PAGE EIGHT rr = rl : NC r ) NT : : ) THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY 1{ WEDNESDAY 19 11 12 13 14 15 | : ! | 16 : : 1 : KEEPING Dallas boys will be at: : . Silk i d : 2 Yi. i f* the Back Seton Catholic and the | [| Wrestling action for both § {1 Screening ; demon Meeting of Back Mt. | [Social get-together of 4 Meeting of the Bac : : girls will host Seton ‘If Back Mountain stration at the meeting of 4 Wrestling Club, 7:30 p.m., Women Against Cancer, Annual dinner meeting of’ | Mountain La Leche POS T-E D Catholic in basket. | | Schools..Check inside for the Wyoming Valley Art} §American Legion Home, Luzerne County Unit of | [the United Credit Bureau | § League, 12:30 p.m. at the : hl ball. Lake Lehinan bovs | the complete sports Le a gue, Hotel Dallas...Motor cycle the American Cancer Service, Inc., Treadway i Sobelman residence, i HL revel to ba y 1 schedule... Sterling... Idetown ‘hare scramble’ starting ciety, 8 p.m. Master | Inn, Wilkes-Barre..Both ‘East Ridge St., Chase 11 PA while the ciel hovel : couples Club covered dish at noon on the course at"| JHosts Inn, Rt. 115, in the | |Boys’ teams of the Back ' Manor...Look for the new 2 Bungie on PN dinner 6:30 p.m... the Carverton Dirt § JLuzerne Room... ‘Mt. will be in basketball | edition of the Post = Tr : Cycle... action tonight away... your favorite newsstan pp [¢] setion Back Mopars | i -today and delivered to the % ion: m [= {x 8 p.m. at the : ‘homes tomorrow... 5 American Legion Home, * s Back Mountain § SS | | ® le J 5% JN J J nd Harveys Lake Daniel C. Roberts Fire Company has announced plans for a spaghetti dinner on Feb. 19 from 5 p.m. until 8 p.m. at the Sportsman’s Inn on Noxen Road in Harveys Chief James Faeber, chairman of the event, said the company will provide ‘all the spaghetti you can eat” for only $2 for adults and $1.25 for children. Tickets are available from Dh. COMING EVENTS Works, Javers Store or Tafts Market. Black actress presents culture ‘‘solo” SPEBSQSA Lake. any firemen or at the Black actress Vinie Broadway debut’ with She launched her career : Burrows will present her Helen Hayes in ‘‘The * as a solo artist in 1963 and ¥ | plan 25th one-woman show, ‘Walk Wisteria Trees” and has since then has created } =) Together Children,”” at performed in six other several programs for the $ 0000000000000 0 College Misericordia on Broadway shows. She has national perfornting 3 Give Your Valentine concert Feb. 24 at 8 pm. as a appeared with Mary circuit. Her current ; : : presentation in the Martin, Ossie Davis, David program ‘Walk Together Something Different college’s cultural events Wayne, and Godfrey Children,’ was first The 25th, annual series. Cambridge, among others. performed in 1968 at the That Will Last! Just arrived - ‘‘Parade of Quartets’ Concert by, the Wilkes- Barre Chapter, Society for the ‘Preservation and Encouragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America (SPEBSQSA) will be held on March 4 and 5, according to an an- nouncement made by President Jack Muchler of Wilkes-Barre. Site of the two Concerts will be Meyers High School, Wilkes-Barre, with a curtain time of 8 p.m. \ a new selection of gifts Neckwear Belts Wood Items Jewelry Buckles And More! Hoof n’ Paw “Country-Western Store” Main Rd., Dallas Open Daily ‘til 5:30 Across from Mark II Rest. Thurs. & Fri. ‘til 8 p.m. 675-4800 Twice aday, that helps keep your electric bill up. UGI CORPORATION Almost every day of the week, you probably use a lot of electrical appliances to make breakfast and dinner. You're not alone. Because twice a day, between 9 AM. and noon, and then again between 5 and 8 P.M, everyone else seems to be using a lot of electrical appliances, foo. In recent years our total customer. demand for electricity during these “peak-load' periods has increased. And, this is especially true in the colder winter months. The results? Customer bills tend to increase due to the cost of operating special “peaking” gener- ators —needed to meet the increasing demand for electricity at peak fimes. Why? Most “peaking” units use oil —they're costly to operate —and this added cost is reflected in your electric bill. Once a day you can do something to help keep your future bills down. And it's simple. Just wait till after eight o'clock in the evening fo do most of those big energy-using chores. After dinner, relax —the dishwasher can wait an hour or fwo. Plan to do your baking on weekends if you've got an electric oven—and prepare meals to freeze for use during the week. Save up your laundry and do full loads after eight. And, fry to schedule your family’s bathing after 8 P.M. —baths don't use energy, but your electric water heater uses a lof! Maybe you can think of even more appliances you can delay using until after eight. And today’s the day to start! Every family that waits fill after eight can help cut down future peals demands for electricity. The need for future rate increases will tend to be reduced because we will not need as much new generafing capacity fo meet the increasing peak load. Remember, the bulk of UGI's electricity is generated using less expensive coal. So, the use of electricity in off-peak periods costs less. It may take a while before the impact from peak load reductions is reflected in our customers’ electric bills. But, if we all start now, that change will come sooner. So remember —always fry to save energy. And one way fo start is to wait fill after eight! Loi ay pop pga Iv 5 789 2) 2 5 7 8 9 1 Av 3 “Energy Peaks!’ that cost everyone more money, normally. occur weekdays from 9 AM-12 Noon, and 5-8 PM. Help bring them down by waiting till after 8. Ms. Burrows made her silk screenist John Sears of George School, Newtown, Pa., will demonstrate photo silkscreen work at Friday evening’s meeting of the Wyoming Valley Art League in Hotel Sterling. On SFeb. 12, Sears will hold a silkscreen workshop in the Art League quarters, Hotel Sterling. Sears is a graduate of the Art Institute of Chicago and received his master’s degree in drawing, pain- ting and printmaking from Northern Illinois University in DeKalb. After teaching ten years in Chicago and environs, he moved to Pennsylvania and now heads . the department of drawiug, painting and silk screen at George School in Newtown. He has spent three summers teaching stone and aluminum plate lithography, silk screen and photo silk screen at the Pennsylvania Governor's School for Arts at Bucknell The annual dinner- meeting of United Credit Bureau Services, Inc., is scheduled for Tuesday, Feb. 15, at the Treadway Inn, Wilkes-Barre. Bureau President Frank Loch, Pennsylvania Gas ‘and Water Company, appointed Jack Manley of Manley Tire Company, Wilkes-Barre, as general chairman of the affair. The session will begin with a ‘“‘/dutch-treat’’ cocktail hour at 6 p.m., followed with dinner at 7 p.m. Letters of invitation have been mailed to the membership of the Bureau, which geographic area extends from Wilkes-Barre to Reading. Members are encouraged to make known their intent of attending the dinner-meeting by writing or calling the Credit Bureau Offices, South Main Street, Wilkes-Barre. Assisting committee members include Franz Deisroth Deisroth, Greenwich Mews Theatre in New York City. The critical acclaim was instant, with Clive Barnes A of the New York Times J " calling her “a magnificen®) ) performer.” The program consists of a college of poetry, prose, and song, evoking the , John Sears University. ; Black journey from auction & Sears has shown his ack to new nation time, BE works in Illinois, nq using the words of ex- § Wisconsin, Indiana, % slaves, historical figures, plus key works by June Jordan, Imamu Baraka, Robert Hayden, Don Lee and more than a dozen other Black writers. Explaining her show, Ms. Burrows says, ‘As a Black actress whose talents have never been fully used in American theatre, I have turned to solo performances, tapping a rich vein from my own Black culture and heritage. Most importantly, in thisg process, I have grown to™* understand that the function of the Black artist is to assist in the psychic, political, and economic Pennsylvania, and New Jersey with one-man shows at Northern Illinois University and Earlham College in Richmond, Ind.; also has shown at the Philadelphia Print Club and Peddie School in Highstown, N.J. In 1974 he won the second patron’s prize for graphics at the Phillips Mill Art Exhibition. Art League membership is‘open to the public. Franklin J. Kaye, president of the Wyoming Valley Art League, advised that reservations must be made with Ruth Richards rs ASE for the Saturday morning |jiheration of African -demonstration by Sears. pegples..” | Now through Feb. 25, the ‘““‘Walk Together Wyoming Art League of- fers an exhibit for public viewing and sale at First Eastern Bank, Wilkes-- . = Barre, main i = Children’ will be presented in Walsh Auditorium at Misericordia, with doors opening at 7. Tickets will be available at the door. All members of the President’s Associates at Misericordia will be admitted free. GROTTO PIZZA Harveys Lake Department Store, Hazleton; Chester Nocek, Peoples: National Bank, Edwardsville; James Post, 1II., Post Fuel, Wilkes- Barre; Elmer Klimchak, Franklin Federal Savings, Wilkes-Barre; President Loch and Michael Lef- chak, bureau general manager. . Open Fri.,Sat. & Sun. 639-1264 t Purchasing That New Car Through a Broker Will Save You Money! R.A. BAYER, JR. NEW CAR BROKER 120 N. Main Street, Shavertown Phone...696-3643 & All American Made New Cars and Trucks Yours or Mine only N's SERVICES, INC. 587-4836
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers