rma ns Fre i \ S, a SECTION B — PAGE 4 BEAUMONT, Mrs. William Austin DALLAS, Carol Ann Williams JACKSON TWP., Mrs. Wesley Lamoreaux HARVEYS LAKE, Mrs. Albert Armitage IDETOWN, Bess Cooke MT. ZION, Rev. “How Now, Brown Cow” That's what my mind said. You don’t see brown cows on 309. Yes, I know that back in 1914 I led a brown cow down that road from somewhere in Dallas .to Wyoming avenue Kingston. But that was then, | the cow was not as big as a school bus, there were not oodles of cars whizzing alone the road. This huge brown cow came up over a slight rise in the road in Shavertown ‘as I was driving toward Dallas. Her imperturbability was phenomenal, her placidity beyond understanding. But there she came, standing on a flatbed truck with cowlets and | _lamblets at her feet. I drove on to “the Dallas Post and said to myself “Wait till I tell my public about . that!” But if ‘I. had waited until last . week's Dallas Post had come out front page of last week there is ‘ng prajesty of a sculptured: cow! Last Sunday f Ruth and I had a sort of hard said it. was a ‘whole new family. by till Cathy. comes! ld Charles Gilbert "daughter. more sense of wondér at the ! | choir: at’ Orange. I 'asked Marie Pere- | | come from. Oh yes, he comes in " THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1966 NEWS FROM POST CORRESPONDENTS 639-2544 NOXEN, Mrs. Elida Beahm Kelly 298-2149 674-4109 : RUGGLES, Mrs. Charles Williams 639-5422 696-1500 & . SHAVERTOWN, Mrs. F. W. Anderson 675-2001 639-9531 ® . SWEET VALLEY, Mrs. Thomas Sayre 477-3731 639-5137 ® TR'JCKSVILLE, Nelson Woolbert 696-1689 388-7261 ® EAST DALLAS, Mrs. Phyllis Tondora 674-7891 Mount Zion | day on Saturday with our trip to! | the hospital in Susquehanna to visit her sister again. So we both gslept- | in Sunday morning, missing our Mt. Zion 9 o'clock service. So we went can sit and meditate on the Gethse- | mane . window given by the F. A. Snyder and family long ago. The words wrought int, the window are worth re-reading: “Into each life comes a calvary, That can only be climbed by prayer, But the cross He ols us to carry ‘Has heen weighed with infinite care.’ Old timers remember the Snyders. | | sang a lovely anthem, “God is there | | behind the shadows”, | to many. : to the Orange service at 11. One| | bor name of Wiggins, a good addition day evening in she rolled after a| to the church and choir. The choir | strong beep-beep. Tuffy eats now! | Valley Crest a message | A young man from Scranton by | Smith of Appletree Road, making a {name of Larry Schwab, gave a very | visit to some at Valley Crest to nice presentation of the matter of hom she had written as pen-pal. Wyoming ‘Conference Homes for the ghe was coming along the corridor Aging. This was done at the invita-' 33d 1 went with her and introduced tion of our pastor William Reid. | her to some of the other residents. As we entered the church we were | She made a lot of friends in no | Jackson Top. Mrs. Agnes Manzoni, returned home from Nesbitt Hospital on the 17th and is making an excellent re- covery from her operation. Lance Corporal Francis Sebolka | Jr., left by plane Monday for Los Angeles, the first step in the way | to Vietnam. His parents observed | their twenty-first wedding anniver- sary on the 6th of this month: Lake-Lehman Band participated | in festivities in connection with dedication’ of Harveys Lake Post | Office this past Saturday. The Jackson Volunteer Firemen and it's Auxiliary wish to thank It was a great day last Friday all those who so graciously gave of | | when I happened on to Mrs. Alex | their time and talents to make the a| 19th annual Fall Festival such a | success. It takes a lot of people | to prepare and serve such a meal, ; and sometimes up to the last mo- ent it seems we will be woefully short of help. Approximately a thousand dinners were served and Halloween The time of hobgoblins and pump- | kins and black cats is upon us. Many | residences are decorating windows to remind one that Hal- color and delights the young fry | which is most. important. This year | the Halloween Parade will not be held on its former night date but will be changed to an afternoon affair. It rather defeats its purpose, I believe, which was to keep the children out of mischief and oc- treats. Most of the vandalism which is | they didn’t win first prize as the | being done around this date can- does wh, come to one's door or the neighborhood children, whom we delight in knowing but rather | to the unsupervised who run ram- pant according to their whims and | corny ideas of a good time. Many | given a church bulletin and a warm | time at all with her genuinely | the produce sale was a sell-out to | homes were splashed with eggs thus | welcome by Harold Hoover Jr., .an | friendly approach. Ruth Kepp was attractive son of our former noigh. at Carverton Myrtle Pascoe | was overjoyed to see this Hoover. Young Harold is taking found friend. I have difficulty un- | | lessons on the piano, and we have | derstanding Ruth Kepp’s speech but | heard him play the church organ Madge had no difficulty making it! | one to whom she had written and | new- | | the bare walls. “Fun and Games” downstairs passed the time for wait- ing patrons and also added to the profits. | (Congratulations to Rosemary Seb- olka, who celebrated her seven- It ‘was a few Sundays ago I met | very acceptably. All power to him. out. And a. couple of people from | teenth birthday on the 21st. Mrs. Freda Hughey at East Dallas, a And people ‘at Orange | Mildred Snyder | well © remember before bursting: into print with my | Jones now of Quaker Lake. We just |. mystery story I would not have] written this. But now the mystery | is solved. My illusion of a cow ten | times bigger than a breadbox has | ‘gone. Now that you have read the had a nice letter from ‘‘Joy Acres’. of Toms River. Madge's mother Liz- zie Dymond, was at church at Or- | ange and we were glad to say hello again. There were some new faces in the | go choir leader about them and she | ELECT R LAWYER WILLIAM A. KELLER FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE PULL LEVER 8-B that. But Tuffy goes on practically And then there is Bob and Madge |, hunger strike as soon as he finds Harding Madge wanted to see and Poor Tuffy: they, too, were elated to see her. - Of course it is nice for Catherine | to go visting; ® attending big do- | ings, seeing old friends—and all | white haired lady whose eyesight has gone but ‘who loves music, Mrs. Edith Irving, formerly of Pittston. | that she does not come home from |I must try next time I'm up there Dallas Post at night. He insists on | to get: down on paper he little poem | Mrs. Irving recited from: memory about her honest dog who returned {her hat he had stolen! Her mother | taught her the lines and T've never | seen them anywhere. Madge Smith is going to enjoy her correspondence with these new friends. Mildred | Lloyd has become a’ warm friend of Mrs. Irving too. Then when I went to call on Mrs. Irene Thomas whose name I had sent to my cousin in: San Antonio | Texas I found she had already had a letter from cousin Helen. loaned me the letter to bring home to vead. This cousin. of mine had | staying out on ‘the porch with nose | pointed .up the road toward where | a beep-beep and a red car should | but doesn’t care for food. But wait | And on, Sun- | The Gilbert Story (all our relatives! are on the mailing list for that) about pen pels. She asked if there might be someone who would enjoy la letter. This cousin has something | by, way of Christian sunshine and | concern to give, and Mrs. irene = {and also’ has a spirit ‘to share that | transcends her knotted fingers and | immobile joints and ‘nearly blind eyes. ; Sales Slip Pads { | | In Many Designs The Dallas Post flameless c c Geile, even heat fff dees automatically. . ve your clothes soft, sweet smelling, fresher than springtime. No won- der modern homemakers are excited about an ELECTRIC clothes dryer, It’s convenient, clean and economical tool Let Reddy Kilowatt take the worries out of yonr next washe day and enjoy another convenience of total electric pong HARVEYS LAKE” “Lighting The Back Mountain Area J Since 19220” / DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA 18612 @ 717 «== 674-1071 ...and only electricity gives you [ mm 0 hes drying...” . Jake She | noted a line in my last issue of | Thomas of Valley Crest needs that, | Birthday Party | Mr. and Mrs. Allan Lamoreaux | ghout the home and I to spend some | Then I introduced hér to a lovely | entertained on Saturday the 22nd | hours at the new post office dedi- | in honor of their son Wayne's third | | birthday. Present were Tommy and | | Debbie Keyes, Falls; Lori, Cindy a nd | | Leslie Weiskarger, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Weiskarger, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Dymond and daughter | Janice, and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Dymond Sr., also of Falls, RD, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Lamoreaux, and Wayne's baby brother Curtis. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Sebalka re- cently became grandparents for the first time, when daughter Barbara, now Mrs. Earl Eck of Sweet Valley and her husband became parents of a baby boy. Mr. Louis Wilcox will recall this | past Fall Festival with a chuckle, and a certain V.IP. in the Auxili- ary with embarrassment. Mr. Wilcox had been ill and his wife took a dinner down to him, complete to | the last detail, except that there was no turkey with the dinner. The mistake was rectified later in the evening, but Louis, with his marvel- ous sense of humor, will not soon friend forget the slip-up. Your ‘correspondent had a visit with several members of her family this ‘past Friday. Mr. and Mrs. George Harris, Mrs. Elmer Weaner and Mrs. Rose Levitt, of Dover; N.J., and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Nafus of Chester, N.J., came up for the day to attend funeral services of their uncle, Ernest Wright, of Detroit, Mich. Miss Susan Olinatz spent the past weekend with Miss Nancy Callahan of Oak Hill, why observed her birth- day. Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Michael Olinatz, who observed their twenty-sixth wedding anniversary earlier this month. All Ann's friends | are happy that she is feeling so much improved since her operation and long stay in the hospital earlier this year. Plans Hallowe'en Party Ladies Auxiliary of Lehman Fire company will sponsor a community Halloween party at the firehall in Lehman, tomorrow night, 7:30 p. m. There will be no admission charge, | but a small fine will be asked of those who come unmasked. Refresh- tivities provided for a night of fun. Grand march will be held promptly | | at 8:00. Everyone is invited to at- | tend. Cub Pack Commission Office Highway on Monday. Mrs. Mary Fiske, den mother, | accompanied Billy Cutter, Matthew | Fiske, Gary Cutter, Scott Slocum, | Robert Hughes, Jimmy Sapser, John | Reese, Charles Gabel, and Tony | Fiske, who was a visitor. let his wife and a certain good | ments will be sold and other ac- | | far this season, hardly an wunder- | standable prank and where did they the people there let Ed Buckley | get the eggs at the prices for which | | they are sold? | A Call From Virginia | On Saturday ‘evening we had] | settled down after a busy ‘day, Fred: | performing the numerous chores | SPORTSMANS CORNER Ever watch a skeet or trap shoot- ing event closely enough ‘to notice how many shooters catch ‘ejected matics are used you'll notice that many shooters ~ walk pick up spent shells. Some of these shell savers are to save money. It cuts the cost of | top skeet and trap shooters in the as well as economy. Reloading has grown into ia big business on ‘a nationwide scale, so big that commercial ammunition | the components the reloader needs. It is not that the average shooter with his reloading tool can produce a better shotshell or rifle cartidge in his cellar than commercial firms gun will perform differently - under varying conditions. A shotgun, for example, will shoot different patterns . with" different shotshells. A rifle will fluctuate in accuracy with the changing of car- tridges. experimentation that he can put to- gether the right kind of shotshell or rifle cartridge for his particular firearm. He gets top performance out of his gun at considerable sav- ings. A box of 25 shotgun shells can be reloaded for less than half the price of factory loads. TEEN TALK— next week I will feature another interview with an- othet one of Dallas high football players. Idetown Mrs. Virginia Balterston of West Grove, Pa., spent the week with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Ward. The beautiful vases of flowers at the Sunday morning worship service { were in memory of Mrs. Bessie Wil- | liams, given by Mr. and Mrs. Bruce — | Williams. At this same service in observance of Laymen’s Sunday, Cub Scout Pack 281, Dallas, Den | Lester Squier, Alfred Ashton, Alfred 3 visited the Pennsylvania Game | Swelgin, Herbert Ward and Lynn on Memorial | Johnson took part. Mr. George Zingle is a patient in the Veterans Hospital, Wilkes- Barre. Gloria. Lyons returned home yes- terday after spending two weeks | | with relatives and friends in Cal- | ifornia. erly, in strict accordance WILKES-BARRE 64 North Franklin Street Call «CAnowdon . Have them take charge. Then you know that everything will be done prop- noewdon costs no more than an ordinary funeral. a pe DIRECTORS SHAVERTOWN 140 North Main Street 140 NORTH MAIN STREET + SHAVERTOWN with your wishes . . . and KINGSTON 420 Wyoming Avenue loween is here. It adds a bit of | cupied on the evening of tricks or | not be laid, T am sure, on the kid- by Jim Hepple empties and pocket them? If auto- | around the stations after the firing is over to amateurs who. reload ammunition their shooting pleasure in half. Many | however are numbered among the | country. They reload for accuracy companies have seen fit to market | can with their advanced technology | the Beaumont Elementary School | and research in the factory. No two | % | guns shoot alike indeed; ‘the same | The handloader has found though | " DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA SHAVERTOWN cations, when the phone rang at 12. hunger in our land. No tranquilizers | Fred let out a groan thinking the| police were coming with a domestic | with the soil and the innumerable their squabble as I picked up the re- | free gifts which are ours for the tak- | ing. ceiver. We need not have been concerned for it was Susie and Bill calling | affection of a cat, the song of the from Hotel Marriot in Alexandria. | | They had mentioned earlier ity tion for peace and contentment. Ball wai | the big masquerade proceeds | of which would go to the boy scouts | in that vicinity, and of their raak- | ing of costumes for the event. The | eternal spirit of youth sure abounds in those twgy young wpecple. Well, | they had fashioned their outfits with great care and lo and behold if most original couple, $75 in cash. | No wonder they called so late and were so elated, ‘but it is their spirit them so dear to our hearts. dedicated over the weekend. At Harveys Lake there was real en- { thusiasm but at Dallas, I feel that | down. For the size of ‘the area | served and the convenience offered | there should have been a much big- | ger crowd on ‘hand to. witness a milestone in the community's his- | | tory. Both were very nice affairs. Perfect Contentment | ceived a mew hunting outfit to" of sharing in all things which make g : | annual vacation during deer season. Two different post offices were | . are necessary when man communes Add to this the companionship of a faithful canine, the soft purring bird and one has the best prescrip- Celebrates Birthday John Clause who celebrated his | birthday last week was guest at a | surprise party with cake, ice cream and all the trimmings. Present to help him observe ‘the special date were his devoted wife, daughter Brenda, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hill and Jay C., Mrs. Joseph Baganski, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Salus, Mr. and Mrs. F, W. Anderson. ny r up at the cabin when he takes his i f Here And There Mr. and Mrs. John Stahl spent | the weekend at Newington, Conn., where they visited their daughter and son in. law, Mr. and Mrs Thomas Evans and family. A Petty Officer and Mrs. Joseph Baganski were weekend guests of | Mr. and Mrs. William Weber, Creen- { | belt, Md. { Sincere sympathy is extended to | Robert Burghardt in his recent be- We had decided to cut down the | reavement. | old pear tree with its aging boughs | | and ugly shape but as if it sensed | | pur intention, the branches put forth | such an abundance this fall that we | were really astounded and Fred | appreciating its benevolence nid | | Bill Glahn will arrive home from | Penna. State Univerzity over the | weekend to indulge in a little hunt- ing, at which he is a pro, William J. Thomas is a patient in | General Hospital, where he was iad- “Let it stand.” Then over the week- | mitted last week. Bill is in traction. end the raspberries which had fail- | ed to produce their usual supply | began to bear again as if to/ make | up for lack of fruition during the | We wish him a speedy recovery. . Cengratulations to Mr. and J il Byron Kitchen whe celebrate ir 46th wedding anniversary today. | drought. A garden is fascinating. | Mrs. Kitchen, who was hospitalized | | Some products one hates to see go, especially the: corn, tomatoes, cu- cumbers, beans and peas but the | cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower and | A little ground, a little rain and heat from a beaming sun and the { Maker has given us that which with a little effort on our part proves no man should know the pangs of Beaumont The annual Hallowe'en Party of is Thursday, October 27, sponsored | by the P.T.A. Mrs. Elizabeth Hess, a former res- ident, writes she is enjoying the sunshine at Fort Lauderdale, Fla. It's always a pleasure to report | Glen Scovell, a son of Scovell, and Robert Montross, son of the late William Montross, were initiated as. Shriners at the Con- sistory, Utica, N.Y. recently. Glen and Bob are members of the Ma- sonic Lodge at Binghamton where they ‘are employéd. The trek to see the site of the new Bell Telephons System Radio Relay Station starts below Beau- mont by taking the recently im- proved bridge over Leonard's Creek on the right of Route 309. before widened dirt road follows a route to the left before reaching the Wil- son Dotters, then starts the wonderful view. hand to greet Raymond Shafer, can- didate for governor, at the Sky Haven Airport, Tunkhannock last Monday. I VOLKS WAGEN NEW and USED CARS and TRUCKS All Years and Models Fully Guaranteed SALES PARTS SERVICE Goodwin Auto Co. ® 651 Wyoming Ave. Kingston, Pa. MTHORIZED oEALER Corner Rt. 11 & 309 Call Coll. 288-6426 CR | squash as if to make up for their | comrades’ loss continue to ‘produce | my Ash and to visit his mother, - until the very end of the season. | Mrs. Anna Dressel. i on former local boys making good! | Mrs, Carolyn | reaching Lutes Corners. The newly | real | climb to the tower topped by the | Many local Republicans were on | | for a time, is home now but’ stills | | | Has to go into traction at night. Luther Hontz, Philadelphia, came in over the weoekend to atte a bachelor party for nis nephew, Cy New Choir Formed | The East Dallas Methodist Church | has a new choir, which practices every Tuesday evening at 7:00. At- tendance last week was 11 and all those musically inclined are wel come to join. | “Heating your home will be a cinch with Gulf House- warming Service.” A Charles H. Leng Sweet Valley / 477-2211 TEI heating oil In Bos Joe THE BOSTON STORE | DALLAS SUBSCRIBERS XHarveys Lake, Sweet Valley and Centermoreland Dial JUST A SPIN Of THE DIAL. and you reach DIAL DIRECT 823-4141 674-1181 Wilkes-Barre — NO TOLL CHARGE. Fowler, Dick and Walker The Boston Store 1 J TT IIIT AREER IER NID DER FERRER REP O° 8d Lm t-