The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, February 10, 1956, Image 3

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WHITE CHURCH ON THE HILL
(Trucksville Methodist)
Rev. Arthur B. Mayo, Pastor
Morning Worship with services at
8:30 and 11:00. Race Relations Sun-
day will be observed, and the ser-
mon topic will be: “In Christ There
is No East nor West.” The Metho-
dist Youth Fellowship will meet at
4:15 at the Fire Hall and proceed
to the First Presbyterian Church,
Wilkes-Barre, for a joint meeting
with the Westminister Fellowship of
that church and denomination.
Monday, February 13, the Chil-
dren’s Society of Christian [Service
will meet in the church parlors at
3:45. The Official Board will meet
in the parsonage at 7:30.
Tuesday, the Pastor's Preparatory
Class will meet in the church par-
lors. The Commission on Finance
will meet at the home of the chair-
man, Mr. Walter Phillips, Brook
Street.
Wednesday, the Friendship [Class
will meet at 8:00 in the church par-
lors. ~
Thursday, the Women’s Society of
Christian Service will meet in the
church parlors at 1:30; Intercessory
Prayer Fellowship at 1:15; Junior
Boys' Choir rehearsal, 3:45; Junior
Girls’ Choir rehearsal, 4:15; Senior
Girls’ Choir rehearsal, 6:30; Senior
Choir rehearsal, 7:30.
BEAUMONT BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. Truman Reeves, Pastor
Monday, 7:30, Young [People’s
Thursday, 8:00, joint Missionary
Bob Matthews of Wilkes-Barre will
give an illustrated lecture of his
recent trip to Central and South
America. :
Sunday, February 12, 10:00, Sun-
day School; 11:00, Worship Service.
DALLAS METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. William H. Heapps, Pastor
Morning prayer, 9:30 a.m.; Church
School, 9:45 a.m.; Church Service,
11:00 a.m., Boy Scout observance,
Attorney Enoch Thomas, guest
Mosier devotional leader, special
film on narcotics will be shown,
Shavertown MYF group will be
guests. There will be recreation and
refreshments.
Tuesday, WISCS meeting at 11:00
a.m. Bach bring own lunch. This all
day study will be supervised by Mrs.
Stanley Davies.
‘Wednesday 6:30, Cub Scout cov-
Thursday, regular choir rehears-
als.
Friday, World Day of Prayer at
Shavertown Methodist Church.
Wednesday, February 22, the
MYF will sponsor a spaghetti sup-
per at the church. For tickets see
Lee Ohlman. Public invited.
Sunday, February 19, at 6:15
Youth Christian Life Class begins
for church membership.
Sunday, February 19, the first
Union Evening Lenten Services will
be conducted ‘at Dallas Methodist
Church by Rev. George Bell as guest
speaker.
Wednesday, February 29, the
Methodist Men’s Club will have a
special program followed by refresh-
ments.
ORANGE METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday, February 12, Church
School convenes at 10:00 am.; Wor-
ship Service at 7:30 p.m.
On Sunday, February 5, the Rev.
Robert Wood baptized Barry Kevin
Reese, infant son of Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Reese, of Orange. Mrs. Reese
is the former Marilyn Davis, daugh-
Dallas,
One of the highlights of the last
quarterly conference held in the Mt.
Zion Methodist (Church in January
was the report of the Commission of
Education of the activities for the
year 1955. During the year, the re-
port showed that 80% of the total
membership of the Orange Metho-
dist Church School was present each
Sunday, the average offering being
16 cents per member. Much of the)
credit for this outstanding achieve-
ment is due to the efficient super-
vision of the Church School, officers
and teachers, Mrs. Marie Gebhardt,
chairman of the commission; Henry
Hess, general superintendent, and
Clara Sickler, junior superintendent.
On Friday evening, February 10,
the “Bargain Basement” will be held
in the basement of the Orange
Methodist Church, at 7:30 p.m. The
public is cordially invited. There
will be many items of interest on
sale. Refreshments will be served.
PRINCE OF PEACE EPISCOPAL
Rev. William McClelland, Jr., Rector
Sunday, February 142, 8:00 a.m.
Holy Communion; 10:00 a.m., Morn-
ing Prayer and Sermon; 10:45 a.m.,
Church School.
Monday, 4:00 p.m., Junior Choir
rehearsal; 7:30 p.m., Boy Scout
Troop meeting; 8:00 p.m. Leader-
ship Training at Sf. Stephen's
Church, Wilkes-Barre.
Tuesday, 8:00 p.m., Auxiliary
Board meeting; 8:00 p.m., Vestry
meeting at the parish house.
Ash Wednesday, 9:00 a.m., Holy
Communion.
Thursday, 10:00 a.m., Auxiliary
sewing at the parish house.
ST. PAUL’S LUTHERAN
Rev. Frederic H. Eidam, Pastor
The second Boy Scout to receive
the Pro Deo Et Patria Award in St.
Paul’s congregation, Life Scout
Frederick Eck, Jr., will receive the
award Sunday morning at the Serv-
ice at 11:00 o'clock from the pas-
tor, Frederic H. Eidam. He will be
assisted by IScoutmaster Malcolm
Kitchen and members of the Scout
Committee of Troop 231, Shaver-
town Methodist Church. In receiv-
ing this award, Scout Eck will be
given the highest award the church
can bestow upon a Boy Scout.
Other services Sunday will be
Sunday School at 9:45 o'clock.
Wednesday night, Ash Wednes-
day, at 7:30, Lent will be ushered
in with the Administration of the
Lord’s Supper.
Bowman’s Creek
FREE METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. A. Lewis Payne, Pastor
Revival services continue this
weekend, with the Christianaires, a
girls’ trio, providing vocal and in-
strumental music, and the pastor
bringing the messages each night.
The hour of service is 7:45 p.m.
Sunday School, 945 a.m.; Morn-
ing Worship, 11 a.m.; Young Peo-
ple’'s meeting, 7:00 p.m.; Evening
Gospel Service, 7:45 p.m.
Prayer Meeting, Wednesday, 7:45
p.m.
ALDEN-NOXEN CHARGE
Rev. Ruth Underwood, Pastor
Race Relations Sunday will be
observed in Methodist Churches of
Alderson-Noxen Charge on Sunday.
Church services with the pastor
preaching and Sunday School will
be held as follows: Ruggles Church
service 8:45 a.m., Sunday School
10 a.m.; Noxen Church service 10
a.m., Sunday School 11 a.m., MYF
6 p.m.; Alderson Sunday School
10:15 a.m., Alderson Church serv-
ice 11:15 a.m.; Kunkle Sunday
School 10 am. Kunkle Church
service 7:30 p.m., MYF 8:30 p.m.
Commission on Education of Kun-
kle Church will meet Monday eve-
ning at eight.
Ruggles Church Official Board
and Commission on Education will
meet Tuesday evening at 7:30 at
ie
FEED
Fernbrook Corners
with
ick Startena
Fernbrook
pan
Captain Singleton (Sheaffer, who
commands the State Police detail
assigned to the Pennsylvania Turn-
pike, ascribes Turnpike accidents to
these three causes:
Fatigue; excessive speed; and bad
tires.
“Why do people fall asleep at the
wheel 2” he asked. “Why will a per-
son wear $20 shoes on his feet and
keep junkyard tires on his car?
Why do they drive at speeds exces-
sive for any highway ?
“Human reason and good com-
mon sense offer the only over-all
guarantee of highway safety,” he
continued. ‘‘Accidents will be re-
duced to a minimum when drivers
realize they can’t gamble with in-
ferior tires, exhaustion, over-in-
dulgence or recklessness on the open
road.
Your Health
From The Luzerne County
Medical Society
Something can be done about
heart disease.
* * *
This is the new look, the new
approach, the new verdict.
* * *
Until recently, a diagnosis of
heart disease was considered tanta-
mount to a‘death sentence.
* * *
There has been a change in the
attitude of both the physician and
the public toward heart diséase.
* * *
We know now that heart disease
is not unconquereble.
* * *
Treatment with the sulfa drugs or
antibiotics can check the strep in-
fection responsible for rheumatic
fever and rheumatic heart disease.
* * *
Heart valve deformities often
found in people with old cases of
rheumatic heart disease are now
being corrected by new surgical
techniques.
* * *
Drugs that can effectively lower
blood pressure without producing
severe reaction in patients have
been recently developed.
* * *
Crippling and often fatal blood
clots that form and break loose in
the veins of those with high blood
pressure are now preventable
through the use of new drugs.
* #* *
New knowledge on dietary re-
quirements and improved treat-
ment of glandular disturbances dur-
ing pregnancy can prevent many
heart defects in the newborn.
* * *
And when infants are born with
congenital heart defects, skillfully
done new surgical procedures can
correct a large proportion of them.
* * *
Encouraging as are these accom-
plishments in the treatment of
heart disease, there is a vast
amount of work still to be done.
* * *
We still do not know the basic
causes for the most common types
of heart disease, namely, hardening
of the arteries and high blood pres-
sure.
* * *
The discovery of these causes and
the prevention and treatment of
hardening of the arteries and high
blood pressure will come eventually.
* * *
From what has already been ac-
complished in the treatment of
heart disease, it is not too optimis-
tic to hope that this disease will
eventually be mastered.
* * *
DO YOU KNOW?
Tea was used as a medicine
before it became a beverage.
the church.
Youth Fellowship groups of the
Charge will have a Valentine Box
Social at the Noxen Methodist
Church Wednesday evening, at 7:30.
Alderson-Noxen (Charge World
Day of Prayer service will be held
in the Kunkle Church Friday eve-
ning at eight. Kunkle Choir will
sing. Representatives of the church-
es of the charge will participate in
the service. The motion picture,
“Song of the Shining Mountains”
will be shown.
SHAVERTOWN METHODIST
Rev. Robert DeWitt Yost
Sunday: 9:45 Church School with
classes for all ages; 11 Nursery dur-
ing church for pre-school children;
11 Morning Worship Service, Broth-
erhood Sunday; 8 Confirmation
Class in Chapel Room; 6 Intermedi-
ate Methodist Youth Fellowship;
6:30 Senior Methodist Youth Fel-
Monday: 3:45 Brownies, Troop
105; .7 Girl Scouts, Troop 9; 8 Kings
Daughers in ‘Chapel Room
Tuesday: 4 Girl Scouts, Troop 66;
7:30 Boy Scouts, Troop 231; 7:30
Commission Meetings; 8:15 Official
Board meeting in Chapel Room. -
as amesday: 7 Girl Scouts, Troop
Thursday: 1:30 Priscilla Circle
with Mrs. Charles Kishbaugh; 1:30
Martha Circle with Mrs. Ethel
Honeywell; Sarah Circle with Mrs.
Thomas Reese; 1:30 Naomi Circle
with Mrs. John Cortright; 3:45
Junior ‘Choir rehearsal; 6:30 Youth
rehearsal.
Friday: 8 Keller Class meeting in
Chapel Room.
“A number of well-meant solu-
tions have been publicly suggested,”
Sheaffer continued. “Each may serve
a good purpose in one category or
another. For instance, take some of
the reasons our men have found for
‘asleep-at-the-wheel’ fatalities. First,
can or bottle drinkers who carry
their spirits with them since they
can’t buy the stuff on the Turnpike.
Second, those who load up before
starting their trips, including that
last one for the road. Third, those
who get up in the middle of the
night, without sufficient rest, to get
off to an early start and see just
how quickly a trip to such and such
a place can be made. It always
makes a good story if they live to
tell it. Fourth, those who simply ig-
nore all the limits of human endur-
ance by grossly over-estimating
These
Nd =H HEN
Sheaffer said the state police have
found drivers forcing themselves to
inhuman driving feats with the use
of benzedrine, dexadrine, ampheta-
mine sulphates, caffeine -citrates
and other “no sleep” concoctions
“until they collapsed and were re-
moved to a hospital or a morgue.”
He discussed so-called highway
nypnosis and sleep contagion which
his practical mind prefers to classify
as ‘‘super-fatigue.” Some of its un-
fortunate victims, he said, possessed
unselfishness exceeded only by their
foolishness. “This is the type who
hurtles his ton or so of explosive
machinery on and on through the
night, too generous to disturb his
passengers who sleep blissfully on
and on to a tragic awakening ,if
any. They forget that it is vital that
superman be kept awake when he’s
attempting superman perform-
ances.”
Lee Tracy On TV
Lee Tracy, who has many friends
and acquaintances in this area, re-
turned to the television stage Wed-
nesday night on the Kraft Theatre
program.
PAGE THREE
Rotary Women Thursday
Testimonial Dinner Women of Rotary will enjoy a
Members of the Jefferson Club | 2% spring hat show presented by
| Mrs. Harry Goeringer, Jr., at Thurs-
will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. at]
The Castle to make arangenna te] 22 nights dinner meeting at lrem
2 Hranseme™™ | Country Club. Mrs. Myron Baker will
for the March 24 testimonial din-| preside.
ner in honor of Daniel Flood. Com- | r—————
mittees will be appointed for the| If you can keep your head when
dinner, and other important busi- | all about you are losing theirs—may-
ness is on the agenda, says Joseph |be you just don’t understand the
Mundy, president. situation!
Jefferson Club Plans
Dr. BERGER
OPTOMETRIST
27 MACHELL AVENUE
Eye Examinations
Dial Dallas 4-4921 for Appointment
SMOKED
4 to 6 Ib. C
Average
Shankless Ib.
20 Cans Shurfine Canned
MILK 6 for
13°
59¢ Doz.
10 Ibs. $1.00
39¢ Doz.
AWARDS EACH WEEK
MAIN STREET
TRUCKSVILLE
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