er he vin ife tht ad is= 1g- 4 | | we ept nd to eat : i ure ur val ure re 384 1en ope eat ual ous ith. 28 res, she it th- n 7 she and 1ty. | in on ady “i you ad. ody t a fore TO- om ded. Te's nN oR DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA THE TRADING POST Did You Read | | { WASH = DRY In HALF the Time! AND SAVE MONEY, TOO! Have you tried the other Self - Service Coin Operated Laundries? Now Try the Best .—By Consumer Test — Frigi- .daire Washers rated faster (just 18 minutes) with great- est water extraction giving . you Cleaner Washes COM-' PLETELY DRY IN HALF THE WASH 20¢ OPEN ° 24 HOURS | Apay ‘Frigidaire - Equipped LUZERNE LAUNDERETTE 91 MAIN STREET, LUZERNE Woman's Club Sewing Contest ls Scheduled For March 25 District judging for the 4th annual General Federation of Woman's Clubs Fashion-Sewing contest will be “held at Hotel Sterling, Wilkes-Barre, Saturday, March 25. Reservations for the 12 o'clock luncheon closed , Tuesday, March 21, with judging to ‘take place at 1:30 p. m. General chairman is Mrs. J. Glenn There is only one WELCOME WASON 80 years of experience fostering good will in | business and community e. For information on Welcome Wagon, phone ® ® ® °® ° ® ® » ® 1d ® » ® * ® ° ® °® » » ® ® » ® ® » ® s ® ® ® ® ® ® ° - WELCOME WAGON 200000000000000000000000000000800000 FRANCES IVES BU 7-4467 or MRS. WILLIAM R. HUGHES Gooch, Kingston,who has announced two divisions this year: the club member division “to select the ideal costume for the Clubwoman’s ward- robe from entries made and modeled by individual club members, and a new student division” to select the ideal ' costume for the high school student’s dress-up wardrobe from en- tries’ made and modeled by high school home economics students.” In" addition there will be a Hall- mark Art Contest and an exhibit of arts and crafts. In recent local judging of the Dal- las Woman's Club entrants, Mrs. Roger McShea, Jr. took top honors in the club member division. and will represent the club in district judging. In the student division Miss Marilyn Eck will represent the senior ciub and Miss Annabelle Ambrose will be sponsored by the Dallas Jr. Woman's Club. In a separate contest of stud- ents not entering the Vogue compet- ition the winning outfit was. made and nindeled by Beverly King. GET IT AT THESE STORES LRA rE rc [leant PUTERBAUGH Harveys Lake oe gy FOR COUGHS KOCHER’S _ DUE TO COLDS MARKET Harveys Lake — 0 — CAVE’S MARKET Idetown —e— BUNNEY’S MARKET Shavertown WET CONTENTS 4 FLUID 02 PRICE SEE [| RY 1 48 {es 0 a £3 co, - DALLAS, PA. BOGDAN’S MARKET Shavertown ORDE your EASTER PLANTS EVEL VDEQE QL CUT from HILL- The SHAVERTOWN OR 4-1331 FLOWERS CORSAGES Florist 3 N. Pioneer Avenue, OR 4-2732 » Pv to the order of— THE FRUGAL BANK & TRUST You Half Your Fuel Bills for a Full Six Months March, 1961 $Cash PVC OCCT COCO TCTeY Your Ford Tractor Dealer dh datetime © COLLECT THIS CHECK AS YOUR BONUS _ On FORD DIESEL TRACTOR Offer Good Through Mareh 31st. ~~ KUNKLE MOTORS Dan Meeker, Prop. KUNKLE, PA. OR 5-1546 | on Wednesday, THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, MARCH 23; 1961 Chase Passes State Boards MRS. CHARLOTTE SLOCUM, RN Mrs. Charlotte Slocum, of Meeker, has . received word that she has successfully passed the State Board examinations, and may affix the RN, signifying Registered Nurse, to her name. Mrs. Slocum, daughter of r. and Mrs. Robert Traver of Harveys Lake and wife of Ernest Slocum of Meek- er, is a member of the nursing staff at Wyoming Valley Hospital, from which she graduated in 1960. She is a member of the 1957 graduating class of Lake-Noxen high school. Mrs. William Cole Heads Lehman Woman's Club Mrs. William Cole was chosen pres- ident and Mrs. John Callahan, vice ‘president, at the recent meeting of | Lehman's Woman's Club held in the Fire Hall. Other officers, second vice president, Mrs. Paul Doris, treasurer, Mrs. John Bradovchak, recording secretary,Mrs. Edward Jones, corres- ponding secretary, Mrs. Mark Heller. Installation dinner will be held at the Castle Inn, Memorial Highway. Reservations must be in by April 5, with Mrs. Leon Bartz or Mrs. David | Ewdards. Contributions were voted to the Lehman Fire Company, $25, Gen- eral Hospital, $25 and Girl Scouts, $22. DALLAS Junior High NEWS JOANNE HADSALL Spring is here! Woolen coats and sweaters are being packed away for Jack Frost's visit next winter. It surely sounds wonderful to, hear the birds singing again. Miss Saxe and Mr. Morgan re- cently attended a conference at Ber- wick High School. The program was opened with an address’ by Dr. Hooten of Florida State University. One of the points mentioned in his address was that’ the content of modern mathematics differs from traditional mathematics, while the intent is to give the individual stu- dent freedom to discover mathema- tical techniques. After a conclusion of the talk the meeting divided into two groups to discuss different fields of mathematics. They later saw a demonstration on the numeral sys- tems, which was given by Dr. Hooten. That evening they attended a lecture at Wilkes College on The School Mathematics Study Group’s First Year Algebra given by Mr. Linden. During assembly on Monday, March 6, the Dallas Falcon wrestling team put on an intersquad exhibi- tion wrestling meet. The members of the Blue team defeated the Red: team by a score of 16-8. (B)—Blue team, (R)—Red team. Weaver (B) decisioned Kaschen- bach (RY) 4-2 T. Finn (B),pinned Wancho (R) in 4:15 ; Goble (B) decisioned Wilson (R) 4-1 Gosart (R) and R. Finn (B) draw 6-6 ' Alexander (B) decisioned Steph- enson (R) 5-2 Wolfe (R) pinned Banks (B) in 1:29 Parents of eighth grade students received sheets showing the scores received in the algebra aptitude tests taken this February over the weekend. The test is an indication of probable success or failure in algebra. The informational is use- ful in the educational guidance of the student and planning the in- structional program. Mr. McCutcheon, our guidance counselor recently spoke to the ninth-graders about the Key Club and Keyettes drill teams. The achievement record and personality of the students will be considered if they wish to join. The Easter vacation will begin the twenty-ninth, and will continue to April 8, inclu- sive. Everyone is looking forward to the vacation. The Junior High School coaches: Mr. Brominski, Mr. Cathrall, Mr. McCutcheon attended a workshop on the care and prevention of athletic injuries at Geisinger Hospital on March 11. The student body viewed a full- length feature movie on Wednesday, March 22. The film was the reward of reaching the magazine campaign goal. DO YOU KNOW - The American Nurses’ Association § | liste 460,000 professional nie in th United States. i! | Winter sure slid out in a blaze of glory, what with the slippery high- ways and the beautifully coated trees and telephone and power lines and now that Spring is officially here, let’s hope that warmer weather is around a nearby corner. Mrs. Sheldon Rice is Area Captain of the Cancer Crusade for Jackson Township, and is badly in need of volunteers. Your help is needed, please contact Mrs. Rice at OR 4-2630 and tell her you will aid in the Township Drive which is to be held April 18. Mrs. Loretta Reakes was thé Sun- day guest of Mr. and Mrs. James Roushey. Madge Billows, teacher in the public schools of Towanda, spent the weekend with her mother, Mrs. John Billow. Carl Aston, president, announces that the Ladies Auxiliary of the fireman will assist in serving the annual turkey dinner cn April 22 at the Fire Hall. Mrs. Fred Gable, Auxiliary, president, advises that the menu will consist of turkey, mashed potatoes, dressing, peas and carrots, cranberry sauce, and fresh home made pies. Serving will start at 4 p. m, and continue until all have been served. Dawn Sherwood has returned from the Nesbitt Memorial Hospital. Republicans, who were omitted from the list of candidates running in the Spring Primary are: Edward Jeffery, Judge of Election; Mrs. Loretta Reakes, Inspector of Elec- tion; Robert J. Culp, Justice of the Peace; and Roland Gensel, Con- stable. Congratulations "to Donald J. Pav- lick, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Pavick, who graduated with honors from the International Correspon- dence School, Scranton, in a course in Radio and Electronics. He hopes to open a shop in the near future. He was the honored guest at a “dinner party attended by members of his family. The overnight hike of Troop 225 scheduled for last Friday night was postponed due to freezing tempera- ture. The hike will be held tomor- row night if conditions are satisfac- tory. Richard Lincoln is Scoutmaster. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Snyder ‘and children, Ray, Jr., and Mary Beth, accompanied by Mrs. Snyder’s | parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Straz- dus, Breslau, visited with Mrs. Snyder's sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Meyer of Sys , Sunday. Two of our enterprising citizens will soon embark in the used car field. Louis Wilcox and Richard Lincoln have set up headquarters, complete with office, adjacent to the Lincoln Sinclair Gas Station on Chase Road, where they will be glad to meet all of their friends. luck to them. Darcy Rogers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Foster Hall Rogers, who cele- brated her seventh birthday on March 4, was the honored guest at a Puppet Show at the Y. W. C. A. The following were her guests: Carolyn Edwards, Jackie Vivian, Amy Robinson, Andy and Dana Coons, her sister, Hilda, and her grandmother and grandpa. Mr. and Mrs. William Sorber of Cranford, N. J., were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Wilcox. Sterling Brown, Chase Road, has announced his candidacy for Justice of the Peace on the Democratic ticket. He is a veteran of World War II, a director of the Air Products Credit Union and a Trustee of his Union. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Wilcox called. on Mr. Wilcox’s mother, Mrs. O. M. Wilcox, Sunday and found her much improved. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Lincoln left for Rochester Saturday to attend the funeral of Mr. Lincoln's sister on Monday. Qur sympathy is extended to Mr. Lincoln. : William Conyngham was host to Bucks County Holstein Association when it paid an inspection visit to Hillside Farm and joined the group when it toured other farms’ raising Holstein cattle, throughout Penn- sylvania and New York State, the forepart of this week. Chief of Police Dennis Bonning reports that Kingston Township cruisers have now been outfitted with 2-Way Radio which can be tuned “in with Jackson Township cruisers making for better police protection in both townships. Mr. and Mrs. Louis W. Berger, Chase Corners, have returned from Palm Beach, where they had a delightful vacation. While at Palm Beach they met Catherine Freeman of Wilkes-Barre and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wise of Sunbury. Nicholas’ Witek, Chase Manor, left Sunday to attend a convention of beer distributors in Philadelphia and returned home yesterday. He re- presented Gibbons Brewing Com- pany. “A Day Apart” service of Lent will be held by W. S. C. S. of Huntsville Methodist Church, Holy Thursday, from 11 a. m. to 2 p. m. Each lady is to bring her own lunch. All women of the church and com- munity are invited to attend this inspiring service. Mrs. Albert Cad- walader is president. B. A. Class of Huntsville Metho- dist Church met in the church parlors Saturday, with Mrs. Albert Sherman, president, presiding. Mrs. John Fielding had charge of devo- tions and used the Easter Story as her theme. The Class will hold a Bake Sale at Boyd White's Store tomorrow, starting at 10:30 with Mrs. Hazel Fielding in charge. Plans were made to hold a “Farmers Dence’” at the Jackson Township Fire Hall, in conjunction with the Good |- April 15. The Dance committee is composed of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Lashford, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Snyder and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gommer, | Sr. Refreshments were served by a committee consisting of Mr. and Mrs. John Headman and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sherman. There were 24 members present. Mrs. Jennie Balegh and Florence Keefer were Sunday visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William R. Hughes. Alan Fox, Sr., was the honored guest at a surprise birthday party at’ his home Sunday. Attending, Rev. and Mrs. William Howard, Mr. and Mrs. James Cook and children, Kenneth, James, Jr., and Debbie, Mrs, Margaret Dubil and children, Edward, Ronnie and Debbie, Mr. and Mrs. William Ferry and children, William, Jr., and Millie June, Mr. and Mrs, Lansford Norris, Allan Fox, Jr., Linda and Emma May Fox and Mrs. Alan Fox, Sr., the hostess. buffet luncheon was served. | A | Cummings Mr. and Mrs. William J. Williams, | Honesdale and Mrs. Emma Kocher, Mrs, ‘Alan Fox on Saturday. Residents of Chase Road, near the | | August and received basic combat | Pine Acre Section, can tell when [ieining at Fort Dix, N. J. Spring is here without seeing the | first robin, because this is the time [employed by Pratt and Whitney | when inhuman persons start to drop | Aircraft, East Hartford, Conn. He is-| off their unwanted dogs and kittens. At the present time, the Tom Wil- | | 23 at the Signal School, Fort Mon- who is their guest, visited Mr. and | mou th, N. J. liams have an unwanted hunting | dog, without a collar or license, parking on their front door Nothing that they do sc do not want. Something care of the abandoned through the Humane Society. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Williams, Chase Road, had as weekend guests, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Griffith and daughter, Dana Lynn of Little Falls, N. J. The Griffiths formerly lived in Trucksville. Mr. Griffith is the son of Mrs. Cedric Griffith of Trucksville. Mrs. Ethel Jones of Wilkes-Barre, sister of Mrs. Williams, was also a weekend guest. Larksville Mountain was a sight to behold on Monday morning. Al the trees and bushes sparkled like diamonds in the morning sun. Fernbrook Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gerlach, Jr., Pittsburgh had their infant daugh- ter, Marcy Elizabeth, christianed recently in St. Paul's Lutheran Church by Rev. Frederick Eidam. The baby’s sponsors were Mr. and Mrs. Walter ‘Gosart. Mr. Gerlach is son of the Walter Gerlachs of Rou- shey Street. Mr. and Mrs. A George Prater, East Overbrook Avenue, spent the weekend with their daughter and |} son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Dymond, who recently moved into their new home in Scotch Hills, N. J. Agnes « Sidorek, Roushey Street, has returned after spending a month || in Mercy Hospital where she was ls admitted after a fall at her trailer home. Mrs. Alex Covert, East Overbrook | Avenue, is a patient in Nesbitt Hos- pital where she submitted to surgery on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Higgs, for- merly of Demunds Road, are now making their residence the former Reese home at Fernbrook Corners. Mr. and Mrs. Corey Crispell and George Shields, Demunds Road, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sidorek and family at Good- leigh Farms in honor of Mrs. Sid- orek’s birthday. ~ : Ee Additional Correspondence (Continued on Page 8 B) = = Delighted With Plumber Obtained From Classified “I've been going to call you for a long time,” Mrs. Fred Gordon, Norton Avenue, said last Wednesday afternoon. “I just want to tell you what a wonderful plumber I got through The Dallas Post classi- fied ads. You know how plumb- ers are—even the good one— always promising and then never showing. up. “Well I called Dick Weidner, from your classified ads. He's Mrs. William Higgins’ grandson. He came immediately. Why our house has never been so warm!” Mrs. Gordon, one of the old- est residents of Dallas, knows what many have learned—you can depend upon The Trading Post when you need help. | { step. ares it away | and to feed it, means that they will | be stuck with an animal that.they | should be | done by the authorities to try to | stop this practice or at least to take animals | - lL. SECTION: B— PAGE. Hadsall Triplets Celebrate Birthe With Three Frosted Birthday Cakes Seven years ago the Carlton. Had- sall triplets were born, tiny mites who were placed at once in incu- bators. Last Saturday they celebrated their seventh birthday, a joint affair garnished with three birthday cakes, one apiece, a day in, advance of the March 12 date. The little girl who ministered in order to save her when an infant, is now receivin specialized instruction at Overbroc School for the Blind, taking p liminary work in Braille. 7 Sharing the birthday celebratic were three little” cousins, Bobb David, and Billy Belles, children Mr. and Mrs. Harold W. Belles, a attends Overbrook School had to get | so of Harris Hill Road; and tH back to classes, being driven down | triplets’ older sisters, Louise an to Overbrook on Sunday. JoAnne. ; Bruce, the largest of the triplets, and Brenda, are in the first grade at Trucksville School, not far from the Hadsall home on Harris Hill Road. All three were in Kindergarten last year, but Barbara, with very poor eyesight from too much oxygen ad- Barbara lives in a dormitory v other little girls who have poor ey sight or lack it entirely. She hs just recovered from a bout w measles; It seemed wise to her ho mother that she should be permi to come home for a little while, convalesce among familiar surround ings. Rev. Charles Frick, pastor Huntsville Christian Church whe: the triplets go to Sunday Schoo Completes Basic Ordnance FORT MONMOUTH, N. J. (AHTNC) —Army Pvt. Richard M. Cummings, son of Mr. and. Mrs. Phillip | A. |recollects that he dropped in to Sr., 115 Sutton Road, | Mrs. Hadsall a few hours after th completed the 1l-week basic ord- | triplets were born. “How are yo nance electronics course February | feeling?” he wanted to know. “Just fine. What's everybod making such a fuss about it fo: There are lots of triplets,” Mrs. Had sall dismissed the situation. | The fact remains that the Hadsa | Triplets are the only ones in th Back Mountain picture, and eac | year, come March 12, they mak | news. One year, the three little or! | appeared as the design for a plaqu “advertising the Blue Cross. Cummings entered the Army last Before entering the Army, he was |a 1958 graduate of West Central | | Catholic High School, Kingston. Subscribe To The Post (in time for Easter) Values to $6.95 Sizes 2 to 6 ® BROWNS © BUCKS $3.50 "BUDDIES MAIN ST. LUZERNE G TUNE-UP TRUCK INSPECTION NOW! CHECK... COOLING SYSTEM WHEEL ALIGNMENT LIGHTS IGNITION § TIMING | & DON CITIES SERVICE STATION TRUCKSVILLE RATTERY BRAKES TIRES old Class of the Church on SPECIM. SAT. Here Comes the Brand New 1961 Hamid-Morton KINGSTON ARMORY Showing Kingston, At The Penna. A ACTION SHOW D AYS 21, Hr. Show — 25 Thrilling Acts a ac — THURS, — FR1l, — SAT. APRIL 5, 6, 7, 8 = AT 2:15 P. M. AND 8:15 P. M. MATINEE 10:15 A. M. For Group. Reservations omy Reserved Seats $2.40 and $1.80 Un Sale Tues., March 28 at the Irem Temple Box Office, the Boston Store and Colombo Smoke Shop, Ld hig ure, Ix. Spee, by Spleen) Units