PAGE FOUR i: {4 | | A number of administrators | and other key personnel from | two Back Mountain school dis- | tricts are playing a prominent ‘role in the planning of the West Side Wyoming Valley Consoli- dated In-service Program. The sixth annual joint educa- | tional meetings will be held | Friday, April 25, and will have some 1,000 teachers, adminis- ~trators and other staff mem- ‘bers as participants. ~The program is under the auspices of these school dis- tricts: Dallas, Lake-Lehman, ~ Wyoming Valley West, Wyo- ming Area and Northwest Area. | education will serve as con- | signed to acquaint teachers with the latest education thoughts, materials, techniques and teach- . ing trends. Among the subjects are social studies, reading, mathematics, science, business education, En- glish, home economics, art, guidance, library, physical ed- | ucation and industrial arts. Dr. Robert A. Mellman, sup- erintendent of Dallas School District, is chairman of the Suburban We Specialize Specialists from all fields of. sultants for the program, de-r ENJOY DELICIOUS FAMILY FEASTING... Restaurant In Tasty, Homemade Foods Feature Large Menu Orders to Take-Out Delicious Soups and Desserts local educators plan in-service program planning committee. His co- chairman is Dr. William J. Smodic, superintendent of Wyo- ming Valley West School Dis- trict. Other local educators on the planning committee are Wil- liam A. Austin, supervisor of Elementary Instruction, Dallas School District; Robert Z. Belles, supervising principal of Lake-Lehman School District; Anthony Marchakitus, principal of Lake-Lehman High School and Charles C. James, ele- mentary supervisor, Lake-Leh- man School District. Channel 44 At 8 p.m., Sunday, April 20, Public Broadcast Laboratory focuses on the problems of the nation’s second largest ethnic minority, the Mexican-Ameri- cans, in a program entitled, “The Invisible Minority.’ Also a report on the findings of the Commission on Income set up by President Johnson to in- vestigate welfare problems ‘around the country. A Ny at Special Sunday Dinners ‘Served all aay - yrom 11 a.m. Sunday Papers Available Open Daily at 6 a:m. at the ““Y”’ - 309 and 118 Dallas - Harveys Lake Highway csc em sm Alumni Day at Bloomsburg Alumni Day at Bloomsburg State College will be earlier this year, Saturday, April 26. The early date has been se- lected by the Alumni Associa- tion in order to attract as many alumni as possible who are un- able to attend later because of activities in schools in which they are serving. The Class of 1919 will hold its fiftieth year reunion on Friday, April 25. Members of the Class of 1909 will also attend the 50th Year Class dinner held in the College Commons at 7 p.m. as guests of the Alumni Associa- tion. Registration will take place Saturday, April 26, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. in Waller Hall. Elwell Hall and Hartline Science Cen- ter will be dedicated at a spe- cial convocation at Haas Audi- torium at 11 a.m. Luncheon will be served in the College Commons at 12:30 p.m. The Alumni Association will present two distinguished service awards. Class reunions will be held at various locations on campus. All resident halls will have ‘open house.” A three act comedy entitled “My Sister Eileen’ will be pre- sented by the _ Bloomsburg Players in Haas Auditorium in conjunction with the Spring Arts Festival. Gail Doughton The Sigma Rho Chapter of Alpha Omicron Pi at Slippery Rock State College wishes to announce the recent election of Gail Doughton as Fraternity Education Chairman for the sorority. Miss Doughton is the daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Doughton of Davenport Street, Dallas. She is a sophomore majoring in Elementary Educa- tion. Miss Doughton is a mem- ber of AWS, WRA, Rocket Staff and Associated Child Educa- tion International. ‘Channel 44 At 10 p.m., Tuesday, April 22, Trumpets of the Lord. NET’s critically acclaimed production of the Negro musical “Trumpets of the Lord,” a continuous blend of sermons and spirituals set in a backwoods church in the deep South, and featuring Negro stars James Earl Jones, Lex Monson and Jane White. You’re welcome to the money. (Just pay it back.) THE DALLAS POST, APRIL 17, 1969 JANICE EILEEN HANNA Hanna-Curtis Mr. and Mrs. P. William Hanna of 43 Wyoming Ave., Dallas, announce the engage- ment and approaching mar- riage of their daughter, Janice Eileen, to SP.5 Donald E. Curtis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Curtis of 401 Poplar Ave., Woodbury Heights, N.J. Miss Hanna is the grand- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Welsh, 11 East Center Hill Road, Dallas, with whom she makes her home. The bride- elect is a graduate from Dallas Area Senior High School and Wilkes-Barre Business College ~where she was president of the Beta-Chi Sorority. She is em- ployed by Sterling Products Co., Kingston, in the account- ing department. Mr. Curtis is a graduate from Woodbury High School, Wood- bury, N.J., and attended Temple University Institute of Technology. Before entering the service he was employed by RCA Service in Gloucester, N.J. Mr. Curtis, a SP5 in the United States Army returned home froma year’s active duty in Vietnam in April, 1968, he is ay ATT NG Now available from Commonwealth! TRENDLINE TELEPHONES stationed at Fort Gordon, Ga., where he is serving with the Signal Corp. He will be dis- charged in early July. A late Summer wedding is planned. surprise party Charles Orner of Wilkes- Barre was the guest of honor at a surprise birthday party attended by a number of people from the Back Mountain as well as by guests from outside Greater: Wyoming Valley. His son Robert, a school ‘teacher from Montrose, was present, with his fiancee Miss Norma Koons from this area. Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Ram- age, with sons Ronald and Robert Jr. from Harveys Lake, attended. Other guests included his mother, Mrs. Sadie Beattie of Wilkes-Barre, and Mr. and Mrs. John Valley of Lehighton, and his wife, Mrs. Millie Orner of Wilkes-Barre. The Kingston House Will Be Happy To Ageept RESERVATIONS NOW For: Weddings — Class Reunions Dinner-Dances — Meetings and Anniversary Parties Call 288-4525 For Available Dates “THE KINGSTON HOUSE" 947 Market Street Kingston Voovoroovomen. On the same day you see us, you'll have money for that bargain too good to pass up, the vacation you It's the most exciting telephone since the dial telephone itself! You'll love Trend- line’s sculptured look . . . its light weight . its longer cord. You'll also love the new dialing ease Trendline offers. To find out how you can join the trend to Trend- line, call Commonwealth's business office today, or mail the coupon below. ! still haven't taken, bills which have piled up. Money, money, money for home improvements, education, anything you deem important. Loans are so easy to get, so easy to pay back at all 11 of our privacy-assured offices. MINERS ramones sams The bank you can GROW with MAIN STREET, DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA 100 Lake Street Dallas, Pennsylvania 18612 Name Address COMMONWEALTH TELEPHONE CO. | am interested in a Trendline telephone. Please have your representative contact me. Phone ; . City i LR £4 State ____ Zip ___ ; x TELEPHONE CO. Oratorio Society concert Wyoming Valley Oratorio So- ciety, directed by Clifford Bal- shaw, New Goss Manor, will present its Spring concert Sun- day, April 20, at 3:30 p.m. in: Irem Temple, Wilkes-Barre. The feature work is Carl Orff’s ‘Carmina Burana,” a “collection of 13th century stu- dent poems set to music by the modern German composer. Its theme is spring, love, and the unpredictability of fate, and the music is lively and .uneful. A group of Brahms‘ ‘‘Lie- beslieder Waltzes’ will also be sung by the 75-voice chorus. Dr. Paul Balshaw, a 1956 graduate of Dallas Township High School, will be baritone soloist. A member of the Ora- torio Society Chorus during his high school years, he has ap- peared as soloist with the group in performances of “Elijah,” “The Seasons,” ‘‘St. Matthew -Passion’’ and others. He is now Director of the Chorus and Opera at Marshall * University, Huntington, W. Va. University Soprano soloists will be Dor- othy Balshaw, of New Goss Manor, Anita Mowery, Ed- wardsville and Joanne Netter Herron, West . Pittston. Mrs. Balshaw and Mrs. Herron have sung with the Oratorio Society on many occasions; this is Mrs. Mowery'’s first appearance with the group. Tenor soloist will be Edward Kabacinski, Dickson City; he sang the title role in the Ora- torio Society’s performance of “Judas Maccabaeus.” Back Mountain members of the chorus include sporanos Dorothy Balshaw, Ruth Turn Reynolds, Barbara Mancuso, Ellen Harris, Rosalind Baker, Mrs. John Moore, Catherine Gilbert; altos Vera Balshaw, Jane Driscoll, Melaine Graham, Nancy Kuzma, Sister Susan Marie, Betty Ann Wallace; tenor Carl Hedden and bass Edward Ratcliffe. Mr. Hedden is president of the Oratorio Society Board of Directors. Mr. Ratcliffe is vice- president of the Chorus. locking out lockjaw Although lockjaw should be - totally obsolete, tetanus takes a larger death toll than measles ‘and is ‘“‘a serious health prob- lem,” according to an article in the New England Journal of Medicine. Federal investigators headed by Dr. F. Marc LaForce re- port «535 cases ‘and 363 deaths in a recent two-year period, despite the fact that lockjaw is one of the few diseases for which there is an almost infallible preventive ‘vaccine. | ; Tetanus is particularly dan- gerous for the elderly and the newborn. Babies usually get infected via the unbilical cord, adults from puncture wounds or scrapesorfromsuchunexpected sources as burns, frostbite and dental ab- scesses. MR. and MRS. ALBERT RAY silver wedding Mr. and Mrs. Albert L. Ray, Main Road, Sweet Valley, will observe their 25th wedding an- niversary Sunday, April 20. They were married April 21, 1944, at St. Joseph’s Roman Catholic Church, Washington, D. C., with Rev. Michael Far- rell officiating. Attendants were Ellen Dawson, Washington, D.C., and Charles Connolly, Wheeling, W.Va. At the time of their mar- riage, Mr. Ray was attending school, taking a course in a specialized subject with ‘the Navy, and Mrs. Ray was em- ployed as a Medical Librarian at the Eastern Dispensary- Casualty Hospital in Washing- ton. The former Laura Catherine Martin, Mrs. Ray is the daugh- ter of Mrs. Harry L. Martin, Trucksville, and the late Harry L. Martin. Mr. Ray is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Ray, deceased, Meridian, Miss., A retired Chief Petty Officer, United States Naval Reserves, he is employed as a Correc- tions Officer, State Institution, Chase. ’ : They are the parents of five children, Karla Penman, Resi- dent Director, Children’s Ser- bi vice Center, Wilkes-Barre; Barry L., Randy Kevin, Grace Ann, and Shawn Holbrook, at home. Father Ralph L. Martin, New y York City, brother of Mrs. Ray, will = celebrate ‘a Mass of Thanksgiving. Mr. and Mrs. Ray will be entertained at a family dinner to be held at The Brothers 4, Dallas, Sunday evening. BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Albert of Edgewood, Md., announce the birth of their second son, April 3, at Sinai Hospital in Balti- more. Peter James, six pounds and thirteen ounces, joins his brother John Paul, who marked his third birthday April 15. Mrs. Albert is the former Carol Deets, daughter of Mrs. Ruth Deets, Harveys Lake. Peter James is Mrs. Deet’s second grandchild. He and his mother were welcomed by Mrs: ; Deéts” when they came home from the hospital. Mrs. Deets is now at home again after her baby-sitting tour of infected tumors, BIRTHSTONES of children or grandchildren Order Now jewel of an idea for OR GRANDMOTHER A RING with the for MOTHER'S DA HENRY’'S JEWELRY CARDS and GIFTS Memorial Highway Shavertown, Pa. 1 MOTHER Mother's Ring li i PD ERY 2) Ee LL CE EE Er CE CS CE RE LER Bh as ob di didn did THERE’S ONLY ONE WAY TO LOSE WEIGHT ee TT SEU Vitamin and ‘Mineral EE SEE REO la iid PE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers