ica PAGE TEN Boston Store awards trophy to TheLake-LehmanHighSchool band won first prize in the band competition held in conjunc- tion with the Veterans’ Day pa- rade in Wilkes-Barre, Sunday, Nov. 9. NT ree rar Tre area band The Boston Store sponsored the competition which included 10 of the 15 area bands in the parade. G.A.R. won the second place trophy and Wyoming Valley West was third. Judges Malcolm Burnside II, of Fowler, were Dr.:James Dunlop, direc- tor of the Pennsylvania State University Blue Band, and Don- ald Beckie, associate director of the Susquehanna University Band. Dick and Walker, presents the trophy to Mark Elgaway, drum major of Lake-Lehman Band after the local band placed first in the Veterans’ Day parade. Also pictured are, left to right: Anthony Marchakitus, L-L principal; John Miliauskas, L-L band director, and John- Zaleskas, L-L assistant principal. ALDERSON THE DALLAS POST, DEC. 4, 1969 HARVEYS LAKE Mrs. Fred Swanson, Alderson, is recuperating at her home af- ter being a surgical patient at the General Hospital. She is anxious to hear from her | friends and neighbors. obituaries . JAMES HUMMEL James F. Hummel, Claude Street, Dallas, died Nov. 25 in Wilkes-Barre General Hospital. Mr. Hummel was born 63 years ago in Hunlock Town-- ship and lived in Dallas 43 years. He was a driver for a Back Mountainlumber company when a young man and later was employed at the former Okonite Manufacturing Co., Wilkes-Barre, for 27 years. He was a veteran of World War I and was a member of Daddow-Isaacs Post 672, American Legion, Dallas, for 34 years. He is survived by his wife, the former Inez Hilbert; sons, James Jr., Portland, Me. ; Mer- rel, White Haven ; three grand- children; brothers and sisters, Nesbitt, Outlet, Harveys Lake; Luther, Loyalville; Harry, New Jersey ; Loren, Hunlock Creek; Mildred Martin, Pikes Creek; Nellie May, Ruggles; Ethel Kocher and Vida Pimm, Noxen; Bernadine McCroy, Outlet, Harveys Lake. Funeral services were held Friday from Bronson Funeral Home, Main Road, Sweet Val- ley with William Beacom, Hollidaysburg, officiating. In- terment was in Wardan Ceme- tery, Dallas. Joseph Levan, brother of Mrs. James O'Connell; ‘Second Street, is home after being a patient at the Veteran’s Hospital where he was treated for three broken ribs due to an accident in his home. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Croas- dale spentthe Thanksgiving holi- days with relatives in Philadel- | phia. Mrs. Russell Dodd and Helen Hanson left to spend the winter in Florida. The Pennsylvania Game Com- mission stocked Harveys Lake with 1200 rainbow and brook trout Tuesday, Nov. 18. Edward W. Manhar, who was in charge of the stocking, said onlookers were lined up for miles watch- ing the operation. Friends and neighbors offer best wishes to Mr. and Mrs. Isem Pennington who observed their 44th wedding anniversary Nov. 9. Bess Cooke, Idetown, spent the Thanksgiving holidays with her brother and sister-in- law, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Parrish, Kingston. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. John Bul- lock, Lake Ariel; Mr. and Mrs. William Parrish, Forty-Fort; Dorothy Turner, Kingston and Mrs. Beatrice Maloney. Harveys Lake Yacht Club will hold its annual Commodore Ball Saturday, Dec. 27, at Irem Tem- ple Country Club, Dallas. Chair- men are Attorney and Mrs. B. Todd Maguire. Festivities will begin at 8 p.m. Auxiliary to Daniel C. Roberts Fire Company will hold its Christmas party Dec. 10 at 8 p.m. at the fire hall. Dollar gifts will be exchanged. Chair- men of games are Mrs. John Murphy and Gloria Wienchow- ski. Take Outs Invited PHONE 288-6606 288-6607 822-1513 q ES Peter Davies injured in school mishap Peter Davies, 15, of West Dal- las was released from Nesbitt Memorial Hospital in time to have Thanksgiving dinner with his family. Peter, a tenth-grade student at Wyoming Seminary school, was injured Nov. 19 in a sports accident ‘at school and was confined to the hospital, in traction, for a week. Marvin Antinnes, athletic di- rector of Wyoming Seminary said, ‘It was a neck injury that was not immediately apparent during practice. It began to bother Peter the next day and he was taken to the school physician, Dr. Shafer, who ex- amined him and had him ad- mitted to the hospital.”’ Mrs. Stanley Davies, Peter’s mother, said ‘‘the school was wonder- ful and Peter had wonderful care.” Christmas hours at post office The hours for the Post Office .at Dallas during the Christmas season were announced today by postmaster Ed Buckley. The service window will open at 8:30 a.m. and close at 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. It will close at noon on all Saturdays. There will be no extended win- dow service during the month of December. On Christmas day there will be no delivery of any kind of mail and no collections will be made from boxes for dispatch. The office will be closed Sun- days. CHOICE: — Beers—Wine Liquor and ers, Movie Review by SHAWN MURPHY Although the movie ‘‘Alice’s Restaurant’’ is ostensibly the “story of young folksinger Arlo ' Guthrie's arrest and trial for littering and subsequent draft deferment, it is in fact a mod- ern Arthurian legend which epitomizes the polarization of our nation into two separate and oftentimes warring camps, the young and the old. Several years ago, a young couple named Alice and Ray ‘Brock purchased an old church in Stockbridge, Mass., and turned it into something of a gigantic pad for hippies and flower children. Providing room and board for youthful wander- it was, in Ray’s words, ‘“‘a place to be the way we wanta be.” ‘‘Alice’s Restau- rant’’ is the story of this place, these people, and the way they wanted to be. Not unlike King Arthur, Ray Brock soon learns that his wife is being wooed—and won—by an unlikely Lancelot, a young drug addict who had been res- cued from Bellevue and brought to live and recover in the church. Striving desperately to keep his kingdom together, Ray attempts to overlook the in- creasingly obvious affair out of love for his wife, concern for taxpayers meet tomorrow night The Lehman Taxpayers Association will meet at the Lehman Center Hose House at 8 p.m., Friday Dec. 5. The program will include a film on sex education in the schools. A report on tax dis- crepancies will be given. All taxpayers are urged to attend. SEA FOOD the young addict, and devotion “ to their way: of life. In the end, his dreams of establishing an: idyllic Eden on earth are dashed: by the snakes of lust and pride... which lurk within us all. It is a good film. There is side-splitting humor in Arlo’s tangle with the draft board, and the movie's score is both tender and rollicking. If the plot at times seems fragmenjed and torn between Arlo’s lit ‘ing escapade and the Ray-Alice- Shelley triangle, the viewer is likely to forgive it its non-Holly- wood lapses in gratitude for itsnon-Hollywood simplicity and excellent character portrayals. Like ‘“Easy Rider,” another current movie which purports to “tell it like. it is’’ with the younger generation, ‘‘Alice’s Restaurant’ permits the wary: “‘over-thirty’’ viewer a glimpse of what it’s really like to be young and rebellious and ‘‘hip”’ in America today. Rated ‘‘R,” the movie realistically depicts the aspects of communal living which most offend members of the ‘‘straight’’ society. There is an abundance of casual Sy Traditional religious rituals aré disregarded. The police become objects of contempt. Yet the film also relates with equal honesty the attempt of many young people to find a way of life which is less corrup and more meaningful than muc of what passes today for ‘“The. American Way of Life.” That they do not always succeed in this quest—that you can’t really ‘‘get anything you want at Alice’s Restaurant’’—is shown to be less important than that they try and then, defeated, are willing to try again. ‘“Alice’s Restaurant’” is currently playing at a down- town theater. THE COMPLETE MENU RESTAURANT cold “ Vic-Mar's Mixed Drinks Dr. Peter Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gebler Fred Mintzer, senior at and sons of New York were Rutgers College, spent. the supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thanksgiving weekend with his Malcolm Nelson on Thanks- parents. giving. Mr. and Mrs. K. William 4 Reighter, Tom’s River, N.J., came to visit the latter’s grand- mothers, Mary Kuchta, a patient at Wilkes-Barre General Hospital, and Jessie Garinger Monday. Thomas Finn is spending the Thanksgiving @ holidays with his father. On Thursday Mr. and Mrs. Reese Finn and family had dinner with his mother, Cora Finn, Dallas. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Yell- alonis and family, Baltimore, and Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Flecknoe and daughter Stacey, Springfield, spent the holidays with Mrs. Michael Clark. we laliril, KS roel [ 4 Side of lasagna, * garden fresh greens, : select relish tray, * Prime Sirloin : strip steak $6.00 | New York cut, Gargantuan potato, “individual loaf of rye, butter, 4 dressings, 1-2-3 cups of coffee. OTEL 81 ROUTE 81 -EXIT 60 We extend our deepest sym- ‘pathy to the family of the late Casterline. The family has been summer 'resi- dents at Harveys Lake for many years. Ann Getzman has returned home from Wilkes-Barre Gen- eral Hospital. ORTH OF SCRANTON PHONE (717) S63:1157 semana CREEKSIDE 1 Mile North of Route 6 on Route 92 TUNKHANNOCK Stop in for our “Just A Little Better” Dinners and Drinks Kitchen Open Daily 11:30 a.m. to 1 a.m. | Dinners from 6 to 10:30 p.m. THE BACK MOUNTAIN'S MOST ATTRACTIVE BAR & DINING ROOM Casual Dress Acceptable MODERN M TELEVISION | ALL COMFORTS PARK MOTEL Delicious Appetizers Choice Steaks South African Lobster Tails Plus Many Other Tasty Dinners Closed Sunday DINNERS SERVED Monday thru Thursday 5 p.m. til 12 p.m. Friday and Saturday 3 p.m. 3i}’1 a.m. "PARK MOTEL Two Miles North 309 in Trucksville Carverton Road, R. D. No. 3 Wyoming, Pa. Suburban RIN ON... SVE Restaurant We Specialize In Tasty, Homemade Foods Feature Large Menu Delicious Soups and Desserts ® ® ® Orders to Take-Out : : ° Special Sunday Dinners Served all day - from 11 a.m. ® Sunday Papers Available ® Open Daily at 6 a. m. : the oN 309 and 1g Dallas - Harveys Lake Highway and beverage choice of vegetable, SHADOW BROOK Tunkhannock, Pa. FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIALS Breaded Fan Tail Shrimp tartar sauce & hot sauce, choice of potato, tossed salad Sliced Boiled Beef with creamed horseradish sauce tossed salad and beverage ; $1.75 $1.75 “AN ATMOSPHERE YOU'LL LIKE” Convicts Menu—11 A.M. til 2 AM. FHPSVIBM Ji MSOC evan uoy it vio fueds banssones av ov HLL Seed Fomoud Open: 10 a.m. Dinners: Lunch 12 to 2 Tooley Woinbsday—Thursday 5to9 Friday and Saturday 5 to 10 Take Route 6 north to Meshoppen and turn Hight at light on Route 267 to Lawton 45 minutes from Dallas ¥ make reservations for Christmas and New Year's parties 1-934-2164 featuring steaks chops til closing seafood | complete line of beverages Tuesday thru Saturday OPEN EVERY DAY EXCEPT MONDAY 1190 AM. to 1180 P.M. SUNDAY DINNERS SERVED FROM 11:30 to 399 ~ Complete Dinners only — $2.00 Delicious Fresh-Baked Pie TAKE TIME TO BROWSE IN OUR 'NEWLY-ENLARGED GIFT SHOP ESTAURANT 612-614 MAIN ST., EDWARDSVILLE, PA. MAKE UP PENNSYLVANIA Every Sunday— 12 Noon to 8 P.M. Free parking For Reservations Call: 822-3131 Every Thursday—5 t0 8:30 P.M. Every Saturday—o5 to 9:30 p, M. A PARTY Enjoy Sterling Hotel’s Award-winning MORGASBORD DUTCH STYLE More than 100 varieties of Fine Foods and Desserts. All you can eat. No charge for seconds, thirds, or fourths. Make your own sundae. ? By Tradition Wilkes-Barre’s Finest! Downtown Motor Hotel. On the River Common... Good Food: ~ Beautiful Delicious Steaks — Seafood FINE MIXED DRINKS : Serving 5:30 p.m.—Midnight | - NO FOOD WEDNESDAYS _ Lower Demunds Road Christmas Parties - Private Parties ‘Make New Years Reservations 675-9659 ; Dallas View ” spen N.Ji andl Rud; Jack their annt at th
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers