SECTION B — PAGE 8 ppm THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1964 | Edwardsville Rips L-Le Lake-Lehman narrowed the lead 3 ~ Bs M. Germak Scores 3 Touchdowns Mike Germak, Edwardsville full- | back, was just too much for Lake- Lehman to contain Saturday after- noon as he cracked over for three touchdowns to spark the Eagles to a lopsided 33-6 win over Lake- Lehman on the winners’ fielc ~ Germak’s scores came on a shirt plunge, a short pass and then he finished the day off with a brilliant 95 yard run in the closing mo- ments. He also ran for two extra points. Germak scored the first Edwards- ville TD in the opening period by plunging over, after a Reimiller-to- Swantkoski pass good for 30 yards put the Eagles in scoring position. The Eagles took a 13-0 lead early in the second period as a Reimiller- to-Swantkoski pass from the 10 was good. Germak plunged for the extra point. to 13-6 before half time as Mark McDermott and Marty Cipola com- { bined on a 45 yard scoring pass play. The PAT was blocked. Again in the third period Remil- | ier took to the air, and a pass to Deschak picked up gocd yardage to get inside the Lake-Lehman 10 where Reimiller hit Germak with a scoring pitch. He also plunged for the extra point. i Edwardsville put the game out of | reach in the final period as Berdy | raced 65 yards down the sidelines for a score, and later Germak | closed out the scoring with a 95 | yard gallop. Berdy then ran over | for the extra point. | Germak’s final score came after) ' Lake-Lehman had marched to the Eagles 5, only to be stopped. SHELL FIRE STARTER Keep empty shotgun shells in cold weather. Split down card- board four ways to make good fire starters. Ny =i | Garey EAGERLY WAITING gourds. “AND IT WILL KICK LIKE Dailas Harveys Lake Highway Butch i OUR HIGHLY SKILLED AND INTELLIGENT PERSONNEL ARE Come and see our large selection of Hallowe'en pumpkins from 1 to 100 pounds. Priced 10c to $2.50. Indian corn, Pure apple cider—mno preservative. Give it time | MERRILL THOMAS PRODUCE Sugar beets produce one-fourth os the sugar used in this country and is supplied by our own sugar-beet industry. Sugar was once a luxury, indulg- A in orly by wea'thy. Tail Jeff Pete TO SERVE YOU. A MULE ! Across from Natona Mills ? 7 STONE f HARRCO HO) ? WILDWE sf Copyright, 1963, Ethyl Corp. he \ ko By Edward Collier Atlantic City is still New Jersey’s mecca for convention- \ eers, beauty queens, sun wor- shippers, tourists. In the gilded “dens of the Old West it was . simply ‘Name your poison, Pardner”; here you are entreated . .to name your pleasure by every 4 device from barker to flashing #4 signs. The famous Boardwalk, ‘a phenomenon of beauties, blar- ing music, amusement parlors, ~ lobster houses and night clubs, & is backdropped with Gay 90’s- : type hotels, most of dubious architectural ancestry. A few years ago swank motels breached the barrier. The showplace Convention # Hall features everything from # the Miss America Pageant to industrial shows, ice hockey and & indoor football in late fall. Mo- © tels and billboards momentarily 4 part for the Race Course, but if £ you pause here seal off a goodly i portion of your wallet, for the # i § ; “goodies of Atlantic City have ’ optimistic price tags. The only i free things are the bracing sea air and kaleidoscope of brightly- clad tourists on the Boardwalk. Highlights of the Magic Circle route south along Ocean Drive are Margate City’s Elephant Hotel, a landmark since 1882; Ocean City’s unltramodern Tab- ernacle; Stone Harbor’s Bird Sanctuary where glasses have been installed in the parking area so that watchers can get a close-up view of the majestic Snowy Egrets; and Wildwood, marked by gaiety and bustle akin to Atlantic City. Before the turn of the century Cape May, on the southern tip of New Jersey, was a summer White House. The rambling, ‘genteel hotels have changed little since then. Visitors ‘can watch’ candlemakers at work in the Country Store, whose rooms more nearly resemble a curio museum. At Cape May Point is the excavated frame of the British Man-O-War Martin, part of the flotilla that ‘blockaded Delaware Bay in the War of 1812, The return is via the pas- toral Garden State Parkway. ; | Hills. hman 33-6 Mt. Carmel Sodality Has Wienie Roast Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Sodality held their annual wienie roast October 11 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Niezgoda, Lehman. + Present were Mary Ann Kuchem- ba, president; Joan Wesoloski, Carol Gutch, Gloria Sadowaski, Karen Klaiber, Tina Marie Mark, Edwin Niezgoda, Diane Lipka, Ann Klemunes, Jane Niezgoda, Patricia Kulakowski, Sue Ann Kubasik, Marie Klemunes, Pamela Piatt, Marsha Doagiallo, Pat Sadowski, Bonnie Janik, Marie Roginski, Terry Sadowski, Bell Comer, Linda Mar- chakitus, Kathleen Farber, Jo Ann Kulakowski, Games and refreshments were en- joyed by the girls. Begin Archery Classes Nine boys are enrolled in the ‘Archery Class which began at the Back Mountain Branch YMCA Oct- ober 15. Instructors are volunteers- ‘Caddie and Tim LaBar. Both young boys are students of state champion George Archery competition. Dallas Birthdays | Happy birthday to the following: | Dr. R. M. Bodycomb, Jean Fleming, | Rodger Brown, Mrs. Jacqulyn K. i Bowler, Charles Wisner, Joan Nel- | | son, Alberta Cross, J. Traver Nobel, John David Lohmann, Ronald Ray, al Mary “M. Kern; ‘Allen, ‘Malkemes, 14 Patrick A. ‘Wilson, "t| Charles Bettinson, John Malkemes, | Richard James Culp and Jack Mallin. “Si” «i Evans, Robin Lea Williams Mr. and Mrs. Robert A Williams, Northampton, ‘announce the birth in October of a daughter, Robin Lea; ‘weight six pounds, ten ounces. 8 | Robin has ‘a sister, Lori Ann, two {years old. i Ford Mrs. Williams is ‘the former Car- ol Hemenway, daughter. of Mr, and Mrs. Franklin Hemenway, Hayfield | Farm. Mr. Williams. is son: of Mr. and Mrs: Druid | Robert: Williams, 5 / £7 —— ee, The annual consumption of sugar lin the ‘United States is:100" pounds per ‘person. * And Aid To Phila Communications have been re- ceived by this paper in a form which includes a note attached to clippings from other publications, ‘ Philadelphia and New York. | The best we can do is paraphase for you. An RD 5 Shavertown man, J. K. | Murray, writes: “From all appear- ances every community has this problem.” Attached is an illustrat- ed story from Long Island's out- standing newspaper, “Newsday,” which shows that the island is dot- ted with sumps, which are a basic { necessity on the flat sandy surface, | to act as “recharge basins,” where water collects to seep into the ground. Otherwise there would be a small flood every time it rains. (Here, we are inclined to think of sumps only as primitive sewage disposal units, but on Long Island they are an ugly and unbiquitous necessity.) From Philadelphia From Philadelphia we hear from the former Helen Reynolds of Trucksville, Mrs. Jack F. Conrad, Flourtown, who tells work that she and her church have done to help negroes living in slums around North Philadelphia. Mrs. Conrad sent us her letter { with Philly newspaper clippings, as ' For the first time, questions about ‘3° - and '4-year-old children enrolled ‘in : nursery schools and kindergartens will be included in the Census Bureau's October Cur- rent Population Survey. Previous fall surveys gathered in- formation on the number of chil- age enrolled in school, but because of the great increase of children in schools below the first grade level, this - month's survey will cover persons 3 to 34 years. The school attendance questions will cover enrollment at each level of school and in each grade or year, as well as obtaining facts on young high school dropouts. Last year’s survey revealed that Half the teenagers ques- tioned in a recent survey op- posed free enterprise! To com- bat these attitudes, the Junior Achievement program teaghes teens the value of our system Wyo. Valley Art League Has Local Instructors Wyoming Valley Art League is offering a wide variety of lessons | this ‘season. Instruction has already | started for beginners and advanced students. Barbara Vivian is instructing in | charcoal work for beginners, Tues- | days from 10 to 12. Another local | instructor is Mrs. Thomas Long- | : { more, who has drawing and water | color painting Wednesdays, 10 to | 12. | Vincent Civiletti, whose pictures | : have appeared from time to time | in the Dallas Post, teaches por- traiture in oil Wednesday evenings | by letting them “set ‘up and run their own firms! A Smart Looking File Box Finished In Durable Vinyl 7:30 to 9:30. Now! Have a finger-tip record of spending! YOUR OWN PERSONAL CHECK FILE CASE ® Another new Miners National service for you. ® Vital for income tax records, ® Systematic method of filing cancelled checks. ® Holds up to 3 years supply of all size checks. ® Available at all Miners National Bank offices. Get Yours Now, While Supply Lasts NVIIRERS sommomms some OFFICES IN: Wilkes-Barre ® Nanticoke e Dallas @ Ashley Mountaintop Alember Federat Deposit Insurance Cogporation dren and adults 5 to 34 years of | PLUS TAX Communications To Post On Sumps delphia Negroes joesult of Leighton Scott's personal tour of the remains of riotland several issues ago. She says: “Mass hysteria is a very. sick thing, whether it involves racial prejudice or Beatles!” “For five years,” she continues, “our church worked with the Bere- an center on Diamond Street. We visited them there and invited them to picnics. Our young folk joined with theirs in many activities in- cluding camp. We helped send two boys and two girls to college.” Mrs. Conrad goes on to tell how, after a severe fire hit a negro neighborhood, the interdenomina- tional organization contributed a truckload of household goods, clothes, food, etc., with the help of city as well. On a picnic in the country, the negro children saw sheep and goats for the first time in their lives. .Now the Philadelphia Council of Churches has assigned the group to reactivate the Corinthian center across from Girard College (where | two Dallas boys dre attending this ‘ year), teaching sewing, and home | economics, and tutoring. Mrs. Conrad says: “What we do {is only a ‘drop in the bucket,’ but 'they refer to us as ‘their friends in Flourtown’.” October Census To Include ‘Three And Four Year Olds | 2.2 million boys and girls 5: seats old, or 54 percent of all children | this age, were enrolled in" kinder- | | garten; also, that about 520,000 | young people 14 to 24 years old had dropped out of high school some- | | time during ‘the 1962-63 *school | year. : : rs A number of families in the October survey also will be asked about their plans to purchase cars, houses, and major household appli- ances during the next few ‘months. Similar questions on consumer buy- ing intentions are included :in the survey four times a year. ih Sampie households will be inter- viewed locally and ‘in 356. other | selected areas of the country dur- | ing the week of October 18. in J. Philip Richards, former in- structor at Dallas ‘Junior High School, teaches oil and watercolor | painting Thursday mornings, 10 to 9 EE Membership in Wyoming ‘Valley Art League is open to the public. The studio is the former YWCA | building, next to Kirby Health Cen- ter. Brenda Jeanne Baker Mr. and Mrs. Homer Baker, Nox- en RD 1, announce the birth of their first child, a daughter, Sep- tember 23. Brenda Jeanne weighed in at seven pounds, eight ounces. Mrs. Baker is the former Rebec- ca Montross, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Montross, Noxen. | 1 (PENNY BRITE DoLL SHOP y : "i Features of A g Big Pool Table! i Reg. 6.00 _--'AS SEEN ON T.V. . 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