The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, October 18, 1962, Image 12

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SECTION B — PAGE 6
SWEET VALLEY
EUPIA RE Troe TTT RTT VY
A skating party will be held
Tuesday, October 23, at Wolfe's
Grove, sponsored by the Committee
of Cub Pack 444, Sweet Valley. Mrs.
Albert L. Ray is chairman.
Parents of cubs will note that
Pack meetings are held the fourth
Wednesday at Church of Christ. The
skating party will replace the usual
Pack meeting. Another Committee
meetings will henceforth be held
the third Wednesday. The next
one will be held at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. George Haines, November
21. Den meetings have |been
changed to Wednesday. Mrs. Mar-
jorie Williams will meet with Den
# 3 at the Maple Grove Methodist
Church 4:15 to 5:15; Den # 2 will
meet at the home of Mrs. Rose
Haines, from 4 to 5; Den # 1 with
Mrs. Burl Updyke 4:14 to 5:15;
Webelos Den will meet with George
Haines, Sr. from 7 to 8. Boys 8 to
11 should contact the Den mothers
or Cubmaster, Burl Updyke.
. Phillip Farber, Jr. Washington,
D. C. and Sister Jane Elizabeth,
Bernadine Nun, have returned after
being called here by the death of
their mother, Mrs. Josephine Far-
ber.
Herbert Britt, Pikes Creek, is a
patient in room 225 at Nesbitt Hos-
pital.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Bonning had
as week-end guests, Mr. and Mrs.
Ed Wilcox, and children, Pat, Bar-
bara and Charles, Buffalo.
Sympathy is extended to Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Wallace, upon the death
of their daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth
Beidleman, Athens, formerly of
Sweet Valley. In addition to her
parents she leaves her husband,
Nathan, children Sharon, Judy and
Nathan, Jr., a brother, James, Hun-
lock Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Long, Dean
attended the Lock
Haven State College homecoming
week-end where Gloria, is a fresh-
Karla Ray was the guest of Judy
and Cindy Raker, Kingston over
the week-end.
Boys fourteen years of age or
oider are invited to join Explorers
post 444. If interested call Howard
L. Post, leader.
W. C. Wint, North Lake, is re-
cuperating after undergoing surgery.
The Wint's son-in-law and daugh-
ter, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Ondash,
Elkins Park, spent last week-end
with them.
‘Patricia Mattice, daughter of Mrs.
Virgil Mattice, Jr. and the late
Virgil Mattice, Jr., West Chester,
was eight on Sunday. Grandpar-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Mattice,
birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan Lewis
spent Saturday with their son’s
family, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Lewis,
Brooklyn. On Sunday, they enter-
tained their nephew, Robert Gre-
gory, Kingston,
Mrs. Charles Spencer, Sr. Lake
Silkworth has as guest, her grand-
daughter, Audrey Spencer, Nanti-
coke. P.F.C. Raymond Voyton, sta-
tioned with the Marine Corp, Camp
LeJune, N. C., was here last week.
P.F.C. George Stockage, Pikes
Creek, has graduated from Signal
Fire Distribution Systems at Fort
Bliss. He is home for 14 days and
will be assigned to a base near De-
troit. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stock-
age and Susan Traver motored to
Reading to meet him. He is a 1961
graduate of Lake-Lehman.
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Kitchen have
returned from an extended vaca-
tion, through the midwest to Okla-
homa. Highlights included the Will
Rogers Memorial; Cleveland Auto-
mobile museum; the Budweiser zoo
in St. Louis, formerly President
Grant's farm; Clairiton Hotel in
Okla. where 30,000 guns are on dis-
| play. They also attended the Don
McNeil show in Chicago.
They re-
cently entertained Mr. and Mrs.
William Howell, Espy.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Glahn, North
Lake, will return this week to their
winter residence, Poplar St., Kings-
ton.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cragle had
as guests last .week-end their niece
and nephew, Anne and Ricky Jones,
Harrisburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Kyttle, and
daughter, April Louise, Passaic, N.J.
were week-end guests of the for-
mer’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Kyttle, Pikes Creek.
Mr. and Mrs. Royce White; and
children, Cherry Kevin and Ricky,
Berwick, spent last week-end at
their summer home, Mooretown.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Marshall, Mr.
and Mrs. Stahler and son Jerry,
Berwick were Sunday guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Preston Mingus.
Sympathy is extended to the
family of Elwood Rittenhouse, who
was buried last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Tackett, Mr.
and Mrs. John Salvage and son,
Elizabeth, were weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Spencer, Lake
Silkworth.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Post and
Henry spent last weekend in Wells-
ville, N. Y.
Sweet Valley Fish and Game Pro-
tective Association will meet Octo-
ber 23. Regular date is the last
Tuesday of each month. The As-
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O'MALIA’S
LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING
Luzerne-Dallas Highway
D LAKE 2
=
RESERVOIR
=x
By Edward Collier
Lakes, forests and scenic
waterways . highlight a Magic
Circle auto tour of northwestern
Pennsylvania, starting in Titus-
ville, where the first successful
oil well was drilled by “Colonel”
Edwin L. Drake a hundred
years ago.
All traces are gone of the
roaring oil boom towns that
made the Wild West of fact and
fable pale by comparison; each
boasted plush hotels, saloons
sociation held a shooting match at
Wolfe's Grove last Sunday with
many prizes being awarded.
Mr. and Mrs. Alton Johnson,
Carol, Lana, Hills of Hope, spent
last. weekend at Pendel with Mr.
and Mrs. Sam Farrell,
Mrs. Samuel Bronson, North Lake,
has returned after being a patient at
Nesbitt Hospital for two weeks. Her
grandson, Bernard Hughes, Ring-
town, spent last weekend here.
Linda McDermott, Dallas, and
Mark Oplinger, Mountain Top, were
guests of Cynthia and Gerard Kipp
last weekend.
Patricia Perkins, student nurse at
General Hospital, is home for three
days.
Fred Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Glen Brown, Lehman Heights, was
a Dogs
Life
THREATS TO UNCONFINED
DOGS
By Bob Bartos
Manager, Friskies Research Kennels
The dog accustomed to being
confined, either the country fel-
low who's been tied or penned
or the city fellow off on a sum-
mer vacation, can get into all
kinds of difficulties if given
sudden freedom.
There are squirrels and rab-
bits to chase. Since both these
play host to dog tapeworm
larvae. (an, intermediate form of
the dog tapeworm) your dog is
apt to become infested with
tapeworm should he catch and
eat his quarry.
Rabbits, in addition to tape-
worm larvae, are subject to the
dread disease, tuleremia, or
rabbit fever, so the gentle little
rabbit presents a definite threat
to the health of your pet.
Deer chasing is another sport
that trailing dog's like to in-
dulge in. The musk gland in a
deer has a particularly strong
and tempting odor and a dog
may follow its scent for miles
until he is clear out of the
county and lost. What's more,
game wardens are usually per-
mitted to shoot deer-chasing
dogs on sight.
Your dog can run into a
skunk and get sprayed. While
this isn’t serious, it does make
him ‘unwelcome in polite com-
pany, which naturally hurts
his feelings.
Far more serious as well as
painful is an encounter with a
porcupine.
Then, there is always the lure
of the garbage pail or unpro-
tected dump where a dog can
gorge to his heart's content.
The aftermath of such feasting
is, at best, a bad intestinal up-
. set.
Poison put out for rats and
other varmints and certain in-
secticide sprays are other po-
tential dangers.
Still another hazard, probably
the greatest of all to the free-
running dog, is the automobile,
So if you value not just the
health of your pet, but perhaps
his very life, don’t favor him
with unrestricted freedom in
the country.
* * *
Feeding Tip: If you must
give your dog between-meal
snacks, make it prepared top
quality dog food such as Frisk
ies cubes,
ier Llu
Sa
NVR
3
CONNEAUT} @
served speculators, drillers,
gamblers, painted ladies, busi-
nessmen.
After a visit to the states
Drake Well Memorial Park and
Museum, the route south in-
cludes Pithole city, the ghost of
a once rowdy metropolis; thriv-
ing Oil City, site of the nation’s
oldest well in continuous opera-
tion; Cook Forest, whose pri-
meval | grandeur includes a
magnificent stand of white pine;
Allegheny River Valley, its
steep hills covered with fern,
iii:
A
py
I 2 i
2a
STATE PARK
mountain laurel, the state
flower; and Warren, with its
fine homes and impressive Civil
War monument.
urving west, there is the
state fish hatchery at Corry;
Pymatuning Reservoir, a mi-
gratory waterfowl refuge; Con-
neaut Lake, a water playgroun ds
and Meadville, with a rare Co: {
lonial charm like that of a pro- !
tected New England town,
whose pride is Allegheny Col-
lege, one of the oldest and most
respected co-educational liberal
J
and false-front stores that
hemlock, rhododendron and
admitted to Nesbitt Hospital, Satur-
day, with injuries sustained in the
Lake-Lehman-Edwardsville game.
John Klemunes, Fort Bliss, is
spending fourteen days here.
Mr. and Mrs. Cleon Dribelbis and
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Nuss, Berwick,
spent last weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Dribelbis, Saugreties,
N.Y.
David Coslett, Jr., a Junior at
Bloomsburg Teachers College, spent
last weekend with his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Cornell had
as weekend guests ‘their daughter
arts institutions in the country.
Nm et
Judy, Jenny, and Jeffrey, Lehighton.
Lake Silkworth Fire Department
will hold its Hallowe’en party at the
fire hall Saturday evening, October
27 at 8. Prizes will be awarded.
Mr. and Mrs. Simon Long had as
weekend guests their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. David Blaine,
Newark, N. J. Sunday guests were
Mr. and Mrs. David Fetterman and
children, David and Susan, Catawis-
sa; and Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Eckrote,
Dorrance Corners; Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Eckrote and children, Betty,
Lester, Jr. and Tammy, Wapwal-
and family, Mrs. Samuel Valick, Jan, lopen.
Mr. and Mrs. David Evans, Jr.
entertained Sunday honoring their
daughter, Amy Jo, who will be seven
October 23.
Bob Smith, Trenton, N, J., spent
last weekend with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Smith.
Mrs. Howard L. Post and sons,
Henry and Brent, spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Lynn, Berwick,
and Mr. and Mrs. James Kibler,
Foundryville.
Charles Spencer, Lake Silkworth,
Ed Spencer, Shickshinny, and Rich-
ard Brown, Nescopeck, spent last
weekend at the Langhorn Speedway
EVERY
LITTER
BIT
BIURTS
DON'T
BE A
LITTERBUG!
Drop every litter bit in the litter-
bag you should always carry in
your car. Persuade (!) others to
- follow your good example. That's
how you can help KEEP AMER-
ICA CLEAN AND BEAUTIFUL.
NG
8 S See,
2 $x x
4g 9
100-mile race.
SUBSCRIBE TO THE POST
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ep
err
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consolidate them and pay them off with
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and Friday evenings 5 to 8 p.m.
AT THE FRIENDLY
‘Miners in Dallas”
MINERS NATIONAL BANK
Main Street, Dallas, Pa.
Come in and see us.
a low-cost loan from ‘‘The Miners."
We open daily 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
DOUBLECHECK
>
Pa
a
with your neighbor
who heats with
Ask your neighbor up...down...across
the street...who heats with gas! He'll
tell you what a pleasure it is...the
clean, dependable, carefree perform-
ance of his space-saving, gas-fired
unit—the low-cost operation compared
to other fuels and their “hidden
charges”. Yes, check and doublecheck,
and you'll switch to Gas Heat!
GAS HEAT costs less to install,
operate and maintain !
| Be sure to phone your Heating Contractor,
i Dealer, Plumber or Gas Company! )
Get Your FREE Heating Survey Now! A
PENNSYLVANIA GAS
and WATER Company
Eo TIRE RT = =r
A a =
Area home, 7 rooms and 2 baths.
Cost of heating with Gas
. $122.99 4
Area home, 8 rooms and bath. 4
Cost of heating with Gas ......... $164.00
Area home, 7 rooms and bath.
Cost of heating with
— IN THE. BACK MOUNTAIN —
Telephone ENterprise 2-0668 TOLL FREE for information and service
Gas ...... $193.00
Aven Fone 6 rooms, nook and bath.
toa of heating with Gas «ww $159.18
ities Les tice
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