A ice isit nd om — Be an 1 dey ARNIS AE ST ts HB A YSIS ON A SON C—O I were pgs wmicridtn nS EER a EE rooil 2 meres i som a a DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA News Of The Churches (Continued from Page 2 B) CARVERTON: 10 a. School 11 a. m, Worship Easter Sunday: 6 a. m. Sunrise Services (This service will NOT be identical with the regular services.) Ta. m. Easter breakfast. Nominal charge, fellowship—plan to stay. CENTER MORELAND METHODIST Rev. J. Edwin Lintern, Pastor ALL CHARGE: Thursday: 8 p. m. Maundy Thurs- day Communion Service in Center Moreland. Friday: 8 a. m: to 8 p. m. Prayer Vigil in Dymond Hollow 8 p. m. Good Friday Evening Ser- vice in Dymond Hollow with special music by the combined choirs. Easter Sunday: 6 a. m. Sunrise Service in East Dallas; meet at the church at 5:50; if weather permits, service will be held outdeors; if weather is unfavorable, service will be held in the church. EAST DALLAS: “ Members unable to attend the Sunrise Service. are urged to attend Morning Worship in Dymond Hollow or Center Moreland. Sunday Church School 10:15 a. m. DYMOND HOLLOW: Sunday: Morning Worship 10:15, sermon, “The Birthday of Our Eter- nity’"; Sunday Church School 11:15 CENTER MORELAND: Saturday: 10:30 a. m. MYF Easter Egg Hunt for pre-school and first grade children. Sunday: Church School 10 a. m.; Morning Worship 11:15 a. m. Monday: Official Board 7:30 p. m. m. Sunday DALLAS METHODIST CHURCH Russell C. Lawry, Pastor’ Sunday: Sunrise Service at the Dallas Outdoor Theater at 6 a. m. ~ Divine worship at 8:30 and 11 a.m. Identical services with Special Choric Speech Choir Sunday School, 9:45 Senior M. Y. F., 6:30 Intermediate M. Y. F., 6:30 Tuesday: Board of Trustees at 7. Official Board at 8 p. m. Senior Girl Scout Troop at 7 p. m. ‘Wednesday: Franklin Bible Class | in the parsonagd at noon BLIGHT ' FUNERAL HONE 307 WYOMING AVE. KINGSTON : PHONE BU 7-3986 W. S. C. S. Executive Board, 7:30 Gir] Scouts 3:15; Brownies 4:15. Chancel Choir 6:30; Senior Choir 8 p. m. Girl Scouts at 7 p. m. | Holy Thursday: Holy Communion Service at 7:30. The minister will be assisted by laymen in administering the elements of the Communion and they will be served in’ the pews. A special invitation is extended to those who find it impossible to attend their own church. A nursery will be provided for small children A Junior Church will be conducted | for children 5 to 11 years of age in the basement of the new building. LEHMAN-IDETOWN CHARGE Rev. Kenneth O'Neill, Pastor Holy Week: Communion services will be held at 7:30 p. m. in Jackson on Wednesday, at Lehman on Thurs- ‘day and at Idetown on Friday. On Good Friday our churches will unite with the churches of the Back Mountain Area in the 12 to 3 service. Easter Sunrise Service at Lehman ' Church at 6:30. Special music, Rev. Kenneth O'Neill of Plains Methodist Church will be guest speaker. Fol- lowing this service an Easter Break- fast will be served. HUNTSVILLE METHODIST CHURCH Rev. Charles F.-Gommer, Pastor Sunday services: morning worship 10 a. m. Sunday School 11:10 MYF 6:30 p. m. SHAVERTOWN METHODIST Rev. Robert DeWitt Yost, Pasto: Friday: 12 to 3 p. m. Good Friday Three Hour Service at Trucksville Methodist Church. Sunday: 6 a. m. Easter Sunrise Service at Dallas Outdoor Theatre 9:30 Church School with Classes for all ages. 11 a. m. Nursery during Church for pre-school children. 11 a. m. Easter Morning Worship Tuesday: 4 p. m. Brownies, Troop 115; 7:30 Boy ‘Scouts, Troop 231. 7:45 Nominating Committee Meet- ing in Chapel Room Wednesday: 3:30 Girl Scouts, Troop 75 Thursday: 4 p. m. Junior Choir Re- hearsal; 7:30 Senior Choir and Quartet. Young People confirmed by the pastor on Palm Sunday were Robert L. Berlew, Barbara L. Brown, Nancy L. Brown, Paul L. Campbell, Loren N. Crispell, Jr., Linda J. Daubert, Susan E. Davis, Lauren E. Dymond, tty Frocks yourself. LAUNDRY SMART WARDROBES THRIVE ON O’MALIA SANITONE Care Sanitone research has developed cleaning meth- ods which flush away the most stubborn soil, thoroughly yet gently. Our Sanitone Soft-Set® is the exclusive finish that restores new fabric today. Clothes come back with the sparkle and feel of newness, cleaning after cleaning. Switch to our Sanitone service today and judge for O’MALIA Sportswear. PATRIA Thursday: Boy Scouts at 7 p. m.; | John M. Evenson, Ida M. Gillespie, Stephen E. Kaschenbach, Donald M. Lawson, Margaret E. Rood, David A. | Wadas, David L. Williams, Russell H. | Williams, II, Linda J. Wimmer. | Baptized on Palm’ Sunday: Janis | Jane Blackmer, William Keith Black- mer, David : Wayne Blackmer, | children of Mr. and Mrs. D. Wayne Blackmer; Scott Alan Carter, son of | | Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Carter; Mark Hettinger Jenkins, son of Mr. and | | Mrs. Thomas H. Jenkins; = Jane | Stewart Robinson, Marjorie Prit- chard Robinson, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. John M. Robinson; James Wylie Sisco, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. James W. Sisco; Ralph Walter Swartz, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Swartz. TRUCKSVILLE METHODIST CHURCH (The White Church on the Hill) Rev. Robert E. Germond, Pastor Easter Sunday: 6 a. m. Sunrise Service outside. Rev. Robert E. Ger- mond will speak. [Following this | service the Senior M. Y. F. will spon- | sor a breakfast in the Church. Tick- ets should be purchased in advance. 8:30 and 11 a.m. Worship services 9:45 a. m. Sunday School Monday: 8 p. m. Congregational Meeting Tuesday: 9 a8. m. Quilters 4:15 p. m. Girl Scouts 8 p. m. Study Committee ‘Wednesday: 10 a. m. Bazaar ‘Workshop SZ 8 p. m. Trustees Thursday, April 6: 7:30 p. m. Study Group No Choir Practice this week Good Friday service: noon to 3 p. m. Pastors participating in this ! service: First ‘Word, Rev. Robert T. Webster, Dorranceton Methodist Church; Second Word, Rev. William { Reid, Jr., Carverton Charge; Third Word, Rev. William ‘Howard, Leh- ! man Charge; Fourth Word, Rev. ' Robert D. Yost, Shavertown; Fifth Word, Rev. J. Edwin [Lintern, Cen- | ter Moreland Charge; Sixth Word, | Rev. Grove Armstrong, Trucksville | Free Methodist Church; Seventh , Word, Rev. Russell Lawry, Dallas. | Special Easter music is planned. | MOORETOWN ASSEMBLY OF GOD Rev. William Schell, Pastor | to 17, home of Mrs.. Wilson Mahoney. Easter Sunday: sunrise service at 6 a. m. Friday: 7:30 Missionettes, girls 9 | THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1961 siding. Sunday evening: 6:30; children’s story-time evening worship 7:45. Tuesday: prayer service at the church hall, 7:30 p. m. Young People 7:30; Mrs. Sterling Williams Released From Illness Mrs. Marie H. Williams would have been 71 years old on Saturday. She was released from a long illness Sunday morning, when she died at her home on Huntsville Road. afternoon from the Williams Funeral Home, Rev. Russell Lawry officiat- ing, followed by burial in the family plot at Pine Hill Cemetery, Shick- shinny. Pallbearers were Ray Titus, Robert Parry, Wayne Troxell, Harold Brobst, Robert Brown, and Alvin Shaffer. Five years ago Mrs. Williams suffered from a stroke, from which she was making good recovery a year later, when she fell and broke her hip. Since that time she had been an invalid, able to be up briefly, and eventually to bear a little weight, but requiring nursing care. A year ago, April 13, her husband, the late Sterling Williams, president of Dallas Borough Council, died. Mrs. Williams, during her fifteen years of residence in Dallas was a member of Dallas Methodist Church and its WSCS. She also belonged to the Shrine Auxiliary. Before mov- ing to Dallas, she taught music in Wilkes-Barre for twenty-eight years. She was born in Shickshinny, daughter of the late Thomas C. and Fannie Yaple Hill. ‘An only child of an only child, she and her husband had no children. Surviving are only distant cousins, but ‘many close friends, among them Mrs. Frank Kern, who came on from her home in Norfolk, Virginia, three weeks ago, and expects to return to Dallas in mid-April. Sunrise Services Many churches are scheduling sunrise services Easter morning, with breakfast to follow, Sunrise service at Dallas Outdoor Theatre is planned for 6 a. m., with congrega- tions remaining in their cars. Children’s Service Sunday School, 10 a. m. Morning Worship at 11, sepcial services with the Junior Class pre- Special Good Friday services for ! children will be held Friday morning | at 10:30 at Noxen Methodist Church. Services were conducted Tuesday | | YMCA To Stage Annual Inter-Branch. Foul-Shooting Contest At Central Inter - Branch Basketball Foul Shooting Contest of Wilkes-Barre YMCA has been announced for Sat- urday, April 15, at 11:30 a. m. Winners and runners-up in each division from Back Mountain and Memorial Branches and Central YMCA compete. Each branch will conduct its own contest in advance. At the Back Mountain Branch YMCA it will be conducted Saturday, April 8, start- ing at 9 a. m. The local contest is open to all youth members of Back Mountain YMCA. There will be three divi- sions for girls and three for boys. Junior divisions will include mem- bers. up to age 12 (as of December 1, 1960). Intermediate divisions will include those from 12 to 15 and Senior divi- sions from 15.to 18. Complete contest rules and infor- mation are available at the Back Mountain YMCA. All interested ap- plicants should sign up by Thursday, April 6 either at the Y’' or with Robert A. Addison at OR 4-3217. The monthly Coed Fun Night at! the Central YMCA will be held Fri- | Teachers College, day, April 7. Two buses will be; available to take the swimmers and’ bowlers to Wilkes-Barre. One bus will load at the Dallas Borough School at 7 p. m. and the other at the same time at the Back Mountain YMCA. Both buses will leave the Bt i COMPANY -~ LUZERNE - DALLAS HIGHWAY CALL FREE ENTERPRISE 1-0843 “Serving the entire Guiding you with knowledge and dignity. .. Back Mountain Area” Snowpon funeral directors : WILKES-BARRE KINGSTON Y’ at 7:2% p. m. Departure from the Central YMCA will be at 10. Fee is 50 cents for members and 75 cents for non-members. The Back Mountain Branch YMCA is a Member Agency of the Wyoming Valley United Fund. Mrs. Sarah DeDWitt Lies At Cedar Crest Mrs. Sarah Hester DeWitt was laid to rest Tuesday afternoon in Cedar Crest Cemetery, following ser- vices conducted by Rev. Robert Dafffin, pastor of Memorial Presby- terian Church, from Disque Funeral Home. Pallbearers were Craig Herdman, William Hoffman, John Porter, Levi Updyke, Archie Baker and Ray Gemmel. Mrs. DeWitt, 66, died Sunday in Memorial Hospital in Towanda, fol- lowing a long illness. She had lived in Trucksville since 1922, moving to this area from Forty Fort. A graduate of Forty Fort schools and Bloomsburg State she taught Forty Fort for a number of years. As a small child, she lived in Kun- kle where her grandparents, Charles : D. and Hester Baird Kunkle, resided. Her parents were the late Frederick and Nellie Kunkle Makinson. She was her grandmother’s namesake. She was a member of Memorial Presbyterian Church in Wilkes-Barre and its Women’s Association. Surviving are: her husband Harry; three sons: Warren, Trucksville; Paul, Towanda, with whom she had made her home for a time prior to her death; and Carl, Wilmington, Delaware; a brother Carl Makinson, Forty-Fort; six grandchildren. The generous man is always just, and the just who is always generous, may unannounced approach the throne of heaven. On Palm Sunday’ Congregations Back Mountain churches on Palm Sunday, the beautifully sunny weather a preview of Easter. At the left, Gate of Heaven church releases parishioners after a morning mass. In the center is Prince of Peace Epis- cepal church, with many chil- dren bearing palms. At the right is St. Paul's Lutheran church, and beneath is Shavertown Methodist church. James Kozemchak toured the area on Palm Sunday, snapping pictures of congregations typical of the fifty-cdd churches in the Back Mountain. stream from Mrs. Gwen Roushey Buried At Woodlawn Mrs. Bradner Roushey, Main Street, Dallas, was buried in Wood- lawn Cemetery Monday afternoon. Officiating at services held at the Williams Funeral Home were Mrs. Roushey’s grandson from Dover, N. J., Rev. Coral Ide, and Rev. Albert Reining, pastor of Dallas Free Metho- dist Church. Mrs. Roushey, 82, died Friday morning at Nesbitt Hospital, where she had been admitted the day before by ambulance. Mrs. Roushey was born August 18, 1877, at Herrick Township, Susque- hanna County, a daughter of the late John and Elizabeth Lewis Thomas. Before moving to Dallas seven years ago she had resided in Stroudsburg, { Scranton and Trucksville. She is survived by her husband, Bradner J., and children: Mrs. John Ide, Philadelphia; Mrs. Ernest Miers, Harford; Mrs. Fred Long, Orange- ville; Thomas B., Fairborn, Ohio; | Mrs. Torrence Moyer, Jacksonville, {Pa.; Mrs. Charles Davis, Columbia, | N. J.; and Lewis J., Newark, Del; a | sister, Mrs. Jennie Lamb, South great-grandchildren, Nesbitt Auxiliary Shavertown Branch, Nesbitt Auxi- lary, will hear David Saye and Thel- ma DeWitt next Friday, April 7, at 1:30 p. m. in St. Paul’s Lutheran Church parlor. Mr. Saye is admin- istrator for Nesbitt Hospital, Miss DeWitt director of nurses. Surplus Food April 18 Distribution of surplus food wil ing Tuesday, April 48, 10 a. m. to 2:30 p. m. [Persons receiving sur- plus food must bring paper bags for loose commodities, and shopping bags or cartons for transportation. GOLDEN GLEAMS Observe thyself as thy greatest enemy would do, so shalt thou be thy greatest friend. BOUQUETS HENRY W. GOODMAN FLORIST WEST DALLAS OR 4-6616 CORSAGES Gibson; also 20 grandchildren and 16 | take place at Dallas Borough Build- | SECTION B — PAGE 3 Palm Sunday Crowds Enjoy Balmy Spring Weather | Stanley A. Grey | Dies At General | ‘Stanley A. Grey, native and life- | long resident of Lake Township was | buried Tuesday afternoon in Kocher | Cemetery; following services con- | ducted by Rev. John Jones from | Bronson Funeral Home. Pallbearers were Walter Hoover, Robert Lutz, | Clarence’ Montross, “Allen, Clifford and Robert Grey. | Mr. Grey, 73, suffering from a | virus, was admitted to General | Hospital .only two hours before his | death Friday morning. | His parents were the late Smith | and Sarah Wilson Grey. A carpen- | ter by trade, he was educdted at { Lake Township schools. He was a | member of Outlet Bible Tabernacle. As a young man, he taught school at Mountain Springs. He and his wife, the former Jennie Hoover, observed their Golden Wed- ding June 2, 1960. | Surviving are: his widow; a daugh- | ter, Mrs. Dorothy Hummell Harveys Lake RD; a son, Raymond, Harveys Lake, four grandchildren; two broth- ers: Corey, Harveys Lake; and Clarence, Ruggles; a sister, Ida Grey, Harveys Lake RD; several nieces and nephews, ’ Miss Anna Holcomb Invalid For Years Miss Anna Holcomb, Pioneer Avenue, Shavertown, was buried Monday morning in Evergreen Cemetery. Services were conducted by Rev. Robert D. Yost, pastor of Shavertown Methodist Church, of which Miss Holcomb was a member, from the Bronson Funeral Home. Miss Holcomb, 81, died early Fri- day morning at General Hospital, where she had been admitted Feb- ruary 27 by Dallas Community Ama= | bulance, after breaking her leg in a | fall. She had remained in traction, | no reduction of the fracture being | feasible. She had been an invalid for years, | cared for by her sister, Mrs. Walter | Shaver, with whom she made her | home. | ~ She was born in Peabody, Kansas. | Her parents, the late Alfred and | Clara Elston Holcomb, moved east | when she was an infant. | Surviving are two sisters, Mrs. | Ellis Swingle of Sterling Farms, and | Mrs. Walter Shaver, Pioneer Avenue; several nieces and nephews. Pallbearers were all nephews: { Lambert and Elwood Swingle, Wel- | lington Shaver, Robert Koons, Jack | Evans, and Harold Holcomb, Jr. i { Dymond Hollow Has Five-Year Program | Dymond Hollow Methodist Church { has as a five-year goal a three part | program: | Improvement of care of members; | working toward having four active | commissions; continuing to train | young people in churchmanship. Care of members will include: in- | creased visitation to home-bound | members; re-activation of nearby inactive members; continued at- tempts to persuade non-resident members to relate themselves to churches in. their community; pro- viding more opportunities for service by active members. Members of the Official Board, beginning May 1, are: ex-officio stewards, James Bonnie, Helen Dymond, Ernest Dymond, Jr.; trus- tees: Glen Eyet, Russell Miller, Daniel |S. Dymond, Stanley Dymond, Ernest Dymond, Sr., and Francis Faux. Elective stewards: Evelyn Eyet, Donald Faux, Patricia Coolbaugh, Marjorie Bonnie, Emily Davenport, Edgar Barth Anna Clara Dymond, Stanley Eyet Erma Eyet, Barbara Miller, Norene Faux, Arthur Cool- baugh, Jean Race, Gertrude Cool- baugh, Rosa Dymond, Dorothy Barth, Anna Miller, Hazel Eyet, J) Pauline Scott, Edgar Eyet, Russell { Faux, Ruth Turk. Representatives to the Pastoral Relations Committee are Russell Faux, James Bonnie, and Harold Davenport. Nominating committee: Anna Mil- ler, Helen Dymond, and Harold Davenport. 3 ‘Holy Week Closings Holy Week sees children out of school, and places of business closing Friday from noon to 3 p. m., to permit employees to attend Good | Friday services at the church of their | choice. Trouble that looks like a mountain from a distance, usually is only “% hill when you get to it.