The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, January 11, 1962, Image 9

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    DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
!
~ NOXEN
a
~ Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Cahill and
family, West Pittston and Mr. and
i Mrs... Charles Cahill, Cornish, Maine
spent Tuesday with the Fred
Schencks.
Mrs. Joseph Dotter, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Kresge, Elwood Patton Jr.
2 spent Thursday with Warren Boy-
er and Mr. and Mrs. Jay Dent, at
Bloomsburg,
~ Mr. and Mrs. Francis * Schenck,
spent several days with their son,
Larry at Schenectedy, N. Y. Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Schenck and Elm-
er Crispell and Mrs. Emily Smith,
were their guests at dinner, on
~ Sunday. g
‘Recent guests at the home of
~ Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Hess were Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Williams and Flor-
ence Ann, Shavertown, Mr. and
rs. Nile Hess and family, Roch-
ester, Robert Hess and son Douglas,
Kunkle.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Montross
and Gregory spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Nevin Benner, Rich-
field, Pa. Sharyn Montross returned
with them after spending a week
with the Benners.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Jones and
Karlene are visiting Mr. and Mrs.
ere er a
Richard Hobbs at Tonawanda, N.Y.
A baby girl was born to the Hobbs’
on December 29th. This is their
second child.
Mary Ann Sevenski spent last
week at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Philip Cummings, Milltown, N. J.
Sunday visitors at the Ernest
Teetsels were Mr. and Mrs. George
Teetsel, Meshoppen, Mrs. Donald
Goble, Tunkhannock, Mrs. Everett
White and family, Johnston City,
NN. X.
Mr. and Mrs, William Hough, Mrs.
Emma Hough and Ruth, Almedia,
Pa., Billy and Gale Weaver, Hudson
Falls, N.Y. and Agnes Butler, Stull,
were visitors at the home of Stella
Shook on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Race,
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Race, Christine
and David spent Sunday at the
homes of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Car-
gill and family, Binghamton and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles VanCampen,
Endwell, N. Y.
Paul Lattimer, Lockhaven State
College is spending a vacation here
with his wife, Eunice and daughter
Stacey. He and his daughter spent
two days this week with his moth-
er, Mrs. Jean Lattimer, Towanda.
TANI
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Traver and
family, Williamsport, spent the week
end here with Mr. and Mrs. Rich-
ard Traver.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Rudolph,
Elmira, N. Y., spent Friday and Sat-
urday with Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Sorber and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Galka, Sr.,
Tommy and Susan, Fairless Hills,
Pa., spent the week end with Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Galka. Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hackling and
Tommy visited his mother, Mrs.
Sophia Hackling and sister Mrs. Ern-
ie Philips Jr. and family. Other visi-
tors were Richard Philips, Roch-
ester, and Mr, and Mrs. Albert
Hacking, Vestal, N. Y.
Mrs. Wheeler Hess has returned
to her home after spending several
weeks with their son Wheeler Hess
Jr., and family, Andover, Conn.
Mrs. Andy Thomas and Jessica
Thomas have been on the sick
list, this past week. /
The sympathy of the entire com-
munity goes out to the family of
the late Welford “Bud” Scouten,
who was taken with a heart attack
on Wednesday, and died soon af-
ter.
St. Lukes Lutheran Church was
made more beautiful over the week
end when new carpet was laid on
the floor of the church. The entire
interior was redecorated during the
summer.
Mrs Ora Bean is spending some
time with Mr. and Mrs. Merwin
Kamenstein, Flushing, N. Y.
Osmand Casterline and Elvin
Bean are at present working at the
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1962
Mount Zion -:- Carverton -- Orange
Now Home, Nelson And Mae Lewis
Recall Happy California Holiday
Nelson Lewis was back on the
job reluctantly handling over boxes
of apples when I went to talk with
him about his trip to California.
(What a luscious place for an inter-
view — the apple cellar! So apple-
ishly smelling that your mouth
starts watering.)
Nelson opened the interview with:
“That's the only way to travel,
Charlie”! It was by jet from Phil-
adelphia express to Los Angeles in
5 hours, 125 passengers with a
crew of 7. “You aren't aware of
any such speed.” The flight was
delayed 3 hours because of word
from the coast that there was too
much fog. Groundling that I am I
do enjoy hearing the story of a
thrilling flight high up where’ we |
| ways. enjoy the
used to think heaven was.
From Los Angeles it was an hour
or so by car to Riverside where son
Lowell lives with his wife Alice and
children Beth Ann, and Bradley
Richard. Dr. Lewis is assistant
director of Horticultural research in
the citrus department of Riverside
University of California.
While on the west coast the
Lewises visited Mr. and Mrs. Sandel
as happens to the best of news-
papers, the Post is delayed a day.
She is so crestfallen that her post-
man says he wishes he could print
one for her!
JUNIOR CHOIR IS FEASTED
The official board of the Mt. Zion |
Church last Thursday night gave a |
supper party for the junior choir in|
appreciation for their work. Present
were: Susan LaBar, Sharon LaBar,
Nadine VanTuyle, Karen Hronich,
Corlis Hurrey, Lind Dymond, Dawn
Schaffer, Diane Earl, Ermie Hoover,
Mike Hronich, Jackie
Jean Hronich. The choir expressed
to Mrs. Hronich its thanks for her
work as director by giving her a
gift. We in the pews at church al- |
singing of this |
group of young people and have vi- |
sions of some of thesz singers being
the backbone of the senior choir
day after tomorrow. The opportuni-
ties for singing in the junior choir
are sure to bear fruit in the future.
Last Sunday January 7 our friend
Rev. Ralph Weatherly conducted
Holy Communion at Providence and
Hyde Park churches in Scranton. He
had to decline an invitation from
have to.
us we enjoy the birds on our feed-
er more than ever. Needless to say,
so do they! Several varieties of spar-
rows, chicadees, tufted titmice, card-
inals,
grosbeaks, nuthatch,
The muskrat shows himself once in
VanTuyie, |
Annie Dwyer, Catherine Gilbert and |
Now that winter has settled on
bluejays, junco, evening
woodpeckers.
awhile at the pond edge, but most-
ly all we see of him is his tracks
in the snow.
Christmas night was the 22nd
wedding anniversary for Marjorie
and Harold Seiple. It was a lovely!
wedding in Mt. Zion church with |
reception at the Mathers home down
the road. Harold and Marjorie have
lived there ever since and now their
two children Phyllis and Hal are |
growing up in this community. |
Wednesday night Dorothy and |
Catherine were guests at dinner at |
the Mr. and Mrs. Charles Banks in |
West Pittston,
Paul Smith, friend over on the |
Hicks Creek Road, lost his balance |
and fell from the cindering truck. |
He suffered head and back injuries |
and was admitted to Pittston Hos-,
pital. I took the occasion to make |
some chaplaincy calls Sunday after- |
noon and found him! resting quietly.
Paul’s many friends hereabouts wish |
him speedy recovery. -
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Smith of the |
Apple Tree Road, Mt. Zion, and |
So I assisted at Orange. It was a
well-attended ‘service, I enjoyed
the choir of a dozen or so singers
in their maroon robes and white
collars. It was a worshipful experi-
ence also to sit for awhile in the
congregation and meditate on the
Snyder memorial window which I
have mentioned before. (What a
nice way for a family to be
memorialized!). In greeting people
at the door after service Elmer and
Lillian Evans passed the greeting
that “you are the man who married
us.” They weren't sorry and neither
was I! And Ira Frantz whom I
SECTION B—PAGE 3
shall always remember as the man
who wouldnt sell fruit on Sunday
on account of “I like to remember
the one who put the apple on the
tree.” We parted with him saying,
“Ill see you at the Library Auc-
tion” . . . Sure thing!
Women of Mt. Zion need to
be reminded that the session
for making cancer dressings
and studying the book about
Latin America is every
Wednesday morning, not just
once a month. They meet at
10 and bring their own sand-
wich lunch.
i ~
Bositn Sr
= JUST A SPIN
their son Bud visited their other |
son Larry in Washington over
Christmas, had a wonderful time.
Two of Dorothy's fellow-students
b
Back Mountain Lumber Co., Shaver-
town.
Mr. and Mrs, Lawrence Miner,
Chenango Forks, N. Y. spent New
Hunt in LaHarba. The Hunts are
some relation to the Parrishes and
used to live in Dallas on Spring
Street near The Dallas Post. I
another church on account of these
engagements. Thus it is with us
retired brethren!
Tg
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Bo Baa AR SE Ea ARETE RRR
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Fowler, Dick
THE BOSTON STORE
Harveys Lake and Sweet Valley
The Boston Store
~ O’'MALIA
SANITONE Dry Cleaning
OF THE DIAL
and you reach
In Wilkes-Barre
ORchard 4-1181
Center Moreland, Dallas
Subscribers Only
NO TOLL CHARGE
and Walker
preserves the
o
lc
in New
Miracle Fabrics
January, 7th. This
Years with his parents Mr. and
Mrs. Jacob Miner.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Jones spent
the week end with Mr. and Mrs. |
Richard Hobbs and family, Tona- |
wanda, N. Y.
Robert May left Thursday for Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., where he will be
employed by Mrs. J. Elmore Tur-
rell. Mrs. Turrell left on Thursday
by plane for Fort Lauderdale.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Beahm left on |
Monday, to spend the winter months
at Bradenton, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. Vane Race spent
a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Willets at Mount Arlington, N.J.
Mrs. Ronald Hopfer is a med-
ical patient in the General Hospital.
Mr, and Mrs. Elvin Crispell, Del-
avan, Wisconsin, announce the
birth of a daughter Cynthia Lee on
is their third
child.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Barton, Ath-
ens, Pa., visited Mr. and Mrs. Jos-|
eph Hackling.
Recent visitors at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Dymond were
Donald Sweet, Johnson City, N.Y.
and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Jones,
Longview, Texas.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Crispell re-
ceived word that their son Ronald
was taken to the hopsital at Pom-
ona, N.Y., in a serious condition.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stonier
and son, Falls Church, Va., recently
visited Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Dymond
and family.
Mr. and Mrs. William Engelman,
Rose Mary, Sheila and Sharon, Mr.
and Mrs. Barry Engelman, visited
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Engelman, at
Sayre, on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Patton
remember going there once, for
Dorothy knew Eloise and Isabel.
Isabel is now Mrs. Edward Crea-
ger and lives next to her parents
and has two children, Joanne and
John.
Mae Lewis showed me some of
the gorgeous stone polishing the
Hunts had done and given to her.
One piece was the size and shape of
a baseball, of may colored designs
in it, highly polished.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Hunt have this |
| that
as a hobby, collecting and polishing
petrified wood and other pieces of
stone from the desert and making
ornamental pieces and jewel set-
tings. They say they never know
just what color or design is hidden
away in the stone until it is
polished. (That's like people we
meet, isn't it?
If Mae had taken a wheelbarrow
instead . of a jet I guess she could
have come home loaded with pretty
stones and many varieties of citrus
fruits, But a wheelbarrow has
some disadvantages when it comes
to transcontinental travel!
Mae told me a funny one about
the Hunts and the Dallas Post. Of
course they are subscribers and the
home-town newspaper is like a let-
ter from home when you are 3000
miles away. It's that way with Mrs.
Hunt. On the day her Dallas Post
is due to arrive she watches for it
like a lover for a letter. Sometimes
spent Sunday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Luther Carter, at Emmaus,
Pa’
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ruff, Sr.
Mrs. Joseph Dotter and Weston
Ruff visited Mrs. Effie, Blizzard, at
Binghamton, on Sunday.
ANACIN
sl.9s
Evans Drug Store
SHAVERTOWN |
OR 4-3888
©
A CARVERTON LOSS
Carverton, as well as the John
Coon family, will miss Madeline
Coon Riaubia who died last week
following surgery. The Coon family
which we number among our
friends of many years was a family
of many native abilities. Playing
the piano and organ was Madeline's
hobby and gift. You couldn't say
she was a trained musician, but was
one who had the gift of music so
much a part of her nervous system
it had to be expressed.
Throughout life of many ups and |
downs, music helped her over and |
through it all. My sympathy goes
to the family.
A NEW, BOOK FOR
MEMORIAL LIBRARY
You may find a rhymester most
anywhere. Almost anybody can
make up a jingle. But a real poet
is rarer than a day in June. At the
Pittston Hospital the assistant to
Miss Esther Tinsley in hospital ad-
ministration is Miss Helen Dumack.
Last week she presented me with
an autographed copy of a neat little
book of her poems entitled “Great
Presence’. She asked if I would
take two copies over to Dallas to
the Back Mountain Memorial Li-
brary. I said I would. The editor
Tester Clark—writes a Foreword
in which he says in part: “Here is
a poet with an enormous amount of
generosity in giving of herself to
others with a rustic simple candor,
in expressing her faith in the life
about her and yearning for a fellow-
ship with the world of people in
her daily experience. A descendent
of simple farm folk who tilled the
soil for many years and absorbed
that magical essence of nature in its
entirety, has put a never ending
song in the heart of Helen Du-
mack.”
The title comes from her lines
called “My resolve . . . to be ever
aware of the Great Presence of life
dwelling within me.”
The book will have a local color
for two of the poems have familiar
settings. One is on ‘Fine Arts
Fiesta” which many of us have at-
tended down on Public Square.
Whether many of us have noted as
Miss Dumack has when she wrote
what she saw also “on the edge of
the same city' square’.
And don’t miss reading the one
with the really Back Mountain set-
ting, “Lehman Horse Show.”
You might not realize when you
see this quiet stepping, soft voiced
hospital administrator, talking to a
workman or a nurse or working be-
hind her desk that she is a poet.
But you go to Back Mountain
Memorial Library and ask for Great
Presence and read it. It is poetry.
I don’t rememher whether any of
her lines rhyme or not. They don’t
from Johns Hopkins University |
dropped in for tea Sunday after-
noon. One was John Molenda of |
Minooka studying for his Ph. D. in |
bacteriology and epidemiology. The !
other was Dr. Rodolfo Varias M.D. |
from Manila, Philippines. He is
working for his degree of Master |
of Public Health, majoring in Ment- |
al Health.
Last Saturday we had a visit from |
Charles Collins, Director of Social
Services of the Wyoming Valley |
Council of Churches. He brought
with him three of his adorable |
children, Cindy, Pamela and Kevin |
who had a wonderful time look- |
ing over the ornaments on our
Christmas tree.
ORANGE NEWS
Sunday morning Mrs. Gilbert and
I attended the communion service |
at Orange while Catherine attended
Sunday School and church at Mt. |
Zion. My reason for this shift was |
that I needed to get away early to |
get to Valley Crest by one. It was
a pleasant experience to worship |
among my Orange friends. My pas- |
tor always asks me to assist at the
communion service whenever my
schedule allows me to be on hand.
Carry your money
in your fountain pen!
A Miners Bank checking account makes i ume
necessary Jo carry large sums of money around
with you. Ws so much easier ... and safer,
#00 . . . fo pay by check. So come in foday and
wen a thecking account af THE MINERS. The
cost is small , , the convenience great, 2
OPEN YOUR CHECKING ACCOUNT
AT THE FRIENDLY
‘Miners in Dallas” |
MIMERS NATIONAL BANK, Dallas, Pa. |
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation a
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