The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, September 10, 1970, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
CAROLYN PROKOPCHAK
Carolyn Prokopchak, RD 3,
Dallas, died Sept. 3 at her home.
She was born in Swoyersville,
the former Carolyn Remetz.
She was a member of St.
Nicholas, Byzantine Church,
Swoyersville.
She is survived by her
husband, Walter A.; sons,
Michael, Allentown; Walter,
Orange; a daughter, Mary
Frances Schaefer, Orange;
brothers, Fred Remetz, Center
Moreland; Anthony Remetz,
Swoyersville; George Remetz,
Lititz; Michael Remetz, Down-
ingtown; a sister, Margaret
Yedinak, Swoyersville,und two
grandchildren.
The funeral was held Sept. 5
from the funeral home, 1442
Wyoming Ave., Forty Fort, with
Divine Liturgy in St. Nicholas
Church. Interment was in Mt.
Olivet Cemetary, Carverton.
SAMUEL BLIZZARD
Samuel Blizzard 72, RD 1
Noxen, died Aug. 20 in General
Hospital where he had been a
patient since Aug. 9.
He was a member of St.
Luke’s Lutheran Church,
Noxen. He was a retired em-
ploye of the former Armour
Tannery.
He is survived by his widow,
the former Flora Belles, Noxen;
sons, Arthur, Noxen; James
and Harold, North Carolina;
daughter, Viola Crouse, Noxen;
stepchildren, Inez Higby,
Idaho;
Benton; Oma Lenkosky,
Wilkes-Barre; Ethel Jones,
Noxen; James Hettesheimer,
Noxen; John Hettesheimer,
West Wyoming; 36 grand-
children, 17 great grand-
children; sisters, Mrs. Elwood
Warner, Westfield; Nina
Traver, RD 1 Noxen.
The funeral was held from the
Nulton Funeral Home, Beau-
mont with the Rev. Harold
Bassettmf Bowman’s Creek
Free Methodist Church of-
ficiating. Interment was in
Orcutt Cemetery, Noxen.
ANN WINCHNER
. Ann Wichner, 211 :Goeringer
\Ave., Shavertown, died Aug. 21
in Nesbitt ‘Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Wichner was born in
Wilkes-Barre, the former Ann
Morrow. She was a graduate of
St. Leo’s High School, Ashley.
She was a member of St.
Therese’s Church, Shavertown.
She is survived by her
husband, Jack; daughters, Rita
Grant, Levittown; Janice
Dimattia, Teaneck, N.J.; seven
grandchildren; sisters, Agnes
Lucht, Acton, Mass.; Stell
Butler, Mildred McGuiness, and
Margaret Behm, all of Wilkes-
Barre; brothers, Joseph
Morrow, Wilkes-Barre; Walter
Morrow, Hanover Green. A son,
Daniel, died June 15, 1947.
The funeral was held from the
McLaughlin Funeral Home, 416
Wyoming Ave., Kingston,aug.
25 with a Requiem Mass in St.
Therese’s Church, Shavertown.
Interment was in St. Mary’s
Cemetery, Hanover Township.
ALEXANDER KOSTICH
Alexander Kostich, 50,
Taylor, Mich., died at Nesbitt
Memorial Hospital Sept. 2 after
suffering a heart attack. He was
vacationing with his wife at
Harveys Lake, when he was
stricken. His wife, Esther, is a
former resident of the Lake.
He is survived by his widow;
sons, Kord and Kim, at home in
Michigan; brothers, Nicholas,
Columbus, Ohio; and Anthony,
Lakewood, N.J., and sisters,
obituaries
Alma Derhammer, -
Le
Sophie, N.Y.C., and Marie
Flynn, Los Angeles.
The body was transferred
from the Bronson Funeral
Home, Sweet Valley, to
Michigan where funeral ser-
vices were held.
THEODORE RUFF
Theodore R. Ruff, 37 West-
minster Drive, Dallas, died
Aug. 22 after suffering a heart
attack at Ben Franklin Service,
Trucksville. Richard Disque,
deputy coroner, investigated.
Mr. Ruff was born at White-
stone, N.Y. He was a resident of
Dallas 18 years where he had a
plumbing business from which
he retired five years ago. He
was a member of Prince of
Peace Church, Dallas.
He is survived by his widow,
the former Catherine Klein; a
daughter, Mrs. William Wright,
Dallas; brothers, Charles, Long
Island, Joseph and Paul, Silver
Spring, Md.; a sister, Josephine
Hausman, Long Island; two
grandchildren and two great
grandchildren.
The funeral was held from the
Disque Funeral Home, 672
Memorial Highway,
Dallas, Aug. 25. The Rev. John
Prater, rector of Prince of
Peace Church officiated. Inter-
ment was in the Chapel Lawn
Cemetery, Dallas.
WILMA JACOBY
Wilma P. Jacoby 46, Hunlock
Creek, died Aug. 29 in Nesbitt
Memorial Hospital. -
She was born in Wilkes-Barre,
the former Wilma Case, but re-
sided in Hunlock Creek most of
her life. She ‘belonged to the
Muhlenberg United Methodist
Church. :
She is survived by her hus-
band, Dean; children, Nathan
D., Kingston; Donna Miller,
Sellersville; Darlene Aasmo,
New Carlisle, Ohio; Robert, at
home; six grandchildren;
sisters, Joan Steele, Elizabeth,
N.J.; Myra Woods, Rahway,
N.J.; and Thelma Lewis, Clear-
water, Fla.
The funeral was held Sept. 1
from the Bronson Funeral
Home, Main Road, Sweet
Valley. The Rev. Robert
Stephens and. the Rev. Oscar
Kulp officiated.
District WSCS
meets Sept. 17
The fall meeting of the
Wilkes-Barre District WSCS
will be held in the West Pittston
United Methodist Church, Sept.
17, at 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Joseph
Grilly, Wilkes-Barre District
president will preside.
Roger L. Pilotti, a drug inves-
tigator for the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania, will be the
speaker. Mr. Pilotti is with the
Dept. of Health, Div. of Nar-
cotics and Drug Control.
Wilkes Co
A College Misericordia student, Kathy Conway, Girardsville,
bids goodbye to Postmaster General Winton M. Blount as she
prepares to leave the Post Office Department to return to Dallas
for classes. Kathy spent the past few months as a summer intern
in the Department.
lege opens
for 24th year Sept. 8
Approximately 700 freshmen
will set the stage. during
“Freshman Week” for the ar-
rival of another 2,000 upper-
classmen and 100 transfer stu-
dents who will return to the
campus at Wilkes College for its
24th academic year as an inde-
pendent institution. The fresh-
men will arrive Sept. 8. Upper-
classmen will register for
classes later in the week for
classes which will begin Sept.
14.
To the daytime enrollment of
approximately 2,800 students
will be added evening division
students taking courses on a
credit and non-credit basis, plus
graduate students, swelling the
overall student body to over
5,000
The first official function will
take place Sept. 8, at 2 p.m.
when President Michelini ex-
tends a welcome to the parents
of new students in the Wilkes
College gymnasium.
This will be followed by con-
ferences with the deans and the
parents. George F. Ralston,
¢
vISiting golfer dies
after attack at Irem
A foursome enjoying a game
of golf on the Irem Temple
Country Club course ended it on
a tragic note last Wednesday at
11:54 a.m. The group was on the
sixth fairway when one of the
party, Stanley Stith, Valley
Stream Apartments, Lands-
dale, suddenly dropped to the
ground in pain.
Coming up just behind was
another foursome which in-
cluded Richard Disque, deputy
coroner, and his son, Richard,
Dallas. The Disques saw the
man on the ground and hurried
to the site to offer assistance.
Both men applied mouth-to-
mouth resuscitation and exter-
nal heart massage while one of
the foursome returned to the
clubhouse to call the ambul-
ance.
The Dallas ambulance crew
was ‘‘very prompt,” said to Mr.
Disque, and they continued
working on Mr. Stith until on the
trip to Nesbitt Memorial Hos-
pital where he was admitted.
The patient succumbed shortly
after.
Members of the crew were
Wes Cave, John Sperl and Jerry
Torr.
dean of student affairs, will
speak to the parents of the men
students, and Jane K. Lampe,
dean of women, will address the
parents of the women students.
On Wednesday there will be
the opening conference for the
class of 1974 with remarks by
William Kaye, chairman,
Freshman Orientation Commit-
tee, and Dean Ralston, as well
as an address by Dr. Robert C.
Riley, chairman of the Wilkes
Department of Psychology, on
“Counseling and You.”
Registration will begin at
mid-day Wednesday and con-
tinue through Thursday with a
break on this latter day for a
freshman luncheon in the gym-
nasium. President Michelini
will make a special address to
the Class of 1974 at this time.
Conferences with advisers
- and students orientation con-
cerned with campus organiza-
tions will be held through
Friday during the day with
special evening dinners and
social events for the new stu-
dents.
On Saturday at 10:30 the
freshmen will be transported by
special buses to Fair-Lea, farm
owned by Chancellor and for-
mer President Eugene S.
Farley, for the traditional
freshmen picnic.
DALLAS
Sept. 1—Charles Condon, Kunkle to Nesbitt Hospital. Crew:
Willard Newberry, Bob Cartier.
Sept. 1—Mary Chldik, 108 Highland Ave., to Maple Holl Nur-
sing Home from General Hospital, Crew: Willard Newberry and
Robert Cartier.
Sept. 2—Irene Evans, Old Lake Road, Dallas, to Nesbitt
Hospital Crew: Wes Cave and Jerry Torr.
Sept. 4—Mr. and Mrs. Sam Green, Tunkhannock Highway to
Nesbitt Hospital, (overcome by coal gas).crew: Bob Besecker,
Frank Hirleman, (Kingston Twp.), and James Davies.
Sept. 5—Mary Diettrick, Machell Ave., to Nesbitt Hospital.
Crew: Lynn Sheehan, Dick Disque.
se -
Phones (AC 717)
822-6108 7350730
BIG #1—We hope you have WARM feeling toward us.
You Are On Top—And We Are Next
We Don’t Want to be the Buffer between
BIG #1 and 18 Other Stations
So, please. Stay On Top.
730 ON YOUR DIAL
(Rated the #2 Station in Northeastern Pennsylvania)
Average Quarter-Hour listening estimates ARB Report
Wilkes-Barre-Scranton. April 16—May 13, 1970 Metro
Survey Area.
P.O. Box 859
Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18701
——————————
Ry
die
Sept. 5—Paul Rother, Maplewood Avenue, from Dallas Senior
High School to General Hospital. Crew: Richard Disque, Russ
Banta and Dave Carey.
Sept. 6—Auto accident, Route 309, Goss Manor. Paulette
Lombardo, RD 4, Blytheburn, and Ann Galavage, Reid Street,
Yatesville, to Nesbitt Hospital. Crew: Dick Disque, Lynn Sheehan
and Russ Banta.
Sept.—Mrs. Gavin, Applewood Manor to Mercy Hospital.
Crew: John Sperl and James Carey.
NOXEN
Sept. 1—John Chiscon, Sweet Valley, injured in woods while
working, to General Hospital. Crew: Earl Crispell, Jerry Tallent,
Roger Boston, Dave Fritz and Gilbert Boston.
Sept. 3—Reuling Davis from General Hospital to home. Crew:
John Lyons, William Traver, Dave Fritz.
Sept. 8—Michael Gennetts, RFD, Harveys Lake to General
Hospital. Crew: Fred Boston, Jerry Tallent, Dave Fritz.
Friday Nite
477-5958
Rt. 29, Lake Silkworth
SURPRISE YOURSELF!
COME TO LOVELY LAKE SILKWORTH
AND DINE AT
LAKESIDE INN
Fish Fey... roa. 1.50
Complete Dinner Menu
Music for Dancing
Every Sat. Nite
Free Parking
OVERLOOKING THE LAKE
THE DALLAS POST, SEPT. 10, 1970
‘“‘how-to’’ books
at local library
Anybody can learn to do any-
thing, or so it would seem after
looking over the dozens of ‘‘how-
to-do-it”’ books listed in the card
catalog at the Back Mountain
Memorial Library. There are
many cards in the catalog be-
ginning with the magic words
“how to,” and each card repre-
sents a book on the library’s
shelves.
Books on how to make a will,
adopt a child, lose weight, earn
money, plan for retirement,
learn a foreign language, and
carry on a conversation are
listed with others on how to stop
drinking, live with a teen-ager,
add years to your life, get more
for your money, tempt a fish,
and travel without being rich.
Home building and remodel-
ing is a favorite field for ‘‘how-
to” books. There are books on
how to build a garage, install
plumbing, remodel a house, lay
linoleum and tile, make built-in
furniture, paint and wallpaper,
and plant your home ground.
For hobbyists, there are
“how-to” manuals on how to
paint landscapes, do wood
carving, refinish furniture,
make ceramics, use hand tools,
arrange flowers, take pictures,
tie flies, make mobiles, and sell
your handicrafts.
The businessman and execu-
tive will find books on how to
manage a small business, be a
successful leader, write better
business letters, solve manage-
ment problems, train super-
visors, read the financial news,
invest wisely, chart data, and
increase executive effective-
ness.
Patrons can also receive help
on how to run for office, bowl
better, buy a used sports car,
repair appliances, write for
television, hold a better meet-
ing, enjoy ballet, build and race
hot rods, speak well in public,
get into college, apply for a job,
conduct a perfect wedding, get
- the breaks, and conquer fears
and worries. And do nothing
with nobody all alone by your-
self.
And all books, of course, are
wonderful for allowing a reader
to do nothing with nobody all
alone by himself.
“Musical Places’’
Youth of Christ
first rally guests
Lester and Grace Place, the
well-known ‘Musical Places,”
will be special guests for the
first rally of the fall season of
Youth For Christ. The rally will
be held Sept. 12, at 7:45 p.m. in
the Youth For Christ Building,
206 Parrish St., Wilkes-Barre.
On many previous occassions
the Places have been in the ;
valley and are well-known for
the variety of musical instru-
ments they play.
One time owners of a very
successful hosiery business
which they gave up to tour the
country, they play their Gospel
music to many receptive aud-
iences.
School of Mission
held at Sky Lake
The Wyoming Conference of
the United Methodist Church
will conduct a “Weekend School
of Christian Mission” at Sky
Lake, Windsor, N.Y., Sept. 11,
12'and 13. The theme will be “An
Encounter with Life.”
Rachael Morris, dean of the
school, has said that leadership
development and new dimen-
sions of the United Methodist
Church and women’s societies
will be stressed; also the need
for missions. motivation, and
involvement.
The school is open to all local
church chairmen, Task Force
personnel, chairman of the
council on Ministries, members
of the Women’s Society and
Guild, local district and confer-
ence officers, young people and
all persons interested in the
winter hours
for library
The Back Mountain Memorial
Library in Dallas will resume
" winter schedule of hours Sept.
14.
The main building will ‘be
open Monday, Wednesday,
Friday and Saturday from 9:30
a.m. to 5:30 p.m., and Tuesday
and Thursday from 9:30 a.m. to
8:30 p.m. 2
The children’s annex will be
open Wednesday, Friday and
Saturday from 12:30 p.m. to
5:30 p.m., and Tuesday. and
Thursday from 12:30 p.m. to
8:30 p.m.
——
pr
FEATURES
i
T
LHI
aI
LINENS
1:
Heritage
Hendredon
BIg Gl
Globe
OWN & COUNTR
253 S. MAIN ST.
WILKES-BARRE
NN
Reg.
$1.49
SHAVERTOWN
“Wise Buyers
Are Buying Breyers”
DN
PLEDGE QF PURITY
| Pledge That Breyers Ice Cream Has Never Contained
Adulterants, Gums, Gelatins, Powders or Fillers, Extracts or Ed
Artificial Flavoring of Any Nature. % *
Real Cream, Cane Sugar and Pure
Flavorings Are Used To Make
BREYERS ICE CREAM
The “Old Fashioned Kind”
Henry W. Breyer
FOUNDER
BREYER ICE CREAM CO.
half gallon
stock up now
sale ends this week
EVANS REXALL DRUG STORE
“Prescription Pharmacy”
Fast Service—Easy Parkinge-673:3121
Now
$1.29
PO000E00000000000006000vOTRYSLTIYE
| on that roof while these
ministry and mission of God’s
church.
Courses of study will be “How
the Word Gets Around,” “The
America’s; How Many
Worlds,” and ‘“‘Out of the
Depths: The Psalms.”
Discussion groups on Inner
City Churches; Country
Churches, Small Town Chur-
. ches, Suburban Churches,
Summer and Winter Resort
Churches will be conducted.
Dr. Lois Miller, associate
general secretary of Joint Com-
mission on Education and
Cultivation of the Board of Mis-
sions will be the resource
person.
Registrations should be sent
to the Rev. Arthur W. Idan, 2
Ceperley Ave., Oneonta,” N.Y.,
13820. Time of registration is 7
p.m. to 8 p.m. Friday, Sept. 11.
Closing session will be 1 p.m. to
2 p.m., Sept. 13. All registrants
are requested to bring their
Bible, notebook, pencil, bed
clothing and towels.
MRS. D. E. ROBERTS
PHONE 474-6659
AY Rr
WE‘REEXPECTING—Kegs
for Cider, Heating Stoves
for wood or coal, Delta
saws and shop toals,
White Steel Cabinets r
kitchen or clothes stor¥ge
and a host of other fall
items.
ROOF DOPE—Better get
warm days last—we can
supply you with steel
sheets, rools, shingles,
coating and cement for |,
patching—our Fibred alu-
minum coating is a great
buy.
STORM WINDOW TALK
—Ildeal aluminum still
makes the $11.95 window
unit which comes with
adjustment plate so that
you can make a tight fit
on a crooked opening—
they'll save 14 of r
fuel bill. or
NO MONEY DOWN—You
can enjoy the convenience
of roofs, pumps, freezers,
washers and chain saws
—the pleasures of R.@BA.
Skidoo, guns, boats, etc.
Yes! with no down pay-
ment!
SUMMER GOOD BUYS—
Three air conditioners—
display models—you can
buy the one you need for
next year at a savings of
more than $50.—all picnic
and summer items have
the red tag and that means
savings of 20 to 50%.
THE TWO BUCKS HELPS
—Our sales of paint e
up 30% since we chan®%d
to the “Tru-Test” line—
you get the best quality—
a great choice of colors
and it's true—you save
$2 bucks on a gallon.
JUST RECEIVED—Con-
crete mixers—some of
them have transport wheels
SO you can move them
with your car—compact
shredders for the Organic
Gardener—more than 100
c,cles and untold toys.
Setter stop in and check
an us.
Gay Murray Co.
Bridge Street
TUNKHANNOCK, PA.
836-2175
colored TV, motorcycies, |-
od Wt i a ep AY
7 Ry TE A Sp i,
ETA CYT I EET PEP Yr fir 1
or BT
AY
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