pe Couples Club To Hear Child Psychologist Prince of Peace Couples Club will have as speaker at the next meet- ing, April 27, in the church hall, Mrs. Martha Fry, child psychologist from Scranton. Mrs. Fry will talk on “Feelings of Hostility,” and her remarks will be illustrated by a film. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Hall will have charge of refreshments. The recent brunch was reported as a success at a meeting held at the home of Rev. and Mrs. William McClelland. Present were these couples: Jack Stahley, Robert Buntz, William Wright, Ralph Smith, E. erage, Roswell Patterson, Calvin Hall and Mrs. Woody Allen. hol ERE AELTE than inan 1] SNS §-0z.glass RLS ASS “More high-quality protein, calcium, phosphorus, ribo- flavin, vitamin A Miss Emma Peifer, 80, Buried In Forty Fort Miss Emma Falara Peifer was buried Monday afternoon in Forty Fort Cemetery, following services conducted by Rev. Thomas C. Da- vis. Miss Peifer would have been eighty-one on April 14. Ill for only a week, she passed away Friday night at the home of her cousin, Ralph Kauffman, with whom she made her home on Demunds Road for the past ten years. Born in Hazleton, daughter of the late Henry and Emma Kauffman Peifer, she graduated from Wilkes- Barre high school and taught at Conyngham High School, South Wilkes-Barre, for forty-three years. Retiring eighteen years ago, she lived with her nephew John Hensyl in Bloomsburg for eight years. When he was transferred to Lan- caster, she moved to Demunds Rd. Local survivors are third cousins, Mrs. Frank Wagner, Dallas, and Mrs. Sherman Meade, Shavertown. As late as last summer Miss Pei- fer took great pride in her flower garden, doing the work herself and enjoying the out of doors. Stanley VanScoy Buried Bpril 7 In Tunkhannock Stanley VanScoy, 81, was buried Wednesday afternoon in Sunnyside Cemetery, Tunkhannock. He died Sunday at’ Hillcrest Convalescent Home. He was born and lived out his life in Centermoreland, belonging to Centermoreland Baptist Church and Vernon Grange. His parents were the late Samuel and Jane Miers VanScoy. Mr. VanScoy is survived by his widow, Lula; a daughter, Mrs. Rus- sell Gregory, Johnson City; a son, Samuel, New Jersey; a sister, Mrs. Effie Oakley, California; and two grandchildren. King’s Daughters King’s Daughters Class will meet Monday evening in Shavertown Methodist Church, Mrs. George Jacobs presiding. Program will be Easter films and a duet by Nancy Jane Jones and Ruthellen Ham- mond. ! f 4 | ! | | | ! | 4 | | ! | } Now ¢1 MAIN HIGHWAY =~ > _-. PER '/2 GALLON 19 SHAVERTOWN EE ~~ I Er ATT Gr FG Ar TTT { / i . no mess, no spatter! Less than \ $919 $269 — GAL: 21° PT. 352 QT. (Deep Colors $5.69) Iridescent Colors All with a silken lustre that shimmers and Fascinating changes with the direction of light and Desi angle of view. Use one or more Applikay €SIgNS colors with any pattern or combination of 3 tte With them you DALIT you can achieve many different effects. Roll on to your walls. may choose . . . they all decorating . . . then youll Tonight and Saturday and see MAIN HIGHWAY Phone 4-1441 SHAVERTOWN { ployee of the Scranton - Spring Brook Water Service Co., Wilkes- Barre, she entered the Women’s Army Corps in August 1952. Lieu- tenant Baur was previously as- signed at Tokyo with the 8232d Army Unit WAC Detachment. wT I - MAKE DONATIONS TO AMBULANCE FUND TONIGHT 6:30-9:00 A committee from Dallas Community Ambulance Asso- ciation will be stationed in the Dallas Borough Building to- night, 6:30-9 p.m. to accept donations for the projected ambulance. Solicitors have been receiving reports regularly each Friday evening. The drive will end April 15. Legal— NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that John Williams of Main Street, Dal- las, Pennsylvania, will file in the Office of the Secretary of the Com- monwealth and in the Office of the Prothonotary of Luzerne County on Wednesday, April 7, 1954, applica- tion for certificate to do business under the assumed name of “Dallas 5c, 10c, and $1.00 Store. Said busi- ness to be carried on at Main Street, Dallas, Pennsylvania. SHERIFF SALE FRIDAY, APRIL 30, 1954 at 10 o’clock A.M., EASTERN STANDARD TIME By virtue of a writ of Fi. Fa No: 30 May Term 1954, issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Lu- zerne County, to me directed, there will be exposed to public sale by vendue or outcry to the highest and best bidders, for cash, in Court Room No. 1, Court House, in the City of Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, on Friday, April 30, 1954, at 10 o'clock EASTERN STANDARD TIME, in the forenoon of the said day, all the right, title and interest of the defendants in and to All that certain lot, piece or par- cel of land situate, lying and being in the Village of Trucksville, Town- ship of Kingston, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, bounded and de- scribed as follows: BEGINNING at a corner in the dividing line between lands of William R. Mathers, and the land herein described, said cor- ner being 76.63 feet in a course of South 44 degrees 15 minutes West from an iron pipe in the line of the State Highway lead- ing from Luzerne to Dallas; thence from said beginning cor- ner, and along a driveway, South 51 degrees 30 minutes East, 24.50 feet to a spike; thence South 39 degrees 25 minutes East, 35 feet to a spike; thence South 27 degrees 55 minutes East, 34.70 feet to a corner; thence North 49 de- grees 35 minutes East, 89.72 feet to an iron pipe along State Highway leading from Luzerne to Dallas; thence North 48 de- grees 16 minutes West, along said State Highway, 100.40 feet to a corner; thence along the line of lands of William R. Mathers, South 44 degrees 15 minutes West, 76.63 feet to the place of beginning. TOGETHER with the right to use driveway leading from State Highway Route No. 92 (U.S. 309) lead- ing from Kingston to Dallas, to the Township Road leading from Trucksville to Huntsville, Pa. Being the same premises conveyed to the said Joseph K. Rolewicz, et ux., by deed dated November 14, 1951, recorded in Luzerne County in Deed Book 1137, page 461. Improved with a single, two- story frame and stucco dwell- ing. Seized and taken into execution at the suit of West Side Savings and Loan Association, Kingston, Pa. vs. Joseph K. Rolewicz and Agnes S. Rolewicz, his wife and will be sold by ROBERT SHERROCK, Sheriff DONALD O. COUGHLIN, Attorney | Kiwanis Women Plan Card Party May 7 Women of Dallas Kiwanis Club plan a card party May 7 at Back Mountain Town and Country YMCA. Kay Wright is chairman, Joan Flack co-chairman. Ann Joseph and Ciaire Troxell handle tickets; Helen Rice, Nancy Goeringer, Ethel Neal, Alta Travis, and Eva Rearick, re- freshments; Marian Renisko, pub- licity. Juniors’ Bake Sale Dallas Junior. Woman's Club is holding a bake sale at Boyd White's store today, starting at 11. Mrs. Ellis Swingle is chairman, Mrs. Walter Webster co-chairman. Beaumont Native Dies In Florida March 24 Mrs. Frank Newberry, native of Beaumont, daughter of the late George Whitney and Emma Clark Cooke, died March 24 at her winter home in Dunedin, Florida. Services were held Saturday in Washington, D. C., with interment in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Washington. Mrs. Newberry took up residence in Washington in 1912, employed first as a congressional secretary, and during World Wars I and II in the Navy Department Bureau of Supply and Accounts. Landscaped paintings executed by Mrs. New- berry were exhibited in Washing- ton, Gloucester and Florida. She was a student at the Corcoran Art School. A member of the Society of Mayflower Descendants, she pub- lished a history of the family of Elisha Cooke. Local survivors are Mrs. Frank Wright, Idetown, and Mrs. George Montross, Centermoreland. There is no teaching like a good man’s life. CORRECT VISION Makes Your Work A Lot EASIER Dr. A. S. Lisses OPTOMETRIST ® Two Office Locations ® GREGORY BLDG. 5 Main St., Dallas Phone 4-4506 DAILY: Tues. & Fri. 1-5 P.M. EVES: Tues., Wed., Fri. 7-8:30 SIMON LONG BLDG. 54 S. Main St., W.-B. Phone VA 3-3794 DAILY 9:30-5 P. M. EVES. BY APPT. TH ET SG CT AH ATHLETE CTT TT ATA AHI 2 A A +A Ar HI 0 v | : | | ! | t ! | t | | | A A A ET TA I Tr Ar A AE AT SH <a> Sundial prides itself 114 MAIN ST. with extra wear on making the $7.98 FREE PARKING AT ANY TIME LUZERNE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers