The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, October 03, 1963, Image 10

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    i SECTION B— PAGE?
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Mrs. Webster Returns
Biter Western Tour
Mrs. Nancy Webster, Carverton
Road, Trucksville, Mr. and Mrs. Her-
bert Webster and Herb Jr, Elma,
N. Y., have returned’ after making
an extensive tour of many of the
states.
They visited in California and its
many points of interest. Mrs. Web-
ster celebrated her birthday in the
Grand Canyon and her grandson
celebrated his ninth birthday in the
Red Wood Forest .
They went by the northern route
and returned by the.southern route,
covering 8400 miles and 18 states.
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THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1963
Rotary Exchange Student Forms
Lasting Friendship With Hosts
Two years ago Annabelle Ambrose
went to the Netherlands as a Rotary
Exchange Student. On her arrival
she was greeted by Attorney Jan
Bregman and his wife Wilhelmina
of Den Helder the Netherlands, who
were to be her hosts for the first
few months. The resultant friend-
ship was instrumental in bringing
the Bregmans to this country. They
are presently staying with Anna-
belle’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Francis
L. Ambrose, Dallas. :
At the Dallas Rotary meeting last
Thursday, Attorney Bregman spoke
on the life of a Dutch family during
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Flanked by Dallas Rotary President Myron Baker on the left, i
and Francis Ambrose on the right, Atty. Jan Bregman talks to ]
Rotarians about Occupied Netherlands, deplores the horrors of war.
the German occupation of the
Netherlands. Den Helder, the Dutch |
naval base, was a prime target for
German bombs. With one-third of
the town destroyed, the housing
problem became acute.
Attorney Bregman also described
the activities of the Dutch under-
ground and’ pointed out that many
Allied fliers were rescued and re-
turned to England.
Attorney Bregman
with these observations:
“With your Marshall plan we
were able to rebuild our country.
‘I'm proud that the Netherlands
was the first country to pay this
debt. : >
“I hope that neither we nor our
children and grandchildren are ever
obliged to go through a new world
war. Your soldiers know what war
is, but these who stayed at home,
cannot fully comprehend its hor-
rors.”
Attorney Bregman and his wife
will sail from New York, on the
concluded
‘companied by Den Mether Mrs. A.
Cub Scouts Tour Post
Nine Cub Scouts of Pack 281, ac-
D. Whitehead and two guardian
mothers, plus some smaller members
Dallas Post Tuesday afternoon under
convoy of Leighton R. Scott.
Linotype machine, proof press, El-
rod, composing stone, job press, off-
set press, newspaper press, cutter,
and folder, the cubsssaw them all.
Cubs were Gary Kostrobala, Tim-
othy Kaye, Peter Davies, Mike Davis,
Joseph Whalen, Doug Whitehead,
Jeff Hoover, Lee Brobst, and Drew
Taylor. Accompanying Mrs. White-
head was son James; with Mrs. Ted
Kostrobala, daughter Donna; with
Mrs. Harold Brobst, daughter Patti.
College Youths Are
Feted On Sunday
Seven young men were feted at a
party, recently before departing for
their respective colleges. Guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Wiliam Ross, Lake
Silkworth, where they enjoyed
swimming, motor boat riding, water
skiing and surfing, the group later
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
LaBar, Elizabeth Street, Dallas, at
a cookout that evening.
Enjoying the affair were: Robert
Taylor, Dallas, who will enter Uni-
versity. of Richmond, Va.; Richard
Disque II, Memorial Highway, Dallas,
who will enter Eckels College, Phil-
adelphia; Ben Rusiloski, Chase, who
will resume studies at Kings College;
David LaBar, Elizabeth street, Dallas,
who will return to Bloomsburg Col-
lege; John Landis, Idetown; Douglas
Trumbower, Sweet Valley and Rob-
ert Ross, Lake Silkworth, who are
enrolled at Penn State. :
'Other guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Disque Sr. and Mr. and Mrs.
Paul LaBar.
of the families, made the tour of the |.
Back Mountain Memorial Library
added almost one hundred books to
its shelves ‘during ‘the past month,
fifty-three in the non-fiction cate-
gory, twenty in adult and young
adult fiction, ‘twenty-six - juveniles,
according = to. announcement by
Marion Jones, acting librarian.
This listing does not include Book
Club acquisitions or Memory Books,
only those which. are placed upon
the shelves for public usage.
Non-fiction includes: Forgotten
Pioneer, by Harry Golden; John
Quincy Adams, by Lipsky; Dairy
Cattle by Ecklers; House Carpentry,
by Burbank; The Fire Next Time,
by Baldwin.
Seven books on the Mormen faith,
contributed by Mormon elders.
The I Hate to Cook-Book by Peg
Bracken, hilariously funny.
Canoe Races October 6,
Meshoppen-Tunkhannock
canoe race from
Meshoppen to Tunkhannock is
scheduled for Sunday, October 6,
taking off from Myo Beach at 1 p.m.
Official entry forms are available
from | Robert Stevens, Shadow
Brook, Tunkhannock RD 4.
The sixteen mile race ‘is divided
into three classes for adults, two
for children sixteen and under. Wo-
men and girls are welcome. Adult
classes include mixed tandem, dou-
ble blade kayaks and canoes, racing,
kayaks, fold boats; junior classes:
one-man double blade kayak or
canoe, tandem single blade.
Sky-diving exhibition at Sky-
haven Air Port before and after the
races.
Down-river
Westendam on October 24.
Dental Hygienist
Susan Kelly, Dallas, was one of a
group of Dental Hygenists who met
at the home of the president, Mrs.
{Barbara VonDoram at Bear Creek
recently.
SUBSCRIBE TO THE POST
DRAINAGE STONE
DIRT FILL
ASPHALT PAVING
Driveways
Parking Areas
CRUSHED STONE
“Meeting Pa. Dept. of
Highway Specifications.”
American
Asphalt Paving
Co.
696-1114
Plant and Quarry Chase
Receives Recognition
ANDREW J. DUDA
A former resident of Dallas, An-
the National Life Insurance Com-
pany’s country wide field force to
attend a two weeks session on life
insurance programming.
drew J. Duda has been chosen from
is one of ten agents selected by
his firm to take the intensive course.
He has been associated with Na-
tional Life’s James V. Covello gen-
.| eral agency in Philadelphia since
November, previously serving with
the Continental Assurance Company
in Bala Cynwyd.
The son of Mr. and Mrs. John
Duda, Pineview Avenue, Andrew
was born in Dallas, and graduated
from Westmoreland High School,
where he excelled in football,
basketball and baseball and was
active in other extra curricular
affairs.
He received his B. S. in Mortuary
Science from Temple University
where he played varsity basketball
and was prominent in student ac-
tivities. For several years he was
associated with Kirk-Nice Under-
takers, one of Philadelphia’s largest
firms.
Mr. Duda is a member of Our
Lady of Assumption R. C. Church,
Knights of Columbus, North Wayne
Protective Association, Wayne Lions
Club, Penna. Funeral Directors Asso-
| ciation, Chester Valley Golf and
Devon Swim Clubs. )
He is married to the former Elea-
nor A. Palma, Strafford. The couple
have two children, Lisa Ann, four
and son, Drew, aged two and a
Duda, who lives in Wayne, Pa.,
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
Local Library Adds Many Books
To Shelves During Past Summer
Leaders in Medicine, by Love; Ford
Decline and Rebirth, 1933-1962, by
Nevins; American Holidays, by, Kry-
the; The Mansions and the Shanties,
by Freyre; Higher Education and
the Federal Government.
They Fought Alone, Keats; Sixty
Days That Shock the West, by
Benoit-Mechan; Here Lies Virginia,
Hume. :
Handbooks: The Modern Skit and
Stunt Book by Deason; Retirement
by Buckley. '
The Growing Years, Coit; The
West Indies, Harman; Mammals,
Carrington; A Nation of Sheep, Led-
erer; The Wine is Bitter, Milton
Eisenhower; Animals of East Africa,
Spinage.
Henry James: Conquest of London
and The Middle Years, both by Leon
‘Edel.
Border Guard, Whitehead; The
Enterprising Americans, Chamber-
lain; The Great Hunger, Woodham
Smith; The Corrupt Judge, Borkin.
A Man, Called John, by Hatch.
The Living Sea, Cousteau.
Pegler, Angry Man of the Press,
by Pilat; Potomac Squire, by Thane;
The Lonely Voice, O'Connor; From
Turtle to Nautilus, Hoyt; Rogers and
Hammerstein, by Green; Profiles of
the Future, Clarke.
Molecules Today and Tomorrow,
Hyde; Profile of Kenya, Kenworthy;
Flights of the Astronauts, Shelton.
The Call of the Maneater, Ander-
son; Man against Storm, Harris.
So You Want to be a Physicist,
Mourse;” Your Future in Nursing,
McDonnell; Your Future as a [Secre-
tary, Noyes.
Automation, Bluemle; Young John
Kennedy, Schoor.
FICTION FOR ADULTS
AND
YOUNG ADULTS
Atlas Shrugged, by Rand; Bride
of Pendorric, Holt; The Horn, Hol-
mes; It's a Great World, Loring;
Rod’s Girl, Carr; The Traitor Queen
Faulkner; The Last Love, Costain;
When the Legends Die, Borland.
Something Borrowed, Something
Blue, Weber; Drums of April, Mer-
gendahl; Come to the Bower, Bryan;
Caravans, Michener; Grandmother
and the Priests, Caldwell; The None-
Lady Rick, Coker Tortoise by
Candlelight, Bawden; The Faraway
Lure, Behn; Key Out of Time, Nor-
ton; Castors Away, Burton; In Love
and War, Wilson.
JUVENILE BOOKS
John James Audubon, The Locked
Crowns, World of Their Own, Miran-
da and the Cat, Rolling Around,
Little Two and the Peach Tree,
Peter’s Pony, Buzzy Bear, You and
the World Around You, The Silent
Storm, The Bridge, Pony Girl
Gift of the Mountains, Snug in
the Snow, A Tiger Called Thomas,
Georgie and the Robbers, Roger Mor-
ris at Bat, The Door Into Summer,
The Fog Boat, Adventure on Suns)
Trail, A Child’s History of Art, Al
kin ‘the Morning Early, The Cloud
Eater, Mystery of the Hidden Hand,
Look to the Mountains, A White
half.
Heron.
’
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