1X ACERT DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA i» THREE POINT MENS SUPPER great deeds they did. Many of Last Saturday night the annual these were Masons. The commenta- Three-point Men's Supper drew tor was John R. Sands of Kingston from Carverton, Orange and Mt. who hag charge of the programs at Zion 63 men to the Mt. Zion church | Irem Temple and the Irem Country for an evening of good fellowship | Club. He was presented by Laroy and profitable entertainment along Ziegler. with a superb roast beef topped off SIGNS OF THE TIMES — with home-baked apple pie (made Cathy 4 dusting. hos mostly of apples from the Lewis RNY os; Teadiustmygc her house orchard). Women of the Mt. Zion chi™h served the meal to the entire satisfaction and applause of They ‘dot, not be tou fall. nor, too the crowd. Those attending were: seraddling, for we have to Hive hey Geo. Parrish, Charles H. Gilbert, too! The citrus plants. ges it every John R. Sands, Laroy Ziegler, Ern- year or they would be through the est Gay, Kenneth Hoover, Harold roof! How. ihe mahogany tree, Hoover, Kermit Sickler, David A. 870Wn from seed which Dottie Perry Jr., Elwood Lord, Malcolm B. brought from Southern, Rhodesia Baird, Raymond Rozelle, Geo. Hen- five years ago is sireiching up bat derson, Joseph J. Perry, Philip Reid, not top fash Jy Hn Nos planting 2] Wire HL. Perry, Bill Hughes, John make any zhogany furniture cf Parrish, Alek Cook Wm. Zrnmers it right Zway! But yer. So often it man, Howard Bory: Cornelius Has- casts, oll, Hs, leaves Jost like ony He, dos DiCostanede, John Lewis Fall trees and stands for awhile Jr, Jewell E. Miller, Arthur F.|!?7e and bony. Not for long. Then Brown, Herman Coon, Willard Piatt, a tiny bit of green tip shows and Donald Lewis, Jerry McDonald, Nzl- then the leaf pattern 2ppears again, son Y. Lewis, Malcolm G. Baird, Roy The Fuschia she brought in has W. Thomas, Ralph B. Vosburg, Ger- opened two new buds. They Tos eld Shafer, Thomas C. Lloyd, Rich- | 27d ‘me of my mother’s house ard Dymond, Edgar B. Sutton, plants for she always had Fuschias, Alden Earl, Bob Krum, Thomas W. Wany fo fnow what color Fuschias Earl, Ira J. Kivler, Thomas Miles, are?’ Fuschia color! Edward Miles, Roy J. Thomas, Har-| Mr. Metzgar came and measured old J. Harris, Henry E. Hess, Gary | three windowns of our “violet al- Earl; Larry Earl, Don Daniels, Billy | cove” for aluminum storm windows. Miles,” J. W. Perry, W. J. Bell, M. He said, “When you get these win- B. Mosteller, ‘Bert Coon, Harry | dows on you'll have to cut your Spare, * William R: Bowen; = Louis | Plants back for they will be grow- Bedford, Russell Lewis, Ben Daniels, | ing so much faster and bigger Charles Wasserott Jr., Donald Sear- | now!” z foss, ‘Charles Wasserott, William ANOTHER SUPPLY SUNDAY ® Last Sunday I supplied the pul- e program after supper con- | pits of Moosic and Avoca churches: sisted of a motion picture reel de- | Their pastor, Charles Gomer Jr. has picting great Americans and the been called to the Trucksville RR ree ~~ | White Church on the Hill. Again I found the organists and the laymen most helpful in guiding me in what to do and when and how. I was already acquainted with the Lay Leader at Avoca for I have seen him at laymen’s rallies, and some- times I have seen him with a yel- low helmet working with P.P.&L. men doing something to poles and wires. He helped do some of the church service for me at Avoca. | ROAD RESURFACING | |, How could there be a 7\more. appropriate gift? Our Mt. Zion church road has The just resurfaced from in front of Howard Krum’s to M OTHER'S RIN G® Mt. Zion church. That road has i needed this treatment for a long time. been thoroughly Twin bands of 14K gold symbolize Mother and Father — joined by lustrous synthetic stones of the month, a one for each child in the family. #7 She’ll cherish the Mother’s Ring forever VOLKS WAGEN New & “Used Cars and Trucks All Years and Models make them fit our living quarters. | because she’ll know you could give her nothing more individ- ual, more personal, more significant, THERE IS ONLY ONE ““MOTHER’S RING”. IT 1S so dis- tinctive, so unique, that it has been awarded U.S. Patent 186,183. Ask for it by name, confirm it by its iden- tifying tag. R.L. EYET X JEWELER 2° N. MEMORIAL HWY. * SHAVERTOWN, PA. FULLY GUARANTEED SALES PARTS SERVICE GOODWIN AUTO CO. 651 Wyoming Ave. Kingston, Pa. Corner Rt. 11 & 309 AUTHORIZED DEALER Call Coll. 288-6426 ingoil...an ® ELWAYS READY TO MEET ELL HEATING NEEDS Twenty-four hours a day, we're on call to supply you with heat- through the cold months ahead! HOME FUEL CORP. 324 DENNISON STREET SWOYERVILLE 287-1117 d will remain so all MOBILEEAT MOUNT ZION plants, trimming them with skill to | graph entitled “The Maronite Herit- | slides of our trip to show her. We ' background in Lebanon. i THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1965 EAST DALLAS Laymen's Speaker WHAT IS THE MARONITE CHURCH ? This is ‘the question I asked of Mrs. Margaret Spencer, the Day Care Center Director at Valley Crest. She is a devout Roman Catholic. She said she would find’ out for me. She wrote to her bish- op and recently received a Mono- age” by Louis J. Maloof, which she | passed on to me for which I am ' grateful. 1 gather from reading] this that the Maronite Church. had | : its origin or at least got its name | from Saint Maron (350-433) a holy | hermit in the land of Lebanon. . He | was known as a teacher of the pur- est Catholic faith and has been compared in the East to St. Pat- rick of the West, so that the book- let's subtitle is “In Defense of the Irish of the East”. The land called Phoenicia was ancient Lebanon and so it was the land of sailors, ship- builders; it was land Our Lord visited (Tyre and Sidon) and where ! He hedled the daughter of a Syro- | dent of Dallas Schools, will spea phoenician woman, a Lebonese. It at the worship service climaxing | was the land from which the fam- | United Church Men's Week, : at 7 ous Cedars of Lebanon came, and am. Sunday in Central Methodist which in one way or another is said | Church, Wilkes-Barre. Dr. Mellman to be mentioned in Scripture some | Serves as Assistant Lay Leader of | 140. times. | Shavertown Methodist Church. 7] Probably I will not remember gall | The annual. Laymen’s- Breakfast the wonderful details in this book Will follow the service. Reservations | but the next time I see reference to jay be made by calling the office a’ Maronite Church I will know it|©°f the Wyoming Valley Council of | is the Catholic Church with its Churches. { Rev. Howard Hartzell, Council | A LAYMAN IS A GUEST SPEAKER | Executive Secretary, and Rev. An- | | | DR. ROBERT MELLMAN Dr. Robert Mellman, Superinten- | Wa¥ to the top and back down the time and again complaints | : 3 . ! drew Pillarella, advisor to United | Wesl 2 . Lay i of ni I { Church Men, are both residents of | odist Conference and several times Dallas. has been a delegate to General Con- So OR Ta IE SE ference. On Layman’s Sunday Wes- ley was down in Philadelphia: as K { J N K L E the invited guest to be the Lay Speaker at Haven Memorial Church. | Mr. and Mrs. T. RB. Williams. East It is one of the largest Negro con- Fo Ae ; | regaions in Phisdephi Wo Onto NJ spent the weekend lev bowie had 3 wonderful time and | They glso visited Julia and Phillip | eC ure enjoyed him greatly. Kunkle. I wasn’t at church last Sunday at Mr. George Landon is a patient EMER a then at Wilkes-Barre General Hospital. 2 y : Toa j Ronald Hess, son of Mrs. Charles | goon ge = ine Job he Seaker Mitchell, enlisted in the dir force. | a ip ome poh: rn Si He left Thursday for Lackland | ig Be er Ta t a A. F. B.,, San Antonia, Texas. i a oo bdo what on Pvt. Robert Martin, Fort Gordon, | Pe it ie full of diversi Ga., is visiting his parents, Mr. and | : re "| Mrs. Ernest Martin for a few days. | fied activity. The smell of Fall was From here he will go to Dallas, in the air, plus a white frost on Toxins i the grass, which made the dahlias| _. . : : give up and faint dead away. They | woos of Runde Church wishes had been nobly beautiful as if they fo ¥ i al who warked at the intended going on to live forever. Formers Market last week, also | Then the frost. It hit the wild grape those who sent baked Sood : nl vines and the poison ivy leaves. Mr. and Mrs. Chay es . Mitchell The whole thing stirred our green entertained * dinner Wednesday thumb lady to get her plants under Might for their son, Ronnie; who | protective custody. And her father Was leaving for the service. Guests | to build over the cellar window Jrove! Mr. od Mrs. Arno Smith cold frame into something more and Miss Polly Carey. “How can our loved ones rest in peace’ ?, for this earthly body is so terribly neglected ? Interested persons have tery, Shavertown; away up on the| We top across from the soldiers plot. , Back in 1935-43, it was well kept They told us (which I had heard | iup. At the base of the steep hill | there used to be two single roads; old and worn out. | one to go up and the other to come down, “driving up” road has been com- | pletly over grown and closed. | Memorial day we had to pari the | car at the bottom and walk up; but the road was so bad — large rocks | and rolling ! | through the woods and found our k | same way. 1 RR durable: In fact I made the thing double glassed by putting one set of old window sashes on top of Kunkle Church is very fortunate to have such a faithful choir. whose beautiful singing adds so. much to when their resting place so muddy that the car skidded so | stopped at the caretakers home—another deplorable mess.— before) that all the machinery is A Mrs. Stein- heure is the sole owner; but right For the last few years the | now she is on her death bed. She was president, secretary, and treas- Last urer, when she was able and well. But the job hands which, I was told, are tied by Mayor Slattery. I have heard we cut him called “Slippery Slattery” and | stones, that is now in her son’s! try to do situation. This week I received a call invit- | can not get in touch with him. My ing me to drive over the terrible | attention was called to a lot of roads; the deep hole sand ruts were | soldier's markers, stilled boxed, ly- ing where they were delivered, for had to be taken to Wilkes-Barre to be disposed of, but “there were no funds to pay the haulers” — hence the awful looking piles. tainly are many prominent people e cer- who live close to the cemetery and have loved ones lying there; I won't mention their names; they should have pride enough to this “IF THE SHOE FITS, I HOPE YOU WEAR IT”. surely | The present caretakers told me this name seems to apply because | they have resigned and are going have | to move out. come in to the caretakers; but they | having courage enough to tackle Who will be next, SECTION B — PAGE 5 | that one or the other cemeteries in such a job? They said it was hoped the association, would take it over — as has happened in similar in- called me, to bring this situation badly that we were afraid to at- months — not placed. Piles of dead | stances. i again to the public eye. I wrote tempt the up grade ones. The grass ' flowers — baskets, etc. are all over | Several funeral directors have about it a year ago; then last year had not been cut and the graves the ones | complained but can do nothing Mrs. Anderson did the same. looked awful,” except for a few | taking care of their own lots have | 2bout it. My parents; a sister and nephew, which had been cut by relatives, | placed they How about some of you folks who are buried in this Evergreen Ceme- despite having ‘Perpetual Care’. were left there and they | are on familiar. terms with the Mayor; going to him and seeing if something can be done? IT THANK YOU, Signed Irene Moore, Your East Dallas news correspondent for the Dallas-Post. The Dymond Brothers did it again Miriam and Fred (Ted) Dy- mond Jr., drove to Harrisburg last Wednesday to receive a citation award from Governor Scranton, for the best equipped and best man- aged migrant living quarters. They were accompanied by Mary and Carl Sickler. They have been awarded this honor for the last few years. EXCLUSIVE FRANCHISED DEALER IN ‘THIS AREA FOR eywood- Wakefield AMERICA’S FINEST MAPLE FURNITURE the message that Rev. Eister brings to us each Sunday night. another set. Then Cathy finished the job of getting her bedroom walls ready to be papared. That meant platching paster (can you get your tongue to say it straight?) and subsequent sanding. A Trip To ‘Oakland Ruth’s sister lives in Oakland and we wanted to go and tell her about our visit with their father’s cousin the week before. So we went last Thursday, taking along some had taken of the oil painting of the Mt. Zion church before the painting went to the auction. And the view of Chestnut Street Philadelphia, both by day and by night from the 8th floor of the Sheraton Motor Inn | where our room was. Wierd! And | the various churches. ’ DALLAS READY-MIXED CONCRETE Phone 675-1155 got some nice pictures of the smil- ing cousin and his wife -- plus the |. Manx cat minus its steering mecha- nism, Manx cats aré made without tails. How they can stand it that way I don’t know. Dottie’s Siamese cats have tails which they can switch and wave while they yowl. Then we showed the pictures Cathy Papeete Lb LLL EL ELL ELL ELLE LEE LEE LEE E DEEL ELLE TT Graphic Arts Services INCORPORATED PHOTO-ENGRAVING Offset Negatives and Platemaking Sereen Prints, Art Work Phone 825 2978 Rear 29 North Main Street Wilkes-Barre, Pa. (AREER EEE ENN EEE EEE EEN ERE YasanasEwEEREREE EERE CECE EE a . = : Dr. Aaron S. Lisses : a Optometrist : : 38 Main Street, Dallas Professions! Spite : 1 Gateway Center : 674-4506 Edwardsville - £ DALLAS HOURS: 287.9735 g Tuesday - 2to8pm Girpwavy CENTER HOURS: B E Wednesday . 2t03pm. Daily 9:30 to 5:30 pm. E § Friday - 2 to 5 pm. 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