SECTION A— PAGE 4 ™ It makes time other small cars shouldn’t KUNKLE MOTORS Kunkle, Pa. ERIE i i i : i A RS EMERGENCY MEDICAL IDENTIFICATION TAGS For: " HEART PATIENTS EPILEPSY DIABETICS CONTACT LENSES Can. be worn as 2 Bracelet or Necklace EVANS DRUG STORE SHAVERTOWN 674-4681 BULFORD REUNION The annual Bulford Reunion is scheduled for this Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Crockett in Broadway. Durwood Splitt will preside. In charge of devotions will be Rev. Allan J. Cease, summer pastor at Slocum, and a student at ‘the Divinity School in Washington, to which he will return in September. Vice president is John Fielding; historian, . Mrs. Clarence Elston; treasurer, Robert Dodson; secretary Mrs. Thomas Cease. Lake Trap Shoot The Harveys Lake Sportsmen Pistol and Rifle Club will hold a Trap Shoot, Sunday, August 18 at their club grounds located between Harveys Lake and Noxen, Route 29. Shooting will begin at 10 a.m. Trophies will be awarded for Straight Runs of 25-50 - 75 - 100. Returns To England MAJOR HAROLD C. BIRTH Major and Mrs. Harold C. W. Birth and children, Cynthia! Brad-- Jey and Vicki have ‘returned to Major Births Basé at’ Alconbury, England after spending several weeks visiting at the home of Maj. Births parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde W. Birth of S. Pioneer Avenue, | Trucksville. { jorie McCarty; and advisors, Mrs. | ° | Connie Nixon, Mrs. Major Birth was recently married in California to Mrs. Shirley Lovl- lace of London England and Malibu, Calif. Mrs. Birth is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Morris of | London, England. Cathy Jean Remington Sgt. and Mrs. James C. Reming- ton announce the birth of a daugh- ter, Cathy Jean on July 31st at Nesbitt Hospital. Sgt. Remington lis. a Marine stationed in Vietnam. | Mrs. Remington is staying with her mother, Mrs. Donald Wilson in Dal- Jas. There are two other children, James (Chales and Donald Cutis. S$ each WIDE VARIETY Invitations - Informals Call The Dallas Post 1 675-3366 HARVEYS LAKE Thursday Evening: THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1968 = Twenty-six Rainbow Girls Left Today For 26th Grand Assembly Twenty six young women, all members of Charles James Mem- orial Assembly, No. 144, Interna-' tional Order of Rainbow for Girls, their mother advisor and six ad- visory board members will leave this morning for the Pennsylvania State University where they will at- tend the 26th Pennsylvania Grand Assembly. The girls are Jill Daron, Gwen Arnaud, Sandy Gordon, Pam Rood, Bonnie Long, Susan Owens, | Ruth Ann Nixon, Margie McCarty, | Sandy Denmon, Estella: Parker, | Karen Lefko, Sandy Long, Nan Pief- fer, Sandy Barakat, Susan Mattern, Linda Finn, Dottie Johnson, Patti Koeb, Glenda Larson, Cathy Wil- son, Barbara Moen, Brenda Rich- ards, Barbara. Long, Jo Ann Wil- | liams, Ardet Walters, Virginia ' Jenkins; Mother Advisor, Mrs. Mar- | Jean Wilson, | Mrs. ‘Shirley Zimmerman, Mrs. Doris | -Walters,s Mrs: “Betty : Meeker, and’| “Mrs. Peg Moen. Barbara’ Daubert and Verna Miers will join the group on Thursday and Mr. Donald D. Smith will join them on Friday. Mrs. Evelyn Hopkins, Grand Deputy of District 6D, and Mrs. Mildred Smith, Grand Deputy of District 6E will leave on Wednesday where they will attend a Grand Deputies | banquet before the assembly ses- sions formally begin. Mrs. Hopkins is being honored at | Grand Assembly this year by serv- ing as Mother Advisor of the Grand Assembly Sessions. She will pre- side as Mother Advisor at the for- | mal opening, election and initiation. | Mrs. Hopkins thas served Rainbow | for 15 years, first being on the ad- | visory board, then as two years as | Mother Advisor, and for the last | four years has served as a Grand | Deptuy. She has also_served on the reception and appreciation com- | -mittees at Grand Assembly. Pat Nixon who will be installed | as ‘Grand Worthy Advisor, and Don- na Smith who served as Grand Hope | of Pennsylvania for the year 1966- 87 have been at the University | since Sunday. Four members of the Assembly | i and four of their advisors will be honored on Friday evening at the HANSON'S AMUSEMENT PARK THE WAZO00S DANCING — 8 To 11 P.M. ADMISSION — $1.00 Friday Evening: FREE SHOW starts at 7:30, featuring TEX BALEN and his Rhythm Ramblers plus STRANGER BURGE and the LAUREL RUN BOYS Next Friday: Featuring KENNY ROBERTS Record Recording Star ARES HR SE Singing Their Latest Hit Recordings | supervision of the Grand Cross of Color investiture ag they receive this Grand Cross of | Color, the highest award given in | Rainbow. They are: Margie Mec- Carty, Linda Finn, Sandy Denmon, Dottie Johnson, Mrs. Marjorie Mc- Carty, Mrs. Shirley Zimmerman, Mrs. Peg Moen and Mr. Donald D. Smith. Miss Barbara Daubert will re- | ceive her majority on reaching the age of 20, and Miss Margie McCarty will serve as a Grand Usherette. Miss Kay Laube, Grand Worthy Advisor, will preside at the Assem- bly sessions which convene Aug- ust 15-18. The Grand Assembly -is being held under the direction and State ‘Supreme Inspector, Mrs. Agnes C. Allen with Mrs. Barbara Heilman, General | Chairman. The formal opening will be held | Thursday evening. Introduction of distinguished guests. and, the Mem- | orial” Service will follow. the “open- ving. -#Election of Grand Officers will take place Friday morning, with in- itiation and majority service be- ing held in the afternoon. Friday evening the Grand Cross of Color | investiture will -be presented. will be installed by Miss Joyce Ness, | Junior Past Grand Worthy Ad- | viso, assisted by Past Grand Of- | ficers. School of Instruction will be conducted Saturday morning. Choir competition and drill com- | | petition will follow in the after- | noon. There will be entertainment | in the evening, and the sessions will | | conclude with a sunrise church | service Sunday morning. Prior to Grand Assembly study | courses are offered by the Uni- | | versity. Dean Harold O'Brien is {in charge of this part of the pro- gram, | Miss A. Jean Gamble, Worthy | ‘Matron of the Order of the Eastern | Star in Pennsylvania and Mr. | Rochester Woodall, Right Worshin. {ful Junior Grand Warden, repre- | | senting the Grand Master of the] | Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania, | F.&AM., will address the opening | session, Mr. George D. W. Koenig, | Worthy Grand Patron of the Order will give the opening prayer. Many dignitaries will attend the sessions. All members of the Order of the | Eastern Star and the Masonic Lodge {in the State of Pennsylvania are invited to attend this 26th Grand | Assembly. LADIES! SHOPPERS! Be sure to clip the new 100 and 50 S&H Green Stamp Coupons in your Acme Ad be- fore going to market. Also don’t overlook the gen- erous 100 Stamp Coupon in your Globe “Back to School” Advertisement. ae a Fol- | i lowing this the new Grand Officers’ of the Eastern Star in Pennsylvania, as — | Receives BS Degree | SUSAN JANE LAMOREAUX The degree of Bachelor of Science | torial in the August 1, 1968 issue fore the’ surgery; (and I might add in. education y was ‘conferred upen Miss Susan “Jane | Lamory eaux at Bloomsburg State College August 8. Miss Lamoreaux, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Lamoreaux, is a | 1965 graduate of Lake-Lehman High | School. ; Consistently ‘on the Dean’s List at Bloomsburg, her certification is in the area of special education for the mentally retarded.. While at Bloomsburg she was active in stu- dent PSEA, Council for Exceptional | Children, and Division of the Men- tally Retarded NEA. | Miss Lamoreaux has accepted a position with Lycoming County school system. She will be assigned | to Hughesville to work with special | education. Some months ago, her engage- ment to Roy B. Gordon of Blooms- burg was announced. The marriage is expected to take place this com- | ing Saturday in Sweet Valley at the Community Church. Officiating | will be Rev. Ira Weyhe, pastor of | Bloomsburg Baptist Church. ‘McDade Promoted To Sergeant In A. TF. Edward J. McDade, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. McDade of [20 Sunset Street, Dallas, has been | promoted to sergeant in the U.S. | Air Force. | Sergeant McDade, a fuels special- | ist at Westover AFB, Mass, is a | member of the Strategic Air Com- | mand. He is a 1965 graduate of Dallas! Senior High School. Visits South America Miss Marcella Niagorski, teacher in the Dallas Area School is travel- ling with the NEA group visiting | the following South American coun- i tries: Bogota, Columbia; Lima, Peru; Santiago, Chile; Buenos Aires, | | Argentina; Montevidio, Uruguay; ‘Broil. Rio De Janeiro, You, the M erohuiit . Why? store traffic? You advertise. To talk with people about your merchandise? To keep your store name before people as a reminder of your services? To create Whatever your objective, your advertising message must be exposed to a responsive audience to be productive. | weight loss of 127 lbs. A regional Weight Watchers (tm) | staff picnic was held at the ‘Orca | Farm’, home of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold | Brooks, Area Dir. of Weight Watch- ers, Of the 104 people present, 40 staff members and 12 husbands | lost a total of 2,183 lbs. The hus- | bands total was 253 lbs. Highest | weight lost was realized by Mrs. Frank Thoma of Wilkes-Barre, who lost 140 lbs. within 10 months on the program, and Mrs. Wm. Slota (of Allentown, showing 2id with a in a years time. An impromptu Style show was conducted by some of the staff members, modeling their origi ‘nal DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA 12,148% POUNDS SHED AT ANNUAL PICNIC dresses worn at the first meeting they ever attended of Weight Watchers. One especially fetching number was a pair of ‘bloomers’ | that a class member donated that measured 96’ around the WAIST! Games were played and an eve- ning meal made up entirely of Weight Watcher menus was served, including ‘“Arnee’s Bar-B-Q Veal”, “Tangy Qven Fried Chicken”, “Silly Celery”, “Simply SpicedlfPeaches”, and many other specialties. Recipes are available free by calling Weight Watchers. Guests came from as far as Scranton to what we hope will become an annual a affair. Keith Yeisley States His Beliefs 8 On Ethical Aspects i | Dear Sirs: I don’t know which of my friends at the Dallas Post wrote the edi- | entitled “Those Heart: Transplants!’ <but,* after reading. it. vhad to interject a | | consideration. First, there are four, and not one, survivors of heart transplants at | the present time. In fact, the cur- | rent issue of Life magazine tells the | story of Everrett Thomas, of Hou- I felt that I Ot Transplants joy for a long time with his di- seased heart; he can shave himself, something he was unable to do be- ‘here’ that if you”saw Cth of Dr. Blaiberg. that’ Dri grinning through shaving lather as he prepared to shave himself for the first time after his historic op- eration, you'd realize how much a seemingly minor thing can mean to a man who. before his heart a ei oe | transplant he thi — = as, | mechanical heart is ston, Texas, who is back to work transplant operation, WES condem- in a bank only three months after ned to die!) As far al . alien. receiving a new heart This op- | tissue” -a transplanted kidney, eration was performed by Dr. Den- which saves many lives anually, is “alien tissue’; a transplanted cor- | nea, that allows people to see again (is ‘alien tissue”-but I think most | people would agree that these op- | erations are necessary’ | Like you say, a “heart from an- | other person is alien tissue, and the body tends to reject all alien ma- | terial . . .”, but this is just one | of the problems that must be over- | come in the pursuit of prolonging human life. Dr. Blaiberg is con- ent to live with the realization that | he may not be able to live an en- tirely “normal” life again, but he .can drive a ‘car, he can take ‘a | walk, he can talk with his neigh- bors, he can feed himself; he even ‘ stopped at a soccer ‘team’s prac- | tice session to kick a soccer ball! I'm sure this seems a lot better to him than what would have been “second best’; a ‘tombstone bearing his name. I also have, to feel as does Dr. | Barnard regarding a “moral issue” land an “ethical issue’; there is Ino “moral issue” and there is no “ethical issue’. 1 think we have {to keep in mind that the heart is I not the soul, nor the mind, of a hu- man being. It is merely «a pump that performs the functigh of send- KEITH P. YEISLEY | ton Cooley, a fine surgeon who has done three or four other heart | transplants, all successful. { I am sure you are referring to | Dr. a Blaiberg when you | | state that . doctors agree that | ing blood through the I ody and he will be in danger of his life for | it's vital organs. Now it ever as long as he lives.” Well, ac- | came to brain transplabts, I feel cording to Dr. Barnard, the most that there would then be a moral important thing as far as Dr. Blai- | issue involved. As far as an ethical berg is concerned is the fact that | issue there survivors. agree to the he does still live! use of the deceased’s heart, than He can walk, without gasping for |in a corneal transplant, where the breath after a step or two; he can | 7S of the deceased are given so lie flat, a “luxury” he couldn’t ne | that others might see. : 1 think you're correct in assum- ing that there will one day be a | artificial pump, that will do the | job of pumping the blood. In fact, | Dr. Michael DeBakey, also of Hou- | ston and one of the world’s fore- | most cardiovascular surgeons, will | not . consider performing a heart thinks ‘that = the the salvation | of those with serious heart di- -| sease. Of course, this is not per- | fected yet, but it shouldn't be too long in coming. Perhaps your point | of the believers of . the sanc- Our circulation audience? Well, people in our audience pay to get a copy of the paper— that’s an indication of voluntary response. ' Just how responsive are the readers of our paper? Our A.B.C.-audited circulation figures will tell you how many copies are sold, where they are sold, how much readers pay, and a host of other information. Ask to see a copy of our latest ~ A B.C. report. The DALLAS POST ‘Lehman Avenue Dallas, Pa. - 674-5656 ean | tity of the human temple’ would | find a mechanical heart easier to | accept is well taken. | When I was in ‘the dience | listening to Dr. Barnard ak, he | said that ‘he was sure the operation would be perfected to a point of | where less than half the ‘time of | his historic = operations w ld be necessary to perform the Furgery. (You may recall from my article | that the operation on Dr. Blaiberg took five hours; One of the opera- tions that Dr. Cooley and his staff performed took less than one hour). Something “else should be brought up here; Dr. Christian Barnard did | not have the sophisticated equip- | ment that is available in most every large hospital in the United States. i | Some of the major equipment, in «F | fact, was donated to the hospital in South Africa; most of it was used equipment that had been re- placed in a large hospital by newer, more up-to-date equipment. I must agree with you that the “whole thing at present is a tem- | pest in a teapot”. However, T feel that it is a necessary ‘thing; I also feel that much has been learned from the surgery performed by brave surgeons on brave patients. And I hope that there will be many more success stories in the near future as far as heart transplants are concerned. & ——————————— et ane | 7 TRAVER-BARRINGER The 61st Annual Reunion of Traver-Barringer Family will be held ‘Sunday, August 18 ‘at Hansons Park, Harveys Lake. Call THE DALLAS POST wii hd |} For Free Estimates AE “op om Needs iciire 4 Bapraid A a few points, for ifldshed onthe. screen, showing him * 3 DA vert gues with Cles sper tari trav four with a Cs time Mos ente at d the Th To Hill brat sary Oper ever Met ‘the were the brot Lang are High hom Stat to. Bain floor Ka At Mrs. ente: recel brat, ing creal Mee} Patti na ( Perr; of ht ored were Gran mit Mr. and Perr Jame and Mrs. Kath Dre At Casts held Park At Jame line, Mr.. child Dotie Nang Den Nesh Huds prese Dotie Dale.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers