The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, August 24, 1961, Image 13

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DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
A baseball thrown by a pitcher
or batted will travel 100 miles an
hour and to be struck on the
larynx by such a force can be
fatal, especially if diagnosis and
treatment are not given immedi-
ately.
&
Card Of Thanks
The family of Lana T. Elston,
Kunkle, wishes to express thanks for
the kindness of friends during the
time of the bereavement. Registration for the fall term at
Wilkes-Barre Business College is now
OF M
WYOMING SEMINARY SCHOOL
in progress. The school will begin
its 78th consecutive year when the
fall semester begins Thursday, Sept-
ember 7th. Advanced registration
| for the day school classes has been
underway for the past several
USIC
Organ
Piano
Violin
Voice
CARL F. ROTH, Director
WESLEY A. BAILEY
LOUIS W. AYRE
SARAH
Announces
THE OPENING OF ITS FALL SEMESTER
SEPTEMBER 12, 1961
Courses
Teachers
months, and all indications point to
a record enrollment for the coming
semester.
Included in the enrollment for
the 1961-62 classes are graduates
from both Westmoreland and Lake-
Lehman High School. Students en-
rolled from Westmoreland are Carol
Dymond, Susan Lawry, Donna Mey~
ers, Harriet ‘Sands, Nancy Harris,
Robert Eyet, Sharon Gauntlett, Eliz-
abeth May, Celia Monka, Janet Reed,
Karen Samuels, Sharon Samuels,
Stephen Vanecko, Jr., Cecil Sutton,
John Chapple. Students from Lake~
Lehman are: (Sandra Sabo, Mary
Manzoni, Susan Dodd, Karin Ros-
koski, and Linda Scouton. Also en-
rolled is Carol Ashley from Dal-
las who graduated from St. Cyril
Academy in Danville, Pa.
New students will report to the
school on September 7 at 10 a.m.
thereafter their classes will be held
Theory
Harmony
Solfeggio
Band Instruments
ELSIE P. POWELL
HELEN F. SHEEDER
HARRY G. TREBILCOX
K. YOUNG
Students May Enroll For Music Without Attending
Other Classes At Wyoming Seminary
Catalog And Further Information On Request >
Telephone BUtler 7- 1126
from 8 to 1 daily.
Five diploma courses will be of-
fered to the students. A 9-month
Stenographic Course designed for
only commercial graduates. The 11-
month Accounting Course, 13-month
Secretarial Course, 16-month Busi-
ness Administration Course, and 20-
month Business Administration
COURSES:
Stenographic
Secretarial
Accounting
Business
Administration
Wilkes-Barre
BUSINESS
COLLEGE
Are You A Top ACADEMIC
High School Graduate of 1961?
Top Academic High School Graduates of 1961 can
‘prepare for responsible and career-opportunity
positions. in business, industry and civil service.
Fabulous opportunities exist now in the early years
of the Soaring Sixties for young men and young
women with the high intelligence demanded in the
executive positions of American corporations and
~ governmental agencies.
PUBLIC SQUARE * WILKES-BARRE - VA 3-3123
EXAM
SHIRTS
CHINOS
CORDS
SOCKS
3 9. pr.
SHOES
Wardrobes
You'll find nifty
thrifty BUYS in
BOYS’ WEAR - Latest
Styles - Fabrics - Conte,
1.98
SWEATERS
SLIPOVER & COAT STYLES °
‘3.98 up
TROUSERS
2.98 up
TIME . .. FOR...
up
. CLOSE OUT GROUP
only 3.
Full Selection
UNDERWEAR
others to $7.95
Hanes and Fruit of the Loom
BUDDIES
F Wheeler's Cafe
THE. DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1961
|Business Clone Semester’s
Registration Now In Progress
Course are planned for both com-
mercial and academic graduates.
Night school classes begin Sept-
ember 19 and will offer beginning
and refresher courses in typing,
shorthand, accounting, business Eng-
lish, Business Math, Office Machines.
Cancer Survey
To Start Soon
One In Eighty-Eight
Will Be Interviewed
One in 88 Pennsylvanians will
soon be checked on to see if he
is still alive.
If he is, the American Cancer
Society volunteer researcher who
calls will ask him to fill out a
confidential form telling how he has
been the past two years, whether
he smokes, and whether he lives
or works in polluted air.
If he has died in the past year,
his death certificate will be checked
for cause of death. If cancer was
the cause, his doctor will be asked
for specific information on the type
and progress of the disease.
These questions and answers
about the state of health of 98,922
people in the Pennsylvania Division
(all of the state except Philadelphia
and Montgomery counties) -are part
of the second-year checkup on
1,100,000 Americans who are sub-
jects of an epidemiological survey
by the American Cancer Society.
Researchers = in Luzerne county
will check on and give question-
naires to 2838 people in the county.
Their headquarters will be the
American Cancer Society Unit of-
fice in Wilkes-Barre.
Called the Cancer Prevention Sur-
vey, the six-year study will give
facts never before available show-
ing how family history, foods,
smoking and air pollution are re-
lated to cancer. Scientists hope to
get clues from these facts which
will lead to earlier finding of can-
cer, and ways of preventing the
disease.
Volunteer researchers -- 6,212 of
them in the Pennsylvania Divisi
will start October 1 to make this
second annual checkup. Prelimin-
ary work is being done now at
the Pennsylvania Division and local
American Cancer Society Unit of-
fices to prepare for the survey.
IBM cards with the names of each
person in the survey are going to
county offices mow, and kits are
being prepared for researchers.
The largest epidemiological study
ever attempted, the ACS Cancer
Prevention Survey was made fin-
ancially possible; only by the fact
that volunteer researchers originally
distributed the survey question-
naires, and are making the annual
checkups the Society said today.
R/2C Earl W. Meeker
Based In Puerto Rico
‘A/2C Earl 'W. Meeker, son of
Alvin, E. Meeker and the late Ellen
Meeker recently spent. a thirty-day
furlough at his home at Shavertown
RD 5. Meeker has been transferred
from Dyess Air Force Base, Texas,
to Ramey Air Force Base in Puerto
Rico, where he is stationed with the
21st Missile and Maintenance Squad-
ron. His wife, the former Madelyn
Harvey of Harveyville joined him
by plane July 21. According to the
young Meekers, the weather in Puer-
to Rico is ideal, with temperatures
the year round in the seventies and
eighties and . much . of interest to
see and do on the island.
The two most popular features
of the first American penny papers,
the humorous treatment of Police
court news and the reports of sen-
sation criminal trials, were borrowed
from the English press.
MAID
WATT
DRYCLEANER
A totally new
DRYCLEANING
and LAUNDRY
: service
NOXEN ROAD
HARVEYS LAKE
SPECIAL
FRIDAY NIGHT
‘Pigs In A Blanket
or
Fish Fry
50c
Every Saturday Night
Lobster Tail
pS i Chicken
| for partiipation
New Frogram Offered
At Seninary Day School
Kenneti C. MacArthur, headmas-
ter of Vyoming Seminary Day
School, smounces that beginning
with the all 1961 term a new prog-
ram in Irench, Latin, and mathe-
matics wil be offered so a student
who start in the seventh grade will
be able t earn a year’s high school
credit in these subjects by the
end of th» eighth grade.
In conection with this program
and in beter preparing the student
in the French
course, cawversational French will be
started nxt fall in the third grade.
By the fith grade the student will
begin mce formal instruction in
the language and will move into
a regular hugh school French course
in the selenth grade.
Latin will be first offered in the
eighth gnde. Since this is not a
conversathnal language, the admin-
istration fels it wiser to postpone
introducing Latin until the student
has a gool grasp of English gram-
Joyce C. Hirleman's
Engagement Announced
Mr. and Mrs. Budd C. Hirleman, |
184 Ferguson Avenue, Shavertown,
announce the engagement of their
daughter, Joyce Catherine, to PFC
James W. Eckerd, Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. James W. Eckerd, Sr,
Stoyer Hills, R. D. 2, Schuylkill
Haven.
Miss Hirleman, an alumna of
Westmoreland High School, is 4
student nurse at Nesbitt Memorial
School of Nursing.
PFC Eckerd, a graduate of West-
moreland High School, is serving
with the United States Army. He
recently graduated from the United
States ~ Army. Security Agency
School, Fort Devens, Mass.
No date has been set for the
wedding.
Chase
is extended to Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Yankowski, on the death of Mrs.
mar.
The aritimetic curriculum is being |
revised t allow the students to
complete he Elementary Algebra |
course by the time of graduation |
from Day School.
‘All of ths will give a student op- |
portunity © obtain advanced stand-
ing in thre fields on entering high
school.
With ths advantage, he will be |
able to stat work toward prepar-
ation for advanced standing exam-
ination for college.
Many pblic independent high |
schools offer their students a chance |
to work tovard advanced placement
in their senior year. To do this, |
preparation must begin in the elem-
entary schoyl, and the Day School |
wants its greduates prepared to take |
advantage of this advanced program, |
according to the headmaster.
Injured In Buzz-Saw
Lester Moss, Demunds Road, who
lost his left thumb in a buzz-saw on
Saturday, reurned on Tuesday from |
Nesbitt Hospital with his second
finger in- a 2ast.
mangled.
“A dime is a dollar from which |
the taxes have been removed.”
The thumb is off |
at the second joint, the finger badly |
Yankowski’s father, Mr. Alexander
Kervalavage of Wilkes-Barre, - on
Thursday, August 17. He was buried”
‘from ‘the Leagus Funeral Home in
| Wilkes-Barre on Saturday, with a
| Solemn High Mass of Requiem being
| celebrated in Holy Trinity Church.
| Louis Wilcox is recovering at
{home from his recent illness.
| Mrs. Mary Pudimott and her ‘sis-
ter, Mrs. Emma Vandermark have!
| returned after spending several days.
| vacation at Ford, New Jersey. -
Mrs. Loretta Reakes accompanied
by her sister, Mrs. Ruth Anstice; of
Pike's Creek, visited her brother,
| Harry Redmond at West Pittston on
| Sunday. &
DALLAS ORchard 5-1176
Centermoreland FEderal $-4500
|
For Further
Wyoming Seminary Day School
KINDERGARTEN AND NURSERY SCHOOL
A Sre-schiool for ages 3,4, and 5
Hours 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.—Payne Pettebone House,
‘Wyoming, Pa.
PLEASE CALL BU 8-5431
Information,
PENCILS
ERASERS
Filler Paper
(ALL SIZES)
Don’t
Forget
Theragran
For Extra
Children + School =
Supplies from
HALL'S PHARMACY
LOOSELEAF NOTEBOOKS |
98c -
HALL’S PHARMACY
MAIN HIGHWAY, SHAVERTOWN, OR 4-4161
PAPERMATE PENS
9%8c up
59¢
THERMOS |
$149 up
LUNCH KITS
$2.98 up
2¢ up
3¢ ea.
1c up
BOOK BAGS |
$1.79 - §2.99
ARITHMETIC
FLASH CARDS
$1. BOX
NAPKINS
17c PKG.
\ OPEN DAILY and SUNDAY, 8 AM. to 10 P.M.
. EMERGENCY PHONES: OR 5-1681 — BU 8-0708
The sympathy of the community
Mrs. Loretta Reskes has returned
‘after spending two weeks visiting
her son and daughter-in-law Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Reakes and her brother
and gister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
‘Charles Redmond, all of Dearborn,
Mrs, Ida Wilcox is seriously ill at
the home of her daughter and son-
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Snyder
of West Dallas.
Mrs. Alex Rebar, Huntsville en-
tertained Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ben-
‘ham end children Kirk and Mary
Dee of State College, Mrs. F. Piate-
ski and children, Daryl, Pam and
Ann, Nattick, Mass. and Mrs. Alex
Rebar, Sr., Edwardsville. Mrs. Ben-
ham and Mrs. Piateski are sisters
pe
SECTION B— PAGE 5
of Mr. Rebar. They all enjoyed the
“cook-out”’ at the Rebars.
The B. A. Class of Huntsville
of Mr. and Mrs, Arthur Tremayne,
Chase Road on Saturday night. Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Sherman served
with the Tremaynes’ a delicious pic-
sons present.
David Elston left Saturday to
spend his vacation at New Philadel~
phia, Ohio.
The Two-Fold Class will serve a
Chicken Supper starting at five
o'clock today. The Public is invited.
The Jackson Township School
Board will meet at the Jackson
ANOTHER
FIRST...
AT THE FIRST
NATIONAL BANK!
TW.
! guidance counselor, or
! Mail fo: College Plan
College Education Plan information is available
“at College Misericordia, Wilkes College, Kings
College, Pennsylvania State University (Wilkes
Barre Center), Wyoming Seminary,
Barre Business College or any office of The First
National Bank. If you wish, see your high school
Wilkes-.
mail the coupon below.
f= oo Eo om mm me Gn GE em am ew Gm Mm Sm me ee ee Se ae
MAIL THIS HANDY COUPON!.
: The First National Bank of Wilkes-Barre
# Please send me full details on your new College
§ Assured Plan.
1
Name.
: Address
: City. Phone,
1
11 W. MARKET STREET
5 Other Convenient Offices: ;
HUE, SQUARE . KINGSTON « PLAINS « CROSSROADS « FAIRVIEW HEIGHTS 3 3
MEMBER F.D. 1. C. ; PL
Eri
of IVAN Ae ar
Methodist Church met at the home 5
nic lunch to the twenty-six per-
Township Fire Hall on September 5.
VRE RRR RR ARE
NOE LER
ThA Re