The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, July 24, 1953, Image 9

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This is the oil painting of the
Blue Room at his daughter's Holly
Hill Farm in Dauphin County that
won an award for Wesley Steelman
This water color of a moss
covered tree and antebellum home
at Greenwoods, Louisiana, won con-
siderable praise from art critics at
CHURCH NEWS
ALDERSON - NOXEN
In the Methodist Churches of Ald-
erson-Noxen Charge on Sunday,
services with the pastor preaching
will be held as follows: Kunkle
Church service, 9, Sunday School,
10; Noxen Church service, 10,
Sunday School, 11; Alderson Sun-
day School, 10:15, Alderson Church
service, 11:15; Ruggles Sunday
School, 9:30, Ruggles Church ser-
vice, 7:30 PM.
Members of Kunkle and Ruggles
Churches are asked to note the
change in the hour of services.
On Friday evening, July 31 at 8,
Rev. J. S. Pemberton of Dorrance-
ton Methodist Church will speak on
his recent trip to the Holy Land,
in Alderson Methodist Church.
Everyone is welcome,
The annual Tea of Kunkle WSCS
with Mrs. Conrad as Reader will be
Thursday afternoon, August 13.
The annual Flower Show of Al-
derson Methodist Church will be
held Wednesday, August 19.
of Trucksville at the National Ama-
teur Art Festival in New York
City.
Greenwoods, Louisiana
the National Amateur Art Festival.
They were especially impressed
with the fine work on the tree. Mr.
Steelman photographed the scene
DALLAS FREE METHODIST
Rev. Joseph Sproule, Pastor
Due to the closoing sessions of
Camp Meeting scheduled for Sun-
day afternoon and’ evening, there
will be no class meeting at night.
Sunday 'School at 10 AM and
preaching at 11 will be held as
usual.
Prayer meeting will start again
Tuesday evening at 7:30.
PRINCE OF PEACE
Rev. William McClelland, Jr.
Saturday, July 25th: The Couples
Club will have a picnic at Phil-
NORTHEAST
Oil Service Co.
FUEL
OIL
Phone Dallas
4-3343
mont, Pa., on
Marble top tables,
blanket chest, butler’s
Terms—Cash.
Victorian furniture, cof-
desk, cherry drop-leaf
N\
Haase, owner
Wesley A. Steelman, Lehigh
Street, Trucksville, was among 105
amateur artists selected as award
winners in the National Amateur
69th Regiment Armory in New
The award winning paintings, one
a water color and the other an oil,
are reproduced here.
The Festival was jointly spon-
sored by the Amateur Artists As-
sociation of America and American
Art Magazine.
Mr. Steelman, who is a salesman
for Milprint, Inc., received Certifi-
cates of Award for both of his pic-
tures.
More than 1,000 paintings, prints
and drawings submitted by amateur
artists from every State in the
Union were on exhibition during the
Festival. Each of the award win-
ners received individual criticism
of his prize winning entries from
a jury composed of noted artists.
Gold, silver and bronze medals
as well as certificates of merit went
in color while on a return trip from
Honduras and Cuba and later did
the watercolor at his home.
lips (Creek. Each family is to bring
supper and meet at the Church at
1:30 p.m.
Sunday, 7:30 a.m.: Holy Com-
munion. 9:30, Morning Prayer and
Sermon.
Wednesday, 8 p.m.: Boys choir
rehearsal.
Read The Post Classified
to the winners. All prize-winning
entries will go on a nation-wide
tour of exhibitions in schools and
libraries.
Mr. Steelman has been painting
since 1949. “I always wanted to
paint”, he stated, ‘“so when the
family gave me a box of oils on
my birthday in March of that year,
I started in”.
Among his first efforts were four
murals on the walls of his home
on James Street, Kingston. They
depicted the four seasons in a
woodland theme.
About the same year his wife
started to paint, taking lessons from
Mrs. Julia Ashley.
Mr. Steelman entered his first
painting in an exhibition last year
in the Art News Show in New
York City.
Lassie and Freddy
At Loyalville Farm
Kenneth Kocher reports that the
Holstein calf, Lassie, which he pur-
chased at the Library Auction, is
a beauty and is enjoying all the
comforts of his farm .at Loyalville
where she is on a six-weeks Purina
Feeding program supplied by James
Huston Feed Service of Fernbrook.
The calf, given to the Auction
by Alfred Bronson’s Hill Top Farm,
was one of two animals which he
purchased at the Auction. The
other a ram, named Freddy, given
by Henry Pool, is a companion of
Lassie at Loyalville.
“This is the first livestock we've
put on the farm”, says Mrs. Kocher,
“and we're going to keep them
both. We're delighted with Lassie.”
=
STATE POLICE SAY:
Always be on the alert. Ac-
cidents seldom happen when
the operator expects trouble.
Postoffice Gets
New Equipment
(Continued from Page One)
tures of the new screen line will
be the drop letter slot cases. The
slots are of brass trim construc-
tion and will be for air mail, out-
of-town mail, local mail, parcels
Polacky has emphasized that if pa-
trons use the drop letter slots prop-
erly it will greatly facilitate the
dispatch of mail.
The Name That Means . . .
Sympathetic
Aid in Need
Let us help you bear the
burden of the loss of some-
one close. Our staff is
noted for discreet -effici-
ency.
GLOVA
FUNERAL HOME
Phone Harveys Lake 9-3044
If no answer Call 9-6000
TELEVISION
® SUN DECKS
1953
Schedule Of Mails
In this connection he said, many
patrons are not acquainted with
the schedule of mails. On weekdays,
the first mail arrives from Wilkes-
Barre at 7:30 AM. The first mail
dispatched goes out to WilkesBarre
at 11 AM. The next arriving mail
is from Wilkes-Barre at 3:30 [P.M.,
and 'the final mail dispatched to
Wilkes-Barre leaves the office at
5 P.M. All outgoing mail should be
in the office a half hour before
it is dispatched in order to give
employees sufficient time to pre-
pare it. The truck which brings
the mail from Wilkes-Barre pro-
ceeds from Dallas to Noxen which
is the end of the route, and all
mail for that area should be in the
office a half hour before the times
listed ‘above for the arrival of mail
from Wilkes-Barre. No mail is re-
ceived zt the Dallas office on Sun-
days, but mail is dispatched for
‘Wilkes-Barre at 4 P.M.
Other Equipment
Mr. Polacky said rural carriers
will be delighted with the three
new carrier cases containing 208
separations each, in comparison
with the old cases which contained
100 separations each. Each separa-
tion takes care of the mail of two
families. Heretofore carriers have
had to use pasteboard boxes and
makeshift material available to
help them sort the mail. The old
carrier cases will now be shipped to
some smaller postoffice,
Mr. Polacky said that mail de-
livery on rural routes could still
be greatly facilitated, especially at
‘Christmas, and during periods when
substitute carriers and green help
are being employed, if rural box
holders would see ho it that their
names are painted on their boxes.
“Often”, he said, “unfamiliar car-
riers are unable to leave mail in
unmarked boxes or are delayed
with the distribution of their other
mail by trying to find the proper
boxes.
Probably of most interest to pa-
trons who will benefit by street
delivery of mail are two big city
carrier cases containing 260 sepa-
rations each. Mr, Polacky stated
that he has notified ‘the Assistant
Postmaster General in charge of
Postoffice Quarters of the arrival
of this equipment. He expects to
receive shortly from the Civil Ser-
vice Department the list of men
eligible for the two carrier jobs.
Appointments will then be made
and carrier service, he believes,
FARMERS
Night Market
Pierce Street
KINGSTON
FRESH PICKED CORN
and TOMATOES
RASPBERRIES CARROTS
PEAS
FLOWERS — JELLIES
BAKED GOODS
POULTRY eo EGGS
Open at 5:30 p.m.
MON., WED. and FRI.
The Pick
of the Crop
HERE'S WHERE
THE BARGAINS ARE
DALLAS
OUTDOOR
THEATRE
Children under 12 — Free
2 Shows Nightly
Starting at Dusk
FRIDAY
“Son Of Ali Baba”
Technicolor
Tony Curtis, Piper Laurie
“Together again, in love again”
News & Cartoons
SATURDAY
“Operation Pacific”
John Wayne, Patricia Neal
“John’s terrific as the skipper of
the submarine that threw an un-
derwater uppercut for Uncle
Sam”
News & Cartoons
SUNDAY & MONDAY
“Never Wave
At A Wace”
Rosalind Russell, Paul Douglas
“A laugh-loaded spree that wins
all the medals for hilarity”
News & Cartoons
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
fllast Of The
Comanches”
Broderick Crawford,
Barbara Hale
“They willed their way through
a wall of hate that was 10,000
Comanches deep”
News & Cartoons
THURSDAY
“Qutpost In Malaya”
Claudette Colbert, Jack Hawkins
“High adventure at the end of
the earth”
News & Cartoons
will start within a month.
After their appointment, there
will be only a limited number of
patrons served at ‘the general de-
livery window at the Postoffice. Mr.
Polacky urged all street delivery
patrons to notify their correspond-
ents of their correct street and
house number as these will have
to appear on all mail addressed
to them. At the same time he
urged all former patrons on Raral
Route 4 which was discontinued
months ago, to advise their cor-
respondents of their proper Rural
Route number. “All of these may
appear to be small matters”, he
said, “but their total makes con-
siderable difference in the quick
dispatch of the mails.”
To top off the list of new equip-
ment that will promote greater
efficiency and create a more mod-
ern appearance at the office are
a new dumping and stamping table
for the preparation of Parcel Post;
four mew attractive bulletin boards
for the lobby and two new lobby
desks,
“It looks at last”, said a patron
who watched postal employees
sweat as they unloaded the big
van, ‘as though the Postoffice De-
partment has recognized ‘that this
is a great and growing commun-
ity and deserves the best in
equipment and housing for the ef-
ficient dispatch of the mails.”
Slar-Lile
DRIVE-IN |
TUNKHANNOCK, PA.
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
DOUBLE FEATURE
“The Battle Of
Apache Pass”
technicolor
Starring Jeff Chandler
PLUS
“Flat Top”
in color
Sterling Hayden,
Richard Carlson
SUNDAY & MONDAY
DOUBLE FEATURE
“Belles On
Their Toes”
technicolor
Jeanne Crain; Myrna Loy,
Debra Paget
PLUS
“Fort Osage”
in color
starring Rod Cameron
TUESDAY
DOUBLE FEATURE
“Louisiana Hayride”
with Judy Canova
PLUS
“Hoedown”
with Eddy Arnold, the
Tennessee Plowboy
WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY
“Bob & Sally”
Cartoons & Comedy
PAGE NINE
HIMMLER
THEATRE
Dallas, Pa.
TODAY & TOMORROW
“Never Let Me Go”
with 2
Clark Gable, Gene Tierney
also Cartoon & News
MONDAY & TUESDAY
“Down Among
(In Technicolor)
with
Wm. Lundigan, Mitzi Gaynor
also Cartoon
WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY
“Girl Who Had
Everything”
with Elizabeth Taylor
also Short, Novelty and Cartoon
SANDY BEACH
Drive-In Theatre
HARVEYS LAKE, Penna.
FRIDAY
“Call of the Wild”
Clark Gable, Loretta Young
“Jack London's saga of the
lawless Yukon with the
incomparable Gable”
News & Cartoon
SATURDAY
“Sirocco”
Humphrey Bogart, Marta Toren
Lee Cobb
“Destiny in a low-cut gown
waits for Bogart beyond
Casablanca”
News & Cartoons
SUNDAY & MONDAY
“Trouble Along
The Way”
John Wayne, Sherry Jackson
‘His fistiest, lustiest,
laughin’est hit ever”
News & Cartoons
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
“Titanic”
Clifton Webb, Barbara Stanwyck
Thelma Ritter
“Titanic emotion rocks the
screen”
News & Cartoons
THURSDAY
“Lorna Doone”
technicolor
Barbara Hale, Richard Greene
“Ruthless in anger,
reckless in love”
News & Cartoon
2 SHOWS NIGHTLY 2
9 PM. and 11 P.M.
N
7
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WYOMING
E