The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, March 09, 1929, Image 5

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    ITABLE
ING AND OLD
s Every Week
. 4 MERCHANDISE
.00 “cerTIFICATE
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V0 CerTIFICATE
1.00 MERCHANDISE
UU CERTIFICATE
d Wyoming Counties may
aper or their immediate
0 ete. You may use the
wer in the same form, or, better
on this:'page and they will furnish
this coupon. © LS
e. There are fifteen advertisers on this
make up a grammatically correct sen-
1e word m each advertisement. The
st grammatically correct sentence EX-
A will be awarded the first prize. The
erson sending in the next best sentence,
ing in the third best. °
may work together on a sentence, and
‘they wish, but only one sentence
, ny one family. Sentences will be
led by this paper, and participation in
Sviden / Shat those participating agree
e judges. 1 NTA SA GE Chel pa
st each reek for the next thirty weeks.
ed each week. Prizes will be paid in
ch will be accepted as cash by “any of
e. The order in which the words are
he ideas will be changed from week to
Il as t
: h ‘names of the winners will be
X
idea you wish, taking not more
isement selected at random. List ]
Name of Advertiser
- Using the Word
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EXEXEX INLINE EXE ENIX EX IX GX XIX IXEIX IX EX EX IXGX EXER EX IXENEXEXIXINE XE XIX IXRIKIN
| BROOD CHICKS .
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Ford Sedan
$40.
Star Coupe
1927
$225.
WANTED
One
Small
Light
Six-
Cylinder
Roadster.
Must
Be
In
Excellent
Condition.
Morris Lloyd
Wyoming Avenue
KINGSTON, PA.
fe ie30
(12) :
Our New Store is rapidly proving to be a most con-
venients hopping center for the many residential commun-
ities of which Kingston Corners is almost a central loca-
tion.
You can drive your car right into our store,
pank it in the basement while you do your shop-
ping.
We carry complete lines of
WOMEN’S AND MISSES WEARING APPAREL
Lingerie and Accessories, Shoes, Domestics, ‘Linings,
Piece Goods, Patterns, Infants and Juniors, Clothing’ and
Accessories, Men’s and Boy’s Clothing and Furnishings,
Hardware, Housewares.
DRIVE RIGHT INTO OUR STORE
EDWARDS, Inc.
WEST SIDE DEPARTMENT STORE
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COAL OF THE
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Kingston Coal Co.
Kingston, Pa.
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n Edit gre Dallas Post, Inc.
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Hic ARTS
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ravers and Artists
GS FOR NEWSPAPERS,
NES. CATALOGUES,
gs for Color Printing
1 Specialty
NORTH MAIN ST.
LKES BARRE PA
57 3
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The Judges
Appointed for
Word-0-Gram
Page
Are:
Z. R. HOWELL,
Supervising Principal
Kingston Township
Schools
CALVIN J. McHOSE,
Supervising Principal
Lake Township
Schools
L. A. McHENRY,
Editor
The Dallas Post
(14)
Important Announcement
Lozier’s offering you for a limited time only
The Special
LOZIER PERMANENT
WAVE
$2.50
Including shampoo and trim. No extras. A cheaper
price means only a cheaper quality. Why take chances
of ruining your hair when for just a little difference in
price you will receive a high quality Lozier Permanent
done by experts—also guaranteed.
The Lozier Beauty Shop
8 WEST NORTHAMPTON STREET
Evening Appointments Wilkes-Barre 2216
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Oriental Carpet Importers
There is only one way Oriental Carpets can be safe-
ly washed, and that is by hand under the care of ex-
perts. Oriental carpets deserve a care no less specializ-
ed than paintings. We invite our patrons to see their
carpets being washed, by hand, in Castile soap, carefully
rinsed and dried by tepid air in motion.
All carpets called for and delivered. Other carpets
may be loaned, so floors need not be marred or patrons
inconvenienced. All carpets, tapestries and other wov-
en objects d’art carefully insured while in our posses-
sion.
MARIE YOUSSOUPOFF__CONNOISSEUR
WYOMING AVENUE AT STONE BRIDGE
Forty Fort, Pa.
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The Scranton-Spring Brook Water Service Company
The water supply of the entire Wilkes-Barre district, comprising 52 separate civil
divisions, with an area approximately 90 square miles, is furnished by Scranton-Spring
Brook Water Service Company. The total population is estimated at 871,000, which is .
served through 82,500 taps in the distribution system. ; ;
The water, obtained from virgin mountain springs and streams, from 15 separate
sources in forested watersheds, is impounded in 89 reservoirs, providing a total storage of
12 billion gallons, and distributed through 705 miles of distribution mains.
All Water Served To Consumers Is Carefully Sterilized.
MAIN OFFICE
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30 NORTH FRANKLIN STREET
WILKES-BARRE, PA.
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BY ELECTRICITY
Easier to Run Than Those
~ Heated by Coal or Oil.
“Electric brooders are excellent for
brooding chicks when the weather is
mild. In New York state they may
usually be used satisfactorily after
April 15, or at any time in a room
that does not depend entirely on the
brooder for its heat,” says Prof. L.
E. Weaver of the poultry department
at Cornell university, Ithaca, N. Y.
In answer to the question—can
chicks be satisfactorily and econom-
ically brooded with electricity >—Pro-
fessor Weaver says, “the answer is
yes, but with reservations.”
“Electric brooders are far more
simule to run than are coal or oil
brooders. When once regulated there
is almost no more work or worry with
them. Put they must be in a room
that is at least moderately warm, for
the electric brooder confines the heat
almost entirely to the space under it.
It does not warm the room as is the
case with coal or oil brooders. The
chicks will not do well if the room is
cold, and the cost of heating just the
brooder alone gets too high even with
a low rate for the current under such
conditions. 3
“In purchasing an electric brooder
one should be sure that it is provided
with a positive heat regulator, that
it is well insulated to prevent unnec-
essary loss of heat, and that provision
is made for ample ventilation.
“Electric brooders are of two types,
those with a curtain and those with-
out. The curtain type requires less
current but is apt to be poorly ven-
tilated or not ventilated at all. The
curtainless type with a good ventilat-
ing arrangement is probably the most
desirable,” says Professor Weaver.
When to Market Ducks
' to Make Most Money
Green ducks at eight weeks of age
should weigh 9 pounds to the pair,
and at ten weeks ought to reach 10
to 11 pounds. They command best
prices about the first of May, and
from then on until July the price
gradually drops. From July 1 to Sep-
tember prices remain unchanged, but
by September to November they are
up again.
The general laying season starts
about February and continues until
the last of August. The first eggs of
the season are rarely fertile. Fer-
tility and vitality are the keynotes of
success in duck culture.
One way to make money out of
ducks is to be ready with a good sup-
ply at the opening of the season,
writes Michael K. Boyer in the Farm
and Ranch. Another important item
is the value of the manure, that of
duck ranking second to hog for grow-
ing vegetables.
The trade for ducks Is largely
found in the restaurants and moun-
‘tain and shore resorts, where they
are served in quarters—the carcass
being cut into four pieces. Conse-
quently, a duck weighing 4 or 5
pounds, served in that way, will com-
mand just as much money as one
weighing 2 pounds more.
In all large cities, where there is a
large Jewish population, live ducks
are in demand. In Chinese sections
there is ‘also a heavy call for this
favorite fowl.
RE HE
Poultry Facts
EH HO
Lameness is one of the first symp-
toms of tuberculosis in poultry.
* 2 =
Plan on sufficient brooding space
and equipment, all you have room for.
Figure how many chicks you "can
brood and then write several hatch-
eries and decide where you want to
order, and then order early.
* * *
There are six steps in raising
healthy chicks from hatching to ma-
turity. They are clean chicks, clean
houses, clean litter, clean feed, clean
management and clean ground or
close confinement,
* ® *
It is necessary to have the brooder
large enough—and it is better to have
it too large than to take chances on
overcrowding.
4 - * *
Milk bas been found to be the best
single source of animal protein for
laying hens, 'it being easily digested
and rich in protein and minerals.
J - * *
If you are sending away for baby
chicks have the brooder all ready for
them, ' warm and ' comfortable, dnd
clean. Théy get chilled if they have
to wait while you “make up the bed.”
- * ®
Duck eggs are successfully hatched
in incubators, but geese eggs are not.
Geese will lay about three dozen eggs
per year.
Ld * A
The highest egg production has been
secrred by using milk with some form
of meat, such as fresh meat, tankage,
or meat scraps.
* %® =x
Some farmers feel that the birds
| will gather sufficient insects while on
the range to make up for the lack of
protein in the ration, but tests do not
bear out this belief.
On
ithe appointment of deput; constables
9)
ar Argum
Lake Polic
Judge W. A. Valentine rendered a
decision Tuesday on the petition for
to act as township police in Lake and
Lehman Townships for the year 1929,
in which he directs that the case be
placed on the argument list for
Thursday, March 14, at which time
argument will be heard before the
court in banc. oA
Last October certain taxpayers of
Lake and Lehman Townships pre-'
sented a petition asking for the ap-
pointment of five deputy’ constables
to serve as township police for the
coming year. A few weeks later ex-
ceptions to the application were filed iu
by Lake Township. On November 24 =
Judge William S. McLean, Jr., enter- :
ed a decree granting the prayer of
the petition, and on December 14
both townships excepted to the de-
cree and requested that the matter
Thursday.
Request Red Cross ;
To Knit Sweaters
For Service Men
=N0— °
Wyoming Valley Chapter of Ameri-
can Red Cross, has been requested to
furnish sweaters for the men in tuber-
culosis hospitals and Miss Margaret
Elliott, secretary of the local chap
ter, has issued an appeal for volun- =
teers who will knit the required quota.
Sweaters are to be tuxedo style as
the former slip-ons caused too much
exertion on the part of the invalid
men. ;
Anyone wishing to knit for the men
can apply at headquarters or to Mrs.
Charles Millard, of the Schooley iy
apartments, city, where they will be
supplied with the necessary yarn and
needles. Other garments are to be
made for the patients and the local
organization will appreciate any vol-
unteer aid given them in this char-
itable work.
0:
Frank Mart
Invites Public
To Visit Plant
—0:— ;
A visit to the Frank Martz bus
plant will amply repay one for the
time taken to make it. Established
in 1908, this concern has grown into
a varvelous business concern. It has
a beautiful building located on Old
River Road, taking up an acre and
one-half of space. The beautiful dis-
play room with broken marble floor,
craftex walls and well lighted makes
a nice spectacle at night. A large :
spacious office employing fourteen or
more people, a beautiful apartment
hall for banquets and other functions,
and an automatic fire prevention
20%
| brakes and shatter-proof glass. In-
| explain some of the many features
| that the Martz people offer.
sprinkler system throughout the en-
tire building. ?
The firm operates 87 busses and
have an order placed for 18 more of
the latest modern designs to be deliv-
ered on or about March 15. Each
coach is services before leaving the
grage each day and have all the lat-
est safety devices including air
side baggage racks are also a fixture :
in each bus. The drivers are care- |
fully chosen from hundreds of appli-
cants and must be sober and indus-
tries and physically fit for the job and
courteous at all times.
The routes taken by these com- 3
fortable riding busses are over the =
Lackawanna, Sullivan and Roosevelt
Trails, noted for their scenic beauty
and include the residential streets
through the different cities to. avoid =
any sight unpleasing to the eye.
The Fort Durkee Hotel, on Public
Square is the Wilkes-Barre Terminal
and ticket office and the representa-
tives at that place will be glad to y
The mechanical arrangement of the
business is a wonder of modern
achievement. = The heating plant is
of the latest. Exclusive electrical
rooms, cleaning racks with high-pres-
sure hose. Buried tanks with a ca-
pacity of 80,000 gallons of gasoline
and 15,000 gallons of oil. Wash room
accomodates two cars at a time.
Electrically opened doors. Club
rooms with swimming pool and show-
er bath. Paint shop using Duco
spray entirely care for all renewals, =
Tires alone are worth a small for-
tune. The tool and machine shop
are valued at $14,000. Everything is
modern, even to the smallest device
including shears for cutting metal.
The plant of Frank Martz is a mar-
vel and well worth one’s time to pay
it a visit. It’s buss service cannot be
beat. When planning your next trip
investigate the Martz service and be
convinced of its economy and com-
fort. X