 10:00 Sunday School. International Lesson Topic, How Can We Follow Christ in Our 1 Homes? Scripture- Luke, 10:38-42; John 11:1-5, 11:00 Morning Worship. The Reverend George M, Bell, D. D., for- merly Superintendent of the Wilkes-Barre District of the Metho- dist Church, and pastor of leading churches in the Wyoming Confer- ence, will be the guest preacher. 6:30 Methodist Youth Fellow- ship. Mrs, Raymond E. Kuhnert will be discussion counselor. Thursday, 4:15 Junior Choir; 6:30, Youth Choir; 8:00, Senior Choir. Friday, Members of the Dallas Methodist Religious Reading Club are requested to rotate books on this date. SHAVERTOWN METHODIST Sunday, 9:45, Sunday School for all ages. 11:00, Morning Worship pre-cshool | children. 6:30 P. M.,, Methodist Youth Fel- lowship, James Edwards will speak on, “Business and Christianity.” Jean Malkemes will lead devo- PURCELL OIL SERVICE FUEL OIL Dallas 9001-R-16 GAY For Insurance Economical operation and careful selection of risks keep Farm Bureau auto insurance rates low — you get maximum protection for less money. Before you buy or renew, check with the Farm Bureau insurance representa- tive in your community. More than a million city and rural drivers insured. Call — 30 Lake St. DALLAS Phone 468-R-7 wilh, 100 FARM BUREAU MUTUAL - AUTOMOBILE LLL RG) TV HOME OFFICE: » AAA LES OHIO tions. Monday, 3:30—Brownies, 105 meets in Social Rooms. Tuesday, 7:30, Meeting of the Men’s Club in the Chapel Room. All men of the Church are invited. 7:30, Boy ‘Scouts, Troop 231. Wednesday, 3:30, Girl Scouts, Troop 66; 7:00, Girl Scouts, Troop 75; 8:00, Meeting of the Budget Committee in the Chapel Room. Thursday, 6:30, Junior Choir Re- hearsal; 7:15, Chancel Choir Re- hearsal; 7:45, Senior Choir Re- hearsal; 7:30, Meeting of the Nom- inating Committee in the Chapel Room. PRINCE OF PEACE Troop Friday, Teacher's meeting at the home of the Rector. Sunday, 8, Men’s Corporate Com- munion and Breakfast. ‘What our Laymen are Doing.” Sunday, 10, Sunday School; 11, 18:30 PM, Lou Jordan, Morning Prayer and Sermon; 8 PM, , Couple’s Club Meeting. The Speaker 'will be a returned Air Force Offi- cer from the Battle in Korea. Re- freshments. All persons most cor- dially invited. Monday, 7:30 PM, Boy Scouts; assistant chief executive of Wyoming Valley Boy Scout Council will present the charter to the Troop for its second year in scouting. Tuesday, 8 PM, The Women’s Auxiliary will meet in the Parish dall, The Rector will speak on the “Drama of Worship”. Friday, Young Couple’s Club will present a square dance for 35 Air- men from the 648th A.C. & W. sta- tion at Benton. Hostesses are girls irom the Back Mountain Area. Dal- ias Township School has granted che use. of its gymnasium for the entertainment of the airmen. Al Diffenderfer will be the caller and oring his band from Kingston. The couple’s Club will serve refresh- ments between ‘‘squares’’. LOYALVILLE METHODIST Sunday services will include preaching at 8:30 by Rev, B. Ever- ett Lord, and Church School at 9:30. Banta Back On Duty At Shavertown Light Louis Banta, Kingston Township Police officer, resumed duty at Shavertown traffic light, Monday morning, after an absence of sev- eral weeks, Banta's left wrist was broken in a fall on the ice while helping a motorist get his car out of a ditch the first day of doe season, Friday, December 14. Charles Metzger, injured two days later and a patient at Nesbitt Hos- pital for two weeks, has been back on duty for some time. I. 'R. Elston handled traffic at Center Street intersection in the absence of regular officers, but was taken sick just before Banta came back on duty. Phone Dallas 271-R-2 CALL US FOR . . . Blue Stone, Fill, Red Ash, Cinders, Stove Wood, Fireplace Logs or GENERAL ASHES and GARBAGE COLLECTED WEEKLY for immediate delivery of GLEN ALDEN COAL (Nut, Stove, Buck, Rice) Ask for “Norti” or “Billy”! HAULING BERTI Franklin St., Dallas & SON Phone 277-R-2 It Will Pay YOU To See Our Selection Of New GAS RANGES At These Reduced Prices $109.00 $119.00 | COMBINATION STOVE | $159.50 Harold Ash Plumbing - Heating - Bottled Gas : Phone 409-R—Shavertown Rev. Robert Webster Is Host To Two Hundred At Housewarming ter, Mrs. Lawrence Richards and niece Nancy Lou of Clarks Summit were hosts at a very lovely house- warming party at the newly reno- vated parsonage in Trucksville on January 27. Mrs. C. S. Heminway assisted them. The tea table was attractive with center piece of snapdragons and chrysanthemums and bouquets of spring flowers were effectively used throughout the house. Past presidents of Reynolds Bible (Class and W.S.C.S. poured. Present were: Mrs, Sarah Strau- ser, Mrs. Carl B. Smith, Mrs. Ber- tha Evans, Janet Evans, Mrs. Bur- dette Crane, Mrs, Lorry Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Long, R. G. Greenwood, Mrs. Voight Long, Mrs. William Shoemaker, Mrs. Robert Shoemaker, David Schooley, Mrs. John Kennan, Mrs. Wallace Perrin, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Lloyd, Ivy Pet- thick, Mr. and Mrs, H. A. Stahl- muller, Mr, and Mrs. S. B. Dilcer, Samuel Dilcer, Mr, and Mrs. Nor- man Stookey, Mr. and Mrs. Neual Kester. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson Coolbaugh, Rev. and Mrs. R. W. Lyon, Bertha Sutliff, Blanche Mae Atherholt, Mr. and Mrs, R. Lewis, Mrs, George Bonning, Mrs. E. S. Jenkins, Jim Trowbridge, Ella Roushey, Ruth Boston, Marion Courtright, Mr. and Mrs, Asher Weiss, Mrs. R, D. Shep- herd, Loretta Olver, Eva McGuire, Claire Parker, Mrs. George Parker. Elise K. Bugbee, Mrs. Addison Woolbert, Ruth Merrel, Lenora Wardan, Mrs, George Bessmer, Mrs. William Rhodes, Mr. and Mrs. Ray- mond Dymond, J. H. DeWitt, Louise Blackman, William Blackman, James Case, Mr. and Mrs, Fred Case, Mr. and Mrs. Arch Woolbert, Mr. and Mrs. Levi Crews, Russell DeRemer, Mrs. W. E. Bennett, Ruth Bennett, Mr, and Mrs. James Dick, Mrs. J. B. Schopley, Julia Henning, Mrs. Cedric Griffiths. Mrs. Herbert Williams, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Reed, Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Scott, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Shannon, Mrs. Marlin Shannon, Mr, and Mrs. Don Sterling, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Johnson, Robert, Janet and Walter Phillips, Mrs. R. A. Finney, Mr. and Mrs. Lowther Brown, Lois, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Hutchison, Charles Hem- enway, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Gallag- her, Dick Harrison, Larry Brace, W. A, Cease, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Greenley, Mr. and Mrs, Bruce Long, Mr. and Mrs. D. Whitesell, Beverly Anderson, Donald Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Don Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Reese. Mr. and Mrs, S. Don Finney, Mrs. Jacob Harrison, William Hess, Mrs, Fred Polk, Mrs, Sam Daniels, Mrs. Elinor Gelsleichter, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Birth and Lola, Alberta Dan- iels, Emma Engler, Peggy Phillips, Mrs. Mame Dymond, Mrs, Ogden Palmer, Mrs. Elmer Coolbaugh, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Cashmark, Law- rence Richards, Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Hoskins, Mrs. J. Herbert: DeWitt, Carol Bennett, Mrs. Charles Palmer, Mr. and Mrs, S. Bennett, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hess, Mr. and Mrs. George Metz, Ralph Martin, Harry Martin, Norman -and Ruth Ping- strom, Louis Wilcox, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Jones, Mrs. W. F. Newberry, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Bullock, Mrs. | Roy Elliott, Mrs. W. M. Gregory, Margaret Dykman, Mrs. H. D. Turn, Betsy Turn, Gladys Fox, Esther E. Blase, Mrs, Franklin Hemenway, Mrs. Albert Blase, Ruth Turn Rey- Rev. Robert Webster and his sis-® Humphrey Owen Passes Away Musical Circles Mourn Tenor E. Humphrey Owen, 86, passed quietly away at his home on Leh- man Avenue Sunday morning, fol- lowing a brief illness. Members of the Welsh musical world, as well as close friends and neighbors of E, Humphrey Owen are mourning his passing. He had a magnificent tenor voice, cultivated over long years in London, where he was a member of the Choral So- ciety headed by Sir Henry Wood. After coming to the United States he was soloist at Grace Church and at St. Stephens. Totally Blind for nearly six years, Mr. Owen was nonetheless active, getting about Dallas with the aid of a cane, until the onset of cold weather. It “was October 4 that marked the sixty-second wedding anniver- sary of Mr. Owen and the bride he took in London in his youth, the former Emma Burden. The couple had lived in Dallas for twelve years. A printer by trade, he left his homeland of Caernarvon, Wales, when avenues of advancement closed, and came to the United States, where he founded the Cax- ton Press, now Llewellyn’s. A founding father of the Prince of Peach Church, Mr. Owen was honorary senior warden. He was a member of many Welsh circles, usually attending the annual Welsh outing at Irem Country Club. This was the first year he had missed for a number of years. He was a member of Kingston Lodge, 395, F&AM, Knights of Mal- ta, Keystone Consistory, Irem Temple and its Chanters. Mr. Owen is survived by his wi- dow; three daughters, Mrs. Jack Sewell and Mrs, Florence Lloyd, Kingston; and Mrs. J. M. Horner, Forty Fort, There are three grand- children, two great-grand daugh- ters, three great grandsons, and one great-grandniece. Private funeral services were conducted Tuesday from Doron- Hughes Funeral Home, Kingston, by Rev. William Williams, followed by interment in Denison Cemetery, Forty Fort. Annex Gets Gavel Frank Jackson, noting Miss Fran- ces Dorrance’s attempts to call the annual meeting of Back Mountain Library Association to order two weeks ago, went home and turned on his lathe a beautiful black walnut gavel for use of organizations using the Library Annex. The gavel has with it a black wal- nut base, protected by green felt, so that gavel pounding will not ruin the head table. nolds, Lena and Howard Ide, Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Zimmerman, Ruth Shortz, Alice Davis, David Davis, Mr. and Mrs, William Hewitt, Alvin Jones, Georgina Weidner, Mary Cease and Mrs. Albert Williams Jr. cee LaGrand Names Fund Chairman Lewis LeGrand, chairman of the Back Mountain Branch Town and Country YMCA announces the ap- pointment of the 1952 Finance Committee, with Ralph K. Garra- han, Goss Manor as Chairman. Working with Mr. Garrahan will be: Fred Anderson, Clyde Birth, George Dymond, Robert Fleming, Mitchell Jenkins, Orman K. Lamb and Mrs. Carrie Rood. The function of this committee is to set up the machinery for financing the work of the Back Mountain YMCA for the coming twelve months. School Attendance Rises Attendance figures i in area schools are on the upswing after several weeks of colds and virus infections. Westmoreland compares 87% at- tendance on Wednesday with 83% a week ago. Knute Rockne was born in Nor- way. PURCELL OIL SERVICE FUEL OIL Dallas 9001-R-16 For Prompt, Dependable PLUMBING Phone Dallas 426-R-16 HARRY A. PEIFFER| & HEATING ASK FOR STERLING AVE. DALLAS PRI with Pen-Fern Qil Co. Complete Automotive Service Fernbrook Comers PHONE DALLAS 79 ¢ Miller’s Auto Electric Specialists In Ignition Carburetion and Motor Tune-up Official Auto Inspec’ion AAA Member EAST DALLAS PHONE 39%4-R-7 i onroEnce| Regular service at our station means feeling SURE that your car will respond instantly to your every move . . . the positive protection you need during treacherous winter driving months. Drive up now — and regularly! STOP AT THE RED & WHITE CALSO SIGN TRY RPM DELO LUBRICATING OILS Snyder's Garage Specialized Lubrication ORANGE DIAL 7-258 ® ; Parker’s Service Station Body and Fender Repairs 28-hour Ambulanse Service Otnicial Auto Inspection AAA Member—Towing Service Open 7:30 a. m. to 11:00 p.m. MAIN HGWY, SHAVERTOWN PHONE 111-R-0 BABY TALK . I can bathe myself. ® ° .e ° . ° ° Cause I'm a big boy now! . by PURVIN Been drinking my yum- my PURVIN’'S MILK out of a glass lately. 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