The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, January 29, 1954, Image 12

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PAGE TWELVE
Lehman - Jackson - Ross. matmen
challenged Nescopeck High School
at Nescopeck on January 13, and
uary 16. Lehman won over Nesco-
peck, 33-26, bowed to Seminary 21-
30. Francis Wysocki refereed at
Nescopeck, Norman Cross, for Sem-
inary. 3
Nescopeck bout: Coburn, 95
pounds, over Nagle, by a fall, 1:46;
Oncay, 103, over Jayax, by a fall,
3:50; Vanderheid, NHS, 112, won by
a forfeit; Schultz, 120, over Thomas,
NHS, by a fall, 1:46; Houck, NHS,
over Williams, 127, by decision, 5-4;
Keller, NHS, forfeit, 133 pounds;
Steltz, 138, over Smith, NHS, by a
fall, 1:49; Nelson, 145, over Herben,
NHS, fall, 1:49; Zern, 154, over
Dorthat, NHS, fall, 2:4; Moweri,
NHS, over Skopic,” 165, by a fall,
3:41; Wallo, 185, by ‘a fall, "over
Stout, NHS, 3:48. This bout was
actually a forfeit to Nescopeck, as
Wallo was overweight.
Wyoming Seminary at Lehman:
Coburn, 95, over Dwyer, WS, by a
fall, 1:35; Cresko, WS, over Oncay,
103, by a fall, 3:30; Rosenn, 112,
WIS, by forfeit; Mather, WS, over
Schultz, 120, a fall, 4:38; Stevens,
WS, 127, by a forfeit; Trexler, WS,
over Rittenhouse, 133, decision, 7-1;
fall; 3:30; Nelson, 145, over Leach,
over McGovern, WS, fall, 7:00; Faw-
cett, WS, over Skopic, 165, by a
fall, 5:00. Neither team had a con-
tender in the 185 pound class, ‘so
Rebekahs Plan’ Dinner
The Rebekahs. will have a dinner
at St. Paul's Lutheran Church Jan-
uary 29, at ‘6 p. m. - Reservations
should be made by Monday with
Mrs. Thomas Shgn, chajrman.. ;
Lehman Fire Auxiliary
Dines At Mooretown
Past presidents of the Auxiliary
of Lehman Volunteer Fire Company
reviewed the progress of the or-
ganization during their term of
office at the dinner meeting held
at Steele’s Restaurant, Mooretown,
last Tuesday evening. Mrs. George
Stolarick, present president, was in
charge.
Future meetings will be held at
the homes of members, the first to
be at -the home of Mrs. Lanceford
Sutton, January 25.
Present were: Mesdames George
Stolarick, Leonard’ Ide, Eleanor Ide,
Joseph Ide, Lewis Ide, John Rob-
erts, Lanceford Sutton, Lester
Squier, William Tretheway, L. .U.
Beisel, Clara Mekeel, Russell Cool-
baugh, Jessie Hagenbaugh, William
Elston, Edward Elston,” Howard
Ehret, Stuart Marks, Donald Cut-
ting, Lawrence Drabick, Gordon
Johnson, Fred Davenport, Charles
Eley, Morton Connelly, Glendoris
Shilanski, Minnie Hoover, Clayton
Bostic and Viola Rossman.
To Observe YMCA Week
At Shavertown Church
Shavertown Methodist Church
will give recognition to Back Moun-
taia YMCA and national YMCA
Week, on Sunday, January 31, at
the morning services.
Carol Bogart of the Westmore-
land Tri Hi-Y Club, Jack Stahl,
Westmoreland Hi-Y Club will speak
and a group of young men {rem
Westmoreland Hi-Y Club will serve
as ushers.
In the abseecnce of Rev. Robert
DeWitt Yost, pastor; Rev. H. C.
Buckingham, District Superintend-
ent of the Wyoming Methodist Con-
ference, will deliver the sermon.
: GREGORY. BLDG.
5 Main St., Dallas .
PuonE 4-4506
DAILY: Tues. '& Fri. 1.5 P.M.
E : Tues. ‘Wed, Tl 7-8:30
Eyes Examined “ Quality
SIMON LO
54 S. Main St.,
PuonE 3-3794
. DAILY 9:30 - 5 P.M.
? EVES. BY APPT.
Glasses © Optical Repairs
- With The Valle
‘TAIL
y’s Most Modern
VV PV VV VV VOI OPT VY ey
Friday to 9 p.m.
[CN VO
Ooi Bocconi lie lionel,
PHONE 4-7141
— DALLAS, PA. °°
BERTI
GLEN
ALDEN’S
FINEST
& SON
E. Ray Austin
Called By Death
Taught 40 Years
At Laurel Run
Prof. 'E. Ray Austin, 30 South
Marshal St., Laurel Run, a mem-
ber of the Laurel Run borough
school faculty for forty years, died
Sunday 10:15 p.m. at his home.
He was 66.
He is the brother of Mrs. Clyde
Eggleston of Vernon, and Prof.
William Arch Austin, supervising
principal of Beaumont schools.
Mr. Austin was born in Kunkle,
November’ 29, 1887 and taught in
Laurel Run borough schools from
1912 until 1952 when he retired.
He also served as supervising prin-
cipal.
He was a member of the George
M. Dallas Lodge, F. & A. M.; First
Baptist Church and recently was
appointed a member of the Laurel
Run borough school board.
Surviving are his wife, the for-
mer Lola Maguire of Dallas; chil-
dren, Mrs. Dorothy Conway, West-
bury, N. Y.; Mrs. Laura Bond, West
Springfield, Mass; Mrs. George
Seastrap and Mrs. Betty Laub at
home; six grandchildren and his
mother, Mrs. W. T. Austin of Beau-
mont.
Masonic services were held at the
Richards-Balliet funeral home in
Wilkes-Barre Tuesday evening with
funeral services on Wednesday at 2
p.m.
Two things make a newspaper
great—what it prints and what it
doesn’t print.—West Point (Miss.)
Times Leader.
nCTaRl
Iie] Food Values™
ZS SS SS
"More high- -quality
protein, calcium,
phosphorus, ribo.
flavin, vitamin A
00,000 (before
to his
ank account.
The contract
or a daily half-
hour = “open - end” transcribed
show to be sold regionally
throughout the country. Ziv ex-
pects to have the red-headed
comic sold on a minimum of
450 stations by March 1st.
Dorothy Lamour is reported
about to produce a TV series en- |
tifled “One Night Stands.” She'll |
star in the films, built around
situations which occur to an en-
tertainer on a cross-country tour
. Another new series in the
making is a ‘biographical series
about leading bandleaders, in-
spired by the movie, “The Glenn
Miller Story.” First exhibit is
reported to be Freddy Martin
and his crew.
Bill. Stern, the sportscaster,
tells of a successful football
coach’s system for recruiting
players. He traveled through the
farm country asking directions
of likely looking prospects. He
ignored those who pointed with
their fingers, and chose the
giants who pointed the way with
their plows!
That seems like good evidence
for choosing an athlete . . . and
the best evidence for choosing a
TV service organization is a
experience in all TV reception
problems. We've got the expe-
rience with reception bugs in
this area . . . and we've won
our spurs with dependable serv-
ice. Call us when your set needs
attention. |
GUYETTE TELEVISION
SERVICE
Phone 4-7101
seys are rapidly becoming one of
the nation’s outstanding breeding
herds under the direction of Ray-
mond Goeringer its youthful owner.
This was proved last week when
animals from the herd won three
of six championships and many
other top awards at Pennsylvania
State Farm Show.
It is the only herd in the United
States that has imported blood lines
from the Isle of Guernsey since
1937, and it is probably the last
that will be able to import them
for many years to come since an
outbreak of hoof and mouth disease
there this year.
During the years Mr. Goeringer
has been building up the herd to
its present national standing he has
travelled four times across the At-
lantic and thousands of miles
throughout the United States to
select the animals that will give
him a complete outcross.
His first after the war trip to
the Isle of Guernsey with Tony Jar-
dine of Doylestown, his Scotch ad-
viser, was futile. The British gov-
ernment would not permit the ex-
port of its famous animals. But
Ray was determined to acquire the
needed blood for his herd. After his
return to the United States, Par-
liament passed an act permitting
him to import fifteen head. They
were brought to quarantine at Clif-
ton, N. J., by John Bessan, a Guern-
sey man, and held for thirty days
until they could be brought to Lake
Louise.
Over the years, Ray has pur-
chased outstanding | blood lines in
Kentucky, Oregon, Washington, In-
diana, New York, New Jersey, New
Hampshire, Connecticut and Ohio,
and has sold some of his young
stock in Oregon, Washington, New
York, Maryland and Brazil.
The herd is in charge of Stewart
DeGraw who helped to show the
prize-winning stock at the Farm
Show last week.
Although Ray,
who attended
an academic student, has always
been interested in cows—he has
lived on the farm since 1928—it
is only during the past five years
that the herd has been built up to
its present state of perfection. This
year was the first that any of the
herd were ever shown at the Penn-
sylvania Farm Show, but the
ninety-one milking cows out of the
177 head herd have been proving
all along that Lake Louise stands
second to none in the country for
production and for quality.
Very Much Alive
Arthur Franklin, a former Dallas
boy, now of Avenel, N. J., has asked
his mother, Mrs. James Franklin,
to inform The Post that he is very
much alive and not deceased as
reported in the caption underneath
the picture of the old . Henry M.
Laing Fire Truck in the Thanks-
giving issue of The Post.
Art has two sons in the Army
Air Force: Lt. James G. in Texas,
named for his grandfather the late
James Franklin, and William C.
who is in training in Louisiana.
Offering You
Funeral
AMBULANCE SERVICE
The Finest In
Economically Priced
Service
SWEET VALLEY 7-2244
Harry C. Smith Fire Company has
recently purchased and received a
Gorman-Rupp portable pump with
suction hose and strainer for use
in streams where other water sup-
ply is unavailable. It was purchased
from Reading Fire-Equipment Com-
pany, represented by R. W. Ed-
mondson of Shavertown.
The turn of the century probably
was made by a woman driver.—
Franklin P. Jones
Women wouldn't wear slacks if
they had any hindsight. — Kathy
Barr
Fractures Hip, Result
Of Very Small Fall
Mrs. Sarah Rogers, Huntsville,
fell in her living room Sunday
night and fractured her hip, Dr.
Richard E. Crompton, summoned
by her son Alfred, diagnosed the
hip fracture, and called Kingston
Township ambulance for transpor-
tation to Nesbitt Memorial Hospital
at 8. Mrs. Rogers, elderly and some-
what unsteady on her feet because
of a stroke several months ago, was
sitting in her chair at the window
when she rose and crossed the
room, collapsing on the floor.
i
In Florida's Finest Climate
Maximum Sunehine—
i Minimum Humidity
§ ON REX BEACH LAKE ...
Bathing, Fishing,
Boating, Lolling.
Department (N)
Here in the hear of Scenic
Florida . .. where you can
enjoy every comfort
in vacation living. . .
Modified Plan—
(Breakfasts — Dinners)
Daily Rates...
2 wks. or longer
$11. to $19. Single
$20. to $43. Double
For Less than 2 weeks,
add $1. per person
Stories of money
you can rent a box
or other valuables
for as low as $2.50
AT KINGSTON CORNERS
govness tans
Roasting
Frying
Comb. Frying
Highway
Specials!
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Trucksville
»