The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, November 01, 1962, Image 8

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    SECTION B— PAGE 2
i 3 —
Honored At Shower
Mrs. Harry Freeman, Noxen, was
guest of honor at a stork shower
given, recently. by Pat Newell and
Arline. Swire, Noxen, Mrs. Freeman
is the. former Joan Newell.
Present were: Katy Kline, Doris
Newell, Jean Winters, Marie Race,
Marguerite Lord, Emily Lane, Laura
Jones, Violet Gray, May Sickler; Ruth
Crossman, Kathy Mentzer, Betty
Spencer, Doris Straley, Cleona Fritz,
Eileen Crispell; "Eleanor Steele, Nancy
Keiper and the: hostess.
7
24-HOUR SERVICE
JACK MT.
LUMBER & COAL
Company.
674-1441
Women Of Rotary Ask
Support Of Program
Dallas Women of Rotary at their
initial meeting of the year voted to
continue their support of Ahban
Unvalla, a young girl from India
who has been studying in Philadel-
phia for several months.
This group provides wheelchairs
and walkers for area people who are
incapacitated, free of charge. The
Wheelchair Project has grown over
the years until there are now 35
chairs, 14 walkers and 3 pairs of
crutches in circulation,
Since 1956, the Club has bought
5 wheelchairs and one walker on
wheels with crutches attached.
Every piece of equipment is in con-
stant use.
To help support these projects
and other welfare activities, a bake
sale of homemade breads, cakes,
cookies, pies, candies, etc., will be
held on November 8 at the Jackson
Fire Hall in conjunction with the
annual turkey dinner served by
Dallas Rotarians. Mrs. Carl Hender-
son, Chairman of Ways and Means,
and Mrs. Donald Peterson, co-chair-
man, are in charge. Assisting them
will be Mesdames Daniel Chapman,
Hanford Eckman, Bruno Gruppo,
Lester Hauck, Stanley Hozempa,
Lester Jordan, and Anthony Mar-
chakitus.
WEEK-END
Delicious
V2 Gal.
Freezer-Fresh
Friday - Saturday - Sunday
SPECIALS
ICE CREAM
Chocolate
Vanilla
Banana
Pineapple
Black Raspberry
Black Walnut
Orange-Pineapple
White House
Cherry Almond
Butterscotch
YOUR CHOICE OF ANY OF THESE FLAVORS:
Carmel Fudge
Cherry, Cocoanut
Pistachio
Coffee
Chocolate-Chip
Maple Walnut
Strawberry
Butter Pecan
French Vanilla
Get These FREE Offers
- FREE Jar Of
Topping - Any
Flavor -. Excluding
~ Walnut
with 7, Gallon
of Ice Cream at
$1.10
3 with 7, Gallon
FREE Box Of
1 Doz. Cones Or
Cups - Take Out
of Ice Cream at
SEA FOOD
PLATTER
Fries,
Figh Sticks, French
Cole Slaw
Bread and Butter
60c
CHERRY or PINEAPPLE
ICE CREAM SUNDAE Special
25¢
MAIN HIGHWAY
— FORTY FORT —
974 Wyoming Ave.
Forty Fort lce Cream Stores
Phone 674-917
DALLAS
— KINGSTON —
308 Wyoming Ave.
It's Highway 81
Not Penn-Can
In order to provide continuity of
a uniform marking pattern for the
traveling public's convenience and
guidance, identification of Interstate
highways has been restricted to
numerical designations by the U. S.
Bureau of Public Roads.
This- explains why the Pennsyl-
vania Department of Highways will
not honor frequent requests to name
interstate roads and interchanges
after prominent citizens, historical
events or leading industries.
However, local or regional inter-
ests often lead to referral of these
roads by the outmoded, but roman-
tic naming after local customs,
traditions or industries. The so-
called “Penn-Can-Highway,” (Inter-
state 81) is an example. On all
official maps and signs, however,
the numerical designation is re-
tained. :
The wisdom of holding to this
numerical designation becomes evi-
dent when the names ‘‘Anthracite
Expressway’ and “Cumberland Val-
ley Freeway’ are used to refer to
the same highway, Interstate 81.
Wyoming Valley Motor
domestic travel department reports
that a great deal of confusion results
from this. People looking for signs
leading to the “Penn-Can Highway’
for example, are helpless until they
understand that this road is officially
| Interstate 81. Another example of
| the name-number confusion is Penn-
| sylvania’s U. S. 322, which the Leg-
islature chose to memorialize the
28th Division. The same road is also
known as the ‘Lake-to-Sea High-
way.”
One local example, “Anthracite
Expressway,” seems a bit absurd in
view of all the considerable effort
extended by local interests in
attracting new. and diverse indus-
tries to an area which has been
trying for many years to avecid being
identified as a one-industry region.
hat name attached to our section
Club’s |
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1962
Mozart Club Soloist
WAYNE WALTERS, Baritone
Local
Mrs. Louie Ayre, Mrs,
Reynolds, Mrs. Harold
Mozart Club members,
Ruth Turn
Rood, Mrs.
William J. Newberry, Mrs. Alan
Sanford, Mrs. R. B. Wall, Mrs.
George Schooley and Mrs. John
Reid, are helping sponsor Wayne
Walters, baritone, Morristown,
N. J.,, at a concert Monday eve-
ning, November 12 in the Weiss
Auditorium of the Jewish Center.
Mr. Walters began his studies with
Carl Roth, head of the music de-
partment at Wyoming Seminary He
later entered Wilkes College De-
partment of music and studied voice
under Wilbur Isaacs and Richard
Chaplins,, graduating in 1959 with
a B.S. Degree in Music Education.
The Mozart Club is a member of
the National and Pennsylvania
Federaltion of music clubs, sole
purpose of which is promotion of
the best mugic and presentation to
the public of the finest young Ameri-
can artists.
GET IT AT
THESE STORES
Li
COUGH
MIXTURE
AEA
FOR COUGHS
OUE TO COLDS
Dodson’s Mkt.
Kunkle
Sag en
Trucksville Drugs
Trucksvilie
— WP
Gosart’s Mkt.
Dajlas
—_— 0
Dallas Drugs
Dailas
—
Evans Drugs
Shavertown
Gosart’s Mkt.
Shavertown
—_— Oe
Zig’s Economy
of Interstate 81 defeats and per-
petuates the concept of this area as
a coal-mining region, when in fact
the anthracite industry is now best
described as co-equal to many other
industries.
Citizens Committee
To Elect Officers
Citizens Committee for Better
Schools will elect officers Wednes-
evening at 8 in room 1, Dallas Sen-
ior High School.
Dr. Richard Potter, Regional Di-
rector of State Department of
Health will speak on health stand-
ards in a school system.
Mrs. Fred Eck will report on a
regional conference which she at-
Ceasetown
SPECIAL MIX
WILD BIRD
SEED
5 Ibs.—50¢
10 Ibs.—985¢
25 Ibs.~—$2.25
HUSTON’S
FEED SERVICE
Fernbrook Corners
674-6191
IH
: 0% 2 Sorina >A
BEAT THE RUSH!
HHI]
Recaps
ALL SIZES IN STOCK
FOR AMERICAN and COMPACT CARS
Town & Country — Suburbanite
59.95
Goodyear and Lee Distributor
ELSTON & GOULD
Main Highway — Fernbrook
674-5581
EEE EOE OEE OOS R ER
New Tires
tended in September in Wilkes-
Barre.
McRERMOTTS
BAR and COCKTAIL
LOUNGE
LUNDY BLDG.
36 - 40 MAIN ST.
DALLAS
OPEN ALL DAY
Delicious Dinners
and Snacks
All Learning
Is Continuous
Ralston Says Don't
Ignore The Obvious
A group of 150 parents attended
Westmoreland Elementary PT A
i meeting Tuesday, approving the
budget by the finance committee,
Glenn Howell, chairman. Included
was enough for a trip to Philadel-
phia by children in the sixth grade.
Students of all grades are selling
candy to increase the fund. Order
forms for candy are to be returned
, to the school before Thanksgiving
{ to insure delivery before Christmas.
i Mrs. Ben Davis, Jr., presented Mr.
: John Mulhern, principal, who read
la letter from William A. Austin with
regard to the milk problem. Chil-
dren may no longer have chocolate
milk, he said without written au-
thorization from home.
Mrs. Davis announced the elec-
tion of Mrs, James D. Gardiner as
recording secretary. Mrs, Robert
Brown and Mrs. Edwin Thompson
were presented as co-chairmen of
hospitality; Mrs. Alex Covert and!
Mrs. George Shaver, Jr., of mem-
bership.
George Ralston, Dean of Men at
Wilkes College, began his talk by
saying that problems of today are
not likely to be greatly affected by
such things as buildings or a change
of curriculum. ‘We tend, all of
us,” he said, “to overlook the obvi-
ous.” He stated that there is a
need to reduce things to simple
fundamentals. “I am not concerned
with programs but with our spirit
of approach.”
Mr. Ralston said education needs
to rediscover the laws of learning.
Learning itself is a continual process
representing individual growth from
self-centeredness to outer-centered-
ness. It involves the relationship
between child and home; child and
school; and child and community.
What are the laws of learning?
First, Readiness. Without being
ready to learn, learning is impossi-
ble. Discipline is all-important.
“Parents, the school and the whole
community add up to the law of
readiness,” he said.
Second: What is taught must be
understood or it is not learned;
Dean Ralston then cited examples
of college math testing which
proved that many students did not
Finally: Exercise, which involves
working at the job, reviewing,
putting into practice.
Education is a return to funda-
mental principles. No matter what
a child does, he must do it well,
Dean Ralston defined a good teach-
er as one who loves his students
and does not require more of them
than of himself. A good teacher
must be an example of conscience,
he said, for a teacher affects eter-
nity.
Mr. Ralston then read a poem
“education,” about Mark Hopkins,
and concluded with, ‘Technicians
we need, but philosophers we must
have.”
Inspector Of Election
Mrs. Laverne Race has been ap-
pointed Inspector of Election in the
South District of Dallas Borough
filling tht vacancy caused by the
death of Mrs. Henry Welsh.
and Friday evenings 5 to 8 p.m.
AT THE
ESE ERTS OEE RCE RCRA
If overdue bills have become a threat to your credit rating, why not
consolidate them and pay them off with a low-cost loan from '‘The Miners."
You'll find it easy to repay—only $6 a year per $100—and you'll keep
your credit good. Come in and see us.. We open daily 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
“Miners in Dallas”
MINERS NATIONAL BANK
ll
CHAUTAUQUA. \
INSTITUTION
STATE PARK
Liniv
[A
ALLEGANY 5
ROCK
LS (6h ©
BRADFORD
a ——
By Edward Collier
bor lighthouse.
A new course at Dallas Adult
Evening School is attracting an in-
creasing number of people. Regis-
trations are still being accepted for
the seminar in Creative Writing,
taught by Robert M. Hukill.
A number of college graduates are
listed among those who signed for
the course.
The program, completely informal
in character, has no intention of
teaching fundamentals of good Eng-
lish usage. It is expected ‘that any-
spelling, punctuation, paragraphing
ete. “Hit hand-written stories, or take it
Add to this, the prime requisite
of having something to say, and
knowing how to say it.
The class could use a few more
people.
A wide range of interests brings
a wide range of treatment, each
writer attacking the problem in a
different way, and each choosing an:
individual approach:
Each Monday evening, Mr. Hukill
sets a disc spinning and broadcasts
Robert Frost, William Faulkner, or
other authors, to demonstrate spe-
New York’s Jamestown is
the hub of a double Magic Cir-
cle auto tour around the long-
famed Chautauqua region.
First of. the sightseeing divi-
dends comes at Westfield, the
grape juice capital, and noted
for its antique shops and pic-
turesque 1828 Barcelona Har-
' Chautauqua Lake, a 19-mile
long finger of blue water, is
alive with sail and power boats.
Chautauqua Institution and its
Increasing Registration For Course
In Writing At Dallas Evening School
body who signs up knows the tech’
really learn what was being taught. | nique of English composition, and’
has the basic knowledge of good"
3
CE
nostalgic nerve-center village
have flourished since 1874. Each
summer the population jumps
from 350 to 12,000—many re-
turning every year for the art
festivals, symphonies and jazz,
religious events, ballet, plays,
lectures and classes.
Jamestown, a furniture capi-
tal since 1813, is the pivotal
point- and business center for
both Chautauqua Lake and
58,000-acre Allegany State
Park. The Park, reached by
New York’s “Scenic Seventeen”
highway, is a forested play-
cific paints in writing.
The second half of the evening is
given to reading aloud of manu-
scripts prepared by members of the
class. There is no compulsion. If
a member does not wish to read a
prepared piece, she remains silent.
Anybody who submits material is
braced to receive suggestions or
criticism, with the understanding |
that no two people ever write alike,
and that writing is the most reveal-
ing thing in the world.
“Down to earth, idealistic, pure
reporting, home-spun philosophy . . .
the writing is as different as the
People who tap the typewriter, sub-
out in making copious notes in a
loose-leaf folder. ;
To date, registrations include
these names: Mrs. Dana Crump, Mrs.
Earl Phillips, Mrs. James Green, Mrs.
Elizabeth Ross, Mr. and Mrs. T. M. B.
Hicks, Mrs. Barbara Evans, Mrs.
Dorothy «Peiffer, Regina Gallagher,
and William Morgan. >
The course was launched as a trial
balloon, with no expectation that it
would be of genéral interest. Six
people registered the first evening.
One was obliged to drop out when
Special women’s medicine can relieve
“hot flashes”, weakness, nervousness
...then you can enjoy life fully again!
Has change-of-life left you weak,
nervous so you feel “half” alive?
Lydia Pinkham’s Compound can
relieve both tense feelings and
physical distress! In doctor’s tests
with Pinkham’s “hot flashes”
subsided. Nervousness was calmed.
Then most women can go “smil-
ing” through ‘“change-of-life
Is Change=-of-Life Making You
Only Half a Woman?
s+.Too tense, too tired to be a real companion to your husband ?
without suffering!
If change-of-life has left you
only “half” a woman, get Lydia
E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
from druggists. See how fast you
can feel “all woman” again!
SLEEP 8 HOURS—~WAKE UP TIRED ?
When due to simple iron-de-
ficiency anemia, take Pinkham
Tablets. Iron-rich, they start to
strengthen your blood in 1 day!
A ©
Mo
HeatLamp
Lo-Glare Infra-Red lamp
helps relieve muscular
aches.
(Reg. 1.79)
2for $1.80
Evans Drug Store
SHAVERTOWN
674-3888
FRIENDLY
Prompt,
GARBAGE
BERTI
674-5731
For
Efficient,
REMOVAL
C Call
674-8731
Clean
& TRASH
& SON
674-8372
ground offering swhrming, sun-
bathing, horseback riding, cae
noeing in a mountain setting.
The return is via Olean, re-
membered by baseball fans as
the place where John J. Me-
Graw organized his first team;
Rock City park and its weird
quartzformations; the old town
of Bradford in Pennsylvania;
and back through the southern
part of Allegany Park, a prim-
itive woodland area favored
by anglers, camping motorists
and bicyclists.
the night was changed from Tuesday
to Monday. This was Georgia Bes-
ecker, a distinct loss, one of the first
to evince interest and anxious to get
a work-out.
Boat-House Windows ‘
Smashed With Rocks
Windows in ten Harveys Lake
boat-hcuses were smashed last week.
The vandals are working at night,
throwing stones from cars, according
to Police Chief Edgar Hughes.
The chief assumes this to be the
work of youngsters, and issues a
warning to them that, if ‘they are
caught, they will be taken to Juve-
nile Court. ;
He does not think that the receat
the smashing of an expensive picture
window in a home on Outlet Road
last week.
Farewell Party Held
A farewell party was held re-
cently at the home of’ Mr. and
Mrs. Theodore MacHenry, Orange,
in honor of Paula Horan, who left
for New York. Attending were:
Mr. and Mrs. John Perry, Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Bedford, Christie, Shar-
MacDonald and Jerry, Mr. and Mrs.
David Perry and Mrs. Rose Llew-
ellyn.
FORTY FORT
THEATRE
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
SHOWS AT 7 AND 9
Alec Guinnesg and Dirk Bogarde
in
DAMN the DEFIANT
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday
(continuous Sun. from 3)
Bing Crosby and Bob Hope
in
ROAD to HONG KONG |
starts Wednesday
Shows at 7 and 9
THE CHAPMAN
REPORT
LUZERNE
THEATRE
Thursday
Kirk Douglas and Cyd Charisse
in
2-WEEKS IN
ANOTHER TOWN
(ladies gift night)
Friday and Saturday
2 thrillers
w
As
vandalism has any connection with.
on and Kim, Mr. and Mrs. James JN
v
PANIC IN THE YEAR
ZERO
and
TIME BOMB
Sunday and Monday
(continuous Sunday from 2)
2 laugh hits
The Three Stooges
in
ORBIT
and
2072
y
ERA
Hg
hect
Davi
TER
Sop
a
A NS PS
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