5 { ui 1 i il Ce DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA ah gr Lake Scouts = | Si Win First Rid Competition Share Honors With Dupont Troop In Marine Corps Meet Approximately 500 people watch- ed District 3, Wyoming Valley Council Boy Scout Troops 361 of Dupont and 331 of Harvey's Lake each win a First Place in the Mar- ine Corps-sponsored First Aid Meet at the Wyoming High School on March 21, 1962. The Dupont Scouts took their honors in the 11-14 year age group, in which they had also entered three other teams. The troop from Harvey's Lake was first in the Explorer Age Group. The Marines of the Wilkes-Barre Recruiting Station and Inspector- Instructor Staff, 3rd Motor Trans- port Battalion USMCR, Wyoming, judged. the young medics, All the boys are instructed in First Aid by Mr. Joseph Neizgoda of Idetown. The Harvey's Lake Lions Club Contest conducted by the United States Marine by Harveys Lake Lions Club. Peter Sarmonis. FIRST PLACE WINNERS in the Explorer Division of the First Aid Corps Recruiting Station of Wilkes-Barre was Harveys Lake Boy Scout Troop 331 sponsored Here, left to right, are: Captain H. C. Deutschlander USMC, Donald Evon, Fred Strenfel, Xavier Chiampi M, D., Reese Finn, Gary West and sponsors its area Scouts. who are led by S. M. Arthur West and A.S.M. Thomas Smith. Nicholas Yazwin- ski is Scout Executive of District 3, and works closely with the troops in this program. The event was planned and sup- ervised by Xavier Chiampi M.D., Chairman of the Health and Safety Committee for District 3, and Capt- ain R. C. Deutschlander, Officer in Charge of the U. S. Marine Corps Recruiting: Station, Wilkes-Barre. Announcement has been made of | the approaching marriage of Con- stance Mae Veitch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wiley A. Veitch, Claude Street, Dallas, to Harlem Irvin Ev- ans Jr., son of Dr. and Mrs, H. Irvin Evans of Ashley and Harveys Lake. Rev. Russell Lawry will perform the ceremony in Dallas Methodist Church Saturday, April 21. Reception will be held at Irem Country Club. | IV VV VV VV VV VV VV VV VV VV VY VV YY Y YY eee COMING SOON "COIN OPERATED DRY CLEANING & LAUNDRY CLEAN WRINKLEFREE DRY CLEANING ano LAUNDRY | Va., will be queen of the | attended her first Apple fete. KLEEN of Dallas |= TUNKHANNOCK HIGHWAY (Route 309) NEAR DALLAS SHOPPING CENTER Watch for further ammoumcements. Have Baby Boy abe tail emit doa bk ai all a a ae ar Hospital on March 31. “NOW YOU CAN BORROW FROM s20 to 60 § 4 } 1 Z PATRICIA ANN GODFREY Patricia Anne Godfrey, daughter lof the internationally known radio land Tv star, Arthur Godfrey and | Mrs. Godfrey, of Loudoun County, Evans—Veitch Nuptials | + Queen Of Blossoms v Shenan- | doah Apple Blossom Festival in Winchester, Va., on May 3, 4, and 5. Arthur Godfrey was Marshal of the | Grand Feature parade at the spring- | time telebration in 1953, at which ! time the then 10 year old Patty Blossom Upward of 200,000 persons ‘are in Winchester and the area for the Apple Blossom Festival | and [Shenandoah Valley Week. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Boylan, Beech | Street, Shavertown, have announced the birth of a baby boy at Mercy ! “For Any Reasonable Purpose” i Home Improvement Loans NO - Long Trips to the City Auto Loans NO - Co-Makers A Personal Loans NO - Endorsers Vacation Loans NO - Parking Problems Pay Off Past-Due Bills NO - Red Tape | THIS IS ALL THE INFORMATION WE NEED Amount of Cash Needed $ Are You Married [] Single [] Divorced [] Wife's . : Name Namen” X10 owe ia | Address Lal A, How Long Phone Employer Employer is not notified | | * Do You Own [] Rent [] Board [] | | | Employer's. Address Salary How Long Occupations... 7 = Week . uw Mo... FILL IN - - - AND‘ MAIL ; CONFIDENTIAL — CONVENIENT — FRIENDLY SERVICE Loans made to residents of all surrounding towns PAY BY MAIL DALLAS FINANCE CO. 26 LAKE STREET DALLAS, PA. (Next to the Post Office) ® PHONE: ORchard 4-1781 OPEN DAILY — 9:00 AM. - 5:00 PM. FRIDAY ho 9:00 AM. - 8:00 PM. ( : : | SATURDAY — 9:00 AM. - 12:00 NOON ; of John Glenn had been noted in LS : ing her a i | friendship. By | Wilson will study under auspices of | El the | widely in this country, taking notes # | The space capsule passed over her fl | area, and residents sat up all night THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1962 | Lehman-Jackson-Ross PTA To Elect Officers Speaker for Lehman-Jackson-Ross i PTA Monday night at 8 at Ross Township School, will be Miss Mary | Glowacki of the Lehman faculty, who will talk on “The Value of Teaching Foreign Languages in the Public Schools. She will be introd- {uced by program chairman Mrs. | Richard Stroud. | President William Gentile reminds | members that election of officers | will take place. | Mrs. Edward Kanasky will have | charge of refreshments, assisted by | mothers of Ross Township's second and third grade pupils. | | Hugustus Rittenhouse Augustus Rittenhouse, Pleasant Valley, died March 27, aged 91, at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Howard Sorber, with whom he had made his home in Shickshinny for | the past three years. He was buried [Saturday at Bethel Cemetery, fol- {lowing services conducted by Rev. | Oscar Saxe from the Bronson Fun- eral Home. He was son of the late William and Martha Myers Rittenhouse, Huntington Township, moving to Pleasant Valley when a lad of nine. He drove the first school bus for Fairmount schools, using a model International Rotary Clubs’ For- | eign Exchange students are shown | seated above: left to right, Chris | Leydolt, Austria; Elsbeth Gerrits, | Thorning-Lund, Denmark. *~ | Standing, left to right: Dr. Robert | Foreign Exchange Students At Dallas High Scheol Forum A. Mellman, Superintendent of Dal- las. Schools, and a member Dallas Rotary Club’s Student For- eign Exchange Scholarship com- brose, Dorothy Eck, Elfriede Hefft | i i Arrangements by Bronson. Floyd Nulton Dies At 80 Floyd C. Nulton, formerly a farm- er in Franklin Township, died March 28 at the home of his daughter, | Mrs. John Rice, in Forty-Fort, where he had lived for the past six months. Burial on Monday was in Eaton Cemetery. He was son of the late Isaac and Emma Haas Nulton. He and his wife would have observed their 58th wedding anniversary April 5. Has Not Been Recovered Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hoyt, Beau- mont, parents of Mrs, Lillian Merd- ick who was drowned in the swol- len Susquehanna near Athens in a car accident, wish to thank every- body who helped during the tragie time. The body, which disappeared in fast-moving ice in the flooded river, has not been recovered. Mem- orial services were held at St. Johns Lutheran Church. Mrs. Harriet N. Tubbs Mrs. Harriet N. Tubbs, native of Sweet Valley, and member of Sweet Valley Christian Church, was buried in Edge Hill Cemetery Tuesday morning, following services con- the Bronson Funeral Home. He leaves his widow, the former Lucy Weatherby; in addition to Mrs. Rice, their children: Mrs. Lucy Gar- rison, Courtdale; Norman, Baltimore, Md.; Mrs. Jean Pellam, Kunkle; Mrs. Helen Crisman, Denver, Colo.; Mrs. Fay Smith, Trucksville; Mrs. Beat- rice Herold, Vestal, N. Y.; Mrs, Ida Fink, Exeter; Dorothy Nulton, Port Crane, N. Y.; Mrs. Vera Heimbach, [of Miners National Band, died af “4 Binghamton, N. Y.; also 15 grand- (her home in Nanticoke Frid«ay children and 14 great-grandchildren; | morning. She was daugbter off the |a brother, John, Middletown. | late Clark and Margsgaret Rummage | Arrangements by Bronson. Edwards. 7 The Fred Ecks Haye Wisitors From Africa, With Report On Marilyn A social worker whole lifelong | it. ambition from early child ood was | to work in the African fi2:ld was | guest of Mr. and Mrs. Freyl Eck over the weekend, and spoke 1/2 the In dealing with health and sani- tation she uses an interpreter, for | there are many dialects. It is of | extreme importance to get her mes- Church School at St. Paul's LU- | sage across with no chance of mis- theran. Ww, | understanding. : The Ecks and Miss Winifred Wil- ["» African Townships are areas set son had never met before, but Miss | aside? Nithin city limits where Afri- Wilson had met Marilyn Eck, now | cans are tencouraged to buy their spending a year in Southern Rho- own cindelkblock homes. They are desia as ' a Rotary Exchange stu- | iyo pedroomy.models with a kitchen, dent. Miss Wilson reports that | ng outside feo and toilet. Very everybody in Bulawayo entertains | kind, polit, people, they ! 2 r | clean, a high opinion of Marilyn, consider- | .c.liye the value of Wducation, and | good ambassador o ; | now about 80% of the &hildren are . | being educated. Bulawayo hgas the For the next three months, Miss | highest rate in Africa. Children Mare Body Of Drowning Victim Back Mountain Hardware | Crue lly Beaten (Continued from Page 1) | comprising more than 15,000 peop- | le. He didnt have to sell himself | on the idea but he did have to sell j other businessmen and his associ- ates that the Back Mountain area could support the finest suburban j 9g 03 soor[d SSoUISNg PUB SIJIOIS found anywhere. Sure of himself and having | a |and Jon Butler, Dallas Senior high | of [school panelists; Nr T. 7 | | chairman ent Foregdgn Exchange Scholarship’ Holland; Arvin Shah, India; Nuala mittee; W. Frank Trimble, Principal, | Committe ge, { Downey, New Zealand, and Bjarne | Dallas Senior High School; Sally faculty 4 | Moyer, Diane Payne, Sandra Am- i school. | attending a baby shower given for | SECTION A — PAGE 3 YOUR HELP, PLEASE A great many address changes for cur readers are obtained only by means of a return postal form when copies of the Dallas Post are not deliverable. The charge for this service, costly enough before, has now been doubled to 10 cents per notice. Please help us to hold down this expense by sending in your new address as soon as you know it, if ‘you are mov- ing. ‘ And please include your post- al zcne number; that is import- | . ant. How Many Of These Items From Previous Issues Of THE POST Do You Remember? Governor George H. Earle’s visit to Dallas and College Misericordia on June 2, 1936 tc deliver the commencement address at the College’s tenth annual commencement. Before the commencement exercises in Wilkes-Barre, the Governor visited the College campus where he was honored at a banquet. Numerous Dallas resi- dents, who turned out to see the Governor pass through town, were disappointed when thestate’s Chief Executive ar- . rived 't the College in a heli- copter anclanded on the cam- | pus in froniof the building's li DT eT a a main entrance. | : The rolling campu.of Miseri- cordia transformed fgaio the | the Forest of Arde ign | zordan, | Dallas Rotary Club Stué., and Donald J. Evans, | ember, Dallas Senior high (Continued from Page 1) day afternoon in the Misericordia senting Shakespes Like It.” Congressman J. nery, in April, 1 ing the College w, can flag which b the United Stati havertown, before collasping. | ir car equipped with two-way | dio, the men alerted Chief Herbert | Miss Franklin, on her way from | friend, had dropped off three | fhe | other girls in town. courage to back up his convigétion, | ! « it was not long after his arrival { Emerett Franklin, proprietor of the that things began to happdn. The | popular tea-room, Center Moreland, insignificant lumber yarda™ that he was attacked, six women have come and his purchased becgaime The Back {forward to say that they have nar- Since Miss Franklin, daughter of | Washington, D.C. Misericordia stu ing a Red Cross F on the spacicus June, 1942. Mrs. Tubbs, 83, retired employee | z (Note Back Mop tain in that name). i tadzt! ember. Mr. Sowden could have Mountain Lumber, Coal Company. | '0Wly escaped a similar experience. | £ Updyke says, “If they’d only say | Then came, the beautiful two-story | something about it at the time, | Hardware fStore—unusual in its ap- give a description of the man or pointmer4 s up until that time for the car, let us have something to a business place Back of the Moun- | work with, ! point these offenders. On thing is " With its destruction last Sept- |for sure, any woman who drives a- loe late at night must keep her |time. stepped out of the local business doors locked on the inside, with | picture, content to rétire and take | windows only slightly lowered.” | Harriet Rice D Friends and neighb Mountain Area extend |Mr. and Mrs. Paul | town, in the death of | Mrs. Harriet Rice of W3 She had been hospitali we could maybe pin- The Daileys attended yesterday at 2 p.m. things easy. Instead he accepted | the challenge and chase the harder task--rebuild. Today the beautiful new Back | Mountain Hardware ovens its doors | to serve this community. There are few as beautiful or with | as big a variety of stock in the | country. | i Peter Monick | This morning at 9:30, a mass of | Requiem will be celebrated at Gate | of Heaven Church for Peter Mon- | ick, Harveys Lake resident for the | past eleven years, who died Mon- | day morning at General Hospital, | where he had been a patient for a week. Burial will be in St. John’s | Cemetery. Sa DALLAS . M-G-M DRIVE-IN THEATRE : regis FRI. - SAT. - SUN. pot NA ! BoB LA YEAR'S FUNNIEST! HOPE~ TURNER "in a TED RICHMOND rrooucTion CINEMASCOPE and MetroCOLOR == JANIS PAIGE JIM HUTTON - PAULA PRENTISS Racing Thrills lc “THE GREEN HELMET” A native of Poland, Mr. Monier) came to this country in 1907, settl- | ing in Edwardsville. He retired from | coal mining in 1937, after being | injured at Woodward Colliery. He | . | taught English. A university wag | travelling | pitt four years ago. Education I goes to the boys if there is to be a | on advancement of women. She | choice, but women are being en- | was given a special grant by Inter- | couraged to raise their standards. | national Federation of Business and | | Professional Women to attend the | be word Ais Yet Io the | sixteenth session of the Status of | 1 > 1 Tosi Snis «are | Woman Contrission. ‘at the UN inl ed Europeans. There is a move | me | afoot ta change this designation State ' Department, | | New York City. - ¢ Slo reports that she loved Now land call all residents of Africa poy : e¢ NeW | Africans. | York, especially its super markets. | : i; In visiting Shavertown, Miss Wil- In her family case work at Mpopoma Township, Miss Wilson's specialty is advancement of African women. She is employed by the African Affairs Department of the Bulawayo (City Council. A native of Ireland, Miss Wil- son’s ambition to see the world, and especially Africa, spurred her | son was intrigued with the first | American home in which she had | been an unofficial guest, and the first American church. Asked whether the orbital flight Africa, she said that it had, indeed. to hear reports from the astronaut. Before returning to Africa, Miss Wilson will visit Los Angeles, Seat- | tle, New- Orleans. On her way home fouyr grandchildren and one great | oh grandson. was a member of Our Lady of Vict- ory Church. 1 He is survived by: his widow | a son, Myron, Kingston; | i — CORI SUMMER PRICES VERYMHARD, NO DIRT LOW ASH CONTENT HIGH IN HEAT —100% (YUARANTEED— STOVE & stpmo NUT $17.00 PEA 15.50 STOKER 14.50 In Two Ton Lots “Give us 3 days Notice she will attend an International Congress in Oslo. Her local visits took in the new Dallas High School, the view from the roof of the N. E. National Bank, the Back Mountain Memorial Li- brary, and College Misericordia. BACK IN AFRICA T-V is only eight months old in her country, but it is already used in the schools. Polygamy poses a problem for Miss Wilson, who must find ways of quelling jealousy. When she sees that an African is about to take a second wife, she tries to discourage EXPERT TAILORING ® Trouser Alterations ® Skirts & Dresses Hemmed ® Coat Alterations rT Cleaning & Pressing ADAMS Back Mt. Shopping Center Shavertown Fowler, Dick The T Open Til 9 Every Night AT IT RA 3 i» to join the Women’s Army Corps. On Delivery ‘And what happened? She spent her tour of duty in London. But OR 14-5766 eventually she got to ‘Africa, was MILTON PERREGO in Capetown for six years. : o aaa \ \ THE BOSTON STORE Harveys Lake and Sweet Valley Center Moreland, Dallas ston Store JUST A SPIN \ OF THE DIAL and you reach 3 SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT ' «3s @ new low - cost BLUE CROSS and foi i} BLUE SHIELD PROGRAM FOR FULL-TIME COLLEGE STUDENTS ' (UNDER AGE 23) GET LISTED BENEFITS ...LOW COSTS... OTHER FACTS ... WITHOUT OBLIGATION Find Out TO-DAY ! How To « Join —— = = — Can Be Posted On 3c Postal To Mail — —- — BLUE CROSS — BLUE SHIELD Dept. SP-E ; BLUE CROSS BLDG. ,| WILKES-BARRE, PA. Please send me information about the Blue Cross Plan for. Hospital Care and Blue Shield Plan for Medical-Surgical Care. STUDENTS: NAME on io od oh ADDRESS I. Is Student Now Enrolled In Blue Cross and/or Blue Shield? Yes [J] No [J] If “Yes” Give Agreement No. In Wilkes-Barre ORchard 4-1181 Subscribers Only NO TOLL CHARGE and Walker Central location overlooking Boardwalk and convenient to Piers, : Churches and Theatres — Near Rail and Bus Terminals — Inviting Lebbies and Parlors — Closed and Open Sun Decks Atop — All Rooms Delightfully Furnished — Modified and European Plans — Conducted by Hospitable Ownership Management that de- lights in catering to the wishes of American Families. HOTEL . JEFFERSON ATLANTIC CITY : NEW JERSEY Vrite for Literature and Rates Hotel Jefferson Aflantic City, New doreay