Set for Sept. 18 In cooperation with Homemakers Schools, Inc. and local merchants, The Dallas Post is happy to present “All the Best’’ at Homemakers - School, 1984. Diane Gryger will be visiting the Back Mountain Area on Tuesday, Sept. 18 and has already met with the staff of The Dallas Post and area retailer in preparation for the upcoming show. Ms. Gryger works as a Home aconomist for Homemakers & ools, Inc., of Madison, Wiscon- . sin, a part of Rural Gravure, Serv-. ice, Inc. She currently travels 40- 50,000 miles annually through Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, , New York, Massachusetts, Connect- .icut, Rhode Island, New, Jersey, BETTY JANE EDMUNDS Mrs. Betty Jane Edmunds, 58, of 93 Main St., Dallas, died Aug. 3 at " home following a lengthy illness. Surviving . are her husband, homas; daughters, Mrs. Joan affey, Swoyersville; two daugh- ters, Helen and Sandra, at home; sons, Jesse Coslett, Jr., Wilkes- Barre; brothers, Henry Van Horn, ‘+ Dallas; Donald Van Horn, Lake- wood, Co. Funeral services were held Aug. 6 from Richard H. Disque Funeral Home, Dallas, with the Rev. Robert ‘L. Benson of the Dallas United Methodist Church, officiating. Inter- ment, Fern Knoll Burial Park, Dallas. PEARL IDE Pearl B. Ide, 76, of RD 4, Dallas, Idetown, died Aug. 5 at the Leader West Nursing Center, Kingston. Surviving are a son, David O., Idetown; daughters, Mrs. Robert Thomas, Idetown; Mrs. Fred Hughes, Lehman; Miss Rita A. Ide, Turnbridge Wells, England; brother, Ernest Baer, Endicott, Dalles Post/Ed Campbell N.Y.; sisters, Mrs. Edith Boice, Idetown; Mrs. Venita Moyer, Roch- ester, N.Y.; Mrs. Dorothy Spencer, Idetown; Mrs. Marie Wolfe, Meeker; six grandchildren; four great-grandchildren. Funeral will be held today at 2 p.m. from Loyalville United Meth- odist Church, with the Rev. Jeffrey L. Rarich, pastor, officiating. Inter- ment, will be in Chestnut Grove Cemetery, Loyalville. Friends may call at the church one hour prior to time of services. HAZEL HOOVER Road, Harveys Lake, died Aug. 2 at Leader East Nursing and Rehabili- tation Center, Kingston. Surviving are several nieces and nephews. A brother, Edgar Wor- thington, preceded her in death. ‘Funeral was held Aug. 4 from the Curtis L. Swanson Funeral Home, Pikes Creek, with the Rev. Lawr- ence Reed, pastor of Emmanuel Assembly of God Church, Harveys Lake, officiating. Interment, Ide- town Cemetery. Delaware, Maryland and Pennsyl- vania. Ms. Gryger graduated from Immaculata College with a Bache- lor of Science Degree in Home Economics Education. She received her Master's Degree in General Home Economics with a Nutrition and Food Specialization from Drexel University in Philadelphia. A resident of Philadelphia, she pre- viously taught home economics in Philadelphia area high schools. Dallas is one of approximately 300 locations across the United States hosting these demonstrations of food and equipment during 1984. Don’t miss the opportunity! Watch The Dallas Post for more details about this fun-filled event. “ Dallas Post/Ed Campbell —_m Barbecue held Members of the Harveys Lake Lions Club were kept busy Sunday as they donned their chef’s hats and cooked at the club's annual Chicken Bar-B-Que. Shown here in the top photo are Charlie Gordon, left, and Rich Wil- liams, keep a close watch on the barbecue pits while Lion Rowland Ritts prepares some individual dinners in the photo at the bottom. cere with the cake are, from left, is presented with a Presenting the centurian Connery, president, of the occasion. notes By ANN DEVLIN Staff Correspondent This woman can vividly recall events that happened about 60 years ago when she was nearly 40 years old. But - that means she would have to be 100 years old. And that she is. Sister M. Pius Dillon celebrated her 100th birthday Thursday, July 26. Sister Pius sits comfortably in her chair in her room at Mercy Center, Dallas. The sun streams in the window and grazes her shoulder, as she talks about the early days when she began serving with the Sisters of Mercy in 1923. Sister Pius remembers when she first came to College Misericordia, around the time of the groundbreak- ing ceremony in 1924. “There were 15 of us,” she says, “and we all lived in the farm- house.” The farmhouse she is referring to used to sit where the Meadows complex is now. The College didn’t have all of the buildings it has now, so many of the young Sisters who worked at Misericordia had to live in the old farmhouse. “We had to walk up the rocky road to the College everyday,” Sister Pius reminisces, ‘‘and we could hear the cars going to Har- veys Lake at night - it was spooky!” Sister Pius joined the Sisters of Mercy and came to work at College Misericordia to be with her younger sister Philip, who entered the con- vent six months before she did. State Dog Wardens from the Pennsylvania Department of Agri- culture will be making a return to the area sometime during the week of Aug. 13 and will be checking homes where dogs are known to reside. Any dog owner found not to be in possession of a 1984 Dog License for any canines over six months of age will automatically receive a citation to appear before a magistrate. Fines can range up to $300. plus court costs for first offenders. All stray dogs found will be picked up and impounded at the local S.P.C.A. Gene Dziak, dog law supervisor of the department’s Bureau of Dog Law Enforcement commented ‘By now every dog owner should have their pets licensed. If they don’t and we find them they're in for a few problems. Besides, a license is an inexpensive way to reunite a lost dog with its owner. It’s: a shame that so many unlicensed dogs must be destroyed because the humane organization cannot locate their owner. By law they (the S.P.C.A.) must keep an unlicensed dog only 48 hours and, in most cases, the dogs can then be humanely destroyed because of overcrowding’, he con- cluded. Current dog licenses cost $5.00 for productive dogs and $3.00 for those spayed or neutured. Senior citizens over 65 years of age are eligible for a reduced fee if they can present proof of age. erne County Treasurer’s Office during normal business hours. VATA 6 MONTHS DAR 11.75% 12.25 12.87 [KR] “But I was thinking of joining the Blessed Sacrament Sisters,” says Sister Pius, “I always wanted to be a missionary Sister.” Perhaps it is partly because of her adventurous nature that she is still in such good spirits. However, according to. Sister Ruth Neely, coordinator of Mercy Center, Sister Pius’ good sense of humor keeps her going. When asked what is her secret of living so long, Sister Pius promptly replies, ‘I guess God lets me live - God loves me, he left me here for some purpose.” She continues, I never pitied myself, no matter how tough things got. I never got myself down - I always bounced back.” Of course, Sister Pius’ longevity must also be attributed to the care she receives at Mercy Center, a home for retired nuns. ‘They take good care of me here,” she states firmly. Sister Pius thoroughly enjoyed her birthday celebration, which included a mass attended by 70 Sisters from the community, and a special blessing for Sister Pius. “I had a glorious, grand time,” she admits, surrounded by bouquets of flowers and a box full of birthday cards. Sister Pius thinks out loud, ‘How many years do I have left?’’ She continues with a smile, “I'm wait- ing for heaven, but nobody comes back and tells me how it is. “If I survive all the picture taking and interviews, I'll live another year,” she adds with a hearty laugh. he honors Laubach The Frank and Effa Laubach Memorial Library of Benton is cele- brating the 100th anniversary of the birth of Dr. Frank C. Laubach, during National Literacy Week, Sept. 2-9. He was born in Benton and spent his early life there. Dr. Laubach was world famous as a missionary, the confidant of gov- ernments, expert in teaching mass literacy, world authority on prayer, Christian mystic, challenger of the world’s complacency, and synony- mous with the word ‘‘compassion”’. He was known as ‘the apostle to the illiterates” and ‘‘teacher of mil- lions”. His literary methods and modifications, influenced by his methods, have helped millions to learn to read in 314 of the world’s languages in more than 200 coun- tries. Time, January 11, 1960, referred to his fame as ‘‘Founder of a world- wide literacy drive’; Lowell Thomas - “The foremost teacher of our time’; Norman Vincent Peale in Look, 1960 - “One of the five greatest men in the world’; News- week, December 30, 1960 - “One of the grand old men of the missionary world”’. He held the following degrees: Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Edu- cation, Bachelor of Divinity, Master. of Arts, Master of Education, Doctor of Philosophy in Sociology, Doctor of Divinity, Doctor of Let- ters, Doctor of Human Letters, and a Doctor of Philanthropy. Authored over 35 books on biography, sociol- ogy, history and international affairs. To honor Dr. Laubach, the U.S. Postal Service is issuing a 30-cent stamp featuring a portrait sketch of Dr. Laubach along with his name. This stamp is part of the Great American Series. : For further information, contact Kenneth B. McCahan, President, Laubach Library, Box 32, RD 3, Benton, Pa. 17814, or call (717) 925- 6452. Harveys Lake awarded grant State Senator Frank J. O’Connell (R-Kingston) is pleased to announce that the Harveys Lake Municipal Authority has been awarded a $36,- 000 Community Facilities Grant (CFG). The CFG is administered by the state Department of Commerce for the purpose of improving exist- ing infrastructure. The Harveys Lake award will be used for the expansion of the exist- ing sewage collection system. Some of the money will also be used to raise several manholes in the bor- ough. 0’Connell said, “The CFG aids communities that are unable to afford the costs of improving infras- tructure. The Harveys Lake grant will help both the borough and its residents address sewage con- cerns.’ Monday-Friday Sunday *By Appointment Only No Longer A Need To Visit The Hospi- tal For Many Diag- nostic Tests and Rehabilitative Treaments *An Affiliate of Mercy Hospital, Wilkes- Barre, Pa. 7:30 AM-6:00 PM 8:00 AM-12:00 PM . Closed