The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, November 26, 1963, Image 10

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~ T News Of The Churches A
DALLAS METHODIST CHURCH
Russell C. Lawry, Pastor
Sunday: Divine Worship. 8:30
and 11:00. :
Sunday School 9:45.
Senior M.Y.F. 6:30.
Intermediate M.Y.F. 6:30.
Monday: W.S.C.S. Executive Com-
mittee will meet at 2 p.m. Mrs.
Charles Hosler will preside.
Tuesday: Girl Scout Troop # 639
meets at 4. Board of Trustees will
meet at 7 with Mr. Peter Roushey
presiding, Official Board will: meet
at 8 with Mr. Arthur Miller presid-
ing.
Wednesday: Chancel Choir will
rehearse at 6:30; [Senior Choir will
rehearse at 8:00.
Thursday: Boy Scout Troop 281
meets at 7.
SHAVERTOWN METHODIST
Rev. Robert DeWitt Yost, Pastor
Sunday: 9:45 Church School with
Classes for all ages.
11:00 Nursery during Church for
pre-school children. -
11:00 Morning Worship Service—
First Sunday in Advent.
11:30 Junior Church in Chapel
Room.
6:00 M.Y.F. Snack and Fun Night |
in Social Rooms.
Monday: 1:00 W.S.C.S. Monthly
Meeting in Social Rooms with Pro-
gram in Sanctuary.
4:00 Brownies, Troop 633; 4:00
Brownies, Troop 629.
Tuesday: 4:00 Brownies, Troop
626, 4:00 Girl Scouts, Troop 632.
7:30 Boy Scouts, Troop 231.
Wednesday: 3:30 Girl Scouts,
Troop 631.
7:30 Pastor’s Bible Study Class in
Chapel Room. :
Thursday: 4:00 Junior Choir Re-
hearsal; 6:45 Youth Choir; 7:30
Senior Choir and Quartet.
TRINITY UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
Rev. Andrew Pillarella, Pastor
Thursday: 8:30 P.M. Choir Re-
GATE OF HEAVEN
Rev. Francis A. Kane, Pastor
Assistants; Rev. Richard J. Frank,
Rev. Michael Rafferty
Sunday Masses, 7:30, 9 and 11
Religious instruction for those
not attending parochial schools will
be given Sundays at Gate of Heaven
after the 9 o'clock Mass; at Our
Lady of Victory, after the 9:30
Mass.
OUR LADY OF VICTORY
Sunday Masses at 7:30 and 9:30.
OUR LADY OF MOUNT CARMEL
Rev. Frances Kolucki
Sunday Masses: 7 and 9 a.m. at
Lake Silkworth. Confessions Satur-
day 7 to 8. 2
At St. Martha's, Mass at 11.
ST. THERESE’S
Rev. John P. Walsh, Pastor
Rev. Francis T. Brennan, Assistant
Sunday Masses: 7:30; 8:45 and
10:45. : !
ST. FRANCES OF CABRINI
Rev. Stanley Kolucki
Sunday Masses at 7, 9 and 11 a.m.
HUNTSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Rev. Morgan Richard Bevan
Sunday services: Worship service
9:30 a.m.
Sunday School 10:30
Young People 7:30
Thursday at 7:30, prayer meeting.
DALLAS FREE METHODIST
Rev. James Randall
Sunday services: S.8 10 a. m;
Morning worship at 11; Youth
Service 7 p.m.; evening <vangel
[istic service 7:30.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
meeting
Praye:
CHURCH OF CHRIST
SWEET VALLEY
William Hughes, Minister
Sunday * services: Bible - School
10 a.m.; morning worship and com-
munion at 11.
hearsal home of the Pastor.
Sunday: 9:45 A.M. Church School.
11:00 A.M. Morning Worship with
church hour nursery provided. |
4:00 P.M. Jr. and Sr. Hi Fellow- |
ship.
7:00 P.M. Adult Fellowship.
ALDERSON METHODIST CHARGE
REV. FRED EISTER
ALDERSON: Sunday services: S.S.
10 a.m. Morning worship 11:15
MYF 5 p.m.
KUNKLE: Sunday services: S. s. |
10 a.m. Evening worship, 7:30 MYF |
at 5 p.m.
NOXEN: Sunday services: S. S. at
11. Morning worship at 10. MYF at
6:30.
RUGGLES: Sunday services: morn-
ing worship at 8:45. S. S. at 9:45.
MYF at 5:30.
LEHMAN-IDETOWN CHARGE
Rev. Norman Tiffany, Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES:
JACKSON — Worship Service 8:45
am. Sunday School 9:45 a.m.
IDETOWN — Worship Service 10
a.m. Sunday School 11 a.m.
LEHMAN — Worship Service 11:15
a.m. Sunday School 10 a.m. M.Y.F.
6 p.m.
TRUCKSVILLE FREE METHODIST
Rev. Grove Armstrong, Pastor
Sunday School 9:30.
Morning Worship 10:30.
Free Methodist Youth Round-|
table 7:00. :
Bible Studies for Soul Winners
at 7:00. :
Evening Service 7:30.
Wednesday— 7:00 Every Crea-
ture Crusade. :
SHAVERTOWN BIBLE CHURCH
Rev. R. W. Edmondson, Pastor
Sunday: Sunday School — 10:00
AM.
Morning Worship — 11:00 A.M.
Evening Evangelistic Service —
7:30 P.M.
Monday: Christian Boy’s Brigade
— 7:00 P.M. ;
Tuesday: Back Mountain Evening
Bible School — 7:30 P.M.
Wednesday: Ladies Prayer Meet-
ing — 1:30 P.M.
Pioneer Girl's — 7:00 P.M.
Thursday: Mid-Week Prayer and
Praise Service — 7:30 P. M.
REFORMATION LUTHERAN
HARVEYS LAKE
Rev. Wesley Kimm, Pastor
Sunday services:
The Service at 8:45 a.m.
Sunday School at 10 a.m.
- First Sundays at 3, Council meet-
ing.
Second Tuesdays, Ladies Society.
ST. LUKE’S, NOXEN
Rev. Wesley Kimm, Pastor
Sunday services:
Sunday School 10. a.m.
The Service at 11 a.m.
First Tuesdays, Sunday School
meeting.
Second Tuesday, Council.
Second Wednesday, Ladies So-
ciety.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF
LATTER-DAY SAINTS (Mormon) =
145 - Lehigh Street
Sunday: Sunday School 10 A.M.
Sacrament Service 11 A.M.
4 Tuesday: Young Men's and Young
Women’s Mutual Improvement ‘As-
' sociation. Chapel, 7:30 P.M. Ages
: 12-20.
Adult Gospel Study 7:30 P.M.
Primary Association Ages 4 - 11
6 p.m, Christian Endeavor.
7:30 Evening worship.
8:30 Senior Choir rehearsal.
Tuesday: prayer meeting and Bible
study, 7:30.
6:30
Third Fridays, 8 P.M. Christian
Comrades.
ST. PAUL’S LUTHERAN
Rev. Frederic H. Eidam, Pastor
THANKSGIVING DAY 8:30 A.M.
THANKSGIVING SERVICE.
9:30 AM. Sunday (School with
classés for all ages. } es
11:00 A.M. The Service with Holy
Communion. , Nursery for pre-
school children and ery room for
infants 2. to 4 Every Member Visita-
tion. .
6:00 P.M. Luther League.
7:30 P.M. Service of Holy Com-
munion.
Tuesday 8:00 P.M. Church Coun-
cil Meeting.
Wednesday .1:00 P.M. Christmas
Party’ of ‘Ladies’ Auxiliary.
Friday 4:15 P.M. Children’s Choir.
“Saturday 9:00 A.M. Confirmation
Class. :
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Sweet Valley
Rev. B. Kirby Jones
Sunday Services: Sunday School
at 10; morning worship at 11.
6:30 Young Adults.
6:30 Young People.
7:30 Evening Worship.
Thursday at 7:30, midweek
prayer service and Bible study.
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
Beaumont
Elder Roger H. Clausen
Saturday services: Sabbath School,
9:30; church services at 11 a. m.
THE TRUCKSVILLE METHODIST
CHURCH
Rev. Robert E. Germond, Pastor
Sunday, December 1st—9:30 and
11:00 A.M. Worship Services. The
| Sacrament of Holy Communion will
be observed at both services.
9:30 A.M. Church School. Classes
for all ages.
6:00 P.M. Junior High Fellowship.
6:30 P.M. Senior High M.Y.F.
Monday: 7:30 P.M. Commission on
Missions.
Tuesday: 9:00 AM. Quilters.
3:30 P.M. Girl Scouts.
Wednesday: 4:30 P.M. Wesleyan
Boys Choir. y
5:15 P.M. Wesleyan Girls Choir.
6:00 P. M. Aldersgate Choir.
7:00 P.M. Eastern Star meeting.
7:00 P.M. Boy Scouts.
8:00 P.M. Chancel Choir.
"8:00 P.M. Trustees Meeting at the
home of Dr. and Mrs. R. E. Cromp-
‘ton. :
Thursday:
7:00 P.M. Rainbow
“Girls. g
Friday: 7:30 P.M. Junior High
Fellowship Roller Skating Party.
Saturday: 8:00 P.M. Couples Club
Square Dance.
PRINCE OF PEACE EPISCOPAL
Rev. John S. Prater
Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. Holy Com-
munion. Pa
Friday: 2 ‘p.m. Junior Choir Re-
hearsal.
Sunday, 8 a.m., Holy Communion.
9:30 a.m., Holy Communion.
Family [Service and Church School.
11 .a.m., Holy Communion.
6 p.m., Episcopal Young Church-
men,
Would Have Been 75
On Thanksgiving Day
Mrs. Elizabeth J. Owens, Harris
Hill Road, would have been
seventy-five years old on’ Thanks-
giving Day. She died Thursday
morning at Nesbitt Hospital, where
she had been admitted to the medi-
cal service November 8.
Burial was in Mt. Greenwood
Cemetery Saturday afternoon, fol-
lowing services conducted by Rev.
Robert Germond, pastor of Trucks.
ville Methodist Church, from a
Forty-Fort funeral , home. Pall-
bearers were James Trebilcox,
Charles Lewis, Clifford Johnson,
William Williams, Fred Turner, and
‘Frank Billings.
Mrs. Owens, resident of this area
for the past forty years, had been
in failing health for several years.
Formerly active in W.S.CiS. at
Trucksville Methodist Church, she
had been obliged to forego most of
her activities. Her husband, Harry
E. Owens, mining engineer for the
Glen Alden Coal Company, died
February 21, 1961.
Ske was a native of Wilkes-Barre,
daughter of the late David W. and
Jane Lloyd James.
Surviving are: a daughter, Mrs.
Robert Stewart, Concinnati; a son
John L. assistant cashier at First
National | Bank, Wilkes-Barre; two
grandchildren; ga sister, Mrs. John
R. Morris, Wilkes-Barre; a brother,
Lloyd James, Wilkes-Barre. .
Evangelists Linebaugh
Bt Glenview Church
Dale and Opal Linebaugh, evan-
gelists will conduct a week of spec-
ial meetings in the Glenview P. M.
Church, corner of Terrace and Pop-
lar Streets, Fernbrook, starting -De-
cember 8 and continuing through
the. 15th. They will also have their
children, Melody Ann and Jona-
than. The Linebaughs are talented
musicians, directors of the Christ-
jan Youth Ranch at Spring Creek,
during July and August.
Each evening there
children’s meeting.
invited.
will be a
The public is
THE DALLAS POST, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1963
Table For Two
They are left alone in the dear old home,
After so many years,
When the house was full of frolic and fun,
Of childish laughter and tears.
They are left alone,
they two—once more
Beginning life over again,
Just as they did in the days of yore
Before they were nine or ten.
And the table is set for two these days;
The children went one by one
Away from home on their separate ways
When the childhood days were done.
How healthily hungry they used to be!
What romping
they used to do!
And mother—for weeping—can hardly see
To set the table for two. |
Ah, well—ah, well, tis the way of the world!
Children stay but a little while
And then into other scenes are whirled
Where other homes beguile;
But it matters not how far they roam
* Their hearts are fond and true,
And there's never a home like the dear old home
Where the table is set for two.
—A.E.K.
Out Of Context!
by Rev. Charles Gilbert
“Hide-away . . . Somewhere deep in the inner self of
most of us a secret voice whispers for a special place to
stretch out our spirits, and savor a round of quiet re-
flections.”
This was a carpet commercial!
It belongs in a spiritual context. We have to have
such a “hide-away,” a condition for our inarticulate souls.
Not a withdrawal from outer
realism, not a running away
from our-tangible-world.’ It is rather a banishment of the
falsities and sheer external preoccupations, and a welcom-
ing in of the eternal life of the deathless soul. And doing
it within our 24-hour days. A psalm writer long ago wrote
truth of it: ‘As a hart longs for flowing streams, so longs
my soul for thee, O God. My soul thirsts for God, for the
living God.”
It is doubtful if anyone can
lead another soul to such.
a place, but. many, driven by inner hankerings, have found
for themselves the way to eternal refreshment, they
“stretch out our spirits” while “lying down in green
pastures .
“He restoreth my soul.”
A carpet advertisement
Edward Line Was
Former Dallas Man
Edward Line, former resident of
Dallas, died aged "97 Thursday
morning at the home of his daugh-
ter, Mrs. Albert Walker at Valley
Stream, L. I. .
A former member of Dallas Meth-
odist Church, he was buried Satur-
day morning at Memorial Shrine.
following services conducted by the
pastor Rev. Russell: Lawry.
Retiring twenty - five years. ago
after a fifty year employment as
a telegraph operator for the Lehigh
Valley Railroad. He was the oldest
member of the: International Bro-
therhood of Railroad Telegraphers.
Born in Quakake, he lived in
Pittston * more than fifty years;
moved to Plains for two years, and
five years ago went to Long Island.
His wife, the former Bessie Stam-
bach, died five years ago.
Surviving are daughters: Mrs. |
Walker, L. I; Mrs. Joseph S. Rals- |
ton, Plains; Mrs. George Mullens,
Philadelphia; Mrs. Margaret Black- |
burn, Wilmington; Mrs. Mildred |
Johnston, Pittsburg; a son Gordon, |
Forida; twelve grandchildren and |
eighteen greatgrandchildren.
Duplicate Bridge
December 5 At Y
A special pre-holiday event spon-
sored by ‘the Back Mountain
Y.M.C.A. will be the Duplicate
Bridge Party on Thursday, Decem-
ber 5, beginning at 12:30 p.m.
sharp with coffee and desert.
Participants will have an oppor-
tunity to earn Master Points.
Events are being arranged by the
Back Mountain Y.M.C.As Bridge
. . beside the still waters” where each can ‘say,
in the context of the soul!
i
Instructor, Warren Seiple, well
known to Bridge enthusiasts in this
area. ing : .
Reservations must be made no
later than Wednesday, December 4
at the Back Mountain Y.M.C.A.
Every one is welcome. Small fee.
SUBSCRIBE TO THE POST
are you a
UNITARIAN or
UNIVERSALIST
without knowing it?
Do you believe man is not
condemned by - the- doctrine
of “original sin” but is
inherently capable of
improvement ?
Do you believe the striving
to live nobly and «eonstruc-
tively more’ important. than
the accepting of religious
creeds ?
Do you believe in the brother-
" hood of man, irrespective of
nation,’ race, or creed?
Do you believe the primary
responsibility for human
progress rests upon man ?
Then you are
professing the \
Unitarian Universalist
belief.
Send 10 cents for booklets on
Unitarianism and Universalism
to:
Unitarian Universalist Association
Fellowship Office
25 Beacon St., Boston 8, Mass.
so
Adore + 50
—yr—
WSCS Luncheon
A reading, “How Far Is It To
Bethlehem,” by Mrs. Robert Deeble
will highlight the Dessert Luncheon
of Shavertown Methodist Church,
‘WSCS Monday, December 2 at 1
pm. in the social rooms.
Directed prayer will be held in the
sanctuary at 12:45. Mrs, Clifford
Parker and her committee will be
in charge of luncheon.
Mrs. John Rogers will preside
during the serving of dessert.
2:
led by Mrs. Milton Evans.
Mrs. J. Traver Nobel will accom-
pany Mrs. Deeble on the organ, and
Mrs. George Schooley will be soloist.
Nursery will be in charge of Mrs.
Frederick Ross. 1
De-|
votions in the sanctuary will be |
CA CE Rh SS
Ralph J. Burkert
Rests At Oaklawn
Services for ‘Ralph J.’ Burkert,
54, Beech Street, Shavertown were
held Saturday ‘afternoon from a
Wilkes-Barre Funeral ‘Home with
Rev. Andrew Pillarelli ‘officiating.
Interment was in "Oaklawn: Ceme-
tery. :
Mr. Burkert died early Wednes-
day morning after he was rushed
to Nesbitt Hospital Tuesday evening
in the Kingston’ Township Am-
bulance.
In ill health for some time he
had returned home fror: University
of -Pennsylvania Hospital some
weeks ago and was then admitted
to Nesbitt. He had only been home
~ DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
AST a
“a short time before his death.
late Lewis and Bertha Schrode
Burkert, he graduated from Cough-
lin High School and was employed
as a printer with Llewellyn Brothers.
[He served in the Marine Corps as
a pressman in World War II and
was a member of United Presby-
terian Church, Dallas.
He had resided with his wife, the
former Agnes McAllister, in Shaver-
town for the past eighteen years,
In addition to his widow, he is
survived by a daughter, Elizabeth
Louise, at home; brothers, Fred,
Levittown; William E., Lehmgn;
Lewis, Kingston; Herman, Edwards-
ville; sisters, Mrs. Thomas Cum-
mings and Miss Gertrude Burkert,
both of Wilkes-Barre.
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@)
Born in Wilkes-Barre, son of the
-
RE Re
-