d- nt Ys for DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Lake-Lehman Board ‘Employs Art Teacher Lake-Lehman School Board an- nounces that Jane Warfield, of Kingston, presently a senior at Kutz- town State College and doing her practice teaching in Reading, will teach art in the senior high school beginning with September 1962. ‘The trouble with a one-track mind is its narrow gauge and a lack of switching facilities. School Flagpoles Steel flagpoles are being assem- bled at Ross, Lehman, and Noxen schools. The type of pole permits bending down flat to the ground for repairs or painting. Party For Educators Lake-Lehman faculty, board mem- bers, and employees, will stage their annual Christmas Party Wednesday, December 13 at Irem Temple Coun- try Club. A a a a So Avoid The ELECTRIC TRAINS ed dodo do le ido dodo did i ib vv vy vvew v v vv YY YT TY VP VV VV VV VV VY VV VP VP YY YOY We Don’t Like To Disappoint You! Bring In Your Jenkins Hardware & Supply Ine. 1714 Wyoming Ave. Exeter, Pa. — Phone Wyo. 295 | Holiday Rush. NOW FOR REPAIR. satirist tdi dha deta oil dd ls lo do iid do lilo dio do Ey Ed {HEAD 5 I you! - - -- THES way Tw — WITH THESE TWO EXCLUSIVE FABRIC CONDITIONERS You get thorough, deep-down cleaning that restores the vibrant look of newness plus the feel and fir of newness. Style-Set® restores ; Soft-Set® restores softness and “body” to : heavier fabrics. Our Sanitone Service is tops for sportswear, for all your cleaning needs. Try it today . . . see and feel the difference. O'MALIA APPROVED SERVICE Laundry & Dry Cleaning Luzerne - Dallas Highway Enterprise 1-0843 THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1961 “Meet Corliss Archer” Lehman Auditorium tomorrow evening will be the setting for Leh- man Senior Play. The cast of “Meet Corliss Axrch- follows: Donna Lord plays Corliss Archer, an attractive high school girl. Corliss’ father, Harry Archer, is played by Bob [Parsons. Mrs. Janet Archer is played by Mary Ann Laskowski. Donna Wandel plays Louise, the Archer's maid. Mildred, Corliss’ companion, is played by Joan Fielding. Then there is [Dexter who is Cor- liss’ boy friend. His years of adol- escence are being ‘complicated by the fact that he adores Corliss. Richard Stroud plays this part. Edward Feist plays Bill ‘Frank- lin, the Archer's mext door neigh- bor and Dexter’s father. Mrs. Mary Franklin, is played by Cathy DiGiosa. Cousin Agnes is played by Carol Toluba. : A small, nervous, middle aged man. Fred Schultz, is the doctor. Joan Sgroi plays the trim effect- ive nurse... 1... Mildred .and Corliss have a friend named, Betty, played by Karen Gabel. Ed er One of the Few Home Owners Who ‘Don’t Need a PACKAGE POLICY! wu ' MOST PEOPLE DO! Vandalism Insurance is one of the many sources of loss cov- ered by our PACKAGE POL- ICY for home owners. This convenient package also * covers fire, theft, personal lia- bility . . . in fact, nearly all of the major hazards threatening the financial security of your home. Call us today for com- plete information. HAROLD E. FLACK Insurance Agency BROOKS BLDG. VA 3-289 1NJILIINNOD “N0ILYVA ANVAWOD JINVANSNI 341i QUVINYLS ANYIOD AL3YNS ONY ALTVASYD WNL Lake-Lehman High School y MARY ANN LASKOWSKI F.T. A. Initiations New members of F.T.A. Club were initiated Tuesday evening. Junior Class Rings The biggest day in the life of a Junior is the day of ‘getting the class rings. Before the Thanksgiving vacation Lake Juniors received their rings. 2 Lehman Juniors had a shock last week. Mr. Arthur Nuss, class ad- visor, wrote this message on the black boards, “You can pick up your class rings in Room 2 from 12:45 to 1:15, WHEN THEY GET HERE”. This was a big disappointment. But I'm ‘sure that by the | time this is published, all the Juniors will be in a gay mood because they fin- ally got their class rings./ Who’s Who Theodore Toluba and Gary De- Hope, [Lake-Lehman graduates, have been named to “Who's Who Among American Colleges ,and Universities. Both are Seniors at Wilkes Col- lege. To gain acceptance one must have excelled scholastically and soc- ially. Gary and Teddy have been active in various campus organi- zations during their four years of college. F.N. A. Lehman Future Nurses’ Club is conducting a clothing drive from November 17 to December 1 to en- able children of a southern moun- tain district to attend school. The Club asks for good, usable, low heeled shoes, jeans, sweaters, dres- ses, shirts, light coats, socks, under- wear, and hats. This clothing is to be brought to the Health Room be- fore classes in the morning. Idetown Mrs. Vivian Rinken entertained at supper on Thanksgiving day—Mr. and Mrs. Charles Derr and daughter, Karen; Janice Rinken, Mel Corig- don and Debra. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Meade and daughters, Connie and Beverly, Baltimore, spent the holiday week- end with-Mr. and Mrs. Corey Meade. Mrs. Libbie ‘Smith spent Thanks- giving - Day with. Mr. and Mrs. George Smith, Wilkes-Barre. Mr. and Mrs. Loren Keller had as guests on Thanksgiving Day, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Austin, LaRys- ville; Mr. and, Mrs. Z. E. Garinger, Dallas, Miss Lina Garinger, Harvey's Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Prutzman and son, David, and C. S. Prutzman of’ Huntsville. Billy Williams, student at Shep- herd College in West Virginia is spending the Thanksgiving recess with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Williams. Mrs. Charlotte Baugh, Hellertown, spent the holiday weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Dean Shaver. Henry G. Kreiss, District Super- intendent of Pennsylvania Temper- ance League, was the guest speaker at the Sunday morning worship service for the Lehman charge while Rev. and Mrs. Norman Tiffany were on vacation. Pvt. Richard A. Husted, who is stationed at Warrington, Pa., is spending a leave at his home here. Sharon Spencer is a patient in Nesbitt Hospital. Have you heard about the playboy who winters in Florida, summers in Maine, falls for women and springs at blondes? Man...is that GAS heat comfortable ?. ful and there’s no work to it! : I's completely automatic! NSYLVANIA GAS and WATER Company Before you buy fuel or convert your heating equipment see your Heating i Contractor, Plumber or Gas Company 4 \ \ Snow Removal |Hampered By Stalled Cars Keeping streets and highways open after heavy snowfalls is a problem to which many state and local road officials give night-and- day attention all winter long, Safety Commissioner O. D. Shipley said. “In most snow-belt communities, local ordinances prohibit overnight parking to allow city crews oppor- tunity to remove snow without hindrance from vehicles parked at the curbs,” he pointed out. “On rural roads, from the most modern expressway to the narrow- est town road, highway mainten- ance crews work extremely hard during storms and blizzards in a mammoth effort to keep roads open for essential traffic.” Shipley observed that last March officials of numerous large Eastern cities became so concerned over the chaotic traffic conditions which fol- lowed severe blizzards that they called the first Annual Conference on Urban Snow Removal Problems. In addition to agreeing on the need for better equipment for snow re- moval, stronger = enforcement of parking and emergency condition regulations, the delegates stressed the paramount problem caused by many private cars and trucks be- coming stalled and abandoned in the snow because they did not have needed tire chains. ; It was revealed that many cities, hoth large and small, were left crippled and virtually paralyzed when essential fire and police vehi- cles, properly equipped with ade- quate’ traction,’ were unable to maneuver around massive traffic jams caused by chainless private cars and trucks. Snowplows and even fire trucks, although properly equipped with. chains, were blocked for hours. J “The snow fighters and members of the National Safety Council's Committee on Winter Driving Haz- ards agreed that the driving public should be alerted to two major findings and safety precautions,” Shipley declared. “One finding is that scientific tests and experience show reinforced tire chains are the most practical means of preventing prolonged de- severe weather and road condi- tions,” he pointed out. “The second recommendation is that while snow. tires are also recommended as aids for mild-to- medium snowfalls in non-hilly areas, they do not replace the occasional snow conditions or even light snow or glare ice surfaces where there are hills.” . Meeker “Over the river and through the woods to grandmother’s house we'll go’ and though there wasn’t enough snow for a sleigh in most places, some folks did get around to visit. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Varner, Sr. had as Thanksgiving visitors Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Varner, Jr. and daughter, Kimberly, - Muhlenburg; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grey and chil- ‘dren, Linda and Robert, Ruggles; Mr. and Mrs. George Stuart, Jr. and daughters, Pamela and Linda, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sayre and chil- dren, Christine and Cathy Sue, Pikes Creek; Mrs. Lena Varner and Pauline Slocum, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Slocum and son, Ernest. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Cornell at- tended the fifteenth annual reunion of the Lehman class of '46 at Castle Inn Saturday evening. Grace Ide left Sunday to resume her teaching position at Estella after spending the holidays with her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Ide. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wadas and children, David, Brian and Patti, visited Mr. and Mrs. Wayne King Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Drabick, Storrs, Conn., called on Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ruggles on Friday. Cindy Disque, Lehman, and Mr. and Mrs. William Winter, Sweet Valley, were Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rogowski. Jim Rogowski celebrated his fifth birth- day on Saturday. ; Mrs. Lyle King spent Sunday with Mrs. John Handlos, Edwardsville. Mr. and Mrs. Robert McCarty, Kulpsville, visited over the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth King. They attended the funeral of Mrs. McCarty’s father, John Shupp, for- away at their home Thanksgiving Day. Mrs. Ruth Valick and children, Jan, Judy and Jenny, Lehighton, spent the holiday weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Willard Corell. Miss Jean Pyatt, Wilkes-Barre, called on Mrs. Cornell on Sunday. son, John, Lake Seneca, N. J., spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Or- ville Dunham. Esther and Meltha Warmouth, Edwardsville, were Thanksgiving guests of Mr, and Mrs. George War- mouth. Hillside Cow Record Hillside Grace Wizard of Oz 3702177 owned by Hillside Farms, produced: 17,691 lbs. milk and 703 lbs. butterfat in 306 days on twice daily milking as a T-year-old. Pennsylvania State University supervised the weighing and testing of production as a part ofthe of- ficial herd testing programs of the national Holstein organization. lays and winter skidwrecks during E need for tire chains during deep- || k mer Beaumont resident, who passed | Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Dunham and | SECTION B—PAGE 1 Shop Pomeroy’s Every Night 5 : Til 9:00 P.M. CALL TOLL FREE | ENterprise 10700 | Any ORchard and NEptune customers can cal] TOLL FREE and order merchandise from Pomeroy’s. SHOP . . . COMPARE . .. 3 Se Before You Buy Your Tree! : pe BEST QUALITY TREE | AT THIS LOW PRICE . 5 a\ Wena op - ATs pan Look at these features: ® Extra Wide @® Heavy Wire 21,” Branches! Branches! @® Flame Proof! © Non- ® Crush Proof! 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