HENRIETTA MACK YS. Your Wife or Daughters Have Been Wishing For A Stunning New Outfit You Will Find Here Smart Hats and Dresses You Are: Welcome To Come In And Look Around Everything Reasonably Priced ARE § OMING e | 136 South Main Sireet LARGE AUDIENCE ATTENDS TOWNSHIP P. T. A. MEETING (Continued From Page 1) Reese, Isabelle Veitch, Walter Kozem- chak, Betty Kepner, William Davis. _ After the completion of the plays Victor Lewis, Professor of Edwards- ville High School gave a splendid talk on “Personality.” He was en- ‘Buckwheat Flour 75¢ Prepared Flour 60c SICKLE R'S Meat Bone 60c Meat Serap 5320 per hundred P.E. PAYNE General Store Loyalville, Pa thusiastically received. These mon- | thly programs are becoming more popular each time as can be seen by the increase in attendance at each meeting. The Parent Teachers Asso- ciation at this meeting authorized the purchase of a set of Comptons Ency- clopedia for the school. The Decem- ber meeting will be held Monday even- ing December 21 at 7:45 sharp. At this time there will be an elaborate Christmas program. Getting Tags Now Avoids Xmas Rush Pennsylvania, motor vehicle owners can aid the Christmas “early mailing” campaign of the Post Office Depart-' ment by posting their applications for 1932 registration now, the bureau of motor vehicles of the State Depart- ment of Revenue announces. “Mail your 1932 applications motor registration now,” said a bur- eau statement. “By doing so you will clear the way for the heavy Dre- Christmas mail. Not only will motor vehicle owners help relieve Pennsyl- ania Post Office employes of the ad- ditional burden of handling applica- tions and tags along with Christmas mail but they also will be aiding the bureau of motor vehicles in the prompt and efficient performance of its duty. “Send in your application now and for get your tags before the Christmas M4 # your saving! EER IONA—STANDARD QUALITY SUNNYFIELD 241/5-1b. bag 43¢ PURE—REFINED LARD QUAKER MAID—BAKED BEANS A Special Array of bargains which are representative of the values to be found at your A&P Store. Read . this list of values—come in—and then figure AN EXCEPTIONAL VALUE! Bartlett Deans Pastry Flour 3 arge can 15 12 0 Z23C 5-1b. bag 12¢ 21h 19¢ ean 5¢ { THE DALLAS Posy DALLAS, PA FRIDAY, NOV VEMBER 20, 1051. mail rush is on. Your 1932 tags can be used on and after December 15. The Post Office Department is co-0p- i erating with the State Department of 5 Revenue in facilitating prompt deliv- | ery of license plates. Let automobile | i owners co-operate with both by mail- | ling applications now.” O DEAD MAN FOUND Now Solved Coroner B. L. Billings was called to Centermoreland on Saturday by a message that the body of a dead man had been found near that place He went, but concluded that the man died from natural causes and no in- quest was necessary, The facts in the case as obtained by Sergeant Miller and Private Wil- son, State Police from Wyoming bar- racks, were as follows: A stranger came to the farm on which John Po- him in, but as he was evidently in poor health, he was required only to feed the pigs and do other chores. so much worse that he was advised to | see a doctor, or go to a hospital. He | refused to do this, and next morning when the family arose he disappear- ed. but as he was not found, it was con- Some search was made for him, cluded that he had gone to stay witn friends, lest he be sent to the poor- house. i Last Saturday his decaying body | Leside a stone wall along an oat field. He had evidently started to run away, laid down and was unable to get up. Billings’ undertaking at Sunnyside. publican. Mystery of Man Who Disappeared Is | and wanted work. Mr. Poganis took | light | The first of August he was | but being overcome with weakness, | establishment, and later buried in the potter's fiela His name was ascer- tained to be Frank Covoleski -and he was 65 years old.—Tunkhannock Re- | POST SCRIPTS GERMAN SALESMAN A local clergyman who was a chap- ‘lain during the World War was seri- | ously wounded and still suffers from | the effects of those wounds, recently {had occasion to «do business with a [nanuisciuring company selling stain- | led glass windows for church purposes. | When the salesman visited him, the | clergy man noted that he spoke with a | decided German accent, and questioned him with regard to his residence in | [the United States and whether he | (fought for Germany during the World | War. The German replied that he had lived in the United States only a few vears and that he had been a captain of German artillery during the War. The salesman in turn asked if the clergyman had been in the war. The answer was that he had been and that he had been seriously wounded on a certain day at a certain hour. The clergyman also told the German the location at Cieges in. the Argonne where he was serving when the shrap- nel came over that wounded him. The German pondered for a moment and then replied that there was only ons battery of German artillery at that ganis lived three or four months a ong funy Ze Delisved that be | was in command of it at the time the clergyman was wounded. To make |-fure, however, he said that he would {look in his diary on his return home | ana find out if it was a shell from {local man. His investigation proved | that he was correct in his surmise. It | (was a shell from one of .the guns | which were commanded by the Ger-! man salesman that wounded Father | J. J. O'Leary of Shavertown. LITTLE BLACK HEN We believe Wilson Garinger (orca hen he has in his flock. She was hatched on May 5, 1930 and during ‘the year November 6, 1930 to Novem- ber 6, 19381 has laid 351 eggs. of a patriotic nature she missed laying | | during two days of July and took a | noliday of five 'days in August. She | laying the cause was overfeeding on {green food. Which leads us to philos- phise that chickens like humans fre- , quently do much poorer work when | well fed than when hunger spurs one of his guns which wounded the | them onward. Overfeeding, too, jemong humans probably causes more deaths annually than starvation. | There's a lesson for us all in the re- cord of Mr. Garingers little | Minorca hen. STILL SMILES There’s a pleasant little Scotchman living in Shavertown who dropped in ito-call on us this week. For several | weéks now he has been stopping in to see us and looking over our presses lon each visit. Being an expert press- | man and lithographer we are always glad to have him give us advice on the care and handling of presses. It was not, however, until this week that our conversation ever got far from the subject of printing, and then only when we began' to ask questions. This young man of the sandy hair and pleasant voice, we learned had gone tn.ough four years of the worst hell ever conceived by man against man. In a voice mellow as Scotch mist and as crisp as the Scotch heather he re- lated some of his experiences in the British army from August 1914 until the close of the war in 1918. He had been with the Manchester regiment at Ypres when the Germans first used poison gas. He had seen 1,500 of his comrades, sneeze, cough, strangle and clutch at their throats, govel in the dirt and mud and die without know- ing what was killing them and with. out being able to resist the attacker. i He had seen them improvise gas | masks of torn shirts and muddy water or handkerchiefs soaked in urine. Did Yes, there was the five inch hole in his arm and the deep where the | sharpnel had ripped its way through the forearm and there was the scar ‘he bear scars? | sear on the other side im his back where a bullet had seared the flesh. | and musical. TIRED TIRES It has been a long time since we The have seen so many motorists repairing was found by Frank Besteder lying | first egg was laid November 6, 1930, | tires along the roadside as we have je following day she missed. Being | during the past two weeks. Perhap than is their custom. The hen has not now than formerly and as is usually 'moulted since hatched, and on some {the case, they go to pieces at the times of the occasion when she missed |when they are most needed. On Wed- 'nesday night while driving from Dal- las to Kunkle we passed six automo- biles drawn to the roadside while the {drivers by the light of matches and flashlights repaired flat tires. black | Four years of the has | world’s worst hell back of him and yet reason to be proud of a black Min- he still smiles, and his voice is soft it is the depression and car owners bet buying new tires less frequently They are will- also missed three days in October and | | me to take longer chances on old tires The body was brought to B. L.-inhpee in November. HERMIT OF HUCKLEBERRY MOUNTAIN { i (Continued from Page 1.) | fect that the rattiesnake hadn’t bit- [ten him but that he had awakened | from his sleep just in time to kick one out of his bed before it had a chance to get in position to strike. Then another good friend came to us an told us that a hermit in ‘Wayne County had been killed by rattle- snakes during the summer months and apparently that incident had become associated with Mr. Eastwood and ELLY that was how the exaggerated reports of his death had gotten into the city newspapers. Even with that tip we continued to hold to our policy that silence is golden when it comes to writing about a hermit who has as many friends as Mr. Eastwood. Then this week we glanced through the Montrose Independent and came across the following letter to the edi- tor of that paper. Dear Sir:— I was much interested in the article ¢ in the last issue of The Independent concerning the Hermit of Huckleberry Mountain, “Auc” Eastwood. The older residents of this township have always known him, and having seen him my- self the article aroused my interest. I nad not heard of his death and as I wished to verify it I made inquiries and learned that the day I received your paper, Friday, November 6th, he [made a trip to the village of Forkston at the foot of the mountain. He had on an overcoat and other clothing be- fitting the season. He often makes | trips to this village. Since the death of his wife, a few years ago, he has lived alone. About two months ago it was re- Iported that he had been bitten by a | rattlesnake, but this was false. No doubt the story printed in the Dallas Post started from the report. He is i a very interésting character and pre- fers living alone on the mountain, coming to Forkston for supplies when needed. Since many Susquehanna donnty people come to the Forkston-Mehoop- any mountain to hunt, no doubt some of them have seen him. I thought perhaps you would be interested to know that the report of his “tragic death” is false and correct it. Very Respectfully, Mrs. Clayton Baldwin. Oe — DALLAS TEAM ENDS GRID SEASON TODAY There is a Bad Squeak in the Price Claims of Some Radisos.... LISTER FOF IT! T. BARNUM, great man that he was, ® would have had nothing on some pres- They were just as much concerned about the trade-in value . . anticipating the time, years A REAL BARGAIN! FANCY—BLUE ROSE RICE 3 ws. 10€ GRANDMOTHER’S—New Size Rye Bread 16-0z. Loaf wid Try the New Plain Loaf. Bread DELICIOUS—STANDARD QUALITY Fresh Prunes large cans GRANDMOTHER'S 20 oz. loaf The Biggest Bread Value You Can Buy—It’s Werth More! gs SUNNYFIELD-—LEAN Sliced Bacon 2 Iona Sauerkraut 3 cans 25e Swansdown Cake Flour ..pkg 29¢ Quaker or Mothers Cals, pkgs 19¢ 1 1b. pkgs. Red Salmon Citron Peel ..... Bulk Dates .. Mixed Nuts Davis Baking Powder ar can 12¢ Bulk Figs ‘Fancy Evap. Apricots ...... Ib 15¢ Almonds Iona COIR wsftenrsssses 2 cans 15¢ Walnuts .. Orange or Lemon Peel. 23¢] Pilisbury’s Ige. Pancake Flour pkege. 3ic Baking Powder UNEEDA BAKERS—FANCY orcioekc « Coffee Mia and Mellow PR Rich—Full Bodied Red Circle 1b.25¢ | BOKAR Graham Waters rkee- You Can Find Perfection In One of These Three Coffees! 1b. can 19¢ 17¢c 17¢ Fol Strength—Flavorful 1b. 29¢ HITCHENAR BISCUIT CO OYSTER CRACKERS 2" 25¢c These prices effective in Dallas and vicinity gerators. With the skill of an artist they explain that their “low price” sets out- tone, out-sell and out-wear full-sized console sets cost- ing two or three times as much. And the most distress- ing part of it all is this: Now and then they catch an unsuspecting individual who actually believes this blah! Being misinformed, he buys . . . only to dis- cover some day that he got only what he paid for, if he was lucky ... otherwise he got less. Don’t you be “sold” that way. Price isn’t everything. On the con- trary, a price that is too low to guarantee fine qual- ity is an extravagance. Millions of Americans + « . millions, mind you... who have searched the radio market for its big- gest VALUE have chosen Atwater Kent. They weren’t thinking solely of the initial investment. ent day claim makers in the radio business. Faet is, Barnum would have been a novice compared with some of these modern exag- Listen to “CECIL AND SALLY” WGBI, Scranton, 2 and 7:30 P. M. daily. ATWATER hence, when the their set for Dollar for dollar, quality for quality, At- DOWN @ —then 10 small monthly payments KENT SUPER-HETERODYNE JAMES R. OLIVER Dallas, Pa. a newer is a vital consider —the comic strip of the airs . y might want to exchange model. And that ation for all money savers. water Kent is the finest radio yet produced . . .. anywhere in the world. Finest in construction, finest in tone, finest in at- tractiveness, finest in stur- diness of mechanism. So, if you are out to get the most enjoyable, easiest operated, best valued radio your money will buy, get an Atwater Kent. It may cost you a little more than some of the cheaply put together sets now so common, but the invest- ment in an Atwater Kent will be an investment in happiness and you’ll have a long-wearing set with a surprisingly large trade- in appraisal. Remember, that’s the verdict of America, as ex- pressed in actual sales! Our modern purchase plan makes it as easy to buy an Atwater Kent as any other radio made. (Continued From Page 1) with new material coming in, Coach Wormley believes that Dallas football will really come into its own next year. ay-llr ayo inc. Tunkhannock When real improvements come a along, they don’t pass by Ar- Pa nold Smith at Kunkle. One of : our finest 52 inch ’‘drainboard Sinks is just one of his latest acquirements. Running water in the house, saves one-half the labor for the cook. I. B. Harned of far off Endicott, dropped in one day to kill time and looked us over, as a result we have already shipped him a bathroom outfit. Electrical lighting fixtures and supplies : and a Richardson & Boynton Hot Air Furnace. “Believe it or not” we ‘hope business continues to be good in Endicott. | B BATTERIES $1.75 A 45 volt Heavy Duty Battery Made by U. S. L. Battery Co. Laurence Race .is doing the team work around the Noxen Tannery with a set of our best team Harness. We have a com~ plete stock of horse accessories, from drive calks at 75¢ per box to our best harness selling at $62.00. LET US HEAT YOUR HOME