The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a candle- light satin gown, accented with Venice lace and powder blue interwoven on the bibbed bodice and A-line skirt. Her headpiece consisted of flowers matching those in her bouquet of white roses and step- ‘Robin Eneboe, sister of the selected a powder blue velvet gown, fashioned with short puf- fed sleeves, and carried a bou-: quet of yellow roses, white dais- ies and baby’s breath. She wore matching flowers in her hair. on pit Page A9 3 7 y ; 2 ~ Lake-Lehman Graduates Wed in Church Ceremon Leda In urc ere Y C. J The marriage of Cathy Ann Loyalville, was solemnized Oct. nn- ... Eneboe, daughter of Mr. and 27, at 11 a.m., in St. Paul’s ch, i Mrs. Cigerd Eneboe, of Chase Lutheran Church, Shavertown. Manor, Snavertown, and Kent The Rev. Lynn Rothrock per- Payne Whitesell, son of Mr. and = formed the double ring cere- ribbon, er-- Mrs. Elwood Whitesell, of mony. tor em en- . . . . nn- hanotis with blue daisies. hen h a can er, rk, est DUS a Cordelia Jill Jeter . Cordelia Jill Jeter Engaged to Marry les Trethaway, of Dallas, Mrs. William Burling Jeter, of Camp Hill, and the late William Bur- ling Jeter. Mr. Tallman, who graduated from the Kentucky Military In- stitute, also attended Morris Harvey College, in Charleston, Mr. and Mrs. Justin Bergman i Jr., Briar Hill, RD 3, Wyoming, have announced the engage- ment of their daughter, Cordel- ia Jill Jeter, to Henry Dickie 5 + Tallman Jr. He is the son of Mr. + and Mrs. Henry Dickie Tall- © man, of Charleston, W. Va., and v. FAY Wh | » .4. West Chop, Mass. W. Va. He is now enrolled in the ht x MisgicJeter is a.graduate. of -Cullinery Institute of {ifneri¢a, 1d . Wyo{@Eig. Seminary . Day Hyde Park, N.Y. 5 His Ne nbanetts are the late Mr. and Mrs. Sweet Tallman, of Chatham, Mass. and Sewickly; and Mr. and Mrs. Cutler Belk- nap Downer, of Winchester, Mass., and West Chop, Mass. No date has been set for the wedding. School, Wyoming Seminary and i Endicott Junior College, Bever- > ly, . She is currently a . memser of the faculty of Wyo- ming Seminary, at the Payne- Pettebone House. Miss Jeter’s grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Char- commen setpoint ssn wom won rn me el re Publick Occurences Dec. 1 / The Carverton United Methodist Women will hold a rummage sale in the basement of the church from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. Per- sons who have rummage to sell may bring it to the church F'ri- ‘ » day evening. C4 “h Township Board of Supervisors will meet at 10 a.m. in the Loyalville United Methodist Church. Dec. 2 The Kingston Township Ambulance Association will hold their annual meeting at 2 p.m. in the Shavertown Fire Hall. Election “of officers will be held. Dec. 3 Baseball for Boys and Women’s Auxiliary will meet at 8 p.m. in the Dallas American Legion Home. Dec. 3 ‘ The Oak Hill Civic and Lehman Taxpayers Associations will sponsor a meeting on sewers at 8 p.m. in the Jonathan R. Davis Fire Hall, Idetown. Dec. 3 Dallas School District Board of Directors will meet at 8 p.m. in the senior high school library to reorganize. Dec. 4 : Dallas Township Board of Supervisors will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the municipal building. Phillip Walter will preside. Dec. 4 Dinner meeting for the Dallas Junior Woman’s Club will be ! held at Irem Temple Country Club beginning at 6:30 p.m. The Dallas Woman’s Club Chorale will present, ‘Prelude to Christ- mas 1973". Dec. 8 Christmas shopping for children of the Back Mountain will be held at Gate of Heaven School auditorium, Dallas, from 2 to 4 yy by the Dallas Junior Woman’s Club. DeCE 9 The Trucksville United Methodist Church will hold ‘“Christ- mas Family Night’’ at the educational building from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Reservations must be made with Mrs. Dan Kistler or Mrs. Thomas Oliver by Dec. 6. The festivities will include a covered dish/supper, tree trimming and a carolling. Each family is re- quested to bring their own place settings. Dec. 10 : The Daniel C. Roberts Fire Company Auxiliary, Harveys : Lake, will hold a Christmas party at the home of Mrs. Carl i Swanson, Baird Street and Lakeside Drive, at 6 p.m. Members are asked to bring a covered dish and a gift to exchange. Dec. 10 The Back Mountain Senior Citizens will meet in the club rooms at College Misericordia from 2-4 p.m. Members are asked to bring small sandwiches or cookies. Dec. 12 The Back Mountain Senior Citizens will hold their Christmas dinner at the Castle Inn, Dallas, at 6:30 p.m. Reservations must be made with Mrs. Ed Stair, 675-1879, by Dec. 1. Dec. 15 Dallas Women of Rotary Will S sponsor a dinner-dance at the Irem Temple Country Club. Dutch treat cocktail hour will begin ‘at 6:30 p.m. and dinner will be served at 7:30 p.m. Dancing will continue until 1 a.m. Mrs. Perry Karnofski, Dallas, and Mrs. a Pais Hoge! Truckevilie, are in 0 sharge of f rostrvatis. oh - Mark Whitesell was his brother’s best man. Bruce McKie, nephew of the bride, served as acolyte, and Judy Young was soloist, accom- panied by Mrs. George Voorhees, organist. An afternoon reception was held at the Whitesell home. The bride is a graduate of Lake-Lehman High School and the University of Tampa, Fla., with a bachelor of arts degree. The bridegroom also was graduated from Lake-Lehman High School and Wilkes-Barre Business College. He is'em- ployed by Whitesell Brothers, as sales manager of the mobile homes sales division. Dallas Alumni Plans Wedding Mr. and Mrs. Peter E. Olson, 206 Richards Ave., Norwalk, Conn., announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Patricia Ann, to Kirk F. Young, son of Dr. and Mrs. George J. Young, 98 Cheese Spring Road, Wilton, Conn. formerly of Dallas. Miss Olson graduated from Brien McMahon High School and the University of Connecti- cut with a degree in education. She is presently employed at a day care center in Norwalk. Mr. Young graduated from Dallas Senior High School in 1969 and attended Virginia Mili- tary Institute and will graduate in December, 1973 from Lehigh University, Bethlehem. A spring'wedding will be held; but no definite date has been set. Lake Women’s Club Gives Meeting Report The Harveys Lake Women’s Service Club held its November board meeting at the Alderson Methodist Church. Hostesses were Mrs. Joseph Rauch, Mrs. Clarence Montross, Esther Grey, Mrs. Richard Williams and Ferne Smith. The meeting was held pri- marily to orient new members. The chairman and officers de- scribed their duties, and Mrs. C. Wesley Boyle, president, ex- plained the functions of the club. Mrs. Carl Swanson, chairman mittee, announced that 198 cheer baskets will be packed and delivered Dec. 15; to the members of the community are asked to meet at the Lutheran Church, Sandy Bot- ton, at 9:30 a.m. Mrs. Louis Lanning announ- ced that the time is nearing for the annual arts, crafts and sewing contests. ‘Begin to plan your entries,” she advised. Mrs. Walbridge Leinthall, in conjunction with ‘Dial a Driver,” is looking for volun- teers to give one day or one-half day a week to help transport or visit senior citizens in the area. About Kitchen Knives--The number of knives you need in your kitchen is determined by your own needs, according to Extension home management specialists at The Pennsylvania State University. A good paring knife, with a straight cutting edge and a sharp point, a utility knife and a large knife, such as a butcher knife are basic in almost all kitchens. But you may find a French or chef's knife useful for dicing, mincing and shredding foods. Health & Beauty Briefs The secret to successful dieting is not a crash diet, physicians state, but a little less of everything. If you eat more calories than your body can use in its normal, daily activity, the excess is stored as fat. Exercise while dieting helps to tone up the muscles and tissues and helps burn stored calories. To burn 300 to 700 calories, try swimming for an hour. Moderate walk- ing burns up 110 to 180 calories per hour. ; : Rekha THE The Kunkle Silver Leaf Club met at the home of Virgie Elston Nov. 20 at 8 p.m. Arline Updyke, president, presided at the business meeting and had charge of the devotions. Plans were made to have the Christmas Party in the Kunkle Fire Hall Dec. 11 at 6:30 p.m. Members are to bring a covered dish, their own place setting, and a $1 gift. Members voted that all the of - ficers be re-elected to serve for the ensuing year. They are: president, Arline Updyke; vice president, Jennie Miers; secre- tary, Naomi Ashburner; treasurer, Elizabeth Hess; cor- responding secretary, Grace Ide; flowers committee, Agnes Elston and Myrtle Hess; pub- licity, Ann Weaver. After the business meeting, lunch was served and games were played. Attending were Doris Harri- son, Grace Ide, Agnes Elston, Jennie Miers, Lillian Shoe- maker, Ella Brace, Mildred Lutes, Arline Updyke, Florence Klimeck, Ann Weaver, Eliza- beth Hess, Dorothy Dodson, and the hostess, Virgie Elston. It was decided not to hold meetings during the months of January, February and March. November heralds the beginning of the holiday season as Luzerne County becomes the activity center of Northeastern Pennsylvania with an events schedule overflowing with special holiday happenings. All of the events - over 150 of them - are listed by category in a Calendar of Events for November and December that has been published by the Luzerne County Tourist Promotion Agency. Thanksgiving and Christmas are the themes of a variety of festivals, concerts, dances and in Wilkes-Barre, Hazleton and munities. In addition, there is a full schedule of sports events together with listings of the fall and ‘winter fish and game seasons. A giant balloon and toy parade will march through downtown Wilkes-Barre Nov. 10 starting at 10 a.m. to officially open the Christmas season. On Nov. 11, another parade will be held in Wilkes-Barre to honor veterans. The Little Theatre of Wilkes- Barre will present a Thanks- giving Children’s Show Nov. 23 and 24. In preparation for Christmas, the annual Holiday Fair of the Nesbitt Hospital Auxiliary will be held at the nurse’s auditor- ium in Kingston Nov. 14 and 15. One of the season’s social highlights, the Starlight Ball, will be held Nov. 17 .at the Genetti Hotel, Wilkes-Barre. The Treadway Inn of Wilkes- Barre will host the annual Thanksgiving Dance of the Pittston Women Nov. 2. Numerous concerts will be ‘presented through the season including a presentation of the Junior Mozart Club, “The Four Seasons of Music” Nov. 11 and a concert by the Misericordia in the William L. Pamela |. St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, Tunkhannock; was the setting recently for the marriage of Pamela Irene Severs, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Severs, Bicking, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bicking, RD, Pittston. The double ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. Pease. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a white Giana gown with matching lace bodice and sleeves. Her elbow length white illusion veil was arranged on a crown headpiece of matching lace. She carried a bouquet of white roses and carnations. Judy Hibbard, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. She selected a pastel pink polyester knit A-line gown. She wore a matching headpiece and carried a bouquet of pink and white carnations. Mary Lane was bridesmaid. She wore a plum polyester knit A-line gown with matching headpiece and also carried a bouquet of pink and white carnations. Flower girl Theresa Hibbard, niece of the bride, wore a white Giana gown accented with plum colored sash. She carried a princess basket of pink and white carnations. Keith Bicking, brother of the bridegroom, was best man. Ushers were Donald Covert, Thomas Doble, and James Doble. Daniel Hibbard, nephew of the bride, was ring-bearer. A reception immediately at Lake Carey Manor, Lake Carey, after which the couple left on a wedding trip through the New England States and Canada. They now reside at R. 733 Main St., Edwardsville. The bride is formerly a resident of the Tunkhannock area and was graduated from Elk Lake High School. She received her B.A. degree from Mansfield State College, and is presently employed by Home Health Services. Mr. Bicking is a former resident of Dallas and was graduated from Lake-Lehman High School. He is presently employed by the Electrolux Corp. — Mr. and Mrs. Merl C. Bige- low, 155 N. Main St., Shaver- town, have announced the birth of their first child, a daughter, Holly Beth, Nov. 25, at Nesbitt Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Bigelow is the former Carole Rosnick, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Rosnick, Staub Road, Trucksville. Holly Beth is the Rosnicks’ second grand- child, and the first grandchild for Mr. Bigelow’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Merl H. Bigelow, 195 N. Main St., Shavertown. Mr. and Mrs. John A. Elin- chik Jr., Orange, announce the birth of a daughter, Nov. 23, in Wilkes-Barre General Hospital. The Elinchiks also have a daughter, Pamela, three years of age. Children have more need of models than of critics. —Joubert the party held Sunday night. Publication. The United Methodist Women of the Shavertown United Methodist Church will present their Christmas program in the social room, Dec. 3 at 8 p.m. Mrs. George Schooley will sing a medley of Christmas music, and there will be four Christmas project demonstra- tions. Mrs. Gordon Edwards will demonstrate making a Christ- mas basket; Mrs. Donald Rome, the felt tree; Judy Tay- lor, the decoupage candle, and Mrs. Frederick Ruggles, the Three King’s Men. x The public is invited. Hostesses are Mrs. Jack Kloeber, Mrs. Clyde Davis, Mrs. Raymond Parsons, Mrs. Howard Allabaugh, Mrs. Rey- nold Watkins, Mrs. Charles Beech and Amelia Brody. Thirteen young ladies, members of the senior class at Dallas High School, entertained classmates at a Holiday party at the Irem Country Club, Sunday night. The festivities began by candlelight at 8 o’clock ‘in the evening with the music provided by Mel Wynn for dancing until midnight. The ‘club was decorated in fall colors appropriate for the Thanks- giving weekend affair. Among the 225 guests were parents of the hostesses and members of the faculty. Hostesses were Gail Edwards daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Edwards, Dallas; Lynn Gregory daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gregory, Trucksville; Joyce Jolly, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Jolly, Trucksville; Kim Lockhart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lockhart, Had- donfield Hills; Rebecca Stout, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Stout, Trucksville; Maria Do Carmo De Souza Reis, daughter of Dr. Francisco Reis, Bela Horizonti, Brazil; Anne Hostesses are, Nixon, Crispell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Darrel Crispell, Dallas; Linda Flock, daughter of Mr. and = Mrs. William Flock, Dallas; Barbara Griffith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Griffith, Trucksville; Debra Kirshner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Kir- shner, Elmerest; Kimberly Martin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. Spencer Martin, Trucksville; Jane Ann Sher- man, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Sherman, Carverton; and Bertha Supulski, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Supulski, Dallas. Services and facilities of the State Civil Service Commis- sions are available to state de- partments, boards, and com- missions at their request. More than 50 local civil defense agencies have contracted for progressive personnel manage- ment services through the pro- visions of the Civil Service Act and other enabling legislation. John Geise, Todd Kirsh-