An original air pageant writ- Se around the Christmas theme by ‘members of Powder and Wig, senior dramatic club, will be given at ium this n at 10:45. Faculty ] adviser i is David Williams. "Leading Parts are taken by Pris- cilla Moore, Roseanne Patner, Ellen Shively, David Pellam, Delmar Shupp, and Sylvia Kusick. Lewis Katchko, Thomas Schmidle and Ed- Irvin Kistler, Jean Meade, Janet Rogers, Lois Simon, Marily Welch, Nancy Dickson, Dorothy ‘Stash, and Nancy Dymond are Shepherds. Peggy Ann Maza, Ann Woicekow- ski, Bertha Dickson, and Barbara Vere sing as an angel quartet, and solo parts are taken by Sylvia Cusick, Lewis Katchko, Thomas Schmidle, and Edward Barnes. ~ Trumpet fanfares and duet are by ~ Spencer Hohlgren and Bill Weidner. Narrators are “Ila Lou Wilson, Joanne Lewin, Annjane Layaou, Susan Wileman, and Thais Rozelle. Stage work and lighting is by Joseph ~ Wroblewski, Irvin Kistler, Delmar Westinghouse XMAS a TREE { BULBS indoor & Outdoor o 16: 19: EVANS Drug Store Shupp and David Pellam. On the same program will be a play presented by Mimics and Mask Club, junior dramatic society, ‘‘Rein- deer on the Roof.” Taking part are Edward Barnes, Sandra Baird, Don- ald Bellas, Ruth Beagle, Jerry Lan- cio, Janet Gebler, Terry Evans, Jean Davis, Loretta Shonk, Fred Gansel, and Betty Mulcey, with di- rection by Edgar Hughes. Junior Library Club has sent a number of scrap-books to the Chil- dren’s Ward, General Hospital, using cut-outs of last year’s Christmas cards pasted on art paper. Book-! makers are Barbara and Patricia Hilbert, Jeanie Lee Gordon, Gloria and Myrtle Strohl and Judy Shan- non, working ‘under direction of Miss Emily Goldsmith. Art students who painted figures and background for the outdoor Nativity scene are Tom Schmidle, Priscilla Moore, Bardie Germick, Rosalind Keiper, Katherine Gavek, Anna Simon, Barbara Vavrek, and Mollie Carey. Mrs. Ferne Whitby, art supervisor, directed. ‘Shop work was done by Sheldon Mosier’s stu- dents. This is the first year such a project has been attempted. College stars, boys home from college who have graduated from Dallas-Franklin, will meet the Var- sity tonight in a preliminary game in the gymnasium. Two games will be played, at 7 and 8. In Memoriam In memory of Thomas Kingston who was killed on the Dallas high- way while on his way to band prac- tice at Dallas Borough High School December 23, 1947. In loving mem- ory—his mother, dad and sisters. Remembrance is the rose that blooms Eternal . . . year by year; Sweet mem’ries clinging to the heart; Keep loved ones ever near; Are links that ever bind | . have gone i i Highwats Shavertown} ahoud 3 ogress With those they leave behind! a 4 sh Dopcing., Singing % & ¢ Edwards and Noise Makers Bc a <<. i <i i ls Thomas Eiper Dies, Aged 33 Masonic Rites At Cemetery Thomas A. Eipper, one of the old- est men in the community, died at 93 in Hillerest Rest Home, Hunts- ville, Saturday afternoon. He had been a patient there since 1950, | year. Until he was ninety he had | been a well known figure about the | streets and in the old ‘Dallas Post- office. He was buried in Wardan Ceme- tery Tuesday afternoon. Rev. Wil- liam Heapps conducted funeral ser- vices at Williams Funeral Home. Kingston Lodge 395, F. & A. M,, conducted Masonic services at the cemetery, with John H. Lamoreux, acting Worshipful Master, assisted by Charles Wood, Ralph C. Hull, and William E. Evans: Pallbearers were members of the same lodge, of which Mr. Eipper was not only a charter member but the oldest living member. = They were George W. Johnson, Howard B. Williams, Howard Roat, William’ Troutman, Ralph R. Schmoll, and Ambrose W. Jones. When Mr. Eipper retired as book- keeper for Woodward Colliery, Glen Alden Coal Company, in 1923, he spent much of his time in Florida, returning during the summer. a number of years after returning to Pennsylvania for good, he lived with Robert Eipper in Orange. When Robert moved to New York, Mr. Eipper boarded around with various families, among them Mrs. William Cairl, Mrs. Walter Risley, Mrs. Marcus Ide, and Mrs. Susan Orr. It was while boarding at the home of Mrs. Henrietta Miller, Shaver- town, recently deceased, that he had a cataract operation, fairly successful. he entered the Huntsville rest home. In 1939 he was given a dinner and a fifty-year award from his Masonic lodge, together with a life membership certificate. Mr. Eipper was born in Hunts-: ville, the family homestead on what is now the Kozemchak place on Overbrook Avenue. He was the only remaining child of nine chil- dren born to Mr. and Mrs. Christo- pher J. Eipper, early residents of that area when it was almost com- pletely agricultural. His wife, the former Mary Eliza- beth Campbell, Orangeville, taught at the Beaumont Academy before their marriage, resigning her posi- tion to take up family duties. Mr. Eipper met her at the home of Mrs. Levi Mosier, with whom she board- ed in Beaumont. Mrs. Eipper died in 1944. There are three sons: Christapher dJ., Demunds Road; William R:, Phil- adelphia; David C., Sheffield, Mass.; three grandchildren, Robert J. Eip- per, Roxbury, Conn.; Leslie H. Tins- ley, Dallas Township, . and Mrs. James Knecht, ‘Harveys Lake; and six great-grandchildren. Read The Classified Column Through Chase Deep Underground | Probably the vast majority of ®— Back Mountain residents do not know that 560 barrels of gasoline an hour is thrumming along stead-’ ily under their feet, on its way to Syracuse from Chester. They have a vague idea that there is a pipe line somewhere, but where it is lo- cated and how it operates is a have an- easier job. | rag TS RES It is slug oil, 300 barrels of it, that separates the products so that kerosene and gasoline do not mix. So accurate are the meters that a in Syracuse. “ : The local line of Sun Pipe Line lines go. There are huge thirty- to supply more populas sections of Pennsylvania. a sixteen foot right of way through farm and woodlands, with the pipe line buried deep, not primarily be- cause of frost, which does not affect gasoline or oil, but to eliminate dan- ger of possible disturbance. = barrel exactly where a given load is located in the six-inch main buried three feet underground. When the slug oil appears at the it is drained off } hamton or Cortland or the terminal closed book. And how it is possible to send a load of gasoline in pursuit of a load of kerosene, and still keep the products separate, is a mystery. Residents of Chase have a clearer conception, because right there, in an isolated sspot is the booster pumping station, manned by three attendants, each one serving a twenty-four hitch with time off in between. Chester Jones, Kingston, is the chief engineer. Kermit Tay- lor, recently transferred to this area after almost six years in the Ta- magqua station, tock over his guard- ianship November 23. It is automatic machinery, but somebody has to be on hand to see that it keeps clicking. Centrifugal pumps of twenty-five pounds suc & Set of TREE LIGHTS with 98: EVANS Drug Store HH . . Main Highway at Is ristmasr’ It is the laughter of children “For, behold, I am with you all days, even to the consummation of the world’ PHONE DALLAS 4-0155 le ME SE NEC DOC DOC DEN SEI ICI oliday ¥ The blessings of Sidi and loyalty, a Shavertown
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers