{ So Clk asp ei i y i i EA had Tan fk x be : ~ girl’s aunt. x jis EE ag. as Landon and day. i" | DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA,SATURDAY, JANUARY 19, 1929 Vik Mr. and Mrs. Benart Soderman, of _ Wilkes-Barre and Harry Flbyd, of Fernbrook, visited for a short time ‘with Mr. and Mrs. Harry LeValley on Saturday. Little Miss Rose Le- Valley accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Sod- erman home for a two weeks visit and will go with them on a trip to Newark, N. J. to visit with other relatives there. Mrs. Soderman is the little * * * Mrs. Amos Kitchen, of Alderson, spent Wednedsay with Mrs. Joseph Shoemaker. : . 0k Ce 2 Mr. and Mrs. Jack Shortz, of Har- vey's Lake, were callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kunkle on Sunday. CA oS ae Messrs. Minor Lozo and Albert Harring, of Shickshinny, were visitors "at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles : Herdman on Tuesday. ¥ * kk Many families of Kunkle and vicin- ity are victims of the influenza epi- . demic the past week. whole families being ill with it and it is seriously affecting school attend- ance. In some cases ; 11a % Mr. and Mrs. Cragg Herdman and two little daughters, Jane and Rebec- ‘ga, are ill with the flu. y ole 2 ar ake The family of Fred Boston, nearly all of whom were suffering from the flu at the same time, are recovering. * * * Misses Marjorie Grummel and Lot- tie Watson, of Forty Fort, were call- _ ers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hen- Saturday evening. ry Shoemaker id se iniskes in George Landon is confined to his home with the flu, as are also Thom- Miss Althea Landon. * * * Gh Allen Brace is attending school again after being kept at home for a few days with a severe cold. fo *k * * Misses Frances Sweezy and Emily Shoemaker were the guests of Mrs. William Brace on Sunday afternoon. * * * Mrs. W. H. Conden, Mrs. A. C. Dev- ens, Mrs. C. W. Kunkle, Mrs. Russell Miers and daughter, Felice, attended the 'W. C. T. U. at Dallas on Tues- rn —— * * Mrs. W..S. Kunkle, Mrs. Ralph Ash- burner and son Bobbie, are on the » mend after a severe attack of the flu. Dr. Swartz attended them. ia : xk Mrs. N. S. Sutliff, of Trucksville, visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sweezy on Wednesday. i LR Miss Blanche Mosier and Mrs. Mel- vin Mosier were Wilkes-Barre shop- ~ pers on Wednesday. hg be Mr. and Mrs. Kiler Richards have moved in with their son-in-law and ‘daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Palmer Up- dyke, for the winter months. WG | ; HALL The families of S. J. Hess and Le- roy Hess are ill with la grippe. “aH * xk A number of men from here went "to the Mountain Springs on Tuesday to work on th eice for Stull Broth- ers. a Bp “Mrs. John Isaacs and Miss Dorothy Elston are suffering from the flu and are under the care of Dr. Swartz. a . CR James Miers is recovering from an attack of the flu that kept him out of school this week. gr! BR Mrs. Joseph Shoemaker is able to be about again after a severe attack of the flu. Mrs. Charles Wertman has been ill for several days with a severe cold. a * * * | The family of Wheeler Kunkle who have all been suffering from the flu 2 sk * ' are recovering. * Ok Mrs. W. H. Conden, Mrs. Charles Herdman and Mrs. Kiler Richards at- tended their Birthday Club dinner at the home of Mrs. Sherman Wardan, of Shavertown on Wednesday. Other guests of Mrs. Wardan were Mrs. Fred Makinson, of Forty Fort; Mrs. D. P. Honeywell, of Dallas; Mrs. C. W. Fisher, of Trucksville; Mrs. S. J. Woolbert, of Shavertown. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Frank Smith spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Shaver, of Laketon. 30; Lamp in Long Voyage Covered with a thick coating of salt. an Osram lamp’ has been picked up at a North Wales coast resort. It had been in the water so long that it was a solid brown mass. It bore the iden: tity mark of a place one and one-half miles away. Despite the lamp’s ap: pearance it glowed almost as if new when attached to an electric circuit. | Electrification for Rural Farms Exhibit Feature ed State Farm Products show will ba held in Harrisburg from January 22 to January 25, 1929. In addition to the various agricultural exhibits, the Pennsylvania Joint Committee on Rural Electrification will have a special exhibit. » The railroads are offering round trip tickets at the rate of a single fare and a half fare. To get this special rate, it will be necessary to obtain a certificate to be presented at the time the tickets are to be pur- chased. y \ Some of these certificates can be obtained by calling at the office of Pennsylvania Power and Light Co., 36 North Main Street, Wilkes-Barre. Dog Owners Delay Securing State Permits for Year —0— Although there are 80,000 dogs in Luzerne County and 23,000 licenses were taken out here last year, Thurs- day at the.expiration of the time al- lowed for securing licenses for 1929, but 2,700 have been issued by the county treasurer, according to official information of James G. Fox, an agent of the State Department of Animal Industry. . Owners of dogs which are not now licensed are liable to arrest and sub- ject to the imposing of a fine. Lords of the Domain Nowadays a man is entitled to life, ‘liberty and the right to vote as his wife tells him to do.—Atlanta Consti- tution. Colder Weather Brings Full Time At Coal Mines —0:— The cold wave which has been hov- ering over this section of the State has been responsible for joy to coal and ice dealers. All Hudson Coal Co. operations, including Greenwood Colliery near Moosic, and Baltimore No. 5 in Wilkes-Barre, are now work- ing. The two collieries had been idle for some time. Glen Alden Coal Co. reports all operations working. Penn- sylvania Co., Scranton Coal Co. and virtually all other producers are mak- ing similar reports concerning oper- ations. Watch Out Emergency hospital: The ‘place where the pedestrian winds up when |/ he is run down.—Detroit News. Pumpkin Keeps Popularity This generation has known the | pumpkin more as a symbol of the har- vest season than as the vegetable of all uses. Pumpkin is still popular, and not only because it is a substi- tue for what the Puritan blue laws | styled “anti-Christian'minced pies,” but other than that their only’ use is’ for Balloween jack o’ lanterns ‘and dairy [ fodder. Every year the production exceeds the censumption.—Rutland Herald. Utilizing Fireflies Cuban negroes, going about at night, fasten a firefly to each big toe, to light their way along some dark path. They also make lanterns out of gourds hol- lowed out and perforated with many small holes inside of which are placed several of the big fireflies. Passion’s Impetuosity A genuine passion is like a moun: tain stream; it admits of no impedi- ment; it cannot go backward; it must go forward.—Bovee. Sun Spots , oN 4 The naval: obscialory says that : after appearing on the sun's eastern limb spots remain visible for about two weeks. By solar rotation they are ‘carried behind the western limb. If still existing they reappear again about a tortnight 9ater. Spots are at times seen to form on the sun's visible A hemisphere : YA nC Greyhound Pigs Gone. That greyhound pigs, that once ex- isted in Ireland, are now extinct is the declaration of an Irish scientist. The animal was a native Irish domestic pig, probably a descendant of the wild boar and had a hairy body, long legs and ears, and often whiskers like those of a goat. Its objection to being driven to market made it unpopular, and this led to its undoing. oH A Good Rule rigs Our health rule for the day: Eat anything you want to but less of it— Ohio State Journal. i | Flawless Tone net of exquisite Price, without Amazing Value! NewType Electro-Dynamic Spea Philco The Philco = Console i ~~ A full-length console cabi- Bl. panels, carefully selected for beauty . of grain and expertly matched. No i nails or screws. All joints doweled \\ and glued—in every respect a high- grade piece of cabinet work. design. Walnut tubes, $157 ~— an lH er engineers have per- Highboy Louis XVI period style. Hand esomely matched buttwalnutpanels,fluted legs and pillars, swinging doors. Con- | structed with painstaking care—all joints doweled and glued —no nails, cleats or screws. Exquisite finish. 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