The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, October 12, 1961, Image 7

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, PENNSYLVANIA
SENIOR PLAYS
One of the projects that is the
most fun in Senior Year, is prepar-
ing for the class play. Both Senior
Classes have picked their play. The
Lake group has begun working
since they will present theirs on
October 24. The cast of ‘Come
Out Of The Closet” by Rollin W.
Coyle will be published next week.
‘Meet Corliss ‘Archer” is the Leh-
be presented in
December. . Tryouts will be held
next week.
TORCH CAMPAIGN
United Fund has distributed
small contribution envelopes to the
students. United Fund supports
many of the youth organizations
students attend. Each contribu-
tion is greatly appreciated.
COLOR PICTURES
All students from grades through
Senior High had their pictures
taken last week in color.
they come back, picture trading
time will be here.
THANK YOU
I would like to thank the gentle-
men who read in this column about
our band drive and sent me a gift
i] go toward new band uniforms.
is not from our joint school
ik but thinks our band deserves
mething for the good work it has
dons, during these past few weeks.
From the whole band, thank you!
‘BON-FIRE
Many high schools and colleges
ave a big bonfire before a college
ame, Our school is also going to
oe its first tonight at the Lehman
Building." On Saturday we will play
Edwardsville at home. Lehman Stu-
dent Council is sponsoring this event.
. Cheerleaders lead the crowd in a
pep rally. Pizza and soda will be
sold by the Council. This will be an
exciting event.
FRIDAY, 13th:
What a date to have a dance. But
this isn’t holding back Lehman Jun-
iors.: They have planned this and ar-
rangements are being carried out.
The contract for music is with the
Lake-Le
High School
When |
lman
By
MARY ANN LASKOWSKI
Cleff Tones: This dance is open to
everyone. Dancing is from 8 to 11.
IN-DOOR SPORTS
With a few days of cold weather,
already we want to stay indoors.
One sign of this is, the boys want
to start playing pre-season basket-
ball. All boys, including those who
play on the varsity team, will be
eligible to participate. The regular
season begins after Christmas.
EDUCATION
Students in high school sometimes
do not appreciate how important
education is, By statistics of the day,
we all know that a person who has
a good education makes a better
home in the future.
In the Wilkes College Manual
there is a summary of the marks
see how you and your children
measure up.
(1) He seeks the truth.
(2) He is able to communicate
ideas.
(3). He has faith in man.
(4) He possesses: vision.
(5) He cultivates inner resour-
ces and spiritual strength.
(6) He has ethical standards by
which he lives. | :
(7) He is aware of the human
hends the. forces that have assured
or jeojardized this progress. 3
(8)
ial, economic, and. political life of
the community. ;
Mary Jean Hennebaul
Mr. and Mrs. Walter: Hennebaul,
Hennebaul weighed in at six pounds,
and sisters: Walter Jr. Barbara,
Fred, and Margaret Mary. Mrs. Hen-
nebaul is the former Mary ‘Grimes,
Barre, Mr. = Hennebaul owns and
operates a service station on. the
| Trucksville highway.
Make Gu, Our LOW OST, STORM DOORS,
STopm WINDOWS,
PORCH ENCLOSURES.
47.
kf Ee than Glass
Va Wee
Winpow MATERIALS
FLEXIBLE, SHATTERPRQOF, MADE BETTER, LAST LONGER
of an educated man. Check it and’
struggle for progress and compre-
He is conscious of his re-
sponsibility as a citizen , and par-,
ticipates constructively inthe soc-
‘lin ‘the cavern.
until “somebody who knows some- |
Harveys Lake RD 1," announce the
birth of a daughter September 23,
1961, at Nesbitt Hospital. Mary Jean
five ounces. She has these brothers
daughter of Joseph Grimes, Wilkes-
Old Peter Stauffer's Loom Work
On Exhibition At Smithsonian
One thing leading to another, a
discussion on whether a ledge of
rock below the old cemetery at the
top of Huntsville Road, bore or did
not bear the impress of a fossil
turtle, led to a bewildering number
of places, including Hong Kong,
Pekin, Australia, the Pentagon, and
Moscow.
It was Mrs. Charles Hosler, Par-
rish Street, a fairly recent resident
of Dallas, who started the whole
thing.
She called up to say that right
under the cemetery there was a
hollowed-out place in the rocky
ledge, and that the ceiling of the
small cave looked as if it might
show the impress of a fossil turtle,
at a little more than head height.
She came around.
A discussion of geology led logi-
cally to a discussion of Indian ar-
row heads near Honeybrook; the
interests displayed in.such excava-
tions by her father, herself, and her
children; Chester County Day in the
heart of the Amish Country; the
travels of a globe-trotting meteorol-
ogist; a display of Pennsylvania
Dutch weaving in the Smithsonian
Institute; a series of adoptions; the
Pentagon; pounds, shillings and
pence in an old account book with
phonetic spelling; the reservoir in
Honeybrook, fed by eternal springs;
and finally, full circle, the fossilized
‘| impress of a turtle.
“Look up there ‘on that ledge,
and see if you don’t think the |
ceiling ‘of the little cave has a 'turtle
on it; she instructed.’
Sure enough, there was a faint
‘tracing’ of head, carapace, and’ legs.
{Think ‘those pieces of rock un- |
derneath might be the turtle itself?’
“Could be. Here's a ohank, ogy
be: the head.”
Mrs. Hosler put. it Cotiilly back
“It better: stay there
thing about it can have .a look.”
“What I really came around to
talk about,” she had said earlier,
‘‘was Chester County Day.”
She supplied copies of the annual
publication, and of the Northern
Chester. County Herald. :
The conversation slipped again.
It now concerned Mrs. Hosler’s
grandfather, one Peter Stauffer, who
once wove. magnificently warm. and
durable wool coverlets which he
sold for $1.50 apiece, figured early
in his. account books in pounds,
shillings and pence. Following an
old pattern book printed in German,
he selected the star pattern as his
favorite, and developed bedspreads
in red stars, blue stars, white stars, |
on his overshot loom.
One of his spreads, together with
his silhouette, his ancient pattern
book, and his yellowed account book,
‘may be seen ‘at the Smithsonian
Institute in Washington, displayed
in a glass-fronted wall cabinet, ‘on
loan since 1955.
Peter Stauffer not only ' made
woven coverlets of linen and wool,
but sturdy linsey-woolsey weave for
garments.
His loom fell prey to an attic-
cleaning spree of some good house-
keeper, and the heavy side beams
were: thriftily used for rails for a
fence. Bobbins and spools were
thrown on the town dump. A pair
of square steel-rimmed spectacles is
still a family treasure.
Charles A. Stauffer, his son,” be-
came interested in digging for
Indian relics at the site of the
Honeybrook reservoir, where once
Indians had camped near the never-
failing springs. He dug up arrow
heads, -flint and jasper, and he
infected his children with the virus.
Mrs. Hosler can’t keep away from
Holds In Heat
“Saves +
Costs So Little . u's.
a Materials. It's
Flex-0-Glass now!
Keeps Out Cold
% 40% On Fuel
Anyone Can Afford It
Compare the low cost, light weight,
convenience and weatherproof
qualities of Warps Flex-0-Glass
with expensive, breakable glass.
So Easy . .. Anyone Can Do It
It takes only a few minutes to
t up any of Warp’s Shatterproof
that even the womenfolks enjoy
doing it. Don’t let cold weather
catch you unprepared!
WYR-O-GLASS, GLASS-O-NET, SCREEN-GLASS,
FLEX-O-PANE, POLY-PANE & EASY-ON KITS
are also made by Warp Bros, Chicago 51, 1.
-0- fr at Your Hardware and Lumber PT
r al Desler to Be Sure You Get Only the Genuine Origr
ONLY
)¢ in
i wide
also in 28” and 48° widthe
easy
Get
TACK ON
SECURELY
nal Flex-0O-Glass
'Cutcheon, who talked on guidance.
.| Mr, Maturi. ~ Alternates, Ray Goe-
ringer, . Andrew . Roan, and Merrill
Faegenburg.
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1961
museums. Her children are all
museum-conscious.
She has a son, Charles Jr., who
is a meteorologist, whose engage-
ments take him all over the world,
wherever eminent meteorologists
gather. :
At present he is in Moscow,
hobnobbing with other scientists.
His training was obtained at M. IL. T.
and Pennsylvania State University.
A daughter, Suzanne and her
husband have adopted two children,
moving to a new and larger home
in Fairfax, Virginia, after taking on
a third. When the adoption agency
said, “We have a family of six
children,” Suzanne and her husband
exchanged glances, and said hap-
pily, “We'll take them all.” This
wag not to be, as other arrange-
ments had been made for the older
ones, Mrs. Mitchell has had kinder-
garten experience, and is now
applying it at home.
Another daughter Barbara, has
recently moved to West Suffield,
Connecticut. She has four children,
same as her brother, Charles.
Charles Sr. is with the Navy in
the Post Office building in Wilkes-
Barre.
He and his wife both have so
many hobbies that they have out-
grown the small house on Parrish
Street.
Hears McCutcheon
Kiwanis Club men and women
held ‘a’ combined meeting Wednes-
day night ‘at Irem Country Club.
Robert Maturi of the men’s section,
and Mrs. William Guyette, presided,
Guest” speaker was George Me-
Delegates to Pennsylvania State
Convention of Kiwanis in Wilkes-
Barre were ‘announced as Jerome
R. Gardner, ‘Alfred H. Ackerson, and
Harry Lefko was announced as
chairman of the Harvest Moon Ball
scheduled for Saturday November 4
at Irem ‘Country Club.
Dallas Senior High rr
run by the Student Council in hopes
School
In a recent assembly, we saw two
films. One was of the second as-
tronaut sent into space. It was in-
titled “Summer in Space.” It
showed the preparations for his
flight and the take-off and the
tense moment when the helicopter
had to drop the capsule because of
its weight.
The other was on the Berlin
crisis; how it came about and how
serious it is now. It showed Hitler
on a few of his triumphant trips
through the capital, and also to-
day’s views of Berlin through the
barbed wire separating East and
West Berlin.
Senior Play Cast
The cast for the Senior play
“Strictly Formal” has been chosen.
They are Sally Moyer, Judy Wil-
News
liams, Elfrieda Hefft, Susan Dor-
rance, Carol Anderson, Marlin Rim-
ple, Sandra Ambrose, Bob Peterson,
Barry Slocum, Barbara Tag, Gale
Graves, Dale Mosier, Glenda Wil-
lims, George Apaliski, Barbara Hil-
debrand and Bernard Phillips.
Under the direction of Mr. Hughes,
Senior advisor, it will be presented
Friday, November 17. [It will be
both an honor and a privilege to
perform on the beautiful new stage
making it something worth remem-
bering for all involved.
Key Club Cider Driver
Key Club held its Cider Deive
Friday and Saturday. They collected
jugs Wednesday and Thursday and
cleaned them. On Friday night they
took the apples to Hardisky’s Cider
Press to make the cider.
We are very glad to hear that
hl i i at
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SECTION B—PAGE 1
‘the fellows did so well in the drive. |ly decided.
Magazine Drive Barry Slocum is head of the drive
Curtis Magazine Drive is starting | and we are sure that he will do a
today at our school. This drive is | fine job.
Sell Quickly Through
The Trading Post
of earning money for a Christmas
Dance. This has not been definite-
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Gin co
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253-257 South Main St., W-B
Arita
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