SECTION A — PAGE 2 _ Dallas Chapter Eastern Star x i- i I STURARS B Tr AAS Sets 10th Auction Tenth Annual Auction of the Dal- | fered are a complete wash stand set las Chapter No. 396, Order of the | of eight pieces, two oak wash stands | tain area, Mr. Dymond is the son Eastern Star will be held at the|in excellent condition, wooden but-| of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dymond, Sr. Lehman Horse Show Grounds Sat- | ter bowls and molds, pewter and p,jlas, RD. He attended Franklin urday, July 30, at 11 a. m., with | glass caster set, birdseye maple bed- i Myron Baker, Robert Bachman, and | room pieces, and ironstone plates. The Art ‘and Hobby Committee | chaired by Mrs. Ida Allen has been most active with unique ideas to add redge; Worthy Patron, Mr. Dennis to the auction fund necessary to enlarge the coffers of the Building Dr. Jordan as jolly auctioneers. Helping on the block will be Worthy Matron, Mrs. Bina Hold- Bonning Jr.; Oce Beryl Austin, Hel- “en Crispell, Elizabeth Davies, Verna Cleona Fritz, Mildred How- | Davis,, ell, Jean Holcomb, Edna Johnson, Elsie Jolley, Bethia King, Mildred Lutes, Thelma Lamoreaux, Ann Jo- seph, Elma Price, Claire Troxell, and Evelyn Smith. Among the antiques to be of- Linda Marlene Heffner \ Mr. and Mrs. Zane Heffner, Coun- try Club Road, Dallas, announce the birth of a daughter, Linda Marlene on July 5 at Nesbitt Hospital. The newcomer weighed ii. at nine pounds, four ounces and joins two sisters and a brother, * Jeanne, Cathy and Ronnie.’ : Mother is the former Betty Lou Griffith of Huntingdon and Mr. Heffner is a native of McConnells- town, Pa. He is employed at the Correctional Institute at Chase. and Mrs. Howard Meade and Mr. daughters, Constance and Beverly, spent the holiday weekend with relatives and friends in the Back Mountain area. VISIT =. . Dr. Abe Finkelstein’s New Optometry Offices 466 BENNETT ST., LUZERNE For Your = i=: ve EYE EXAMINATIONS NEW FRAMES OPTICAL REPAIRS Located Over 56 Years 72 Main St. — Luzerne For Appointment Call 288-114% 287-1811 For July 30 Fund. {int Biithay Is Held At The G. Frantz Home | On July 3 a birthdoy dinner was | the junior class. The family ‘are | held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Frantz, Idetown, in honor of Stanley Scott's 17th birthday and | late Eugene | the birthday of the Hummell. A prayer was said for their father and grandfather who is sadly missed since passing away ten months. ago. Also. Mr. Glenn Frantz, Idetown, Lorraine Hummell, N. J., and Mrs.. Raymond Scott, Noxen, will observe birthdays this | waek so it was a joint affair Present were: Mrs. Carrie; Hum- | mell; Harveys Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Frantz, Glenn. Jr., Tdetown, | Mr. and Mrs. Raymond ‘Scott, Stan- ‘ | ley, Leroy, Judith, Larry, Janet, {and Alan, Noxen, Mr. and Mrs. | Loren Hummell, Lorraine, Linda, Lou Ann, New Jersey, Mr. .and Mrs. Frank = Hummell,’ Angela, Trucks- ville, ‘Mr. and Mrs. Ray Jones, Tra- | cey. Ray Jr., Noxen. |» The- children enjoyed: games and swimming in a pool. | rl TE da | Clase From The News Room |" The errand boy mislaid the letter | Which was to have accompanied a { manuscript addressed to - Harper Brothers. Filled with responsibility, he improvised: “Dear Mr. Hopper, | here ‘is a manuscrap, if you want it’ keep it and if you don’t want it | send it back ahd go to Hell.” | Subscribe to ‘he Post In the interest of your good health and good appearance this article which appeared in newspapers nationally* is reprinted by MAIN STREET UDDIES MEN'S SHOP LUZERNE “STOP KILLING YOURSELF” Abdominal Support Why do widows outnumber widowers? To the traditional team of work and worry, long branded the guilty pair, weight has been so strongly linked by science that diet- ing, once a woman's pastime, has become a male preoccupation. And now comes evidence that jt isn’t just the paunch, but the sag, that brings on the pallbearers — that the girdles that give the ladies their girlish figures may also be extending their lives. The idea that control under shorts, tightening the abdominal mus- cles and expanding the chest, im- prove not merely appearance but health isn’t exactly a new one. Long before modern drugs came on the market, doctors prescribed abdomi- nal belts for men with heart ailments. : But new research, reported in the Journal of the American Med- ical Association, tends to show that the new drugs may be no more ef- fective than the old-fashioned bélt— or the modern control shorts, Scripps Institute scientists found that *‘ap- plication of the belt previous to exercise reduced or prevented the abnormal postexercise increase in the amplitude of the A-wave of the apex cardiogram,” just as popularly-pre- scribed glyceryl trinitrate. How do control shorts help the heart? One famed medical writer, Dr. P. J. Steincrohn, writes that it helps the circulation of the blood, ~ and “thereby takes an unnecessary load off the heart. And when one multiplies this by the heartbeats which add up to a few billion in the wormal lifetime, one can understand how a simple abdominal support might add years to a man’s life.” Many doctors are suggesting the increasingly popular new types of men’s control shorts to their pa- tients, and finding back and breath- ing as well as circulation benefits. The most popular type, Mandate, “underwear that slims,” meets the Medical Journal's prescription of a belt “tightly applied to the abdomen in such a manner that it does not disturb the patient’s respiration or produce discomfort.” FOR LONGER LIFE— FEEL BETTER LOOK SLIMMER “LESSEN FATIGUE ~ MANDATE ~~ ABDOMINAL R UNDERSHORTS THAT §: SLIM Abdominal support ; aids circulation i o MANDATE! instantly takes 1 [& to 2 inches off your waist- line! ) o MANDATE! comfortably pro- B' vides vital masculine sup- § port, braces-up tired back muscles. o MANDATE! improves posture Hf « — lessens fatigue. : o MANDATE! travels well— N. quick washing, fast drying! ; only $ 59 5 * Reprinted by permission of Central Feature News, Inc. : -— a f == | NAME ] 1 i ) STREET. i I 1 ary. ZONE STATE i i STYLE circle i i ORDER BY SIZE circle one QUANTITY T SIZ circle one or bot! you desire i WAIST SIZE |circl both d I 1 S (30-34 i (30-39) SM BRIEF 12.343 1 I M (35-37) 678910 | i MLGEAD) | MLL J TINENTAL ; i 1 (41-43) Y BOXER 1.2345 bo XL (44- (as shown) 678910 | : i (44-46) i ! [J Charge to my acct.or [J C.O.D I. ) be . or enclose [J Check or I ! hands of the insurance company.” | evs THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1966 | Dallas School Board | i (Continued from 1 A) Dymond Brothers Tomato Growers | and Packers both here and in Homestead, Florida. Also a native of the Back Moun- | es | Township Schools and graduated | from West Pittston High School. He is married to the former Miriam | Moore, daughter “of Mrs. Irene Moore, East Dallas, a correspondant for the Dallas Post. There are five children, Fred III, a member of the | Marine Corps Reserves, who works | with his father, Mrs. Norman Weav- | er, State College; Timmy, a 1965 | graduate of Dallas High School; | Sherrill, a Dallas High School senior this year and Kathy, a member of | members of Centermoreland Meth- | odist Church. More Teachers Leave | The loss of six more teachers, | Edward Heltzel, Robert = Howells, | Kenneth Kirk, Mrs. Juanita Mec- Evoy, James Morgan and Lois Krommes led directors to question why so many of the faculty were leaving the district. Thomas ~ Jenkins, senior high school principal, to whom the ques- | tion was directed replied, “Salary. | We have lost’ cight teachers in the high school. When our salary schedule ‘wast good, we had plenty of good teachers applying for jobs | Now other districts are contacting our good teachers.” ; Harry Lefko reported the survey on the baseball field at the senior high will probably be done next | week. | | | . The following officers of the Dal- | The offer of Miners National las Women of Rotary were installed | ponding Secretary; Mrs. Stanley Ho-'| president. Absent when picture was | Bank to supply money at 3% was. recently at a joint meeting with the | zempa, President. Standing left to | taken was Mrs. Spencer Martin, Dallas Rotary Women Install New Officers For Coming Year & i urer; Mrs. John Konsavage, Corres- right are Mrs. Peter Arnaud, se- cond Vice-President; Mrs. Herman Otto, Recording Secretary; and Mrs. row up to $200,000 as needed dur-| Country Club. Seated left to right | | ing July and August. | are Mrs. James F. Besecker, Treas- | temporary professional employee. | pesire own Borings. | O0€EL Valley Robert Methot, representing Rou- | | said he did hos Ry company | spent the weekend at Wildwood, | engineer would go along on test yy jy > 3 Hig Barry Pahler with the airforce | ee Gh | in Texas finished his basic and has | r n testing. % ; > | to Kansas City, Mo., at the end of borings taken when the high school | his leave. oud ye Ta ¥ their hold an Ice Cream Social on July : 16 at the fire hal. chak and Earl Fritzges were ap- i] hold their festival this week- pointed to the advisory council of end at The lake rig fh ; s | nic will be held on July 23 at Ben- i or iler repairs went to 3 accepted. The beard voted to bor- | Dallas Rotary at the Irem Temple | | James Bamrick. was hired as a | : [ | | shey, Smith and Miller, architects,| Jessie Peiffer and Bobby Gross, | borings done previously since de- | i b h for the week. ill go | Mr. Richardson had suggested using “en homefor he wesh 310 will 01 was built. Methot said his company | Swet Valley Ladies Auxiliary will Jack LaBerge, Andrew Kozem-| 1.1c Silkworth Fire Company, the West Side Area Vocational Maple Grove Sunday School pic- | | ton Park. R. Monk at $785, to Harold Brobst, | Mrs. Ruth Ansteel and. Mrs, Ed- classroom lighting at $343.50, win Britt spent Thursday at Dan- plumbing repairs to R. Fitch & Sons , yife. for $975.50, Deluca’s Music Com- Thomas Petroski spent the week- pany for E flat Sousaphone at $385, | oid with his.mother. typewriter repairs: to Michael J.! Mrs. Caroline Ferrey spent Sun- Lewis at $5. Common and Co. for | & % ! : th Mr. Mrs. Albert Allen, roof insulation at $590, Kurtz Bros. | REE Tend Mos ory Alish for window shades at $456.10. |e Joinies, Stethrach Tom Flynn was awarded the con- | and family, Trenton, N.J., spent the tract on coal, being the lowest bid- | holiday weekend with their par- der and under the Federal program, | ents Mrs. Charles Steinruch and a TV Distribution Center contract| pn. and Mrs. Albert Ferrey. age on William, Guyette Mr. and Mis. Charles Hibler and : amily have returned home to| Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Dennis re- | Truth or Consequences, N. M., after ported they had received no settle- ten days visiting with Mrs. Hibler’s ment from the insurance COMPAany | parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Reben- on the school bus accident and were : : : nack, Meeker. She is the former without transportation which was Betty Rebennack. The Hiblers have a definite hardship. ! two sons, Allen Patrick, aged 10, Solicitor Jonathan Valentine said and John Michael, 8. Mr. Hibler’s it was the school board's respon- sister, Mrs. Geery accompanied sibility to see that the bus con- | them. tractor had proper insurance and, The Hiblers spent two days in| this had been done. Mr. Kozemchak | New York City sight-seeing and vis- | said, ‘‘Morally you are right, but | iting Mr. and Mrs. Ostrovsky; Mrs. | there are certain procedures we Ostrovsky is the former Marie Re- ! must follow. It is strictly in the | hennack. Marie Wright, Tunkhannock, and Mrs. Claire McKenna are on a trip to Chula Vista, California, where they are visiting Mr. and Mrs. James Hodge and family. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Vaughn, | Scaife, Blossburg, visited friends and relatives in the area on Sunday. When Mrs. Dennis said the school | busses were over-crowded, Mr. Ko-| zemchak said he had ridden the busses and found no overcrowding. He alsg read an extensive report on the accident. | Rev. Andrew Pillarella gave in- vocation. ° | ELSTON & GOULD Tire Service COOPER TIRE DISTRIBUTOR OUR TIRE SERVICE DEPARTMENT WILL BE OPEN THURSDAY NIGHT until 9:30 P. M. THANK YOU FOR YOUR PAST PATRONAGE ! RAY ELSTON Shavertown Group Has Theatre Party A group of Shavertown friends enjoyed a theatre party last Wernesday in the Poconos where they saw the stage play “Mary, Mary.” : Present in the group were Mrs. Ruth Houser, Mrs. Elsie Wolfe, Mrs. Florence Kast, Mrs. Ruth Shaver, Mrs. Frances Keller, Mrs.” Harold Ash, Miss Helen Bowser, Mrs. Bow- ser, Pittsburgh; Kay M.. Beishline; Conyngham Valley, and Claire Ann Hauck, Bloomsburg. They also enjoyed dinner in -the mountain resort area. Terri Lynn F ennell Mr. and Mrs. Bert Fennell, Ro- chester, N.Y., announce the birth of a daughter, Terri Lynn, on July 3, at Nesbitt Hospital. 7 The little one weighed seven pounds. ; Mother is the former Judy Row- lands, daughter of Mrs. Elizabeth Rowlands, Trucksville, and the late Mr. Rowlands. Mr. Fennell is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Fennell, Harveys Lake He is employed at Sears Roebuck in Rochester in at Purely Personal | Mrs. Anna Thomas, 35 Red Ledge | Drive, has returned home, after be- ing a medical patient at Nesbitt Hospital. ! Sharon and Maureen McElwee, | Harrisburg, are spending some time with their aunt, uncle and cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Yenason, Joe | Michael, Johnny and Pauline, Par-' rish Street. Mrs. Edna Stoughton, Eley Street, Kingston, former resident of Par- rish Street, Dallas, is a patient at | Nesbitt Hospital. Mr .and Mrs. Don Mitchell, Alli- con, Sally and Ted, Fairfax, Va., spent the weekend visiting the C. L. Hoslers, Parrish Street. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Malkemes, Fer- guson Avenue, recently visited their daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mahoney, Ronnie and Karen, blood and A. Yeust. Re H. R. McCartney, immediate past first Vice-President. photo by Kozemchak Ambulance Logbook Back Mountain Area Kingston Township July 6: Marie and Jessie Gordon, Mrs. Leonard Laskowski and Lorna to Nesbitt Hospital from accident scene. Carl Miers, Arnold Yeust and Harry Smith as crew. July 8::Helen Rowen, Highland Avenue, to Nesbitt Hospital. Walter Davis, Joseph Youngblood, Jack Lasher. July 11: Dewey Richards, Carver- ton Road, to Nesbitt Hospital. Youngblood and A. Yeust. ° July 12: Jacb Gabel, Chase, to Mercy Hospital. Youngblood and R. Shoemaker. July 13: Rhonda Schmig, Mt. Airy Road, to General Hospital. Young- Harveys Lake July 6: Crew was called to home of late Rinaldo Cappellini. John Stenger, Lee Zimmerman. July 9: James Oldfield and Ed- ward Hughey, motor cycle accident at Pole 169 to Nesbitt Hospital. Stenger and Fred Javer. July 10: Craig Bingham, Alder- son, to Nesbitt: Hospital. Stenger, Javer and Richard Williams. July 11: Mrs. Josephine Rushton, Sunset, -to Mercy Hospital. Stenger and Williams. Noxen : | July 6: Corey Schooley to Gen- | eral Hospital. Earl Crispell, Ronald | Hopfer, David Fritz. July 12: Nina Brown from Gener- | al Hospital to home. Elmer Race and D. Fritz. Syosset, Long Island, N.Y. | Mr. and Mrs. Victor Brown, Loyalville, had as recent guest, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Rowlands and sons; Stanley, Jr., John and daugh- ter, Linda, Nixon, N.J.; Mrs. Cora Dymond, Mr and Mrs. Edmund Cowan and daughter, Wendy, Dana and Robin, S. Plainfield, N.J. Mrs. Paul Walter, Carol and Thomas, have moved from Berlin, Conn., to Machell Avenue. Miss Nancy Brown, Washington, D.C. spent the holiday week-end with her family, Mr .and Mrs. Arja Brown and Bob, Ferguson Avenue. Jim and Bob, Mr .and Mrs. Fred B PRESCR EVANS DR 674-5587 . COMPOUNDED IN THE || STRICTEST CONFIDENCE ' “Prescription Pharmacy” —b IPTIONS UG STORE | sell DeRemer, Mr. | Fiske, Dallas; Miss Gail Lamoreaux, Branch = Methodist Branch, N. J. Mrs. Quick is the former Marion Church, Long McAllister, daughter of the late Mr. | Picnic Hosts Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bottoms, King Street, Dallas, entertained at a cook-out July 4 in their yard. Present were: Mr. and Mrs. Har- old Schooley, Judy and Bob, Rus- and Mrs. Gene Mrs. Naomi Pauling, Mr .and Mrs. David Mathers, Mrs. Nellie Wagner, Joseph Walton, Trucksville; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rogers, Debbie and Tracy, Fern- | brook, Tom. the host and hostess and twenty | Shavertown; | and ‘Mrs. Lewis McAllister, Syra- cuse, N. Y. Mr. Quick is -the son of Mrs. | Laura Quick, Syracuse He has been | transferred to Florida. There are three children: Judy, { Marcia and Charles, Jr. 3 Local Man Named ‘Manager By Firm Willliam Weber, Greenbelt, Ad., | formerly of Trucksville, has en named manager of the General Ac- | ceptance ‘Corporation office at Al- | exandria, Va. Mr. Weber is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Weber, Sweet Valley, R, D. 1. He is married to the former | Flora Sue Anderson, Shavertown. | | OFFSET PRINTING | Ann’s Apparel SUMMER SALE DRESSES Reg. - 9.98 To 14.98 z Reg. - 14.98 To. 17.98 9. AIR COOL sin PETITES Hr : 30 Jr's. 12% - 24% unto 15 S Kl RTS 95 15 Price Main St. Luzerne SUMMER CLOSEOUTS! LOWEST PRICES! SPECIAL BEDUCTIONS! ONEVERY APPLIANCE, STEREQ AND TV SET IN OUR G:£ LINE! FREEZER 16 Cu. Ft. TBF16CB No Cash Needed on GECC Plan! Yd Perfect for bedroom, or almost 7 gall $1399 SIANTONS INSTALL-IT-YOURSELF : thermostat. RP305A F The Buy of the Year--the Buy of a Lifetime STANTON’S TV and APPLIANCES ~ DALLAS SHOPPING CENTER G-E THINETTE ¢ Ss air-conditioning a modest-sized as a dehumidifier, as it removes ons of moisture per day, 5 position A at a: wi Y anit DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Mr. And Mrs. Charles Quick Mark 2th Wedding Anniversary July 9 Mr, and Mrs. Charles Quick, Har- veys lake, observed their fourth anniversary Saturday, July 9. | The couple were wed in the Long 113