96 he ay an ‘al |e ag ng nt A rm 3 — a HS IE Sn wn ig § TR CNR “DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Returns To Business A revision in College Misericor- | dia’s nursing program has been an- | nounced by Sister Marianna, R.S.M., dean. Arrangements have been | made, Sister Marianna said, to in- clude all nursing education students in the program leading to the de- gree of Bachelor of Science in Nurs- ing. : The dean’s bulletin explains that licensed registered nurses currently | enrolled in the Bachelor of Science in Nursing Education Program may be admitted to the generic nursing program after they have met re- auirements for advanced standing. Registered nurses who do not wish to enroll in the program leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science | in Nursing should complete degree requirements of the B.S. in Nursing Education before June, 1970. In her statement, Sister Marianna BOYD WHITE | explained that the revision is really Boyd ‘White, well known’ Dallas giving Misericordia’s department | businessman, . ‘has ‘again assumed tp wm 2 TF pv ao managership of the White Furniture K: T. 4-H Club { and Appliance Store on Main Street. | To Sell Bulbs | After a year’s absence during | | which time Mr. White and his wife | Lauren Wills was elected vice- spent a six weeks vacation in Eu- | president of the Kingston Township | rope, the genial salesman is ready | Cloverleaf 4-H Club which met on | to meet and accomodate his old Friday evening with Pat Holdredge | customers , | presiding. : The store business finds a long-| The new officer replaced Brian | time advocate in Mr. White, who | Beard who resigned. Slides were prior to coming to Dallas in 1949, | shown to acquaint parents present | was associated with his father in With the work of the 4-H and pro- | the hardware business in Ashley. jects to be undertaken by the club. | Mr. White ‘said ‘he thas missed] Club members are selling Gladioli | his associations with his old friends bulbs and also taking orders for | and is looking forward to renewed ! tulip, hyacinth, daffodil, crocus and | acquaintanceship. iris bulbs which will be delivered In addition to his activities in the | in October. Anyone wishing to order | wh : , ._ any of these garden beautifiers are TT So Mr. White and his | asked to contact any club member | Ki ee e ormer. Dorothy - Rute, | or the leader Mrs. Marvin F. Scott. | ingston, . are active members of | © prooecds from the sale will be | Dallas Methodist Church, where he | used to help pay cost of the Achieve- | a as a member of the Official | ment Night Banquet which is held | i rd, trustee and lay leader. He liv the fall for all 4-H Club. members| is also a member of Coalville Lodge, | of Tyzerns Countv, who comvlete 474, - Ashley, Bloomsburg Consistory | their projects for the year. A Home and Irem Temple. As a hobby he en- | Club is being formed for Cloverleaf joys bowling with the Community | 4-H girls. | Bowling League. ’ : | The planning committee will meet He attended Wyoming Seminary | May 5 at Pat Holdredge’s home at | and Dickinson College but still pre- | 7:30 p.m. | fers the business world in which he | grew up above all other fields of endeavor. For additional informa- | reasonable rate. tion on the many bargains ty be | | 4-H insurance for members will | become effective May 1, at a most a . | , ingle, | found at White's Furniture and Ap- | Present were Shelly Swingle, | pliance Store check page B—1 of Sandy Deutsch, . Pat Holdredge, | the Dallas Post. | Diane ~ Chadwick, Evelyn Scott, | | Karen Gillis, Lauren Gillis, Lauren | Wills, Kevin Chadwick, Dan Shan- | Piano Needed | Richard Billings, Sandra Turner, A newly formed church congre-| pi}y Gillis, Bonnie Sutton, Alvie gation in the Back Mountain is in| qutton Leslie Goeringer, Kathy serious need of a piano. If you have Goernuer Joseph Puller, Christle one you wish to donate to a worthy Smith and Susie Grieshaber are new cause, call 675-1177. members. Next meeting will be held May 17 at 7:30 p.m., at the Kings- SUBSCRIBE TO THE DALLAS POST | ton Township Municipal Building. | non, Sam Shannon, Warren Sutton, | — College Misericordia Bnnounces Revision Of Its Nursing Program of nursing an opportunity to con- centrate effort in accord with cur- rent trends in nursing education. She said that college administration has made all provisions to continue | to offer professional training to nurses who have already passed their state licensing examination after completing the traditional hos- pital training of three years. Registered nurses will be given such training at College Misericor- dia, she stated, withih the four- year nursing program that is fol- lowed by students who earn 5, B.S. | in Nursing first and then take the state licensing examination in the summer following their graduation. Kunkle Fire Company Plan Chicken Dinner Kunkle Fire Company will sponsor a chicken dinner, family style, in the Community Hall Wednesday, Mayl7. Serving from 5 until 8 p.m. Warren Johnson and Russall Transue are co chairmen. Publicity lis being handled by Basil Frantz {and Bud Mitchell. y Auxiliary to the Fire Company will cook the. dinner, using their own good old fashioned’ and tried recipes. Men will serve. Fig Harmony Club Dinner Members of the Harmony Club celebrated their 39th anniversary at. sther’s Diner in Beaumont. recently. | | Mrs. Mae Phillips was installed | as president, Mrs. Myrtl Berlew, | vice president; Mrs. Nora Dymond, | secretary; Mrs. Ruth Derr, treasurer. Mrs. Sadie Schallenberger was in- stalling officer. ) Centerpiece was made of spring flowers and favors in tulip design were made by Mrs. Emma Hoover. Next meeting will be held May 4 at thé home of Mrs. Mae Race. Present were Joyce Bellas, Ethel Kester, Mae Phillips, Elizabeth Bliss, Sheryl Phillips, Cinwien Besteder, Florence Carle, Mary Etta Carle, Betty Skouronsky, Gladys Martz, Florence Underwood, Betty Swep- penheiser, iMnnie Frantz, Margaret Morgan, Nora Dymond, Fannie Ber- lew, Mabel Bell, Mildred Love, Em- ma Hoover, Ruth Derr, Gertrude Perry, Rose Llewellyn, Mae Race, Martha Clarke, Pauline Smith, Alice Austin, Myrtle Berlew, Mrs. J. F. Traub. Mrs. Leon Fredd, Mrs. Sadie Schollenberger. Waterfowl Museum Opens May 1 Wild Waterfowl Museum at Lake Pymatuning will open May 1, close THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1967 Two Receive God And Country Awards On Sunday At an at impressive Shavertown Methodist Church on ceremony Sunday morning, two members of Boy Scout Troop 231 received their God and Country Awards from their Pastor Robert DeWitt Yost. Recipients were Warren Charles | Boyes and William Charles Freder- (ick. Frederick is a Life Scout and | Boyes became an Eagle Scout at a Breakfast on Sunday ‘morning, sponsored by the Men's Club of the | church. The God and Country Award is the highest religious award to be | given in scouting. The two lads U.S. Post Office Is Raising Rates On International Dallas Post Office and virtually every other post office in the coun- try is operating at 5 deficit, the ' National Association of Postmasters of the United States reported today. However, proposed postage rate increases, including substantial | (Third-Class | mail), will place all post offices in | a sounder financial position. By re- | ducing the deficit, it will be more | feasible t, finance postal mechan- | hikes for advertising ization and plant improvement as well as provide funds for door-to- | door delivery services for city resi- dential areas and restoration of six- | day-a-week parcel post service, the | organization said. | Edward Buckley, Dallas Postmas- | ter, issued the Association’s findings | today in his capacity as local rep- resentative of the nation-wide or- ganization which is supporting $825 restore first class mail rates to a | ington And Air Mail justments, in line with the times, is hard for the residents of many com- munities to understand, President | James O'Toole pointed out. The Association's report (made these points: 1. Contrary to a prevailing public impression, first-class mail to- day barely meets its own costs and does not ‘pay’ for losses on other classes of mail. 2. Since the last rate increases on letters in 1963, service re- sponsibilities have increased greatly. The population served by Dal- las Post Office has | from 13,935 to 15,295. B. The number of delivery (City) stops has increased from 875 to 925. Increases on first class mail will also A. of post offices increased | | INFLATION A year ago everybody was talk- ing about inflation. Food prices - especially meats - were soaring. Business was booming. But the stock | market was going down. Those who | had bought stocks as @a hedge | against inflation were puzzled, and | disturbed. This year stocks have | climbed smartly in the face of fall- | ing production and rather flat | prices. What has happened to in- | flation.? FACTS ON INFLATION When we listen to stock brokers, we feel that all one has to do in order to make money is to buy common stocks and let inflation take its course. But when the gov- ernment economists discuss the matter, we get the impression that to have no inflation is bad, a little is good, and a lot would wipe us all out. Then we talk with some pretty smart bankers, and they just about convince us that the best recipe for a neal stretch of prosperity is to have all prices tilt gently down- | ward. began as cub scouts graduated into | Thoroughly confused, we ask our- the regular troop and have served | Selves: Just what is inflation? After 25 :dery chiefs: | talking with more economists -and : | bankers, we settle for the fact that Pictured above are the scouts and mast ‘people think inflation is sim-} their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Warren | ply an advance in prices and a hike { C. Boyes, Sr., Warren Boyes, Jr. in the cost of living. But when we William Frederick, Jr., Mrs. William | get deeper into the subject we re- Frederick, Sr., Scoutmaster William | lize that ‘the price climb just has . . . | . | Frederick, Sr., who is in charge of | to have a cause. And, indeed, it | Boy Scout Troop 231, Shavertown. | has some most important and | Pastor Yost stands directly behind | powerful causes. | | the award recipients. MONEY THE CLUE feo { { | Local Women Bid | Today it has become fashionable | ‘Sh to talk of rising prices as being | owcase Theatre | caused by “Cost-push” inflation. | ; | Simply, this means that prices can! | Mrs. Jonathon L. Weir of Hunts- | be hoosted by the unions demand- | ville Road, and Mrs. Gerald John | ing and getting increases in wages | | of New Goss Manor will assist in| that are greater than the advances easy Thegire s production of in productivity. It also means that jorihobaa weed | higher taxes can cause inflation. | | Mrs. Weir has been active in com- | How ? By corporations adding the | munity theatre both on stage and amount of the hike in taxes to the | | in many capacities back stage. Mrs. prices of their goods and services. | John has been an active member | It would seem ,then, that the] of Showcase Theatre for the past culprit behind inflation has been! three years on stage and off-stage. found; that all we would have ta@ For this production Mrs. Weir | do to control inflation is to hold |is chairman of the make-up com- | costs down. Yet a little examination | mittee, Mrs. John is serving on the will show. that if there is not a | sufficient supply of money around by | to create enugh demand for products | | Pulitzer prize winning playwright, at the higher prices, sales will Soon | | Maxwell Anderson will be presented | decline and profits tumble. This, | | at Showcase Theatre, 39 N. Wash- | in turn, will lead straight to a busi- | Street, Wilkes-Barre, on | ness recession. So it may be con-| | | cluded that, without sufficient sup- | | publicity committee. | “The Bad Seed’ written million in postage rate increases position they should occupy as pre- April 8-29 and May 5-6. recommended to Congress by Presi- | November 30. May and June are dent Johnson. the preferred months. The museum Association President James scribed by law. The new postal budget of $6.665 | billion as submitted to - Congress is situated next to the Game Com- | O'Toole pointed out that advertising provides for further substantial im- mission’s waterfowl area, where mail, now paying only 61 percent many young birds may be observed. ! of cost- will be raised much closer ! LUTE Hn TELEVISION CO now at STORE NAME outstanding 23=INCH NSOLE By 8 DUMONT 'STANTON’S TV and & — “Own the finest in quality TV.—the superlative DuMont. This new 1967 console boasts 20,000 volts of picture power to assure the sharpest, clearest picture available. Advanced 3 LF. stages provides stronger signals from fringe stations and interference-free reception. Perma-tune per- manent fine tuning, picture optimizer and illuminated UHF/VHF dials too! D EV O N—authentically styled Early American 23 inch television console—high fidelity ~ sound system. Handcrafted cabinet in grained maple finish on wood. $229.95 APPLIANCE i "to a break-even point. The $825 million will help offset | additional costs of extending door- to-door delivery, he noted, at the | | rate of one million homes a year for five years, for city residences which would normally be entitled to door delivery but have been {given only curb line delivery. | service, Costs of restoration of six-day-a week serviee on parcel post routes, which had been cut also are affected by - the rate measure, he added. Local post office expenditures do not reflect services provided. The urgent need for postal rate ad- to five-day | provement in plant, with $201.9 | million. requested, or a 45.9 percent | increase. The "primary purpose of plant improvement is to maintain and improve the Department's pre- | ferred service first-class mail. Without postal rate increases, Mr. O'Toole emphasized, the total de- ficit for the next fiscal year will be a staggering $1.2 billion. Even after allowances for public services, such as pervices provided for other agencies, the deficit would still be | nearly $600 million. I placing at everyone's disposal a vast communications network of 33,000 post offices 700,000 employ- ees and delivery anywhere to any- “ Even at 6c. the stamp will re- | | main the greatest bargain on earth, | Gel ml | plies of money, all the “cost push-| | 3 ing” in the world would lead %ot | Pairs Bnd Spares Class | 2%, 2 =o recession! | | 1 { i ; ‘Meets At Lewis Home | gpcenr mstory aN EXAMPLE | | i | Pairs and Spares Class of Carver-! No better example of what may | ton Methodist Church held its April | happen when the’ money spigots are | | meeting at the home of Donald and | turned off - then on - can be found | | Naomi Lewis. | than a study of events in 1966 and | | David” Werts led the class in so far in 1967. With living costs | prayer prior to the opening of the threatening to run away and with | business meeting. | the stock market bumping the 1,000 | | Present were Jean and Kermit Dow Industrial level the money | | Sickler, Dorothy and Don Searfoss, | managers became alarmed. They cut | CM ] d Rov" Mooket: Lillian the money flow from an annual | | ann =n oy ee er, Lan | ote of advance of about 8% to the | and David Werts, David Perry, Don- |, level. Short-term interest ratas | {na Owen, Earl Harris, Marie Wall | spurted. Bonds sagged week after | and the host and hostess. week. Stocks tumbled wildly. Money May meeting will be held at the | Was drageed from . savings banks | home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Meeker. { | | | | and placed in higher-yielding bonds | and certificates of deposit. Mortgage | money disappeared, and home build- | ing sank to the lowest figure of the | past two decades. | one of nearly 200 million Ameri- cans,” he said. Tire Sale | When the money managers saw | what they ‘had wrought”, they be- | came scared. In late 1966 they opened the money valves . . . first a little, then wider and wider. And | they are still at it,” fearful that the recent ‘‘inventory indigestion’ | may lead to massive ‘business Expert Muffler ELST( Premium Cooper Full 4 Ply Tires For Less Then Major Brand 1st Line 2 Ply Recaps As Low As $6.50 Exchange Front End Alignment Brake Service and Tail Pipe Tune Up and Ignition State Inspection All Tires Fully Guaranteed N « GOULD TIRE MAIN HIGHWAY cramps’! Then the Administration | and the Congress got into the “re- vive business” act. They restored the 7% investment credit and faster | depreciation on certain building. De- | | layed public works outlays were al- so reinstated to the tune of $1 bil- lion. And, as a final psychological “needle”, the Federal Reserve cut the rediscount. rate from 4, % to 4%. { | NEVER FEAR - IT WILL RETURN! Those who have been wondering “where inflation went” may not | have to wonder long. The outpour- | ing of funds by the banking system {and by government action will soon Babson’s Point of View On: : SECTION A — PAGE 3 ARE’ LEH 8 be matched by perhaps the biggest budget deficit since World War IL As much as $15 billion, -and may- be even $20 billion, will’ “be: the annual rate of federal-spending de- ficit by a year from toddy: If this proves accurte - and we think it is not far from the mark - inflation will be on everyone's lips again by spring. 1968. 2 GAY-MURRAY STORE TALK “TRU-TEST” — the new label which is fast ‘becoming known for high quality at Attractive price. It includes many items essential to good living. Cus- tomers are already coming back, requesting TRU-TEST paint, tools, etc. FOR $2.98 — you buy a gallon of latex wall finish. Customers tell us it is very satisfactory— odorless, and covers well. Our other paint products for other types of jobs will suit you equally well. § FOR $32.88 you can buy a 20 inch Rotary Lawnmower with 3 h.p. engine. $269.95 buys a 6 h.p. riding tractor with 25 inch rotary mower. Check also on our line of SCOTT'S products for better lawns. i i FOR $7.00 you buy 100 lbs. of certified seed potatoes — enough to produce 1400 lbs, if: properly cared for. Red, Pontiac, Katah- din, and Kennebec are available now. Why not grow your. own! ay aJail FOR 65¢ you buy a pound of seed peas — enough for a 45 foot row in your garden: LITTLE MARVEL, WANDA, THOMAS LAXTON, FREZONIAN, and TALL TELEPHONE: are unrstock. You buy better in our bulk seed. ~~ or < JUST THINK — what a change in taxes would take place Cin our county if the idle folks now drawing $40,000.00 per month in assistance would help them- selves by growing their own gardens. FE eh FOR $7.95 you buy a sturdy 24 inch picnic grille with adjustable level, Other picnic items such as charcoal, torch lights, tables} and chairs are also favorably priced. Sun FOR $159.00 you buy a FRIGI- DAIRE automatic washer or dry- er. You know the quality, and the great record of Frigidaire service. It isn’t better because we sell it—we sell it because it's better! I : GAY-MURRAY TUNKHANNOCK (by appointment) = i prevent travel : on the road on the sea in the air DRAMAMINEER Prevents motion sickness regardless of cause — car/plane/train/ship/bus/and even amusement park rides. DRAMAMINER also relieves DRAMAMINER is available 675.3366 at 9 Sf (brand of dimenhydrinate) ways have it handy when you “hit the road.” handy packet of 12 tablets. And for the little ones, there is pleasant-tasting Dramamine liquid. i EVANS DRUG STORE SHAVERTOWN i” sickness with “ary ard Snes 1 . - n motion sickness . . . so al- Hadid at “Evans Drug Store ina “5 674-4681 7 Dallas Shopping Center — 674-7101 DALLAS — PHONE 674-5567
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers