The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, June 28, 1962, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    00
.50
i
mrs
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
Almost Half Of Dallas Gradiates
Will Continue Their Education
Forty seven percent of the class |Barry Slocum;
of 1962 from Dallas Senior High
School are going to further their ed-
ucation, Six from the class will en-
ter the Armed Forces. Thirty-three
are working, and two are Foriegn ex
change | Students. The rest of the
graduates are undecided.
Bound for Bloomsburg State Col-
lege: Nancy Jones.
College Misericordia: Susan Dor-
rance, Barbara Mikolaichik, Barbara
Prokopchak, Marjorie Walp, Judith
Williams.
Lebanon Valley: Lewis Chere; Ly-
coming College: Mary Jane Bennett;
Mansfield College: Donald Williams.
Ohio University: Barbara Tag;
Penn State Extension School: Dale
azi; Penn State University: Mary
onnie West, Robert Wileman.
Pennsylvania Military College:
Rensslear: Jon’ T.
Butler.
Southern Seminary and Jr. Col-
lege: Susan Owens; Susquehanna Un
iversity: Nancy Lou Elston, Lyn
Wyse; Stroudsburg State College:
Nancy Jones; University of Connecti-
cut: Diane Payne.
Bucknell University: Robert Peter-
son, Mary Alice Knecht.
Wilkes College: George S. Apaliski.
Ralph Belles, Sandra Lee Ash, Robert
Gardner, Harold Harris, Robert Wall-
ace, William H. Welch.
Wingate University: Edwin Carl
Bush, Harold S. Hislop; College (not
sure which): Michael Delvin, Robert |
Keay, Bernard Phillips.
Wilkes-Barre Business College:
John Carey, Catherine Ide, Earl Har-
ris, Charles Kishbaugh, Thomas Lan-
| don, Elsa Orchanrd.
Wyoming Seminary Dean School
of Business: Gladys Ell, Margaret
Hall, Olga Jurysta, Robert Fletcher,
Janet Lawrence, Phyllis Major, Mary
Zarychta.
Business School (not sure which):
Frank Smith, Howard Steele, Clif-
ford Stuart.
General Electric Drafting School:
Russell Hoover; Telephone School:
Frank Hirleman; IBM School: Nancy
Coolbaugh.
Allentown Hospital School of Nurs-
ing: Dorothy Jeanne Eck;Geisinger
Medical Center: Elfrieda M. Hefft,
Glenda Williams, Judith Woolbert;
General Hospital: Arline Gale Gra-
ves, Mary Mokychic; Nesbitt Mem-
orial Hospital: Donna Wright; Robert
Packer Hospital: Ruth Miller; St.
Mary's Hospital, Scranton: Elizabeth
M. Kistler, Theresa Novicki, Beverly
Race.
Women’s Medical College, Phila-
delphia: Louise Jean Hadsall.
Beautician School: Carol Weiss,
Linda Wolfe.
Armed Forces: Dennis Blair, Wal-
Exclusively
Ours In
Wilkes-Barre!
I
2p
Lo
Wo
a. DARK- TONE
IN SIZES 14% to 24%
{
even on the hottest days.
gracefully flared skirt.
or blue.
ORDER MERCHANDISE
TOLL FREE
ENterprise (-0700
All NEptune and ORchard
subscribers call Pomeroy’s
TOLL FREE
(POMEROY'S
Iw YR PTE Your, Shopping RN
. OVER 100 TO CHOOSE FROM !
only ©,
Fresh, new easy-to-care-for cotton prints in a host of styles
and dark, rich tomes to keep you looking cool as a shadow
Only one style shown here as
button front style has wide set collar frosted with white,
Crisp geometric print in olive, brown,
CHARGE IT AT
DAYTIME DRESS DEPT.
Cool a5 a shadow:
DARK-TONE COTTONS
OUR OWN KORELL
fit you perfectly without costly alterations
if you are 5° 5” or under
Beautiful transitional cottons . . .
a cool spell on the hottest summer day. Handsomely de-
tailed ‘to wear for vacations . . .
“BETTER HALF” “8
COTTON
99
POMEROY’S
_ SECOND FLOOR ¥;
Take Many Months To
Pay With A Flexible
Charge Account!
9:30 a. m, to 9:00 p. m.
“The Pomeroy Look of Fashion”
in Wilkes-Barre
SHOP THURSDAY
DRESSES
dark rich tones that cast
for town.
FAR LEFT -. . .
Printed Boyedere Stripe
12.99
For now through the coming
‘season 100% cotton
. sateen button-to-waist dress
with umbrella skirt and jewel
neck. Brown, grey, green and
teal. 12 plus to 22 plus.
NEAR LEFT...
Printed Acetate Cotton
10.99
For now and always . ..
chic short sleeve, button-to-
the-waist dress of printed
61% acetate and 39 9, cotton.
It has a tucked bodice with
self looping around the cardi-
gan neck. Blue, green, brown.
12 plus to 22 plus.
Shop Monday, Thursday
9:30 a.m., 9:00 p.m.
Tuesday, Wednesday,
Friday, Saturday
9:30 a. ne 5:30 p. m.
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JUNE 28, 1962
ter Davis, Nelson Dymond, Jack Fow-
ler, Robert Price, Frederick Risch,
Charles Weed, Stephen Welitchko.
Foreign Exchange Students: Band-
ra Ambrose (Holland), Dale Mosier
(Germany).
Daddow Isaacs Post
Sponsors Boys Program
Daddow Isaacs Post 672, American
Legion, will again join the Depart-
ment of Pennsylvania in the Key-
stone Boys’ State program when over
from June 25 until July 3. James
being sent by the local post.
Council and captain of the basket-
ball team. At Gate of Heaven School
which the Post gives every year.
ion which the boys will run for ten
days, electing all officials from the
three forms of government.
Tom Reese will again be coun-
selor at the Keystone Boys’ State.
Shareholders Re-elect
Gas & Water Directors
Shareholders -of Pennsylvania Gas
and Water Company at their An-
nual Meeting in the firm's execu-
tive offices in Wilkes-Barre re-
elected eight directors.
Re-elected to the firm's Board of
Directors were: Rulison Evans,
Chairman and Chief Executive Of-
ficer, Robert R. Evans, President,
Atty. Charles B. Waller, Esq., and
Edward Eyerman, Jr., all of Wilkes-
Barre; Atty. - Gomer W. Morgan,
Esq., J. J. O'Leary and Harold A.
Vicker, Vice President, all of Scran-
ton, and Charles B. Gamble, Bir-
mingham, Alabama.
More ‘than 79% of the common
stockholders were represented by
proxy or in person.
Following the Annual Meeting the
|! Board of Directors met and re-
elected the following officers: Ru-
lison Evans, Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer; Robert R. Evans,
President; Roger A. McShea, Jr,
Vice President - Financial, H. A.
Vicker, Vice President; Frank R.
Wallace, Secretary-Treasurer; A. J.
Podesta, Controller and Assistant
| Secretary-Treasurer; Frank J. Loch,
Assistant Vice President; Robert W.
Walker,
urer; M. A. Line and Mrs. Elsie J.
Daniels, Assistant Treasurer, and J.
Glenn Gooch, Assistant Controller.
Crowd Picks Strawberries
Big crowd Saturday morning down
berries for shortcake and preserves.
Strawberries smelled heavenly under
400 boys from all over the state will
go to Penn State College to study!
city, county and state government
Halpin, Elizabeth Street, Dallas, is
Jim, student at Westside Catholic
High School, is president of Student
he won the Good Citizenship Medal
At the Uuiversity, Governor Law- |
rence will proclaim Keystone Boys’ |
State the fifty-first state of the un- |
Assistant Secretary-Treas- |
a blazing sun. Many pickers arrived
too early, had to wait until 8 a.m.
and
‘Sea
Fashions
of
California”
'headed for Huntsville
Swim and
Fun Suits
by LEE
Woman's Club
Pictured above are members of
the decoration committee for the
Dallas Senior Woman’s Club annual
dance to be held July 14 at O'Con-
nell’'s Twin Lakes. Theme of the
affair will be ‘Mexican Holiday,”
music by Bob Bird’s Orchestra from
9 until 1. Breakfast will be avail-
able.
Seated, left to right, are Mrs.
Harold Brobst, chairman of decor-
ations; Mrs. George McCutcheon,
general chairman; Mrs. William
Wright, co-chairman; standing, Mrs.
Dance Committee
1 Thomas E. Reese, Mrs. John Blase,
Mrs. Nelson Nelson, members of dec-
orating committee, Mrs. Robert
Brown, publicity chairman. Absent
from picture is Mrs. Kenneth Bailiss,
decorating committee.
Tommy Edwards Enjoys His Ride
In Helicopter Over The Valley
Here is the first hand account of
an aerial scenic helicopter ride
awarded Tommy Edwards, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Edwards,
Perrin Avenue, Shavertown, at the
recent Shavertown PTA Spring Fun
Festival.
Making the trip with Tommy in
George ‘ Howatt’s helicopter,” were
Tommy's father and his brother,
Richard and sister, Joan.
Tommy writes:
We were in flight at 3:50 p. m.
and landed at 4:30 p. m. at Forty
Fort airport.
We followed the Susquehanna
River at an altitude of 2600 feet,
turned at the North Street bridge
and flew over Public Square, Wilkes-
Barre, at an altitude of 3200 feet.
We circled the Square several
times and then headed for the Back
at Fred Updyke’s, picking straw- | Mountain over the Lerhsy ille. Moun- |
| tain.
At Shavertown we circled our
home. on Perrin Avenue and then
Dam and
0 EXTRA
USE ONE OR BOTH COUPONS
A GLAMOUROUS
GLORIOUS SELECTION
SWIM and
PLAYWEAR
SIZES 382 -
portions of Harveys Lake. We then
followed the Harveys Lake High-
way to Kingston, crossed the Ave-
nue and again followed the river
back to the airport.
Public Square, Wilkes-Barre, ap-
peared at 3000 feet to be about
equal to a two-inch square. The |
Susquehannaa River could be seen
worming its way between the val-
leys of Wilkes-Barre, Plymouth and
Nanticoke.
Conyngham farms were = very
pretty from this height and ap-
peared as a vast checkerboard with
the contour plowing in the different
fields.
The Shopping ‘Center at Shaver-
town looked exactly like a Christ-
mas tree setting.
Shavertown and Dallas appeared
so small you could hold each of
them in the palm of your hand.
The tombstones in the numerous
graveyards. looked like rows of
sugar cubes.
won at the PTA Fiesta was the
biggest thrill of my life and I again
thank Mr. George Horwatt for his
kindness in pointing out to us the
many landmarks in our area.
=
OVERHEARD MONDAY AT
DALLAS POSTOFFICE
Harv: If I buy stamps here
they're cheaper, aren’t them?
Postman 1: Yeah, Harv, and
we got more flavors.
Postman 2: An’ Harv, if you
buy ’em here they're fresher.
Harv: So's the help.
Wendy Sue Wesley
Mr. and Mrs. George Wesley, Jr.
announce the birth of their fourth
daughter, Wendy Sue, June 20, at
Nesbitt Hospital. She weighed 6
pounds, 13 ounces. Sisters are Penni
Lynn, and twins; LeAnn and LuRae.
Mrs. Wesley is the former Loydene
Briggs, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Har-
old Briggs, Sylvan Lake. Mr. Wesley
son of Mr. and Mrs. George Wesley,
Sr. He is employed at the Wesley
This scenic airplane ride that I
S&H STAMPS
FOR
ON
$5.99 to |
BOYS’
SWIM
$1.39 to $2.99 =
(2 to 4)
& GIRLS
SUITS
| w=
Seamless
NYLONS
PERFECT
BOX of 3
Mesh
$1.50 | |
SUN
FOR
& FUN WEAR
THE FAMILY
® SHORTS
® SHI
RTS
DRESSES
® SLACKS
® BLOUSES
OF $5. OR MORE
The
| 190 |ciose IN Luzerne | 100 | |
COUPON GOOD FOR
100 S&H GREEN STAMPS
$1 4 99 In Addition to Regular Stamps
» On Cash Purchases of $5.00 Or More
in THIS COUPON GOOD THROUGH |
100 [i Good Only On 1st Floor
Jone Smmes Damm mmm Es SES GSE SIE i
CEE GENES EE NED END of
100 | Grose IN LUZERNE | 190
100 S&H GREEN STAMPS
In Addition to Regular Stamps |
On Cash Purchases of $5.00 or more.
THIS COUPON GOOD THROUGH !
| 100 -| Good Only On 2nd Floor | 100 -
MISSES SNEAKS
WHITE - BLACK - MULTI STRIPE |
1.99
Garage, Sweet Valley.
Addison Resigns
As Y Secretary
Will Direct Physical
Education, Athletics
Robert A. Addison, executive-
secretary of the Back Mountain
Branch YMCA, tendered his resigna-
tion to the Board of Management
at its monthly meeting, June 25.
Director of Physical Education and
Athletics at Adirondack Community
College, Hudson Falls, N. Y. assum-
ing his new duties in September.
At Adirondack, the newest of the
21 Community Colleges in the State
of New York, Addison will organize,
develop and administer the total
physical education program. His
duties will include coaching the
basketball team. 7
He will draw up specifications for
the physical education facilities and
equipment for the new $4 million
campus which will be started this
fall.
Mr. Addison has been at the
Back Mountain YMCA since Septem-
ber, 1960. Under his leadership
three ‘Y’ Indian Guide Tribes, the
first in northeastern Pennsylvania,
and the Dallas Junior Hi-Y Club
were formed.
Monthly Coed Swims and the an-
nual Learn - To - Swim programs
mushroomed during Addison’s ten-
ure. This past year the Coed
Swims averaged over 90 per night
and the ©Learn-To-Swim number
reached 290 this past week, over
200 more than two years ago.
Classes in trampoline,
add other physical education ac-
tivities for elementary youth and
classes in wrestling and Judo were
held this past year for high school
boys.
‘Addison will conclude his serv-
ices with the Back Mountain
YMCA at the close of the 1962 Day
Camp which starts on Monday.
Prior to coming to the Back
Mountain YMCA, Addison taught
and coached at State Teachers Col-
lege, Paterson, New Jersy, Bates
College, Lewiston, Maine, and
Doane College, Crete, Nebraska.
He earned his BA degree from
Oberlin College and his MA degree
and Ed. S. certificate from New
York University.
Mr. Addison, his wife and four
children’ plan to move to Hudson
Falls in late August or early
September.
Entertains Kunkle Club
last week at the home of Mrs.
Oliver Ellsworth, Present were mes-
dames Elizabeth Hess, Fred Dodson,
William Brace, Ralph Elston, Wil-
liam Weaver, Emma Miller, Flor-
ence Klimeck, Ralph Ashburner,
Russell Miers, and Ann Weaver.
Plans were made to hold our
picnic on Tuesday, July 17, at 6
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Stanley
Harrison. Members are requested
|
{
{
|
|
A PURCHASE
EACH FLOOR OF
GLOBE
| |
July 3
[100 |
COUPON GOOD FOR
|
July 3
STOP
THURSDAY
AND
FRIDAY
EVENINGS
to bring a covered dish and their
| own place settings:
‘Bake Sale
The Joy Class of the Kunkle
| Methodist Church will hold a bake
sale June 30 on the Fire House
{lawn, in Kunkle, starting at 1
| o'clock. For any specialties contact
| Mrs. Fred Dodson or Mrs. Thomas
Landon.
DARING'S
ARE
GREAT !
SAVINGS
Fully Cooked
HAMS
49¢
5c
FRYING CHICKENS
20¢
1, Gal.
33c
Fmd 89¢
WILL BE OPEN
JULY 4
9 to 6
MAIN HIGHWAY
DALLAS
OR 4-8481
Shank
Whole
Whole or cut
Eatrite
ICE CREAM
SCOTTIE TISSUES
4 Boxes
He will be assistant professor and
tumbling
The Kunkle Silver Leaf Club met
Eas