ly in trick~ presi- to his Barre ,. ['S SEER DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA ; Mormons To Stage Hill Cumorah Pageant At Palmyra Aug. 7 To 10 Two young missionaries of the Mormon Church assigned to this area who have been chosen to par- ticipate in the 1963 Hill Cumorah Pageant at Palmyra, N. Y., today issued a cordial invitation to resi- dents to attend the famous reli- gious spectacle. This years performance will be given at 9 PM. August 7, 8, 9, and 10. There is no charge for seating or parking, The missionaries are: Elder Jack Weyland ' from Billings, Montana and Elder Nick Baldwin from Blackfoot, Idaho, now both residing at 145 South Lehigh Street, Trucks- ville. \ Last year, whem two other mis- sionaries serving the area were in- cluded in the cast, the pageant drew such a crowd that seating facilities were exhausted. Viewers are advised to go early, to enjoy the hour of recorded mugic before each evening's presentation of the pageant. Around 100,000 people see the spectacle each year. It is presented on 25 different stages on the slopes of Hill Cumorah, each lighted in its turm as Hebraic, Grecian, Roman, and Aztec scenes follow each other in rapid sequence. More than 350 young men and women takes part. Spectacular use is made of colored lighting and veils of falling water, and the accompaniment of the world-famous Mormon Choir, Ta- bernacle Organ, and the Utah State Symphony Orchestra runs through | the entire performance. Violence of earthquakes and wars of extermination are a foil for scenes of early civilized life on this continent, and for the beautiful imagery of the virgin birth in Bethlehem. Each year since 1937, the pageant has expanded, growing in intensity as more and more facilities are added, and more and more mission- aries ‘and’ students take part. Mormon missionaries are for the most part young people, frequently college students, who consider it a privilege to serve their church at their own expemse. Their families consider it an honor, and provide for it in the family budget just as they do money for higher educa- tion, Elders Weyland and Baldwin will leave om Monday for the week of rehearsal at Palmyra, and the fol- lowing week of actual participation in the pageant, returning after a fruitful two weeks to their parish in Trucksville. Lehman Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Wright entertained recently Mrs. Edward Cook, Bethlehem, Marie Wright, Kingston, Claire McKenna, Joann Maloid and Debby, Idetown. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Wright, Mr. and Mrs. John Sidler, and eighteen boys went on an educational trip to Allentown to Lehigh Dairy, to Philadelphia to a produce market, | Lancaster Stock Yard, and a farm! to see how they grow and process tobacco. They left Tuesday morn- ing and returned Thursday evening. | Mrs. Alice Elstom is home after making a long visit with her son and family Mr, and Mrs. Walter Elston of North Carolina, who had a baby girl recently. Sally Eliza- beth. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hoover had the pleasure of entertaining their grandson, Keith Hoover, son of Dale and Jean, while they were on a trip to Washington D.C. They will spend the rest of their vaca- tiom with Dale’s parents in Lehman. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Worthing- ton, Allentown, visited their. mo- ther, Mrs. Stella Schuler, staying with the Cemnellys. é Mr, and Mrs. Ben Shipman and family, Spencerport, N. Y., visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Marks and family for the weekend. +. Mr. and. Mrs..Eddy Cilvik have a new son, Robert James, borm last week at General Hospital. This is their sixth child, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Middleton are back here on a vacation. They built a beautiful home in Braden- ton, Florida. They are staying at their cottage at Patterson Grove Camp Ground. Mrs. Middleton’s sister Mrs. Grover McNair, Wins- ton Salem, N. C., is staying with them. Mr. and Mrs. William Drabick and grandchildrem are home after a visit with their son Larry and family in North Carolina. Mrs. Elizabeth De Natly, Vallejo, Calif., left for Philadelphia and then to California by plane, after spending a couple of months with her sister Mrs. A. M. Major and family. = While: here they visited Pennsylvania Dutch country with Mr. and Mrs. Myron - Baker, also: made a trip to Cape Cod, Mass. Birthday best wishes: Lillie La- moreaux, Jay Ruckel, Madeline Adamchick, A. J. Rebar, Alvin Cragle, Gaylord Martin Jr., Howard Ehret, Robert Parsoms, Gilbert Tough, Naomi Nuss, George L, Rice, Florence M. Howell, William E. | Dallas Post. his wife and baby Amanda to his Sidler, Ralph C. Miers, Roger C. Miers, Norma Cutting. HARRY’S Trucksville Pharmacy has exciting new MN NORCROSS TRAVEL AND VACATION CARDS Give vacationers : o royal send-off! i ent Main Highway Trucksville Jay Farr Brings Wife And Daughter To Dallas Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Farr, White Birch Trailer Court, have as guests their son Jay, his wife, and the five weeks old daughter whose birth was announced recently in the A /fc Farr introduced parents upon his return from Eng- land last Wednesday, when the 1 Farrs met the little family at Mec- Guire AFB, took them to Spots- wood, N. J., to see Mr. and Mrs. Levo Kocher, and drove them to | Dallas on Saturday. Jean and the baby will stay with |the Farrs while Jay studies ‘the Minute Mam missile signal system in Denver for eight weeks, begin- ning August 5. Another Farr son, Larry, just about to be discharged from the Air Force, will bring his wife, the former Barbara Coomey, and year- old daughter Kim, back to Sweet Valley for a wisit with her parents and his, from Pope Air Force Base on Wednesday. The Farr family expects to stage the first get-to- gether in years before Jay goes to Colorado. John Miliauskas III Mr. ‘and. Mrs. John -Miliauskas, Jr., Harveys Lake, announce the birth of a son July 15, 1963, at General Hospital. John the Third, twenty one inches long, weighed in at eight pounds, nine ounces. This is the couple's first child. Mrs. Miliauskas is the former Dorothy Suschavage of Plymouth, Mr. Miliauskas is director of the Lake- Lehman Band. ’ THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JULY 25, 1963 Noxen Truckies Evacuate West Dallas Crash > 27 | 7 | | | As driver F. Warren Lausen, 46, Sacred Heart, Minnesota, re- moves personal belongings from the cab, co-driver Rollyn Olson, 22, Montivedeo, Minn., scrambles up the bank after ruefully examining the helpless carcass of their cross-country tractor-trailer, crashed at the intersection in West Dallas. At 6 a.m. Tuesday, as Olson slept in the back of the cab, Lausen piloted the truck up to the intersection of 118 and the Lake highway, eastbound, from Swift and Company, Minnesota, to Scranton. Unlike most drivers who have crashed at the corners, Lausen knew the road, was horrified to flip the trailer-brakes and get no response whatever. He ‘stood on the tractor brakes,” careened into empty westbound lane in front of Whitesell Brothers to attempt a swing south toward Dallas, then changed his mind because of the 5800 pounds of butter in the trailer. He continued across the fortunately empty Lake road, about 43 feet to the left of the center of the Lehman highway, missed hit- ting a utility pole by about three inches, and plunged part-way down the twenty foot embankment next to the Game Commission. His undercarriage caught on rock, tore part-way off, but stopped the truck. A few more feet to the left the ground was flat and level, where it has been filled. Four of the largest wreckers in the Valley were needed to pull the rig back out, in an operation which took till 3 that afternoon. Police chief Frank Lange, aided by assistant chief Bud Weaver, Noxen police, and state police, directed traffic. Neither driver suffered any notable injury. Area Holstein Cows Established Record Registered Holstein cows in this area have established mew produc- tion records. A special report from The Holstein-Friesian Association of America includes these recently completed official lactation sum- maries. Hillside Rag Apple Deirdre 3502931, a nine-year-old produced | Two Road Sections Pitted By Potholes Two pitted road sections are wreaking havoc with motorists, and are worthy of mention as forewarn- ing. Blow-outs and flying hub-caps have been occurring round the clock at the edge of the southbound lane on the highway just a few feet above Duke Isaacs’. The rut is worn in the shape of a tire, and George Isaacs | 16,609 lbs. milk and 737 lbs. butter- says he had quite a trophy-room of fat in 365 days. Hillside Onyx Jes- hub-caps which came flying through 'sie Of Oz 3846713, an eight-year- the night as motorists try to dodge Rosanne Of Oz 4028380, a six-year- barricades and fall into the hole. | old, had 16,768 lbs. milk and 694 The road in front of the Little lbs. butterfat in 315 days. All are League diamond, an extension of owned by Hillside Farms, Inc, Church Street, has necessitated, as Trucksville. one motorist observed, driving as if | According to the national Hol- jumping on a checkerboard, because | stein organization, the new produc- there are holes all over the place. |tion figures compare to an annual srr Bh" | output of 7,211 lbs. of milk and 270 Save On Your Printing Ibs. of butterfat by ‘the average Have It Done By THE POST |U. S. dairy cow. TY se i; oy countries and gs lich (RARE fk ft's also the only 4-wheel drive vehicle to give you 8 forward speeds, a choice of gas or diesel engines, and so many kinds of optional farm- ing, ranching, and construction equipment that you can specify a rig custom-built to your requirements mit gives you up to twice the payload (model for model) of other 4-wheel drive vehicles = It gives you a wider’ choice of body styles than other 4-wheel drive vehicles: open, closed, | and canvas-topped models; 7 and 10 passenger station wagons; pickup trucks; even a live-in Land-Rover Dormobile = It gives you 3 power take- © off points, a choice of two chassis lengths, and performance so de- pendable it's made Land-Rovers stand- ard equipment for the armies of 26 Kunkle Motors ALSO — Austin 850 - Sprite - 'Midget - MG - Austin Healy Land-Rover, the only 4-wheel drive vehicle with a body that can’t rust, rot or corrode. i 3 ROVER | the police forces of 37. DAN MEE KER, prop. 675- 1546 Bam cen ion on sm eu a we mn co cm ut to "do" ] a | Lewisburg, were entertained at a A evening. | the Poconos and his office is now | en, Timmy and Charles, Jr., Endi- | cott, | was discharged from the Air Force [at Mrs. William Reese and family, picnic supper at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Gunton, Sunday Roy Transue and Russell Transue, Wilkes-Barre, and Clara Anthony, Kingston, called on Stella Shook Doctor and Mrs. John H. Thomp- son have returned from a two weeks stay at Robin Hood Lake in open for business. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Nalbone, Gayle, ‘Susan and Joe, Jr., were on a sight-seeing tour of New York City over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Hubbard, Carbondale, called on Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wilson and the Lawrence Races on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Vancamp- N. Y., visited Mr. amd Mrs. Lawrence Race Sunday. Charles Seattle, Washington, Monday and arrived home Thursday. Miss Helen Williamson, Philadel- phia, former ‘teacher in Noxen school is a caller im town this week. She has many friends and relatives in this vicinity. Mrs. Lucy Gilmore is a guest at Maple Hill Rest Home, Lehman, since Wednesday. Guests at the home of Mrs. Samuel Arendt and family Satur- day were Mrs. Gladys Burroughs, Mrs. Gussie Milacei, Mrs. Leila Walker, Miss Charlotte Haas, and Mrs. Clara Totten, Trenton, N. J. Vicki Wikoski, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Wikoski, Abington, spent two weeks with her grand- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Schooley. Mrs. Samuel Arendt and daugh- ter ‘Esther, spent three days at Niagara Falls where they visited Mrs. Elias Pelar, Mrs. Mary Dens- more and families, Donald Dens- more spent two weeks with his grandmother, Mrs. Arendt. The following ladies attended a card party at Irem Country Club on Thursday afternoon: Mrs. Robert Timko, Mrs. Earl Crispell, Mrs. Robert May, Mrs. Elvin Bean, Ora Bean, Elizabeth Wilcox, Mrs, Ralph Lutes and Mrs. Jean Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Austin and sons, Longview, Texas, spent Satur- day with Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Dy- mond. Classmates of the Methodist Church held a covered dish picnic at the home of Mrs. William Mun- ketchy, on Friday evening. A de- licious lunch was enjoyed by the following: Mrs. Alpha Dymond, Mrs. Elida Beahm, Mrs. Albert Jones, Mrs. Fred Schenck, Mrs. Oscar Fish, Mrs.' Dorothy French, Mrs. Ruth Field, Mrs. Raymond Gunton, Miss Stella Shook, Mrs: William Butler, Miss Helen William- meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Albert Casterline. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Jackson went to Warwick, N. Y. on Saturday, where they visited Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Jones, Jr. and family. Marilyn Jackson returmed home with them after a visit with the Jones family. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Boone and Michele, Eyers Grove, Pa., visited her parents, the William Engel- mans, on Saturday. Bill Coole, Athens, Pa., spent the weekend at his home in Noxen. Noxen Lion’s Club held a picnic supper at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Osmand Casterline, on Wednesday evening, Present were: Mr. and Mrs. Willard Bender, Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Bean, Ora Bean, Mrs. Eliza- beth Wilcox, Mr. and Mrs. Harry. Walters, Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Bos- ton, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Fielding, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Timko, Mr. and Mrs. Arlie Harvey, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Z. Belles, Pastor Wesley Kimm, James Casterline and the host and hostess Mr. and Mrs. Os- mand Cagterline and their family. James Casterline, Buffalo, N. Y., spemt a week's vacation with the Osmand Casterline family, Mrs. Ruth Young, New York City, spent the weekend at the home of Mr. .and Mrs. John Newell and visited other relatives and friends in the area. Mrs. Thelma Williams and gon Kenneth Ayers, Tunkhannock, and son Willard Ayers, wife and daugh- ter, Minot, North Dakota were din- ner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Fish, on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schenck visited at the home of Mrs. Cleta Hahn, Moosic, on Thursday. Mrs, Elwood Patton and daugh- ter Mary are visiting David Patton, Chicago. Calvin Keiper, Oneonta, N. Y., is a guest at the home of Mrs. Elida Beahm for several days. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith and family are visiting her parents in Kansas, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Richards, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Schenck called om their sister, Mrs. Cleta Hahm, at Moosic. Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Bender and Sophia Hackling visited Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hackling, at Vestal, on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Richards are spending a few days with Mrs. Lulu Stevenson, Somerville, N. J. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Schenck and granddaughter, Iris Evams and Dawn K. Duelle from Westfield, Pa., were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Richards, this week. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Daubert and family, Allentown, spent the week- end at the home of the Robert Mays. 4 Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Bean and Ora Bean drove Mrs. Elizabeth Wilcox son, Miss Mariel Lutes. A busi- ness meeting was held and the next two week visit with Mrs. to her home in Binghamton after a Ora Bean and the Elvin Beans. Mrs. William Derhammer spent a week with her father, Morris Baines, at Lansing, Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Miner enter- tained the following guests at their home on Sunday: Mrs. Laverne Gary and son Richard, S. River, N.J., Mrs. Robert Waters, N. J., Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gunnis and daughter Larraine, Buffalo. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ruff spent Sunday with their son, Albert Jr., and family, at Baltimore, Md. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Vilasi and family, of Binghamton, are spend- ing a week with Mr. and Mrs. Jeddie Mac Millan. Shavertown Cub Pack Picnics At Acahela Cub Scout Pack No. 233 and their families, Shavertown, enjoyed a picnic supper and witnessed the Order of the Arrow at Camp Aca- hela, Thursday evening. Enjoying the affair were; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Precone, Mike, Joe and Roseann Precome; Steven Wolinski, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Silic, Steve Silic; Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Kriedler, Tommy, Kathy, Betsy and Carol; Mrs. Louis Spaciano, Mark, Larry and Cindy; Mrs. Leona Loveland, Mrs. James Morris, Jimmy Morris, Susie. Culver, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Covert and Kevin; Mrs. George Shaver; George, Tommy and Alan; Jimmy Gosart, Mr. and Mrs. Clay- ton Stetson, Neal; Kevin and Jill; Mr. and Mrs. Pat McGough, Jimmy and Jane Ann; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Voelker, Donald, David and Bar- bara; Eddie Friar. Local Boy Scout At Western Camp Marshall Rumbaugh, son of Dr. and Mrs. Marshall U. Rumbaugh, Dallas, is one of thirty three boy scouts to leave recently for Philmont Scout Ranch, New Mexico, where they will spend tem days. SECTION B — PAGE | | Bobcat Reported In Shavertown Tt may be a wild kitty, over- grown and hungry, but Mrs. Dana Campbell, William Street, Shaver: town, is sure it’s a bobcat. The nocturnal howling suggests the presence of a wild beast in the nearby community. The animal seen also by Mrs. Campbell's neigh. bors was reported as a very large cat, white with brown spots. The prowler who sets the Camp bell coon dogs to kicking up a fuss every evening, has been spotted in neighboring garbage cans occasion- ally and is suspected of snatching food set out for the dogs at supper | time. The large cat comes out of the wooded area across from the Camp bell home and thus far has ev: several hunters on the trail to bag the culprit. Forty-Nine Inch Rattler Strikes At Pony-Rider A forty-nine inch rattler whick struck at Sugar, the Library Auction pony, Tuesday afternoon near Loy. alville, was shot by Ray Klingerman when rider Larry Steltz yelled fox help. ! Larry loaded the dead rattle still quivering, into a paper sack. The Dallas Post Does Full Color EYES EXAMINED GLASSES FITTED CONTACT LENSES DR. I. BERGER OPTOMETRIST 27 Machell Ave. Dallas Phone 674-4921 PALL LIAALALALELELLELELELLATRARLERIRCRIIVINISINSNS Fresh Picked — Home Grown SWEET CORN TOMATOES MAZER'S FARM MARKET Located on Route 118, Lehman Highway Between Whitesell Bros. and Lehman Center About 1 Mile From Lake Highway LAC ACA AE AE AE SEE 0 SEA MACACA AAC ACA AOAC AAA J Aa BR ER RN NN NN RN NN NN NN NN EN NN wy OPEN EVERY DAY — (1 A.M. To 7:30 P. M. yd A ES NN NN SS SN NN NN NN SS NN SS SN NN NNN NAYS ATTENTION . For. all 509, DISCOUNT Women For all HIGH SCHOOL and COLLEGE students For the purchase of a Private Pilot Course in ADVANCE LEARN TO FLY NOW !! . For HUSBANDS and WIVES learning to fly together at the same time . 90% Discount to licensed pilots for the purchase of a block of time. . 20% DISCOUNT for anyone who does not meet the above qualifications. F. A. A. Certified Flight Instructors Sanderson Ground School Available For Further Information, Stop in or Call North East Aviation Skyhaven Airport Tunkhannock, Pa. TErrace 6-2171 CESSNA SALES & SERVICE i AUTHORIZED FACTORY DEALER
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers