CTION B — PAGE 4 COINCIDENCE stast week Mr. and Mrs. Ralph |wgeltine and Louise were driving “ound our countryside, trying our road. They met Catherine ing the dog, and Louise recog- d her as a Kingston Township smate. So the car turned d, and Cathy and Tuffy ram ie, and the Hazeltines came on a porch for a visit. Cathy ped Louise around the gardens wt. I was telling Ralph a few ngs about our Dorothy, and he FL me of am ancestor of his who 5 the first woman missionary to to foreign parts. I said, “Let's would that be to China or i 3ia?” He said, ‘To Burma.” hh,” said I, “that must have been “Baptist missionary.” “Right”, ~ 1 he. Then I told him about one | the most interesting missicnary “aks I ever read, “The Splendour ~~ God”, which was about Adoni- © a Judson. “This was his wife!” ~ DALLAS POST ADVERTISER } Zes, we had in mind for some _ te to get a strip of foam rubber make a pad for our porch swing ich is of slats. Dallas Post ried an ad for foam rubber in sizes and shapes from the Bed- ¢ g Company, on South Main © eet, Wilkes-Barre. Sure enough v had just what we wanted. 5 some odd shaped pieces I nted for odd uses. We told the n, Mr. Brown, we ‘saw his ad in : Dallas Post.” He blessed our ye for mentioning the Dallas a Ee retire ryte ett israe Mt. Zion Hoover Reunion : The 51st Annual Reunion of the Danny and Annabelle Fitser from : ; Florida are visiting the Earls andj Boer family, wee held gf Benton tictids ronid about | Park, Benton, August 3, with forty- | Mrs. Russell Lewis had a letter { from Mrs, Isabel Hunt Creager of 744 E. Pine Hurst Ave. LaHabra, |! Cal., saying that her son Jobn is in the bagpipe band. She wanted Blanche to tell me about it on ac- count of my brother’s great delight in bagpipe music. Mrs. Creager is the former Isabel Hunt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sandel Hut, for- merly of Dallas. The Hunts have moved to a new address, 920 Salt’ Air Lane, Fall Brook, Cal. Their new home gives them more room and more freedom for their rock hound activities. ’ Incidentally I had a letter from Mrs. John Sedam, the former Shir- | ley Snyder, Orange, now at Marys- ville, saying that she and John are | amateur rock hounds, enjoying | that hobby very much. She and the Hunts should get acquainted. Dr, and Mrs. Lowell Lewis of California and their children Beth and Brad are spending this month visiting their home territory, Mt. Zion and West Pittston. { Peggy Thomas who was in and out of the hospital last week is back in Nesbitt for more tests. | Catherine has been asking: for names of favorite hymns for use six relatives and one visitor in at- tendance. Basket lunch was en- joyed at 12:30 p.m. Business meeting convened at 1:30 p.m. with Russell Hoover pre- siding. Mrs. Elmer Hoover led de- votions. Russell Hoover, president; Mrs. Elmer Hoover, vice president; Mrs. Russell Hoover, secretary; and Robert Hoover, treasurer, were re- tained for the coming year. The program consisted of recita- tions and singing. Games were en- joyed by both children and adults. Prizes were awarded to Robert Hoover, oldest man; Mrs. Helen | Crispell, oldest woman; Adele Hoov- | er, youngest child; Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hoover, married the longest period; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wan- del, married the shortest length of time; Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Hoover, largest family present. Four marriages, twelve births, and six deaths were reported. The 1964 reunion will be held the first Saturday of August at Benton Park. Present were: Outlet, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hoover, Robert Hoover, ! Mrs. Esther Weaver, Mrs. Leat Cris- pell, Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Hoover and Sandra; Dolores Kocher, Mrs. Rose Milbrodt, Mrs. Emmett Hoover, | Jean, Allan, Emmett, Bert, and FOR SALE Sawdust and Shavings FRED MEAD Tunkhannock, R. D. 5 .TE 6-7876 \ NEW LOW PRICES COAL VERY HARD, NO DIRT 1 LOW ASH CONTENT 4 HIGH IN HEAT . —100% GUARANTEED-— yTOVE & JUMBO NUT $16.50 EA 15.00 STOKER 14.00 In Two Ton Lots 1 Give us 3 days Notice i On Delivery : 674-5766 MILTON PERREGO in the hymn-sing 7:30 Sunday night | Adele, Joseph Milbrodt, Miss Al- August 18. She has received many | berta Milbrodt, Miss Joyce Hoover. requests and the congregation led | Lehman, Mrs. Elizabeth Milbrodt, by the choir will be able to sing at | and Tera, Mr. and Mrs. Corey least a stanza or two of byrne Hoover, Lois, Bette, and Cindy that are someone's favorites. Be-! Weaver. "sides this singing there will be | Harveys Lake, Mrs. Jennie Grey, some special numbers by the Youth Choir. This hymn-sing is to be 7:30 Sunday night. I went over to Joe Perry's the other day to get a new supply of honey. His wife Frieda took me to the honey building where Bill was extracting. He used a knife heated by steam to uncap the frames of honey. The wax fell into a vat where steam melted it. Melted wax was formed into cakes to be shipped to a candle factory. I always emjoy preaching in the Dallas church as I did last Sunday. i The Dallas people are always so friendly, and I like the worshipful ' atmosphere which the organist and singers help sto foster. ! CARVERTON | Mr. and Mrs. Layton Fish, David land Robert, Montoursville, are visiting Mrs. Fish’s parents Mr. and Mrs. Christian Ickinger, Carverton. Also Mrs. Hildegard Wolfe, visiting. Memory brings back to me the two ; dil] on FE 0 9 A NOTICE | little Ickinger girls of a few years : i ’ Dr. Donald E. Getz Announces that his office will not be open for two weeks, August 17 to August 31. CHIROPRACTOR » va mz FE ES | | Mrs. Amelia Anderson. | Shavertown, Mrs. Donald Nulton, | Lois and Timmy. Idetown. Mr. and Mrs. Flovd Hoover, ' Mrs. Ethel Spencer, Mr. jad Mrs. Elmer Hoover. | Noxen, Mrs. Robert Traver, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Kitchen and ‘Allen, Ji., Mrs. Helen Crispell. | Meeker, Mrs. Ernest Slocum and Ernie. Mehoopany, Genevieve Farr, ! visitor. ‘Reunion Saturday | * The annual reunion of the Cease | Lamoreaux families will be held | | Grove, Saturday at Rummage’s | Hunlock Creek. | Business meting will be held at 4 pm. Coolbaugh Reunion ‘Bug. 25, Tunkhannock The annual Coolbaugh reunion | of the descendants of Isaac wad Ruth Coolbaugh will be held at Roger Lane’s Convalescent Home Tunkhannock, August 25, Everyone | welcome, 0 go. ‘ | Mrs. Harry Reid of New Jersey | is visiting her mother, Mrs. Betty Scureman a few days. Mrs. Scure- Iman is spending some days in the hospital for surgery. Lois Honeywell, Carverton, ] EEENNENEEEESEEEEEEENEEENENNNEEENEEERNEEREEEEEEES The A.B.C. Symbol. = WED ah CyLnt Mrs. was a patient in General Hospital ! last week. : | ‘The right to purchase or refrain from J ’ THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1963 Warren Montross Head Of Family Descendants Descendants of Samuel, Norton, John and Elijah Montross, born and reared for the most part in the Back’ Mountain area, met for the 58th annual reunion at Irem Coun- try Club Picnic Grounds, Saturday, July: 21. »* : / This year family groups arrived promptly between 1:15 and 1:30, and began immediately to push the picnic tables together and set out the baskets. Missing from the usual crowd this year was our president of the past two years, Warren Montross, now undergoing tests and treatment for an affliction suffered during World War II. He has been shifted, and helped somewhat by many doctors at both Bronx Veterans Hospital and Wilkes-Barre Veterans, where he is presently admitted. He will probably return to the Bronx in the fall or winter months. Wesley Himmler, Dallas, was also missed. He was hospitalized at General, undergoing tests but ex- pected to return to daughter Alberta Oliver's home on July 23. We were thankful to have John Montross with us again, as in the past. He too has been ili, but is quite © well again with pills and a restricted diet to help him along. Helen Himmler Eggleston con- ducted the business meeting, min- utes of 1962 were read by Helen Williamson, secretary and treas- urer’s report by John Montross. Warren Montross was reelected president by unanimous vote, as we silently. prayed for his return to more normal health and the ability to serve next July. Helen Eggleston was reelected vice presi- dent and her daughter, Nancy purchasing this publication gives you, the reader, and no one else the power to pass judgment on whether it shall continue to survive. D This symbol It also serves as a constant guide to our readers’ opinion. The DALLAS POST Lehman Avenue Dallas, Pa. OR 4-5656 OR 4-7676 This symbol represents our membership in the Audit Bureau of Circula- tions, your assurance that our circulation facts are verified by independent audit, measured by recognized standards, and reported in standardized reports. These audited facts, available without obligation to interested persons, provide a factual basis for advertising rates, evidence of subscriber interest, facts on market coverage, and facts for appraising our circulation ’ quality and editorial vitality. / 7 HALLMARK OF CIRCULATION VA NST represents the standards by which your voluntary response is measured. It testifies to the advertising value of this publication. Dale And John Say It's Lucky \That Clouds Veiled The Depths { 7 x DALLA! , PENNSYLVANIA Fernbrook Sincere sympathy is extended the family of the late Mrs. Sarah Moss. gerd pags , “Daddy—quick! Give me a fast rundown on the international situation! I’ve got a date later with a fellow in the State Department!” | { Re-elected | Eggleston, secretary-treasurer. Helen { Williamson was givén a round of | applause for eight years of service as secretary. She felt it was time | for the younger generation to take over, and also the bus trip from Philadelphia is quite tiring. How- ever she expects to attend sessions as long as she is able. i Floyd Montross and Helen Wil- liamson ‘were asked to continue as historians, and showed their large scrapbook of pictures and clippings, depicting activities of young and older members of the Montross family. . The scrapbook makes a splendid addition to the Montross Family volume, published in 1958 by Drs. John and Eve Taylor. Helen Eggleston showed, slides of the European tour she and her hus- band took last October. As all loaded into their cars for the home- ward trip, everyone felt they had shared a happy time of fellowship, and voted to gather again next year at the same spot on July 22. Helen Williamson, Secretary. Home Calendar Food Brands — A manufacturer's . Museum. ‘| parks and historical buildings. More about the two wander- ers, Dale Mosier and ‘Jehn Parry, seeing Europe through the eyes of a Youth Hostel. They are on the way home now, having sailed August 11, ex- pecting to dock August 21. Dale writes: We are now in Munich with Peter burg. He married Sharon Hostel in time for dinner, for which Butler of Shavertown and is em- we were mighty thankful: Luksavage. ployed as ‘a GE technician here. | | Mrs. Moss was indeed a very good even We had luck and got a We got back to the Youth The town itself ‘was beautiful (it John had known both of them in seems like I am using this word all America; so that is how we made the time, but it is no exaggeration). | this connection. nice couple and have one baby girl. bright, cheerfully painted half-tim- ber houses. Many of the houses had Is she ever cute! They are a real There were many small streets with | Yesterday we visited the German large paintings on the sides or wood | many mines actual ‘methods), machines, planes, ' ships, physics, etc. I really learned a lot. Sharon and Pete were so wonderful to us that we were re- | luctant to leave Munich. We boarded a train for Vienna. It is a really beautiful city (on the same level as Paris), with many palaces, monuments, museums, | We tramped over the city for two solid | days, getting into museums, etc, | very cheaply because of our Rotary It was fantastic with so carvings along the rafterd, which | ; : (real life size, with added immensely to the picture. We Gilbert Harvey on the birth of a also saw a few Swiss cows walking along the street next to the river with their large bells swinging with their motion. | (To Be Continued) Your Blue Cross A new low cost Blue Cross bene- fit plan—the 30-day Co-Op Plan— is offered to non-group members of | the Blue Cross All Service 120-Day exchange student cards. All cul- ites : : | Co-Op and Regular Semi-Private tural activities have large reductions 2 | Plans, as an alternative to an ad- for students. We took the night ;istment in their present rates. train in, sleeping most of the Way | Higher rates for members of the in and out. for the Vienna Philharmonic sym-|gcptember 1 for monthly accounts phony orchestra, which we heard | So on y ; | 120-Day Co-Op and Regular Semi- | Before we left we bought tickets Private Plans will go into effect on the night of our departure, in the City Hall courtyard. The music was just about perfect as you can imag- ine. The next morning we were still travel'mg in the Austrian Alps and we got a good view of them in the area of Innsbruck and the stretch between Innsbruck and Gar- misch, We had a slow train so we had a lot of time to sit and enjoy | the scenery. ‘We stopped off at Garmisch-Part- kirchen and stayed in a youth hos- tel. We took a ‘train up the Zug- spitze, the highest mountain in Germany. At one pont we had to | go through a tunnel about four miles long. The train didn’t go all the way up to the top though. From the end of the tracks we took a cable car up to the top. While there we got the urge to do ‘a bit of mountain climbing. We climbed around the peak awhile] and then made an adventurous as- cent of the peak beside it. It was a good thing that it was so cloudy that we couldn’t see down because if we had we might have been scared even though they did have | stairs cut in the whole way. How, food brand, found in many different types of retail outlets, explains Harold Neigh, Penn State extension consumer economics specialist. = A retailer’s brand is his own private label and found only on food items ! in his store. Although both brands are advertised, a manufacturer's brand is likely to be advertised more often throughout the country. | So if you read about two American | mountain climbers being heroically rescued in the Swiss Alps you will know who it is. It really was a lot of fun, though, climbing about the peak looking out and over the wide ! valleys: or down at the clouds. It was also fairly cold on top and John and I had a good snowball fight. | Individual — * Clothes-Saving Tip—To keep the| We took the cable all the way shape of garments with sloped down the mountain this: time in- shoulder lines, hang on padded or | stead of taking the train. You con wooden contour hangers and ease | hardly notice that you are suspend- the shoulders into place, suggests 'ed about 100 feet above ground with Bernice Tharp, Penn State extension , 8 steel cable. It doesn’t rock at all clothing specialist. If you don’t as about 45 people travel at a time. have emough wooden hangers, tape: Here we were expecting a roller two wire hangers together. Bend | coaster ride. | to match the shoulder line of each |. The day before we had also been | garment. Button the garment as | traveling through the Alps. They you put it on a hanger. ; Reading to a Child—As you read ascend sharply and another there to a child, he's interested in the : are many high snow-capped ranges. | facts, but he also listens to the | The houses are typical with their: sound of words, reminds Mrs. Mar- | balconies, many flowers and im- maculateness. : guerite Duvall, Penn State exten- : : sion child development specialist. We both really fell in love with, Tn addition, he listens to the rhythm | the Alps. They were a relief for our | of the text and your voice, and he | eyes, especially after being in North. looks at the pictures. Storytime] ern Europe for a year. On the way : may give him a feeling of love and | down on the cable car you could get security and answer some of his| @ magnificent view. The peak had questions about how things work | a large lake at the bottom which and what people do on their jobs. | was a rich blue-green. Extra Calories — No single food When we got back down after is fattening. It's the extra calories | much ear popping and plugging we you get over and above your re-; found .that we had missed the 5:00 quirements that add the extra | o’clock train by 5 minutes. We knew weight, says Louise Hamilton, Penn : are magnificent. For cme thing they | and October 1 for quarterly ac- counts. Non-group members (persons un- able to join through a place of em- ployment but billed directly at their homes) who do not wish to pay these new rates may this new 30-Day Co-Op Plan. ~ transfer to | ' that we would be too late for dinner : pegs i) fiend) Shs milton at 6:30 at the Youth Hostel if we 2201 jisse y al who 7 § waited for the 6:00 o'clock train. So we decided to hitch hike though we had bought return tickets | ($5.00). | ride with two American girls, who had graduated from East Strouds- Adult Fellowship Group will meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fehlinger, East Dallas, Saturday evening at 7:45 P.M. for all those having birthdays and anniversaries in August. Sincere: sympathy is extended to ° Mr .and Mrs. David' Kitchen, De- munds Road, on the passiig of Mr, Kitchen’s mother, Mrs. Beulah Kit- chen, in Episcopal Hospital, Phila- delphia, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Williams and family of Hatfield have returned home after spending a week at Lake TeJa, Demunds. Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. daughter, Patricia Ann. Day Co-Op Plan, who do not wish to pay the new rates, to continue to enjoy the same kind of broad protection for a ‘shorter period— 30 days per year—at a considerably lower rate. Since mest members are hospitalized les than 30 days a year, this 30-Day Plan should prove adequate in most instances. It also gives Regular Semi-Private members who wish to increase their benefits the chance to do so. Semi- rivate members have limited cover- age of drugs, X-rays, maternity care, out-patient emergency care and out-patient minor, surgery. Under the 30-Day Co-Op Plan these services are ‘fully covered during the benefit period. Also, coverage of diagne=tic services in ‘the hospital out-patient department and a broader private room allowance are included in the new Plan. A Merit Rating study of non- group members of the 120-Day Co- Opwand Regular Semi-Private Plans shows that during the past 12 New monthly rates for All Serv- ice 120-Day Co-Op members are: $5.45; Parent and Child (ren) $8.15; Family — $12.60. Former rates were $4.45; $6.70 and $10.95, respectively. New monthly Regular Semi-Priv- ate Rates are: Individual — $4.60; Parent and Chil(ren) — $6.90 and, Family — $9.20. Former rates were: $3.95; $5.90, and $7.90, re- spectively. Monthly rates for the new 30- Day Co-Op Plan are: Individual— $4.40; Parent and Child (ren)— $6.60 and Family — $10.65. The new Plan Is patterned after the 120-Day Co-Op Plan which pro- vides full coverage of almost all hospital services the member re- quires. The only differences are: [ The 30-Day Co-Op Plan . provides (1) 30 days of benefits per year brand is a nationally advertised :ever, we decided to try it aga jn qtead of 120 days and (2) out- | when we reached the Swiss Alps. | patient diagnostic services are avail- able only in a hospital out-patient departr»zrit. To receive these bene- fits the member makes a Co-Op payment of $5 per day for each day hospitalized up to a maximum of 15 days during a 12-month period for all persons listed on the Agree- ment. i This new 30-Day Co-Op Plan serves a dual purpose. It enables members of the All Service 120- months non-group members paid $4,260,740 in membership dues to Blue Cross and received $4,969,358 for hospital care.” Blue Cross paid over $700,000 more for hospital care than was received in member- ship payments from non-group : members, an average payment of $1.17 for each $1.00 received. . “It should be pointed out that there is more to this than simply an adjustment in Blue Cross rates,” commented Mr. Bell. and quantity of hospital care and Blue Cross benefits are increasing. Hospitals are providing better care, and Blue Cross members are receiv- ing more benefits than ever before. As hospitals improve their services, their charges likewise increase. 674-5816 MONK Plbg. & Htg, N. Lehigh St. Shavertown, Pa. 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