The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, May 02, 1952, Image 11

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    SRS
'hannock. Mrs.
and a delegation of girls were in
‘attendance at this rally. Dr.
SA
Y News
:
The YMCA’s Northeast District
Hi-Y and Tri Hi-Y Conference was
held at the Tunkhannock High
School Monday, April 28. The Back
Mountain YMCA was represented
by nine members of our ‘Y’ clubs.
They were: Judy Evan, June Ladu-
mus, Eunice Traver, Esther Gailey,
Marilyn Traver, Janet Bean, and
Patsy Jones from the Lake-Noxen
Jr. Tri Hi-Y Club and Charles
James from the Westmoreland Hi-
Y club. Also in attendance were
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Garinger and
John E. Donovan.
Westmoreland Hi-Y Club at its
last meeting viewed ‘The Chal-
lenge”; a film on civil liberties. The
discussions of this club during May
will be on narcotics.
Teen Council of [Shavertown held
a ‘farmer dance last week at its
Thursday evening session at the
‘Y’ headquarters building. An en-
thusiastic crowd enjoyed the eve-
ning. “Rod” McKenzie, Secretary of
North Branch YMCA, called the
dances.
At a recent meeting of ‘the Lake-
‘Noxen Jr. HitY Club, James Stelt-
er, Lew Coumsen, and John Par-
ry presented a wrestling demon-
‘stration. These men are the coach
and members of the wrestling
team from Forty Fort High School.
Lake-Noxen Jr. Hi-Y Club re-
ceived honorable mention as one
of the outstanding clubs in North-
‘eastern Pennsylvania at the Dis-
trict YMCA Rally held at Tunk-
Mildred Garinger
John
R. Hart, Rector of Washington Me-
morial Chapel, Valley Forge, was
the main speaker on this occasion.
John E. Donovan, acting Back
Mountain ‘Y’ Secretary, was in
charge of the delegation.
Lake Board Meeting
Official Board of ‘Alderson Metho-
dist Church met at the parsonage
Monday evening. Present were Mr.
and Mrs. Warren Dennis, Mr. and
Mrs. Fuller Ashton, Mr. and Mrs.
Gilbert Carpenter, Mrs. Morrison
Witter, Mrs. Albert Adams, Mrs.
‘Albert Armitage, Alan Kistler, El-
‘mer Wyant, Mrs. William Deets,
Mrs. Fred Swanson, Mrs. Harry Al-
len and Rev. Ruth Underwood.
SAFETY VALVE
IT’S AN EYE-SORE
Dear Editor:
Considering the condition of the
Dallas Borough Building, it is no
wonder that we get out a light vote
in the community.
Is there any reason why elections
should mot be carried out in a pub-
lic school building in Dallas, as in
many communities in Wyoming Val-
ley ?
My guess is fthat many more
women would turn out to exercise
the franchise if they were not afraid
to put weight on those ramshackle
steps.
This is an expanding community.
Our Borough Building and our Post-
office do mothing to sell newcomers
on the [beauties of Dallas.
Wie have beautiful hills and wval-
leys. Our highways are increasingly
good. We should have civic pride
enough to soberly assay our assets
and our liabilities and do something
about our eye-sores.
Mrs. Pillar to Post
Trucksville PTA
To Elect Officers
Trucksville PTA will hold its last
meeting of the year Monday night
at 8 at Trucksville Grade School.
There will be nomination and
election of officers, and the pro-
gram will include a sound record-
ing “Chronicle of the War and
Years of Crisis” with authentic
voices and narrated by Edward R.
Marrow.
Teachers will be in their home
rooms for conferences with parents
from 7:30 to 8.
Sweet Valley Firemen
Plan Pumping Contest
An antique water pumper, dat-
ing around 1850, has been pur-
chased by the Sweet Valley Fire
Company and will be featured in
a contest between Back Mountain
Fire Companies at the Memorial
Day parade.
Already floats have been entered
by most Back Mountain business
concerns and the Lehman and
Huntington Mills bands have signed
up. :
Folks are reminded that all en-
tries must be in the hands of the
firemen by May 15.
. « of course, it's electric!
ADD IT UP...
Westinghouse Automatic Upright Cleaner (Reg. Price) $72.95
Westinghouse Motor-Driven Hand Vac (Reg. Price)
SALE! SALE! SALE!
LIMITED QUANTITY
Westinghouse
DE LUXE AUTOMATIC CLEANER
WITH TOSS-AWAY* BAG
Plus this
HANDY HAND VAC
. $25.95
Yotal $98.90
Here is a limited time, Special Price Combination:
The Westinghouse Custom Automatic Upright
the newest
Lake May Queen
THE POST, FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1952
PAGE ELEVEN
"FARM TOPICS
Hedge Is Useful-——A hedge is
useful around farms and houses.
You can separate properties, or
make a division between home
grounds and the farm fields. A. O.
Rasmussen, Penn State extension
ornamental horticulturist, urges
selection of hedge plants that are
nardy. The type of hedge wanted
will determine the kind of plants
chosen.
Plan Before Planting—In home
gardening, planning is just as im-
i | portant as planting. In planning
Alice Eppley
Lady In Waiting
Roberta Lord
LakeNoxen May Queen, Alice
Eppley, will be crowned May 14 at
"11 AM. on the high school grounds,
as the main feature in a day de-
voted to recreation and extra-cur-
ricular activity.
Roberta Lee Lord, so close a
runner-up that several, votes of the
high school student body had to be
taken, will be Lady in Waiting.
The two seniors are co-presidents
of the Senior Class.
Grades 1-12 will join in ithe pro-
gram, with each grade assigned a
particular dance or game. Girls of
the senior class will act as the
Queen’s attendants,
Movies will be shown to the lower
grades during the afternoon, and
there will be a baseball game with
Lehman.
Alice is daughter of Mrs. Maude
Eppley, Harveys Lake. ‘Senior year
activities include: Associate editor:
ship of Yearbook; manager of girls’
basketball team; ico-manger of mag-,
azine campaign; secretary of Dra-
matic Club; band membership
chorus: membership; played on soft-
ball team; voting delegate to FFA
convention.
She was class president of grades
8 and 9, class secretary grade 7.
Roberta is daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Lord, Noxen, and has
just completed the one ‘year she
has spent In ‘the joint school at
Lake. Senior activities include: sec-
retary of Student Council member-
ship in Dramatic Club, girls chorus,
band; co-manager of magazine
campaign; associate editor Lake-
what to plant, consider the likes
and dislikes of the family as well as
the nutrition vatues of the wvege-
tables to be planted.
[Control Tulip Blight—Ferbam
| sprays have given excellent control
of botryis blight on tulips. Penn
State exetension plant pathologists
suggest the first application when
new growth is 3 to 5 inc hes thigh,
followed by two sprays at 7 to 10-
day intervals. Follow carefully direc-
tions for use of the spray.
Improve Roadside Stand—Your
roadside market is your showcase.
Herbert MdFeely, Penn [State exten-
sion. marketing specialist, urges
cleaning up trash, painting the
stand, providing a hardsurfaced
parking space, and planting flower
beds or borders.
Apply Hardwood Ashes—Hard-
wood ashes from (he fireplace can
be sifted and placed around delphin-
iums, roses, lilacs, and similar plants.
Do not apply more than la half-inch
thick. [Cultivate lightly after appli-
cation and water thoroughly.
Need Organic Matter—Garden
soils need plenty of organic matter
for the production of high-quality
vegetables. Plow down sod, manure,
straw, corn fodder, and other vege-
table matter.
Billy Meeker Has
Rheumatic Fever
Billy Meeker, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William Meeker, Beaumont, is home
from General Hospital, where he
was entered as a patient on Easter
Monday, coming home later in the
week after cardiographs and tests.
Billy, eight and a half, will be in
bed at home for somes time, but
rheumatic fever these days results
in no permanent injury if the
patient is kept quiet, so Billy is
one of the lucky ones.
Mrs, Edward MadDougal, third
grade teacher at Beaumont, drops in
to visit and ito advise on moderate
amounts of homework. Classmates
make colored cards for Billy, and
cub scouts come to call.
Township Alumni Plan
Banquet For May 10
Dallas-Franklin Township Alumni
Banquet will be held at ‘the school
on May 10, with Edward Lummley
as chairman.
Gerald Snyder, former head of
the Agriculture Department, mow
located in York County, will be
the main speaker. Mr. Snyder left
Dallas Township schools in 1942.
Noxen year book; assistant leader
of Brownie Troop 163, Noxen; all
outdoor sports.
She was class president for grades
9,10, and 11 at Noxen.
Roast Turkey, dressing
Roast Chicken, dressing ..
Roast Duck, dressing
ENJOY SUNDAY DINNER AT THE
“Castle”
Owned and Operated by
Mr. and Mrs. Gus Bitsakos
~ who were proprietors of
THE BLUE SHUTTERS, ELMHURST, PA.
for 15 years
DINNERS
Choice of one: Fresh Fruit Cup or Tomato Juice
ls Fresh Jumbo Shrimp Cocktail ............ .90 extra
Clams On The Half Shell ........_... .50 extra
Home Made Soup Of The Day
Hearts of. Celery, Spring Green Onions, Radishes
Cottage Cheese, Saltines, Home Made Preserves
ENTREES
Audrey Lutz Drowns
In Own Back Yard
Audrey Lutz, two years old,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Lutz, Orange, was drowned in a
water-filled excavation for a new
outbuilding Saturday afternoon.
Children of the four families liv-
ing in the two neighboring houses
were playing together Saturday
afternoon, after the rain had par-
tially stopped falling there had
been a game of jumping over the
water, with children getting a run-
ning start from the clay embank-
ment and landing on the lower
side of the deep hole.
Audrey, denied a turn while the
big children were engaged, climbed
the bank when they left ‘and tried
to jump. Footmarks showed where
she had slipped, after the sight of
a small hand clutching the bank
led to discovery.
The tragedy was not discovered
until it was too late, John Fowler
phoned for the local fire depart-
ment and to West Wyoming for a
crew with resuscitator. Dr. Harry
G. Gallagher was summoned from
Dallas. John Chappell, Shavertown,
fishing in the neighborhood, started
artificial respiration, alternating
with the child’s father, until the
resuscitator crew arrived. Hope was
abandoned after two hours.
Audrey was buried Tuesday
afternoon in Memorial Shrine Ce-
metery, following services con-
ducted from the home by Rev. Rob-
ert Wood.
Survivors are the parents, two
sisters, Linda Jean and Rose Mary;
paternal grandmother, Mrs. Bertie
Lutz, Easton; and maternal grand-
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wil-
liams, Orange.
Six Local Students
Win State Ratings
Four student musicians from Back
Mountain schools, two from Wiest-
moreland wand two from Dallas-
Franklin Township, and two ompeti-
tors in English, won ratings at Har-
risbrg in the. Pennsylvania [State
Forensic and Music League finals.
Ray Harleman, Westmoreland, in
a field of seven, got a rating of
Superior with his baritone horn.
Three matings of Excellent were
given: Robert Stair, Dallas-Franklin,
with his Concerto in A Major, on
the trombone; Louise Kann, West-
moreland, on the piano; and Rose-
mary Bukeavich, also of Westmore-
land, with a humorous oration.
Marilyn Mosier, Dallas-Franklin,
was rated Good on the clarinet;
David Viann Fair in Original Oration,
in a field of ten where no Superiors
or Excellents were awarded.
Lake-Noxen Seniors
Tour Washington, D. C.
Thirty-five seniors of Lake-Noxen
Township schools left Monday morn-
ing at 6 in a special Martz bus for
the annual trip to Washington, re-
turning late last might after four
days of sight-seeing.
They were accompanied by Robert
Belles, high school principal, and
Betsy Sullivan, commercial head.
The itinerary included a visit to
Mt. Vernon.
Two things you can do if
the car balks:
1. Get it overhauled and
put in tip-top shape . .
make a personal loan to
pay for it so you can
spread the cost over a
year.
2. Buy a new car and
save on financing.
Inquire about our Auto-
mobile Loans.
i
the (Club members and their friends
on the importance of education on
our society. In his address titled
“Always in Wonderland”, Dr. (Clark
pointed out the great need for
women in the field of education as
in all other realms of living.
Miss Mary Parker, President of
the [Scranton Wilson College Club,
presided, and Mrs, Richard Jones,
President of the Wilkes-Barre Wil-
son College IClub, spoke in behalf of
the Wilkes-Barre (Club.
CANCER'S DANGER SIGNALS -
Wilson Club Hears
Dr. Herbert Clark
Dr. Herbert A. Clark, head of the
Education Department of Wilson
College, was guest of honor at a
dinner given by the Wilkes-Barre
ton Wilson [College Club, at the
Wilson College Club and the ‘Scran-
Century Club in Scranton on.Friday
evening.
At this time, Dr. [Clark spoke to
CA
ANY SORE THAT DOES NOT HEAL
A LUMP OR THICKENING
IN THE BREAST OR ELSEWHERE
UNUSUAL BLEEDING OR DISCHARGE
ANY CHANGE IN WART OR MOLE S@
PERSISTENT INDIGESTION OR
DIFFICULTY IN SWALLOWING
PERSISTENT HOARSENESS OR COUGH
ANY CHANGE IN
NORMAL BOWEL HABITS
TODAY TO THE CANCER CRUSADE
OF THE AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY
GIVE
MINUET DOLL
Mother's Day ‘9
Sunday Two i i) delicious chocolates
: ! and a lovely dol Vg
& mn + rou sox 3.95 7
PEC
AMERICAN CUSTOM
CHOCOLATES
Qur finest chocolates; always 2. 0 0 % 21h py
the perfect gift 1 LB. BOX
NF IRST LADY s
Assorted rough-dipped milk chocofates
for the “first lady” in your life.
1 POUND BOX 2.00
FLORAL DELIGHT
Luscious assorted chocolates in a 2 2 5
1 POUND ®
Mother's Day gift box.
MY OWN SPECIAL SELECTION
A choice assortment of chocolates
Dy a master candy maker, Nymer Neal.
rnd. 50 700
Kitchen Fresh
COTTAGE CHOCOLATES
Everyone's favorite; fresh from 2 1b, box
Nymer Neal's kitchens. 1 LB. BOX 10 -
Vacuum Cleaner is the latest model . . .
and finest for your cleaning ease. Automatic Nozzle
adjusts to the right height, regardless of rug thickness.
The Self-Adjusting Handle automatically adjusts to
storage, normal or low cleaning levels. With the
Toss-Away Bag feature your hands never touch
dirt; there are no messy bags to empty. As a PLUS
.to all this, you also get the Hand Vac with its power-
ful, motor-driven brush. It’s ideal for cleaning up-
Roast Prime Ribs of Beef .............
Roast Leg of Lamb, Mint Jelly
Roast Fresh Ham with Apple Sauce ............
Grilled Virginia Ham Steak, Pineapple Ring .
Two - Broiled Lamb Chops, Mint Jelly ............_.
Two - Broiled Pork Chops, Apple Sauce ......
Calves Liver with Bacon
Broiled T-Bone Steak ...........
Broiled Delmonico Steak
Broiled Lobster Tail, Drawn Butter _.
Broiled HalibutSteak
Open Friday
Afternoons Until
5 P. M. For Your
Convenience
Celeste Candy
“STUFT FRUITS”
A treasure hox of hard fruit
FRUITS and NUTS
An assortment of choice
GOLDEN TOKEN
A token of remembrance worthy
furni tair carpets, tt andor Sil] Bree A aon f your deep affection. fecti Neal.
a res ST BE ae on Ee
Save over $23.00 NOW. Whipped Creamy Potatoes or French Fries 1%2 Pound Box . . . 3.50 . .
Fresh Vegetables Of The Day
Banana Fritters with Fresh Fruit Sauce
Green Salad
Coffee Milk
*Trade Mark
5
Dessert Tea
You cAN BE SURE...iF ws Westinghouse -
“%e KINGSTON
NATIONAL BANK
AT KINGSTON CORNERS
Ask for our Special Children’s Menu
USE YOUR CREDIT
Flannigan Furniture
Main St.
Evans Drug Store
The Rexall Store
Where Thousands Of Prescriptions Are Filled
SHAVERTOWNPHONE 222
Dinners and A LA Carte every day — Special Sea Foods
“THE CASTLE”
Dallas-Harveys Lake Highway Phone HL 3647 ;
Member Federal Deposit Insuranci
Corporations
Dallas
Buy Back Mountain