The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, June 02, 1939, Image 6

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    THE POST,
Eo LE 0 TRL, ats a S43
ET
FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1939
Or ret rmer rr freers
See Paint Made
" AtRaker Factory
Plant One Of First |
01 Kind In Valley
An interesting Wyoming Valley
industry, recently opened at 595
Market Street, Kingston, .is the
Raker Paint factory. The company
is operated by Lester Raker, a grad-
uate of Prait Institute, Brooklyn
and a chemical engineer. Before
coming to Kingston Mr. Raker was
employed in the research labora-
"tories of the National Lead Com-
pany, makers of Dutch Boy White
Lead, in New York City. Later he
managed production in the Raker
Paint factory in Scranton. The bus-
iness in Scranton was established
fifty years ago by Mr. Raker’s
grandfather.
Grinding of pigments and mixing
of paint is done in the factory at
Kingston, and the public is always
welcome to visit the plant and
watch the paints in process of man-
. ufacture. Barn, house, implement
and furniture paints are manufac-
tured. Besides this the company
handles complete lines of enamels
and varnishes for every type of use
and service. It also handles a
large selection of wall papers in the
newest and most modern patterns.
The company furnishes ladders
and spray equipment to those who
purchase paint from the factory.
This has been a popular feature this
spring. Customers who are not sure
f the exact amount of paint need-
for their work, simply take the
measurements of the surface they
wish to cover to Mr. Raker and he
can tell them how much paint they
will need and the cost for all ma-
terials for the work. 7
Three-Way Tie For Tops
In Merchants’ Softball
: A three-way tie between Buddies’,
Stull’s and Parry’s for first place
in the Luzerne Merchant's Softball
"day when Memorial Day games were
postponed.
Games unplayed Tuesday, which
included Luzerne Club at Parry’s,
Little’s at Buddies, Lare’s at Asco
and Benefit Association at Stull’s,
will be made up by arrangements
between the teams’ managers.
Parry’s traded pitcher Martina to
Asco for outfielder Jordan and
Lare’s Market traded Breckenridge
to Asco for Pollack. Yadisky, man-
ager of the Asco softballers, has re-
turned to the active playing list to
\ ginsthen the falling grocers.
F Lhedule for next week: Tuesday
N€SS oon, Lare’s at Luzerne Club,
~ Vali’'s at Buddies, Parry’s at Asco
and Little’s at Benefit Association.
Thursday—Asco at Buddies, Lu-
zerne Club at Littles’, Benefit at
__Lare’s and Parry's at Stull’s.
} Expect Appropriation For
* Swoyersville Town Hall
. Between five hundred and a thou-
sand dollars, sought from the WPA
by Swoyersville Borough Council for
the completion of the Town Hall
project, will be allocated to the bor-
ough in the early part of June, it
was disclosed by Burgess John Bro-
_ @ inski this week.
Joye project, which includes re-
“irs and alterations to the borough
building on Shoemaker Street, was
_ discontinued last month when the
"- labor appropriation ran out, and
employment was taken from a doz-
en laborers.
It will take less than $1,000 to
complete the job, and the appropri-
ation is expected to be approved by
WPA officials sometime next week,
according to Burgess Brominski.
Council is in a position to finance
' the necessary materials, he stated.
BS Two Local Musicians
In Prof. Wood's Recital
The students of Prof. Ernest
Wood, of Dallas, will present a
musicale in the Memorial Church,
gFiorth Street, Wilkes-Barre, Mon-
¥ day night, June 5, at 8.
"ton of Dallas, and Miss Edna Meek-
er, of Kingston, will be featured ar-
tists, both playing several numbers
on the pipe organ, assisted by an
able cast, who will give piano, or-
gan and piano, and vocal selections.
There is no charge, but a free-will
~ offering will be taken. The program
"is under the auspices of the King’s
Daughter’s Circle of the Church. The
public is cordially invited.
“Bob” Sut-’
Magneto and Carburetor
SERVICE
Quick Service--Prices Reasonable
RUDOLPRH’S
ELECTRIC SERVICE
338-35 E. Jackson Street
i WILKES-BARRE, PA.
’Phone 2-5868
SEA FOOD “WINES and LIQUORS
Special Lunch Every Saturday Night
DALLAS INN
“HERM” VAN CAMPEN, Prop.
Sunday Dinners and Private Parties
By Reservation
Charlie Locke and His Crooning
Strings Every Saturday Night
| HUNTSVILLE ROAD, DALLAS, PA.
N
| League remained unbroken Tues-|.
TOWN MEETING
(Continued from Page 2)
five jobs for Democrats and twenty-
two jobs for Republicans.
Previously they had fought
through the courts for forty-nine
appointments, with John Riley and
Bob Bierly tieing the Davis-Mac-
Guffie vote and MacGuffie stoutly
declaring that with the G. O. P.
county majority he never would
submit to minority representation.
The Democratic Court handed down
twenty-two jobs and the Commis-
sioners lost twenty-seven.
So, the twenty-seven were subject
to another appeal, with the same
old division of forces. Economy and
patronage became so confused you
could not distinguish one from the
other. On Saturday, the day of
the Guild show, the award to five
Democrats brought the better
awards to twenty-two Republicans,
all of whom should be on duty the
day The Post goes to press.
And there were your Guildsmen
in their Gridiron entertainment,
parodying and paraphrasing the
song of “The Three Little Fishes,”
to this effect:
Three County Commissioners rule
Luzerne,
Where a wage or salary is hard to
* earn, 3
Where the, spoils belong to the
G. 0. P.
And the County Controller to
Democracy. \
“We want,” said MacGuffie, “lots
of extra clerks
“To list the voters or they'll jam
the works;”
“You're right,” chimed in Davis,
“and I'll motion so,”
But Riley countered with a robust
“NO!”
And Bierly shouted “DENIED!”
The lid went down with a loud
ker-slam
With registration in an awful jam.
Oh, Judges, listen to our tale of
woe:
There's a way to arbitrate a “Yes”
and “no”.
When county officials are an
even split
it seems that business is
about to quit.
MacGuffie and Davis must the
voters woo,
And Riley’s looking for election
too,
They all want the jobs and they
fail to see
There is always danger in monop-
oly.
So, count up the vacant spots,
Divide them in equal lots;
Give each side a shake of the old
plum tree,
And we'll hear no more about
economy.
And
Chorus:
Give politicians their share of the
jam, >
And the flow of business you
never can dam.
Well, your narrator liked the
Guild show. As gridironers the
newspapermen of Wyoming Valley
did a much better job with local
material than the more publicized
Washingtonians have many a time
done with national subjects. This
scrivener shall never forget Martha
Thomas of the Record as one of the
Garble sisters.
Nor will memory lose for a long
time the lilting cadences of “The
Ruler of the Keystone State.” Dal-
las has a claim upon the Governor,
because ‘a very important member
of the James family, Mrs. Agnes
James Spry, wife of David, is a
neighbor in Shavertown. How bet-
ter portray, in brief form, the ‘idea
of the man who was elected Com-
monwealth Chief after the fashion
of the famous Sir Joseph Porter
who became Admiral of the Queen’s
Nah-vee by never, no, never going
to sea? Here's the song and if you
know your Gilbert & Sullivan and
“Pinafore” you can sing it:
THE RULER OF THE KEYSTONE
STATE
When I was only a small galoot
I spent vacations in a breaker
chute,
I threw out boney and discarded
rock
Which the miners had to shovel
and the bosses dock;
I tumbled out such mountains of
wasteful slate
That now I am ruler of the Key-
stone State.
New Amazing Safe Way
Makes Stained, Discolored
FALSE TEETH
LOOK LIKE NEW
Do these Three Simple Things:
(1) Dissolve a level teaspoonful of
Kleenite in half a glass of warm
water.
(2) Put in your stained, discolored
plate or bridgework. Leave for
15 or 20 minutes; while you
dress or overnight.
(3) NO BRUSHING — rinse — re-
place.
Now look at your teeth—gleam-
ing, lustrous, natural-looking; teeth,
gums and plate sparkling, stainless,
clean and sweet—free from all un-
pleasant taste and odor.
Get Kleenite today—all druggists
have it—Don’t gamble—insist on
Kleenite—the Dentists’ Plate Clean-
vad Gut-Rate
Drug Store
THREE COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
When I grew older I peddled ice
With a horse and wagon and a
tong device,
I shaved it neatly and I brushed
it clean
Til it glistened with the brilliance
of a diamond’s sheen;
I cut the ice exactly as to size
and weight
And now I am ruler of the Key-
stone State.
The breaker days are an epoch
past
And boys no longer heed the
whistle’s blast,
The ice-man’s finished with his
chilly toil
With freezing automatic
kitchen coil;
Machines have caused a freeze-
out of the humble skate,
So I became the ruler of the Key-
sne State.
stone State.
in a
So, neighbors all of Old Shawnee,
On roads to fortune take a tip
from me:
Don’t choose endeavors that are
circumspect
If you'd be cutting ice among the
State’s elect;
Forget the diplomatic frills and
pick the slate
And you may be the ruler of the
Keystone State.
oy,
“START
RIGHT"
Says the experienced housewife
to the June bride, “save your
health; keep your home pleas-
ant; save your husband shirt-
aggravation. Your clothes will
last longer. Your clothes will
you let the O'Malia serve you.”
O'Malia Laundry
ON THE LAKE HIGHWAY
PAINT NOW
PAY MONTHLY
USE...
The Sherwin-Williams
Budget Payment Plan
(Covers Both Labor and Material)
® Largest selling house paint
in the world.
eo Combines beauty and
protection.
oe SWP gives maximum cover-
age, ease of application, and
lowest cost per job.
VISIT OUR STORE AT
84 S. Main St. Wilkes-Barre
| For correct color suggestions
! WALL PAPER
We have wallpaper that is second to
none, with facilities for showing the
finest papers obtainable in a price
range to fit every home budget.
We specialize in WALLCREST, SAN-
ITAS, WALLTEX and WOOD GRAIN
papers.
If you have not received your
Home Decorator and
Color Guide
by Rockwell Kent
you may secure one by calling
at our store.
SPRING SUGGESTIONS
oFlax Soap. eWallpaper Cleaner.
eo Soilex. # Chamois. ® Sponges, Etc.
Serwin- WiLiams
COMPANY
84 SOUTH MAIN STREET
WILKES-BARRE
PHONE W-B 83-1111 or
DALLAS 320-R-2 .
As far as your correspondent
could judge, the only important
absentees were those who owe most
to the scribes. Governor James
fought to get there and was defeat-
ed by the last-hour jam in the
Legislature. However, he did send
for copies of the show and saw to
it that a letter was at the banquet
table early Saturday night. In that
letter the Governor declared that
he had at least an evening’s enjoy-
able reading. And his only regret
was that he was compelled to re-
main away from the Gridironing
which would have smoothed out
many a wrinkle in his executive
brow. —A READER.
Himmler Theatre
MATINEE EVERY SATURDAY AT 2
DALLAS, PA.
THIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
“Ice Follies of 1939”
Joan Crawford and James Stewart
also serial and comedy
MONDAY AND TUESDAY
DOUBLE FEATURE
“While New York Sleeps”
with Michael Whalen
“Pygmalion”
with Leslie Howard
~ WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY
Jack Holt in
“Flight To Fame”
also Fox News and
“Crime Does Not Pay”
NEXT FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
James Cagney in
iiDklahoma Kid”
GAY - MURRAY
NEWS |
NEW 6 CU. FT.
FAMILY MODEL
$149.50
All the features of other re-
frigerators plus, economy—
uses only 1% H. P. Motor—
Sealed Unit means no service
calls — Westinghouse 5-Year
Guarantee.
Have you seen the latest thing
in kitchen helpers? We can
show you all models of oil,
electric, gas and coal stoves
made by Perfection, Westing-
house, KitchenKook and Pitts-
ton. >.
Oil Stoves sell as low as
$4.50
Westinghouse Electric Ranges
$82.50
Kitchenkook Gas Stoves
$19.50 ”
Pittston Enameled Ranges
$98.00
SEE US AND BEGIN TO
ENJOY COOKING
Here’s a Bargain in Used
| Kitchen Ranges
1 Gray Penn Esther $42.50
1 Gray Dockash $50.00
1 Ivory Wincroft $70.00
Cabinet sinks and new bath-
rooms make the cooks good-
natured and keep our shop |
men busy. Will Chamberlain
at Laceyville had a cabinet
sink installed just this week,
while we furnished a complete
outfit for Donald - Stonier’s
new home at Prospect Hill.
Prime Electric Fence has been
used on the Robinson Farm
at North Eaton for a year
with very good success. Wal- |
ter came in the other day for
extra insulators to build more
fence—that’s one way of say-
ing that the Prime gives real
satisfaction. Stanley Oliver
of Meshoppen and Veto Ku-
met at Bardwell are recent
customers.
FLY TIME IS HERE——
Screen Doors sell at $1.95
Window Screens 35 cents
Sprayers 25 cents
Reliable Flit Spray, pint
39 cents
See us for your Fly Ammuni-
tion and be ready to shoot
on sight. |
You can buy an
Electric Milk Cooler
here as low as
$169.00
Why Not See Us About It?
GAY - MURRAY Go.
Ine.
TUNKHANNOCK, PA.
Thousands of thrifty homekeepers shop regularly in Acme Super Markets.
They welcome the opportunity to compare prices and to select quality foods
from such a large variety. They see foods they never new existed and thus
are able to be a “step ahead” in meal planning. They also find in Acme Super
Markets more of their favorite foods priced low.
® Quality Meats—Satisfaction Guaranteed ®
TENDER STEWING /
Chickens n. PE
Roasting Chickens Ib. 25¢
OVEN TENDERED C H i C ¥
SMOKED
HAMS Pot Roast
Owned and Operated by
AMERICAN STORES COMPANY
42 - 44
MAIN STREET
DALLAS
Open Late
Friday and Saturday
= Pastry Specials =
GOLDEN LAYERS
nr 26s 1b. 21¢ “i 1b. 456
COCONUT BUNS Cellophane
wr. LOE
YOUR CHOICE
Wrapped
dozen i5¢
Bacon
MEAT, CHEESE, PICKLE or
im PIMENTO LOAVES
PRODUCTS SKINLESS FRANKFURTERS » §19c
89¢
» 10c
SEA TROUT or
MACKEREL
9¢
Imported Can Ham
TENDER LAMB
Liver ». 29¢| Fillets
Fancy Woodside Roll
Del Monte
Ortho-Cut or Fine Tub
BUTTER
COFFEE
» 23¢ 2 ~ 49¢
Del Monte or Asco
Your
Choice
Oil or Mustard
Peaches 9x: Qc | Sardines = Be
Apricots ~~ 22 925¢/| Mackerel = 8
Acme Quality
BREAD
Phillips’ “Delicious”
BEANS
CRAX
1-1b. 25¢
pkgs.
a) RE TR large
ho 25¢ 11 OIL as i5¢
Whole or Cracked Wheat,
With Pork & Tomato Sauce
Buy in quantity. Save more
Raisin, Sliced Rye,
Vienna Twist, Supreme
gallon 8 5 [J
Flaked Tuna Fish = 4 0c
CANNING NEEDS AIDS [Sauer Kraut oF = gc
Mason Jars doz. 65¢ | .. sare .
Mason Jars doz. 75¢ Ginger Ale Club. bot. 19C
3 pkgs. 10¢c
Jar Rings
pkg. 18¢
Jar Caps
Banner Day
Freshly Roasted
Coffee 3 = 3§C
Jelly Glasses doz. 35¢ . SBR all
Cs bot. 23¢ Evap. Milk tv 10 ine) 85°c
; SELOX 5 B E E | 5th wu
ge. .
pke. 10c One Cannon Towel Souvenip Te a5poon
ee
BROOMS
Better Grade
i EacH 49c
included in each pkg. of
Silver Dust
wa 9c
black band from
Palmolive Soap |
5 «Yc
DE ERR TT
ies? = GARDEN FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES =
BEETS glass 0c Fancy New Texas
ad JE 2 Ibs. h
ny r ONIONS C
we 0 i Lemons we doz. 25¢
» . C
A rhe Carrots “er bunch 5¢
soup canbe) Cabbage ~ 9 Ibs. 10¢
CATSUP 3 1vo- bo 95¢ Fars nd on ES Calif. Tees TUGE
aos Foon 6» 25c| B RPE |B ASC
EXTRA LARGE, SWEET, JUICY ©
Florida Oranges ~ 25C
— Prices effective June 1, 2, 3 — More Big Values in Acme Super Markets —
”