Asia SECTION B — PAGE 6 Florence Frear Was Daughter Of Pioneers Miss Florence Frear celebrated her Order of Eastern Star, Dallas chapter 396. She leaves one niece; Mrs. Donald Meeker of Noxen; two greatnieces, Donna and Lorraine Meeker; a cousin eightieth birthday September 18 ‘at | Alice Taylor, of Kingston; a sister-in- the Carpenter Convalescent home | law, Mrs. A. Ellis Meeker; Herrick where she had been a patient for sev- | Center. eral months. Three weeks later she was buried in Beaumont Cemetery. | her every She passed away early morning after suffering a stroke. Rev. L. E. Peterson, pastor of Mon- | [ Her niece and greatniece visited Sunday at the Convales- Saturday | cent home, and helped celebrate he’ birthday. roe Baptist Church, conducted ser- | Christian Science vices from the Nulton Funeral Home. Sunday night, members of Dallas Order of Eastern Star read services. Miss Fre vas born at Beaumont, daughter of the late Henry and Man- dana Frear Frear, and spent ker en- tire life there. A graduate of Monroe Township school, she taught for a time at the South Run one-room schoolhouse. She was of pioneer an- cestry, early settlers of the area. Her aunt, Miss Callie Parrish, also of Beaumont, celebrateds her 100th birthday recently. Miss Frear belonged to the Monroe Baptist Church, its Sunday school, and its Misssionary Society, and to Lecture October i5 How spiritual awakening gives real meaning to life will be brought out in an address to be given in Wilkes- Barre next Monday, October 15 by | Charles M. Carr of New York City. A Christian Science teacher and practitioner, Mr. Carr is on exten- sive tour as a member of The Chris- tain Science Board of Lectureship. He will speak in the church, 185 So. Franklin Street at 8:15 p.m. under auspices of First Church of Christ, Scientist, on ‘Christian Science And | Everyday Living.” The lecture is free | and local members have: invited the | Entitled: By: Place: Time: Given By: A Free Lecture On: CHRISTIAN SCIENCE “Christian © Science and Everyday Living” Charles. M. Carr, Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, Boston, Massachusetts. CHURCH EDIFICE, Wilkes-Barre Monday, Ocotober 15, 1962 at 8:15 p.m. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. You and your friends are cordially invited to attend! C.S8.B., New. York, N. Y. 185 S.. Franklin St., CES CRC ESC CES CC . Graphic Arts Services. : INCORPORATED = E PHOTO-ENGRAVING E| : Offset Negatives and Platemaking g : Screen Prints, Art Work gE = Phone VA 5-2978 z = Rear 29 North Main Street Wilkes-Barre, Pa, g BETTE AE EERE | IN LUZERNE PLENTY. OF FREE PARKING $100 to $3500 Take up te 86 months to pay! 5 CONVENIENT OFFICES TO SERVE YOU ! Main Office—WILKES-BARRE Mon., Tues, Weds Thurs. 9 A.M. to 3 P. M. Friday—9 A. M. to 5 P. M. West Side Office—Edwardsville In The Gateway Shopping Center Mon, Jugs, Wed 9AM. 103 or and Fri. 9 . M. to 8 P.M. Saturday 10 A.M. to 2 P.M, Exeter Office, Mon. Thru Thurs. 9 A. 1137 to 2:30 P. ° flymouth Office, Plymouth Tues, 3 3 Thurs. Lo M. + Fridays oS Mo to 5 P.M. ® Back Mt. Office—~Shavertown Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs. 8 ALM. to2P. Friday 8 A.M. to 2 P.M, 5 P.M. to 8 P.M, Saturdays 8 A.M. to 12 Noon Wye. A Aves Exeter Friday, 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. Chase Resident Dies, Aged 75 Johanna Laskowski Lived Here 50 Years " For fifty years Mrs. Johanna Las- | kowski, 75, lived at Chase, maintai- | ning her own home until two weeks before her death. She had suffered | from a heart ailment for several years Before she died Saturday morning at | Nesbitt Hospital where she had been admitted September 25. She was buried at Memorial Shrine Monday afternoon following services conducted ‘by Rev. Charles Peers from a Nanticoke funeral home. | Born in Nanticoke, daughter of | the late Felix and Charlotte Grygo, Mrs. Laskowski lived there for twenty-five years. After graduation from Nanticoke schools, she was em- ployed as bookkeeper. She was a member of Nanticoke First Presby- terian Church and its Women’s Guild, land as long as health permitted, was | active in Jackson Township Fire Aux- | iliary. A son Elmer, is supervisor of Jack- |-son Township, a leader in civic af- | fairs. A granddaughter Mary Anne | Laskowski, wrote the school news |for Lake-Lehman until entering | Wilkes : this September. | Her husband Bernard, popularly | known as Barney, died in 1954. | Surviving are these children: Mrs. i | Melba Brown, Kingston; Theodore, | at home; Bernard, Plymouth; Mrs. | Olive Skok, Milford, Conn.; Elmer | Chase; six grandchildren: Johanna, | her namesake, now Mrs. Yurick; | Shirley Anne Laskowski, with the | Water Company in Plymouth; Mary { Anne, at Wilkes; Rcbert Skck; Jim {and Bill Brown, both with Radio | Corporation of America; three great- | grandchildren; brothers and sisters: | Mrs. Frank T. Nork and Mrs. Frank Boguszewski, Nanticoke; Edward | Grygo, Bethlehem. Pallbearers were: Harold Bertram ohn Fielding, Donald Reakes, John ones, Ladine Cavallini, Mr. Shepherd. Se public to attend | Mr. Carr, a native of Melrose, Mass. received his education at M.LT. In | 1942 he withdrew from business to ! devote his full time to the public practice of Christian Science. Ten years later he became an authorized teacher of Christian Science. He ser- ved from 1944 to 1954 as Christian | Science Committee = on Publication for the State of New Jersey. Stephen M. GLOVA FUNERAL SERVICE Harveys Lake NE 9-3571 ERNEST GAY New Dallas Shopping ¢ Center DALLAS 675-1176 Centermoreland FEderal 38-4500 WE HAVE THE GENUINE 45 JATOP QUALITY fn WINDOW HOLD IN Neal KEP OUT goin oie JEADFLEX-0-GLASS Ch 29GLASS-O-NET ~47)SCREEN-GLASS He FLEX O- PANE FEED SERVICE OR 4-6191 wer MATERIALS RT YT8)WYR-0-GLASS H USTON'S FERNBROOK CORNER ON KEEPS OUT COLD HOLDS IN HEAT Saves up to 40% on fuel Don't let cold weather catch you unprepared. ; Have a warm, cozy home all winter long. Get § Flex-O- Crass fromyourk Havdwore orLumber Dealer NOW TACK SECURELY X\A\\/ | book For Gengine FLEX- O- GLASS. The Name Is Printed Along The Edge. CRYSTAL CLEAR “over you “Screen Porches, Breezeways, Windows 4 ‘Doors with FLEX-O-GLASS So Easy—Anyone Can Ba ft. © osts Sa Little— Anyone Can Af ord It aferial thot i is GUARANTEED Vi RS THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1962 Mrs. Irene Moore's Cooking Skill ‘Brings Position At Mrs. Irene Moore, cashing in on | long years of experience in feeding ! | her own family with the best in Penn- | sylvania Dutch ‘cookery, and further experience in Dallas School cafeter- | ias, is now happily engaged in teach- ing the art to youngsters in the Car- | son Valley School in Flourtown. ] Mrs. and Mrs Robert Moore drove her to Flour- town to her new assignment. Carson Valley School is for child- ren from broken homes, placed there by the State. They are separated into small units, each house with a house mother. The houses are located on a large estate, beautifully landscaped and cared for. Mrs. Moore is in Thistle House. Mrs. Goldie Strazdus, a near neighbor in Bast Dallas, who has been with the school for five years as housemother, is assigned to Mother Goose House. Mrs. Moore applied for her present situation through Mrs. Strazdus. The school is a year-round propo- sition, though children may go home for Christmas if parents are able to take them. With this in mind, Christ- mas this year is set for December 16 | at the school, with preliminary shop- ping under supervision in town. Moore closed her house in | | East Dallas last week when Mr. Mrs Moore, of Pennsylvania Dutch Carson School | extraction, has good cooking at her | fingertips. For years she was at Dal- | las ‘Township cafeteria. Last year she | started at the new Dallas high school | cafeteria, found the work too taxing and the lifting too heavy, and drop- ped out, to spend the winter at Home= stead, - Florida, with her daughter, Mrs. George Dymond. Other children are: Robert Moor a Martz Road; Mrs. Sherwood Krum, Mount Zion; George Moore, Buffalo; and David, North Adams, Mass. And there are nineteen and one half grandchildren. : Mrs. Moore is one of the mainstays of East Dallas Methodist Church, and its Ella Moore BibJe Class. She says she will miss the church work, and reflects that her vacant house next door to the Robert Moore house looks very lonely, but she is looking for- ward to years of enjoyable work with children, teaching them how to do the things that she knows best. The kitchen, she says, should be the pleasantest room in the house, filled with orderly confusion, warm and bustling, with the delightful smell of good things cooking foy dinner in the air . . and more especially, Pennsyl- vania Dutch cooking, with seven sweets and seven sours, and plenty of apfel- struedel. To Mark Its 119th The oldest church in ‘the Back Mountain is about to celebrate it: 119th anniversary. Huntsville Christian Church wil mark the occasion with week-long meetings, beginning officially Monday night at 7:30, though preliminary ob servance is scheduled for Sunday. State Secretary Rev. E.L. Thomp- son of Pittsburgh will speak each evening. Wyoming AvenueChristian Church, of which Rev. Charles Frick was pastor before entering the armed ser- vices as chaplain during World War II, will send a delegation Monday Oldest Church In Back Mountain Anniversary ind join in the anniversary celebrat- ‘on. Other delegations are expected during the week. Since its founding 119 years ago, the church edifice has undergone a number of remodellings. Eleven years ago, the congregation financed a par- sonage for the Fricks, who had been living on their farm at Pikes Creek since their return ‘to this area in 1948. Monday night is the anniyersary not only of the church’s foundation, but dedication of the parsonage. A coffee hour will follow Monday : night's observance. night to greet their former minister | Vative Of Trucksville Jrops Dead In Lancaster Clifford Covert, 68, native of Trucksville and resident of Lancas- ter for many years, died suddenly of ff | 2 heart attack at his home Monday EYES EXAMINED GLASSES FITTED CONTACT LENSES DR. I. BERGER OPTOMFETRIST 27 Machell Ave. Dallas : Phone 674-4921 LIKE MAGIC . . : Finish 22 Gr. 38 Main Street, Dallas 674-4506 DALLAS HOURS: Tues. — Wed. 2 to 8 pm. Friday 2 to 5 p.m. Other days in Shopping Center evening. Gassed in the Argonne sector in World War I, he had suf- fered from weakness of the lungs. ‘His death was completely unex- pected. . He had ‘mowed the lawn, had eaten his supper, and had sat down in a chair. He will be buried in Lancaster Friday afternoon. His parents were the late Joseph Edward and Minnie Baker Covert. He was educated in Kingston Town- ship schools: At one ‘time, he operated the Meridian, and he was a past commander of Veterans of Foreign Wars in Kingston. He leaves his widow, the former Mary Westwaters of Kingston; bro- thers and sister; Clarence, Trucks- ville; Claude, Buffalo; Willard, Fern- brook; Marian Weiss, Kingston. There are five children, none of © MASTER FURNITURE REPAIR ® ANTIQUE REFINISHING ® CABINET MAKER Aaron Optometrist them living in this area. SPOTS or STAINS VANISH.... . Without Removing of Your Furniture Cail STEFAN HELLERSPERK EVENINGS OR 4-0744 S. Lisses | Professional Suite Gateway Shopping Center Edwardsville BU 7-9735 GATEWAY CENTER HOURS: Daily 9:30 to 5:30 p.m. Evenings: Thurs. & Fri. to 8 p.m, 2 $ i i Fosvder, Dick LE TH << <<