Publication by Nelson Woolbert Phone 696-1689 Auxiliary to: the Trucksville Fire Company met in the fire hall Monday evening. Mrs. Hugh allagher presided. Mombedll enjoyed a ‘Go to Market Party’. Members are soliciting Betty Crocker coupons to replenish their silverware. Coverleaf 4H Club met in the municipal building Friday evening. Mary Beard presided. Members made plans for their “varied spring projects. A Social hour followed the meeting. Mrs. Frank Hummell, 225 Meadowcrest, entertained her card club Wednesday evening. Tables were decorated in the Valentine motif. Mrs. Palmer Updyke, Davis Street, is recuperating at home from injuries she received in an automobile accident in Wilkes- Barre. ; Robert J. Sincavage and Rosemary F. Bray are two of the 61 Wilkes College seniors who have completed academic requirements for their Bachelor's degree and will receive diplomas at the 26th annual commencement in June. Mrs. Joseph Maciejezyk and infant daughter have returned to their home at the Michael Kester Trailer Park, Harris Hill Road, from Mercy Hospital. The United Methodist Women of the Trucksville United Methodist Church will meet in the educi&¥ional building Feb. 27 at 7:30 pir. Following desert, a business meeting at 8 will be held. Mrs. William Dickson will preside. Mrs. Thomas Kreidler will be in charge of the program. Charlotte Pruous, Trenton, N.J. will visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Boyles, South Memorial Highway, this weekend. Brownie Troop No. 659 will receive nationwide recognition in the McCall’s Needlework and Craft Magazine for their picture of a ‘Pilgrim On A Tray’. The picture was a Thanksgiving project for the group. Arthur B. Evans, Pioneer Avenue, is a member of the ticket committee for the 94th banquet of St. David's Society. The event will be held, March 3 at the American Legion Home on North River Street in Wilkes- Barre. Frank Kardell, 161 Johnson St. presented a photography exhibit in the Kennedy Lounge on the campus of College Misericordia the past weekend. The exhibit featured both color and black and white. Frank is a graduate of Dallas Senior High School "and has studied at Luzerne County Community College. Mrs. Robert Roese and infant daughter have returned to their home on Chase Road from Nesbitt Hospital. Bertha Evans, Holly Street, celebrated her birthday yesterday. She was honor guest at a family party. Mrs. = William Mathers, Cliffside Avenue, was confined Plans are now in progress by all Back Mountain’ Girl Scout troops to hold a parade March 11 at 2:30 p.m. This will mark the opening of Girl Scout Week 1973. Each troop is invited to have a float Linda A. Troup On Dean's List Linda a Troup, a senior at Lynchburg College, Lynchburg, Va., has been named to the dean’s lis@sr the first semester of the 1972-73 session. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver J.R. Troup Jr., 111 Orchard East, Newberry Estate, Dallas. Lynchburg College’s dean’s list is made up of students who have achieved a grade average of 3.5 or better on a 4.0 grading system. depicting Girl Scouting in the United States or in a foreign country. Girl Scouts from Dallas will march down from the Forty Fort Dairy Bar on Memorial Highway and the Shavertown- Trucksville Scouts will march up from North Main Street meeting at the Shavertown Shopping ~~ Center. While ‘contributions to the Juliette Lowe World Friendship Fund. Invitations have been sent to executives of the Girl Scout Council as well as council board members who reside in the Back Mountain area. Chairmen from the Shaver- town-Trucksville Neighborhood are Mrs. Charles Preece and Mrs. Alfred Hudak while Mrs. Clem Kuras, Mrs. Allan Ridall and Mrs. Sheppard Pawling are handling arrangements for the Dallas Neighborhood. Telephone 654-9508 Showroom Hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Closed Wed. & Sun. to ‘her home several days last week by illness. Friendship Class of the Trucksville United Methodist Church met in the educational building Tuesday evening. Margaret Goodman presided. Mrs. Harold Croom led devotions. A fish supper was planned to be held in April. A social hour followed. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Harrison, Staub Road, en- tertained Sunday. The occasion marked the 49th wedding an- niversary of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Gruver of Pringle. Mrs. Duane Vitale and infant son have returned to their home at 113 Kester Trailer Park, Harris Hill ‘Road, from Wyoming Valley Hospital. Michael Popson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Michale Popson, 198 been accepted into the Pi Sigma nova University where he is a junior. Photo by Joseph Kane Guitarist Bernie Robinson presented a selection of original folk music compositions at the program held last week in Hayfield House on the Wilkes-Barre Campus of Penn State University. Mr. Robinson is one in a series of guest artists who have been appearing weekly at the local campus through the efforts of the Campus Cultural Affairs Committee. He is a second year student in the university’s associate degree program in sur- veying and resides with his wife and son at RD 5, Tunkhannock. Page 15 Cellist Ko Iwasaki will appear in concert with the Phil- harmonic Orchestra of North- eastern Pennsylvania March 1 at the Irem Temple, Wilkes- Barre, and March 2 at the Masonic Temple in Scranton. Both performances will begin at 8:30 p.m. Mr. Iwasaki made his European debut with the London Symphony Orchestra in 1972. Following his premier appearance, he was engaged to perform =~ with the New Philharmonia Orchestra during the 1972-73 season. He is currently performing, in ad- dition, with the Vancouver Symphony. The cellist, who was born in Japan in 1944, was graduated from Toho Conservatory with honors in 1964. He has per- formed often with the Japan Philharmonic, NHK Symphony, the Yomuri, and the Tokyo Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Iwasaki came to the United States as a Fulbright fellow in 1964 to study with Leonard Rose ‘at the Juilliard School of Music where he received a teaching fellowship in 1966. That same year he made his New York debut in the Young Concert Artists Series. Since that time he has played with the Honolulu Symphony, the Denver Sym- phony, and the Seattle Youth Symphony. The program ‘for the up- coming concerts will feature Mr. Iwasaki in a performance of Sir Edward Elgar's Cello Concerto, Op. 85. Also on the program are Roman Carnival Overture, Op. 9, by Hector Berlioz; Suite No. 2 from Romeo and Juliet Ballet, Op. 64, by Serge Prokofiev; and ‘‘The Quiet City,” by Aaron Copland. Tickets for the concerts are available at the box offices, the Spruce Record Shop, Scranton; Book and Card Mart, Wilkes- Barre; and the Hazleton Public Library. Thomas Michalak is music director and conductor of the Northeastern Philharmonic Orchestra. Dallas Woman Hurt in Accident A 72-year old Dallas woman was slightly injured Saturday afternoon when the car she was driving was involved in a three- car collision on North Main Street, near Beaumont Street in Wilkes-Barre. Ruth A. Walters, 144 Tunk- hannock Highway, Dallas, was treated for a laceration of the head at General Hospital. According to city police re- ports, the drivers of the other two cars were Marilyn R. Gauntlett, 16 Grandview Ave., Dallas and Deborah A. Martin, 540 Bennett St., Luzerne. i £ Hag, 3) 7 p RL Cho, 7 N IC GS NRE To ES —_— NER GE Yo gal. Reg. 79¢ 12 0z. can Reg. 43c 60° 4oz. cup Reg. 19¢ (Choice of Flavors) - CHF-273-67