RA MA] i, ma tree gp ry TTX Ry Tey ed { y , PAGE SIX Purely Personal Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Ide, Hunts- ville, left Wednesday to spend some time in Hollywood, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. James Besecker, Norton Avenue, are spending two weeks in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Howard W. Risley, Huntsville Road, will have as Thanksgiving Day dinner guests, the former's sister, Mrs. Clarence Boston of Philadelphia, her daugh- ter, Priscilla, student at Swarth- more College, and Mrs. W. B. Risley of Dallas. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Griesing, Franklin Street, spent the weekend in Wilmington, Del. visiting ‘Mr. and Mrs. Richard Phillips and get- ting acquainted with their new granddaughter. Mrs. Griesing is staying for a couple of weeks. Mrs. Earl Monk, Philadelphia, spent the weekend at her home in Dallas. She was called here by the death of her brother-in-law, Martin Broderick, Scranton. Mr. Broderick was killed by a hit and run driver Mr. and Mrs. Fred Newman, Highland Drive, Goss Manor, cele- ‘brated their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary with open house on Saturday. : Margaret Veitch, Shavertown, and Gertrude Wilson, Franklin Street, Dallas, have returned after spending two weesk in Florida. Carl Hedden, student at Cornell University, will spend the Thanks- giving weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hedden, Machell Avenue, Mr .and Mrs, Frank Ferry, Ma- chell Avenue, will have as Thanks- giving weekend guests their daugh- tters, Virginia, teacher of mathe- matics at Wilmington, Del., Patricia, home economics teacher at Kenntt Square, and Barbara, music super- visor at Penns Grove, N. J. Mr. Ferry who has been so criticallly ill is able to be down stains now. Mrs. Robert Thetheway .is con- fined to her home at Idetown ‘with hepatitis. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Davis have gone from their home at Dallas Star Route to Lakeland, Fla. Mrs. Robert Steinruck has re- turned to her home at Bristol after a four month visit with her daugh- ter and son-in-law at Camp Pendle- ton, California. Her daughter is the former Lillie Marcy. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Blaine, new- lyweds, have taken up residence at 74 Main Road, Trucksville. Atty. and Mrs. Floyd Katon and sons John M. and Floyd Jr. of Washington, D.C. spent the week end with Mrs. Katon’s brother and family, Mr, and Mrs. Frederick Eck, Lehigh Street, Shavertown. Mr. and Mrs. Clark E. Ruch, Jr. and family of Rice Street, will be holiday and weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Derr, of Blooms- burg R. D. 5. Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Jenkins, Davis Street, spent several days this week in New York City. Miss Frances Dorrance, Church Street, will spend the holiday week- end visiting friends in Philadelphia. T. M. B. Hicks, New York (City, spent the weekend at his home on Pioneer Avenue. Mrs. Clara Yeager, who has been living at Shrineview, is now living at 171 S. Franklin Street, Wilkes- Mrs. Mae Townend, Pioneer Ave- Friday for Mrs. John Arthur Knight and Mrs. Henry Townend. Mrs. Frank Werner, Pioneer Ave- nue, will have as house guests over the Thanksgiving weekend her two sons and their families: Mr. and Mrs. Alan H. Smith and daughter, Gale, from Basking Ridge, N. J; and Mr. and Mrs. Harold D. Smith, Trenton, N. J. ‘Alan Smith is asso- ciate editor of Encyclopedia Ameri- cana. Mrs. Frank Warner will leave for Miami, Florida, December 1, to spend the winter in her trailer, which is permanently parked in the Nelson Trailer Park in Miami. Newcomers to Dallas are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lesser, 29 Park Street, where Mr. Lesser was associated with the Iriquois Gas (Company for three years. He is now sales en- gineer with [Scranton Spring Brook Water Company. They have two girls, Dianna, 9, and Pamela, 7, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Steinhauer came up from Maryland over the week end to move their furniture to storage until their new home is completed in March. They are pres- ently living at 8218 Garland Awve- nue, Takoma Park, Md. Mrs. Henry Disque, Philadelphia, spent the weekend visiting her daughters, Mrs, George Bittenbend- er, Country Club Road, Dallas, and Mrs. Alvin Funke at Ashley. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Payne and family of Greensburg are spending several days this week visiting Mrs. Payne's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gro- ver Anderson, Harveys Lake. They came home to help the Andersons celebrate their fiftieth wedding an- niversary. Mrs. George Carey has moved from Harveys Lake to 151 E. Wal- nut Street, Kingston. Miss Louise Thomas has moved Nancy Dymond To Marry Richard V. Bartlebaugh Mr. and Mrs. Elmer L. Dymond, engagement of their daughter, Nan- cy Fay, to Richard V. Bartlebaugh, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Bartle- baugh of Forty Fort. Miss Dymond is a graduate of Dallas Franklin the American Stores Company. Mr. Bartlebaugh was graduated from Forty Fort High School and is a member of the Senior Class at Wilkes College. wedding. Recovering. From Eye Surgery At Mercy Mrs. Arthur Smith, wife of Kingston Township supervisor, is at Mercy Hospital, recovering from a cataract operation performed on Wednesday. This is the second such operation, the first performed some months ago with excellent results. Attending surgeons are confident that the present operation will re- sult in equally good sight. Mrs. Smith will remain in the hospital for several days longer. She would appreciate cards. Four Local Men Receive Degrees At Caldwell Four Back Mountain men were among those who received degrees at the Fall Reunion of Caldwell Consistory in Bloomsburg last Tues- day. They were: David Willard Evans, Claude Street, Dallas; Carl Edward Johnson, Carverton Road, Trucks- ville; . Ted Grover Meixell, Goss Manor and Oliver Donald Rome, Dallas RD 1. Johns Hopkins Student James Wheatcraft, former resi- dent of Goss Manor, is now fresh- man at Johns Hopkins University at Baltimore. He has been pledged to Phi Kappa Psi. He will spend Thanksgiving weekend with his par- ents at Stamford, (Conn. Duane Edwin Updyke Mr. and Mrs. Burl Updyke, Pikes Creek, announce the birth of their third son, Duane Edwin, November 9 at Nesbitt Hospital, weight seven pounds twelve ounces. Mrs. Updyke is the former Shirley Britt, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Britt. There are two other little boys, Merwin, 3, and Alan, 1. Carol Louise Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Richard Phillips, Wilmington, Del,, announce the birth of a six pound, five ounce baby girl, Carol Louise, at Delaware Hospital, Wilmington, Delaware, on November. 16. This is their first child. Mrs. Phillips is the former Lois Griesing, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Griesing of Dallas. Mr. Phillips is son of Mrs. Florence Phil- lips and grandson of Mrs. F. M. Gordon, Norton Avenue, Dallas. Buxiliary Meeting Back Mountain Auxiliary of Wyo- ming Valley Hospital will meet at the home of Miss Frances Dorrance Wednesday at 2 o'clock. Everyone interested is cordially invited. Tea will be served. from her summer home at Hunts- ville to her winter home, 153 Franklin Street, Wilkes-Barre. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Vanden Hout have purchased and moved into a home on Midland Drive, Mrs. Vanden Hout is the former Polly Lou Cooper. Mr. Vanden Hout is associated with the Forty Fort Dairy. The couple formerly lived in Grand Rapids, Mich. Mrs. Freda Apaliski and son have taken up residence at 50 Lewis Avenue, Trucksville. Bob Lewis, student at Clarion State Teachers’ College, and his family will spend the Thanksgiving weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Lewis, Woodlawn Drive, Dallas. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jackson, Harveys Lake, will have as Thanks- giving weekend guests their daugh- ter and her family, Mr. and Mrs. William Richards and daughter Karen, from Poughkeepsie. Larry Creasy, freshman at Penn- sylvania Military Preparatory School, will spend Thanksgiving holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Creasy, Dallas. Mr. and Mrs. T. M. B. Hicks, Pioneer Avenue, will have as Thanksgiving house guests Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Harding and five child- ren from Herndon, Virginia; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. B. Hicks, III, with three children, from Lake Packanack, N. J.; Mrs. T. M. B. Hicks, Sr. from Williamsport; and Dr. Ruth Tuthill, former patholo- gist at General Hospital, now path- ologist at Fox Memorial Hospital, Oneonta, N. Y. Nancy Brader and her fiance, Dr. Jerome Marshall Jr., Dallas, will be guests of honor at a party held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Wolfe, Elmcrest Drive, Dallas, on Saturday. Hosts will be Mr. and Mrs. Richard Turrell of Chatham, N. J., daughter and son in law o the Wolfes. A i Two life long and highly respec- | ted residents of Lake Township will | observe their fiftieth wedding an- niversary with an Open House, Tuesday, November 29, at their home, Point Breeze, Harveys Lake. They are Mr. and Mrs. Grover C. Anderson who are known to hundreds of residents of that sum- mer colony and who have played a leading part in the life of Lake Township for more than fifty years. The popular couple was married November 29, 1905 at the Metho- dist Parsonage in Hancock, N. Y., by the Rev. B. Eldridge, and shortly thereafter established their home in the old homestead where they have lived ever since. Mrs. Anderson before marriage was Carolyn Amelia Hoover, daugh- ter of Jennie R. Crispell and Abid Baldwin Hoover. She was born at Outlet. ¢ Mr. Anderson was the son of Matilda Haffener and Joseph And- erson. He, too, was born at Har- veys Lake. Both Mr. and Mrs. Anderson’s parents and grandparents were among the early settlers in the township. : Mr. Anderson has been a farmer all of his life. During earlier years he made the acquaintance of hun- dreds of people through his work on the lake steamers operated by Harveys Lake Transportation Com- pany. The Andersons have three child- ren: Mrs. William E. Wright, Point Pleasant, N. J.; Mrs. Harold G. Anderson, Harveys Lake; and eight grandchildren. They are members of Alderson Methodist Church. Two Of The Eighty Plus Pictured above are Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Sutton, ages 88 and 83, both members of the Dallas Post’s Eighty Plus Club, receiving free copies of four children: Mrs. James Jones, of Mooretown; Lanceford Sutton, of Lehman, and Mrs. David Perry, of Carverton, Another son, Leslie, of Lehman, is not in the picture. Mr. and Mrs. Sutton are lifelong residents of Lehman, having resid- ed in the house they now occupy for sixty-five years. In his active years Mr. Sutton was a farmer, and even now, raises young pigs and keeps a flock of chickens. Mrs. Sut- ton does all her own housework and a deal of crocheting for the chil- dren and grandchildren. She is ac- tive in the Lehman Methodist Church’s Louella Neely Bible Class, the W.S.CS. and the Librarian Breaks Rib, No Apparent Cause Miss Miriam Lathrop, Back Moun- tain Library librarian, has a broken rib which is slowing her down a little, but not incapacitating her. X-rays at Nesbitt Hospital on Fri- day showed a clean break. Miss Lathrop is unable to put her finger on a fall or a blow which might have caused the injury. Just before Wednesday’s Book Club meeting she felt a