The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, June 03, 1981, Image 16

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    ; by Tom Mooney
Has ‘‘black magic’’
comes to the Back
Mountain, or is somebody
just fooling around?
A few weeks ago Dallas
Twp. police investigated a
report of ‘‘devil wor-
shippers” meeting and
conducting ceremonies in
a ‘cemetery close to the
Mercy Center at College
Misericordia. Finding
some debris and the
remains of a fire, they
decided to pay close at-
tention to area cemeteries
as the folklore ‘witching’
days'of May 1 and June 21
approached.
However, when nothing
turned up on May 1, Dr.
Steven Davies, Professor
of Theology at Miseri-
cordia, said he wasn’t
surprised. ‘I see no
evidence of any serious
cult,” said Dr. Davies. “rt
wasn’t any kind of
sacrifice.” He said the
traces of whatever
happened went unnoticed
for several days after the
late-March incident and
that, as far as he could
tell, there was no indica-
tion of any organized
‘‘ceremony.’
‘It was probably just an
amateur magician,” he
suggested. He completely
ruled out voodoo,
traditional black magic,
and Satanism, calling it
more like a prank, after
viewing the spot. He at-
tributed to rumor the
devil worshipping or
there. “People have a lot
of fun spreadingrumors,”
he added.
Five young people,
members of 1981
graduating classes, will
be honored at the 9 a.m.
mass, Sunday, in St.
Frances X. Cabrini R.C.
Church, Carverton. Rev.
Hugh McGroarty, pastor,
While you're catching forty
winks, you could be buy-
ing electricity at lower
nighttime rates and saving
16% or more on each kilo-
watt-hour. It all depends on
how much electricity you
buy at the lower nighttime
rate. To buy more at
night— use Electric
Thermal Storage home
heating and hot water
heating units (ETS).
With ETS equipment —
a storage-type home heat-
ing unit or a 120-gallon
storage-type water
heater —you can buy most
of your electricity at a
lower nighttime rate and
save. In most households,
heating and water heating
account for more than 75%
of the total energy use.
To save on your electric
bill, you simply install ETS
equipment and apply for
UGT's optional RTU Rate*
(Residential Time-of-Use).
During the night, lower
cost electricity will charge
the ETS equipment. In the
morning, the power to
those units is turned off.
You'll have daytime power
for other electric needs, of
course, but your heat and
hot water will be drawn
from storage units.
IN ADDITION TO
LOWER COST NIGHT-
TIME ELECTRICITY,
you'll get a credit of $3.21
will celebrate the mass
which will honor Doug
Burak, graduated from
Wyoming Seminary;
Susan Santarelli,
Margaret Luke, Debbie
Baseski and Philip
Knepp, Dallas graduates.
Leonard Venable
Leonard Wesley
Venable, 46, of 19 Split
Rail Lane, Dallas, died
Sunday,
General Hospital
following an illness.
Born in Chickasha,
Benjamin W. and Della
Mae Burch Venable, he
had been a resident of
Dallas the past six years.
He was educated in
Oklahoma and was a
graduate: of George
Washington University
and Southeastern Univer-
sity, both in Washington,
D.C. Venable also studied
at the Sorbonne in Paris,
France.
At the time of his death;
he was vice-president of
Water Investment Co.,
King of Prussia. In this
capacity he was manager
of the Dallas and Shaver-
town Water Companies.
An Army veteran of the
Korean Conflict, he was a
member of the Episcopal
faith;
Surviving are his. wife,
the former Betty Led-
better; sisters, Mrs.
James Hawk, Tuscon,
Ariz.; Mrs. Leland
Gerdes, Chickasha, Okla.
Funeral was Tuesday,
May 27 with Rev. John S.
Prater, rector of Prince of
Peace Episcopal Church
officiating. Interment was
at the convenience of the
in Rose Hill
Chickasha,
family
Cemetery,
Okla.
Anna Lewis
Mrs. Anna Thomas
Lewis, 65, of 35 Red Ledge
Drive, Dallas, died
Monday, May 25, in
Nesbitt Hospital following
an illness.
Born in Wilkes-Barre,
May 13, 1916, daughter of
the late Daniel and Anna
Frederick Thomas, she
resided in Dallas the last
20 years. She was a
graduate of Kingston
Township High School.
She was a member of
Gate of Heaven Church,
Dallas, and its Altar and
Rosary Society. She had
been employed at Duplan
Mills, Kingston;
Bloomsburg Mills, Linear
Corp.; and Valley Paper-
back all of Fernbrook.
Surviving are a brother,
William J. Shavertown;
sister, Mrs. Theresa
McCue, Dallas; stepsons,
George Lewis, Clarion;
Robert Lewis, Palmyra,
N.Y. Her husband, Atty.
Burt B. Lewis, died in
1979.
Funeral was Thursday
from the Richard H.
Disque Funeral Home, 672
Memorial Highway,
Dallas, with Mass of
Christian Burial in Gate
of Heaven Church, Dallas.
Nicholas
Shavertown.
Cemetery,
Eugene
F. Weaver
. Eugene F. Weaver, RD
5, Weavertown Road,
Shvertown, died Sunday,
May 24, in Wilkes-Barre
General Hospital,
following a long illness.
Born in Jackson
Township, Jan. 8, 1899,
son'of the late James and
Lydia Miller Weaver, he
was a life resident of
Jackson Township. He
was employed as a
mineworker for the
Hudson Coal Co. and the
Vulcan Iron Works. His
wife, the former Viola
‘Sites, died March 11, 1979.
Surviving are sons,
Eugene Jr.
Plymouth; William, at
home; daughters,
Gensel,
grandchildren; one great-
grandchild;
Henry and
Larksville.
Funeral was Wed-
nesday with Rev. Francis
Parmenteri,
First Assembly of God
Church, Plymouth, of-
in Huntsville Cemetery.
Harry
E. Spencer
Harry E. Spencer, 74, of
- 42nd St., Idetown, died as
a result of injuries
sustained in an auto-
mobile accident Monday,
May 25, near the Hunts-
ville Dam.
Born in Dallas, he had
been a life resident of the
area. He was the son of
the late Horace and
Miranda Rogers Spencer,
attended Dallas Township
schools and was self-
employed as a painting
contractor. He was a
veteran of World War II.
Surviving are sisters,
Mrs. Mable Whitesell,
Dallas; Mrs. Helen Swan,
with: whom he resided;
Mrs. Liva Harris, Noxen.
Funeral was Friday
from the Richard H.
Disque Funeral Home, 672
Memorial ‘Highway,
Dallas, with Rev. Jerry
Tallent, pastor of Noxen
Bible Tabernacle, of-
on your monthly electric
bill or $38.00 a year by
using a storage-type water
heater controlled by UGI.
And if you install ETS
you'll save even more,
based on your heating
requirements.
For example, if you live
in an average 1400-square-
foot home using ETS home
heating, you would receive
an additional $79.00 a year
for allowing UGI to control
the storage heating unit.
This means you would
receive a total of $117.00
a year for allowing UGI
to recharge your storage
home heating and water
heating units, plus taking
advantage of lower night-
time rates — while you
sleep.
Get in touch with UGI
and find out how you can
save while you sleep
using Electric Thermal
Storage equipment and
Rate RTU. Call us at
Enterprise 10636.
*Costs apply to Rate RTU only. 2.444c¢
per kwh between 11 p.m. and 7 a.m.
(Off-peak hours); 4.584¢ per kwh be-
tween 7 a.m. and 11 p.m. (On-peak
hours). Plus applicable power cost
adjustment and Pa. tax surcharge, both
of which apply to all electric rates.
Minimum monthly charge is $9. 72.
CORPORATION
42 Don't waste energy.
J Rea
a
|
in Chapel Lawn- burial
Park, Dallas.
George
H. Stritzinger
George H. Stritzinger,
76, of 35 -Echo Valley,
Mobile Home, Harris Hill
Rd., Shavertown, died
Tuesday, May 26, in
Nesbitt Memorial
Hospital, Kingston,
following a prolonged
illness.
He was born in
Kingston, son of the late
Peter and Elizabeth Jones
Stritzinger. He resided in
the Back Mountain area
most of his life and for-
merly was employed by
the Columbia Lace Mill,
Wilkes-Barre, retiring in
1974 from the Quaker
Lace Mill, Philadelphia.
Stritzinger was a
member of the Salvation
Army Citadel, Wilkes-
Barre.
Surviving are
daughters, Mrs. Lillian
Stucker, Levittown, Pa;
3 Distinct
~ Sympathy
Arrangements
ALLERY'
_FLORAL & GIFTS
3 675- 1717 Memorial Hway,
6 6 00 TMs a 60 50 We Wt
Expressions
of Sympathy
MUM FARM
Open 7 days
CASE
MEMORIAL
Dallas-Harveys
Lake Highway
Dallas
OPEN
Monday through
Friday 9-3:30
Saturday 10-5
639-2820
09 09 3PM P I 09"
Barre Guild
Mrs. Nellie Hufford, grandchildren; four Army Citadel, South
_ Sayreville, N.J.; Mrs. great-grandchildren; Pennsylvania Avenue,
Dorothy Brown, Dallas; brother, Peter, Trucks- Wilkes-Barre, with: Capt.
Mrs. Jane Brown, Ville; sister, Mrs. Peter Stritzinger, nephew
Macungie; sons, Thomas, Elizabeth Bartoo, Dallas. of the deceased, of-
Shavertown; and Funeral services were ficiating. Interment was
William, Dallas; 23 Friday from the Salvation .in Forty Fort Cemetery.
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