The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, June 01, 1956, Image 1

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Two Easy to
Remember Phone
Numbers
4-5656 or 4-7676
VOL. 66, No. 22, FRIDAY,
Lake-Noxen Speaker
HERBERT W. DUSCHAK
Herbert Duschak
Speaker At Lake
Ceremonies Start With
Class Night Tonight
Class Night at 8 p.m. tonight is
the first of Lake-Noxen high school’s
listed activities for Commencement
week. Baccalaureate service will be
held Sunday at 7:30, with Rev. Har-
old C. Buckingham, superintendent
of Wyoming Methodist Conference,
Wilkes-Barre District, giving the
sermon on “Multiplication by Div-
ision.”
Graduation exercises, on the lawn
if weather permits, will be held
Wednesday evening at 7:45, when
Herbert W. Duschak, a lecturer of
note for twenty years, will speak on
“Priming the Pump.” | Author, phil-
osopher, editor, Mr. Duschak has a
wide reputation as a serio-humor-
ous speaker.
Class Night program is entitled,
“Feudin’, Fussin’, and Fightin’,”
1956 version, with festivities direc-
ted by John Zaleskas, an evening
of fun in the auditorium.
Honor Society
Takes In Eight
Lake-Noxen Has Special
Assembly Of Welcome
Lake-Noxen Honor Society induc-
ted eight new members at a special
assembly May 22. ‘New members
elected were Seniors — Ana Lee
Engelman, Edng Gosart, Sonya Kul-
cavage, Janet Oney; Juniors — Mar-
lene Butry, Barbara Kern, Tanya
Kocher, and John Zorzi, elected
scholarship, leadership, character,
and service to the school.
Jeannette Ide was master of cere-
monies.
Talks on the purpose of the meet-
ing and on qualifications for mem-
bership were given by Judy Sear-
foss, Emilie Schenck, Jane Dougal,
Carlene Kocher, and Patricia
Cornell.
The roll was read by Mrs. Carrie
Smith Rood, the sponsor, and the
pledge of membership by Jeannette
Ide.
Robert Z. Belles, supervising prin-
cipal, spoke to the student body and
gold pins, certificates and member-
ship cards.
A program by the Seniors follow-
ed the ceremony. Vocal and instru-
mental numbers were rendered by
Janet Oney, Emilie Schenck, Joyce
Shalata, Judy Searfoss, Phyllis
Kocher, Nancy Kline, Viola Blizzard,
Mae Titus, Sonya Kulcavage, Car-
lene Kocher, June Ladamus, Carol
Deets, LaVerne Sult, Jack Taylor,
Paul Keiper, and Larry Case.
a
i
its ranks, four from the Senior
among the Juniors. Welcoming
Speaker's Topic
Changing World
Westmoreland Will
Present Harrison Wood
Westmoreland High School will
have as commencement speaker
Harrison Wood, correspondent and
commentator who will speak to the
graduating class June 7 at 8:00 p.
m., on “This Changing World.”
Mr. Wood was a morning lecturer
on New York Town Hall and gave
the main address for town hall pro-
grams in seven other cities. He is
acknowledged to be one of the five
top speakers of the American plat-
form today. He gave the com-
mencement address for East
Stroudsburg State Teachers College
on January 26.
Harrison Wood is a grass roots
advocate of returning the govern-
ment to the people. He is a fear-
less crusader for the preservation
of free competitive enterprise at a
profit as against the dangers of
creeping socialism in centralized
government,
Commencement Week starts to-
night with Class Night.
Rev. Russell C. Lawry, newly in-
Westmoreland Speaker
stalled minister of Dallas Methodist
Church, will conduct Baccalaureate
services Sunday at 4 in the high
school auditorium, giving invoca-
tion and benediction as well as the
main address.
“God of Our Fathers” will be
sung as both processional and re-
cessional. “Bless This House” will
be sung as a solo by Georgiana
Ruth DeWitt, and “In a Monastery
Garden” by a quartet, Ruthellen
Hammond, Nancy Jane Jones, Carol
Ruth Simon, and Patricia Ruth
Shaver. Accompanist will be Rober-
ta Williams and Alice Jane Shortz
at the piano, Carol Lee Thomas,
bells.
Burned Boy To Have
Birthday In Hospital
Little Dennis Schoonover who
was seriously burned four weeks
ago at his home in Center Moreland
when his clothes ignited from a
trash burner will celebrate his third
birthday anniversary on Wednes-
day, June 6 in the Children’s Ward
at General Hospital.
Dennis eagerly looks forward to
the arrival of the mailman and the
receipt of cards and notes. Yester-
day he had a skin graft on the leg.
His parents Mr. and Mrs. Loren
Schoonover think he may be in the
hospital for another two weeks.
i
Farm Show in 1955.
Is Purchased By
It was no accident that Ralph
Sands has sold his young: Holstein
Bull Sandsdale Dandy Dewdrop to
the famous Curtis Artificial Breed-
ing Farm of Cary, Ill.
Dewdrop’s sire is the excellent
Curtis Candy Dandy George, one of
the outstanding Holstein Bulls of
the country.
The mother of Dewdrop is the
famous old Molly Cow, registered
as Molly Belle Lyons, Grand Cham-
pion at Bloomsburg in 1952, ’'53
and '54.
She is classfified Excellent with
a record of 23,106 pounds of milk
and 891.7 pounds of butterfat in
334 days at ten years of age.
‘Around Molly’s family of four
daughters, two granddaughters and
two grandsons, Ralph Sands has
built an outstanding herd of Hol-
steins and has become one of Penn-
sylvania’s leading young breeders.
His Senior Herd Sire Springbank
Piebe Sovereign 10973275 has con-
tributed largely to the success of
this herd being a consistent show
ring winner and siring some of the
best animals in the Sandsdale herd.
One daughter of Sovereign and
Molly made 713 pounds of butterfat
as a two-year-old.
Sovereign and old Molly have
truly put [Sandsdale on the map..
Sandsdale Dandy Dewdrop will be
heard from and Ralph Sands is to
be congratulated on the production
of such a fine young sire and his
sale in four figures to the nationally
known Curtis Candy Artificial
Breeding Company of Cary, Ill
Old Molly’s lifetime record is
125,104 pounds of milk and 4,637
pounds of butterfat. It is safe to
say that old Molly will be around
Sandsdale Farm for many years to
come.
Miniature Room Exhibit
Brings In Over $500.
Mrs. Paul Bedford, president of
[Shut-Ins and Wheel-Chair Club,
Inc., reports that over $500 was
taken in at the exhibit of miniature
rooms shown this spring at the
Boston Store hy Mrs. Dwight Fisher,
Pioneer Avenue. Proceeds of the
exhibit were divided between
Wheel-Chair Club and Crippled
Children’s Association.
Several checks are still outstand-
ing, which when received, will swell
the fund. Z
Kulcavage,
Emilie Schenck,
class, four from
committee and
are: First row:
A £ g
ee Fe Ww
pe rl em AC a
Patricia Cornell and Edna Gosart.
one
\
Curtis Candy Co.
Little League
Opens Saturday
With A Parade
Fire Companies And
Band To Assemble
At Bloomsburg Mill
The whole community is urged
to turn out tomorrow afternoon at
2 when Back Mountain Little League
opens its season with a big street
parade and a special program at
the Little League Field in Shaver-
town.
Parade units will form at Blooms-
burg Mills at 1:30. Included in the
line of march which will be headed
by civic fraternal and Little League
officials will be Westmoreland High
School Band, Dr. Henry M. Laing,
Shavertown, Trucksville and Orange
Fire Departments as well as any
others who wish to participate.
All Little League teams will par-
ticipate in uniform. The parade
will move promptly down Memorial
Highway and thence up West Cen-
ter street to the field, where open-
ing day ceremonies will take place.
The first regularly scheduled
game between Shavertown and
Jackson will take place immediately
after the ceremonies.
The field is now in excellent
shape with a newly constructed dry
surface dug out along the third
base line.
There are fifteen uniformed play-
ers on each of the six teams making
a total of 90 boys on the major
league teams. : There are also 90
boys on the six minor league teams.
Al minor league games will be
played this year at Fernbrook Field
just off DeMunds Road on the Goer-
inger property. Major League games
will be played Monday through
Friday on the Shavertown Field,
with rained out or make-up games
played on Saturdays.
Other Little Leagues throughout
the Valley have had a two weeks
start on the local League because
they were able to use their fields
earlier. The local League has to
wait until school recesses before it
can start. This means that the local
teams are under considerable pres-
sure in order to finish the sched-
ules within the time set by National
Little League. Thus Back Mountain
League plays five nights a week
instead of four.
Lawry, Heapps,
Exchange Pulpits
Rev. William Heapps, for the past
four years minister of Dallas Meth-
odist Church, and Rev. Russell C.
Lawry, minister for the same period
at Elm Park Methodist Church,
Oneonta, N. Y., are exchanging
pulpits, as announced at the recent
Wyoming Conference.
Rev. Lawry will conduct services
in Dallas on (Sunday, and later give
the Baccalaureate sermon for West-
moreland graduates at 4 p. m.
Rev. Heapps, four times tapped
for Baccalaureate speaker, but un-
able for reasons of health or be-
cause of prior commitments to ac-
cept any of the four invitations at
‘Westmoreland, will conduct his first
services in Oneonta on Sunday.
The families expect to make the
move, both on the same day, some-
time during the coming “week.
Rev. and Mrs. Lawry have two
children, both girls, one twelve
years old, the other only two.
Rev. and Mrs. Heapps have four
children: Dale, 23, a recent gradu-
ate in the music department at
Wilkes; Paul, 21, and Billy, 18,
both presently employed at the Nel-
son Furniture Factory in Kingston;
and Donna Jean, 9, a pupil of Dallas
Borough School.
Lehman Valedictorian
ASHEL SUTLIFF
Salutatorian
MARY SOROKIN
Sutliff, Sorokin,
Top Lehman List
D. V. Houck To Speak
At Commencement
Ashel Sutliff will be valedictorian
at Lehman-Jackson-Ross commence-
ment exercises June 6 at 8:15 in
the auditorium, and Mary Sorokin
will be salutatorian.
Donald V. Hock, well known on
radio and television programs as
well as on the lecture platform,
will speak on “Convictions for To-
morrow’s World.”
Rev. Kenneth O'Neill will give
the invocation after the procession-
al. Following honor orations and
the speaker of the day, Anthony
Marchakitus, high school principal,
will announce awards.
Edgar Lashford, president of the
school board, will award diplomas
to graduating students introduced
by Lester Squier, supervising prin-
cipal.
Graduates will form the reces-
sional march, %o the strains of “War
March of the Priests.”
Baccalaureate services will be
held in the auditorium the preced-
ing Sunday, June 3, at 8:15 p.m.
Rev. Kenneth O'Neill giving the
address, ‘Learning to See.”
Esther Ide, Jean Drapiewski, and
Janice Bronson will furnish the ob-
ligato for the processional hymn,
“God of Our Fathers.”
The senior chorus will give two
numbers. “Faith of Our Fathers”
will be sung as a recessional, Nancy
Drapiewski accompanying.
Ashel Sutliff, 17, is son of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Sutliff, Shick-
shinny RD 1. Graduating from the
Academic course, he expects to take
a pre-medical course at Pennsyl-
vania State University.
Mary Sorokin, 17, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John Sorokin, Plymouth
RD 1, is finishing the commercial
course. She plans to get secretarial
work following graduation.
St. Mary's To Graduate
Back Mountain Students
Back Mountain students who will
graduate from St. Mary's high
school June 10 are: John Ferry, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ferry; Mich-
ael Campbell, Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Campbell, Center Hill
Road; Philip Cummings, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Peter Cummings, Trucks-
ville; and Marie Nothoff, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Nothoff, Har-
veys Lake.
Finds Three Ancient
Issues Of Dallas Post
Chief Edgar Hughes, Harveys
Lake, has discovered three ancient
copies of the Dallas Post, called in
the late eighties the Dallas Weekly
Post and published regularly on a
Saturday.
The issues are those of April 22,
1899; July 28, 1900; and January
11, 1902.
Township Valedictorian
Salutatorian
ALLAN S. MOSIER
Patton, Mosier
Share Honors
Township ‘Graduation
To Take Place June 7.
Elwood Floyd Patton, Jr., a stu-
dent new this year to the high
school on the hill, and Allan Mosier,
finishing his twelfth year, share
scholastic honors at Dallas-Franklin-
Monroe Township high school,
where each will speak at Thursday
night’s Commencement exercises.
Patton, valedictorian, is from
Noxen. He attended Beaumont
School for 11 years. Graduating
from Vocational Agriculture, he
plans to farm after doing his stretch
in the armed services.
Mosier, salutatorian, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Sheldon Mosier, Dallas RD
1, plans to enter college in Septem-
ber.
Both boys have been active in
school affairs, both belong to the
Honor Society, of which Mosier is
president.
Activities for Patton include
baseball and basketball, school
plays, yearbook staff, school patrol.
For Mosier, Key Club, Hi-Y, band,
dramatics.
Commencement. week starts to-
night with Class Night in the audi-
torium at 8.
Rev. A. Lewis Payne, Bowmans
Creek Free Methodist, assisted by
Rev. Robert Wood, pastor of the
Carverton charge, will conduct bac-
calaureate services Sunday at 4 p.m.
in the auditorium.
Final examinations will: be held
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
Thursday is Teacher’s Day, with
commencement exercises in the eve-
ning, at which Captain John V.
Deuel, author and explorer, will
speak. =
' Official last day of school is next
Friday. ”
Kindergarten Registers
June 7 At Dallas Borough
Children who will attend kinder-
garten at the Dallas Elementary
School next school term are to be
registered on Thursday, June 7.
Teachers Mrs. Charles A. James,
Mrs. Mary L. VandenHout, and Miss
Barbara Clark will be in their class-
rooms to enroll these new pupils
from 10 to 12 A.M. and 1 to 3 P.M.
Children will be enrolled if they
are four years and seven months of
age before September 1, 1956, and
if they present birth and wvaccina-
tion certificmates. If the child has
not yet been vaccinated, he should
be brought to the school to register
anyway.
Each parent registering a pupil
will be presented with a copy of
“Happy Journey’, a handbook of
instructions to parents whose child-
ren will enter school for the first
time in September.
It is important that all children
be enrolled early for next year.
Additional accommodations may
have to be provided.
/
Valedictorian
a
MARGARET ANN WEIGEL
Salutatorian
WILLIAM DONALD ROBERTS
Westmoreland
Honor Students
Weigel, Roberts, To
Speak At Graduation
Margaret Ann Weigel, Westmore-
land valedictorian, will take as her
topic, “Retain Your High Ideals,”
and William Donald Roberts, salu-
tatorian, will talk on “No True
Education Without God”, at West-
moreland High School’s commence-
ment exercises Wednesday evening
at 8.
Miss Weigel, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. William Weigel, Edgewood
Heights, is active in extracurricular
projects as well as superior scholas-
tically. For two years she served
on the dance committees; took part
in Senior Play; was on the canteen
committee; participated in May Day
for four years; Rockettes as a soph-
omore; belonged to Dramatics Club
two years, was on the school news-
paper for three; belonged to a knit-
ting club one year. .
Roberts, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Burton Roberts, Shavertown, took
part in a wide variety of activities
including dance committee and play
for two years, canteen one. A mem-
ber of the Westmoreland Chorus
four years, he sang in the North-
eastern District and Pennsylvania
State Choruses as a senior. Clubs
include: cooking, leathercraft, shop,
typing, newspaper, Hi-Y.
Critically 1
At Nesbitt
Dr. H. A. Brown Faces
Operation Today
Dr. H. A. Brown, beloved Lehman
physician, is critically ill at Nesbitt
Hospital. He will be operated upon
today to determine the nature and
the gravity of a disorder of the
liver.
Three members of the faculty of
Lehman-Jackson-Ross high school
gave 0 - positive blood yesterday,
and more teachers have signified
their desire to contribute. Those
who had the honor of donating
blood for Dr. Browh were Arthur
Nuss, John Armstrong, and Edward
Edwards.
Dr. Brown’s two sons have been
with him. Emerson flew in from the
state of Washington last weekend,
and Harold has arrived by plane
from California. His daughter, Lou-
ise Ferre, of New Rochelle, N. Y..'a
registered technician, was called,
and is at the hospital with him.
The community is deeply dis-
turbed over Dr. Brown's desperate
illness. Carrying on with his work,
attending to his patients far beyond
the line of duty, while illness was
creeping upon him, Dr. Brown fin-
ally realized that he himself was
gravely ill, and made arrangements
to turn his patients over to other
physicians.