The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, October 13, 1966, Image 10

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    SEC LON B=— PAGE 2
T Ne
CT. THERESE’
Rev. John P. Walsh, Pastor
Rev. Vincent Langin, assistant
Sunday Masse~~ 7:30; 8:45 and
0:45.
GATE OF HEAVEN
Rev. Francis A. Kane, Pastor
Assistant Pastors
Rev. John A. Bergamo
Rev. Thomas A. Flynn
Sunday Masses at 7:30, 9, and
a.m.
21
OUR LADY OF VICTORY
[undav- Masses at 7:30 and 9:30
and 11:15.
ST. FRANCES X. CABRINI
Rev. Stanley Kolucki
Sunday Masses, 7:30, 9 and 11
SHAVERTOWN BIBLE CHURCH
Rev. R. W. Edmondson, Pastor
Sunday — Sunday School—10:00
a.m.
Morning Worship — 11:00 a.m.
Evening Evangelistic Service —
7:30 p.m.
Wednesday—ILadies Prayer Meet-
ing — 1:30 p.m.
Pioneer Girl's — 7:00 p.m.
Young People’s — 7:00 p.m.
Thursday—Mid-Week Prayer and
Praise Service — 7:30 p.m.
GLENVIEW PM CHURCH
Rev. Andrew Derrick
Morning Worship 9:30 a.m.
‘Sunday School 10:35 a.m.
Teen Time 6:15 p.m.
Evening Service 7:00 p.m. i
Wednesday, Bible study & prayer;
7:30 p.m. .
Sunday morning broadcast
WNAK, 10:15.
EMMANUEL ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Harveys Lake
Rev. Forest Nelson
Sunday services: Sunday School
at 9:45; church service at 10:45.
Evangelistic service at 7:30.
Wednesday at 7:30, Bible Study
and prayer.
OUTLET
FREE METHODIST CHURCH
Kev. Donald Keller
Sunday: Church School 9:45 a. m.
Morning Worship at 11.
FMY 7:15 p. m.
Evening ‘Worship 7:45
Tuesday: 4 p. m. Christian Youth
Crusaders.
Wednesday: 7:45 p. m. Prayer
Meeting. :
LEHMAN-IDETOWN CHARGE
Rev. Winfield Kelley
JACKSON: Sunday worship 8:45;
§.S..9:45.
{(DETOWN: Sunday worship ‘at 10;
S.S. at 11; MYF at'7.
~ LEHMAN: Sunday worship at 11:15;
S.S at 10; MYF at 6.
Tuesday night at 8, Men's Class
at Lehman.
Saturday
Couvles Club.
WSCS tonight for Jackson mem-
bers, with Lena Roushey. Time, 7:30. !
at 8 p.m. Idetown
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST
Beaumont
Elder Roger H. Clausen
3aturday services: Sabbath School,
“30; church services at 11 a. m.
Noxen Independent Bible Church
Rev. Warren Hathaway, Pastor
Sunday, S S 10 ‘a.m.; Morning
Worship at 11.
Evening Worship 7:30.
Wednesday, Bible Service 7:45 p.m.
HUNTSVILLE METHODIST
Rev. Pershing Parker, Pastor
Sunday services: Morning worship
at 10; Sunday School at 11:10.
Nursery during church service.
MYF at 7 p.m.
Tuesday at 8,
Quilting, all day.
Second Thursdays, WSCS dinner
choir practice.
i ate
MAPLE GROVE METHODIST
CHARGE
Rev. Wm. Rosser, Pastor
MAPLE GROVE CHURCH:
Sunday services: Sunday School
at 9:45, Morning Worship at 11.
Tuesday: Junior Choir at 7,
Senior Choir at 8.
LOYALVILLE: Morning worship at
9:30, followed by Sunday School.
PARK NEIGHBORHOOD
FREE METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. Grove Armstrong, Pastor
Sunday: 8:35 a.m. Radio Program
WBAX. Sunday School 9:30; Morn-
ing Worship 10:30.
Sunday evening service at 7:15.
Wednesday 7:00 Family Prayer
Night.
There is a well staffed and equip-
ped Nursery for all regularly sched-
uled services.
CENTER MORELAND CHARGE
~ Rev. Howard E. Hockenbury
CENTER MORELAND: 10:00 a. m.
Church School; Worship, 11:15.
Official Board, First Mondays.
8:15 p. m.
DYMOND HOLLOW: 11:15 a. m.
Church Scheel; Worship 10:15.
Official Board, Third Mondays.
8:15 p. m.
EAST DALLAS: 10:15 a. m. Church
School; Worship 9:00 a. m.
Official Board fourth Mondays at
8:15.
COMMUNITY BIBLE CHURCH
Sweet Valley
Rev. B. Kirby Jones
Sunday Services: Cunday Schoo
¢ 10; morning worship at_11.
7:30 Evening Worship.
Choir practice Tuesday evenings
at 8.
Midweek Services Thursday, 7:30
p.m.
11:30 Sunday morning sermon on
WNAK.
Broadcasts: over WNAK: Year of
the Bible, weekdays, 1 to 1:30 p.m.
Poetry to live by, each evening at 6.
Unitarian-Universalist Fellowship
of Wyoming Valley
Services at Wilkes-Barre YM-YWCA
10:30 a.m. Sunday service and
Church School.
HUNTSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Rev. Richard Bevan, Pastor
Sunday services: Morning Wor-
ship, 9:30, S.S. 10:30; CYF and Chi
Rho, Sunday 6:30; Bible Study, Sun-
day 7:30 at home of Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Melvin.
Bible Study and Prayer, Thurs-
day 7:30. 3
Adult Choir, Monday. 7:00; Chan-
| cel Choir Saturday 2:00.
Teachers and Officers. 1st Mon-
day of each month; Offical ‘Board,
2nd Monday.
Christian Women’s Fellowship.
4th Tuesday; Christian Frienly
Circle, 3rd Tuesday.
Fellowship Dinner, 2nd Thursday,
September thru April.
PRINCE OF PEACE EPISCOPAL
Rev. John S. Prater, Pastor
Thursday, 4:15 Junior Choir Re-
hearsal.
7:30 p.m. Senior Choir Rehearsal.
Sunday, 7:45 a.m. Men’s Corpor-
Communion and breakfast.
Speaker will be Mr. Samuel Daven-
port, whose subject is his recent
trip to Russia. ;
9:30 a.m. Family Service and
Church School.
11 a.m. Morning Prayer.
6 p.m. Episcopal Young Church-
men.
Wednesday, 10 a.m. Meeting of
Episcopal Church Women in the
Parish House. Program will be about
the Wyoming Valley Council of
Churches.
MORMON CHURCH
Dallas Elementary School
Sunday services: Sunday School,
10 a.m.
Worship at 11.
DALLAS BAPTIST CHAPEL
Eastern Star Building, Foster St.
Rev. Tom Sibley, Pastor
Sunday School 9:45 a. m.
Morning Worship 11
Evening Worship 7:30
SHAVERTOWN METHODIST
served to public at noon. Study Rev. Robert DeWitt Yost, ' Pastor
group second Wednesdays, 7:30.
Two-fold Club, first Fridays at 8.
B. A. Class third Saturdays.
ling.
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN
Rev. Frederic H. Eidam, Pastor
Sunday Worship Services at 8:30
and 11 ‘a.m.
Sunday School at 9:30 a.m.
Sunday, 7:30 Men's Breakfast in |
i honor of Gary Kleppinger with pres-
C & U Club third Sunday eve-|
entation of Eagle Scout Award.
9:45 Church School with Classes
for all ages.
11:00 Nursery during Church for
Dedication of Hymnals and Mem-
pre-school children.
11:00 Morning Worship Service -
orials.
First Tuesday of the month:
Church Council meets at 8 a.m,
Second Tuesday:
at 8 p.m.
Fourth Tuesday: Men's Brother-
hood at 8 p.m.
First Wednesday:
ary at 1:30 p.m.
Thursday Evenings:
Rehearsal at 7:45 p.m.
Saturday Morning: Confirmation
Clas at 9 a.m.
Ladies Auxili-
Senior Choir
FIRST CHURCH CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
Sunday Services 11 a.m.
lh.rsery-11 a.m. — Sunday School
11 a.m.
~ Wednesday Evening Meeting 8
ym.
OFFSET PRINTING
Made To Your Design
Dorcas Society |
11:30 Junior Church in Chapel
, Room.
6:00 Junior M.Y.F. in. Social
Rooms.
6:00 Senior M.Y.F. in Social
Rooms. . Parents Night.
Monday, 4:00 Brownies, Troop
626.
7:30 Leadership Training School
at Wyoming Seminary.
:30 First Quarterly Conference in
Chapel Room.
Tueslay, 4:00 Girl Scouts, Troop
32; 4:00 Girl Scouts, Troop 633;
7:00 Boy Scouts, Troop 231.
Wednesday, 3:30 Girl
Troop 631.
Thursday, 4:00 Junior ‘Choir Re-
hearsal; 4:15 Youth Choir; 7:30
Senior Choir and Quartet.
Friday, 8:00 Keller Circle Meeting
in Social Rooms.
Scouts,
ws Of The Churches 4
CHURCH OF CHRIST
SWEET VALLEY
Rev. E. P. Murphy, Pastor
Sunday services: Sunday School
at 10, Morning Worship at 11.
Young People’s service 6:30 p.m.
Evening Worship at 7:30.
Choir practice at 8:30.
Tuesday: Prayer Meeting at 7:30
am.
DALLAS METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. Robert H. Sheehan. Pasior
Sunday, October
Worship
9:45 a. m. Church School with
classes for all ages.
11:00 a. m. Worship. Nursery for
children under 6 years of age!
during the 11 o'clock service. |
6:30 p. m. Youth Fellowship.
Monday: 7:30 p. m. Membership
and Evangelism Commission.
Tuesday: 7:30 p. m. Commission
on Beard of Education.
Wednesday: 6:30 p. 'm. Chancel
Choir rehearsal. {
7 p. m. Webelos
.8 p. m. Senior Choir rehearsal
8 p. m. Tea sponsored by the |
Durbin Class. :
Thursday: 7 p.m. Boy Scout Troop |
281. |
8 p. m. Brickel Class Meeting.
TRINITY UNITED PRESBYTERIAN |
Rev. Andrew Pillarella, Pastor
Sunday, 9:45 a.m. Church School |
and Nursery.
Nursery.
2:30 p.m.’ The Lackawanna Coun- |
cil of United Presbyterian Men, will |
ing at the First Presbyterian Church, |
will be Mr. Earl K. Larson, Jr.|
Executive Co-Ordinator for Exten- |
sion of the Ministry, National Coun- |
cil of Presbyterian Men, New York. |
4:00 p.m. Youth |
Fellowship. RE
7:30 p.m. Young Adults.
Monday, 7:30—9:30 p.m. Wyo- |
ming Valley Council of Churches
Leadership School at the Wyoming |
Seminary, Kingston.
Thursday, 8:00 p.m. Choir rehear-
sal.
Westminster
ALDERSON METHODIST CHARGE !
Rev. Fred Eister
ALDERSON: S.S. at 10, worship at
11:15.
MYF 6 p.m.
EVANS FALLS: S.S. at 10, worship
at"11:15,
KUNKLE: S.S. at 10 a.m.; worship
at 7:30.
NOXEN: Worship:at 10 am. 1.8.8.
at 11. ! 8
MYF 6 p.m.
RUGGLES: Worship 8:45. 8. S. 9:45.
TRUCKSVILLE METHODIST f
Rev. C. F. Gommer, Jr., Pastor
Sunday, Oct. 16: 9:30 and 11 a.m.
Worship Services. The Pastor will]
speak on “The Com mon People
heard Him gladly.”
9:30 a. m. Church School; 11 am.
Youth Department Church School. |
7 p.m. Senior M..Y. F.; 7. p. m.
Junior High M. Y. F. :
Monday: 8 p m. Workers’ Con-|
ference.
Tuesday: 9 a. m. Quilters.
4 p. m. Cadette Troop 634.
4 p. m. Girl Scout Troop T05. |
8 p. m. Dorothy Circle.
8 p. m. Friendship Class
‘Wednesday: 4:15 p. m. Wesleyan |
Boys; 5:15 p. m. Wesleyan Girls. |
“7:30 p. m. Chancel Choir.
CARVERTON METHODIST CHARGE
William Reid, Pastor
CARVERTON:
ciplined Life Read Hebrews 12:1-14.
10:00 - Sunday School.
ORANGE:
10:00 - Worship; 11:00 - Sunday
School.
MT. ZION:
10:00 - Sunday School;
Worship.
11:00 -
EASTERN ORTHODOX CHURCH
Rev. Gerald Sudick, Pastor
Church School 10:30.
Sunday service at 11:30 a. m.
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
MOORETOWN
Rev. Elmer Kipe, Pastor
hip at 11 a.m.
7:30. evening worship.
"Wednesday, 7:30, Bible Study.
Mt. Zion Harmony Club
Ruth Bowen, Mt. Zion, entertain-
ed Harmony Club recently, Mrs.
Ruth Derr co-hostess, Mrs. Mae
Race presided. ;
Prizes were won by Mrs. Ruth
Derr and Mrs. Gertrude Perry.
Next meeting will be at Mre. Nora
8 p. m. Circle 1 |
Every once in awhile, we
Church Bulletin.
This present excerpt seems
If a child lives with criticism,
he learns to condemn.
If a chlld lives with hostility,
| he learns to fight.
he learns to be apprehensive.
If a child lives with pity,
{ learns to feel sorry for himself.
If a child lives with jealousy,
he learns to feel guilty.
If a child lives with encourage-
| ment, he learns to be confident.
|
16: 8:30 a. m.
Communit
he
The newly formed Community !
| School of the Bible, meeting in the
recreation room of the Bittenbender
home on Machell Avenue last Mon-
day night, drew
twenty-five, among them Harry F.
Martin who expects to enter the
ministry.
He will teach practical Christianity |
Mr. Martin, Fernbrook, ‘has al-
ready supplied a number of pulpits
as a lay preacher, among them that
of Grace Presbyterian in Duryea;
the Independent Church of Noxen
which has recently attracted Jerry
Talent as: a preacher, following
resignation of Rev.” Warren Hatha-
way; Primitive Methodist in Fern-
brook, where the pistor is Rev.
Andrew Derrisk; Calvery = Bible
Chapel, off the Muhlenburg Road;
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship and | Second Congregational Welsh | will be offered later on. -
Church in Wilkes-Barre.
He has also worked as chaplain |
at Luzerne County Prison, and has
hold their 15th Annual Fall Meet- | been active in the Wayside Mission. |
During the last months of World
Wilkes-Barre. The keynote speaker War II, he was in training as a is the outcome of this plan.
Letter Of Gratitude
of his jump course. He graduated
with the Dallas Township class of
Dear Editor:
Will you kindly publish in your
weekly paper the following mes-
sage ?
It is with deep gratitude that we
most humbly accept any and all
kindnesses shown to us during our
recent loss of “husband and Dad,
{ John Lukacs.
We especially want to thank the
Bradley Gardens Rescue Squad who
responded so quickly to the call, so
efficiently gave emergency care, and
were so courteous to the family;
Rev. Harold Bassett who was so
faithful during the last week of
John’s illness:
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Bronson for |
their deep understanding and sym- |
pathy; Goodman Florist for their
usual geod work with the flowers:
the Hanover and Shickshinny Vet-
erans Post for the honors they gave
a stranger comrade from the fu-
neral home to the graveside, with a
solemn ceremony and Taps sounded
by Mr. Ted Meck during a downpour !
of rain.
Then last, but certainly not least.
2. thank-you to those in charge of
the Idetown Fire Hall, in which was
served a delightful meal made pos-
sible by my dear aunts,” wonderful
cousins. and friends who have love
and sympathy in their hearts for!
their fellowman.
With deep appreciation, we are:
The Lukacs family,
Esther, Maureen and Danny
Loyalville Hallowe'en
Party 0a October 22
A Hallowe'en masquerade party
| will be held at the Loyalville Meth-
Friiday: 7:30 p. m. First Quarterly | odist Church House Saturday, Oc: |
Conference. | tober 22 ‘at 7:30 p. m. The march
| for prizes will be at 8 p. m.
There will be games, contests,
cake walk and other activities,
| Everyone is welcome. Refreshments '
| will be sold.
9:00 - Worship - Topic: The Dis- |
Shavertown W.S.C.S.
Meets For Luncheon
| W.S. C. S. of Shavertown Meth-
| odist Church held a luncheon
| meeting in the social rooms Mon-
day, October 3 with fifty-nine
| present,
Devotions were
Thomas Reese. Speaker of the eve-
| ning was Mrs. Ralph Beard who
| talked on the “Need of Helping
| People to Help Themselves’,
There will be a continuous prayer
vigil on October 28 from 7:30 a. m.
| to 7:30 p. m.
The Society will sponsor a roast
beef supper on October 26 from 5
led bv Mrs.
Sunday services: S. S. at 10, wor- | until 7 p. m. There will be a study |'®
course on child affluence ‘and
| poverty held at the church Sunday
| November 6 and 13 at 5:30 p. m.
{ Next meeting will be held on
| Monday, November 7. Members are
{urged to jot down the change in
date.
: Dymond’s, October 20th.
| Others present were Mesdames
| Fannie Berlew, Ethel Kesty, Emma
Hoover, Maude Lampman, Rose
| Llewellyn, Mae Phillip’s, Florence
| Carle, Alice Austin, Nora Dymond.
PLINTY OF PRIS PARKING
FURNITURE.
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with published on the Church Page.
y School Of The Bible Has
Drawn Good Registration From Area
a gathering of
_____ THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1966
Children Learn What They Live With Emi
lift something from St. Therese’s
Was Dedicated
particularly timely, and is here-
Sole Life Interest
f If a child lives with tolerance,
he learns to be patient.
| If a child lives with praise, he |
{learns to be appreciative. | evitable illness, Emily Goldsmith
| fession of teaching.
After the close of the school year
this spring, she returned to the
library at Dallas Junior High School,
to get things in order, and leave
| he learns to love.
| If a child lives with approval, |
he learns to like himself.
| If a child lives with recognition,
| he learns it is good to have a goal.
| If a child lives with honesty,
{he learns what truth is.
mer.
She remained on the roll of fac-
| diy members until August 31, still
| clinging to the hope that she might
| be able to return. She had been
| hospitalized since August 17th. |
Teaching was her life.
paratrooper at Fort Benning, Ga. |... When she died at Nesbitt Hospital |
the war ending with the completion | Friday night, aged 58, the career
11944, entering the armed services | of a dedicated educator ended, one
mediately: | which had begun when she was
In Fernbrook, his home town, he | eighteen years old.
worked with the Little League for| Her pallbearers were fellow fac-
five years, ahd with the Te n- ulty members, gathered to do her
Langue. for three. honor: Sheldon Mosier, Alfred M.
He 15 rorried, and Has hres oil Camp, John Rosser, Robert Dolbear, |
dren, one. a sophomore in Dallas John Baur, Thomas Cary, |
High ‘School, the two. younger ones She was born in Demunds, her
twins, boy and girl, in the fifth | parents Benjamin and ‘Ada Pemble- |
Carats, ton Goldsmith.
"The Community: School of. the She attended normal school at
Bible affords Mr. ‘Martin an oppor- Bloomsburg, obtaining 2 teaching
I fuitity to, further Hie. education in certificate, and taught, first in ele- |
like ministry. mentary schools, later in Junior
| It is too late now, states Rev. High.
!B. Kirby Jones, founder of the! ‘In line with later requirements for
| school, to accept any more registra- | teachers, che studied during the
tions for this term. Further work Summers, in Colorado, in New York
at Columbia, and more recently at
Rev. Jones, pastor of Community | Futztown where she completed
Bible Church at Sweet Valley, Las library science courses and took a
] aster’s degree.
| possible foundation of a school for| For a time at Junior High she)
| Bible study. The present venture | combined the teaching of social
| studies with the handling of the
I Mev.” Jones: in addition to. his library. Eventually the library ab- |
| pastoral duties, broadcasts regular- sorbed her entire time. |
rly, five days a week, over WNAK, John Rosser, principal at Dallas |
and on Sundays at 11:30 a.m. Hours | Junior High, says of her, “She was
are 1 to 1:30 and at 6 p.m. Monday
| through Friday. here when I came back from the
Le World War II. I had hoped that she
Mrs. Ted Poad ies’; es ibn ima
Dies Suddenly
of us did. She was a fine teacher,
|
had in mind for several months the ¥
absolutely dedicated. Time meant |
nothing t, her. Her whole life in- |
terest was right here in this school.” |
Church affiliations were with |
Orange Methodist. She belonged to
the National Educators Association. |
Miss Emily leaves two sisters, |
Irma Goldsmith, at home, and Mrs. |
Charlotte Weaver, Harveys Lake, |
once on the substitute list at Dallas,
now teacher of special education at
Lake elementary school.
Another sister, Miss Estella Gold-
smith, died some years ago.
Burial was at Chapel Lawn Mon-
Services for Mrs. Theodore A.
Poad, 146 Main Street, Shavertown,
wife of the former Kingston Town-
ship tax collector, were held Tues-
day morning from Disque Funeral |
Home with Rev. Robert DeWitt Yost |
officiating.
| Interment was in Memorial Shrine
| Cemetery, Carverton.
Mrs. Poad was stricken Friday
morning at her home and rushed to
| Nesbitt Hospital in Kingston Town-
ship Ambulance. Indications that | ov otnifg Rev.” Willikin Reid,
l'evening were that she was respond-! :
3 pastor of Carverton Methodist
ing to treatment but Saturday mor- | C : :
ja ; | Carge, conducting services from the
ning she sank int, a deep coma, | Di Funeral Tome
‘passing away at 8:10 that evening | Sue, Fu ne
from a cerebral hemorrhage. | .
Since moving to Shavertown 30 Clarence Rinken Has
vears ago. Mrs. Poad had been ac- |
"tive in the affairs of Shavertown | Fatal Heart Attack
Methodist Church of which she was |
L Victim of a fatal heart attack,
a member, the WSCS and Berean | Clarence (Clem) Rinken was pro-
ass.
For a number of years. she | : : ;
assisted her husband in the duties | node at Se el 5 LE
of the tax office. . | been stricken suddenly at his home
| The former Helen Alpaueh, daugh- | in Idetown. He would have observed
| ter of the late Mr .and Mrs. Peter pig 66th birthday this Saturday.
Alvauch, Mrs. Pcad was born in| Native of Wilkes-Barre To hi
: -B: wnship,
| Wyoming and attended schools he had been a resident of Idetown
| there. ‘She and Mr. Poad celebrated | for the past fifty years. Since 1948
| their. 39th wedding anniversary this Lad owhed and operated Rin
year. Tear? : 3 Lz ich-
In addition to her husband, she hens Tavern on the DI] Lake Hig
Mrs. | He was a member of St. John the
Baptist Church in Larksville; Har-
| veys Lake Rod and Gun Club, and
| Jonathan R. Davis Fire Company.
Bearers were Sen. Harold Flack, |
LaRoy Zeigler, Albert Beech, James
| Martin, ‘Reynold Watkins and Wil-
{ iam Guhr.
is survived by two sisters.
| Ellis Williams, “Wyoming, and Mrs.
, Ruth Mathers, Forty-Fort. Also nu-
‘merous nieces and nephews.
| He leaves his widow, the former
| Nell Sefcik; %wo sons: William,
| Houston Texas, and PFC Robert,
| with the United State Marines in
| Jacksonville; one grandchild; a sis-
| ter, Mrs. Rodney Ingram, Hopewell,
| Virginia.
Burial was on Tuesday from a
Kingston funeral home.
(Ada Casterline Lies
In Orcutt Cemetery
Mrs. Ada Casterline, Noxen res- |
| ident for the past 47 years, died
| Friday morning, aged 85, at Gen-
eral Hospital. where she had been
| admitted on Tuesday to the medical
| service.
Mre. Casterline, widow of Albert
| Casterline, belonged to Noxen Meth-
| odist Church and was a charter
member of its WSCS. She was also
| a member of the Dallas Post Eighty-
{ Plus Club, admitted at the time the :
| Club was still taking new members, | more urgent matter.
| before the call of home-town papers | Surviving are theses children: Mrs.
for the boys in Vietnam became a ' Franklin Patton, Mrs. Warren Mon-
NL
Graphic Arts Services
INCORPORATED
PHOTO-ENGRAVING
Offset Negatives and Platemaking
Screen Prints, Art Work
|
Phone 825 2978
“-
| tross, and Osmand, all of Noxen;
‘Mrs. Nevin Benner, Richfield;
James, Buffalo; 21 grandchildren,
| 21 greatgrandchildren; a sister, Mrs.
| Lulu Gilmore, Noxen.
Burial was in Orcutt Cemetery,
following services conducted by Rev.
Fred Eister, pastor of Alderson
Methodist Charge, at the Nulton,
Funeral Home Monday morning.
_ Rear 29 North Main Street Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
NEENAH ENERO EN ERNE EEE
Dr. Aaren S. Lisses
Optometrist
38 Main Street, Dallas
674-4506
Professional Suite
Gateway Center
DALLAS HOURS: Edwardsville
Tuesday - - 2 to 8 p.m. 287-9735 y
GATEWAY CENTER HOURS:
esd -= 2to 8 pm, i
Weilnagday Sm Daily 9:80 to 5:30 p.m.
Friday -- - 2 to 5 pm,
Evenings Thurs. & Fri. to 8 p.m.
an
ly Goldsmith |
Teaching Was Her |
In the face of advancing and in-|
the library shipshape for the sum-
Christian Science
Lecture October 18
Janet Smith, Second Reader for
First Church of Christ, Scientist,
Wilkes-Barre, will introduce Fran-
cis William Cousins of Manchester,
England, as lecturer on Tuesday,
| October 18.
The lecture wll be staged at
Wilkes College Center for the Per-
If a child lives with fears,| If a child lives with acceptance, | could not give up her chosen pro- forming Arts, at 8:15.
|
Mr. Cousins will take as his topic,
“Christian Science Reveals the Good
That is Available to Mankind”.
The lecture lasts for 45 minutes.
Admission is free, and everybody is
welcome,
Mr. Cousins is an experienced
teacher and practitioner of Chris-
tian Science as well as a member |
of the Board of Lectureshp of The
First Church of Christ, Scientist,
in Boston, which is sponsoring his
| appearance here..
A native of London, Mr. Cousins
was formerly associated for many
years with a firm of West African
merchants. He resigned from busi-
| ness in 1951 to devote full time to
| the
public practice of Christian
Science healing.
Donald G. Meeker,
BRged 52, Drops Dead
Donald G. Meeker, 52, suffered a
fatal heart attack Friday morning,
dying at the garage of his cousin
Danny Meeker in Kunkle, He had
been working on a car as garage
mechanic when stricken. Deputy
Coroner Richard: Disque was sum- |
moned, and pronounced death due
to natural causes. : i
Mr. Meeker was a native of
Noxen, son of the late Alonzo and
Minnie Goodwin Meeker. He belong-
ed to St. Luke's Lutheran Church
in Noxen.
He leaves his widow, the former
Marjorie Frear of Beaumont; a
daughter, Mrs. Donna Caldwell,
Jamestown, N.Y.; two grandsons; a
brother Carl, Niagara Falls.
Services were conducted Monday
afternoon, Rev. Frederick Eidam
here when I came in 1940. She was | officiating from the Nulton Funeral |
in Beaumont Specialist
Home. Burial
Cemetery.
was
Mrs. Gwendolvn L. Saxe
Buried At Bethel Hill
Mrs. Gwendolyn Lewis Saxe, 63,
of Bethel Hill, died Thursday night
in Bloomsburg Hospital, where she
had been admitted four weeks
earlier.
Native of Uniontown and former
resident of Wilkes-Barre, she had
lived in the Sweet Valley area since
1945. She was a graduate of River-
side General Hospital School of
Nursing, and a member of Bethel
Mill Methodist Church ‘and its
‘WSCS. For the past four years she
had been a Sunday School teacher.
She and her husband Herdic J.
Saxe had been married for thirty-
eight years.
She leaves her husband; a daugh-
ter, Mrs. Elizabeth E. Goss, Wyn-
cote; three grandsons: a sister, Mrs.
Mary Jane Davis, and a brother Al-
fred Lewis, both of Wilkes-Barre.
Services were conducted on Mon-
day by Rev. Oscar L. Culp, from the
Bronson Funeral Home, followad by
burial in Bethel Hill Cemetery.
Tshman WSCS Plans
Roast Beef Dinner
Lehman WSCS will serve a roast
beef dinner in the church dining
room on Wednesday. October 19.
Serving to begin at 5:30. Menu in-
cludes roast beef, gravy, whipped
potatoes, cole slaw, creamed peas,
carrots supreme, apple sauce, bis-
cuits, home made pies and bev-
eroges. Mrs. R. E. Wright is: general
chairman, Mrs. David Eddy in
charge of the dining room.
School Lunch Week
School Lunch week throughout
the Nation is in progress, October
9 to 15. Frank Hemingway, Dallas
District cafeteria manager, calls at-
tention to need for nutritional well-
being on the part of school children.
MONUMENTS
of Select
Barre Granite |
. . . whose everlast-
ing, blue-gray beauty BARRE
is guaranteed for- GUILD
ever by 61 memorial
manufacturers. Monuments
CARVERTON
MONUMENT CO.
ORANGE ROAD
CARVERTON. PA.
NATTA] PRNNAVIVANTA
IN MEMORIAM
In Memory of our Dear Mother
and Grandmother Mrs. Jennie Meek-
er Steltz Oct. 8 1909 - Nov. 8 1963.
A precious one from us has gone
A voice we love is still
A place is vacant in her home
which never can be filled
No one khows the silent heart
aches
Only those who have lost can
tell the grief that is borne in
silence
For the one we loved so well.
Mr .and Mrs. Lloyd Naugle and
children. '
Durbin Class News
The Durbin Class of Dallas Meth-
odist Church met at the home of
Mrs. Boyd White September 27.
Mrs. Thomas Cease presided
at
| the business meeting. x
Mrs. Louise Colwell, teacher of ~
| the class, led devotions and gave
a talk about her recent trip .to
Europe.
The class will sponsor a birthday
tea and hat show October 19, fea-
turing the twelve months and four
seasons. A group of members will
meet, at the home of Mrs. Floyd
Slocum today to make articles for
the church bazaar.
Refreshment ' commiittee for the
meeting was Mrs. Earl Brown and
Mrs. George Hess. 3
Also attending were: Mesdames
John Williams, Raymond Elston, A.
“A. Eggleston, Walter Elston, Thom-
as Reese, Paul LaBar, John Casner,
Marshall Rumbaugh, Robert Shee-
han, Wilson Maury, Arthur Miller,
Herman * Otto, C. Graydon Mayer,
Robert Moore, Walter Brunges and
hostess. !
Unitarian Fellowship :
To Hear Mimi Wilsen
The Unitarian Fellowship of Wyo-
ming Valley will hear Miss Mimi
Wilson Sunday morning at 10:30 at
Phone 333-4246
EY EE
the Y.M.-Y.M.C.A. Building on
Northampton Street. ra
Herbert Quick will conduct th
AT
“df
i_service.
Miss Wilson is Public Information
for Economic Develop-
ment Council] of Northeasten Penn-
sylvania. Her topic will be “A Re-
gional Approach to Economic De-
velopment.”
Church School will be conducted
at 10:30, and a coffee hour will fol-
low the service.
how
good
can life
be 5
WHAT IS GOOD?
How does it happen?
Nobody- seems to have enough,
but people have all kinds of
thoughts about it. Is it a thing?
an event? an idea? Perhaps it's
just being close to God.
St. Paul said, “He be not far from
every one of us.” .
YOU CAN HEAR a searching lec-
ture on man’s potential for good by
FRANCIS WILLIAM COUSINS,
C.S.B., an experienced teacher and
practitioner of Christian Science
from Manchester, England
and member of the Board of
Lectureship of The First Church of
Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass.
x
'NO COLLECTIONS ARE TAKEN,
no registry to sign. This is not a
sermon or a church service, but a
public lecture ranging from the
nature of good as a divine force,
to the practical rules for spiritual
healing. You will be most welcome.
TITLE: Christian Science Reveals
the Good That Is Available to
Mankind.
Christian Science
Lecture
EEE ETE
DATE: TUESDAY, OCT. 18, 1966
TIME: 8:15 P.M.
PLACE: WILKES COLLEGE
CENTER FOR THE
PERFORMING ARTS
Corner South River and
West River Streets—
Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
Admission Free, Everyone Welcome
~Alfred’ D.
.
We have been a part of
The Back Mountain Area
for over 35 years —
serving ECONOMICALLY
and EFFICIENTLY
BRONSON FUNERAL SERVICE
Sweet Va
Mildred A.
lley