b 4 1 i eRe 2 rs a EN -~ i ¥ ; | | bi | i = eb AS Ny FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1933. THE DALLAS POST, D EEE SEP | city boarding islightly “cracked”. house appear to he The following cast has been selected: Mrs. Simpkins, Es- ; School News ther Rogers; Miss Brown, Muriel Zim- merman; Miss Smith, Lois Elston; a Miss Green, Evelyn Culp; Mrs. Hall, SCHOOL NEWS Irene Major: Mr. Hill, Joseph Lyons; MONROE TOWNSHIP Orchestra Mr. Roberts, Fred Winter; Mr, Jones, Alfonso Marchakitus; New members will soon be added to Benny and Mr. Long, Rusiloski. “Forty Miles An our orchestra as several contemplate [four 5 comedy, in which Peggy Rad- the purchase of new instruments. Professor George Kaschenback of ley has been in traffic court for speed- ing. The cast is as follows: Judge ; en Wilkes-Barre will be engaged to teach peayody, a wise and just man, Robert the orchestra one lesson per week. This will be paid for ont of the money Won Mr. LR ts and front’ November ‘24th ‘entertainment. [VICK lembered, it ar mith; Mrs. j i Miers; Patrick Noonan, policeman Mrs. Snowe will continue the orches- A Te Adan ) y i ad- ; tra work also, and will teach the ite hay be ipardhsed before the vanced selections played public. Grade News The honor students of the fifth and |. sixth grade are: fifth, Verna Trayer, Lillian Ward, and Marcella Gavek; sixth, Emory Kitchen, Wilbur Bigelow, and Emma Stevis. There are twenty-two students in the fifth and sixth grade who have at- tended school regularly for three. months, Sophomore News Dora Anuyl a student of the Sopho- more class has returned to school. fol- lowing a two weeks illness. Elwood Patton, a junior shot a seven point buck, and Kenneth Traver, a Sophomore, a three point buck, Water System The students of the Senior High School are conducting a subscription campaign for the Curtis Publishing Company. The school has participated in similar campaigns in previous years. Last year we purchased ~ our radio from the returns. This year we plan to use our share of the money from this magazine campaign to purchase drinking foun- tains for the water system, we hope to have installed in the school. The magazines which we are selling are “The Country Gentlemen,” “The Ladies Home Journal” and “The Sat- urday Evening Post.” Your co-opera- {ion and support will be appreciated. Water In Sigha The most worthwhile project since the building 6f the school is now under way. There is a movement to take surplus water out of the buildings and pipe in good drinking water. We can thank our school paper for furnishing the spark that has slowly kindled the blaze of enthusiasm lead- ‘ing to the water project. ‘The financing of the system is to be divided ‘in’ thiée ways. The township is to furnish the pipe, the state emergen- cy, labor relief work, and the school itself the fixtures, fountain and sinks. Moves like this portray ‘spirit and community foresight. « ° Sa 1 St LEHMAN ‘SCHOOL NEWS Plays To Be Given The Seniors of Lehman High School will present two one-act plays, “A Mad Breakfast” and “Forty Miles An Hour" December 15, in the high school audi-- torium. ‘A Mad Breakfast” is a farce in which the characters found in a Radley, his wife, Dorothy Karschner; Peggy, their daughter, Dorothy Major; Grandma Radley, Irene Major; Parker Doane, a good looking ‘chap, Arthur AL. MILLINER-CAMP Teacher of Piano, Trum- ~ pet, Trombone, and J others First class instruction at ex- ceptionally low prices. For Appointment ° Call Dallas 275-R-9 or Lehigh St., Trucksville Phone Dallas, 9087-R-7 For Reservations “== FERNBROOK INN Delicious Dinners Schlitz Beer on Draught + ..5Dancing—Everybody Welcome ok : Fresh Opened Daily OYSTERS LITTLE NECK CLAMS - » Weidner’s Main Street LUZERNE, PA. from the Senior Class. } BASKET BALL The regular basket ball practice has started for the Lehman students. Twelre girls and fifteen boys reported for practice. Although only a few have reported the school has high hopes of a winning team. : 3 Lehman Student Honored Donald Brandon, a student in the Sophomore class of Lehman High School was honored by the reward of $100, the fourth prize offered by the Wilkes-Barre Record. The campaign was conducted for mail subscriptions only, outside the towns and communities in which the carrier service is maintained. Donald received 4795565 points. Junior Party Philip Crispell entertained the Jun- ior class at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Ide on Monday night Novémber the twenty-seventh, After a series of games were played and prizes awarded; a tasty lunch was served to the following: Miss Park, Miss Kistler, Mr. Magul, Mr. Hawk, Mrs. Ide, Ruth Bertman, Jennie Major, Anna Scopic, Bertha Walters, Ruth Ide, Marion Weintz, Barbara Disque, Ruth Searfoss, Grace Ide, Phoebe Lamoreaux, Hannah Culp, Louise Searfoss, Philip Crispell, Chester Sut- ton, Edward Simpson, David Howell, Francis Micholowski, Joseph Trojan, Brinzo, Joseph Neizgoda, Edward Par- rish, and Gilbert Husted. We regretted that two of the mem- bers of our class, Margaret Lyons and Edna Fritz were unable to attend, due to illness. —Sweet Valley— Corey Foss was one of the success- ful hunters on the.first day. He shot Creek spent the week-end with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Corey Foss. #4 add school boards name officers Classified Ads Pay Robert Park, Robert Disque, Andrew. ETIQUETTE OF GREETING CARDS While the etiquette of greeting cards is generally understood, there are a few points which are frequently raised. The most important is the matter of signature. If it is to be printed or en- graved on the card, it must be in keep- not only with the lettering already on the card, but with the design of the card itself. For the more formal card, the old-English or Gothic letters or “copper-plate” script is preferred. For the man’s card the plain lettering. Block letters on gold, silver or colors for the card in the modern manner, Casual script in color for the informal card. When the calling-card plate is used for engraving the names, effort should be made if possible to select a card with a verse so worded that the names may be placed at the top rather than the bottom of the verse as strict good form frowns on the use of such titles as Mr. or Mrs. in a signature. While it is not always possible to ad- here to this point if the cards already bear a verse, it should be born in mind if a greeting is selected to be engraved with the name. A smart innovation this year is to nake the signature the central feature of the design on the front af a booklet, with ithe sender's own handwriting used in color, as for example a card of \rough-finish ivory-toned paper bearing the name written diagonally across the front in red and set off by red stars. Cards signed individually by hand are increasingly in vogue and many of the new cards in booklet form have a blank inner page or even omit the from their face with the thought that {the sender will write his or her own seasonal message. The informal type of signature is growing in popularity. A young mar- ried couple, for instance, find it a bit smarter to use a signature such as “Sally and Bill Suttin”. These cards, of course, are intended for immediate friends and relatives. In general usage either the husband's or the wife's name may come first, although strictly speaking, the wife’s name comes first in a joint signature when the for- mal Mr. and Mrs. is omitted. * Signing’cards is apt to be a problem for a widow. For her close circle of friends she signs her name optionally either Mary Brown or in full, Mary i Sieh row do seven-point; ;buck Weighing 200 Graham Brown. For more formal cards pounds at Beaar Creek. y s . 3 rt, the husband’s name is used, as Mrs. Squire Ely is ill. or fk A Sota Bro hee dow Clifford and Thomas Foss of Bear ohn SSrown. ox nLite % wicow are similarly addressed, using the full name. re; sn ALLAS PA. lconventional Merry Christmas phrases |, It .is entirely correct for a person in mourning, to send and receive cards. Care is naturally taken, however, to recepient. Misericordia News | Class Song Contest The Class Song Contest held recent- ly at College Misericordia Created much interest among the student body. | Miss Mary Graham, of Luzerne, wrote | the words and music of the Senior class song, which won highest recogni- tion by the judges. ; The other compositions were written | by Miss Marie McDonald, a member of | the Junior class; Miss Helen Dele- hanty, of the Sophomore class, and Miss Kathryn Buckly, a Freshman, French Club Meets. The French Club has been reorgani- zed, and under the capable leadership of Miss Mary Conlan, president, the members of the club hope to produce many plays and entertainments during the year. Miss Claire Sweeney is vice- president, and Miss Helen West is secretary. : Italian Dinner. { The Secretarial Science Department of College Misericordia served a de- lightful Italian dinner to the entire! student body, on Monday, November 27th, ; .: The waitresses were dressed in Italian costumes, and the dining room possessed a real Italian atmosphere. The affair was such a hughe success, that the department is planning to give a series of such dinners, The money realized on the dinner is going toward the purchase of a Li- brary, as well as several other articles for the Department. select appropriate designs which do not stress the idea of holiday merri- ment, but convey rather a sincere mes- sage of seasonal good-wall, In sending cards to an employer, it is a frequent gesture of courteqy es- pecially if the sender is a woman, to address the card to Mr. and Mrs. even when the sender of the card is not ac- quainted with the wife. This is done only when the card is sent to the home address. The secretary may send a card to her employer or any office worker to the head of her department, addressing it to the office. In selecting your cards, good taste as well as consideration for the postal de- partment suggests a conventional size neither ‘too small’ nor over-large nor oddly shaped. The large cards de- signed for later framing are of course exceptions. Cards should be mailed in sufficient time to ensure their delivery before Christmas. The belated card suggests an afterthought on the part of the _Sende. Addresses should be written by hand in ink.. If there are two envelopes, the ‘address is written in full on the outer lone. The inner envelope is left un- jsealed and bears only the name of the ere errr The Good Old-fashioned Bakers want the good loose Baking Molasses and Table Syrup that GEORGE HUEY | has sold for many years. HUEY’S CORNERS Kingston, Penna. ‘Mrs. Slaudenspiegel. NE of the gloomiest shadows is that cast by the perennial Christmas gift problem. At least it is forbidding to those weaker mortals who put off their shopping until the last minute and then find themselves panicky as they search wildly for some decent gift for Dad or Cousin Bill or Speaking Of Coming Events - - - We don’t sa the world, but nicest. We mean a membership in Wyoming Valley Motor Club (which, of course, includes membership in J rcome to rifle bullets. Wear Red, Says Hunters’ Warning The Luzerne County Fruit Growers Apple Show opened on Wednesday, at k 40 West Market Street, Wilkes-Barre. Growers brought their fruit for eat yr starting Wednesday at 8:00 a. m., and all entries were in place by noon. A! 1:00 p. m., judging started with Mr. J. L. Mecartney of the Horticultural Ex tension Department of State College in charge. Xe The Show this year was conducted by the Luzerne Fruit Growers since 1926. show was a new venture, in that th were no cash awards. y Fruit Growers responded very en couragingly to this new feature of ni cash awards, and the public saw very interesting and beautiful exhibit of apples presented for their inspec tion. ¢ The, show will be open each day an evening up to and including Friday night and the public is invited, free of charge, . Game Commission Secretary Urges Safety Measures In Woods Wear red and lots of it, says Ernest E, Harwood, Executive Secretary of the Game Commission in wa personal appeal to all deer hunters. It takes only a few cents to buy all the red cloth you need and but a few minutes to sew it on. Some hunters think be- cause they wear a one-time red, but now faded, hunting cap that they have all. the protection they need, Harwood added. But they want to get this idea out of their minds. Also, he continued, don’t think for a moment that be- cause you have hunted 10 or 12 years without wearing red, you have be- You haven't. I remember a case which happened a few years ago, Harwood related, where a hunter, wearing only a faded red cap and regular tan colored duck hunting coat and breeches, killed a deer. But while leaning over to get it his red cap was not visible to another hunter who topped a knoll a couple of hun- dred yards away. Atmospheric conditions (it was misty) coupled with the movements of the hunter bending over his kill, led the newcomer to believe he was look- ing at a deer. On top of that, a fork- ed sapling perhaps 50 feet on the other side of the bending hunter appeared, to the now stretched imagination of the other hunter, to take the form of a big buck, and he fired and killed his fellow hunter. Now if he had worn red over his back he probably would be alive today, and the other chap would have been spared the mental torture that will be his for the rest of his life. You may ‘say you don’t care to wear red. Don’t take this attitude. ‘Wear it to keep the other fellow from making a mistake, Become accident minded continued Secretary Harwood. So far this season we have had less accidents than for quite a few years, I through remote forest areas. They will not always be at their camp head quarters. Many of them will be worl ing on the roads and in the brush. I you happen to get a shot that is i line: with those camps or working crews, be a sport and pass it up. The killing or wounding of any of thes: boys will invoke much justified criti csm of our hunters generally. The presence of these Conservation Camps if a hunter is new at the game, may well serve the purpose of pro- viding a land-mark upon which he can fix his general location at all time Study the entire lay of the land before you start out and you will find, that with serious application it won't be long before you are able instinctively to get your bearings. : ‘ In conclusion Mr. Harwood asked all hunters to be good sports calling at tention to the old ‘adage—It always ha paid—it always does pay—it alwa will pay—TO PLAY SAFE! : 3 beseech each and every deer hunter who goes afield this year to do his part in preventing additional accidents. TRESPASS SIGNS Every effort to help hunters become 3 For 10¢c accident minded is worthwhile, if it and saves only one life. 3,For 25¢ Another thing: Be careful when hunting near Citizen's - Conservation Camps. The boys in these camps are doing much to help forward your, in. terests by building fire trails and roads Less, in Quanties The Dallas Post. i Every Homekeeper will welcome this special opportuni ty. Take advantage of these savings and enjoy the finest Coffee you ever drank. Victor Coffee » 15¢ A fragrant blend of the best Santos Coffees. es Ground fresh to your order. a 1b. 2 19¢ 4SC0 Coffee ‘Rich, full-flavor and charming aroma make ASCO a favorite ; Ground fresh to your order. of 1b. 23¢C 'y Acme Cotfee Certified Mocha, Java, and South. American Coffees skillfully blended in this superb Coffee. Vacuum packed. Chase & Sanborn Coffee “te out. Butter 2 » 57c| The Finest Butter in America = ! Cream Richland Butter : Derrydale Butter 2s. 53¢c : 2 Ibs 49¢ Strictly Fresh ; dozen 3 5 C y it’s the most expensive gift in we honestly believe it’s one of the A. A. A. and a year’s sub’ scription to the Motorist). In case you agree with us, we'll be happy to send a cheery letter and a club card to any one on your gift list. VISIT, WRITE OR PHONE HOTEL MALLOW-STERLING" WILKES-BARRE, PA. «a Wyoming Valley Motor Club »» The Pick of the Nests. | Fancy Selected EGGS dozen 23¢ | * Beery Bop Guaranteed fea oul | Large Angel Food Cake each 33c Goldenrod Cake each 18¢c New crop, bright, meaty fruit from the Santa Clara Valley | pe Fleischmann Yeast cake 3c Post Toasties Corn Flakes = 2 pkgs. 17c Baker’s Milk Pack Coconut can 15e Jello 4 pkgs 25c : Grape Nuts pkg 19¢ Full Cream 21¢ Finest $ 1 .00 Merchandise Certificates : Stores. Buy them from our Cashiers or Managers. h -19. Cheese, fac - 10 Make some needy family happy with a basket of a Theos Prices Effective in Ow Sores Bn |oo Just the thing for sandwiches or served with pie. food. Accepted same as CASH in any of our Daliss and Vielalty, Ir 0
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers