{ i i! | § | i i i { XN EE @ hi Sa A / 3 — E> << <I << <> << <> <i <> <TD <> <I CE << << ( SECTION B — PAGE 4 Wyoming Seminary Alumni Asso- ciation will hold “Alumni Day” Sat- urday, June 8th, beginning with a luncheon for the executive commit- tee at 12:30 in Pettebone-Dickson Center. From noon until 2 the Cen- ter will be open to the alumni for Lie Ti THe HTT HTT SL 5 Phone VA 5-2978 E Rear 29 North Main Street Wilkes-Barre, Pa. gc il <I <> ED «D> EI ED <> Eh <TD> aE Ss iy i i GP Ea En iw Boston Sz g ® Fowvler, lunch, and the swimming pool will open from 3 to 4. Guides will be on hand to conduct tours of the campus. Special reunions have been plann- ed by the following classes: 1958, 1953, 1948, 1938, 1933, 1923, 1918 and 1913. They will meet in the THE BOSTON STORE Harveys Lake and Sweet Valley Dick and Walker . The Boston Store Ue Tin Tn <P AE Tr. En ET. GT. <I. CE. En. ST. SS. A. =~ TI CEE ER EE SC TU EI EC ETT Graphic Arts Services INCORPORATED PHOTO-ENGRAVING Offset Negatives and Platemaking Screen Prints, Art Work AEX CTE CORN EE CE EEE TU RT ES EEE TUE TC EEE TURPIN ERNE © JUST A SPIN OF THE DIAL and you reach DIAL 674-1181 In Wilkes-Barre NO TOLL CHARGE Center Moreland, Dallas | Mrs. fT CED WE EW CT <I <I> AER IT <i i GR CA I WD CT A «AWD <a CI EW fr ere cafeteria during the afternoon. Alumni Dinner will be held at 6 in the Seminary Dining Room. Kris- ten Kristensen of Yonkers, New York, class-of 1913, will be speaker and ‘Robert A. Buntz, class of 1938, teacher of Biology at Seminary will | be toastmaster. Invocation and bene- diction will be given by Dr. Henry Clay Banks, class of 1923, and min- ister of the First Presbyterian Church in Endicott, N.Y. Following the dinner there will be ‘dancing from 9 to 11 at no additional cost. Bob Baird’s orchestra will play. Edgar H. Wood is general chair: man assisted by the following alumni who will serve on various commit- tees: Alice Howarth Ayers, Charlotte Muschlitz Arbogast, William G. Ben- ton, Helen Griffith Benton, Robert A. Buntz, Jane R. Charlton, Thomas F. Charlton, Helen Himmler Eggle- ston, Louis F. Goeringer, Pauline Newcomb Goeringer, Mazie Weiss- man Greenwald, Betty Gregson, G. THE DALLAS POST, WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 1963 Wyoming Seminary Alumni Day Set For June 8 Agnes Gregson, Frank M., Henry, Marilyn L. Isaac, Louise Loucks Jen- nings, F. Prentice Lacy, Betty Luet- zel Lacy, Barbara Northrup Lem- mond, John McCole, Ruth Walburn Mclean, Jane Morris, Jack Pritch- ard, Wilbur Shortz, Ray W. Turner, Judith Brown Turner, Rosemary A. Vogel, Barbara Dykins VonDran, Claire Conlon Evans, William Evans, Wilmer L. Williams, Louise Smith Wood. oF SHEE Lehman Men’s Bible Class met recently in the basement of the Methodist church. Robert Disque presided. At a short business meeting a mo- tion was voted to help pay for a public - address system in the | church, sponsored by the Wait and See class. Raymond Searfoss gave a talk on accidents in the home by. fire. Raymond Searfoss and Mrs. Robert Disque served refreshments. Dewey Hoover, garageman from Outlet road, is home from the hos- | pital. He is improving, and his | family is glad to have him home. Mr. and Mrs. Art Hoover enter- | tained their son and family over | the weekend, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald | and sons Terry and Jerry from | Wilmington Del. J ‘Helen Sidler is home on vaca- tion from Bloomsburg College with | her parents Mr. and Mrs. John Sidler. M. Y. F. of Lehman Methodist Church held a Memorial Service in Sunday school. Carl Squier led the service, and many other young folks took part also and did a fine job. Folks in Lehman are up in arms about the children having school on Memorial Day. It is too bad some folks forgot our dear heroes so soon. HORSE SHOW Lanceford Sutton and Bud Me- keel have been named co-cha‘rmen of the Lehman horse show, to be held July 3 and 4 on the Park farm, corner of Route 118 and Humtsville-Idetown road. Following committees and chair- man have been appointed: Myron S. Baker and Gilbert D. Tough, show cochairmen; Joe Ellsworth, show treasurer; Walter Chamber- 00030002 CU 2 I CONTINENTAL INN g LUZERNE-DALLAS HWY. : Facilities For ® WEDDINGS BUSINESS HIE CI EIA ® BANQUETS ® PARTIES For Information Phone 287-7588 MEETINGS tHe He HHT SH] 4 TE ET EE EEE EN TEE RE EE EE ET ETT TIES MOON-LIGHT. SALE MAY 31st FREE COFFEE and DOUGHNUTS 9-11 STORE OPEN "TIL 11 P.M. Zipper Fly. Sanforized, The Knees Will _ ‘Outwear The Pants? Extra denim permanently fuse inside the legs. More protection, strength and wear. Comfort fit for growing boys. They fit right, feeb a Np right, look right. Long wearing Le: £3 ; Cowboy Denim can really take ith LEE JAMBOREE AT McCRORY'S +FREK + I< ER BE BE Balloons for the Kids + FIRE EK cits for adults —Guess the number of stitches in the BIG LEE RIDERS outside the Store— Sheriff’s Badges THIS IS THE BIG WEEKEND LEE factory representative will be at Fri & Sat. 3 Store "RIDER SPECIALS ® BOY’S RIDERS — (Regular $2.99) — A ® McCRORY'’S Back Mountain Shopping Center — USE OUR CREDIT PLAN — ® PEN UNTIL 9 and Gifts for the Kids y 2 for "5.50 Youths and Boys HUSKIES Regular — $3.49 2 for °6.50 MEN’S Regular $3.98 2for°1.80 ~ 2 BS RAT {| nation-wide bell ringing on the 4th of July, lain, show secretary. Parking and Police, Joe Ide; Lehman Ambulance, Wesley Moore; electric wiring, Bruce Varner, CGor- don James. : Refreshments, Glenn Johnson, John Rebennack, Ed Powell; square dance, Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Marks; Parade, Back Mountain Horsemens Club; program advertising, Dorothy Baker; patrons, Lee Wentzel; show announcer, Gilbert Tough; show grounds, Bob Disque, George Ma- jor, Leonard Derby; stabling Paul Hoover; feed and bedding, R. E. Wright. Edwin Wright; box seats, Lewis Ide, Bill Calkins. Pump, Willis Ide; fencing and ring, Bob Disque, Myron Baker, Leonard Ide, Tom Brown. John Hu- dak; stands, Willard Garey and Bryce Major. grounds Monday and Thursday nights and Saturday afternoon Everyone is. asked to help. Frances Slocum Society Plans Patriotic July 4 The Frances Slocum Society, local Chapter of Children of the American Revolution, met last Saturday at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Lewis’ L. ‘Rogers III, vice- president Deborah Rogers and the Senior President Mrs. Robert Rosen- bluth presiding. Two delegates and three alternates were elected to at- tend the State Conference June 20- 21. A society newssheet will be put out four ‘times a year. Two members of the local group will run for state offices: Sandra May, former president of the society, for state president, and Deborah Rogers, vice-president, for Central District Vice-President. The society will participate in the a project aimed at re- turning patriotism ‘to the 4th of July. " Members present were Deborah Rogers, Susan Rogers, Mimi and Cheryl Hunter, Sarah Bobo, and Nancy Coleman. Seniors: Mrs. Hun- ter, Mrs. Lewis Rogers III, Mrs. Robert Rosenbluth, and Mrs. Coray H. Miller, State Promoters and past regent of the Wyoming Valley Chapter DAR, which sponsors the Firemen ‘will be working on the BY LEIGHTON SCOTT Short of standing in the fire | tower on Chestnut Ridge, a man | Holiday House. I went up there on invitation of | Joe Niezgoda, superintendent, who | wanted me to see his regal array of tulips before they gave way. Holiday House, if you are won- dering, and well you might, since! it's relatively new, is the palatial’ white building on the hill above Idetown. It is visible for miles. The house is surrounded by forty- three acres, either landscaped or | maintained wood-land, and it was’ plain to me as I turned off the] highway onto the property that Joe had more daily problems than just his tulips. That's a lot of land. Once a private estate, Holiday House is now the day camp for the Jewish Community Center, serviced in summer by busses from all over the county. The camp began opera- tion two years ago, and it is already a paragon of organization, to com- plement its physical plant. Between Memorial Day and early fall, the main building, pools, athlet- ic courts, and the recreational pavilions which dot the forest, hum with kids’ activity. Now, just before opening, as spring burgeons in Joe's gardens, and warm mist steams up from the valleys below, the camp seems more like some cloister, inviting rest and | meditation. Sun was shining bright as I walked up on the open terrace to see how many local landmarks T could spot. From my left was the hollow of Harveys Lake, the fire tower and country club, Dallas High School’s roof glinting, College Miser- icordia, and farther right Natona’s water tanks. The sculpture of Lehe! man golf course and Heffernan’s | evergreens to the right needed no pointing aut. Cars seemed to crawl like bugs down 118 and Tunkhannock high- way, and on days without haze, Joe said, you could see windshields winking even on the Pennsylvania turnpike, Far to the right of this panorama. before the camp’s own trees cut off my vision, I could see Chase insti- tute, a massive plant against the landscape, On what is probably the north side of the main building Joe has his tulip garden with surrounding close-cropped evergreens and bushes. Tulips are of every imagin- able color, bunched in tear-drop shaped plots. Small piles of wither- ing cuttings lay near some of the bushes, indicating Joe had been in medias work all morning. The superintendent, a life-long resident of Lehman township, was putting his Penn State extension horticulture courses ‘to work. He, his wife, and daughter Janice, who has a scholarship to Misericordia next year, live year-round on the estate now, so he can take care of | and basketball the ever-growing physical plant. Son Albert is a jet mechanic at Dover Air Force Base, Delaware. Joe will plant annuals when the tulips go, and they should be in bloom by July. ; Main building, for which he has been superintendent since it was built in 1947, was the home of Juli- us Long Stem. It is of modern architecture, unusual for its time. A family-sized swimming pool is used by adults during ‘the summer, For Beautiful Wedding Invitations younger group. THE DALLAS POST = an {) pr LOW-COST QUALITY ° WATCH CARAVELLE LCR = TV Eel : ‘YOUR LA PRINCESS Precision jeweled movement, shock resistant, unbreakable mainspring. WINDJAMMER -~ Precision ones movement, rproof*, si resistant, IL dial, i Never before such precision- ney gecprgdy, Siow hutiry a 1 suc! lasting ua 2 . at thie tow price, TE wy 4 See our complete selection of superbly styled Caravelle fine iy os OTHER GIFTS for: . GRADUATIO Speidel I-D Braclets Pen and Pencil Sets Jewelry Music Boxes Lockets Wallets > Lighters Rings Cuff Links Luggage Radios ®Stationery HENRY’S JEWELRY —Cards and Gifts— Fostoria, Keepsake Diamonds and Lenox Memorial Hwy. Shavertown —OPEN 'TIL 9 AT NIGHT— camp-work. In the back is a huge olympic- They are serviced | by two 628 foot wells. tennis, volley-ball, courts, we ‘turned our attention to the fact that we Passing the | were walking on one of Jog's for- | mulas — grass. carpet, which has flourished in an amazing two years on trucked-in topsoil. My guide pointed to a few twigs that still needed picking up, ruefully ! referring to the terrific thunder- storm two weeks ago that hurt his flowers too. We passed on through the shiny new open-air bath-houses into the woods, where the arts and crafts, pavilions were scattered. They were all equipped with duffle-bag racks and running water. On our way back to the parking lot Joe pointed out the deer tracks. No hunting is allowed. A baby rab- bit lay dead near an oak shrub, viec- tim of some natural enemy. We saw a scarlet tanager, at first mistaken for a much more common cardinal. I said it was a long time since I had seen cine. We took one more look out at the panorama, before I left. Only then I noticed Oak Hill just below. I had been so busy looking far, that | I forgot to look near. - Thenking Joe for showing me around, I noticed he was working | : | for a while, until her daughter gol on some pumps, shape. getting them in There are always the me- chanical jobs, for which he is emi- | nently qualified as a former tool- and-die maker, You've got to be able to do every- He is justifiably ' proud of his tough athletic grass i "DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Hand-Mix Grass, Flower Sculpture And Expert Care, Keep Idetown’s Palatial Day Resort Breathtaking while the children are at their thiag in his business, he said, | I agreed, and thought it must be la nice life taking care of such a couldn’t ask for a more complete | size pool, with three big chemical | place, which is what you always view of the Back Mountain them I. filter tanks; also an intermediate think about the other guy’s job. got recently on a walk around! ang baby pool. | Anyway, Joe does a nice job, and | the camp shows it. i | | Passes Examination | 1 | | I | JANE ELL Jane El, 209 Hellers Grove, Trucksville, a graduate of Empire Beauty School, Wilkes-Barre, passed her state board examination for beautician's license in April. She does not intend to open shop to school. Jane is the daughter of Johnny ! the barber, Main Street, Shaver- town. She graduated from West- moreland High School. @® Lights © Battery ® Plugs @ Tires LET US CHECK YOUR AUTO DECORATION DAY Tune-up Driving will be hectic enough without car failure. ® Brakes ® Lubrication adhd A db uti abbott rtd didiiindie outa eb do ii todo doin Bo do edi. BIRTHS DALLAS ESS0 , AT THE “Y” — ROUTES 118 & 309 Open 24 Hrs. — 674-4571 — AAA Service i (oles “EXECUTIVE” (oles “JR. EXECUTIVE” increasing your present floor desk top: 45 x 30”. When ordering desk with center add “CD” to number. "COLE DESKS and Everything you want in a desk. Ideal for department heads and supervisory employees. Will greatly enhance the appear- ance of your office. Heavy steel. Linoleum top: 60" x 30”. No. 1571-2 letter, 2 box drawers... No. 1570—1 letter, 4 box drawers Center drawer with lock....... $10.95 add’l. When ordering desk with “center drawer add CD” to number. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers