PAGE FOUR Enterprise Firm Buys McCarthy's Aluminum Enterprise Aluminum Products has purchased the Aluminum Divis- ion of McCarthy Enterprises, Inc., and will continue the manufacturing and sale of aluminum doors and windows, awnings, porch enclosures and jalousies at the rear of 20-22 East South Street, Wilkes-Barre. Lee McCarthy, president of Mec- Carthy Enterprises, has announced he has sold the Aluminum Division to John Wardell, Trucksville, and Peter Klemash to devote more time to the Community Motors, Lincoln- Mercury dealer, with sales rooms and service headquarters on Market Street, Kingston. Wardell and Klemash have been associated with the Aluminum Division of McCarthy A Enterprises since the firm was founded nearly three years ago. They bring to the new firm considerable experience in this business. Klemash is a resident of Phillips Avenue, Lynwood, and Wardell re- sides at Westmoreland Hills, Trucksville. Wardell has been asso- ciated with Mr. MdCarthy for nearly thirty years and Klemash joined the auto dealer firm thirteen years ago. Borough PTA Hears Talk About Summer Activity Dallas Borough PTA was given in- formation about summer activities available to children in this area, Monday night at the March meeting. Robert Parry spoke on baseball for boys, taking in all the programs offered by the Back Mountain. George Pickett, YMCA secretary for the area, spoke on Camp Kresge, and summer program of the YMCA. Agnes Gregson represented Girl Scouts. She outlined the advantages of sending a girl to the established camp at Onawanda, or the weekend or Day Camp at Wildwood. Mrs. William Baker presided. Kindergarten mothers served. At- tendance award was tied between Mrs. James’ kindergarten class and Mrs. Louise Colwell’s fourth grade. Police To Sponsor Benefit Dance May 9 A dance for benefit of Back Moun- tain Police Association will be held at Jackson Fire Hall May 9. Tickets are available from any police officer in the Back Mountain. Statesmen’s Orchestra will provide music for ballroom and square dancing. Red Jones is the caller. SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION ® Buying ® Building ® Refinancing Borrow the West Side Savings & Loan way . because interest rates are reasonable . . . you re- ceive prompt service . . . you build credit and you deal with well known home people who are in- terested in you. “A Savings Institution Of Strength And Character” 219 Wyoming Ave. — Kingston, Corners Member Federal Ho Loan Bank System THE DALLAS POST, FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1958 Dallas Area Grade Schools Prepare For Annual Spring Work Exhibits Heads Sunrise Program REV. RUSSELL LAWRY Rev. Russell C. Lawry, assisted by Donald Williams, is in charge of the second annual Easter Sunrise Ser- vice to be held at the Dallas Out- door Theatre at 6 o'clock on Easter morning. The service, attended by over a thousand cars last year, is, sponsored by the Country Cousins Club. Rev. Edgar F. Singer, pastor of Forty Fort Methodist Church, will be guest preacher. Services Tomorrow For Mrs. Armanda Remley home of her daughter, Babcock, at Hunlock Creek. Mrs. Remley had been living with her daughter since August, when she submitted to an operation from Funeral services will be conducted from the Bronson Funeral Home to- morrow afternoon at 2, by Rev. Robert Yost, pastor of Shavertown Methodist Church which Mrs. Rem- ley attended. Friends may call this evening.- Burial will be in Bethel Hill Cemetery. ” A native of Fairmount Township, daughter of the late Dalton and Theodosia Long Harrison, and widow of the late Jay E. Remley, who died in 1923, Mrs. Remley spent thirty years in Shavertown. She is survived by these children: Ethel Babcock, Hunlock Creek; Carl Remley, Dallas; Mrs. Marion Hub- schmitt, Rockaway, Maryland; eight grandchildren and one greatgrand- child; .a brother John and a sister Mrs. Carrie Laycock, both of Sweet Valley; a sister, Mrs. Daisy Deiter, Bloomsburg. Pallbearers were Carl Harvey, Robert Deiter, Paul Kingsbury, J. Kingsbury, Byron Laycock, and Nick Catece. Twelve Local Students To Sing In Glee Club Twelve: Back Mountain students at West Side Catholic High School will take part, in a Glee Club con- cert Sunday afternoon at 8, and Monday and Tuesday evenings at 8. David and Raymond Hindricks, and Edward Girvan sing in the bass section. Ann Black plays in the orchestra. Carol and Patsy Pola- chek, Carol and Tally Thomas, Eileen Ferry, Sharon Butler, Claudia Laux and Terry Kennedy sing in the girls’ section. »——> BUY DIRECT AT «ex FACTORY-TO-YOU SAVINGS | o WINDOWS © JALOUSIES | PRODUCTS "(Successor to McCarthy Enterprises) © DOORS e AWNINGS [ © PORCH ENCLOSURES ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM VA 5-2126 or VA 4-2872 (after 5 pm or Sun.) — HERE’S WHAT YOU GET deavy Extruded Aluminum No Sag, No Twisting Completely Weather Tight Genuine Aluminum Screening i Positive Lock Catch LARGEST SELECTION OF AU sluminum DOORS In Eastern Pa. | Complete with Non-Slam Liniiien $ 95 i Pneumatic Closer and Best Storm Value in Town. Compare Its Features with Doors Twice the Price. Only VA 5-2726 or : VA 4-2872 No Down Payment © Easy Terms 24-Hour Service Including Sunday ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM PRODUCTS Rear 20-22 East South St., Wilkes-Barre Drive to the rear of Nesbit Lane across from Mattern’s, Florist A Name You Know. A Firm You Can Trust Manufacturer of Aluminum Combination Windows, Doors and Awnings’ which she failed to make recovery.’ Children Schools are working hard to finish project books and pictures of spring before next week’s exhibitions, when blackboards will bloom with gay pictures, and desks and work tables will show how modern education brings out individuality and enlists interest. , Exhibits will demonstrate how children are taught to read, write, add, spell, and is developed around a unit of work. Through art activities and art media the pupil expresses honestly his own ideas, feelings, and experi- ences in his own way. In arithmetic and in spelling it is desirable for each child to get the same answer. However, the “right” answer in the art class is when every child comes out with a different answer. This is why a row of identical cut-paper daffodils on the bulletin board is not the best answer to an art lesson on the subject of spring. Mrs. Dorothy T. Withey is supervisor of art. Below are the exhibit dates for three schools and the lesson units portrayed in each classroom. Ex- hibits are in the evening. Shavertown Elementary School, James H. Goodwin, principal, exhibit || on Monday, March 24. | Grade I, teacher, Mrs. R. McGuin- ess, Unit— The Farm” Grade I, teacher, Mrs. R. Michman —“The Circus is Coming” Grade II, teacher, Mrs. E. Kromel- bein—*“Indian Life” Grade II, teacher, Miss B. Sutliff— “Fun at the Carnival” Grade III, teacher, Mrs. R. Porter —“A Trip to the Alps” Grade IV, teacher, Mrs. R. Novy— “The Class of 1966” Grade V, teacher, J. Park—‘“The 49th State” Grade VI, teacher, J. Goodwin— “The Coffee Industry in Latin Amer- ica” Dallas Borough Elementary School, Mrs. Louise Colwell, principal, ex- hibit on Tuesday, March 25. Kindergarten, teachers, Mrs. Marie Borton—‘‘Spring Is Here”; Mrs. Han- nah James— ‘Butterflies Are Here”; Mrs. Marlene Holly — “Dolls Are Here.” Grade I, teacher, Miss J. Martin— “Our Friends, the Indians” Grade I, teacher, Mrs. A. Rood— “First Grade Looks at the Sky and the Earth in 1958” Grade II, teacher, Mrs. A. Mason —“Our Holidays” Grade TII, teacher, Miss C. Davis— “Community Workers” Grade IV, teacher, Mrs. L. Colwell —“Spring Gardens” Grade V, teacher, Mrs. M. Hughes —“The Change of Seasons” in Dallas ‘Area Grade | Grade VI, teacher, John Mulhern —*“South America” Trucksville Elementary School, Miss Adaline Burgess, principal, ex- hibit on Wednesday, March 26. Grade I, teacher, Miss A. Burgess —“Spring Is Here” Grade II, teacher, Mrs. E. McGuire —“Spring Frolic” Grade III, teacher, Miss G. Weid- ner—*“Adventures in Reading” Grade IV, teacher, Miss M. Young —*“Washington, Father of Our Coun- try” Grade V, teacher, Mrs. G. Fleming —“Westward Ho” Grade V, teacher, Mrs. A. Trimble —“The Agricultural and Industrial South” Grade VI, teacher, Miss J. Yozviak —*“People of South America’. Little Cindy Brobst Dies At Hospital Little Cindy Ruth Brobst, fifteen months old, daughter fof Mf. and Mrs. Kenneth Brobst, las, died Thursday afternoon in the Child- ren’s Hospital in Philadelphia. She was buried in Memorial Shrine Mon- day afternoon, Rev. Charles Frick conducting services from the funeral home at 672 Memorial Highway. Arrangements were by Bronson. Mr. and Mrs. Brobst never ex- pected Cindy to live beyond infancy. When she was about two months old, a remarkable operation was per- formed, with insertion of a valve to siphon off excess fluid from her brain. This operation was similar to one described two years ago in the Reader’s Digest. Little Cindy devel- oped an enlarged heart, and at times required hospitalization and oxygen. Four days before her death she was admitted to the Philadel- phia hospital for observation and treatment. Physicians had given no real hope to the parents. Death would be almost inevitable, they had been told from ‘the beginning. Surviving in addition to the par- ents is’ a sister, Sharon, nine years old. : Pallbearers were young boys: Don- ald and Richard Stroud, Thomas Hopa, and Gerald Wagner. Former Summer Resident Dies At 91 In City The community extends s; thy to Mrs. Anthony Didjulis, cks- ville, who lost her mother Sunday afternoon in the death of Mrs. John McGahren, 91. Mrs. McGahren, wid- ow of a former District Attorney of Luzerne County, was well known in this area, spending many summers in the family farm in Trucksville. William Dodson Dies At Fernbrook, Rged 81 William Dodson, 81, stroke Saturday ‘suffered a “died the after noon at rook. Dallas Com- | munity Ambulance crew headed by | Norti ‘Berti administered oxygen without avail. Mr. Dodson was bur- | ied Wednesday afternoon in Mt. Greenwood Cemetery, following ser- vices conducted from the Williams | Funeral Home by Rev. Robert D. | Yost, pastor of Shavertown Metho- | dist Church, and Reverend Frederic | Eidam, pastor of St. Paul’s Lutheran. ! Mr. Dodson was a native of Hun- | lock Creek, son of the late Fred- erick G. and Eva Baer Dodson. He spent his childhood at Hunlock Creek, attending local schools. Later he lived in Larksville, Courtdale, and Kingston, working for a time for Wilkes-Barre Transit Company, ! and later becoming a funeral direc- tor. For twelve years of his thirty- one years in this profession, he operated his own, business in Wil- liamstown. He has also associated BETTER GET A BEFORE IT’S . OUR LARGE TIRE SHIPMENT IS GOING FAST! BIG SAVINGS DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Postpone Legion Ruxiliary American Legion Auxiliary, Dallas 62, will meet March 27, not March 20 as formerly announced. A Talent Sale will be a feature of the meeting. Each member will bring something of her own manufacture which will be auctioned off. - > Auxiliary To Meet Franklin Township Fire Company Auxiliary will hold its regular meet- ‘ing Monday evening at 8 at the ‘home of Mrs. William James. Mrs. John Zarno will preside. with the Murray-Smith Company. He and his wife, the former Bar- bara N. Baker of Courtdale, celebra- ted their sixty-first wedding anni- versary October 21. He was a mem- ber of Shavertown Methodist Church | and Forty Fort Council 190, Sons and Daughters of Liberty. Surviving are his widow; a son, Fred E. Dodson, of Dodson and Hudak Construction Company; a daughter, Mrs. Oscar Dymond, also of Fernbrook; five grandsons and eleven greatgrandchildren. SHARE OF THE TOO LATE! STATION WE ARE THE OFFICIAL IN THIS AREA We Give S & H Green Stamps DALLAS E58 CLYDE BIRTH, Owner — OPEN 24 HOURS DAILY — BIRTHS AAA EMERGENCY SERVICE WALTER HENNEBAUL, Mgr. Main Highway, Jet. Rt. 115-309 ORchard 4-1421 “KNOWN FOR FRIENDLY SERVICE” SERVIGENTER | STANDOUTS Caster Parade From The STORE S. & H. STAMPS T00 ! ~ many patterns and colors. IN THE SUNDIAL for Style, Comfort and Wear Shiny pumps for girls, rugged styles for boys! All designed to provide your children with the best in sturdy, fashionable footwear. Make Easter a real festive occasion by getting stylish Robin Hood shoes for Easter. Come in today and choose from many, ¥ _ Child’s Sizes 4-12; 1215-3 We can FIT your child! 3.98 4.98 b.98 Yowll Love the Vast Selection! ni: 114 MAIN STREET LUZERNE Plenty of Free Parking In Rear of Store SHOES ‘GLOBE STORE z ¢
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers