ME I A SIAR some, 4 i ¥ 8 Re: FUER CRE Sn DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Apple Blossom Festival, Planned At Shenandoah On April 29th Invitation to the Shenandoah Ap- ple Blossom Festival's Grand Fea- ture parade, to take place at Win- | chester, Va., on April 29, have gone out to more than 250 prospective units in a dozen states, according to Robert N. Taylor, parade director. Invitation, accompanied by entry | blanks, have been sent to college, | high school and community bands, college and univwersity ROTC drill teams and honor guards, military academies, drum and bugle corps and other units and individuals in Maryland, Pennsylvania, North Car- olina, g'South Carolina, Alabama, Flori#™ Tennessee, Ohio, West. Vir- ginia, Delaware, Kentucky, Virginia, the District of Columbia and ‘Canada. First division of the 1:30 p. m. parade will be composed of more than 400 antique automobiles from 10 states. 7 More than 50 floats, carrying out the springtime theme and graced by scores of young ladiies, many of them beauty winners in their A PROMISE - IN ACTION Girl Scout Week March 6-12,1966 3 sis home localities, will highlight the 3% hour long spectacle. The floats will represent cities, towns, communities in Maryland, Virginia and West Virginiia, businesses in the three state area and civie, fra- | ternal, patriotic and social organiza- | tions of Winchester and the entire surrounding area.. Queen Shenan- doah and her court will be featured “on one of the floats and two floats will be adorned with the 34 Apple Blossom princesses, representing colleges and universities in Mary- land, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia and the District of Co- lumbia. A celebrity Grand Marshal, to be announced in the weeks to come, will command the procession. Ad- Grand Feature parade will be pro- vided by the Winchester Lions club which for the 23rd year, will supply more than 100 men to manage the springtime program’s top event. The 1966 Apple Blossom Festival will open on April 28 with the coronation of Queen Shenandoah 23rd, and the three-day program will end on April 30. Save On Your Printing Try The Dallas Post and | g THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 1966 Hopeful Anticipation Of Arrival Of Uniforms ministrative personnel for the, | Jackson Township Firemen hope- | | fully anticipate arrival of their uni- forms for the big game tonight with WARM. The Day May Be The day may be coming, and coming soon, when man will have greater control over the weather. He already has achieved some con- trol, although he doesn’t use it very often. ATLANTIC CITY FOR A PERMANENT FOX MANOR, HOTEL Facing Boardwalk and Ocean A friendly family hotel located in the finest section of this world resort SPECIAL RATES FOR RETIRED GUESTS Write for Literature and Family Rate Plan NEW JERSEY YEAR ROUND HOME « Left to right, their last names: | | Holodick, Balliet, Moskaluk, Jones, | Krupinski, and Havrilla. First names are written helpfully on the Coming - - - The National Academy of Sci- | ences and the National Science Foundation recently urged a far greater expenditure of federal mon- ey for weather research. They said this might make it possible: -- To nodify or steer, hurricanes away from populated regions. -- To suppress hurricanes before | they develop. To change the course and vio- lence of cyclones. -- To break up or prevent tor- | nadoes. -- To abolish persistent regional | sSmMogs. 3 | Man already can control the] weather to some extent. He can in- | crease rainfall from certain kinds | of clouds by mat least 10 percent. | He can auppress crop-damaging | | hailstorms to a certain degree. And | | he can reduce the number and | sheet. Particulars are available in the Jackson Township column, second section of this issue. danger of lightning bolts in thunder storms. Cloud seeding is the most com- mon method of weather control in | use today, according to World Book Encyclopedia. “An airplane may drop dry ice, salt particles, water asxray, or other | substances into a cloud in order to ‘seed’ it,” World Book explains, “or | silver iodide seeds may be released from the ground and carried into the cloud by the wind.” “If the conditions are favorable, | tiny droplets of water from the cloud collect around each ‘seed’ and fall to the earth as rain or snow. “Cloud seeding methods have also been used to get rid of fog and to prevent fruit trees and other crops from being damaged by wind and hail. By seeding the clouds before they reach an area with valuable crops, experts can sometimes re- duce the strength of a storm and save crops from harm,” the en- Dallas-Plymouth Tickets |HOME CALENDAR On Sale Now For Game _ Fitted Sheéts: Fitted bottom 7 | sheets with elastic sewn into the Adult tickets are on sale today and Friday until 1 p.m. for the Dal- las-Plymouth basketball game. The game will be held at the Scranton CYC Friday night at 8. Tickets can be picked up at the Dallas Senior High School, Town House, Suburban Restaurant, Evans Drug Store, Hall's Drug Store, or Trucksville Pharmacy. | TWO Dennis Ferry Is “~ngiarred To Vietnam CWO Dennis J. Ferry, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ferry, Huntsville Road, has been transferred to Viet- nam from Fort Benning, Georgia, where he completed training in the large helicopter field. Ferry had been at Fort Benning since transfer last August from Anchorage, Alaska, where he had spent fcur years. This coming July will mark the end of his eighteenth year in the gervice. | A younger son of the Ferrys, | Captain John Ferry, MD, is present- | | ly stationed at Pensacola, Florida, | { where he will graduate as a flight | | surgeon. | Both sons attended Dallas Bor- | | ough school, transferring to St. | Mary's for the high school years. | | John took premedical courses at | medical | | University of Scranton, studies at Creighton University in Nebraska. | cyclopedia continues. | Although the seeding process has been known for more than a dec- ade, it is not often used. For in- stance, no seeding was attempted during New York’s critical water shortage last sumer. Scientists hope to see greater use of the weather-control techniques we already have. They also hope that more money spent on research will lead to other and more effective ways of controlling weather. Mark Twain said, “Everybody talks about the weather, but no- body does anything about it.” | sprouting; corners wear longer than fitted sheets with nonelastic corners. In a series of tests, the American In- stitute of Laundering found sheets with elastic corners were used and washed for 52 weeks with no re- pair needed. The nonelastic sheet had to be repaired after 21 weeks of use. Vary Vegetables: Serve a variety | of properly cooked vegetables an chances are your family will enjov them. The vegetable flavor by itsel” is excellent, but sometimes you ma~ wish to vary the flavor. You ma serve vegetables with a sauce, ca» died or glazed, scalloped, au gratin buttered, or with buttered crumbs Keep Potatoes Cool and Dark: If you're throwing away the last few potatoes because they have sprouted or shriveled, find a new storage place. For best keeping and cooking quality, store them where the tem- perature is 45 to 50 degrees. Higher temperatures cause shriveling and lower ones cause ‘the starch to change to sugar. The basie- ment next to an outside wall may be just the right storage place. Mend to Cut Clothing Costs: You may not like to repair clothing, but | it pays off in better appearance and savings for the entire family. Now, as always, the stitch-in-time means fewer clothing replacements and | more money for other family needs. Use Pesticides Safely: Before you buy a pesticide, read the label, ad- ists. Make sure the label gives the directions and precautions for stor- ing, mixing, and applying the pesti- cide, and for disposing of unused material or the empty container. Invisible Stains: If you spill or- cool water, advises Mrs. Mae Bar- Bergman's invites its many friends and customers in Wyoming Valley the to join with them in their Golden Jubilee celebration! on Saturday afternoon. hand to assist you. new and exci Bergman's lovely models from College Misericordia will informally model vibrant new spring fashions, in- cluding the exciting sun tones, on Thurs- day evening from 7:00 to 8:30 and Bergman's fashion director, will be on ting for spring. Juanita Miller, Come, see what's Throughout its fifty years 'of growth in Wyoming Valley, Bergman's has kept pace with the needs of the fimes. Bergman's store at the Narrows Shopping Center is the most modern store in Wyoming Valley. It is spacious and airy. There is ample free parking for 1500 cars. Too, Bergman's is proud to be associated with Arkwright, Inc., market specialists and merchandise counselors for 125 fine stores in the United States. Bergman's has access to the best of the nationally advertised brands, plus the best of International Fashions. Bergman's is building, and will continue to build on the same guiding principles of quality, value and courteous service initiated by its founder in 1916. § Via ki Shop Bergman's Thursday and Friday from NOON to B:33: shep Saturday 10 to 3:23! Free spotlicht’'s on Bergman's... the fashion store in Wyoming Valley ALS vise. Penn State extension special- | name of the pest you want to kill. | After you buy a pesticide, read the | label before using. Follow all label | ange or grapefruit juice on a fab- | ric, sponge the spot at once with | specialist. A citrus fruit stain often | American Cancer Society. SECTION A — PAGE 5 In President's Club a 7 Charles W. Gordon Jr. of 3 East Franklin Strget, Shavertown, an agent for the Nationwide Insurance group, has earned membership in Nationwide’s exclusive President's Club. He won the honor for excel- lence in sales and service during the past year. Gordon will be recognized for his achievement at the eighth annual conference for President's Club members, at the Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island, Michigan, August 14-18. Nationwide President Bowman Doss will lead a delegation of top management to the five-day con- ference. President’s Club membership was earned this year by 40 of Nation- wide’s 5,700 agents. This is the first year that Gordon has qualified for the organization. | becomes invisible after it dries. /ith aging or if heat is applied, ! the stain turns yellow and is hard | to remove. About 75% had not and women in 1965. avoided if the patients | of these deaths could have been ton, Penn State extension clothing | smoked cigarettes, according to the parking for 1300 cars LN 3 Lung cancer killed 47,000 men ve oo — PEERS EAB BR ERE AR TE ERA REE A ERR EEE FR ED AE RE AAR ENE AEE NAA RS RE EAE EE AERA SEAT NEA SAS FE ERROR EN RRR R RRR AR ER ARR RI RRR RRA ERR RRS RA BER RAR BIRR HBO i AEE RATER RRB RENE RRR ER RRR RUN RRR E RRR RRR