The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, July 09, 1937, Image 8

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    KINGSTON
TOWNSHIP
David Evans of the Glen Alden who
a brother-in-law of Bert Riley and
ides up on East Center Street,
havertown, is an interesting person-
ality. It would not surprise us one
it if his friends call upon him to run
or some office this election.
lliam Evans, Harry Ellis, Jr, and
few others are bust around the
school yard.
Harry Fronzoni, the shoemaker on
he Trucksville highway, is mourning
‘his brother-in-law, Ed Smith, who died
at his home in Idetown.
Pittman Edwards was seen correct-
the damage which the hard rains
ently did in his garden. Mr, Ed-
ards reports “Brick” Roushey, who
as injured in an accident, is getting
Baker Dave Evans isn’t around much
hese days. When he took over the
m at the top of East Centre street
aker” used to come down and make
s calls quite often. Farming must
€p hin busy.
Charley! Youngblood, the East Cen-
Street grocer, is getting a number
new customers around Fernbrook.
Dilys Rowlands, for years a teacher
n the Edwardsville schools, is cer-
inly enjoying her vacation this sum-
ner in her Holcomb’s grove home.
ss Rowlands was featured on the ra-
dio and comes of a musical family,
ler father, Morgan Rowlands, at one
ne was the golden-voiced tenor of
yoming Valley, and his son, John,
carrying on the tradition.
[Eddie Morcom is getting quite
dashing with his underslung Dawes
pile and his pet dog on a leash. May -
Eddie is getting ready to run for
iayor of Shavertown when it annexes
‘rucksville,
Jasper Swingle was up to see the
yall game one evening about 6 but
ince there were no friends around
Jasper accepted an invitation to ride
own and missed the battle. Although
not a player was on hand at 6, twenty
f them arrived within half an hour
nd Jasper missed a good game. So
le wouldn't be disappointed we told
im no game was played.
Squire Herb Williams,Jr., is head
ok and bottle washer down at Wiool-
ert’s lunch.
Duke Isaac’s new hoist is getting
good bit of usage since it was in-
talled a few weeks ago.
~ Shavertown is welcoming a good
many new residents within her bor-
ders.
~ Mrs, Smith has her house for sale
d Harry Goeringer is the agent.
Properties around the bridge are
havertown are good investments. Any
them can be rented.
The rock garden at the Shavertown
r station has been taken care of
“and is a sort of diamond in the rough.
‘What do you think of a little boy
ho gets up at 4 a. m. every day to
egin his play. Kenneth Moore of
Main Street does this every day and
is parents are accustomed to it, What
-a precious young fellow he .is—and
hat a man he will grow up to be!
“Another Teddy. Roosevelt,
~ How many Smiths are there in the
township? There are eight who have
telephones. There must be twenty-
“eight more who have no phones. Sta-
tion Agent Culbert got a telegram
for a Smith, who didn’t have a phone.
Mr. Culbert called up a Smith, who
got other Smith neighbors to their
phone, one after another, until, we
think, he had talked to about forty-
eight Smiths without getting the one
with the middle initial of B.
. We have two Dorothy Smiths__both
music experts. The oldest one we call
Dot, and she expects to be ready. for
, music instructors’ job within another
~ year.
- Local residents are sorry to see
Bruce MacDermott moved from this
section. The MacDermotts were al-
ways well thought of, Bruce's father
once holding rank with the best of
the valley's preachers. And Hughey,
his big, six-foot brother, was theifirst
baseman on that really famous Wyo-
ming Seminary team of Dorris Mec-
‘Geown, Jere Jayse, Von Krug, Rep-
nolds, Charles Smith, Billings, et al.
Mrs. Olver, who was before marriage
Miss Ethel M. MacDermott, is an ex-
pert music teacher, with a studio in
Wilkes-Barre.
Harvey Kitchen enjoys reading The
Post. A busy man at the Wilkes-Barre
Pressed Steel Co., he finds relaxation
in trimming his lawn and driving his
~ new Plymouth.
: John Knouse of Fern Knoll Ceme-
tery is also a busy man these days.
Last week there were three funerals
at the cemetery,
There are some people who recall
the Luzerne drum corps which had
- Dave Evans as bass drummer, Johnnie
Mooie as fifer, the MacCollough bro-
thers and others as drummers. In the
Kingston drum corps was ex-Congress-
man C. Murray) Turpin playing the
and Sam Gilbert as bass drummer.
Sam smashed both drumheads in at
the dedication of the Larksville High
School. Clifford Lawley, Clifford Dev-
ens and Robert Nicol were in a class
by themselves handling the drum stick.
Jack Nicol played the cymbals. Dor-
ranceton once had a fine corps with
Newitt as drum major. He was a wiz-
ard with the baton. We missed the old
drum corps on the Fourth,
~The daily vacation Bible School of
the M. E. Church in Trucksville will
start next Monday.
An open air Gospel Mass Meeting
was held last Sunday at 8:30 on the
Earle Benscoter property at Muhlen-
berg Corners. The Rtv. L. B. Bryden,
veteran Bible teacher and evangelist
of note, had charge of the meeting.
The Fourth was well spent—the mo-
money we mean. Every young American
in the township was free as the early
Indians. In the old days one of the
best things about the Fourth was the
iron cannon which sounded the big
salutes.
Landscape Artist King of the Wyo-
‘ning Nurseries had a force of men
working on Dr. Schooley’s lawn on
West Centre Street, Shavertown,last
week, doctoring those fine shade and
fruit trees which make the place so
inviting. Mr. King is a brother of
Howard King and Cliff King of Fern-
brook Street and he has been with
the Wiyoming Nurseries for about five
otears. He points with pride to the
work his firm did at St. Nicholas
Cemetery on the high road.
We saw Harry Ritts in his garden,
which has an aquarium and gold fish.
Mr. Ritts is enlarging the concrete ba-
sin for the ones he takes out of the
hatchery. Between the lumber yard
and his railroad office work, Mr. Ritts
is so busy you'd think he wouldn't
have time to keep his flowers looking
so lovely.
Two Family Rally
Attracts Throng
Continued from Page 1)
Moosic: Mr. and Mrs. George W.
Best.
Kingston: Mrs. Lee Earl, Mrs, Alice
Evans, Ruth and Ned Evans, Mrs. C.
H. Merithew, Mrs. E. R. Millington,
Jeanne Millington, Mr. and Mrs. E. E.
Reilly, Mary Reilly, Mr. and Mrs. Mar-
vin Parrish, Lois and Marvin Parrish,
Jr. :
Forty Fort: Mrs. Eleanor Faust, Mrs.
Claude Faust, Jerry Faust, Mrs, Ira
Robert, Merle and Charles Robert, Mr.
and Mrs. A. R. Lyons, Sylvia Lyons,
Peggy Hosqy! Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Reilly, Frank" Parrish.
Wyoming: Mr. and Mrs. John L.
Parrish, Robert and George Parrish.
Courtdale: Nelson Parrish.
Wiashington, D. C.: Mrs. Cora Haw-
kins, Barbara Sue Hawkins.
Naugatuck, Conn.: Mr. and Mrs.
John L. Benson, Paul Benson, Mrs.
Mildred Popky.
Dallas: Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Shaver,
Mrs. Gordon Hadsall, Jean and Mar-
tha Hadsall, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Parrish, Alma and Emma Parrish, Mr.
and Mrs. R. E. Wright, Edwin Wright,
Mrs. Frank Wright, Ethel and Re-
becca Wright, Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Par-
rish, Paul Parsish, Elizabeth Cooke.
POST SCRIPTS
(Continued from Page 1)
flower shop in New York and it was
into that shop that there came one
day a dignified old gentleman whose
face was strangeiy familiar.
After the patron had picked a bou-
tonierre Mr. Protopapas told him he
thought they must have met some-
where. Somehow, he associated the
face with other events which had
transpired in Southern Africa.
A little proudly, the aged gentleman
said it was quite likely that his face
might be fauniliar, since he had been
an actor on many stages for many
years.
“Have you ever played in Cape-
town?” Dmitris asked.
The old man had.
“In 1909?” asked Mr. Protopapas.
Assuredly! ‘Then Mr. Protopapos
had seen him. That night he had
played such and such a role. Ah, that
was a play. He had been inspired that
evening. He remembered—.
‘While Myr. Prctopapas gasped, the
dignified old gentleman, fired by the
memories of long-past applause, laun-
ched into the role he had played in
Capetown. He swung his arms. He
declairmed. He stalked. And, as cur-
ious passers-by began to stop and
crowd into the window to view the
impressive performance, the old actor
became so excited in his role he tore
his collar completely off and began to
work on more intimate parts of his ap-
parel.
Mr. Protopapas somehow ended the
impromptu dramatics, and was, ever
after that, very careful about recall-
ing their early conquests to actors.
Kal
Our friend, Dmitris Protopapas can
speak, of course, of almost any big
city or any section of the world, but
we like his stories of Africa best, for
he spent some years there, and knows
the Dark Continent as few men do.
It was some mention of the diamond
mine by! us that started our conver-
sation with him, and introduced us to
his pleasant personality. We had
heard from a man who has just re-
turned from Africa of the dogs which
guard the diamond mines.
An attendant at the mine who was
showing his dogs to this traveler aske
ed him for a match. He waved the
match a few times before a blood-
hound’s snout, gave it back to our
friend, and said:
“Now walk away from this spot a-
bout a hundred yards and stick the
match in the rth.”
‘While ¢ ir friend marched obedient-
ly away, the attendant covered the
dog’s head with his coat, so he should
not see our friend’s movements. Our
friend shoved the match into the
ground and came back.
2
RE
THE DALLAS POST,
Directors Give
Martin Contract
(Continued from page 1)
Approve Playground
At the same meeting the directors
approved a plan to conduct a play-
ground on the athletic field beside the
high school daily this summer. The
plans were launched some time ago by
Prof. Martin, with co-operation of the
Kiwanis Club, and that service group
has volunteered to purchase a part of
the stationery’ equipment to be used.
Ty Carr, who has been directing
basketball and softball leagues in this
section, will have charge of the play-
ground, which will be linked with those
of Wiyoming Valley Playground and
Recreation Association directed by
Miss Ruth Swezey. Ome of Mr. Carr's
two NYA assistants will be Marion
Heale. There will also be special
classes. The WPA will provide 'mova-
able equipment.
New Proje
After consigerable fdiscussion, the
board approved tegtative plans to
renovate the Truckgville seiool build-
ings, at a cost to t trict of about
$2,800. WPA will labor costs,
pay
which may) run over $6,000.
With the Shavertown building in
splendid condition and the new annex
almost completed at the high school
the improved Trucksville building,
which has been badly in need of re-
pairs, will give the Kingston Township
school district one of the best groups
of buildings in this section.
Two vacancies exist on the township
faculty now. Helen Reynolds, a sixth
grade teacher, and Elvie Griffith, a
third grade teacher, resigned to be
married.
“Get it,” said the attendant, releas-
ing the bloodhound. The dog circled
the spot a few times then set -off, nose
to the ground, in our friend's tracks.
In a minute or two he stopped, grasp-
ed a hunk of sod in his jaws, and
trotted back.
The. attendant took the dirt, sifted
it gently in his hands, and when the
dust and grass had fallen away, there,
in his hand, was our friend's match.
—_——
As we say, we were telling this
story! when the gentleman to whom
this week’s column is devoted came in
and sat quietly down. When a few
friend's challenged our story of the
dog, he interrupted politely and as-
sured them it was”true. He had, it
seemed, been around diamond mines
quite a bit. Then he told tales that
made our little story seem dull.
——
He told stories of days in Africa
when natives were selling rough, un-
finished diamonds for half a crown
and finding few buyers. He told of
diamond preserves which are guarded
by the government, lest their treasure
be released in a flood which would
wreck the diamond market. :
He told of the strict regulations
governing employes who work in the
mines, men who must sign contracts
and stay’ within the limits of the high
fence while they are employed, and
who must be isolated, for eamina-
tion inside and out, for ‘wo days be-
fore tha leave the property.
And yet, Mr. Protopapos said, there
are those who beat the rules__for a
while. One was a restaurant owner,
who had a business hard by the fence
which enclosed the mines. He had
great flocks of chickens, which he al-
lowed to run about, picking up their
food where they might.
In the course of time, many’ of the
chickens were bound to wander undet
the fence into the diamond preserve,
and, by the same monotonous rule,
workers inside who had managed to
secrett diamonds somewhere, would
have an opportunity to throw a pre-
cious stone unseen where a chicken
with an appetite for glass might pick
it up.
It was a slow process, for many of
the chickens were killed: and their
crops examined without results. But
when a chicken did give up a rough
diamond it paid well for all the inno-
cent fowl who had failed.
The smuggler was caught eventually.
His downfall was one strange enough,
lowing supplies and services:
ment supplies and equipment, art sup-
plies, furniture, changes in fire alarm
systems, replacement of heating and
lighting systems, linoleum floor.
All bids shall be addressed to D. A.
‘Waters, Secretary, Dallas, Pa., the en-
velopes to be plainly’ marked, “Sealed
Bids”, showing the item on which bid
is made.
A. copy of the requisitions and
specifications may be had on applica-
tion at the district office or by sending
a self-addressed stamped envelope to
the Secretary.
Each bidder shall submit a unit
price on each item, and may also sub-
mit a total price.
The Board reserves the right to re-
ject any or all bids or parts of bids,
or to select ayy item frem any bid.
By order of the Board of School
Directors. 3
D. A. WATERS,
Secretary.
oh that. He Was Serving loo many Cecil DIXON + dseveeve Factoryville
chicken dinners.
Ralph Rinker ........ Lake Carey
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
Ralph Decker ......... Mehoopany
SEALED BIDS
The Board of School Directors of Paul Line ........ ov inte Lovelton
Dallas Borough School District will |} Andrew Dpmond .......... Vernon
receive sealed bids until § P. M., July
7, 1937, at the office of the district in |§ Jos. Robinson ........ North Eaton
the high school building, for the fol- Mis Anns Shere... Meshoppen
School supplies, janitor’s supplies, |§ A. I. Burlington ...... Leraysville
coal, manual training supplies and
equipment, home economics supplies —0
and eduipment, laboratory supplies PRIME IS SAFE
and equipment, commercial depart-
Y, JULY 9, 1937
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that the partnership heretofore exist-
ing between the undersigned in the
conduct of an accessory store, gaso-
line sctation, garage, repair shop, etc.,
at No. 11 Main Street, Dallas, Pa.,
under the name of “ADD. WOOL-
BERT'S ' AUTO SERVICE,” has
been dissolved; and that the business
will be continued by Addison C.
Woolbert, Jr., who will assume all
obligations, and to whom all bills are
poyable.
H. Lawrence Lee.
Addison C Woolbert, Jr.
B. B. Lewis, Att'y.
Classified Ads
FOR SALE—XKitchen stove, lawn mow -
er. Cheap. C. L. Albert, Dallas 328.
| FOR SALE—Barn, 30x36, native white
pine timbers; good condition; five
acres good hay. Mrs. WL. H. Nevel,
Idetown. 1t
FOR SALE__Hay mower, rake, lumber
wagon, plow, stone boat. Mrs. Fran-
cts Weaver, Carpenter Road, Harvey's
Lake. 1t
FOR SALE—1930 Ford Coupe,
reasonable. Sheldon Gay
Centermoreland 66R4,
price
phone
Carverton, Pa.
LOST—or taken by mistake— while
atteding Himmler Theatre. Lady’s
white coat. ® Will finder or person
knowing its whereabouts kindly notify
Mrs. James R. Oliver, Dallas, Pa.
FOR SALE — Beds, complete; hand
washer with wringer; any/ reason-
able offer accepted if taken at once;
Arthur Hine, Claude Street, Box 215,
Dallas. 1t
FOR SALE—Reconditioned washers,
radios and sweepers. Rebennack &
Covert, Kingston, Pa. tf
housework, must have references;
call at Rothstein's, Clifford Avenue,
Trucksville, care of Butler Estate.
FOR SALE—Goodrich DeLuxe auto-
mobile heater, used 2 hours; perfect
condition. Cheap for a heater of this
grade. See Mr. Spurgeon at Dallas
“Post” office.
FOR SALE—Baled hay and straw. A.
J. Hadsell, Huntsville. Phone Dallas
251 R19.
"FOR SALE—1 -horse power motor for
32V Delco plant; pump; six months
old; in perfect condition; cheap to
quick buyer. Leslie Dymond.
FOR RENT—T-room house, all im-
provements. Dr. Wall's residence, 5
Machell Ave. Inquire of Mrs. William
Gans, Dallas. ,
WANTED TO RENT__Five- or six-
room house; Dallas or Kingston Town-
ship. All improvements. Rent must be
reasonable. Phone Dallas 300 or write
Box T, Dallas Post.
- MURRAY
GAY - MU
Prime Fence Users
Chas." Boice v.iiinres Sugar Hollow
Leroy Dailey Clarks Summit
Fused against lightning
Economical—operates.for 15¢c a
month
Complete__set includes insulators
to put up 2500 ft. of fence
——
WE GLADLY DEMONSTRATE
—0
(Gay-Murray Go.
TUNKHANNOCK,
PENNA.
{
HELP WANTED __ Girl for general
=
Dill Pickles
Fresh Dressed
Stewing :7 it
Chickens = “:-.
Best Whole Center |.
Cuts
Chuck
Roast
Legs of
Lamb
Ib. 2: gd P S
These are Milk Fed—Fatted Chickens
Delicious Spring
Boneless Rolled
Veal Roast
Cheese or
Baked Loaf
Large Size
2
15
310°
Sliced Spiced i Sliced
Luncheon Boiled
Meat Ham
14 1b. | 1 Ib. 14 1b.
15¢/ 29°
5 1b.
13° 25°
GARDEN_FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES
EXTRA LARGE—Ripe
Watermelon
each
C
Try one of these EXTRA LARGE Melons this week-end. Theyre
Sweet and Juicy, and a real value!
Sound Select Slicing
Tomatoes
3 = 25°
Plums
Santa Clara-Fresh
2 23°
Honeydew Melons "seach 25¢
Jumbo Cantaloupes
2 for 27¢
Finest Selected i
New
Potatoes
152.23
full
peck
C bunch
Home Grown
Carrots
Lifebuoy Soap 3 cue 17c
A © P Apple Sauce 3 To 2.95
Red Heart Dog Food 3 ans 23¢
Small White . White House
Soup :
Beans Milk
3-25°| 325°
small cans,
A & P's Fancy Creamery Tub
Butter
Bre
One Price—One Quality—the ad
Best Lge. Sliced
Loaf
2 Ibs. 69c Cc
Silverbrook Sweet Cream
Print Butter, 2 1b. 73¢c
ATP
i America’s Favorite
18 oz Sliced
Loaf
i Large Double Loaf 11c
Cc
Ivory Flakes 22
Ann Page Tomato Juice 4 I
Spaghetti, Macaroni I’ 55 2 re
Noodles
2c
25¢
lle
Fine Granulated
Sugar Cheese
Ibs. :
16.549 | =» 23
bk
25 1b. Bag im Fully cured for fine Flavor
Delicious Whole Milk
TEA KEEPS YOU COOL!
DRINK NECTAR TEA icep!
Mixed, Formosa, Pan orBasket
Fired Blends
1, 1b. 10€ + 1. 19¢
1 1b.
PER.
15¢
Orange Pekoe or India Ceylon
Blends
1 1b.
pkg.
29¢
Fo