The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, April 05, 1940, Image 5

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KINGSTON
ROYAL LYNE, Correspondent
SHAVERTOWN -- MT. GREENWOOD -- TRUCKSVILLE
TOWNSHIP
Warn Taxpayers
Against Delay
Township Board Making
Commencement Plans
A warning to Kingston taxpayers
that they must pay delinquent
amounts or face stiff legal action
was given at the meeting of the
township school board on Monday
night.
Harry Bogart, tax collector, re-
ported he had collected $1,442.91 in
March. The treasurer’s report
showed a balance of $1,061.47 April |
1. Howard Appleton notified the
directors that one of the fire insur-
ance policies will expire on April
10 and it was renewed.
The secretary read applications of
nine persons seeking teaching po-
sitions. The applications were re-
ferred to J. A. Martin, supervising
principal.
Several legal matters in reference
to tax liens were referred to Arthur
L. Turner, solicitor. Bills totalling
$833.18 were paid and the board
authorized Mr. Martin to rent caps
and gowns for the graduating class.
Mr. Martin presented an NYA
project for two people in the high
school office and the directors ap-
proved it.
High School Notes
Miss Alyce Joseph, a member of
the high school faculty, accompan-
ied Miss Janet Grosert to Forty Fort
high school last Thursday after-
noon. Miss Grosert won second
prize in a contest for extemporane-
ous speaking,
x ¥* =x
Miss Ruth Howell accompanied
‘Miss Sarah Breslin to Edwardsville
on Friday afternoon when Miss
Breslin won second prize in the
poetry reading contest.
* *x =
Richard Jones of the high school
delighted Wyoming Rotary Club on
Wednesday night when he delivered
the oration which won first prize
for him in the county-wide contest.
Mr. Jones was a guest of John Earl,
president of the local school board
and a member of Wyoming Rotary.
F X ¥F
Kingston Township was represent-
ed in the County Declamation Con-
test at Forty Fort on Wednesday
night by Miss Mary King.
Miss Florence Heitzman, a teach-
er in the high school, was ill this
week. Mrs. Warren Taylor substi-
tuted.
High school pupils saw films of
the U. S. navy on Wednesday after-
noon.
* % *k
Dr. Sherman’ Schooley of Shav-
ertown, who. recently was appoint-
ed to examine students in the town-
ship, started his work on Tuesday
morning. Each pupil will be given
a thorough physical examination.
Next Wednesday afternoon in the
high school the General Motors
Corp. will show motion pictures of
the “Futurama” at the World's
Fair.
ToRepeat Drama
At St. Therese's
Laketon Seniors Score
Hit With 3-Act Comedy
The Senior Class of Laketon High
School, which scored a tremendous
success with its three-act comedy,
“Meet Uncle Sally”, at the school
Wednesday night, will repeat the}
play next Wednesday night, April
10, at 8 at St. Therese’s auditorium
in Shavertown, for the benefit of
Harvey's Lake Chapel and St.
Therese’s Church.
Miss Margaret M. Dunn, a mem-
ber of the Laketon faculty, is di-
recting the production. Members
of the cast are Robert Payne, Ruth
Rogers, Florence Melusky, Ruth
Stevenson, Richard Williams,
Charles Kern, Olga Brin, Josephine
Hummel, Leo Johnson, Elizabeth
Sorber, Otis Allen and Tom Garrity.
Township Brevities
Mrs. William Riddle of Rice Street
is recovering from her recent ill-
ness.
Mrs. Elizabeth Kellar of Orchard
Street has moved to Alexandria,
Va., where she will make her future
home.
* % ¥
Mrs. Dana Cook of Carverton is
ill at her home.
Rev. Herbert Olver, pastor at
the local Free Methodist Church
and who has been ill for a week,
is able to resume his pastoral duties.
Miss Olwen Jenkins of East Cen-
ter Street is visiting friends in Flor-
ida. She expects to stay several
weeks.
* ¥ %
Dr. and Mrs. S. R. Schooley of
Shavertown have returned from At-
lantic City.
Lacey Williams has opened a bil-
liard parlor in Kuhn's Building on
Main Street, Shavertown.
Mrs. Edna Smith of Harris Hill
Road has returned home following
several weeks’ visit in Florida.
* kx ®
Kingston Township Boy Scouts
assisted in flood relief work in the
valley this week,
Mrs. Samuel Davis of Carverton
Road has been removed to her home
from the hospital.
Mrs. Z. R. Howell of Shavertown
is visiting in Noxen.
Ringstrom Title Holder
Charles A. Ringstrom of Harris
Hill Road, a student at Bucknell
University, Lewisburg, won the 127-
pound individual wrestling title in
the intramural tournament at the
college. Al, as he is known here,
represented Lambda Chi Alpha.
Church Women Gather
The Women’s Division of Chris-
tian Service of the Trucksville
Methodist Church met Thursday for
an all-day meeting at the home of
Miss Verna Smith. A tasty lunch
was served.
THE POST, FRIDAY, A
DALLAS TOWNSHIP GRADE
PUPIL SPELLS DOWN ALL
BUT ONE, THEN MISSES
Apparently Jean Van Hyning
of Dallas Township isn’t a reg-
ular reader of Rives Matthews’
column, “Ricochets”.
Had she been, she might
have been able to spell “rico-
chet” when officials in the 6th
annual Luzerne County spelling
bee gave her that word last
Friday night.
Miss Van Hyning, who was
representing the township grade
schools, went down, and her
sole remaining rival, Florence
Slominski, 11, of Conyngham
Township went on to win.
Miss Van Hyning’s support-
ers, however, felt that she had
done well by coming in second
in a field of 28 crack spellers
from all parts of the county.
Mrs. Lucinda Warden, 80,
Succumbs At Shavertown
Mrs. Lucinda Warden, 80, died
Sunday at the home of her son, S.
Ray Warden, Shavertown, of gener-
al debility. Mrs, Warden, a native
of Bradford County, had spent most
of her life in Luzerne and Wyoming
Counties.
The funeral was held Tuesday at
2 from Falls Methodist Church with
interment in Orcutt’'s Cemetery,
Noxen. Surviving are four children,
Mrs. Fred Jones, Forty Fort; Mrs.
Louis Doll, Tunkhannock; Mrs. Wil-
liam LaBar, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,
and Mr. Warden of Shavertown.
Ruff Becomes Editor
For Publication House
Rev. G. Elson Ruff, former pastor
of St. Paul's Lutheran Church,
Shavertown, and for the last sev-
eral years pastor of the Lutheran
Church in Schuylkill Haven, has ac-
cepted an editorship in the United
Lutheran Publication House in
Philadelphia. The Ruff family mov-
ed from Schuylkill Haven this week
to Philadelphia, where Rev. Mr.
Ruff assumed his new duties.
Township Schools Fare
Well In Contests
Pupils from Kingston Township
made a creditable showing when
the local district played host to the
Forensic League last Saturday.
Schools in Forty Fort, West Wyo-
ming, West Hazleton and Kings-
ton Townships were represented.
Charles Pugh of Forty Fort won
the trombone solo contest and Theo-
dore Anderson of West Wyoming
was second. Marion Jones
Kingston Township won the piano
solo contest. The winner in the so-
prano solo contest was Betty Spen-
cer of West Hazleton, with Wilma
Hunt of Kingston Township second.
The cornet solo was won by Gideon
Robbins of West Wyoming. Gordon
May of Kingston Township was sec-
ond. The Kingston Township girls’
chorus won its contest.
Kingston Township High School’s
glee club will compete in the dis-
trict contest at Bloomsburg on April
13 under the direction of Miss Dor-
othy Weaver.
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
SHERIFF'S SALE
FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1940,
AT 10. A. M.
By virtue of a writ of Fi Fa No.
32, May Term, 1940, issued out of
the Court of Common Pleas of Lu-
zerne County, to me directed, there
will be exposed to public sale by
vendue to the highest and best bid-
ders, for cash, in Court Room No.
2, Court House, in the City of
Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, on Friday, the 26th
day of April, 1940, at ten o'clock in
the forenoon of the said day, all
the right, title and interest of the
defendant, in and to the following
described lot, piece, or parcel of
land, viz:
All the surface and right of soil,
lying and being in the Borough of
Kingston, Luzerne County, Pennsyl-
vania, and bounded and described
as follows, to wit: Beginning at a
corner on the northerly side of
Warren Avenue and 102.3 feet from
Pierce Street; thence North 30 de-
grees and 1 minute West 135.5 feet
to a corner; thence North 60 degrees
and 13 minutes East 40 feet to a
corner; thence South 30 degrees and
1 minute East 135.5 feet to War-
ren Avenue aforesaid; and thence
along said Avenue South 60 de-
grees and 13 minutes West 40 feet
to the place of beginning. Con-
taining 5,400 square feet of land,
the surface only, be the same more
or less, and being lot No. 71 on
plot of lots of John B. Reynolds,
according to a survey of Ira E, Hart-
well, dated April 22, 1905. Being
the same premises conveyed to the
aforesaid Lily Ada Eddy by William
H. Ogden, et ux. by deed dated
March 25, 1924, and duly recorded
in the Recorder of Deeds’ office in
and for Luzerne County in Deed
Book No. 599, page 144.
Improved with a double frame
dwelling house and garage.
Seized and taken into execution
at the suit of the Wyoming National
Bank of Wilkes-Barre, vs. Lily Ada
Eddy, and will be sold by S$
DALLAS C. SHOBERT, Sheriff.
Neil Chrisman, Atty.
SHERIFF'S SALE
FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1940,
AT 10. A. M.
By virtue of a writ of Fi Fa No.
33, May Term, 1940, issued out of
the Court of Common Pleas of Lu-
zerne County, to me directed, there
will be exposed to public sale by
vendue to the highest and best bid-
ders, for cash, in Court Room No.
2, Court House, in the City of
Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, on Friday, the 26th
day of April, 1940, at ten o’clock
in the forenoon of the said day, all
the right, title and interest of the
defendant, in and to the following
described lot, piece or parcel of
land, viz:
All the surface of all that certain
land, situate in the Borough of
Kingston, Luzerne County, Penn-
sylvania, bounded and described as
follows, to wit: Beginning at the
intersection -of the southeasterly
side of Wyoming Avenue with the
northeasterly side of Park Place;
thence along Park Place South 37
degrees 10 minutes East one hun-
dred fifty-six (156) feet to the point
on the beginning of a curve; thence
by a curve to the left with a radius
of forty feet, sixty-seven feet and
thirty-seven one-hundredths of a
foot; thence North 45 degrees 20
minutes East twenty-seven and six-
tenths (27.6) feet to lot No. 8;
thence along the same North 43 de-
grees 40 minutes West two hundred
(200) feet to the southeasterly side
of Wyoming Avenue; thence along
the same South 45 degrees 20 min-
utes West fifty (50) feet and six-
tenths (6) of a foot to the place of
beginning. Containing 11,800 feet of
land, more or less. Improved with
a one and one-half story frame and
stucco house and garage.
Seized and taken into execution
at the suit of A. J. Sordoni, assignee
vs. Victor L. Dodson, and will be
sold by
DALLAS C. SHOBERT, Sheriff.
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
SHERIFF'S SALE
By virtue of writ of Levari
Facias, directed to me, I will ex-
pose for public sale, for cash, at
Court Room No. 2, Court House,
Wilkes-Barre, Pa., on April 26, 1940,
at 10 A. M., the following described
real estate: All the surface of that
lot on Mary Street, Ashley Borough,
Luzerne Co., Penna., property of
Harry D. Doak, et al. Being 25%
feet in width and 100 feet deep, as
described in deed from Byron D.
Jones, et al., to Harry D. Doak and |
Edith Doak, his wife, by deed dated
the 3rd day of May, 1932 and re-
corded in Luzerne County deed
book 566 at page 369. Improved
with a frame dwelling house, part
of a three tenant dwelling, outbuild-
ings, fruit trees, shrubbery, etc.,
and known as No. 75 Mary Street,
Ashley, Penna. Sold as the property
of Harry D. Doak and Edith Doak,
his wife, defendants and John W.
Doak, Cora W. Doak, James H. Doak
and Fannie E. Doak, terre Tenants.
DALLAS C. SHOBERT, Sheriff,
George L. Fenner, Sr.,
George L. Fenner, Jr., Attorneys.
Briggs-Stratton Motors
bs
RUDOLPH®
ELECTRIC SERVICE
WILKES-BARRE, PA.
— PHONE 2-5868 —
83-85 EAST JACKSON ST.
Neil Chrisman, Atty.
J
of |
Local F. & M. Alumni
To Have Annual Reunion
Alumni of Franklin and Marshall
College in Northeastern Pennsyl-
vania will have their annual reun-
ion at Fort Durkee Hotel, Wilkes-
Barre, on Thursday, April 11, at
6:30 p. m., Calvin McHose, North-
eastern alumni secretary, announced
yesterday.
Fred M. Kiefer of Shrine View
will be toastmaster. Other F. & M.
alumni in the Dallas area are T. A.
Williammee,
of Dallas schools, Irving Roe, who is
director of swimming at F. & M.
and Henry Kraybill. About 100
persons are expected to attend.
Guests will include President
Schaeffer, Alumni Secretary Robert
J. Pilgrim and ‘Uncle Charlie” May-
ser, athletic director.
Tunkhannock Crest Is
' Five Inches Below 1936
The roaring Susquehanna flooded
Tunkhannock early this week to a
mark within five inches of the 1936
flood.
The river overflowed its banks
before midnight on Saturday and
reached its crest early Monday, after
which a steady recession began.
Highways along the river were
blocked and three State bridges, one
on Field Brook in Nicholson and
two near Mill City, were washed
out.
North District G. 0. P.
Club Hears Candidates
A good-sized crowd attended the
meeting of the Republican Club of
the North District of Dallas Town-
ship at Shady Side Dairy on Wed-
nesday night. Among the speakers
| were Don Wilkinson, candidate for
representative from the Sixth Leg-
islative District, and Peter D. Clark,
Sixth District GOP chairman.
Two Township Teachers
Attend Convention
Antonia Kozemchak and Amanda
Walsh, teachers in the commercial
department at Dallas Township, at-
tended the annual convention of the
Eastern Commercial Teachers’ As-
sociation at Atlantic City from
March 21 to 23. They stayed at
the resort then over Sunday, to
join the Easter parade on the fa-
mous boardwalk,
Ruth Schooley And Fred
Woolbert Are Married
The marriage of Miss Ruth
Schooley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Schooley of Trucksville, and
Fred Woolbert, son of Mr. and Mrs.
S. A. Woolbert of Trucksville, took
place Saturday afternoon at 4
o'clock at the home of the bride.
Rev. Harry M, Savacool performed
the ceremony. There were no at-
tendants.
After a reception held at the
Schooley home for about 60 guests
the couple left on a wedding trip.
On their return they will make their
home on N. Sprague Avenue, Kings-
ton.
Buxiliary Card Party
Shavertown branch of the Nesbitt
Memorial Hospital auxiliary will
have a card party April 12 in the
high school auditorium. Mrs. Rob-
ert Taylor of Trucksville is chair-
man. She is assisted by Miss Mary
Boldt, Mrs. M. Cornell, Mrs. J. C.
Fleming, Mrs. W. E. Batey, Mrs.
Richard Reese, Mrs. J. Bailey, Mrs.
C. E. Banker and Mrs. Howard Ap-
pleton.
Gene Tunney, former heavy-
weight champion, will receive
$1,250 per lecture this season.
CAP GUNS — GAPS
All the new models.
See them in our window.
BACK DATE MAGAZINE
STORE
61 MAIN ST. LUZERNE
BETTER RECEPTION!
Don’t buy a radio until you see
the new Zenith, with the sensational
new built-in aerial.
ONLY RADIO SHOP
RADIO TROUBLE-SHOOTERS
Main Street Dallas
~~ STORAGE
Wilkes-Barre Storage Co.
— PHONE 3-4174 —
19-35 New Bennett St., Wilkes-Barre
— NEW STOCK —
FISHING BOOTS
Lowest Prices In City
MEN’S AND BOYS’
WOOL MACKINAWS
and JACKETS
$2.98 and $3.98
Ball Outlet
118 SOUTH MAIN STREET
WILKES-BARRE
supervising principal |
D. J. Thomas, Mrs. C. M. Lewis, Mrs. |
40)
Expect New Rise
Will Be Checked
Up Again; Still Plenty
Of Snow In Watershed
(Continued from Page 7)
that six days elapsed between the
Twin Floods of 1936, when the river
after reaching a crest of 26.85 on
March 13, dropped 10 feet, only to
climb again to 33.32 feet on March
19.
Valley Begins Mopping Up
Keeping an anxious eye on the
grey skies, Wyoming Valley began
yesterday to clear away the debris
and hard yellow mud left by the
receding river.
One of the first jobs tackled as
the waters went down was the
mending of the 25-foot breach in
the dike south of Kingston. Early
yesterday Army engineers began
maneuvering = tractors and dikes
across dry land toward the break
which was responsible for most of
Kingston's damage.
Another major project—and one
which may take a month or more—
was the reconstruction of a 50-foot
section of the Carey Avenue bridge
at Plymouth, which sagged on Tues-
day when several supports were
swept away. The State Highway
Department denied that either the
North Street or the Market Street
bridge in Kingston had been dam-
aged by the flood.
Biggest job was the task faced
by householders, who were return-
ing to homes abandoned hurriedly
early in the week. The Red Cross
said 6,072 homes had been flood-
ed. More than a third of them were
in Kingston, where 2,396 homes
were touched by the flood.
Profit By Lessons of 1936
The Twin Floods of 1936 taught
Wyoming Valley the necessity for
carefully-laid plans to meet any
disaster, plans which, until last
Saturday night, were only words on
paper. Then, as the cocoa-colored
flood hammered at the valley’s door,
the paper plans were translated
swiftly into action. Men and wo-
men who had been rehearsing their
jobs mentally for four years began
directing the mobilization of a vast
army of WPA workers, national
guardsmen, firemen, policemen, Le-
gionnaires, Red Cross nurses and
volunteers. The lessons of 1936 had
been studied well, admiring ob-
servers agreed.
This week’s flood brought more
lessons, most of which had to do
with the wvalley’s $4,500,000 dike
system, started three years ag
and not yet completed. «
Authorities said the dikes had
given effective protection, well
worth the cost. Because the pump-
ing system is incomplete, sewer
water flooded parts of Wilkes-Barre,
but that was not the fault of the
levee, and Kingston would have
escaped damage if a sandbagged
gate in a dike south of the borough
had not given away Monday morn-
ing. Wyoming Valley expected to
hear a great deal more about that.
Congressman J. Harold Flannery
said he would ask the U. S. Army
Engineers to conduct an official in-
vestigation in an effort to fix re-
sponsibility for the only break in
the levee system. “I believe Army
officials should make a thorough
probe,” he said.
Fire And Water
It was water rushing through
that break which inundated the low-
er section of Kingston on Monday
morning, just as worried families
were beginning to believe assuranc-
es that the new dikes would keep
them dry.
Then, about 1:30, one of the tanks
not far from the dike gate which
had failed, toppled. Steel struck
steel. There was a spark. With a
deafening roar smoke-wreathed
flames shot into the air, 1,000 feet
ER PR I
THE WYOMING
NATIONAL BANK
OF WILKES-BARRE, PA.
Personal Loan Service
$25 to $1000
Payments On $100—
$7.15 Per Month—15 Months
Discount Rate $6 per Hundred
LOANS INSURED
NO ENDORSERS REQUIRED
Husbands and Wives Sign
Together.
Single Persons Sign Alone.
YOU NEED NOT BE A
DEPOSITOR TO APPLY FOR
A PERSONAL LOAN AT
THE WYOMING
NATIONAL BANK
OF WILKES-BARRE, PA.
Lehman Juniors Rehearse
Comedy For April 12
The Junior Class of Lehman High
School will present a three-act
farce, “Look Who's Here”, in the
school auditorium on Friday night,
April 12.
The play centers about an old
maid aunt who despises the insti-
tution of matrimony. Her beloved
nephew, upon whom she bestows a
monthly allowance as long as he
stays single, marries secretly. A
mix-up results when the new bride,
who poses as the wife of her hus-
band’s friend, is confronted with
the friend’s fiance. Donald Dod-
son, a member of the faculty, is di-
recting the play.
high, one eye-witness said. While
frantic householders left in the
homes on the fringe of Kingston,
a quarter of a mile away, stared in
horror, the flames spread in an
ever-widening circle across the
muddy current.
They burned out before they
reached the homes, after they had
destroyed two wooden sheds, and
a shifting wind saved nearby tanks
which held 2,000,000 more gallons
of gasoline, but flames danced about
one tank and an open pipe line all
through Monday night. It was Tues-
day night, more than 30 hours af-
ter the explosion, before weary fire-
men reached the top of the last
blazing tank and dumped in enough
muddy chemicals to smother the
flames.
From all that, Wyoming Valley
learned that when the next flood
threatens there must be vigilant
patrolling all along the dikes to
watch for the ominous trickle which
precedes a bad break.
Guffy Versus James
Overlooking nature’s part, Sen-
ator Joseph F. Guffey promptly
blamed Governor Arthur H. James,
charging that James’ economy-
minded Administration scuttled the
flood control program which had
been started by the Earle Admin-
istration. Even the Democratic
Philadelphia Record said that was
“unfair and absurd.”
Governor James, whose Plymouth
home had water on the first floor,
cancelled a speaking tour to visit
the flood district. By the time Guf-
fey was beginning to blame the Gov-
ernor, James was announcing that
he intended to ask the 1940 Legis-
lature to (1) provide funds for con-
tinued flood control. work in the
State and (2) encourage the State
Highway Department to build roads
out of reach of flood waters.
Informed that dikes in the val-
ley had measured up to expecta-
tions, President Roosevelt reiterated
his interest in flood control, but
emphasized that complete protection
demands not occasional dikes but
an integrated plan along the whole
water shed, similar to the work in
the Tennessee Valley under the
TVA. He promised his co-operation
in the work of army engineers along
the Susquehanna.
It was too early to estimate the
damage, except that it would be
considerably below the 1936 total.
T. M. B. Hicks, Jr., industrial com-
missioner of Wyoming Valley,
guessed the figure would be “a few
hundred thousand dollars—consid-
erably less than a million”. Others
estimated the damage at $3,000,000.
Damages in Wyoming Valley in the
1936 flood exceeded $9,000,000.
ra areeoraraLTe
HIMMLER THEATRE
DALLAS, PA.
MATINEE EVERY SATURDAY AT 2
THIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
“The Four Wives”
with the Lane Sisters
Comedy, Cartoon, Serial
MONDAY AND TUESDAY
% DOUBLE FEATURE
“The Cisco Kid
and the Lady”
with Cesar Romero
— and —
“The Honeymoon’s Over”
with Stuart Erwin
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY
“Nick Carter, The
Master Detective”
with Walter Tidgen
Cartoon—Comedy—News
NEXT FRIDAY AND SATURDAY |
“The Swanee River”
with Don Ameche and Al Jolson
Comedy and Serial
*
BlexWilsonIs
83YearsYoung
Alex Wilson, Dallas Township
road supervisor, who was 83 years
old on Wednesday, was guest of
honor at a party at his home on
Sunday, when members of his fam-
ily and friends gathered to con-
gratulate him.
A native of Wyoming County,
Mr. Wilson is the son of Jane (Em-
mens) and Peter Wilson. Healthy,
vigorous and cheerful, despite his
age, Mr. Wilson is still active as a
supervisor. Besides busying him-
self with his duties, he is already
anticipating the presidential elec-
tion and the baseball season.
Mr. Wilson lives in the old Dur-
land homestead at DeMunds with
his grandson, Nelson Wilson, and
his wife. Mr. Wilson's wife died
several years ago. He has seven
sons and three daughters living.
Several years ago he served as a
county road caretaker and had an
excellent record. He has one sister
living, Mrs. Elizabeth Camor of
South Dakota, also in her 80’s.
LEHMAN
James Hutchison, county agent,
will speak on problems pertaining
to the rural interests of young peo-
ple at the regular Lehman Parent-
Teacher Association meeting to be
held in the school auditorium this
Monday evening, April 8 at 8
o'clock. Joseph Clouser, music su-
pervisor, will have charge of the
musical numbers. 3
Mrs. A. B. Simms and daughter,
Judith, visited recently with her
brothers, Harold Major and his fam-
ily in Nemacolin, near Uniontown.
Miss Lee Faylor spent the recent
vacation with friends in Donora,
Butler, and Pittsburgh.
Mrs. Charles Keller, and daugh-
ters, Mary and Grace, spent a re-
cent week-end with Mrs. Keller's
brother and his family in Dawson,
near Connellsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sickler and
grand-daughter, Dorothy Jean, of
Forty Fort, called at the home of
Mrs. Clara Shupp, Tuesday after-
noon,
Alice and Jackie Fine, children of
Mr. and Mrs. John Fine of Wilkes-
Barre, are visiting their grandpar-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Johnson.
The Men’s Bible Class of the Leh-
man Methodist Church met at the
home of Mr. W. R. Neely for their
monthly fellowship meeting last Fri-
day evening. The president, Mr.
Lewis Ide, presided at the business
meeting. John Sidler, a teacher in
the vocational department of Leh-
man high school, was guest speak-
er. Joseph Clouser, music super-
visor, accompanied musical num-
bers. A very pleasing lunch was
served to the following: Rev. C.
Duane Butler, John Sidler, Joseph
Clouser, H. A. Snyder, Fred Elston,
Lewis Ide, Oliver Whitesell, Alex
Tough, William Ambrose,
Neely, Clyde Cooper, William Els-
ton. - :
—~
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So why suffer another day from
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but also lumbago, sciatica, neu-
ralgia, as well as the less serious
lameness of muscles and joints? It :
is no longer necessary to dose the
system with internal medicine. The
entire MUSCLE-RUB treatment is a
simple liquid, applied directly to
the limbs, shoulders, neck, face or
back—wherever the trouble may be.
There is no burning—no irritation.
All pain stops as if by magic. Even
chronic and severe conditions re-
spond so amazingly that seldom is
more than a bottle needed.
We urge only that you make this
test, MUSCLE-RUB is now obtain-
able at any drug store. Buy it to-
day. Use one-half the bottle, and if
you are not amazed and delighted
with the results, return the remain-
ing half bottle to your druggist, and
he will refund your money. The
price is 50c regular size, 89c¢ for
large, family size.
Get a bottle of MUSCLE-RUB Today
Special This Week at
ALL DRUG STORES
DISTRIBUTORS
Congratulations TITMAN'S NEW MARKET
equipped with
Carrier Air Conditioned Refrigeration
for safe, sanitary preservation of foods
POWER ENGINEERING CORPORATION
~~ WILKES-BARRE, PA.
a ;
— =
W. BR. =