The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, May 07, 1970, Image 16

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    PAGE SIXTEEN
Dallas Chorale begins
Spring concert season
After rehearsing for a period
of ten weeks, the Dallas
Women’s Club Chorale will
begin their concert season May
5 with a program for the Dallas
Junior Woman'’s Club and their
guests at the May Tea. The pro-
gram will feature old show
tunes, vaudeville favorites and
hits from broadway. In keeping
with the space age the program
will be a “Musical Trip to the
Moon.”
On May 7 the Chorale will
perform for members of the
Bethel Baptist Church at their
annual family banquet. The
Wyoming Women’s Club will be
entertained May 12 and the
Dallas Senior Woman’s Club
will hear the Chorale on the
May 13.
Patients at Valley Crest will
see the show and the Senior
.Citizens Group will also be
entertained.
The Chorale will conclude
their program for the month of
Ambulance Log
LEHMAN
May 3—Anna Urban to Mercy Hospital. Crew: Joe Johns, Ron
Wenrich, Bill Dawe.
Lake Silkworth
By Mrs. John E. Wildoner
477-5348
I am surely glad you don’t go
horseback riding seated on your
hands or I would not be able to
write this week. Our horse-
loving daughter’s pride and joy
was feeling his oats after the
long winter and needed some of
the vim and vinegar ridden out
of him lest he zig when he was
expected to zag with one of our
inexperienced offspring aboard
his broad back.
My size (certainly not my
shape) made me the logical
choice for the job, not that I
minded. Still, by Saturday, I
was glad when a couple of
would-be jockey friends hap-
pened along.
Arch would be a jockey if his
wife allowed him and Gail
would be another if his mother
consented. With Gail’s fashion-
able haircut, except for the
color, you couldn’t tell where
the flowing mane of the horse
left off and Gail’s began! At any
rate, our Golden Girl now rides
her Silver Steed with much
more confidence and we all
breathe a little easier. Even
Grandma can’t resist the old
plug’s muzzly affection, and I'll
bet before this sumer is over
she’ll be showing us a thing or
two about horseback riding we
thought she’d forgotten!
Harry Zeig Jr., his wife
Cheryl, and their pretty little
pixie daughter, Kelly, have
moved their trailer home from
its former location on Route 29
to their plot of ground adjacent
to Harry’s parents’ property on
Hartman Road.
Dick and Barbara London and
their two handsome sons, from
whom the young Zweig family
purchased the trailer, have
been living in the new home
Dick built since before Christ-
mas. Dick’s spare time is put to
good use building cupboards
and cabinets and, in general,
putting the finishing touches on
his work.
Jack and Mabel McKeel are
hard at work on their new home
which had to be postponed
awhile when the McKeel saw-
mill burned. Already, much of
the outside framework has been
erected. Soon, Warren and
Leann will be able to do all those
things they've been planning to
do: “when we get in our new
house!”
Bob and Gail Rood are
making preparations to move
ICK
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MOTORS OPEL.
538 ST., KINGSTON
their recently acquired trailer-
home to their property located
at Dushore, Pa.
The new trailer court planned
by Al Radginski on Route 29
south of Lake Silkworth is slow-
ly taking shape. Excavation is
being hampered by April
showers and the soil’s being
already saturated with water.
A young, light-colored,
female German police dog with
an injured left hind leg has been
hanging round and, at night,
sleeping in the stable with
Sally’s horse. Our attempts to
befriend the beautiful animal
have been unsuccessful and we
don’t even know if the dog
wears a license or collar.
The recently organized Boy
Scout Troop 440 of Lake Silk-
‘worth is becoming bigger and
better all the time. Scoutmaster
David Wildoner, assisted by
Sheldon Lamoreaux Sr., has his
scouts marching and learning
wood lore each practicable Sat-
urday. Meetings are held each
Wednesday night in the Lake
Silkworth Volunteer Fire Hall
and any boy interested in be-
coming a member of the troop,
or even visiting at a meeting, is
welcome. They are interested in
you. Presently each scout is
embarked on his own private
project to earn his unifrom; so,
all you residents of Lake Silk-
worth and vicinity, keep these
fine lads in mind when you have
yard work or cleaning-up to do.
John Wildoner got his wife,
Jane, an early birthday pres-
ent—one of those diggin’ riggins |
that plow and harrow a garden
plot at the same time. What’s
more he’s even volunteered to
hold the lantern wo she can
work longer hours at night.
© We live directly across the
road from a cemetery. Contrary
to some folks’ assumption, we
do not have fresh-cut flower
centerpieces each time there’s
a ‘funeral! But the wind has
blown some plastic ones our
way and a vivid hyacinth of
- super proportions adorns our
‘mailbox post. The gravestones
* have always presented a hazard
to our mixed-heritage hound,
Herman, too. Whenever he
chases an airplane and its flight
path goes over the graveyard,
‘there’s always the danger that
he might collide with a grave-
stone and knock out what few
teeth he has left!
¥oinall
May with a performance at the
Fine Arts Fiesta on Public
Square in Wilkes-Barre. This
will be the sixth year that the
chorale has had the privilege of
working with the fine arts group }
and an open invitation is issued
to the public to come and hear
the Woman’s Club Chorale.
The group’s schedule for June
will be published at a later date.
Chorale director is Mrs. David
Wojciechowski and the pianist
is Mrs. Walter Steltz.
Shown as they prepare for
their series of spring concerts
are the 24 members of the
Chorale. They are seated first
row, from the left: Mrs. James
Balmer, Mrs. William Jones,
Mrs. Daniel Meeker, Mrs.
Joseph Kaminski, Mrs. John
McGoey, Mrs. Walter Steltz,
pianist, and Mrs. David
Wojciechowski, director.
Second row: Mrs. William
John Schray, Mrs. Donald
Schaffer, Mrs. Charles Mahler,
Mrs. Lamont Holdsworth, Mrs.
Harry Bernardi.
Third row: Mrs. John Wil-
liams, Mrs. George Yatsko,
Mrs. Ivor Williams, Mrs. Leo
Mohen, Mrs. Paul Lauer, Mrs.
Leon Brokenshire, Mrs. Joseph
Katyl and Mrs. Robert Kir-
chner. Absent when the photo
was taken were Mrs. Joseph
Balavage and Jill Sickler.
Walter Glogowski
re-elected Dallas
DEA president
Walter Glogowski, the
graphic arts teacher at the Dal-
las Junior High School, was re-
elected president of the Dallas
Education Association at the
April meeting. Other officers
elected to serve with him are
John Johnson, first vice presi-
dent; Marcella Nagorski, sec-
ond vice president; Judy Roe-
der, secretary, and Lena
Moore, treasurer.
The officers will be installed
by Robert Rowlands, Luzerne
County School Superintendent,
at the annual spring dinner that
will be held next Saturday night
at the Fox Hill Country Club.
Mr. Glogowski is a graduate
of Wilkes College and has done
additional graduate work at
Millersville State College. While
at Wilkes, he compiled an out-
standing record as a varsity
wrestler. He taught for several
years in the Plymouth High
School prior to coming to Dal-
las.
Auto wrecked
on Main Street
A car parked off the road on
Main Street, Dallas, was demol-
ished April 25 at 11:45 p.m.,
when struck by a vehicle driven
by William Howell, RD 5,
Shavertown. The destroyed
automobile, a 1969 Ford sedan,
was owned by Richard Ross Jr.,
Kingston, and was parked in
front of the Joseph P. Brennan
residence, 191 Main St.
Dallas borough patrolman
Sev Newberry arrested Mr.
Howell, who claimed he had
© fallen asleep, for driving under
the influence of alcohol. Bail
was set at $500 pending a hear-
ing May 5 before Justice of the
Peace Harry Thompson. Assist-
ing Patrolman Newberry at the
scene of the accident was Spe-
cial Patrolman Ted Montross.
Walp, Mrs. Edwin Taft, Mrs. :
THE DALLAS POST, MAY 7, 1970
Dallas Boro Council
okays construction
on Newberry Estate
Dallas Borough Council has
approved the construction of
multiple family dwellings on the
portion of the Newberry Estate
that lies within the borough.
Council granted a limited ac-
ceptance to existing zoning laws
to allow the Troup Fund, Inc. to
construct its condominium
development.
President Edwin Delaney
proposed that council amend
the present ruling on trailers, or
add a clause, that will penalize
firms or individuals keeping
trailers on land within the bor-
ough beyond the stated time
granted by council. Council
voted to fine violators, who' do
not remove a trailer after the
specified time, $25 a day.
Donald Smith on
nuclear submarine
Navy P0O2.C. Donald E. Smith
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
E. Smith Sr., 144 Main St., Dal-
las, is serving with the Blue
Crew aboard the nuclear-
powered fleet ballistic missile
submarine USS Simon Bolivar,
homeported at Charleston, S.C.’
~municipality,
The matter of appointing a
three man Zoning Hearing
Board was brought to the coun-
cil’s attention. Members must
be borough residents who do not
hold any other post in the
except that one
member may also be on the
planning commission. Council-
man Jerry Machell submitted
the name of Wilbur Davis, and
councilman George Thomas
suggested the name of Gus
Kabeschat.
REDUCE EXCESS
BL ULE 0)
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ony $ 1é°
A mild diuretic to aid in
the elimination of excess
body fluids.
EVANS
REXALL
DRUG STORE
PRESCRIPTION PHARMACY
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Standard equipment includes:
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Try out Toyota Corona and its easy going fully
automatic transmission. Today! At easy going
Richard Auto Sales, Jn.
Scranton -Carbondale Highway Phone 489-2031
Olyphant, R. D. 1, Pa. 18447
Solid Vinyl
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Metal Trims
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ALSO OTHER SIZES 12x12—12x15
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Dallas firemen
douse 2 fires
Two fires were reported in
Dallas last week, both were ex-
tinguished by volunteers from
the Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire
Company: The first, a grass fire
April 29in Woodlawn Cemetery,
was put out by eight volunteers
under command of Asst. Fire
Chief Don Bulford.
The second fire, April 30, was
an automobile owned by George
“ Casterline, Harveys Lake,
which caught fire in front of
Yalick Brothers Farm Produce
stand on the Harveys Lake
Highway. Eight firemen extin-
- guished the blaze using Purple-
K, a dry chemical, under the di-
“rection of Asst. Fire Chief Don
. Bulford.
‘legion to sere
‘spaghetti May 9
The Dallas American Legion
Post 672 will hold a spaghetti
supper at the Legion building
May 9. Serving will be from 5:30
to 9 p.m. Tickets may be pur-
chased from any legionnaire or
at the door.
Charles James Memorial As-
sembly No. 144, International
Order of Rainbow for Girls, will
hold a regular meeting tonight
at 7 p.m. at the Eastern Star
Hall, Foster St., Dallas. All
members are urged to attend.
Pictured above are members of the Dallas Woman’s Club
Chorale who are rehearsing for their spring concert season.
;]
s
9—PERSONAL
Tr CRORE TT
John,
Come home, . . . All
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fast, easy, personal loan
from Northeastern National
Bank.
Dr. I. M. Hurt
Northeastern Pennsylvania National
ADVERTISEMENT Bank & Trust Co. Member F.D.I.C.
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