IB Bo BN BN NN BB BH BF FE BEB = | fo om om em wt, A DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA St. Therese’s Bake Sale Altar and Rosary Society, St. Therese’s Church, will hold a bake sale after each Mass on Sunday, October 28. Cochairmen are Mrs. Adrian E. DeMarco and Mrs. Edward Petty. A telephone squad will con- tact all members, and full coopera- tion is asked. Donations of baked goods, cash or ingredients for baking will be greatly appreciated. Special orders may be placed, or further information obtained by calling the cochairmen. A large variety of baked goods, including home made bread will be offered for sale. Bellas And Dymond Home For Weekend Roger Bellas and Nelson Dymond Jr. visited home in Orange this week end, motoring from Camp Gor- don, Georgia. Accompanying them was Bill Duke, native of Texas, who is sta- tioned in Georgia with them. All three came in Duke's car. Host to Roger were parents Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mahler and grand- parents Police Chief and Mrs. Byron Kester. Nelson visited with parents Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Dymond and family. Postie Says: We COAL OIL GAS Automatic Heat We Do FREE HEATING SURVEYS (Call 674-7781 Sell Service A —— Installations POSTIE AUTHORIZED e-f-m- DEALER J. B. POST CO. 66 Oxford Street Lee Park, W-B Call 674-7781 For Your Free Home Heating Survey = |. Squire And Wife |. - Fete Fiftieth, |. m - Winning Firsts Justice of the Peace and Mrs. John Fowler, Orange, ‘celebrated their Golden Wedding Anniversary ‘Sep- tember 28 by winning first prize at Bloomsburg Fair in several competi- tion-shows. The Squire, who has been raising Bantams since he was an eighteen- year-old boy in England, took two firsts with his Modern Game Red Pyle birds. Says the veteran magi- strate, regarding the Bloomsburg show: “I never came away without a First.” Mrs. Fowler won two Blue Ribbons in crochet-competition. Well prac- ticed in the art, she has been doing the delicate needlework since she was four. She has taken many firsts at the Columbia County shows. The Fowlers married in Durham, England in 1912. Several years later, the Squire left home to fight the Ger- mans. He was an infantry sergeant. For a while after the war he mined coal in England, and then in 1924 moved to West Pittston to continue in his trade in the United ‘States. In | all, he was. a miner, he explains proudly, for forty-three years. Squire: Fowler is no newcomer to his present position either. He has been a squire since 1932. John Fowler, Jr. is the owner of Colonial Inn, Fernbrook. His sister, Mrs. Frank Smith, and her family, live near- their mother and father « THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1962 Kunkle Firemen Plan Chicken Dinner “The members of Kunkle Fire Department will serve a ‘Family Style Chicken Dinner’ at Kunkle Community Hall Wednesday, Octo- ber 17, from 4:30 to 8:30,” says Thomas Landon, chairman. With the Women’s Auxiliary to help, the members hope to garner funds to bolster their present first class equipment and to renovate the fire hall. Mrs. Dorothy Dodson will be in charge of the kitchen and Mrs. Helen Landon ‘the dining room. This is the public's invitation to volunteer its service via enjoying a tasty chicken dinner and thus reciprocate for the Kunkle Fire De- partment’s many calls! Road Condemnation Almost Completed Acquisition of right-of-way for the new Dallas-Luzerne Highway is al- most completed, according to an an- nouncement by the State Highway Department Saturday. Ninety-five per cent of purchasing and condemnation processes has been arranged. Display The Flag Daddow-Isaac Post American Leg- ion through its Commander Ed. Buck- ley, suggest that the American Flag be displayed on Columbus Day, Fri- day. The Flag is the symbol of our American Heritage, and we should be proud of ‘it. ot a - ~ Shoes FOR MEN WOMEN & CHILDREN BIGGEST LINE OF INSULATED HUNTING Boots and $ 595 CADDIE MEMORIAL HIGHWAY INSULATED UNDERWEAR $5.95 CANVAS HUNTING PANTS S495 LABAR’S COMPLETE LINE OF WOOLRICH CLOTHES GUNS & SHELLS SPORTING GOODS — DALLAS i i B i f f i ! HUNTING ! b i é i ’ f i . Carl Stash, 9, Now At Girard School Fully Endowed For Fatherless Boys Carl Andrew Stash, 9, has been ad- mitted as a student to Girard College, Philadelphia. The son of Mrs. Eliza- beth Stash and the late Andrew Stash, 141 Davenport Street, Dallas, Carl was among sixty-five admitted to the well-known boarding school for boys. Girard College was founded in 1848, according to the will of Stephen Girard, famous philanthropist, and himself an orphan. The school is com- pletely endowed for instruction, ac- tivities, and living facilities of each boy. Carl will be able to study at the Philadelphia boarding school until he receives his high school diploma. Be- fore entering Girard, he attended Gate of Heaven School. Andrew Stash, an electrician, died December 25. Carl has two sisters, Betsy Ann, 11 and Mary Ann, 6 and one brother Andrew, 4. Mrs Stash thinks this is a wonder- ful opportunity for Carl, and fer- vently hopes he does not get stricken by that old boarding school ailment, homesickness. Mrs. Osterhout, 57, Was Housemother For Deaf Transferring her home-making skills to the mothering of “children in the Pennsylvania School for the Deaf, since the death of her husband in 1956, Mrs. Mary Martha Osterhout of Dallas had started the new term with enthusiasm early in September. She had been back here two weeks ago to visit her daughter, Mrs. George Weale, Columbia Avenue, and ap- peared in abounding health. Thursday night she died suddenly at the school where she had been house mother for four years. Her hus- band George died equally suddenly in 1956. Mrs. Osterhout, 57, had learned, during her four years as house- mother, to communicate with the deaf children, and took great pride in her work. She was looking forward to spending many more years with “her children.” Born in Wilkes-Barre, April 5, 1905 she was educated in city schools. She moved to Dallas a year after the death of her husband, joining Dallas Methodist Church. She was buried Monday afternoon at Memorial Shrine, her pastor, Rev. Russell Lawry, conducting services from Disque Funeral Home. Gay At Roundtable Of Insurance Agents Ernest A. Gay, Dallas, recently at- tended ‘the Agents’ Regional Round- table meeting of Nationwide Insur- ance Companies, Treadway Inn, Leb- anon. The Roundtable, composed of 48 men chosen from 835 Nationwide a- gents in eastern Pennsylvania, is an advisory group, facilitating commun- ications of ideas between agents and regional management. Year-Around Fishing Needed To Avoid Overcrowding Bass Largemouth bass of trophy size are usually found in ponds and lakes where year-around fishing and nat- ural predation remove most of the small and medium sized fish, says Edwin L. Cooper, research zoologist with the Agricultural Experiment Station at the Pennsylvania State University. Fish counts by Cooper and associ- ates reveal that lakes or ponds, closed to fishing, seldom produce “lunkers” or big ones because of intense competition for food. Natural reproduction, they point out, usually produces too many fish. “Our experiments show that me- dium sized and large bass should be harvested continually to make food available for other bass to grow,” Dr. Cooper states. In one study, about 5,500 bass of 5-inch length populated a 3-acre experimental pond in the spring.’ Of these, 4,600 or 84 per cent were removed, leaving 900. Fish counts in the fall revealed 830 well-fed .two-year-old bass, all about 8 inches long. Their total weight was three-fourths that of the entire spring population. Moreover, the 830 survivors had spawned a new crop of fingerlings, making the total fall weight equal to the spring weight. These studies indicate that food is more important than age in de- termining size. A poorly fed bass will seldom get to be 10 inches long in 3 years, Cooper obsérves. A very well-fed bass‘ could mature at 10 inches in 1 year. ’ Mrs. Florence Helfrich Dies At 39 In Her Sleep Mrs. Florence Rolison Helfrich, 39, died in her sleep Wednesday at her home in Grove City, Ohio, three days before she had expected to come to Fernbrook with her husband to see her mother, Mrs. Florence Rolison, and take her back to Ohio for a first look at the new ranchhome which she and Major John Helfrich had re- cently purchased. Mrs. Helfrich was excited about her new granddaugh- ter, could scarcely wait to take her mother to Ohio for a visit with the family. She had talked with her mother Monday night, setting the time of the visit a week ahead of the date or- iginally planned, anticipating her mother’s delight in ‘seeing the new home in its setting of fall flowers be- fore a killing frost should strike. Mrs. Rolison had her suitcase packed in readiness for the trip. Mrs. Helfrich graduated from Dal- las Township school in 1944. Her hus- band John left Dallas Township school to join the U.S. Air Force, where he rose to officer status, serv- ing in Greenland, England, Guam. He recently retired after twenty years service. She leaves her husband; a son John Jr; daughters, Mrs. Miriam Weaver, Columbus, Ohio; and Cheri, at home; her mother, Fernbrook; two grand- children; a brother William Rolison, Kingston. Burial was in the family plot at Woodlawn Cemetery, from a Luzerne funeral home. ‘nearly So many happy owners of the Nation’s homes can’t be wrong! They chose, and enjoy, clean, quiet and carefree Gas Heat because of its many benefits and advantages. You, too, can join the big swing to automatic Gas Heat, the dependable, convenient way to heat your home. In fact, Gas is the Nation’s No. 1 house heating fuel. / SEE YOUR HEATING CONTRACTOR, PLUMBER, DEALER OR YOUR GAS COMPANY FOR A FREE HEATING SURVEY. No obligation, of course. PENNSYLVANIA GAS — IN THE BACK MOUNTAIN — Telephone ENterprise 2-0668 TOLL FREE for information and service Col. Jon Evans Returns Home Was Senior Medical Advisor Of Korea Colonel Jon P. Evans, a Harveys Lake physician who formerly prac- ticed as a specialist in obstetrics and gynecology in Wilkes-Barre, has re- turned from Korea for an assignment as Chief of Operations Division with the First Army Medical Section at Governors Island. Col. Evans pre- viously had served as operations officer of the section from November 1947 to April 1948. Married to the former Dorthea Ruth Thomas, Wilkes-Barre, they have two daughters, Jean, 17, and Jone, 15, and have homes at Gov- ernors Island and Harveys Lake. He entered the Army Medical Corps as a first lieutenant in August 1943 and served at various Army hospitals in the United States until August 1946 when he was separated from the service. Recalled to active duty in Novem- ber 1947, he followed his Governors Island tour with a two year assign- ment as medical officer with the Central Intelligence Agency, Wash- ington, D. C. He went overseas in January 1951 as medical officer and staff advisor on the U, S. Military Mission to Iran until February 1953. He then became division surgeon at Head- quarters, First Armored Division, Fort Hood, Tex., until July 1955 when he went to India for four years as assistant army military attache. On his return in March 1959 he became chief of the Medical Intelli- gence Division in the Office of The Surgeon General, Washington, D. C. and later, director of the Medical of the Office of The Surgeon’ General at. Walter Reed Army Medical Center. Since June of 1960 he has been Information and Intelligence Agency senior: medical advisor to the Re- | SECTION B—PAGE 1 Raymond Spencer, 78, Has Fatal Heart Seizure Raymond Spencer, 78, suffered a fatal heart attack Sunday evening at his home in West Dallas. He was buried in Idetown Cemetery Wednes- day afternoon, following services conducted by Rev. Frank K. Abbott and Rev. Norman Tiffany, former and present pastors of Idetown Methodist Church, He was a lifelong resident of the area, son of the late Simon and Lydia Spencer. An employee of Wilkes~ Barre Transit Company for 45 years, he retired some yeas ago. He had been looking forward to the hunting season. On Friday he purchased his hunting license, to be ready for small game and deer sea~ son. He was an enthusiastic hunter and fisherman. Nobody suspected that he was ill, though he had suffered a few vague pains. "He belonged to Idetown Methodist Church. Surviving are: his widow, the for- mer Lottie Ide; five children: Elwood, Wilkes-Barre; Bruce and Roland, Dal- las; Harold, New Jersey; Mrs. Edith Shaffer, Dallas; eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren; a sis- ter, Mrs. Arthur Montross, Dallas. public of Korea Army. Colonel Evans received his AB degree from Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va., in 1937, and earned his MD degree at Temple University School of Medicine, Phil- adelphia in 1942. Among his awards are the Glider Badge, the Ar my Commendation Medal, with two Ozk Leaf Clusters, and he has been decorated by the Government of Iran. He is a Military Fellow of the : American Medical Association and a member of the Pennsylvania State Medical Society and the American Public Health Association. 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