ded Hu, } aster of! omsburg to be program f Wilkes s educa~ eo Ov o - ® > | mY a V-8, 4 rad. ater, &H, WIS, els RESET SE d «8 rere ¥ e— NEE DELEERL bbb bE BE PEELE EEE] DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Fernbrook Fred Hughey, Demunds Road, is a patient in St. Barnabas Hospital, Rm. 521, 3rd and 183rd Streets, (Bronx Section), New York 57, N. Y., where he submitted to sur- gery on May 23rd. Mrs, Hughey is staying in New York with him. His son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hughey, Overbrook Ave- nue, visited him over the weekend. They expect to visit again this weekend. His condition is good. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Lumley, Har- ris Street, had as weekend guests, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Williams, Media, and Mrs. Mary Sheridan, Bronx. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Simpson, E. Overbrook Avenue, had Mrs. Simp- son’s four sisters and their husbands as Memorial Day guests as well as her mother, Mrs. Bertha Stanton, Scranton. They are Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Schick, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Edwards; Mr. and Mrs. Ben Carey all of Wilmington, Delaware and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Johnson of Harrisburg. Mr. and Mrs. John Johnson and children, George, Cheryl and Cindy of South Hampton, N. J. spent Sunday visiting Mr. and Mrs. George Shaver, Jr., E. Overbrook Avenue and Mr. and Mrs, Charles ‘Snyder, Claude Street, Dallas. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Sidorék, and family, Harris Street, spent a few days visiting Mr. and Mrs. Joe Sidorek, Macina, N. Y. While there they also visited Mr. and Mrs. Dan Rydzewski, a nephew of Mr. Si- dorek’s. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Allen, E. Overbrook Avenue, had as guests for a week, Mr. and Mrs.” George Getner, Ilion, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Simpson, E. Overbrook Avenue, spent the week- end in Poughkeepsie, while their chudren visited in Elmhurst and Harrisburg. Miss Verna Lamoreaux, Fern Street, and Mr. and Mrs. George Shaver, Sr., Trucksville, visited Mr. and Mrs. Richard Dietz and family Bloomsburg Sunday. Sandy Weaver, daughter of Mrs. Helen Weaver, Hatboro will grad- uate from (Central Bucks High School on June 11. The Weavers are formerly from Fernbrook and Sandy is a niece of Edwin Lumley, Harris Street. Mrs. Leona Bellas, Harris Street, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Robert Williams and family in Hatfield. Mr. and Mrs. Melvyn Compton and son Harry, Levittown are spending a two weeks vacation with their families, Mr. and Mrs. .Benjamin Earl, Hamiiton Square, N. J., spent the JeBENESSEERERREENNNERE, = : mn BITUXEDOS - CUTAWAYSH — WHITE COATS rs COMPLETE FORMAL WEAR RENTAL SERVICE ADAM'S CLOTHES Clothes for Dad and Lad Back Mountain Shopping "Center — Shavertown Adam Hozempa, Prop, y; a busy day. The lens did a very good job, but had to be satisfied with only a passing mark, not being able to reproduce every one of the multi- tudes of happy faces of marchers and watchers. One of two climactic events in the procession was the ceremony at the Borough Honor Roll, where, at upper left; Commander Richard Staub and the Daddow-Isaacs Post color guard stand at attention as Warren DeWitt plays taps; and, lower right, girl scout Shirley Back Mountain Honors In this small sample of the crowded scene of Memorial Day celebration in Dallas, the camera lens tries to record fragments of THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1963 placing a wreath at the monument mony. in front of the home. Ann Reese and boy scout Bob Schilling march solemnly away after weekend visiting Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hughey, Overbrook Avenue, and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hontz, Shavertown. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Bloomer and daughters, Melinda and Brenda of West Chester spent the weekend visiting their parents. A Society Meeting of all members and friends of the Glenview P.M. Church will be held in the church on Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Stuart and Mr. and Mrs. George Stuart, Poplar Street, spent Sunday visiting Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stuart of East Orange, N. J. ! SADDLES © BRIDLES | ® TACK © Western Wear, and Gifts CHAZEL NE 9-8504 b b b > > > b b . . Indian Moccasins b > b > . > > y Rt. 29—Harveys Lake to Noxen 4 4 { 4 4 4 4 4 . 1 and Gifts ] 4 4 4 d 1 4 4 4 Idetown Trucksville and Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Mattice, Sweet Valley, spent Dec- oration Day ‘with Mr. and Mrs. It was a home-town Memorial Day | Parade, leisurely and off to a slow Lois Laning 5 30: | start, Brownies and Cub-Scouts boil- ’ ling out of the' American Legion Mrs. Emory Hadsel, a ene | grounds on Memorial Highway, fire neth Calkins, Bess Cooke, Ric nod | 2PPaTatus lining up on Center Hill Ide, Reverend Tiffany and Alfre Road, south-bound traffic deflected Swelgin were present at the of Gor the highway to Lake Street, ficial board held in the churchhouse and deflected back again as drums Saturday night. {of the Dallas Junior High School A 3/C Barry L. Rauch who was | Band were heard in-the distance:and stationed .at the Greenville AFB | red and white uniformed musicians Mississippi is spending a two week / came into view. visit with his aunt and uncle Mr. | and Mrs. George Honeywell. He will then go to Alabama Air Base escaped maternal hands to take the spotlight; small boys on bikes | | where he has a job as an operat- | barged into the line-up at the cem- | eter; toddlers wailed as they were cot reererei | thwarted in their Sete on he @ 1 | geraniums decorating the graves a SutfersiEye Injury | Fontan. Citizenry tramped heed- Cindy Lou Lefko, three, daughter | lessly across the mounds where liv- of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lefko, Lu- | ing grass served as common de- zerne Avenue, Dallas, suffered an nominator for veterans of the War eye injury late Sunday afternoon Between the States, the Spanish when she fell on the patio while American War, the First World playing in the yard. Her injury War, the Second World War, and necessitated four sutures adminis-' the Korean Conflict. 3 tered by Dr. Richard Crompton. The mammoth American flag was ing room specialist. CUSHIONS PHONE 287-1133 [1 CENTER CONSOLE LIGHTS [1 TRIP ODOMETER [1 WINDSHIELD WASHER [0 MANY OTHER FEATURES Extra-cost options? ALL THIS BUICK — OPEL — RENAULT 588 MARKET ST., KINGSTON of [1 WILDCAT 443 V 8 ENGINE [0 AUTOMATIC TURBINE DRIVE TRANSMISSION [1 POWER STEERING [J POWER BRAKES [J BUCKET SEATS FRONT AND REAR [0] DUAL EXHAUST (J HEAT DEFROSTER (1 BACK-UP RIVIERA by Most of them come at no extra cost in the Riviera by Buick. Sure you can add a few things like power windows or air conditionng, but a Riviera is virtually complete as it is. Re- member this when you start to compare the Riviera’s price with some other cars that claim to be “Just like a Riviera, only cheaper.” Be sure to find out just how much of the equipment that’s standard in the Riviera will cost you extra in these other cars. We think you'll discover the Riviera is one of the year’s great car values. See It Now in A Choice Of Colors At COMMUNITY M [0 CUSTOM PADDED TOR! OPEN EVES. TIL 9 P.M. A new generation of small-fry! Its Dead On Memorial Day Top center, Main Street is jammed with parade, led by Al Camp and the Junior High ‘School band. makes last minute preparations at the Post home, origin of the cere- Simultaneously, cub scouts, seen just below, waiting (patiently ?) for the slightly delayed procession, swarm all over the field piece A big day for them, too. Ol Number 1, 1927 Mack engine, Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Com- pany, sporting a like-new mirror finish and an equally bright smile |Home-Town Atmosphere At Parade vo. ana 20s. Lous ene, s+ OT Memorial Day As Dallas Marches atone © 20a: {School Band playing “Oh Beautiful Rowett at the cemetery. ; but proudly wearing the blue satin | tude of all the United States. uniform; the noise to start. Parade marshal Paul Shaver Dallas and Kingston Township. final words. & shalled by their leaders; fire appa- ratus moving slowly past the ceme- tery, with a spurt of speed on the kle, and Dallas, and Shavertown, and Idetown and Trucksville, leav- ing the cemetery to the traditional exercises and ‘the final tribute to the borne along briskly by an entire new generation of High School girls, not one among them a participant in the first appearance of the flag | dead. five years ago. | Rev. George A. Prater, introduced Children who had swaggered | by Dick Staub, gave the prayer. about the cemetery on Memorial, James Post gave the address, tak- Day five years ago, formed orderly |ing as his topic “Salt of the Earth,” ranks and marched in procession, | and developing the theme that salt Den 1, Den 2, Den 3, impatient of | was indeed the seasoner, and that the antics of their younger brothers {it took community gatherings such and’ sisters. | as the Memorial Day observance, to bring 'out the true flavor of a com- Memorial Day . . . something very 8 special in the American scene, a munity. pledge to the future, with a nostal- | The band played under direction gic salute to the past. | of Al Camp las the gathering stood The flag at half-staff at the Honor uncovered for the National Anthem. Roll in central Dallas; Father Rich- Robert Wiley was the Echo for Taps ard Frank offering prayer; a Boy|both at the Honor Roll .and at and a Girl Scout laying a wreath of Woodlawn, Warren DeWitt the bug- remembrance; Dallas Junior High|ler at the Honor Roll, Thomas | for Spacious Skies;” the spine-ting- | Children flinched as the American ling Taps, and its echo (from the | Legion squad fired the volley. Par- parking lot at the Acme store); the | ents herded their young into cars, American Legion replacing its cam- cars meshed their gears and snailed paign caps and marching on, toward | out of the approaches to the ceme- Woodlawn Cemetery. | tery,’ and another Memorial Day in The Key Club Drill Team, with Dallas passed into history. newly admitted members separated | rh by blue and white clad girls from | Delaware has the lowest altitude the more experienced performers, |and Colorado has the highest alti- red and white twirlers; | sober green and brown and blue | “Caution is not cowardly, and and khaki clad youngsters, mar-| carelessness is not courage.” ayear per $100-on PERSONAL LOANS at the MINERS” | MINERS NATIONAL BANK | Main Street, Dallas, Pa. Member F.D.I.C. from driver Jim Wertman, was just as happy to wait quietly for all Bat it did a noble job leading fire companies Trucksville, Shavertown, Kunkle, and Idetown, and ambulances from Poppy girl, in the convertible with Mrs, Leonard Harvey and Mrs. Frank Harvey, is Cindy Lou Oncay. ; Friends and neighbors are seen at lower right corner, watching the parade pull up to the monument. Dallas, down past the mill, and up to Woodlawn Cemetery for the From there it wheeled through SECTION B — PAGE 1 Lands Two Big Ones 'On Holiday Weekend | ‘Albert Raph, 92 Tunkhannock Highway, had a disappointing day Friday, landing only a twenty-eight inch Lake trout. The day before, at the same end | of Harveys Lake, Warden Place, he | pulled in a twenty-nine inch Laker. | Quite a Memorial Day weekend. Asked what he does with all his | big fish, Mr. Raph, a mechanical | foreman at Natona Mills answered: | “I give them away. I don’t care for | fish.” {| He used a silver spoon, said to be pulling well these days, and a cop- per line to land the eleven pounders. He estimated a quarter hour's fight in each of them. | Mr, Raph once caught a thirty- six inch trout at Harveys Lake, and | has won Rod and Gun Club prizes | for his fish. { | | | Register Now For | Swimming Classes | Learn to Swim classes for young- sters between the ages of seven to fourteen will be held the week of | June 17 at the Central YMCA in { Wilkes-Barre. Instruction sessions will be spon- | sored by the Back Mountain YMCA. | All interested persons are asked to | make applications at the Shaver- | town building with Cliff King. Transportation will be by bus and | will leave the Back Mountain “Y”’ | at 3 p.m. daily throughout the week designated. A bus will also leave from the Elementary School in Dal- | las Borough simultaneously. | Group will be divided into two | classes with each receiving five one- | half hour classes. A fee to cover | transportation and minimum in- | struction fees will be made for each person registering. at - the Back Mountain Y, a member of the | United Fund. Kenneth Young will be in charge | of classes. Mr. Young, Physical Di- | rector at the “Y,” will be assisted | by his staff. At The Dallas Post Beautiful Letterheads Are Produced By Dallas Post Offset Your home will seem bigger eet it sp in Oe Bich, arses i ir Bott 0 masse Ps brass Poy Bp, A when | you store all those Fo Out-of-Season clothes at SE * Co Deluxe Hanging STORAGE | FOR YOUR WARDROBE Fur Trim Garments Included All garments SANITONE Dry Cleaned and put on hangers in our spacious 30,000 cubic foot COLD STOR- AGE VAULT on the premises. You pay only for insur- ance, plus cleaning charges. We furnish convenient hampers. SPECIAL! COLUMBIA I. ALBUM LIMITED EDITION 10 all-time favorites- memorable hits including: Laura, Tenderly, Stardust. A $3.98 Value Fe TT TER EA Collector's. 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