= mmons Piliar Figure To Lasting Rest Gustav Kuehn Of Dallas Was Oldest Practicing Pharmacist In State In summoning Gustav A. A. Kuehn last Saturday afternoon, death robbed Dallas of one of its most familiar and beloved figures. On Tuesday afternoon, when Mr. Kuehn was laid to rest in Fern Knoll Cemetery, after services at the family home on Machell Ave- fue, Dallas, solemn-faced throngs joined in the heart-felt tribute to the jovial, kindly druggist who had ‘been identified with Back Mountain “business and civic interests for a quarter of a century. Mr. Kuehn was born in Liver- pool, O., on April 30, 73 years ago, the son of Rev. and Mrs. Conrad Kuehn. He was only 14 years old when he began his career as a phar- macist, starting as an apprentice in New York City. Three years later he went to Albany College of Phar- macy and Medicine to study and was graduated, at the age of 19, with. high honors, the youngest member of his class. : When he came to Wilkes-Barre he conducted a pharmacy on Scott Street. In 1912 he was a Dem- ocratic candidate for. Mayor of Wilkes-Barre and shortly after his defeat he moved to Dallas, estab- lishing a pharmacy in a store on upper Main Street before he moved to the I. O. O. F. building, where he had maintained his drug store since. . He frequently reminisced of Dal- las as it was when he came here. “It was some place in those days,” he would say. “No electric lights, no telephones, no streets, no anything.” Known For Keen Wit A natural wit, Mr. Kuehn, who was known affectionately to innum- erable persons as “Gus”, joked often about the changes in the business he chose. He longed often for the old-fashioned “prescription parlor” of his youth, which was, he once insisted, “a real drugstore, not one of these darned hardware stores. A visit to his store was always an occasion for Mr. Kuehn to get one of his sober-faced sallies and the jokes he conceived frequently passed from person to person, throughout the town, until they had beccrie almost folklore. He was a charter member of Lodge, 61, F. & A. M., was a 32nd Degree Mason, a member of Key- stone Consistory, Knights of Pythia, Luzerne County Pharmaceutical As- sociation and Shavertown Lutheran Church. : When the Pennsylvania Pharma- ceutical Association held its con- vention : in Wilkes-Barre in 1938 it selected Mr. Kuehn the oldest practicing: druggist in the State. His wife, the former Jean Alex- ander. of ‘Avoca, has been active in Republican politics, having served as treasurer of Luzerne County Re- publican Women's executive com- mittee and as vice chairmanez’ > republican - commit- lsides his widow, he is survived by two sons, Karl Kuehn, Dallas, and John Ammerman, Allentown; a daughter, Mrs. Lydia Rohrbach, York; two grandsons, Karl Rohrbach day afternoon, Frankfort, ~fastor ‘of Shavertown Lutheran Church and Rev. C. Du- apg Butler, pastor of Lehman Meth- “odist Church, officiating. Pallbearers were James Oliver, Dr. Sherman Schooley, W. B. Jeter, H. S. Doll, M. A. Wilcox, Dr. G. K. Swartz, and George Trimble. In- terment was in Fern Knoll Burial Park. Ends Life Three Weeks Biter Fire Levels Home Morose because of the loss of his home at Montrose in a fire a month ago, Joseph Ignatovig Adams, 26, Pikes Creek, ended his life on Sun- day afternoon when he drank poison while attending a family reunion at the home of his aunt, Mrs. Williams J. Stochen, 240 East Dorrance Street, Kingston. When Mrs. Stochen learned of her nephew's intent, she fed him raw eggs as an antidote. Mr. _Stngher ther: rushed Adams to Nesbitt Memorial HdSpital, where he died within an hour, without re- gaining consciousness. Surviving are his widow, Marie; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ignatovig; a brother, Ralph, all of Pikes Creek, and a sister, Mrs. Eva Townly, Rum- son, N. J. Native Of Lehman, War Veteran, Is Dead Herbert L. Ide, a native of Leh- man and a veteran of the World War, died Friday night in General »l Of Main And Bennait Stree’ e gram; pt Cottage At Lake. IF POST’S EDITOR ISN'T RIGHT, HE’LL LOSE BOTH WAGER AND HIS DIGNITY Last Year, Taken From The Files Of The Post. If The Post’s editor is wrong on this one, he’ll not only lose his wager, but his dignity in Confer With Council . . . Shavertown Engineer Recommends Construction of 300,000-gallon Reservoir As So- lution To Problem . .'. NEWSPAPER STRIKE ENDS. .. “Don’t Blame Us” Say Signs Erected By Luzerne Com- mittee Along Neglected Main Thor- oughfare. | April 14: E. E. LINE, UNDER FIRE | FROM SCHOOL BOARD, SUBMITS RESIGNATION AS DALLAS FACUL- | TY MEMBER . .. “Aunt Ellen” Fer- guson 935, Dies At Harvey's Lake . . . Farmers Organize To Fight Re-| duction In Milk Prices . . . Luzerne Police Chief Informs Motorists They Should Send Damages To State . . . State Renegs On Promise To De- velop Kitchen Creek As Park, April 21: State Prepares To Pave Another Link On Dallas-Tunkhan- nock Highway . .. Robert Westover, Former Dallas Boy, Suffers Broken Back When Thrown From Horse At Waverly . . . Evans Falls Methodists Dedicate New Church. April 28: DALLAS WATER COM- PANY READY TO LAUNCH $7,000] IMPROVEMENT PLAN . . . Munici- pal Ownership Plans Postponed Pending Test Of Program . . . 42- Year Old Street Car System To Be Abandoned April 31 . . . Busses To Link Dallas And Wilkes-Barre . . . Peg Casterline, 18, Harvey’s Lake, "Achieves Chilly Distinction Of Being First Girl To Take Dip In Lake This Year. March 19: DEATH THROWS ITS SHADOWY MANTLE OVER ADAM KIEFER . . . John Reinhardt And John Shupp Injured When Scaffold Falls At Hillside . . . Mrs. Robert L. Leonard, 83, Dies At Trucksville . .. On Lake Road . . . Mary Ferry Heads Dallas PTA Again. March 26: Memorial Day To Re- flect New Flame Of Patriotism... Dallas Methodists Observe Fiftieth Anniversary Of Dedication Of Church . . . Pitchers Strike Out 31 ton Township Baseball Game . . Dallas Firemen Make Seven-Mile Trip To Orange In Eight Minutes To Save Rural Home. June 2: Twenty-One Graduated From Dallas Borough High School . . . Banks Starts Work Construct- ing Evans Falls Road . . . American Legion Makes Scholaxship Awards To Eight. June 9: Water Company Sinking New Well . . . FHA Indorses Goss Manor . . . Emphasizes Advantages Of Dallas As likely Place For New Home Construction . . . Sweitzer’s Dog Places In Six Shows In Month. June 16: Michael Fieger, Hillside, Secretly -Quits America To Live Un- der Swastika . . . Joseph Rood, Dal- las, Dies At 83 . . . Luzerne Borough Officials To Confer With State Of- i Refuses To Release Tax Collector Four Escape When Car Turns Turtle | Players In Dallas Township- Kings-| | -) Jammed On Head Of Robert Tier- the bargain. When Granville “Whitey” Brace returned from a trip to Hillside, near Newark, N. J., this week he had a news item for The Post. In New Jersey, said Whitey, banks are paying ten cents for every 1939 nickel. August 11: Mary Still, War Nurse, Reminisces Of Experiences 20 years Ago . . . Triplets Born To Holstein On Farm Of Fred Shoul- dice, Jackson Township. August 18: A, C. Devens Buys Dutch Mountain Clay Products At! Public Sale . . . American Legion Re-dedicates Rice Cemetery; Raises American Flag . . . Howard Arm- | strong, 37, Hangs Self . . . Clark | Withdraws From County Fight For | Sake Of Harmony. August 25: Dallas School Board The editor, a hardened skep- tic, doubted that one, even when Whitey insisted. Sides were drawn and a wager was agreed upon, to be decided by writing to any Newark bank. If the editor’s skepticism is con- firmed, Whitey has agreed to travel Main Street, Dallas, on his hands and knees. If the - Editor is wrong—a possibility not unprecedented — he will drop his journalistic dignity and pay up by taking a stroll on all fours. From Bond . . . Niemeyer Family Boasts Of Four Generations, In- cluding Four “Williams”. September 1: Coon Construction Co. Begins Repaving Main and Ben- nett Streets, Luzerne . . . 1,100 Minks Grown On Balut Farm At Hay’s Corners . . . William And Mary Hoover Kunkle Mark 50th Wedding Anniversary . . . William Weaver, 10, East Dallas, Fractures Skull In Fall From Truck, November 24: Marie Almedia Oberst, 56-year-old Harvey’s Lake Widow, Slain At Wheel Of Coupe « By 61-Year-old Fiance, Frank Glas, | Luzerne, Just Before He Kills Him- September 8: Florence Rusilow- | self . . . Lahr’s Unit Suspended By ski, 20, Lehman, Foils Kidnap At- | American Progressive League . . . tempt Arline Frantz Gage | Nephew Of David Richards, Dallas, Among Americans Leaving England | Killed When Royal Oak, British Because Of War Outbreak . .| Flagship, Is Sunk By Sub. DIVER SEARCHES HARVEY'S! SWIFT PRECAU- LAKE FOR BODY OF MILLARD | December 1: HAEFELE . . . Joseph MILLARD | 05 CHECK DANGER OF EPI- Named Borough Councilman To | DEMIC . . . 16 Scarlet Fever Car- Succeed Warden Kunkle. riers Found In Dallas Township... , Herbert Lahr Challenges Rival September 15: Haunted By Mem- | Branch To Public Debate . . . Milk ory Of Dollar Eggs, Housewives; Producers Fear Rise May Cut Con- Cause Food Price Rise . . . DALLAS sumption . . . Michael Fieger traced WATER COMPANY COMPLETES To Nazi Bavaria . . . Three Mem- IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM; CON-!ibers Of Snyder Family Submit To SUMERS APPLAUD ACTION . . .!Appendectomies Within Year. Jack Nothoff, Jr., Three Pounds At Birth, Reunited With Parents After | , December 8: Harmony Is Keynote 114 Days In Hospital Incubator | 8 Dallas Township Board Names . . Luzerne Boulevard Dedicated. | Jos President - - . Peter D. Clark, Councilman, Boomed For September 22: Election Board Re- | Court House Job . . . Bad Weather verses Results On Local Option . . .| Handicaps Deer Hunters . . . White Sweet Valley Is Dry According To | Buck Bagged By Ralph Welsh . . . Revised Votes . . . Lehman Votes | Empty Treasury Compels Dallas Wet By Margin Of 75 . . . Noxen, | School Board To File Liens . . . Wo- Once Dry, To Become Wet . . . Lu- | men’s Club Arranges To Have Santa zerne County Farm Bureau Marks! Greet Needy. as Toner 0emtirY | December 15: POLICE NAB GEM THIEVES . . .Two Who Robbed | Labar Cottage At Lake Get Quick Trial And Sentenced...Projected September 29: Henry M. Laing! Highway To Skip Dallas . . . Con- Fire Co. Launches Long-range Pro- crete Spur Will Connect Town With gram For Public Support . . . Radio: Route 92 . . . State Promises Com- Telephone Installed At Harvey Fire: pletion Of Route 92 By 1941 . . Tower As Weapon Against Drought- | Mrs. Mabel Allen Stang, 82, Dies Provoked Fire Towers . . . Scatter-|. . . 35,000 Bushels Of Apples From ed Showers Bring Relief From |County’s Surplus Soi To Federal Year's Second Long Drought . . .!Surplus Commodities Corporation. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Washburn Ar-| ney, 19 Months, Alderson. THE POST, FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1940 HEADLINES wo... .. OF 1939 SIX GOOD REASONS FOR SHOPPING IN Owned and Operated by American Store Company You save more on your total food bills. A larger variety of quality foods from which to select your food needs. Systematic arrangement enables you to shop without having to make out a list. i1- | 4. Attractive values in the popular foods you want to buy. 5. Modern attractive markets where you can do your food buying all | under one roof, Itemized receipt enables you to check your purchases in the quietness of your own home. ACME QUALITY MEATS ALWAYS SATISFY! Lean, Oven-Tendered ? moked PICNICS - 1 3c " 19e brothers and sisters: Mrs. Ernest PORE CHOPS ul Chalker of Miners Mills; Mildred, Meaty Chester County Fresh Cut Elva, Arthur, William and Pauline x Evans, all of Lee Park. HAMBURG SCRAPPLE Ibs. P 3 25¢ Rev. M. L. Dodd, pastor of Fir-! wood Methodist Church, officiated 1b. 1 5¢ Jeccce CHUCK ROAST * | } at the funeral services. Pallbearers were Billy Sutton, Harry Sprow,. IN OUR FISH DEPARTMENT! FRESH HADDOCK FILLETS Young Witd@ies Rt City Hospgal Mrs. Ray Keiper Buried | At Maple Hill CemSery |. ia, Ill a week, Mrs. Florence" 29, wife of Raymond Keipe: Road, Dallas, died last Frid |ternoon in General Hospital, kes-Barre. Her sudden death cl as a keen shock to her fri throughout this section. She was the former Miss Flor Evans of Lee Park, Wilkes-Ba The funeral was held on Mond afternoon, with services at th home of her mother, Mrs. Mari Evans, 22 Graham Street, Lee Park. Interment was in Maple Hill Ceme- tery. Besides her husband and mothe Mrs. Keiper is survived by a daugh- ter, Peggy Lou, and the following iper, (ain af- 2 Center Cut Henry Sprow, Harry Bond, William Bond, Peter Punchin. December 22. Overbrook Avenue Families Complain To Governor Ib. i9¢ ome Beds Of Dox In Clooring Fancy 1b. | Fancy 6 lbs. | Stewing 2 doz. oa er Snowfa ‘Aunt | Baia a | Becky’ Monk Drosases To Mark sty. § Scallops 23c | whiting 25¢ | Oysiers 29¢ | Birthday On Christmas Eve . . . Hl Fresh Ib. | Stewing pt. can | Fancy 1b. |Seatize Tlagey On Colins Campus Shrimp {9¢c | Oysters 2ic| Sea Trout 10c S isericoraia upiis ay are- | well Until 1940 . . . Ralph Eipper @ FANCY FRESH FILLETS ih. fic Elected President Of Dallas Fire Company . . . Mrs. Irwin Coolbaugh b. ba And Six-month-old Baby Struck By PE A RE A NS »-Rag Truck. ¢ December 29: Ten Thousand ASCO CORN STARCH i=1h. pkg. 5¢ Properties, One Third In Dallas KING MIDAS NOODLES DOMESTIC SARDINES Oil or Mustard MAZOLA OIL Del Monte Choice, Sliced COFFEE PEACHES | 1b. tin 22¢ 3" —925¢ | 20-0z. pkg. Asco Pancake Flour i 5 gives employment to more than 4° i pint Mother # Joy Syrup millioh workers on farms, in ml ~ BOTH FOR 19¢ | tories, and stores. ASCO SOUR KROUT 2 No. 22 cans 12-02. pkg. 10c 4 cans 19¢ qt. can Jie Area, To Be Sold By County Treas- urer For Back Taxes . . . Joseph Elicker Leaves For Nassau In Bri- i tish West Indies To Accept New Job . . . Harvey's Lake Firemen Battle Blaze At Lake Silkworth... Move Started To Secure Mail De- livery Service For Dallas . . . Mrs. Rebecca Monk Dies On Christmas Day . . . Mrs. Andrew Race Dead Following Childbirth. When cotton was combed by hand, the average American used only 14 pounds annually. Today the consumption has jumped to 23 pounds because of improved indus- trial methods, and the industry rive Here For Supper After Post- lunch Flight From Bermuda. October 6: Justice Harold Lloyd Arrests ‘Peeping Tom’ At Shaver- town . . . Outlet Youth Placed Under $1,000 Bail . . . G. O. P. Re- gaining Lost Strength In Rural Area . . . Huntsville Church Marks 96th Birthday . . . Oldest Fire-#sine In U._S, » 1s op ttedipa SE ~ OX RQ ie 7 i \4- NY =? J Loaned ficials In Effort To Secure Paxiig] — p June 23: First Section 02 Yingerne Boulevard Nears Compietion . .. . . = Fire Damages Governor June 30: Three Automobile Acci- dents Occur In One Week On “Death Valley Curve” At Ruggles . . . De- borah Jeter, daughter Of Mr. And Mrs. John Jeter, Becomes Hostess For American Airlines . . . Joseph Polacky Appointed Dallas Post- master; Nicholas Staub Named For Trucksville . . . Harold Lloyd, Shav- ertown, Announces Candidacy For County Sheriff. July 7: Roscoe Lee Dies Of Heart Attack . . . 1939 State Road Map Omits Both Shavertown And Trucksville But Includes Kunkle And Kyttle. July 14: DROUGHT-STUNTED | CROPS FACE RUIN UNLESS RAIN COMES SOON . . . Farmers Suffer After Dryest June In 43 Years... Radiogram Tells Mrs. Tracy Son Lee Is Well On Way Across Pacific In Yacht Race . . Judge Valentine Agrees To Be Candidate For Re- election . War-time Chaplain, Foe Of War, Marks 25th Anniversary Of Priest- hood. | July 21: Governor James Invites Civic Club Group To Conference On Plans For Concreting Luzerne- Tunkhannock Highway . . . Elaine Barrie, Estranged Wife Of John Barrymore, Appears At Lake Sum- mer Theatre . . . Posse Combs Kun- kle Wilds To Find Frankie Kuehn’s Dob, “Becky” . . . Little Sleep For Crews Battling Forest Fires Near Here. July 28: SCRAMBLE FOR G. O. P. BERTHS DOMINATES PRIMARY ELECTION AS CANDIDATES FILE . . . Paul Winter, Shavertown, De- nies New York Charges He Is Nazi Agent . . . Peter D. Clark Announc- es Candidacy For County Treasurer Hospital, Wilkes-Barre, and was ad Tuesday, after services home; 324 1 § Se held | Milk Situation . . . Farmers Ask James To Study . Drought Drags . 4: Dr. C. L. Boston, Nox- oars A Country Doctor, His 80th Ye-thday . . s Stord ult, 100 kr On A. Farm Mrs. Henry Kiefer; 93, Called By| : Death . . . Phil" Cook Features Dal- las On WABC Morning Radio Pro- . . Father J. J. O'Leary, |. . gr flower +0 Dallas Company. October 13: Lieut. Harold J. Rau, Shavertown, Flies Mighty Douglas Bomber Over His Parents’ Home . Fire Drill Test Sees Borough School Vacated In 50 Seconds. October 20: Campaign Enrolls 200 New Members For Dallas Fire Com- pany . . . Marie Louise Emilie Hoff- herr, Who Saw Her Homeland, France, Survive Two Great Wars, Dies At Daughter's Home In Dal- las . . . Faith Hope Charity Hard- ing, Trucksville Child Mystic, Christened In Oriental Temple . . . Civic Symphony Organized At College Misericordia. October 27: June Colwell, 8, And | vo. Clarol is Ann Peterson, 7, Dallas, Fly To New York To See Fair . . . First Snow Flurries Arrive . . . Farmers Claim Price Of Milk Can Be Cut Four Cents. November 3: Wrecked Three Times, Able Seaman Edward Wil- liams, Dallas Visitor And Survivor Of Athenia Disaster, Still Thinks Sea Is Safer Than Land . .. Gerald Sullivan Alumni head. preliminary bleaching . . November 10: Dallas Township Voters Authorize $20,000 Bond Is- sue . . . School Board Acts Swiftly To Get Annex Under Construction . REPUBLICANS SWEPT INTO OFFICE IN COUNTY . . . William Hausch, Harvey’s Lake, Lone Demo- | crat Elected In Back Mountain Re- | gion . . . Henry Pierson, Orange WPA Worker, Burns Barn To Spite Landlord . . . Peace Is Keynote Of | Armistice Day Program. November 17: FARMERS WIN CENT-A-QUART BOOST IN. MILK PRICES . . . Dallas Fire Equipment Gets O. K. After Rigid Test By En- gineer . . . County’s Bumper Apple Crop For 1939 Estimated At 2,500,- 000 Bushels . . . American Flag At Dallas Post Office Stolen In Broad Daylight. coupon NOW. that can’t be copied . . . a JOAN CLAIR, CLAIRCL, Inc - SHOE REPAIRING WHILE YOU WAIT Luzerne Quick lj ome Shoe Repairing AAEress nh heii Kd CY iis le dvs neniotdetsmntsiivarioniss We Are Distributors For The FAMOUS “WOLVERINE” WORK And your hair is most important of all! For it’s your hair that makes or mars your looks. Let’s look at your hair now. Is it drab?—overbleached?—streaked?— flecked with grey? 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