i 8 i i g rr mame ® ? a RET RIREITTESR 13, T PTE NIT ERT TE % now ir wow uw 3 PAPE ER STAPLE ESR ES FE FERIREEDSN x E TTT XTERRF FER tra a erry Tt ¥ 32 FOES § } THRASH 131 weeks ago, but it had to be post- poned due to a cold, and was re- scheduled ‘continue 'to send cards and letters. -— 8 : SECTION B — PAGE 2 ~ Jackson Twp. Harry Ostrum, a patient at Flick | Saturday evening. State Hospital, Cresson, wishes to Manor, thank all who so kindly sent him | mens Jay rN cards on his birthday. Harry has | ween Mrs. Carl Jesse Mrs Vera been a patient for the past ten | ontes, Mrs. John Evans, Mrs months and was scheduled to | Evelyn’ Devens,” - Mrs Benjamin undergo a lung operation two | Spencer, Mrs. ‘Robert Hazeltine, Williams. for yesterday. Please | Thomas Gimble, Mrs. Ted Ellsworth, and Mrs. Hazel | Jackson Methodist Church held a | Fellowship Supper Saturday night Chase | with children of the church furnish- IN LUZERNE PLENTY OF FREE PARKING “solve the d When you have a room that's hard to heat . . . recreation room . . . nursery . . . attic . . . garage . . . closed-in porch . . . a Gas Space Heater will give you clean, quiet, dependable heat, automatically and economically. And there is a wide range of sizes and colors for any heating application, i GAS SPACE HEATER LIVE IN MORE COMFORT...' MORE CONVENIENCE... FOR LESS... WITH GAS Ask for literature and specifications! entertained the following !ing the entertainment. members of the Sapphire Class of Valley View Chapel at her home Mrs. Loretta Reakes entertained the following members of the Jackson Church W.S.C'S. at her home: Rev, and Mrs. Norman Tif- Irene Slater, Charlotte Ashton, Lu- cille Splitt, Elaine St. Clair. Plans for a Christmas Party December 12 were formulated. Naomi Murray, Scranton, visited with her parents Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Murray, Jackson, Sunday eve- ning. The death of the young boy killed at Mountaintop last week while awaiting the school bus points at the dangerous practice of some of our young boys on the lower Chase Road who persist in playing baseball and football on the highway, despite frequent speeding cars. They should use the playing field set aside for them by the late John Hewitt. Mr. and Mrs. William Conyngham are awaiting the arrival of their fficult heating problems.... automatically ! GAS BASEBOARD HEATER PENNSYLVANIA GAS and WATER Company fany, Mesdames Lena Roushey, Mary Ashton, Thelma Torwek,. Margaret Bonning, Esther Murray, Florence Smith, Crystal Smith, THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1963 daughter Jesse home from Madeira School for Girls, Greenway, Virgin- ia, and their son, Will, from Hotch- kiss School for . Boys, Lakeville, Conn., for Thanksgiving Holiday. Families of township boys in the service stationed overseas or at distant points in the U.S.A. can send them a recorded message for the holidays by contacting the Red Cross before December 2. | Huntsville Christian Church will {hold an election of officers on | December 27. Chief of Police Robert Cooper struck a buck which was crossing the highway near Slimak’s Servic Station Saturday night, bowling it over. After a short while the buck came to, and managed to take off after the herd of does he had been following. There have been three bucks killed on this road so far this year, Justice of the Peace R. J. Culp and Robert Snyder went turkey hunting on Saturday but had mo luck. A group of them will journey | to Culp’s cabin located in the Black: | Forest about 70 miles south of GAS WALL FURNACE . . er Se Gs RD as 5 Z a 0 a RE SS Ses 2 AS &; 3 THE LARGEST PUBLIC UTILITY WITH HEADQUARTERS IN NORTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIA — IN THE BACK MOUNTAIN — Telephone ENterprise 2-0668 TOLL FREE for information and service GAS ROOM HEATER Conyngham To Confer Breeder Awards Pennsylvania Holstein Associa- tion will celebrate its Golden Anni- versary at Host Motel, Lancaster, today and Friday. Speakers will be Maurice Goddard, ‘State Secre- tary of Forests and Waters; Le- land H, Bull, State Secretary of Agriculture; and Arthur S. Mor- gan, New Holland Sales Manager. Naticnal Holstein Director Wil- liam TL. Conyngham, Hillside Farms, will confer . breeder awards. Top quality ‘registered Holstein from United States and Canada will be sold November 23, in the Farm Building, a new feature of the meeting. Williamsport, where they will hunt turkeys and await the arrival of bear season on Monday, Novem- ber 25. Ricky Frantz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Frantz, a student at Hotch- kiss School for Boys, will spend the Thanksgiving Holiday with his par- ents. A five year service plaque is awarded by SAAB company officials to Dan Meeker, Kunkle Motors, at a general meeting of over 100 dealers in New Haven, Conn. re- cently. Several of these: awards were made to dealers who had ex- celled in sales. Meeting was to look over the Dan Meeker Gets Service Award | new line of cars, with an address | by a European champion rally driver { who has driven SAABs to many victories, including one in Africa where he drove three miles with an ape on his hood. Left to right: Phil Krantz, zone manager; Ralph Millet, president of SAAB Motors, Inc., and Dan, A surprise birthday party for Kathy Jo Dymond honoring her debut as a teenager, age 13, was held at her home November 15. Kathy is the youngest child of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dymond Jr., Orange, and incidentally, one of my 22 grandchildren. Guests were Linda Redmond, Jane Birnstock, Gail Dy- mond, Connie Sue Rozelle, Lizzie Sickler, Vicki Ditlow, Dale Rozelle, Buster Sickler, Sherril Kay Dymond, Teddy and parents. Infant Richard, son of Woody and Charlotte Redmond, is back home in Orange after being a surgical patient at Mercy Hospital. John Newberry, son-in-law of Lucy Morgan, continues to be a patient in aMrcy Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. William Baker, Bil- lie and Kevan, New Jersey, were weekend guests of Margarets mo- ther, Mrs. Ben Brace. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Brace, John- son City, visited Mrs. Ben Brace and Irene Moore last Tuesday. When they arrived home they found their daughter - in - law Mrs. John (Alta) Brace, my niece, had passed away suddenly ‘of a heart attack. She had been in good health. East Dallas Mrs. Raymond Carlin Jr., and Mrs. Helen Viehdorfer of Snowshoe were Saturday visitors of Myra Carlin. Mrs. Bert (Gladys) Brace is visr iting her daughter Barbara and fam- ily in Rockville, Maryland, and son Kenneth in Washington. A family dinner is planned there for Thanks- giving when Earl and Alice Brown and family; Louise and George Hess and sons expect to join in the fes- tivities. Many happy returns of their birthdays go to Lloyd Ryman, Gertrude Moore, Nancy Schmidle, John Philips, Carl Gries Jr., Jimmie Dale Hunter, Margaret Hislop, Mir- iam Morris, and Miriam Dymond. Anniversary greetings: Pauline and Arthur Magee. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pickett and family spent the weekend with Julia’s sister and family, Anna Can- zani, Paramus, New Jersey. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Cook visited friends in Binghamton on Sunday. Mr.- and Mrs. Fuller Dymond and family were guests of Mrs, Net- tie Mokychic last week. Mrs. Ful- ler is the former Dolores Martin. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Siley, Phil- She leaves a daughter Jeannine, married recently to Markus L. Smith, Johnson City. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Weaver, Tunk- hannock, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jones, Orange. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Souder and adelphia,” and Mr. and Mrs. Rus- SIGNS OF ALL KIND BUILT - PAINTED children, Old Bridge, New Jersey, were Sunday visitors of the latter's | parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Moss, | Upper Demunds Road. Lester's | health is slightly improved after a | severe illness. | Ernie Barber, son of Mr. and | Mrs. Irwin Barber, Demunds, left last week to live with his grand- mother in Ovid, New York, who was widowed recently and wanted him for company. Ernie enrolled in Central High School there® last week. Irivn, his oldest brother spent last week at home, but will return to Washington, D. C., where he has a position as an electrical engineer, and lives with his aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Stiles. They were also guests of her sister, Mrs. Barber, for the weekend. Another sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Jacque Bulkley, Harveys Lake com- pleted the guest list. hee AEE CERISE EDEN ETE OSRDEGEE Mad PEERS ® TRUCKS | WINDOWS DISPLAYS SHO-CARDS PAPER SIGNS | SIGN CLOTH SCOTCHLITE ART WORK SELINGO SIGNS, HUNTSVILLE | 674-8126 1 HENRY W. ® MUMS ° FLORIST WEST DALLAS 674-6616 CORSAGES ® CENTERPIECES GOODMAN "DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Noxen Mr. and Mrs. Charles Weaver and family entertained several members of ‘the Black Diamond C.B. Club on Sunday. They brought covered. dishes and enjoyed a picnic dinner in the yard and supper in the house. They put up sheet rock and panelling in the Weaver's new home, It was all very much ap- preciated, as they are anxious to get in their new home before win- | ter weather. Present were: Mrs. Elmer Banta Jr., Jeanette and Charles, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Simms, Nadine and Febeia, Don Reposh, Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Rolands, Robert Teetsel, Earl Mil- ler, Howard Lewis and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Weaver and family. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Breeze and Mrs. Philip Pfanco, Hazelton, visited at the home of Albert Casterline on Sunday. Mrs. Guy Fritz and son, Dave, re- cently visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sheehan, Allen- town. Mr. and Mrs. David Brobst and family, Lynn, Pa., were supper guests at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Carl Brobst on Satur- day evening. : Mr. and Mrs. William McGovern and family are moving into the house on Elizabeth Street, recently vacated by Warren Newell. Noxen Volunteer Fire Company was called to extinguish a chimney fire at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Patton, on Thursday night. Noxen Volunteer Fire Company was called out at 11 p.m. on Satur- day to extinguish a fire at the old Mallory Steele home on Harvey's Lake-Noxen road. The home was burned to the ground. Word was received by Mr. and Mrs. Harry Keiper ‘that their son Raymond of Bristol, underwent surgery at the Veteran’s Hospital at Coatesville, Pa.," on Friday. He is in building 59 A. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Richards spent two days, last week, at the home of Mrs. Lulu Stevenson, Newark, N. J. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jackson, Clark’s Summit, spent Thursday at the home of the Willard Benders. Mr. Willard Southworth, Mont- rose, was a weekend visitor at the heme of Nathan Straley. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mason, Endi- cott, spent the weekend with Mrs. Joseph Hackling. Mrs. Hackling celebrated her seventy ninth birth- day at the home of her daughter Mrs. Thomas Miller, Towanda, on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ruff and Mrs. Joseph Dotter visited at the home of Mrs. James Blizzard, Binghamton, on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Boone and Michele, = Eyers . Grove, Pa., spent ‘Sunday with the William Engelman family. sell Siley and grandaughter, Hazel Morgan, spent Sunday in Strouds- burg celebrating little Susie's first birthday. Strazdus, who was Geisinger Medical Center for the last few weeks, has returned to her noon. John Smith, Orange, still a pa- tient in Walter Reed Hospital, Washington, wrote this poem and dedicated it “To Mom.” Knowing Johnny from little up, I was really moved reading it. “ ” Guidance Sometimes I'm sad and lonely, and all my skies are gray; and everything I say or do brings heartaches all mv way. If 1 sit, sad and lonely and the atmosphere is blue, T search for things to give “Thanks” for, and I thank God I have you. When 1 cry and sorrow, and by no one am I heard; I reach for your last letter, drawing comfort from four words. I guess I count on you. Mom, in ten thousand different ways; and the strength I find in you, Mom, . has brought me through these days. I love you because you taught me to be thankful, when you say, Life’s lesson in these words Mom; ‘This too, shall pass away.” Love, John.” I hone his friends will continue to send him cards and letters as he has a long time to spend there. Mr. and Mrs. Byron Moore, Sr., and Mr. and Mrs. Byron Moore Jr. and Karen, Binghamton, were Sun- day visitors of Raymond Moore family and Irene Moore. A group of young couples under leadership of Don James, offered a songspiration, Sunday evehing in East Dallas Church. They came from Meshoppen and Skinners Eddy with messages in song which were enjoyed by the congregation. 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 » * I am happy to report that a | a patient in" home in East Dallas, Sunday afterdg ¥ 4 —