op | PAGE TWELVE NEWS FROM POST CORRESPONDENTS MRS. HAZEL ROBBINS, Harding MRS. ALBERT ARMITAGE, Harveys Lake BARBARA SIMMS, Lehman ALICE SHORTZ, Kingston Township MRS. ARCH AUSTIN, Beaumont MRS. IRA BEAHM, Noxen MRS. STEPHEN DE BARRY, Oak Hill ® STANLEY JONES, Orange Oak Hill Hi, friends. Is everybody heading for the Bloomsburg Fair? After two years’ futile attempts, we hope to ~ take the young one down this year to see the sights. We rather imagine the animals will be the major point of interest. Last week we received a lovely letter from Anne Hubbard in which she asked to be remembered to all the bowling girls. She says she thinks about them every Tuesday night between 9:15 and 9:30. Speaking of bowling, we're rather proud of our better half’s standing in the Back Mountain Church League’s summer schedule—he had second highest average and second highest single game (248). Mr. and Mrs. John Kenyon and sons, David and Stephen, have re- turned to their home on Sunset Drive after spending the weekend at their cottage at Beach Haven, New Jersey. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bicking and Mr. and Mrs. William Jones had as weekend visitors Mr. and Mrs. Frank Trexler of Allentown. We're glad to report that Mrs. Harold Cook has returned from Nes- bitt Hospital and is feeling better. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kanasky and Mr. and Mrs. William Hollings- worth had as guests over the week- end Mrs. Jean Shuff and children, Barbara and Michael, and Mrs. Gladys Sykes, all of New Cumber- land, and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Grimes and daughters, Cathy, Betsy and Patricia, of Kingston. New At Oak Hill Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph J. Schleich and daughters, Kathryn, aged 2, and Lisa, aged 3, have moved into their new home in the upper circle. The couple formerly resided in Buffalo, New York. Mr. Schleich has been appointed to the teaching staff of the history department at King’s College. A native of Bavaria, Germany, the new instructor holds a BS degree from Canisius College, a master’s degree from the University of Buf- falo and has completed requirements ~ for. the doctorate at Fordham Uni- versity. Mr. Schleich did archival research for his dissertation in Vienna and Munich on a Fullbright Grant in 1954-1955. Idetown The W.S.C.S. held its monthly meeting in the church house on Tuesday evening. Hostesses were Mrs. Claire McKenna, Mrs. George May, Marie Wright, Bess Cooke. Mrs. May gave the missionary lesson, Mrs. "O'Neill, the book report. It was decided to give ten dollars to the United funds. Present were Mes- dames Lula Schultz, Bruce Mathers, Leslie Sabo, Frank Lengyen, Ernest Fritz," Pearl Connor, Corey Meade, Claire McKenna, Ralph Welsh, George May, Russell Rogers, Harold Donnelly, Bruce Williams, Dora Evans, Hope Ide, Kenneth Calkins, Rev. and Mrs, Kenneth O'Neill, Bess Cooke. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Hilbert with Mr. and Mrs. Walters and daughter Elaine of Easton spent the weekend with Mrs. Hattie Hilbert. Mrs. Hil- bert spent last week with relatives and friends in Chenango Bridge, N.Y. Anthony Toluba Jr. is enrolled at Rochester Institute of Technology in a five year course of Chemical En- gineering. Mrs. Sallie Brown is home from a three week visit with her son, Wal- ter and family of Newark, N. Y. Harvey Kitchen is a patient in the Nesbitt Hospital. The Bible study on the Book of Acts will be held in the church on Wednesday night at 7:30 with Rev. O'Neill in charge. : Noxen / Mrs. John Newell has returned from General Hospital. Howard Shook has returned to his home after spending several weeks at General Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Edwards en- tertained at dinner Sunday Mrs. Grace Thompson, Mr. and, Mrs. Glen Holcomb, Port Crane, N. Y. and Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Bush of Brack- ney, Pa. ~ Word has been received of the birth of a baby boy to Mr. and Mrs. Edward Davis at Ideal Hospital in Endicott on September 15. Mrs. Mrs. Harry Miller, Harrisburg, was operated on for the removal of a cataract at Polyclinic Hospital, Har- risburg, on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Loren Case spent the weekend visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack McGinley and family at Newark, N. J. and their son, Larry, who is with the army at Fort Monmouth, N. J. Mr. and Mrs. David MacMillan had as weekend guests Mrs. Jean Siglin and family of Newportville, Mr. and Mrs. Percy Patton, Bristol and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Flyn and family of Newton, N. J. Wheeler Hess spent last week at Hartford, Conn., visiting his son, Wheeler Jr. and family. Mrs. Stella Wall has returned to her home in West Wyoming after a lengthy visit with her sister, Mrs. Lola Miner. Richard Harding, son of Wilson Harding, resumed his studies at Penn State Extension College on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. William Murphy and family visited Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Kasson at Vosburg on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. James Wilson have returned to their home at Stark- ville, Miss., after spending two weeks vacation with the former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. David MacMillan. Both Mr. and Mrs. Wilson are attending Mississippi State College. Pvt. Kenneth Turner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Turner completed eight weeks of basic combat train- ing September 7 at Fort Knox, Ky. He graduated from Lake-Noxen High School in June. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Myers and family, Massachusetts, visited Wil- son Harding this past week. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Race and family of Buffalo, N. Y. visited here over the weekend. James Hoblitzell, Allen Field, and Richard Race left Sunday for State College where they enrolled for the winter term. Mrs. Nelson Cargill and Candy and William Race of Endicott, N. Y. visited Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Race lover the weekend. The recent rains have been more than welcome to the employees of Armour ‘Leather Company where work has been curtailed because of insufficient water. Myrle Siglin and Mrs. William Siglin and family of Bristol spent the weekénd with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Siglin. The following spent the weekend with Mrs. Dorothy French and at- tended the wedding of Patricia Jones and Alan Hobbs on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Hopfer and daugh- ter, Mr. and Mrs. William MacIntosh and Lillie and Roberta, Mr. and Mrs. John Williams, N. J., Mrs. Harry Schwartz and Mr. and Mrs. Philip Shafer, Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. Osmond Casterline, Brent and Darlene, spent the week- end with Mr. and Mrs. James Cas- terline at Buffalo. Beaumont The Lend-A-Hand Women’s Club had its monthly meeting at the I.LO.O.F. Hall Thursday, with Mes- dames Norman Frantz, Charles Smith, and Carl Smith as hostesses. Plans were made to send a “Sun- shine Box” to Norma Meeker and to have a Hallowe'en Party at the [.O.O.F. Hall Thursday, October 10, when masked members at the party will call at the homes of the absent members. Patients at the General Hospital this past week were Mrs. Harry Brown, Mrs. Algert Kliamovich, and Emory Straley. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Stitzer and family of Wyoming were Sunday dinner guests of the Herbert Good- wins. The Warren Johnsons and Mor- gan Lewises enjoyed a weekend sightseeing at Washington, D. C. recently. Mrs. Walter Pilger, Sr. is at Roch- of her daughter, Mrs. Albert Van- Campen who is hospitalized. At its meeting last Monday eve- ning at the home of Mrs. Harry Clark the Rebecca Sunday School Class made plans to have a “Fay Maid” Party at the Beaumont School Tuesday, October 15. ; Mr. and Mrs. Jennings Byron Wood and children Gary, Kathy, and Loretta have returned after a three year tenure doing missionary work near Havana, affiliated with the Church of God. Mrs. Wood is the former Abbie Belles, daughter of Davis is the former Doris Miner. Mr. and Mrs. Heber Belles. * Trees Cut Do You Have Any Work For A ~ POWER SAW? * Fireplace Logs Cut Ask For Free Estimate On Work BERTI & SONS Phone Dallas 4-5731 * Trees Trimmed ester, N. Y. caring for the family The Harry Hilbert family were guests of the Henry Mowrys at a barbecue chicken dinner Sunday. Mr. end Mrs. Kenneth Jackson and daughter, Marilyn accompanied by Mrs. Emily Lane and Karlene Binghamton last Sunday. Kingston Twp. A joint meeting of the planning committee and the building com- mittee of Trucksville Methodist Church was held recently in the church parlors. Presided over by the chairman of the planning com- mittee, Dr. Richard E. Crompton, the group heard progress reports concerning actions now under con- sideration to relieve the overcrowd- ed conditions in the church. Mrs. Harry Goeringer, Jr., Car- verton, entertained at a coffee hour in the interest of the membership drive of Wilkes-Barre Y. W. C. A. Present: Mesdames J. B. Schooley, Lewis Rogers, . Chapman, Floyd Pry, Bart Collett, Sally Weiss, Wil- liam King and the hostess. Berean Class, Shavertown Meth- odist (Church, was entertained by Mrs. Oscar Dymond at her home in Fernbrook. Mrs. William Dodson was assistant hostess. Present: Mesdames Walter Shaver, Jane Isaacs, Henry Calkins, Anthony Moreck, William Ockenhouse, Rus- sell Cease. Barbara Hirleman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Budd Hirleman, Shav- ertown, has resumed her studies at Pennsylvania State University. Mrs. Lemuel Troster, Trucksville, is recuperating at her home after submitting to surgery at Nesbitt Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kleiner, Trucksville, have returned from vis- iting their daughters in Auburn, Mass., and Altoona. Mr. and Mrs. Club of Trucksville Methodist Church enjoyed a corn roast which was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Louis T. Wilcox. Those present: Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hess, Mr. and Mrs. Byron Shortz, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Slucki, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Stookey, Mr. and Mrs. William Hewitt, Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Bennett, Mr. and Mrs. [Cedric Griffiths, Mr. and Mrs. Don- ald Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shepherd, Col. and Mrs. Leon Beisel, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Greenley, Mr. and Mrs. Voight Long, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Fennell, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Johnson, William Strange, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Lloyd, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ide, Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Finney, Miss Marian Finney, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Feindt, the host and hostess. ? Mrs. Gwilym Evans, Lehigh Street, is visiting relatives in New York City. Lay Foundations For Five New Ranch Homes Excavations have been made and foundations laid by Jones Construc- tion Company for three ranch-types homes on the former Weiss farm for individual employees of the new Metropolitan Wire Products Com- pany in Parsons; a home on Sterling Avenue, and one on Hughes Ave- nue, New Goss Manor, all of them in the $20,000 range. A father and two sons compose the Jones Con- struction Company: Howard, David, and Jack. Meeker Turkey Dinner Meeker WSCS plans a turkey dinner with all the trimmings for October 3, starting at 5:30. Mrs. Morgan Cinnellly is chairman. Jones of Noxen visited relatives at Gifts & Greetings for You — through WELCOME WAGON from Your Friendly Business Neighbors and Civic and Social Welfare Leaders On the occasion of: The Birth of a Baby Change of Residence Arrivals of Newcomers to City PHONE DOROTHY D. LANDIS Dallas 4-3211 or Dallas 4-1101 FRANCES IVES BUtler 7-4467 A 3 . X ; We THE DALLAS POST, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1957 America’s ten richest women —who are they? How much] money do they have and how do they spend it? Are they happy? Who are ‘they? They don’t know themselves. Nor do their lawyers know; nor can they, their lawyers or their invest- ment counselors say, even with- in the last.$10 million, just how wealthy they are because their fluctuating assets can only be estimated in round figures. The September Ladies’ Home Journal names the ten women who are probably the very rich- est and tells, briefly, their life stories, Those listed and their estimated fortunes are: Doris Duke, who acquired her father’s American Tobacco Company fortune at age 21 ($300 million) ; Mrs. Edsel Ford, heiress to Ford Motor Company millions and J. L. Hudson, Detroit depart- ment store (nearly $300 million); Mrs. Merriweather Post, whose father developed and popular- ized Post Toasties and Grape- Nuts ($250 million); Mrs. Horace Dodge Sr., widow of the motor car manufacturer ($250 million); Mrs. Frederick E. Guest, whose father was a part- ner of Andrew Carnegie ($200 million). Worth between $125 million and $200 million are Mrs. Al- fred I. duPont, whose husband’s family got its start with a gun-| Powder mill on the banks of randywine Creek; Mrs. Charles Shipman Payson, the former Joan Whitney, sister of Jock Whitney, U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain; and Mrs. Mary G. Roebling, one of the nation’s ablest banking brains. Mrs. Chauncy McCormick, heiress of McCormick and Deering farm implement fortunes, has an esti- mated $120 million and Helena Rubinstein, the list’s only self- made woman, has a personal fortune around $100 million. America’s Richest Women Named Photo Wide World Doris Duke, the most publi- cized and reputedly richest woman in America, acquired her father’s American Tobacco Company fortune at age 21. their. fortunes? They can—and do—buy anything they want. © But they spend more on help- ing crippled children, finding causes for diseases, relieving poverty and raising education standards than they do on them- selves. Are they happy? Most of them are unhappy about the publicity they get. They can’t marry, have children, get divorced or write a check without getting atten- tion, which always -prompts letters asking “Why do you have so much money?” and “If you have so much, why can’t you give me even just one million?” The biggest problem of a woman of immense wealth is more personal. As one woman put it, it is “finding a place where she can feel she is needed and is doing something worthwhile enough to be inter- oe How do. these women spend esting.” Demand for Pennsylvania Live- stock Exposition premium lists has been increasing with approach of the entry deadline date of October 1, according to word from Harrisburg where the first event of its kind ever held in the Keystone State will be staged November 12-16 in the Deadline For Entry In Pa. Livestock Exposition In Harrisburg Is Oct. 1 State Farm Show quarters. Advance entries indicate a highly successful showing of beef cattle, swine and sheep, declares William L. Henning, Pennsylvania Secretary of Agriculture. He is a breeder of all three species. The Fastest Growing Dairy In Greater Wilkes-Barre Call Dallas 4-6031 =... or buying It pays to know you are getting a quality product as well as printed metered deliv- eries — and you get both from . . . R. A. DAVIS 18 Scott St. Wilkes-Barre Phone VA 2-21 BE SURE OF WHAT YOU'RE GETTING! . . buying your medicines heating comfort PRINTED METERED DELIVERIES i 88 for Delivery International,” are available from B. L. Coleman, Manager, Pennsylvania Livestock Exposition, 1831 N. Cam- eron Street, Harrisburg. Judges for the Pennsylvania show will be: Beef cattle—Glen Brachter, Okla- homa A. & M. College; L. E. Math- ers, Mason City, Ill; Dr. Don L. Good, Kansas State College, and Dr. Robert A. Long, University of Georgia. Sheep — Carl Bradford, Wooster, Ohio; Luther Belden, North Hatfield, Mass., and Alex McKenzie, Still- water, Okla. Swine—Arlie Anderson, Elizabeth- town, Pa.; Arthur Jordan, Ohio State University; R. Alan Williams, Iowa City, and Wilbur Plager, Iowa Swine Producers Association, Des Moines, Iowa. Carcass show — Dr. Robert W. Bray, University of Wisconsin and Samuel Cook, Philadelphia. Dates for the exposition will per- mit showing stock at Harrisburg and then the Eastern Livestock: Show at Timonium, Md., opening on the 16th, and the International Livestock Ex- position in Chicago, opening on No- vember 29th. a Dallas Firemen On Dry Run Saturday Morning Dallas Firemen turned out for a dry run Saturday morning at 10:30, when a blaze was reported near Moore's Store in East Dallas. Turned out to be somebody burning trash, and the apparatus was back in the Borough Building again within ten minutes. X-Ray Unit To Remain Open Until 8 Sept. 24 Wyoming Valley Tuberculosis Association Mobile X-Ray Unit will prolong its hours next Tuesday until 8 p. m. to permit men and women who are employed to get a chest X-Ray. The last time it will ap- pear in Dallas for some time, it will park as usual at the Acme, starting operations at 10 a. m. The unit serviced 279 employees | of Natona Mills last Monday. Start your Chicks on Start your Turkey Poults Raise Broilers on Ti-o-ga Broiler Feeds. Field Tested. Buy Tioga’s Feeds. Follow our programs. — Compare Results! Ask for free literature. Chicatine. on Turkatine. Phone: 4-7141 DEVENS MILLING CO. A. C. DEVENS, OWNER Dallas, Penna. 3 Ask about our compre- hensive Service Con- tract that can save ¢ you plenty. Phone Dallas 4-5701 TV reception not up to par? That’s your cue to call us. We'll quickly find out whatt’s wrong and make it right. thoroughly experienced. DeRemer’s TV & Appliances RCA - FRIGIDAIRE - EMERSON O»r men are Trucksville 5 Modernize Your HEATING PLANT eA 2 an te Bae Ss WITH A LOW RATE HOME REPAIR LOAN FROM "THE MINERS" DALLAS BRANCH - Dallas 9 o
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers