— A A SH I GP 1 EE A IE I iE I Cr Sc seme en TAG % NAP ATR SpA Coie AT Hr ay RESIS £1 AR SN I RI SA RR SNC SER TR I 1 ERY a BEY ERI) SECTION A — PAGE 6 ‘Eastern Star Auction; Summer Festival Scheduled August 19 ‘Mrs. Mildred Garinger, Matron of the Dallas Chapter 396 Order of the Eastern Star, cordially invites the public to at- tend the Auction and Summer Fes- tival scheduled to take place at her home at Harveys Lake Saturday, August 19. All members of the Order will assist this Solicitation Committee in the collection of old and new goods: — Myrtle Rineman, Mildred Bron- son, Helen Hontz, Wynne Hoover, Edna Johnson, Jean Kuehn, Louise Lamoreux, and Myfawny Riley. Since bidding is not to start until 3 P.M. the Refreshment and Baked Goods Committee plans a variety of sandwiches, hot dogs, hamburg- ers, homemade pies, cakes and cookies as an enticement to have supper in the cool shade of Garin- Worthy | ger’'s garden: No. | Dendler, TENDER BABY 3EEF LIVER — Mary Ora Bean, Comstock, Mary Frances Dorothy Dodson, Gertrude Davies, Cleona Fritz, Bina Hold- redge, Vera Hopa, Bethia King, Mil- | dred Lutes, Bernice Stephenson, Doris Straley, and Ann Roberts. The Children’s Booth of games, books, and toys will have Laura Dymond, Martie Dymond, Verna Davis, and Mildred Kelley to keep the interest of the small fry. | Aprons and Fancywork will ex- hibit the deftness of handmade | articles with Ella Williams, Anna | Alt, Anna Shaver, Altheda Titus, Edith Templin, and Maude Yeisley | as the busy committee in charge. | Oldsters andgyoungsters alike will | Vida enjoy the Fish Pond with Thelma | head Culp, Anna Battison, Pearl Gosart, Elizabeth Leach, and Virginia | I Elizabeth Ide, | Swanson at the helm. Homemade Candy will be man-| aged .by the capable hands of Diane | Myers, Ruth Bennett, Annjane Cochran, Violet Gary, and Dorothy | Johnson. To add a festive touch to milady’ ol this | summer « and fall wardrobe Jewelry Committee is most busy: — Retty Meeker, line LaBarre, Jennie Miers, Kozemchak, and Joyce Ward. ~ This White Elephant Booth Com- | mittee has scrubbed and polished all odds and ends:—Sarah Strauser, Mildred Howell, garet Layaou, and Jennie Yuest. Home grown Produce and Plants green | thumb. committee: — Evelyn Smith, | will be handled by this Charlotte Calkins, Evelyn Hauck, ski, Agnes Myers, Edna Rebannack, | Jane Schooley and Marie Wolfe. These males have been drafted to the Grounds Committee:— | Louise James, Mada- | Olga | Elsie Jolley,. Mar- | Margaret * Mieczkow- | THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 1961 Hymn Singing Has Vital Role In Religious Faith—McVey (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second in a series of five stories on hymn singing in America, published by The Post as part of the National Newspaper Hymn Poll. Every reader of the Post is urged to write the name of his favorite hymn on the official ballot printed with this story. Mail it today so your vote can be included in the national tally. We will publish local and nat- ional results.) BY BILL McVEY { words spoken by my three-and-a- ' half year old daughter were her Gar inger, Burton King, George | THE CHRISTIAN HERALD SINGER | “I want to sing, Daddy.” These | | greeting to me when I called home {one day from out of town. | She was happy, so she wanted {to sing. I listened to at least four | unrecognizable verses after which 1 artists singing in public, at group | singing | she stopped, caught her breath and ! | said, “I'm happy now.” | My little daughter has discovered | something that most of us have for- | gotten--everyone can be happier by | singing. . Today's inhabitions, unknown by {us as children, deter most of us from | bursting out in song: when in the company of others. But there isn’t one of us who { doesn’t want to sing. Singing is as ‘natural to a human being as crying | or laughing. Secretly, many of us, as | untutored as we may be, love to William Rineman, William A. Aus-| Price, Ziba Smith, and Bruce Wil-|sing. No one knows how many sec- tin, 0 scar Dymond, Raymond ERESH MADE LAMB PATTIES "UNCLE SAUL'S CORNED BEEF BRISKETS Hams. J rot Boneless Round Roast Boneless Rump Roast of L AMB coum SPRING B CHOPS 59: : 89:98 bn 49 @ BREAST ( OF LAMB | know what it was,” ‘he later told | (it. songsters ‘applaud their own AT YOUR Ln &. WILKES-BARRE iat anes efforts in the privacy of their - ‘bath, rooms or while driving alone. The best music to get the bath- a family get-together, to or inspire everyone, is hymns. Singing hymns leads us to a high- er plateau of = devotion--of under- standing God’s love and our fellow man. For instance a stranger in Ber- muda got a public bus filled with children returning from a Sunday were singing School picnic. They hymns and he recognized “In The Garden.” He sang with the young choristers and found he was no long- er a’ stranger. “Something hapvened. 1 don’t me. “A bond seemed to unite all of us on that bus.” ing” of our visitor to, Bermuda. When it occurs, there's no mistaking | : ing ‘dium, or a few hundred gathering | He couldn’t carry a tune, but ther I think 1 can explain that ‘feel-| was a melody in his heart and h ° teenagers who've Trey off he that this is just about as “square” as you can get. But 'some- thing happens. When it does, you nc longer hear yourself. ‘All you know is that seventeen youngsters sound like a hundred voices. Watch thousands entering a sta in a church for a hymn sing. At the beginning of the program you se them as individuals wrapped up their own lives, their own problem: Many have come just to listen, t: be in the audience but the momen comes when they can not be pass jive. Everyone seems to be singin and suddenly those who have com to listen are singing too. I've walked down the aisle, urgin people to sing. I've stood mext to : man who was shouting the words was singing with spirit. The man, the choir girls on the DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA exper fence. ‘This is what my friend ' vho visited Bermuda tried to ex- lain. Singing hymns creates an atmos- here of brotherhood--a feeling of nity. A divine bond blends all the wlifted voices together as one voice. As we sing a hymn we may forget yur problems our worries, even our ‘ears, but more important, we find 1ew strength through each hymn ve sing, strength to face the adver- sities of life. Great experiences seldom happen o most of us but you can turn any Sunday morning, any family gath- oring, any social get-together into a great experience, really singing chose hymns. Perhaps a revival of hymn s‘ng- ng will re-echo around the world nd serve as notice behind the iron urtain of our greatest strength- {fr Shristian unity - and brotherhood-- ‘affirming our determination that 11 men shall be as free as we are » sing the hymns they choose to Ib. 13¢ . 69¢ OSCAR MAYER SKINLESS FRANKS === 65¢ OSCAR MAYER SMOKIE LINKS 12 oz. pkg. b5¢ 4 FRESH SALMON STEAK (FANCY SILVER) - DRESSED WHITING FRESH HADDOCK FILLET FRESH SEA SCALLOPS BIRDS EYE FROZEN FOODS “FISHERMAN FRESH” SEA FOODS , 8 | 4 OAK FARM FRESH EGGS i: BORDEN'S © z ; RE » 4% | [Bl CHEESE SPREADS Ceres" 2ND Birds Eye Cauliflower Birds Eye Fordhook Limas Birds Eye Bahy Limas 2 ve 43° BIRDS EYE—FRENCH STYLE GREEN BEANS 10 oz. pkg. 10 oz. pkg. 10 oz. pkg. 9 oz. pkgs. 2: 35° GARDEN GOLD - LIBBY ’ MEAT PIE LEMONADE - ORANGE DRINK can §¢ CHICKEN, BEEF OR TURKEY § phys. $ i 3g SNOW CROP—WHOLE STRAWBERRIES 1% Ib. pely bag 49¢« TCO CALIF. 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