ot, x = i i BEALE SEAT arr “ad sd apagRe me a x = — Hep a soit go pee ei o rif te hr arp : 1 gq +i ie AR ERE O er MM SPL 7 rr — S Tap ht O13 pratt Ld I a =R nls very and eld. this s in arry Vice- ecre- urer, ‘een- The Mon- High ners rday *hool nd: r on ar, their put, and the ok, 100k. and I r on ydon e at help on of \ a Team DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA ou Scouts To Work For Library Auction Twenty-two Girl Scout troops of the Back Mountain District will co- operate in making ready for the fifteenth annual Library Auction Above are Senior Scout, girls and officials of the District. Seated left to right are Seniors of Girl Scout Troop 9: Laura Jacob, Marjorie Davis, Judy Crispell, Janice Niezgoda, Charlotte Roberts, Moderator; Joan ' Darby, Sharon Strzelezyk, Martha Messick, and Janice Priebe. In the rear are Susan Cheney and Jean Merolla; Mrs. C. Wesley Boyle, District Director; Mrs. Darrell Cris- pell, District chairman; Mrs, Vin- cent Makar, Dallas Neighborhood Chairman; Mrs. Paul Priebe, co- leader; Mrs. Joseph Niezgoda, lead- er; Mrs. Robert Smales, Tunkhan- nook Neighborhood Chairman; Mrs. | Ernest Norrie, Trucksville-Shaver- town neighborhood troop organizer; Consultant Penny = Farrar, borhood | Troop Troop (Chairman; nick and Jeanette Gosart. Troop 9 is only one of the area troops which will assist in recondi- tioning jewelry, stringing beads, 8 Auction at the Barayard. A big assignment for Girl Scouts is making of 1,000 lollipops for sale at the candy booth, and many Girl Westmoreland Diamond Team Beat Newport & Wilkes-Barre Twp. Baseball action on the local high school level during the past week | saw The Westmoreland nine vie- | torious in games with Newport High School at home and Wilkes-Barre | Township away. After a slow early season start, the local ball tossers have recorded a four won and four ‘lost record by defeating Newport, 8-7 and then downing Wilkes- Barre Township, 7-4. In the Newport encounter the Westmoreland Nine avenged an earlier 2-1 loss at Newport by sur- viving a three run rally in the last inning of the return game at the Dallas Township field. Tom Gaunt- lett with a home run over the right field fence in the first inning to score three runs along with two other hits led the Westmoreland attack. Paltrineri, the winning pitcher, with a double and a single, ‘and Wes Evans with two hits figured in the winning score, Whit- taker, Fry, and Harris contibuted single hits at opportune times. Score by innings: Newport R H El “That’s be- of the top- notch weeklies in the entire country!” cause it’s one 11.20.04 0 3—T7 (9-2 | Westmoreland RiHCE 3-00.29 9" "X 8 30:1 Travelling to Wilkes-Barre Town- ship for a return game after an earlier 8-6 victory, the Westmore-~ land team won its second game over the home nine by a score.of 7- 4. Dave LaBar sparked a four run game winning rally in the seventh inning with a tremendous 375 foot { home run to right field. Walks to | Wes Evans. and Tom Gauntlett followed by ' successive singles by Earl Harris, Harold Hislop produced three more runs to sew up the game. Wes {Evans with a perfect day of three hits, LaBar with a homer and a single, and Earl Harris with two singles led the batting attack. Tom Gauntlett, in addition to a triple that scored two runs in the third, pitched a no-hitter uatil the fifth i inning and struck out the first | eight of nine batters to face him. | He totalled. fifteen strikeouts for | the game. | Games remaining to, be played (Mrs. Charles Roberts, Dallas Neigh- | and | and Marsha Getty. Absent when the | picture was taken were Marian Ole- | polishing silver for the July 7 and | John Carey, and: Scouts will assist at the Doll Booth, Troop 9 held a coketail reception | Tuesday evening at Dallas Metho- dist Church social rooms, where ‘ present Girl Scouts of the area and potential members were guests. Troop 9 is a Trail-Blazer Moun- | taneer group specializing in out- door skills, and interested in com- munity service. One meeting a month is devoted to making of can- cer dressings, and girls are studying emergency procedure for possible disaster. As part of the Ranger- -Aid Bar, members have offered to lay permanent trails in unexplored sec- tions of Wildwood. photo by Kozemchak this week will see Westmoreland face the league leading Northwest Nine and arch-rival Lake-Lehman on the Dallas Township field, Score by innings: "| Grace (Case, | of historical engravings. {and Tobacco, | Lines | Into Action,” “The Pontoon Bridge,” Westmoreland R H E 0 0 3 0 0 0 4—710 2 ‘W. - B. Township R HE 0 0 0 0 2 0. 2—4 4.0 Westmoreland ab “rh Peyy 2 ied. Ln Dik YA) Whittaker, 2b 1.20000 1abar, 3b, Ll ea dL meld Bvans iss. lin S20 Paltrineri, 1b 30700 04 Gauntlett, p gga Harris, cf gd 0] Senchak, If . 140 0| Carey, MT. 2 wo at Hislop, ¢ 30 Plat, pfs ln nn 2.020 Dorosley, Sef 200 0 ix 2..:02 0) | Totals OF. 7 9 Wilkes-Barre Twp. ab r h FSipple, ef lb 0° 0} Golaszewski, ' 0iv7 1 Pipech, ss 0 0] Rozanski, c¢ 0.70} Ferrance, p, 3d Allen, If 3a Capinas, 3b 0.1.0 Zaledonis'. cd 0.04 Buzak, rf 10 | of the Pennsylvania legislature, and 1 | a reproduction of G. W. Storm's fam- la number of portraits<of important Kimsel, 2b" 2d. kas Fuld Totals 27 4 4 ~ Walked for Capinas in Tth. ‘Westmoreland 003 000 4—7 |rance 9 Golaszewski Loser—Ferrance. THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY. May 25,-1961 | Noxen Lutherans A Hold Annual Banquet | A mother and daughter banqiet | was held by the members of the | Ladies Society of St. Luke's Luth- | eran Church on Wednesday evening | at the Parish Hall. Tables and hall | were appropriately decorated with ! spring flowers. A program of sing- | ing, games, was enjoyed by all: | Present were: Mrs. Ira Beahm, Mrs. | David J, Morris, Mrs. John Jones | and Candy, Mrs. Clarence Turner | and Janet, Mrs. Nile Sickler, Mrs. | W.S. Bender, Sharon Ginglin, Mrs. | Donald Wall, Mrs. Albert May, | Sharon Brody, Mrs. Gilbert Boston, | Laura Boston, Mrs. Jay Darr Sr., | Mrs. Howard Engelman, Mrs. El- | wood Schenck, Alberta Goble, * Dor- | othy Keiper, Mrs. Earl Crispell, Mrs. | John Edwards, Mrs. Francis Belles, ! Mrs. Arthur Blizzard, Marcella | Blizzard, Mrs. Sam Blizzard, Mrs. | Diane Blizzard, Mrs, | George Montross, Mrs. Frederick | Case and Mildred Jane, Mrs. Donald | Meeker, Mrs. Wheeler Hess, Mrs. | Albert Ruff, Mrs. Roy Dendler, Mrs. John Holdredge, Catherine Dendler, Mrs. Usmar, Mrs. Lewis May, Mrs, | Ora Bean, Mrs. Elvin Bean, Mrs. George Macialek and Marilyn, Mrs. Mark Moyer, Mrs. Richard Keiper ; and Deborah, Pastor Wesley Kimm, Mrs. Joseph Dotter, Mrs. Clark Oliver, Mrs. Harry Miller. Civil War Engravings On Exhibit At Museum Twelve Forbes engravings of Civil War scenes owned by the Pennsyl- vania Historical and Museum Com- mission have been put on exhibition in the central gallery in the State Museum. Building. From 1861 until 1865, Edwin Forbes was a staff artist for Frank Leslie’s “Illustrated Newspaper,” and was assigned to accompany the Army of the Potomac. He later used his sketches of camplife and battlefields as source material for several series Among subject titles in the cur- rent exhibit are “Through the Wilderness,” “Trading for Coffee Between Fortified During a Truce, “Going “The Distant Battle,” and “The Ad- vance of Calvary.” There are a number /of other Civil { War art works on exhibit at the museum, a group headed by Roth- | ermel’s huge 32 by 1634 foot paint- | ing of Pickett’s Charge at The Battle of Gettysburg, done on commission. ous “Lincoln and His Generals” painting, The Commission also owns leaders on the Civil War scene. W.-B. Township 000 020 2—4 2B—Allen. HR—Labar. SO—Fer- 1, Gauntlett 14, BB—Ferrance 6. Gauntlett 2. ‘I see The Dallas Post has been honored again I” Membership in GREATER WEEKLIES is by invitation only . . proud to have received this invitation to the ranks of America’s finest weekly newspapers. Our selection points up the fact that The Dallas Post meets the require- ments equal to those demanded by metropolitan papers. you, our readers, are getting more local néws, pictures, features and adver- tising than the average weekly paper offers. Since The Dallas Post circu- lation is carefully checked by the Audit Bureau of Circulation, for the pro- tection of our advertisers, it helped tremendously in our selection as a member of Greater Weeklies. ‘We thank you for your readership of The Dallas Post . are able to publish a better newspaper. Yes... Keep up with your community-Read The Dallas Post “More than a Newspaper — A Community Institution” — NOW A GREATER WEEKLY NEWSPAPER — THE DALLAS POST HAS BEEN SELECTED A Greater Weeklies Newspaper . We are It means that . through you we Umpires—Miller || Kiwanis Peace Markers Along The Border THE LONGEST UNFORTIFIED BOUNDARY IN THE WORLD Shown here are the thirty-two Markers which Kiwanis Clubs on both sides of the common U.S.-Canadian bor- der have established at principal ports of entry. These Markers are dramatic proof of the peaceful nature of the longest un- fortified boundary in the world. This map is presented at the time of the sixth observance of Canada-U. S. Will Week. There are now thirty-two Kiwanis- sponsored peace markers along the three thousand mile Canada-United States border, each one dedicated to dramatizing’ the peaceful neighbor- liness of the two countries, according to Robert S. Maturi President of Dallas’ Kiwanis Club. The announcement was made rec- ently at the time of the 1961 obser- vance of Canada-U.S. Goodwill Week. Canada-U.S. Goodwill Week, al- though originated by Kiwanis, now enjoys wide participation in both countries. The peace markers, erected by Kiwanis clubs on opposite sides of the common border, working in con- cert, are located at all principal ports of entry. Each peace maker bears the leg- end: “This unfortified Boundary Line between the Dominion of Can- ada and the United States of Amer- ica should quicken the remembrance of the more than a century old friendship between these ¢ountries— a lesson of peace to all mations.” Some of the markers are of bronze, some of granite. The Rush-Bagot (Agreement in 1817 is an agreement that is the sole legal basis for our three thous- and miles of unfortified boundary. It virtually demilitarizes the bound- ’ Peace thirty- Good. of naval vessels on the waterways between the countries, and instruct- ing those which are deemed neces- sary to interfere in no way with the peaceful passage of merchantmen of OR 4-387 ary between the United States and 1. Alaska Highway near Milepost 1220 2. Blaine, Washington 3. Oroville, Washington 4. Paterson, B.C. 5. Nelway, B.C. 6. Porthill, Idaho 7. Kingsgate, B.C.—Eastport, Idahe 8. Mt. Eisenhower, Banff, Alberta 9. Carway, Alberta 10. Coutts, Alberta—Sweet Grass, Montana 11. Wild Horse, Alberta 12. Monchy, Saskatchewan 13. West Poplar, Saskatchewan 14. North Portal, Saskatchewan 15. International Peace Garden, Manitoba 16. Kilarney, Manitoba 17. Emerson, Manitoba 18. Fort Francis, Ontario 19. International Bridge, Pigeon River . Ferrydock, Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan and Ontario . Ambassador Bridge, Detroit, Michigan . River shore, Port Huron, Michigan . Fraser Heights, Port Stanley, Ontario . Queen Victoria Park, Niagara Falls Ontario . International Bridge, Niagara Falls . Peace Bridge, Buffalo, New York . International Bridge, Thousand Islands . Ogdensburg, New York . Cornwall-Messena Internationat Bridge, Cornwall, Ontario . Trout River, New York 31. Lacolle, Quebec 32. International Bridge, St. Stephen, N.B.—Calais, Maine Canada by calling for a limitation either country. This agreement can - and could - be terminated by a sim- ple six months notice on the part of either signer. “GO AMERICAN” BLACK TOP PAVING © DRIVEWAYS © PARKING AREAS SHOPPING CENTERS “The Oldest Producer of Black Top in Wyoming Valley” American Asphalt Paving Co. Inc. FOR FREE ESTIMATES SECTION A— E 4 | Mrs. Stanley Heads Dallas Womeén of notgS. officers Thursday at the C Club: President, Mrs, Stanley, First Vice-Presi Richard Demmy; Second Vice ident, Mrs. Richard Post; Reqd Secretary, Mrs. Jack } responding Secretary, Mrs. Butler; Treasurer, Mrs. a The nominating committee co of Mrs. Myron Baker, Mrs. Hellersperk and Mrs. Harry inger. Program was given by Dr. ( Reif of Wilkes College who ¢ tique Prints”. Mrs. Jobs presided. Present were: Mesdames S Hozempa, Elmer Evenson, Stanley, Arthur Ross, Robert am, Merton Jones, William Walter Mohr, Ralph Pos Harry Goeringer, Jr. John I Richard Post, Robert Body Fred Jennings, John Manley, Bell, Joseph. Sekera, Franci brose, Hanford Eckman, Baker, Herbert Butler, wards, Richard Demmy, Squier, Earl Phillips, Spence tin, Lester Hauck, Oswald fiths, and James Alexander. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers