) fod PAGE SEVEN Sr. Mary Ann Dillon and Sr. Ann Crouse have the Sisters of Mercy in Guyana. Scranton Province administers St. Joseph’s Hospital and the St. Francis Night and Family Shelters in Georgetown. Guyanese Sisters also work in schools and an or- phanage. Guyana has serious economic problems, which makes it difficult to provide health care. There is hardly anything that can be bought. The donations of North American Sisters have been instrumental in obtaining drugs, donations of supplies, equipment and personnel to assist their Guyanese Sisters to carry out their ministry in this bankrupt Sr. Mary Ann, provincial administrator of the Scranton Province at the Provincialate in Dallas, and Sr. Ann, director of personal development, have traveled to Guyana to continue the practice of annual visits to all the Sisters in the Province and to assure th Guyanese of the continued love and support of all their Sisters. a3 Several services at Huntsville Christian Church (Dallas) will be held to celebrate the rising of Christ and Easter. On March 3l, Maundy Thursday services will be held at 7:30 p.m. This short candlelight program features hymns, scripture readings, meditations, and com- munion. It recalls the night of the Last Supper and Jesus’ betrayal. Arch priest Rev. Robert S. Kondratick, ' ad- ministrator of St. Andrew’s Eastern Orthodox Church of Dallas, announces’ a Lenten dinner to be held on Friday, April 1, at the Jonathan R. Davis Fire Hall, Route 415, off the The New Life Com- munity Church, which meets at the Glory Barn on Brace Road in Orange, will present an Easter sunrise service on April 3 at 6 a.m. Vibrant hymns and communion will be shared to celebrate the Resurrection. = Pastor The following schedule of Holy Week services has been announced for the United Methodist Churches of the Carverton charge, according to Dr. Allan J. Cease, Pastor. Holy Communion will be celebrated on Maundy Thursday, March 31 at 7:30 p.m. at the Mount Zion United Methodist Church. The confirmatin class of the charge will re- enact the Last Supper by presenting the play, “The Starting Saturday at 8 a.m., April 2, a 24-hour prayer vigil will be conducted. Members of the church will take half hour blocks of time to pray for the church, congregational concerns and the world. At 6 a.m. on Easter Sunday morning, April 3 a sunrise service will he held on the church grounds near the Hunt- sville Dam. Later that morning, at 9:30 and 11 the regular Dallas-Harveys Lake Highway, Idetown. Serving will be from noon until 7 p.m. Homemade clam chowder, potato pan- cakes, halushki, pierogies, coffee, tea, soda, will be served. Take outs are available. Please bring your own con- Dennis Madeira will share a message and the Madeira Gospel Singers will present songs of victory in com- memoration of Jesus’ resurrection. Kristin Ciehoski and Timothy Madeira will dramatize ‘Mary in the Garden’ and ‘The Upper Room” by Gary R. Shiplett. A children’;s service sponsored by the Sunday schools of the charge will be held at the Orange United Methodist Church on Good Friday April 1 at worship service and Sunday school will be held. The sunrise and 9:30 a.m. programs will celebrate Christ’s resurrection and are two of the most important services on the church calendar. The public is most welcome at each of these services and should contact Cliff Jones, pastor, at 675-0611 for more informtion. tainers. There will also be a bake table featuring Easter breads, nut roll, poppy seed roll, assorted baked goods and hor- seradish. For orders or in- formation, please call 639- 5004 or 675-1439. The public is invited. Soldier at the Cross.” Pastor Madeira invites the public to share in this celebration of joy. Weather permitting, the service will be held outdoors. The church’s regularr services are 9:30 a.m. (Sunday School); 10:30 a.m. (Church). 10 a.m. A sunrise service is scheduled at the Car- verton Cemetery on Easter Sunday, at 6 a.m., followed by a continental breakfast at the Car- verton United Methodist Church. The Back Mountain Clergy Association will sponsor a Good Friday Service at the Dallas United Methodist Church from noon to 1 p.m. and again, from 2 to 3 p.m. United Methodist Women’s Day was ob- served on Sunday, March 20 in the Huntsville United Methodist Church at the 9:30 a.m. worship service with Rev. Harriet Santos, pastor. Mrs. Harold Kittle, local president, welcomed the congregation. Mrs. Edgar Lashford in- troduced the speaker, Mrs. Larry Saxe, who gave a meditation on Christ-Signs of Mission. Choir anthem was “Calvary” and Miss Jane Hudak was guest soloist, with Rosendo Santos director and organist. Other local members who prepared the service are: Mrs. Walter Powell, Mrs. Willard Wright, Mrs. Ray Perrego, Mrs. Paul S. Shouldice, Mrs. Nor- man Franklin, Mrs. John Major, Mrs. Arthur Tremayne, Mrs. John Fielding, Mrs. Wesley Lamoreaux. The service, dedicated to Mrs. Clarence Elston for her years of faithful service, was called ‘Ruby Elston Day.”’ Awards were presented from the local women by Mrs. Kittle; a pin, a special mission recognition from the Women’s Division, board of global missions by Mrs. Lashford; ap- preciation of faithful service from the Sunday School by Fred Nicely, Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Bartos, RD 3, Orange, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Joanne to Edward C. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Smith, 334 Shonk St., Plymouth. Course Offered Penn State University, Wilkes-Barre ~~ Campus, Office of Continuing Education, now offers an associate degree in business administration. This is a two-year, college-level program designed to prepare graduates for em- ployment in business. The program is management oriented and involves communication and quantitative skill building. Sixty-eight credits are required for the degree and the subject areas include: Accoun- ting, Marketing, Management, Business and Management Information Systems. Miss Bartos is a graduate of Dallas High School and Brandywine Jr. College in Wilmington, Del., where she received an associate degree in business. She is currently employed in the family business. Mr. Smith is a graduate of Roselle Catholic High School, Roselle, N.J. and King’s College where he received his bachelor’s degree in Communica- tions and Marketing. He is currently employed as an advertising account executive with the Times Leader. The wedding will be solemnized July 23, at St. Frances Cabrini Church, Carverton. superientendent; framed neelepoint of the church emblem, by Mrs. Lash- ford and David Lashford, and greeting from Rev. William Reid, district superintendent. Following the service, a covered dish meal was held in the fellowship room. - Rev. Santos presented the program of pleasant memories. Members of Mrs. Elston’s family were introduced: Mr. and Mrs. Harold Elston, Huntsville; Mr. Mr. and Mrs. David G. Weaver of Cen- termoreland will observe their 60th wedding an- niversary on Friday, April 1, and the occasion will be marked with an open house reception Saturday evening, April 2, from 6 to 10 p.m. at the Franklin Twp. Fire Hall in Orange. A buffet supper will be served that evening from 6 to 7. No invitations have been issued for the open house and reception, and all friends and relatives of the couple are invited to attend. It is requested that gifts be eliminated. Mr. and Mrs. Weaver were married on April 1, 1923,in the Freeland Presbyterian manse by the late Rev. Mr. Worrel, pastor at the time. Their attendants were Mable Phillips and William Couttes. and Mrs. George Schimmel, Eric and Heather Schimmel, State College; Mrs. Norman Franklin, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Elston, Fern Brook; Mr. and Mrs. Dale Elston, Christy and | Grandson and family, unable to attend. Mrs. Weaver is the former Miss Anna Phillips, daughter of the late Lilly Estelle and Jacob Phillips of Wyoming. She is a retired employee of the Rockaway, N.J. division of the RCA Corporation and has the distinction of being the first female employee to retire from that division. Mr. Weaver also is retired as a foreman for the Lehigh Valley Coal Company, which had its corporate headquarters in Wilkes-Barre. The couple are parents of two children: Mrs. Daniel (Dorine) Koch of Compton, Ca., and David with his wife Betty operate the Village Market in Cen- termoreland. Mr. and Mrs. Weaver also are blessed with six grandchildren and six great grandchildren. & Days 822-5798 Evenings 696-3684 649 Wyoming Ave Kingston,Pa.18704 PHONE (717) 283-2125 UBS © SANDWICHES
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers