THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1961 innocent babes by King Herod when: | who these cooperative youths are: | ant To | he heard about Jesus) friemd Bradley Earl, Ronnie Earl, Larry | School To Close For Mou in t Pion = € arve I fon «5- Dr ange Weatherly mentioned with grati- | Earl, Mike Bell, Billy Miles, Thomas | Christmas Holidays DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA _ The Old Titer “Daddy, what is heredity?” 1 Bab “All men may be born equal, but | “Heredity, my boy, is what a man | ‘ 1 | believes’ in’ until his son begins to it's what they are equal to later on | tude that the Christian Church had Marcy, Nancy Alling, Susan LaBar, . {act like a fool.” that counts.” 3 | included. among its holy occasions a Sharon LaBar, Hal Seiple, David | Dallas and Lake-Lehman Schools! — tb Se = | prayer and scripture reading for Booth, Wayne Scull and of course | will hold no sessions tomorrow. To- Frieda | December 28 signalizing the Holy in the middle of them all in their | day is the last day of school before Blanche Innocents. We ought to remember fun, frolic and Christmas service is | the Christmas holidays. All schools | them too. Scripture says that God teacher Marjory Seiple. Wh open again on Tuesday, Janu- : / | makes even the wrath of men to | ary 2, at the usual hours, with bus Zor WSO S lw Tek praise Him. We may be sure that | ° Sell Quickly Through | schedules and cafeteria service | The Trading Post _ | maintained. MARY LEWIS CHRISTMAS PARTY Mary Lewis Bible Class had its Christmas party Wednesday at Mt. Zion church, Mrs. Emma Miles and Mrs. Jean Hronich served. tary Mrs. Lucy Howell, treasurer | voted \ God. Hie cherished fh Is of the | The turkey, so tender yow could Mrs, Russell Lewis. Members pres- | CARE as it has done évery year, A X0C 14S CUCTISKeT the souls olf the | cut it with a fork, was roasted by ont were, Emma Masters, Laura | work and study meeting was set | Holy Innocents that tragically ded] Sally VanTuyle. Other dishes tasty Rozelle, Ruth Perry, Rose Miller, for the first Wednesday of each PRO #0 hace) Christ Wes More Sally VanTuyle, Margery DeWitt, and the other by Mrs. Lucy Howell. Rozelle, Officers were elected as follows: Krum, President Mrs. Paul Smith, Sas) BOE president Mrs. Ezra Rozelle, secre- | Mt. to send a contribution to and good were prepared by members Minnie VanTuyle, Mrs. Thos. How- | month to make bandages for the’ of the class. Cancer Society and to’ study. | A GOOD GIFT You Mt. Zion folks better tell - ap . ard, Mrs. Ball, Edith Perry, Jennie | Smith, Ida Mullison, Myrtle Smith, Minnie VanTuyle was home for a Mrs. Margaret Reid, Mary T. Lewis, | few days last week and then re- Lucy Howell, Ruth Gilbert, Mrs. | turned to Abington. Menhennet, Mrs. Guilford, Muriel OLD BALDY IN ALL SEASONS mn I Catherine Gilbert entertained the PTA last week at Exeter Township Elementary school with colored slide pictures. Be- sides some Christmas scenes her pictures included a year’s cycle of seasons and moods taken of Ba’d Mountain over beyond Newton and Milwaukee. Some were taken near the mountain itself but most were from Mt. “Zion area. If you have watched a mountain hide its lovely head in gathering mists, or display its purple robes in the glory of an afternoon sun, or look benignly over the ton of a cloud—well, you can imagine what old Baldy looks like around the calendar. | A LIVE NEWS ITEM Like old times I dropped in at Emma and Bill Perego’s at Orange. “Any news?” says I. “Yeah”, says Bill, “I'm still alive!” Of course that is good news. We had a grand visit. I did not remind them of what fun it was years ago to eat black chocolate cake in a bowl of milk at their house. Emma had heard that was the way I liked black chocolate cake and she pro- vided it! Pleasant memories. They S : told me that Beverly and Marie | Perego (they have an apartment | upstairs) recently visited Marie's uncle. John Hay in Philadelphia. Beverly and Marie's daughter, Don= na and husband, Richard Sands came with baby Richard” to visit while papa Richard went hunting. | He bagged an 8-point buck. They live half wdy up the Mile Hill out of Tunkhannock. Marie Perego is having good suc- cess conducting the Orange choir. Now they are rehearsing Christmas music, ALL TOGETHER FOR CHRISTMAS We four Gilberts are together again for Christmas, a cherished occasign. The Christmas tree stands in front of the big study window on the wooden platform ‘I built for it in two sections last year. Trim- mings have been accumulating since the first year on Dorothy's first | tree. The tall balsam fir in the front yard is trimmed again this vear by Catherine’s imaginative | hand with tin can covers glowing { with criss-crossed fluorescent tape. | You light them up at night with your car lights. : | WHEN CHRIST WAS BORN your friends about the news coverage now extending over | our way and urge them to sub- | scribe to The Dallas Post. | Would make a good Christmas | or New Year's gift—a year’s | subscription! TAKE CHEER TO RANSOM The Youths Crusaders, Marjory | Seiple’s Sunday School Class, con- | sists of a dozen or more boys and | girls of teen-age enthusiasms. For | instance, the whole bunch of them with their teacher went to the | ‘Lackawanna County Convalescent | Home at Ransom, Saturday, distrib- | uted gifts of cookies and handker- chiefs to the residents. Bradley Earl played his accordion ! and Larry Earl his trumpet. Every- | body was pleased beyond measure and the class itself got a great deal of delight from doing it. | “After they got back to Seiples | they all sat down to a turkey din- ner which they knew what to do with. Then in the evening they gathered: at the Mt. Zion Church to trim it for Christmas. We saw the results on Sunday | morning—the shapely well-trimmed | tree, the poinsettias and greens along the altar rail, and perfectly safe but lovely electric candles and greens on the window sills. It is. worth while knowing just After dinner an exchange of gifts furnished pleasure to everybody. Entertainment was provided by readings, one: by Mrs. William Reid, | 1 | | | i i JUST A SPIN OF THE DIAL ORchard 4-1181 and you reach ‘THE BOSTON STORE In Wilkes-Barre Center Moreland, Dallas Harveys Lake and Sweet Valley Subscribers Only | For That Special Gift opm or Remembrance JOHNSON'S NURSERY GREEN-HOUSE = MAIN HIGHWAY SHAVERTOWN OR 4-4816 OR 5-1806 NO TOLL CHARGE Dick and Walker The Boston Store Fowler, rn May your Chi.-uiias be as bright as the ornaments upon your iree. And may we add our thank you for your kindness in 1961. ~ STRAUSER’ ho LINOLEUM & TILE CENTER | Last Wednesday afternoon Rov. ? ' Ralph’ Weatherly spent an hour or MAIR ST. LUZERNE | so with me to delve deep into the problems of the universe. In re- BILL. — SARAH — BILL, JR. — JIMMY sponse to a thought that had both- i ered me (about the slaughter of Ln iW (ELA (BRASS So MINERS NATIONAL BANK |& > oc ed z ° wo, ssa o . / = Gz 6 / " MINERS | | CCL [Miners NATIONAL NATIONAL BANK BANK A Memy Christmas TO ALL OF YOU FROM ALL OF US AT THE FRIENDLY MINERS in DALLA 4 MINERS NATIONAL BANK : wie. of Wilkes-Barre Member F.DIC. , they do use the telephone. With characteristic modesty, of course. se EE While the Amish people in Pennsylvania's Lancaster County remain aloof from most modern conveniences One of America’s 12 million Independent telephones New look in drive-in phones: by Commonwealth Telephone Co. of Dallas, Pa. Numbered among the nation’s “best run, best equipped” companies, Common- wealth operates more than 78,000 telephones in 16 Pennsylvania counties. It is one of 3,200 Independents from Florida to Alaska who help you reach all America. } Moré facts? For a free copy of “An American Story,” write: Dept. 12, U.S. Independent Telephone Association, 438 Pennsylvania Bldg., Washington 4, D. C. Reprint from Saturday Evening Post—December 23, 1961