“and Mrs. Clarence Holcomb. I SLEEP 1 HE TOLD Mf SIX HOURS ENOUGH FOR ANY ONE WHY DON'T HE PRACTICE WHAT 3 THE KIND oF WORK RE DOES WOULD MAKE ANY BoD Y SLEE PY Rm (Copyright rn — = i i { i t : i ) | €. MS MANS. OF SOCIAL INTEREST IN AND ABOUT DALLAS 0: Mrs. Frank Harvey is visiting her sister, Mrs. Harriet Dils of Oneonta, N. Y., this week. Betty Jane Wilkins, who has been ill with pnewmonia, is recovering satis- factorily. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Shiber, who have been visiting the past two weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Shiber, re- turned Saturday to their hom: in New Haven, Conn. Little Ruby Wilcox, who has been ill for several days, is recovering nicely. Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Hull visited in Harrisburg this week. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Parrish Monday on P. P. Vosburg of town, Pa. A number of friends gathered at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Willian Baler on Thursday evening to help her cele- brate her birthday. Dinner was ‘served called Camp- to Mr. and Mrs.. William Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Machell, Xr. and Mrs. Arthur Dungey, Mr. and Mrs Ray Shiber and Mr. and Mrs. Zell Caringer. ..Jack Hazeltine has acceptcd a posi- | tion with the Conrad Motor Company in Kingston. Walter Rau has been chosen as a member of the new Harmonica Band organized last week by ths DeMolay boys. About fifty make up the new band. Members of the band will meet during this week to arrange practice | nights and any other detaiis which may arise. Mr. 'and Mrs. Fred Youngblood, ac- ence of the P. M. Church. Mrs. W. W. Baer spent Wednesday visiting her daughter, Mrs. Thomas Sutton at Harvey's Lake. Mrs. Henry Randall is suffering with a broken collar bone and a sprained foot as a result of a fall from her porch on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Booth are spend-- this week at Atlantic City. Miss Doris Calladine, R. N., received word this week that she! had success- fully passed her State board examina- tions. Miss Calladine is a graduate of ‘Wyoming Valley Homeopathic hos- | pital. Mrs. Helen Cook Winters and Mrs. Katie Naus of Kingston spegt last week-end iin New York City. Mrs. John Cummings is spending this week-end with her daughter, Mrsr. Floyd Chamberlain of Wilkes-Barre. Mrs. Ella Daddow was hostess on Sunday to a number of friends from Forty Fort. Her guests were: Mrs. Harriet Bullock and daughter Ella, Miss Mary Shaver, Mrs. J. B. Erhart and daughter Margaret and son Joe. Mrs. Bertha Albertson entertained at | dinner on Tuesday evening at her home on Church street. Her guests were Messrs. Asa Lewis, Carl Hontz, Theo- companied by Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Duffy of Mountain Top, spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Grace at Wysox. Miss Betty West left Wednesday for | Allentown, where she is enrolled { tais | year in Cedar Crest College. Addison Woolbert has purchased a | new Chrysler Plymouth car ,from| James Oliver. [ Mrs. Nesbitt Garinger, Mrs. Jack | Roberts, Mrs. Donald F.antz and Miss | Fay Whipp mo‘ored to Turlkannock | on Thursday wi:cre they attended the fair. Mr. ‘and | Mrs. W. T Barnes of ‘Wilkes-Barre were guests on Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. George Sawyer. Mr. | Barnes is the chief engineer of the | Scrarton-Spring Brook Water Service| Company. A number of friend of Mrs. Harriet Stevens surprised her with’ a party at her home Tuesday evening. Lunch | was served to the following guests: | "Mrs. Harriet Stevens and her sister, | Mrs. Moore, Mrs. Fred Gordon, Mrs. | D. P. Honeywell, Mrs. Nelson Whipp, | Mrs. H. A. Wiese of Shavertown, Mrs. | Emma Shaver, Mrs. Addison Woolbexrt | | Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Finch cd Thursday in Plymouth. | Mrs. Frank. Wilcox is spending this | week with her daughter, Mrs. William Lynch, of ‘Allentown. She will attend the fair while there. Mr. and Mrs. Luther Hunsinger, | Hiram and Arthur Hunsinger of Ceasetown, visited Mr. and Mrs. Wes- | ley Hoover recently. Mrs. Hunsinger | is a sister of Mrs. Hoover. i Mr. and Mrs. Harry Keiper of Ber- wick met with quite a serious accident Sunday when their car was struck by | another below Nanticoke, doing con- siderable damage to their car and quite seriously injuring Mr. Keiper. They were removed to the home of the former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. James | Keiper and stayed over the week-end. | James Keiper took them to their home | in Bérwick on Monday. i Mrs. James Keiper visited her| daughter, Mrs. Alice Merrell of Lu- zerne recently. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Keiper visited | Mrs. Keiper’s brother in New York | over the week-end. i | Harold Grey of Kingston visited his | uncle, Wesley Hoover, Sunday. | Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Franklin and | son, James, Jr. visited the former's] parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Franklin, | recently. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Hoover and Mr. and Mrs. James Keiper attended the Tunkhannock fair on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Adelman spent last week-end with Mrs. Adelman’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Munson Keener, | of Berkshire, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. C. I. Albert and chil- | dren and Mrs. Albert's mother, Mrs. | Davis, are spending Saturday and | Sunday in Towanda. Mrs. Bertha Albertson entertained | her son, Dr. H. W. Albertson, his | daughter, Marjorie, and son Harry, ,Jr., | of Scranton on Sunday. Miss Elziabeth Howells of Plymouth | is the guest this week of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Allen. | Rev. Anthony Iveson returned Tues- day from Pittsburgh, where he spent | a week attending the General Confer-’ 9 CANNING POINTS 1. Have all equipment in readiness before canning is started. 2. Pack prod- ucts in jars or cans that will seal air tight. Spoilage in canned foods is frequently due to imperfect contain- ers. 3. Pressure cookers are help- ful in the canning of meat and all non-acid vegeta- | —r——————— &] bles. The high : pressure obtainable Grace Viall Gray. king an spores, thus assuring perfect sterilization. Pressure cookers also save time and fuel. 4. If you live in the South, or in | very high altitudes, or in the west By GRACE VIALL GRAY Household Science Institute. poses always use glass jars. 6. Empty space in a jar will nol lessen the keeping qualities of the food, but it detracts from the ap. pearance and is a waste of jar space However, if a glass jar has lost liquid during processing, do not open to re fill, 7. To can fruit juices pasteurize for from 25 to 30 minutes at 160 to 5. For exhibit and contest pur: | Classified Advertisements SEALED PROPOSALS Sealed bids with specifications will be received by the Dallas Borough School District for the erection and completion of three blowers for forced draft wired from from a box for sep- |arate control and each furnace with a {separate combustion equipment, also each blower with thermostatic control. Sarme for three hot air furnaces in No. 1 school building at Dallas, Pa. Bids must be in the hands of the secretary no later than 7 p. m., Sep- tember 20, 1929. The board reserves the right to ac- cept or reject any and all bids. J. F. BESECKER, Secretary. 0 : SOLICITS BIDS The Dallas Borough School Roard solicits sealed bids for the hauling of fifty tons of coal from Kingston Coal Company and Raug collieries to be placed in the cellar of Dalas Borough schools. All bids must be in the hands of the board’s secretary on or before September 21. The board re- tains the right to reject any or ail| bids. JAMES BESECKER, Secretary Dallas Borough School Board. | | Wood, Dallas, 160. FOR SALE Grapes, $1.00 a basket. Bulford, Dallas 267-R-18. Call Frank WANTED Girl for general housework and plain cooking. Apply 80 Norton Ave. | Phone Dallas 220. — RE — BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY At Trucksville, Pa. Established loca- tion for a first class barber... See Mr. Leonard, Trucksville, or at Grand Union Store, Dallas. — 0 FOR HIRE A Chester white boar for hire. Prict reasonable. Charles W. Moss, De- Munds, Pa. dt A Ce FOR SALE Grapes and quinces. Call Ernest . Wd Os NOTICE My wife, Viola Hilbert, having left my bed and board, I will pay no bills contracted by her after September 18, 1929. STANLEY HILBERT. FOR RENT Six-room House on Trucksville- Carverton Road Inquire OOO) GD) GI (630 dore Snyder, Dr. Owen Eley of Scran- coast states, get the time-tables for FOR RENT MRS. JOHN McGAHREN ton and Misses Lulu and Dorothy | canning recommended by your state . Beisel. college. In these sections it-is recom- Goss Homestead, located near Goss 118 Carey Avenue, Wilkes-Barre Mrs. Russell Case, who was a dele-| mended not to use hot water for the A house, Inquire Ceores Phone W.-B. 3365 gate from the Fernbrook P. M. Church | canning of vegetables and meats but Na kemes, Shavertown. Phone, Dallas $ { to the. general conference in Pitts-| the pressure cooker. burgh last week, returned to her ET mr home at Glenview Terrace on Monday. | + NN NP Pf pnp pngngngnpngnpy Claude Isaacs accompanied the Irem OFFER $5,825 IN PRIZES IN | 4 Temple band to Atlantic City the lat- NATIONAL CANNING CONTEST ¥ 4 t > 3 2 Packing Chicken in Jars. . 4 for port of is week ol tiigas aay ward off a Svesiéned surplus of farm g 4 ‘Every |Dollar Spent in a Clover Farnf Store Comes Right Back to You' 4 Mr. and Mrs. Myron Steele attende products In many sec s and to impress : b 4 a corn roast at the homeof Mr. and mies with She Toncmy zo rT HOE Me [ 3 Mrs. Lessley Steele on Chas? mountain ea tiv) Ness ame Canned:dods, a .Na- : . 3 Fa . 1 Thursday afternoon. el ue come Is ii Pawn 8. Canning does not change poor| $ High Grade : Food Products 1 Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Adelman enter-| § tables and meat in the country. Two hun § | Products into good products so use| ¢ A 1 tained at their home on Vednesday = and twenty-two cash prizes totalling good products to put into jars. And| $ Pp ] evening Messrs. -Clifford Shaver, 5,825 have been hung up by the Sears- do not spoil good products by half| ¢ 4 Joseph Hickman, James Jeffrey and Reshuck Afrieanral Foandaton, Tonge way methods of canning. Use the "LOVER M STOR 4 Misses Irene Rome and Charlotte re Sveshstakes .prus $1,280 for quickest, safest, and most efficient } 1 — 1 I : st jar of canned food entered in the ’ ’ > NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS J Evarts, all of Plymouth. ; contest. Any woman or girl is eligible to method of canning, which is the pres | § oo CLEVELAND, QHIO, 3 Miss Helen Rearick of Moosic has enter the contest, but entries must be in not sure cooker method. p Ta : - 1 been hired to fill the place left va- later than October 1, 1929. Further informa- 9. Bef i q 4 cant by Miss Mans. Miss Reaick| § tion on the contest and free jar and entry} | C ah Song Syed prod 4 teact Latin and history. lanks for sen in entries may al y Y place 4 ches Latin and story | ls Sie Re 2 Mt | or winter wo Loon tha Jus wein|§ WEEK-END SPECIALS IN OUR | Mrs. Claude Isaacs is recovering { tional Canning Contest, 925 ¢S. Homan § | psorvation at room temperature for| § { quite rapidly now from the effects of Avenue, Chicago, IIL D 4 her tonsil operation. 3 #3 | at Toast one ‘week. GROCERY DEPARTMENT 4 Bill Czulegar has accepted a position 3 3 in the men’s furnishing department of | js a house guest of Mrs. John Frantz [ 1 Sears-Roebuck ~~ & Company in|and Mrs. Frantz were dinner guests on Ain’t Science Wonderful? lL OCTAGON SOAP, large size, 5 cakes ........ Sr hh 29¢ 3 Wilkes-Barre. Thursday of Mrs. Elmer Parrish. Veterinarians have discovered, ac- | ¢ =; . 4 Olin DeWolfe, who for several years Mr. and Mrs. Ross Lewin Fernbrook | cording to Farm and Fireside, how to [ CAMPBELL’S TOMATO SOUP, Scans... iL in a 25¢c has been a teller in the Heights Sav-| spent Sunday with Mrs. Lewin’s| remove the bark from a dog and the f i ings Bank in Wilkes-Barre, has ac-| mother, Mrs. Emma Shaver. | bleat from a goat. It remains only | § J 4 cepted a position in Syracuse State John Rogers, breeder of white collie | for them to eliminate the mosquito’s | ¢ 3 Bank and will leave for that place on | dogs, has just sold two at very fancy | bite and the bee's sting to make coun- | 4 September 21st, at which time he will | prices. One was shipped to a Mrs. | 1if ha tically 100 Der nt per- \ ® 3 take up his new duties. | White on Long Island, the other to | Ee Lio: pIne y p 3 Dp i Miss Wolfley of Wilkes-Barre, who John A. Starran of Lancaster, Pa. { OCTAGON WHITE FLOATING SOAP, 2 cakes: va 3 ....15¢ 1 A a ene am a on = cal $ 4 ¥1¢€ SOAP FLAKES,, 2 Ibs. ..... GRRE A 25¢ ) b ° > 8 1 P { S 2 in - on A tor Ls y MUFFETS, 2pkgs............. ar RE A ed 25¢ § onuiac Dix »_-. _...Z8 ncesio 3 [ 3 q 4 b ® s 4 3 TEXAS FIGS, 2cans oui. oc ot ooo bdoalgion So aii os 25¢ GOOD LUCK PIE FILLER, 3 pkes. aii. Sion. val, Guna, 25¢ ares - b b > > b b r 3 b > [ . YANKEE GIRL AMMONIA, bottle... 0. lh 8c > b b b b | p | & | $ ¢ | § | & . te DILL PICKLES, large can... ...... .....%. ADR 23c h |} PURMTANMALT. .-......... ... i 59¢ | y — |e YANKEE GIRL JELLY, 8 oz. glass, 2 for.................... 25¢ I 4 —_— | » | & ; Be CL y F A > | * | # It | ¢ Over One Hundred Clover Farm Stores To Serve You | $ . . > 1 When the Pontiac Ste ay jnrsailued by the Ooiland Motor Cut Company in 1926, it was eliovad to be the | There Is One In A National Grocery first car so named until this old-timer came to light at Pittsburgh, ra. plate on the car reveals its name as the | € . Chain F 5 Pontiac and its manufacturer as the Pontiac Motor Veriie Company; Pontiac, Mich., a firm that cropped into | € Your Neighborhood * or Local Grocer i d then dropped out after building only fifty or sixty cars. | § : adh the pienure about 1904 and then dropped ow g y Th | : Wilkes-Barre Division Headquarters—Phone W.-B. 9600 | ! . tated itd adds ddr etait Ataietriurriru Aah: