phia Branch meeting held at Harris- ~Trucksville- burg were given by Mrs. Reynolds and Mrs. Mrs. Norris, Mrs. Per kins and Miss Laura White gave leaf- lets on the Bingham Canyon. Mrs. George J. Reynolds told about the; plans for a bazaar to be held in the Fireman's Hall on December 1st. Those present were: Mrs. J. Rolland Crompton, Mrs. Bruce Long, Mrs. Nel- lie Reese, Mrs. Harry Brodhum, Mrs. William Thomas, Mrs. Charles Pei- kins, Mrs. I. E. Bennett’ Miss Laura ‘White, Mrs. William Hewitt, Mrs. C. F. Lewis, Mrs. C.'F. Norris, Mrs. George W. Reynolds, Mrs. Susan Pethick, Mrs. DeWitt, Mrs. I. C. Parsons, Mrs. H. D. Turn, Mrs. George J. Reynolds, Miss Julia Montanye. Mrs. B. M. Coleman and son Bruce have returned home, having spent a week with relatives in New Jersey. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Newhart enter- tained at dinner on Wednesday even ing Miss Sue Haite and Mr. William Newhart of Ashley. : \ ————— en NOTICE OF LIQUIDATION Norris. i The newly organized - Community ible Class met last evening at the ‘home of Mrs. Dow. Mrs. Quay of Kingston is the teacher and the Book f Acts is to be studied. Much in- terest is shown and a goodly number have already joined the class. Mem- ership is open to any who wish to study God's word and all will be wel- ome. The class will meet every Tues- day evening at 7:30 p. m. prompt. "hose present were: Mrs. G. W. Rey- lds, Mrs. W. N. Thomas, Mrs. Ma- 1 Bachman, Mrs. Steelman, Mrs. Ni- hols, Mrs. Guy Woolbert, Mrs. Enke, rs. J. E. Newhart, Mrs. Ethel Oliver, . Hattie DeWitt, Mrs. Spry, Mrs. S, Mrs. C. B. Ransom, Mrs. Har- d York, Mrs. Mahoney, Mrs. Pethick, Liss Ivy Pethick, Miss Montanye, Mr. Sweezy, Mr. and Mrs. Bradbury, Mr, and Mrs. I. C. Parsons, Mr. and Mrs. oxe, Mrs. Dow, Miss Grace Dean, . Hobbes, Mrs. Peter Moyles, Mrs. ones, Mrs. Owens, Mrs. Quay, Mrs. r s, Rebecca Kulp, Mrs. Scott, Ars. Kelly, Mrs. Tracey and Miss Notice is hereby given that the un- ura White, dersigned is closing up its affairs, 2nd Miss Tilia _Montanye has returned creditors are notified to present claims “home after spending a few days in for Payment, on ar before Febuary Y New York City and ‘Princeton, N. J. 1982. Petition for dissolution will be presented to the Court of Common he Woman's Home and © ‘Foreign | Li c 1 I Missionary Societies met at the home Togs. of Tagerne Co, on February 1, 1932 at 10 o'clock a. m, f Mrs. George W. Reynolds on Wed- in ty Sein oF rds nesday. Business was transacted in MERS STATE - 5 SHINNY t e morning and adjourned for lunch. rs. Charles F. Lewis presided in the By: 0. £, GREGORY, PRESIDENT afternoon with Mrs. G. W. Reynolds PEACH FHOPMARER: ding devotions. Leaflets were read | SECRETARY Mrs. I. C. Parsons, Mrs. W. E. C. W. Dickson, Attorney, ennett and Mrs. William Thomas. ] Trust Company Bullaing, : rs. Crompton told about the mystery Berwick, Pa, ‘mother plan. Reports of the Philadel. | O¢toPer 16, 1951. 2-1-32 FOR ONE WEEK ONLY~ SPECIALLY REDUCED PRICES ‘ON OUR THREE FAMOUS BRANDS OF COFFEE $ O'CLOCK COFFEE 3 S0c 3 RED CIRCLE COFFEE 1b 23¢ BOKAR COFFEE 1b 25¢ Distributing System and Quick sure Fresh Coffee . . . Always! FINEST_FRESH CREAMERY Lbs . 7 | sitverbrook Print Butter 2 IDS 67c¢ IONA—RED RIPE . Tomatoes 4 Blots 25¢ Pillsbury’s Pancake Flour 31 IONA Makes the Finest Pancakes You Ever Tasted Pkge Peas vem sie—Tener 2 cans 1 Qc . . . Better Than the Old-Fashioned Kind! Fancy Ripe ‘Cranberries 2h 19¢ Uneeda Bake rs - English Style Assorted Biscuit i... 29¢ DELICIOUS—SWEET—TENDER A Marigold Brand : eas cans PEE | sranomornER’S” : Vacuum Packs © GRANDMOTHER'S “le : Loaf “J€ | Raisin Bread ' Bread Loaf 10c The Biggest Bread Value You Can Buy! It’s Delicious Toasted! The World's . More Pounds Sold Than Any Other Brand, Most Popular Coffee." A Favorite For Over oy Three Generations 1 America’s Foremost oi Package ‘Coffee And; A&P’ : ‘Turnover i. EVAPORATED ~ APRICOTS \ bt Con sed Milk ....ean 19¢ 2 En 3 Shoé Polish ........can 120 ‘Domestic Sardines vate 2 cans lle ; ated Peaches ........ Ib. 15¢ 2 pkgs. 25¢ k ..2 cans 35¢ ultana Kidney Beans .3 cans 25¢ loo Wheat ............. pkg. 15¢ . A pkg. Lie iS... vues, vess.db. 19¢ E old ae ee sai nie aie Ib. 29¢ 8 | Book 302 page 3 etc. {the other one from Anthony Wideman land wife dated 18th April, 1918, and =s oT Lhe, | ET STARS Paramount Phot CAROLE: AROLE LOMBARD was reared with two brothers who took her training in hand at a very early age, according to their own ideas of what a sister—usually a neces- sary evil—should be like. Naturally they thought she should be as much as possible like her brothers. Carole, was laughed at if she ~- and left at home s&lone if she - tattled. : xi Perhaps you can guess ‘what “hobbies she developed. By the time ‘she was sixteen she could sail a boat, ride a horse and swim and dive as well as the other Lombards and could beat them two sets out of three on the tennis court, ~~." The fact that she grew up slim “and blonde and fragile looking in spite of all these activities was ' something over which the brothers had no control. When, in her last year at a Los Angeles high school, Carole decided to enter the movies, she went about it with the ‘same thoroughness with which~ she had mastered sports. by Gg Are So: played dolls, ridiculed if she cried —_— | <7 LOMBARD Tirelessly and with a determination that left no room for discourage ment she studied voice pitch, make up, gestures, clothes, mniannerisms and coiffures. She never cherished the idea that her looks—which by that time were quite an item— would be sufficient to send her far in pictures. She has earned a reputation as one of the best-dressed women in Hollywood but she denies .that clothes are a hobby. “Clothes are a business,” she says. “They should be a very Serious business to every woman whether she likes them or not. I do not regard shopping as a pleasure, but I do it as carefully as I do my work at the studio.” She makes very sure that her fig- ure, which many experts call flaw- less, remains at its 108 pounds. She has never dieted, however, and thinks that the “fad” diets which exclude candy and other wholesome and necessary foods are foolish and dangerous, Exercise and sane, well- balanced meals are the clue. she thinks, to slenderness as well as health, : — - SHERIFF'S SALE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1931, AT 10 A. M. By virtue of a writ of Fi Fa No. 63 County to me directed. there will be exposed to public sale by vendue to the highest and best bidders, for cash, at the Sheriff’s Sales Room, Court House, in the City of Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, on Friday, the 27th day of November, 1931, at ten a’clock in the forenoon of the said | day, all the right title and interest ot the defendants in and to the follow- ing described lot, piece or parcel of land, viz: That land in Hanover Township, Lu- zerne County, Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows, to-wit: BE- GINNING at a corner on Lee Park Avenue, the same being a corner of Tot No. 324 in plot of lots hereinafter l.mentioned; thence, along lot No. 324 South 46 degrees 30 minutes East one-hundred = and seventy-five = (175) feet to a corner of a ten (10) foot al- ley; thence along said alley South 43 degrees 23 minutes East Seventy-five (75) feet to the corner of lot No. 328; thence along lot No. 328 North 46 de- grees 80 minutes West one-hundred and seventy-five (175) feet to a corn- er on Lee Park Avenue; thence along said Lee: Park Avenue North 43 de- grees 23 minutes East. seventy-five (75)- feet to the place of beginning. Being lots Nos. 325, 326 and 327 of Morgans’ Addition to Wilkes-Barre, recorded in the office of the Recorder of Deeds in Luzerne County in Deed BEING the same premises convey~ ed to Elizabeth Delaney by two deeds, one from W. L. Tobias and wife, dat- ed the 10th day of August, 1911, re- corded in Deed Book 472 page 451; and recorded in Deed Book 521 at page 3486. Improved with a three story, slate roof, brick dwelling house, outbuild- ings, fruit trees etc. Being known as 31 Lee Park avenue, Seized and taken into execution at the suit of The Hanover Bank and Trust Company of Wilkes-Barre, Pa. vs. W. B. Delaney and Elizabeth De- laney, and will be sold by December Term, 1931, issted. out of the k Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne, | SHERIFF'S SALE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1931, AT 10 A. M. By virtue of a writ of Fi Fa No. 62, 1931, {the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne | December Term, issued out of County, to me directed, there wilil he the highest and best bidders, for cash at the Sheriff's Sales Court House, in the City of Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, on Fri- day, the 27th day of November, 1931, |at ten o'clock in the forenoon of the said day, all the right, title and - in- terest of the defendasts in and to the Room, cel of land, viz: That land in the Township of Han- over, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows; to- wit: BEGINNING at a corner - ‘Park Avenue, the same being a corn- er of lot No. 327, thence along said: Jot No. 327, South forty-six (46) degrees, thirty (30) minutes East, one hundred and seventy-five A175) feet to a corn- on: a ten (10) foot alley; thence along said ten (10) foot alley, South forty-three (43) degrees, twenty-three (23) minutes West, twenty-five (25) feet to a corner of lot No. 329; thence along said lot No. 329; North forty- six (46) ‘degrees, thirty (30) minutes ‘West, one hundred and seventy-five el! ‘Avenue; aforesaid; thence along said Lee. Park. Avenue, North forty-three (43) degrees, twenty-three (28) minu- tes East, twenty-five (25) feet to the place of beginning. BEING the same premises eonveved to Elizabeth M. Delaney by W. B. De- laney, Jr., and wife, by deed dated the 30th of August, 1922, recorded in Deed Book 608 at page 4490, if Improved “with a two story tite. dwelling house, outbuildings, fruit Park Avenue. ; Seized and taken into execution at the suit of The Hanover Bank & Trust Co. vs. Wm. B. Delaney. Elizabeth M. Delaney, and will be sold by JOHN MacLUSKIE, Sheriff A. L. Turner, Atty. err (reer TELEPHONE JOHN MacLUSKIE, Sheriff A. L. Turner, Atty. { YOUR NEWS ITEMS Telephone: Dallas 300 exposed to public sale by vendue to: following described lot, piece of par- J on Lee (175). feet to a corner on Lee. Park trees, etc. being known as No. 33 Lee |’ —Jackson- ‘Jackson Ladies’ Aid Society will (hold their annual chicken supper, Wed- nesday evening, November 11th. Ev- ‘erybody welcome. €) -Idetown- The Ruth Bible Class met at the home of Bessie Williams for their mon- thly meeting. After the Business ses- sion, Bible study was conducted by Mrs. Estella Brace, and Mrs. E. R. Parrish. W. 8S. Kitchen and Mrs. Willams to the following members: Henderick Gregory, teacher; Mrs. Henderick Gregory, Mrs. E. R. Parrish, Miss Ju- lia Spencer, Mrs. A. n Neely, Mrs. Fred Ide, Mrs. E. E. Brace, Mrs. Alice Gordon, Mrs. Albertine Allen, Mrs. Gertrude Major, Mrs. W. H. Nevil, James Rogers, Mrs. Ruth Wilson, Mrs. Eva Wright, Mrg. Maranda Spencer, Mrs. Howard Riley, Mrs. Walter Kit- chen, Bessie ‘Williams, Saddie Parks. CHURCH SUPPER The Ladies’ 'Aid Society of the Ide- town M. E. Church will hold 'a chick- en supper, November 11, in the base- ment of the Idetown church. em : DALLAS M..E. CHURCH The following services will be held [at the Dallas Methodist Episcopal | Church: Church School 10:00 o’clock. i The Holy Communion 11:00 o'clock, | Epworth brag ue Devotional Meeting l6: 30, “Preaching at 7:30 p. m, The official Board will meet at $8 o'clock Tuesday evening. | The Philathia Class will meet with Irs. Georgia Patterson, Wednesday afternoon. Prayer meeting, Wednesday evening. The men of the church will serve a | supper to the Ladies’ of the church. | Friday evening, November 13. yrs Books for the Blind Through American Red Cross Chap- ters, 3,827 volumes of novels, class books and others, transcribed into braille for blind readers, have been added to libraries, in the past year. These books are to be obtained through the Library of Congress and city libra- ries. This activity, carried on by a great number of devoted women volunteers in Red Cross Chapters, had its incep- tion in preparing books for war blinded. —0 SHERIFF'S SALE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1931, AT 10 A. M. December Term, 1931, the Court of Common Pleas of Lu- issued out of zerne County, to me directed, there will be exposed to public sale by ven- due: to the highest and best bidders, for cash, at the Sheriff's Sales Room, Court House, in the City of Wilkes- Barre, Luzerne County, the 27th day of November, 1931, at ten o'clock in the forenoon of | the said day, all the right, title, and | interest of the defendants in and to the following described lot, piece or parcel of land, viz: Pennsylvania, on Friday, All the surface or right of soil of all that certain lot of land, situate, ly- ing and being in the Borough of Sug- ar Notch, County of Luzerne and State of Pennsylvania, bounded ana ‘described as follows, to-wit: BEGINNING at a corner of an al- ley on the Northerly side of Main Street; thence along said Street East- erly forty (40) feet to a corner; thence Northerly one hundred and fifty (150) feet to an alley; thence along said al- ley Westerly forty (40) feet to corner of an alley; thence along the same Southerly one hundred and fifty (150) feet to the place of beginning. (Con- taining six thousand (6,000) square feet of land, and being lot numbered 77 in Block numbered 2 on plot of lots laid out in the Borough of Sugar Notch by the Lehigh and Wilkes- | Barre Coal Company. Seized and taken into execution at the suit of Miners Bank of Wilkes- Barre, successor to Wyoming Valley Trust Co., vs. Michael J. Malloy, Brid- get Malloy, and will be sold by JOHN MacLUSKIE, Sheriff. Bedford, Jones, McGuigan ang Waller, Attys. Lunch was served by Mrs. By virtue of a writ of Fi Fa, No. 12, | CARD OF THANKS thank all those who expressed their cent illness and death of their wife and mother. flowers and furnished automobiles. 0 TRAP NEST YOUR HENS By J. H. Bodwell More and more poultrymen are trap nesting their birds, especially during the winter months. Of course,’ it takes more time, but it is more profitable to keep less birds and trap nest them than to keep a few more birds with the same labor and do no trap nesting. The following advantages of trap nesting should certainly receive consideration of the poultrymen. 1. Eliminate loafers accurately, thus tending to increase profit. 2. Eliminate mortality to a great ex- tent as culls will be found and dis- posed of while they can still be sold for meat. 3. Eliminate crowding in nests. Pul- lets can keep quiet and are not both- ered by other birds while laying. 4. Helps eliminate loss from pick outs. The oviduct returns to position before the bird is released so it does not invite other birds to pick. If a little hemorrhage starts from laying the egg, the. vent will be dry before bird is freed. \ 5. Helps to prevent early molt for the bird’s condition will be watched more , closely and if she is poor flesh she will be fed to overcome this. 6. Eliminates monthly and periodic culling. 4 7. Know which birds to keep the second year. in oe SHERIFF'S SALE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1931, AT 10 A. M. By virtue of a writ of F. Fa No. 29, December Term, 1931, issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Lu- zerne County, to me directed, there due to the highest and best bidders, for cash, at the Sheriff's Sales Room, Court House, in the City of Wilkes- Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, on Friday, the 27th day of November, 1931, at ten ‘0’clock in the forenoon of | the said day, all the right, title and interest of the defendants in and to the following described lot, piece or | parcel of land, viz: All that certain piece of land in the Township of Kingston, County of Lu- zerne and State of Pennsylvania, hounded and described as follows: BE= | GINNING at a corner of land of Wil- {liam Mission on the public road or |old turnpike road; thence along said | public road North thirty eight degrees, forty-five minutes West Three and eighty-five one hundredths (3.85) perch es to a corner; thence North fifty-one degrees East, ten and four (10.4) perches to a corner; South thirty-eight degrees forty-five minutes East three and eighty-five one-hundredths (3.85) perches to a corner of land of William Mission, and thence dlong said Mission land South fifty-one degrees “West, ten and four tenths (10.4) perches to the beginning. Containing one-fourth of an acre, more or less. Being thente the same land conveyed to the Mortgagors by Arthur G. Calkins and wife, by deed dated March 15, 1923, recorded in Luzerne County Deed Book No. 574, page 534. Improved with a two story frame house with shingle roof, outbuildings, fruit trees, etc. Seized and taken into execution at the suit of John W. Reese vs. Paul E. Squier, alias Paul E. Squire, Hattie M. Squier alias Hattie M. Squire, and will be sold by JOHN MacLUSKIE, Sheriff Fred B. Davis, Atty. : Circulating Library 100 New Books to Choose From Evans’ Pharmacy Shavertown, Pa. AKIN RRR R EHH IHHHIKHIIKNN electing me a School Director. ability. = III III ICH HI HH ISI IHIIIIHRIK IKK IRS CRRERKERKARHNR) I wish to take this means of expressing my appreciation for the confidence placed in me by the voters of Dallas Township in I will try to warrant this trust by serving the taxpayers of this community to the best of my Signed A. P. Kiefer NN AE HRN EAH E ANE HHH H ERIKA ICICI ICN H IIH INS W. S. Condon and family wish ito sympathy and kindness during the re- Also all those who sent the will be exposed to public sale by ven tenths, 5