The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, November 02, 1961, Image 2

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SECTION A — PAGE 2
Breaking a record of ten years’
standing, the sixteenth annual dog
show of Back Mountain Kennel Club
has attracted a record entry of 482
dogs for this year's event at King-
ston Armory, Saturday. These dogs
will come from a dozen or more
states for the verdict of an inter-
national panel of expert judges.
A total of 74 different breeds and
varieties will be exhibited in the
conformation classes, in addition to
the 35 dogs of various breeds ent-
ered in the obedience trial., The
three varieties of Poodles have the
largest entry with 52.
One ‘of the next largest entries
is Cocker Spaniels, to be judged
this year by William E. Lahn, Still
Avenue, Dallas, Other judges will
come from Canada, Michigan, Tex-
as and New Jersey.
‘Judging will start at 10 a.m. and
continue until Best-in-Show around
4 or 5 o'clock. It is a benched show
and all dogs entered may be seen
in the ring or on their benches be-
tween noon and 3 p.m.
Although Back Mountain Kennel
Club serves the entire “Wyoming
BE AN: INFORMED VOTER,
candidates, read all you can; and then vote
your convictions.
phone . . . write . . . visit
Dallas, Pa. Phone OR 4-5107
NEW YORK LIFE INS. CO.
Life Insurance ® Group Insurance @ Annuities @ Health Insurance
: @® Pension Plans '@
16th Annual Bk. Mountain Dog Show
To Draw A Record Entry Of 482 Dogs
Valley in the interests of pure-bred
dogs, local residents are prominent
in its leadership and in planning
this year’s record-breaking show.
Among them are Thomas B. Rob-
inson, club delegate to the.Amer-
ican Kennel Club, and Mrs. Robin-
son, club secretary; Mrs. A. Lee
Stewart, trophy chairman, and Mr.
Stewart; Dr. Richard C. Post, one
of the show weterinarians, and Mrs.
Post, all of Dallas; Mr, and Mrs.
Robert Jewell, Shavertown; Dr. and
Mrs. William A. Wicks, Trucks-
ville; Mr. and Mrs. Austin K. How-
ard, Trucksville; J. H. MacVeigh,
Dallas; Albert Billings, Dallas; Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Eber, Demunds;!
and Miss Frances Dorrance, Dal-
las.
Cleaners Open Saturday
Closed for the past two days be-
cause of the death of the prop-
rietor Harold Davis, Davis Cleaners
will open Saturday to permit cust-
omers to pick up their clean cloth-
ing.
listen to the
Peter Kaye
76 Midland Drive
Harold Davis Dies
Biter Heart Attack
A requiem mass for Harold Dav-
is will be celebrated tomorrow
morning at 10 from St. Therese's,
following services from the Wil-
liams Funeral Home at 9:30. Father
Brennan will officiate. Dallas Lions
Club will hold a service this even-
ing. Friends may call today, 2 to
4, and 7 to 10 p.m.
Mr. Davis, only 37, died Tues-
day morning at Nesbitt Hospital,
where he had been a patient for
three weeks, since being admitted
by ambulance suffering from a
heart attack.
Mr. and Mrs. Davis collaborated
in operation of the Davis Cleaning
in Trucksville, a business launched
in 1950. His death removes from
the Back Mountain scene one of its
most energetic and far-seeing young
‘businessmen.
He was born in Indiana, moving
with his family to Syracuse, then
as a young boy to Wyoming Val-
ley. He graduated from Forty Fort
High School in 1942, and enlisted
in the U.S. Army. He served in
Germany with the 887th Military
Police. Upon discharge, he attended
National Institute of Dry Cleaning
at Silver Springs, Md., finishing in
1949. :
He belonged to St. Therese’s
Church, and was a member of the
George Shupp Bowling League. He
was vice president of Dallas Lions
Club.
He is survived by his widow, the
former Alice Wiencoski; his par-
ents, Mr and Mrs. Ben Davis; two
children, Nancy and Harold Jr.,
students at Gate of Heaven School;
a brother Robert, in Buffalo; a sis-
ter, Mrs. Robert . Kappler, Dallas
Township.
USE THE POST CLASSIFIED
Two Dallas Senior High School
Students took first place prizes in
the Safe-T-O Driving Contest con-
ducted by the Pennsylvania Manu-
facturers Association Casulty Insur-
J Ei lai
BAR. 0, FR Inw
AT DEALERS AND STAN §
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1% TEMPERATURES WEDNESDAY EVENING, SY AUGUST _16, 1961
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12; Fired ®19
12 Dismissed;
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|
th ors ti THE EVENING
NEWS, WILKES-BARRE, PA,
ROUX XK
WEDNESDAY EVENING, * SEPTEMBER 20, ME ane
11 Dismissed, 12 Others Hired By y County
S Fired And § Hired 1 TDroppech 3 Named
3y County
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16 Hired By County
TIMES-LEADER, THE EVENING NEWS, WILKES-BARRE, PA, WEDNESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 6, 1961
i0 Appointed, 9 Dismissed By Institution n Board
x Xx Xx *x * x * kk x, %x x
120 Hired 21 Dismissed In County Shake-Up
ll Fae)
11 Hired By Coup
t
By Commissioners; ln County Chan9®% 7 oy Others Dismisse d
pI, asst so
ENING, 18, 1961 3 _ ENING, OCTOBER 4, 1961
f° Jobs Authorized At Home; =
Pay Scales Stir Controversy
and so it goes...
The payroll gets
19 Are Appointed To Cony Jobs;
BIGGER and BIGGGER!
The cost of County Government GROWS.
... So will your TAXES!
A TAX INCREASE!
PROTECT YOUR PURSE
om, John L. « Dorrts, Chix
J Dismissed At Today's Meeting
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1961
Dallas Students Win Safe-T-0 Driving Contest
|
|
ance Company,
Barbara Tag took first place in
the girls’ division. Barry Slocum
took Grand Prize. A total of 46
students from 14 schools participat-
ed.
Contestants were required to take
a written test in addition to the
driving requirements. This is the
secnd year in succession that a
girl from our school has won the
girls’ first places
Last year, Marilyn Eck was the
prize winner. Mr. Robert Dolbear,
Driver Training Instructor, accom-
panied the students to the contest
and was well pleased with their
performances. These students took
the Driver Training Course under
Mr. Robert Dolbear,
INCORRECT CAPTION
ON PAGE 2 SECTION C
The overline and caption
under the picture of four Dallas
students on page 2 of section
C is incorrect and should have
appeared, as it now does, on the
picture above.
The correct caption for the
picture on page 2 Section C
follows. —Editor
Commended In National
Merit Scholarship Exam
Four seniors at Dallas Senior !
High School have been honored for
high performance on the National |
Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test |
(NMSQT) given last spring. Each |
Scholarship Corporation.
students: Lewis Chere, Mary Ben- |
To increase their opportunities |
to obtain financial assistance if |
sends the names, home addresses,
tests scores, and other informatior
of all commended students to t!
two colleges they indicate as
their preferred choices at the
they took the qualifying test.
The four students were :
the high school juniors ir nr
than 15,000 schools who t che
NMSQT last March. The tb our
examination covers fiw mar-
ate areas of educations selop-
ment,
Mrs. Bertha Mi A
Lies AtMaple¢
Mrs. Bertha Mic} J7, resident
of Bound Brook, formerly of
Loyalville, died ° Tuesday at
Somerville,
She was burie
le Grove, follow
arday at Map-
arvices conduct-
irman Luzerne County Democratie
ed by Rev. Jo sarrahan, pastor
of Maple Gr Aethodist Charge,
from the Br . Funeral Home.
Mrs. Mic’ sad attended the
funeral of mother, Mrs. Lydia
Covert of ville, five weeks ago.
Her fath: ss Clarence Covert.
She i ved by her husband
Stephey , ese children: Andrew,
with JS Army in Germany;
Mar "cia Anna Hillon, Free-
: J.; Stephen Jr., Bound
{. J; four grandchildren;
, and sisters: Charles, East
, N. J.; Mrs. Walter Stevens,
son; Jack, Loyalville; Ken-
. Harveys Lake.
-arge Of Manslaughter
.gainst Cadden Dropped
Charges of manslaughter against
Gerald Cadden, 58 year old Harveys
Lake resident who was badly beaten
hy his brother Stanley before de-
‘ending himself with a fatal bullet
‘sn Columbus Day, were dropped
I'ast Thursday in a hearing before
“he Grand Jury | Judge Brominski
residing. Mr. C .dden, ribs broken
w the beating, .and suffering from
sthma, has be n in precarious phy-
ical condition since the attach,
Subsorib 3 The Post
Dies Of Wound [Paes Bede the aorta.
i rity, roused by his father John |from West Side Catholic Hig}
| he had entered the junior year inlnis father
| September, shot himself in the chest | {off at Semi
Mashella of Philadelphia, on a hunt- firearms. He had been hunting on
student endorsed by his school re- |
ceives a formal letter of Commen- |
dation signed by his principal and '§
the president of the National Merit |
___ DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
16 Y 01 d B .|ing vacation at Lake Louise, the |Saturday, the first day of the Small
ear oy boy was rushed in the family sta- | Game Season. The revolver he used
tion wagon to Nesbitt Hospital | was reportedly one which had been
i St 7 i Hi; 1f where he was pronounced dead on | given him several months ago by
| 100 S umnse § arrival. Postmortem showed the | his father’
slug lodged against the spine, after Born at Darby the boy was the”
son of John E. and Dorothy Goer-
Garrity were at |inger Garrity. He was a member
breakfast when they heard the shot |of Stella Presbyterian Church. Forty
Mr. Garrity, finding his son fatall {Fort.
wounded, ran for the dock at Lake
Parents Hear Shot,
3 ’ : ] He leaves his parents; brothers
Find Youth Dying Louise where Dr. Marshella wa: and sisters: Christine, Glenn, Paul
In His Bedroom standing. and Lynn, at home; paternal grand-
Bruce had taken summer schoo! | parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gar-
A sixteen year old Franklin | WOrk to prepare for entrance tc |rity, Wilkes-Barre; maternal grand-
| Township boy died 45 his own | Wyoming Seminary, after spending mother, Mrs. M. XK. Goeringer,
a little over a year at Westmore | Wynnewood.
hand Monday morning. Bruce Gar- | I'land, where he had been a transfe:
He was buried yesterday at Oak-
lawn Cemetery, Rev. Robert D.
Garrity, to get ready to go to | School. McClure officiating.
school at Wyoming Seminary where | The boy normally accompanied
to Kingston, dropping Retired British Colonel: “I S25, gh
inary while Mr. Gar- | Algernon, sorry to hear you buried
| rity proceeded to his service station | your wife.”
Wrapped in blankets by his par- | at the Narrows Shopping Center. Other Retired British Colonel:
ents after being seen by Dr. T. E. | Bruce was well acquainted with { “Had to. Dead, you know.”
with a .22 calibre revolver.
tL ori sel
S00)
»
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Gavy’s Market
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W. Frank Trimble, high school |
principal, names these commended | §
- Main Highway —
nett, Barbara Tag and Diane Payne.
Trucksville
they need it. the Merit Corporation |
FREE DELIVERY — OR 4-7161
wears
CHUCK ROAST BOILED gm.
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Tetley Tea Bags 8c
Shurfine Frozen Orange Juice §/[°1.
Shurfine Frozen French Fries &/°I.
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Grapes & Ihe. 29c| Cabbage 3 Ib. 10c
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" GAVY'S
~~ Market
Main Highway — Trucksville
A