The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, January 17, 1963, Image 16

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    day evening.
Updyke,
SECTION B— PAGE 8
Shavertown ;
~ Mrs. Margaret Traver, Main Street
was removed to Mercy tospiital on
Monday. She has been ill for a long
time and ‘would appreciate cards
from her neighbors.
. The William Fredericks, W. Center
Street, who recently sojourned to the
state of Florida, are wishing for a
bit of pleasant southern weather
in this area. :
Harry Ritts, Pioneer Avenue, wh
is coniined to his home these days,
would enjoy the visits of his friends.
Mr. Ritts loves nothing better than
to chat apout current events and
review issues of ‘the local scene.
Dr. and Mrs. Cralg Aicher, Spring
Street, had as Sunday guests, the
- latters parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
McGiness and family, Ralph Jr., and
Judy Allen; Wilmington, Delware.
Mrs. William Ockenhouse, Main
* Btreet has been ill at her home.
' The annual meeting of the Con-
gregation of St. Paul's Lutheran
Church will be held following church
services on isunday morning.
Mrs. Fred Malikemes, Ferguson
Avenue, was elected president of the
Dorcas Class of St. Paul’s Church at
a meeting held recently. She suc-
ceeds Mrs. Dorothy Jones.
Keller Group Shavertown Meth-
odist Church will meet in the church
parlors on Friday evening at 8 p.m.
Mr. Alvah Wilson is ill at Nesbitt
Hospital.
Circles Postponed
Sarah Circle of St. Paul’s Lutheran
Church has been postponed until
next Tuesday evening at 7:45 at the
church and the Priscilla Circle wiill
meet Wednesday evening at 8 p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Earl Fry, Dallas.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ash, Main
Street, observed their 27th wedding
anniversary on Monday. There are
two children, Robert and Tommie.
+ Mr. Joseph T. Regan, Ridge Street,
is recuperating at his home after,
surgery was performed at Geisinger
Medical Center. He returned home
to Shavertown.
Glad of Return
His many parishioners were happy
on Sunday morning to see their
pastor, Rev. Robert Yost, back on
. the pulpit, after spending several
days as a patient in General Hospital.
New Church Winows
Four lovely stained glass windows
installed in the vestibule of St.
Therese’s Church last week were
donated by the Holy Name Society,
Mrs. George Bednar, Mrs. Mary Laux
and Mr. and Mrs. John Breza.
The windows in the sacristies were
given by Mrs. Anna Stenger, Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Mangan; Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Kupstas, Mr. and Mrs. James
Brett, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Glenn,
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Staub, Mrs.
Daniel Zimmerman and Mr. and Mrs.
‘Walter Staub.
The first set portrays the four
Evangelists, the latter, the Saints
who were interested in young people.
Family Night Supper
A Family Night will be held for
members of Shavertown Methodist
‘Church on Sunday evening in the
church parlors, beginning at 5 p. m.
Supper will be served.
> Etertains Club
Mrs. Ruth Houser entertained
members of her card club on Thurs-
Membership is made
up of local business wives. The
group have been together for many
years.
Noted Statewide
First item in November Pennsyl-
vania (Township News magazine,
“Windrowing The News” column, is
the appointment of Mrs. Jean Up-
dyke, wife of Police Chief Herbert
and Mrs. Betty Coslett,
wife of Assistant Chief Jesse Cos-
lett, to Kingston Township police
department.
Discover Body
In Wrecked Car
87 Year Old Man
.Has Heart Attack
An eighty-seven year old Bethel
Hill resident was stricken with a
fatal heart attack Saturday morn-
ing shortly before noon. The body
of William B. Hess was discovered
in his car, which had plunged over
a fifteen foot embankment on the
Bethel Hill Road.
He apparently died instantly,
unable to control the car or shut
off the ignition. State Troopers
Brennan and Uris from the Shick-!
oer Alfred Bronson in ‘the investi-
gation. i :
Services were conducted Tuesday
afternoon by Rev. Fred Hickoff from
the Bronson Funeral Home, with
burial in Bethel Hill Cemetery.
A native of Fairmount Township,
he was son of the late Caler and
Elisa Mead Hess, and a lifelong
resident of the area. Of late, he
had made his home with, his grand-
son, Archie Hess. His wife Carrie
died in 1940.
He was a member of Bethel Hill
Methodist Church.
Surviving are: a son William B.
Hess, Fairmount Township; eleven
grandchildren, thirty-seven great-
grandchildren, and two great-great-
grandchildren.
Mrs. Elizabeth Friis
Dies At Riverside, Cal.
Mrs. Elizabeth Friis, sister of Mrs.
Bert Riey and Dan Evans, Shaver-
town, died following a heart attack
on Christmas Day in Riverside, Cal-
ifornia.
Surviving are: her husband Oscar,
and several nieces and nephews.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Riley spent
three months with their sister last
summer in California.
Mrs. Lucy Tripp Ws
Pikes Creek Native
Six years ago Mrs. Lucy A. Tripp,
a mative of Pikes Creek, moved back
from Forty Fort to the family home-
stead, to make her home with her
sister, the late Mrs. Otis Rood. After
Mrs. Rood’s death, she continued
to live there by herself, handling
small outdoor work, keeping up the
home.
Wednesday night, at Nesbitt Hos-
pital where she had been admitted
earlier in the day with a ‘heart
attack, she died, aged 89.
Burial was in Forty-Fort Ceme-
tery Saturday afternoon, following
services conducted from the Brom-
son Funeral Home.
Her parents were the late Josiah
and Olive Thompson Wolfe. Her hus:
4
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FORTY-FORT
THEATRE
Tonight, Friday, Saturday
Jerry Lewis
“Ps Only Money”
ilitdinitinmdbustatatidmaibtiatiueabutiediostmd gate
Sunday, Monday
(Con’t. Sun. 8-11)
Rory Calhoun
“Marco Polo”
shiny Barracks assisted Deputy Cor-'
Russell Ide Loses
His Only Sister im
Mrs, Rozena Ide Gordon, a native
of Lehman, died aged 92 the day
after Christmas at Highlands, Kan-
sas. Her brother and his wife, Mr.)
and Mrs. Russell Ide, flew out for
the funeral, which tock place from
Bellevue Church. }
She was the oldest of nine chil-
dren born to the late Edward F.
and Mary Crispell Ide. Russell Ide
is the only one left of the nine,
next to the youngest.
'‘As young married folks, Mr. and
Mrs, William R. Gordon, married
July 25, 1893, moved to Kansas,
two years later, to farm with an
uncle Judson Ide.
She is survived by one son Ed-
ward, with whom she made her
home after the death of her hus-
band in 1936; a daughter Mrs. Mabel
Thorpe, of Liberty, Missouri; eight
grandchildren, fifteen great-grand-
children, one great-great-grandchild;
and her brother Russell.
Kingston Woman Dies At
Lake Cottage, A Suicide
A Kingston woman died by her
own hand at Harveys Lake. There
was no suspicion of foul play when
the body of Mrs. Edward Roman-
ansky, 44, was discovered by her
son and daughter Saturday after-
noon in a cottage at Point Breeze
maintained | for familly use. Signs
indicated that she had propped a
German Mauser rifle between the
fireplace and her own chest, and
pulled the trigger with a poker.
Burial was Wednesday afternoon
at Fern Knoll, following services
conducted by Rev. Robert Webster,
former pastor of the White Church
on the Hill.
Deputy Coroner Richard Disque,
summoned by Chief of Police Edgar
Hughes, pronounced ‘it suicide, of
| a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
band Edwin M. Tripp died in 1957.
For almost sixty years the couple
lived in Forty-Fort.
Mrs. Tripp was a member of
Forty-Fort Methodist Church, its
Ladies Bible Class and WSCS, and
was active in other church affairs.
She was a member of the DAR and
Chapter 30, OES of Wilkes-Barre.
_ THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 1963
H. C. Griesing
Dies At General
Cardiac Team Makes
- Heroic Effors
Herbert Charles Griesing was
buried yesterday at Memorial
Shrine, following services conducted
by Rev. Russell Lawry from the
Disque Funeral Home.
Mr, Griesing, 61, admitted ,Jan-
uary 9 to the medical service at
General Hospital, was apparently
making good progress when he
died, Sunday morning. A cardiac
team made heroic efforts to restore
circulation, working for over an
hour. He had suffered a heart at-
tack seven years ago.
Seventeen years ago, he moved
from Hazleton to Franklin Street,
Dallas. With the Lehigh Valley
Coal Company for 44 years, he
rose to a superintendent’s position
upon transfer from Hazleton. Re-
cently, he had been handling real
estate belonging to the company,
and had been so occupied the day
before onset of his illness.
He was well known for his ability
in fly-tying, and his prowess as an
angler. For a time, he was a mem-
ber of Dallas Kiwanis. He belonged
to Dallas Methodist Church.
A native of Hazleton, he was son
of the late Gustav and Margaret
Pippert Griesing.
Surviving are his wife, the for-
mer Florence Shelley; daughters,
LUZERNE
THEATRE
Last Times Tonight
Steve McQueen - Robert Wagner
“The War Lover”
GIFT NIGHT
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Friday, Saturday 1
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{ Reptilicus”
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“Pirates of Blood
River”
Sunday
(Con’t. 2-11)
2 Science Fiction Hits
“The Phantom Planet”
Cohit
“Assignment
Outer Space”
VV VV VV VV VV VV VY VV VV VV VV VV YY VV YYY
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JAN. 31
DEADLINE
for
AUTO INSPECTION
WE ARE AN OFFICIAL
PENNSYLVANIA STATE INSPECTION
STATION
for &
"Mechanics On Duty 8A. M. 05 P. M.
© FRONT END ALIGNMENT
© WHEEL BALANCE
@® BRAKES LINED and ADJUSTED
® BEAR WHEEL A
MAIN HIGHWAY
AYOID
LAST - MINUTE
RUSH!
FERNBROOK
674-5581
rouid
LIGNMENT
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|
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{
With Quick, Clean
Red Cross Offers Area
Home Nursing Courses
Home Nursing courses will be of-
fered residents of the Back Moun-
tain by Wyoming Valley Red Cross,
according to announcement by Mrs.
Houston Day, chairman of Home
Nursing division. :
Classes will be taught by Mrs.
Joseph Fenstermacher, R.N., in-
structor at College Misericordia.
The twelve hour course, divided
into six two-hour sessions, will be
held once, twice or several times
a week, depending upon th wish of
the group.
Classes must number at least
ten, not over twelve at one time.
Purpose of the course is to promote
the ability to detect illness in the
home as well as serving in an emer-
gency.
It will also teach proper nutri-
tion and health standards in the
community.
The group may include any in-
terested person from Junior High
age and up. Place and time will
be announced later.
Phone Mrs. Day, 674-7616 for
enrollment or information,
Mrs. Lois Phillips, Wilmington, Del;
Mrs. Claire Kuehn, Dallas; brother,
Howard, pharmacist in Hazleton;
sisters, Mrs. George Berger, West
Hazleton, and Mrs. Carl Schatz,
Havertown; four grandchildren and
several nieces and nephews.
Save On Your Printing
\ Have It Done By The Post
WARM
wg ml any
wacsairw NF ani Nae)
Brea Milk Producers
Ten Back Mountain registered
Guernsey cows have recently com-
pleted top official DHIR production
records, according to the American
Guernsey Cattle Club.
The animals, five of which be-
long to Andrew J. Sordoni, Har-
veys Lake, and five to Raymond
Goeringer, .Dallas, were all milked
two times daily under tests super-
vised by Pennsylvania State Uni-
versity.
Lake Louise Farms topped the
area with two five-year olds which
produced 15,670 and 15,650 pounds
of milk and 678 and 777 pounds of
fat in 305 days. They are Moreau
Farms Beverly and Crusaders Elsie
of Blue Vista.
In the Sterling Farms herd, Ster-
ling Florella, senior four-year old,
produced 14,460 pounds of milk
and 791 pounds of fat in 305 days.
Sterling Regina, senior four, gave
12,150 and 598 in 291 days; Sterling
Gay Blossom, junior two, 9,160 and
470 in 305; Sterling Maple, junior
two, 8,900 and 465 in 305; and
Sterling Cherie, junior two, 8,660
and 478 in the same time.
Lake Louise Farms had two very
heavy five year old producers near
the top 305 day production; Grand
View Mo Fairy, 5, 13,920 and 617,
and Lake Louise Cora May, 13,210
and 560.
Reed Farms Mo Molly, junior
two, gave 10,880 and 587 in 305.
Oa, 2%.
At Large In Back
A lovely white male cat wandered
into the yards of upper Shaver
Avenue residents last summer, He
was quickly adopted by several
families, the Ernest Bells, Mrs.
Betty Richman and Pearl Averett,
who fed and cared for him.
Particularly intrigued by its
friendly nature was Judy Allen, the
Bell's granddaughter, who promptly
named him “Whitey” and spent all
her spare time playing with her
adopted pet.
Soon after Christmas Day, the
cat disappeared. Everyone was’
concerned and greatly relieved
when he came
several days later. Mrs. Richman
noticed his face was badly torn,
but there were no other visible
wounds on the body.
She took him into her home and
tried to nurse him, but his condi-
tion did not improve. He was un-
able to walk and refused food.
staggering home |
DALLAS. PENNSYLVANIA
niore Trigger-Happy Killers
Iountain
In desperation, Mrs. Richman
took the creature to Dr. Richard
Post, who found its entire body
had been torn by gun shot. There
was nothing he could do but
recommend a swift release for the
tortured patient.
Young Judy Allen was crushed at
the news and ‘the neighborhood
aroused at the cruelty inflicted
upon a defenseless, harmless crea-
ture by some uncaring trigger
happy killer.
Lap-Board Party 9
Jonathan R. Davis Fire Company
Auxiliary plans a lap-board party
Monday evening at 8 at the Fire
Hall in Idetown. Tickets may be
purchased from any member, or at
the door.
Auxiliary members are asked to
submit their gifts to the prize com- .
mittee in advance.
ISIE SETS RHIC
ARR ARERRREERRERS
ORDER TO TAKE OUT
Delicious - - - Made in My Own Kitchen !
PIERCGIES
HUT ROLLS
ANNA HUMINIK
Cheese — Potato — Sauerkraut
Old (Country Style
ees es a
..... 15¢c Doz.
POPPY SEED ROLLS
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