The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, May 03, 1940, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
CLASSIFIED ADS
WANTED TO BUY
Wanted To Buy—Roasting or stew-
ing chickens. Phone Dallas 317-R-3.
FOR RENT
New 4-room apartment; entire sec-
ond floor; private entrance; all
modern conveniences. Huntsville-
Idetown Road, near Huntsville. Call
Dallas 360-R-T7. 183
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
One hundred sixty foot frontage on
Main Highway, Dallas. Will sell
at $10 a foot. Jacob Rau. Phone Dal-
las 120-R-8. Shavertown. 181
FOR SALE OR RENT
Farm, 68 acres, Nevel Hollow. Priced
reasonable. See George Callender,
Sweet Valley. Phone Muhlenburg
1-R-3. 182
FOR SALE
Zeiser cottage at Lake Carey, fur-
nished; 150 fi. lake front, beautiful
grounds, huge porch; 9 rooms, elec-
tricity, bath, hot and cold water,
running water in all bedrooms, 1st
floor lavoratory, fire place, Pyrofax
stove, furnace, concrete cellar, drill-
ed well, 2 car garage. $8,000. 15tf
New Eclipse lawn mower, rubber
tires. Low price for quick sale.
Brown's Hardware, Dallas. 183
Fordson tractor, one fresh cow. Rea-
sonable. J. J. Thomas,, E. Dallas,
R.D. 3. / 181
Silver King 28-inch girl's bicycle;
like new. $15. Phone Dallas
146-R-9. 181
Horses, mules, farm harness. Michael
Stolarick, Lehman. 183
Farms, homes, lots. Good locations.
George L. Stolarick, Lehman, Pa.
183
Baby Chicks, N. H. and B. R. Hatch-
es every Wednesday and Friday.
Finest breeding. Penna. official
blood test. Price May 15 to July 1,
Tc each delivered. 16tf
Ice Box. $3.00 Al Metzger, Dallas
Post. 161
Best prices on Burpee’s Bulk Garden
Seeds. Brown’s Hardware Store,
Dallas. 183
Farms for sale or rent. Inquire Box
Y, Dallas Post. otf
For Sale—Coal from any breaker.
Stove, furnace, fireplace wood.
Ralph D. Lewis, 128 Shaver Ave.
Shavertown. Phone Dallas 253-R-8.
3tf
For Sale—D & H Anthracite Coal—
egg, stove, nut, $7.25; pea, $5.75
buckwheat, $5.15; rice, $4.40. De-
livered. Bag coal. Edwards Coal Co.,
Main St., Dallas. Phone Dallas
457-R-3 or 121. 2tf
Coal—Nut, stove, egg, $7.50; pea,
$6.00; buckwheat, $4.90; rice,
$4.15. Delivered at Shavertown. 25¢
per ton additional in Dallas. Wood
$2.00 per load. Stewart J. Eustice,
Dallas 460-R-9 or 288-R-8.
MISCELLANEOUS
For prompt removal of dead, old,
disabled horses, cows, mules,
phone Carl Crockett, Muhlenburg
13-R-4. Phone charges paid. 40tf
Guaranteed rebuilt Ford V8 engines.
4000 mile guarantee. $7 month.
Stull Brothers, Kingston, Pa. 19tf
Wanted To Buy—OIld horses. We
pay highest cash prices for old
live horses. Must not be diseased.
Write or phone Ralph R. Balut, Dal-
las, Pa. Phone 371-R-3 and re-
verse charges. 34tf
REUPHOLSTERING—
All work guaranteed; large selection
fabrics. Write or phone 7-5636.
John Curtis, 33 S. Goodwin Ave,
Kingston.. 10tf
ALDERSON
The Ladies’ Aid Society of Alder-
son Methodist Church will meet at
the home of Mrs. Irma Hicks next
Wednesday.
The congregation of the Methodist
Church at Alderson will hold a Fel-
lowship Supper at the church on
Tuesday.
The Ladies’ Aid Society of Alder-
son Methodist Church is planning
to hold a rummage sale this month.
Anyone having articles to donate is
requested to phone Mrs. Vita Com-
stock.
MOORETOWN
Mrs. N. G. Roberts, Mrs. Irvin
LaBarr, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Smith,
Mr. and Mrs. Basil Steele, Joy and
John Alan Steele, Mrs. John Steele,
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Stroud, Mr.
and Mrs. George Stroud attended
the reception for Rev. and Mrs.
Snyder on Monday night.
Mrs. James Jones spent Tuesday
at Lehman.
There will be talking pictures in
the hall this Saturday night, “The
Heart of New York”, with Al Jolson,
Frank Morgan, Madge Evans and
Harry Langdon. Mystic De Yong,
a magician, also will entertain.
Mr. and Mrs. Basil Steele enter-
tained Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Blaine of
Berwick on Sunday.
Dog Harness Found
Mrs. George Sawyer of Dallas has
brought a dog harness to The Post
in the hope that the owner will
claim it. The harness, size 22, bears
license 3276. Mrs. Sawyer found it
in her garden. The owner may have |
Junusually attractive appearance.
it by claiming it at The Post.
Postscripts
(Continued from Page 1)
forced to go to war against her will;
that Otto von Hapsburg is a ‘clown
prince” and that a photograph cir-
culated by the British purporting to
show a ruined Catholic church in
Lodz, Poland, is a lie because there
wasn’t any church in Lodz, so there.
If the United States were fascist,
Germany wouldn’t be so interested
in you, as a reader or as a citizen.
If the United States were fascist,
Germany would play ball with the |
government, not you people, and |
the government would tell us what |
to print and it would be a-great deal |
simpler for Germany. As it is. Ger-!
many has to worry about 130,000,-
000 people, instead of just one Amer- |
ican dictator and his handful of
henchmen.
We mention “Facts in Review”,
not because it is any worse than
some of the stuff our friends, the |
local politicaians, occasionally try |
to smuggle into our columns by |
one ruse or another, but because
this 16-page magazine; bearing on
its cover a huge portrait of Foreign |
Minister von Ribbentrop, is typical |
of the stuff that is being stopped
at the desks of American editors,
who are this country’s first line
of defense against propaganda and,
perhaps, war.
It isn’t that editors are smarter
than anyone else. Our own accum-
ulated wrong guesses make an em-
barrassing total. It’s just that one
of the qualifications of being an
editor is the ability to detect the
fishy smell which surrounds free
publicity. After a few years’ ex-
perience, a newspaperman acquires
an allergy for phony stories, or else
he becomes a publicity man him-
self and gets rich writing pieces
which his former fellow workers
keep chucking in the waste basket.
We wouldn't pretend that we
don’t give you propaganda once in
a while. Every editorial we write
is propaganda for something. Joel
Serra on Page 3 is a propagandist of
the first water. Most of our col-
umnists, this one not excluded, have
pet peeves and causes. It’s difficult,
you'll admit, to refuse a free puff
once in a while to a good advertiser
to whose loyalty we owe the very
shirt on our back. We're as human
as you are, and the best we can
do is guarantee that we won't let
anything harmful to your funda-
mental welfare creep into our paper
as news. Sometimes we think we do
a little better there than some of
our larger, metropolitan brothers.
—0—
But if a smidgeon of propaganda
for one cause or another gets into
The Post sometimes that doesn’t
worry us. You see, there are about
15,000 daily, Sunday, weekly and
semi-weekly newspapers in the
United States, their editorial pages
reflecting every shade of political
opinion from Soviet communism to
pious capitalism.
Obviously, most of these news-
papers are patriotic defenders of
their own version of the American
way of life. Since newspapers are
seldom more or less than mirrors of
public opinion, it is natural that
they should, in a capitalistic demo-
cracy, be capitalistic and democratic.
It could scarcely be anything else.
Aside, however, from this general
defense of the status quo, American
newspapers present a bewildering
array of editorial opinion, a freedom
of expression in sharp contrast to
the situation in most totalitarian na-
tions.
Admittedly, American newspapers
have their faults, and serious ones,
many of them arising from abuse
of the unique freedom they enjoy,
but they are the most unrepressed
newspapers left in the world. Cen-
sorship abroad may postpone some
disclosure, bad guesses or biased in-
terpretation may mislead readers
for a while, selfish publishers may
cloud significant issues temporarily,
advertisers may padlock opinion on
this newspaper or that one, but
sooner or later, in the . glorious
rough-and-tumble of democratic
journalism, the truth will out some-
where.
It may come in the communist
Daily Worker, the socialist Daily
People, the reactionary Herald Tri-
bune, the staid Christian Science
Monitor, the impressive New York
| Times, the New Dealish Philadelphia
[Record or the eight-page Dallas
! Post. The important thing is that
in the United States those who wish
to know the truth can find it
if they search.
Lake Accident Case
| Settled Out Of Court
The lawsuit of Herman Fried of
Larksville against Joseph Edward
and Leo Blazejewski of Crystal]
Bottling Co., to recover damages for
truck of the defendants at Harvey's
| Lake in June, 1933, was continued
for settlement this week.
The trial began Monday. On Tues-
day, a juror was withdrawn and
Judge Thomas F. Farrel continued
the case, the supposition being that
there would be an attempt at set-
tlement out of court. Fried said he
was hit by the Crystal Bottling Co.
truck while standing in front of
the Casino, Harvey's Lake.
Storefront Repainted
The front of the Tally Ho Grille
in the Devens building on Main
Street, Dallas, was repainted this
week in black and silver, making an
THE POST, FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1940
FAMOUS VIOLINIST AIDS CRIPPLED CHILDREN | Miss L ake Will Conduct Cl asses For
To raise money for its work among crippled children, Wilkes-
Barre Kiwanis Club will sponsor a concert by Rubinoff, famous violin-
ist, in Meyers’ High School, Wilkes-Barre, at 8:30 next Wednesday
night. Among the compositions on his program, Rubinoff will play
his new arrangement of George Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue”.
Miss Elizabeth Lake, widely-
known home economist, will appear
in person at a series of four cook-
ing schools to be held at Kingston
Township and Dallas Borough high
school auditoriums next week by
Luzerne County Gas '& Electric
Corp.
Miss Lake, who is associated with
the Westinghouse Company, will be
assisted by Mrs. Bertha Phillips
Howe. Miss Irene Messinger and
Mrs. Isabel Reynolds will assist Miss
Lake and Miss Howe.
The schedule of sessions follows:
Tuesday, May 7, 2 p. m., Dallas Bor- |
Housewives Four Days Next Week
ough High School; Wednesday, May
8, 7:30 p. m., Dallas Borough High
School; Thursday, May 9, 2 p. m,,
Kingston Township High School;
Friday, May 10, 7:30, Kingston
Township High School.
New recipes will be tested on the
stage and interesting demonstrations
of modern equipment will be given.
There will be several handsome
prizes awarded to those attending
and a number of other attractive
features are being planned to make
ithe schools interesting and helpful
to housewives and home economics
students.
KUNKLE
The congregation of the Methodist
Church will hold a Fellowship Sup-
per at the Grange Hall, Kunkle, on
Monday night, beginning at 6.
* ¥ %
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wertman
and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wright of
Nanticoke visited Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Wertman on Sunday.
* ¥k %x
Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Miers, Rus-
sell Miers, Mrs. James Miers and
Mrs. Wallace Perrin motored to
Scranton Sunday to visit Mrs. Laura
Hartman.
* ok ox
A group of friends surprised
| Charles Wertman on his birthday
irecently. Cards were played and
refreshments served to Mr. and Mrs.
| Richard Disque, Mr. and Mrs. Cres-
son Gallup, Mr. and Mrs. Giles Wil-
son, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Rydd, Mrs.
Amanda Herdman, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Disque, Alice Gallup, Her-
bert and Austin Wertman, and Mr.
| and Mrs. Charles Wertman.
* * %
Mrs. Frank Hess is recuperating
| from a recent illness.
* ¥ ®
Local farmers are taking advan-
tage of the weather to catch up
on much belated field work retard-
ed by unseasonable weather.
* * %
The Silver Leaf Club met Monday
night in the Grange Hall. Plans
were made for a Mother and Daugh-
ter Banquet to be held May 13.
After a business meeting games were
played and luncheon served to Mrs.
Edgar Nulton, Mrs. Kenneth Martin,
Mrs. William Weaver, Mrs. Ralph
Ashburner, Mrs. Owen Ide, Mrs.
| Unlicensed Milk Dealers
| Can Be Fined $300
|
| Milk dealers in this section were
| warned by the Pennsylvania Milk
| Control Commission yesterday that
| the deadline on dealers’ licenses was
{May 1 and that dealers who have
not applied will be subject to pros-
ecution in the current drive against
dairies operating illegally. :
Under the Milk Control Law, the
penalty for operating without a li-
cense is a minimum fine of $25
and a maximum of $300. In cases
where license applications have been
filed but all requirements have not
been met, the Commission will grant
additional time for dealers to qual-
ify.
ny
Noxen Girls Are Given
Audition By Major Bowes
Ruth Hackling, 12, daughter of
{Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hackling of
Noxen, left Wednesday for New
York City to appear before Major
Bowes for a radio audition. Miss
Hackling will sing for the jovial
Major, in an effort to secure a spot
on his program. Her sister, Leah,
a dancer, also was to have a try-out.
Jacob Klimeck, Mrs. Nelson Harris,
Mrs. Phillip Ellsworth, Mrs. Oliver
Ellsworth, Mrs. Anna Weaver, Mrs.
William Brace, Mrs. Gideon Miller,
Mrs. Harold Smith, Mrs. Palmer
Updyke, Mrs: Victor Rydd, Miss
Frances Hess, Miss Gertrude Smith,
Mrs. Morgan of Alderson and the
hostesses, Mrs. Olin Kunkle, Mrs.
Guy Rothery, Mrs. Ralph Hess and
Mrs. Stanley Elston.
DETECTIVE
Y¥ WEL,
LEONARD.
| GAVE YOU 5
EVERY CHANCE! /%
ONO SISSON
SIONS
NN
THR
W,
gow (1 [I] 11]
RILEY
J
N. TO THE
AMERICAN
CONSUL
Bh oer
ILEY AND VIOLA
LANDED AT THE
SHANGHAI AIRPORT,
THEY HAVE HIRED
A ‘RICKSHAW
DRIVEN BY ONE
OF THE MANDARINS
MEN WHO HAS
BEEN ORDERED
TO KiLL RILEY—
BUT
MR. RILEY,
THIS IS NOT
THE WAY TO
THE CONSULS
injuries suffered when hit by al:
MISSY IS
7 THIS IS
___ By Richard Leg\y
RIGHT— ST WAS 4
NOT THE] EXPECTING }|
WAY TO “MELICAN J THIS, YOU
CONSUL IT IS
THE END OF
THE LINE FOR.
FOREIGN
DETECTIVE
DEVIL— YOU
DIE NOW 7
SEE I PICKED,
UP YOUR
MANDARIN S
RADIO MESSAGE
WHILE FLYING /
ON TO 7
SHANGHAI?
YOO CERTAINLY
KNOW YOUR
STUFF, Jay ||
§
i
ZN
FACTS YOU NEVER KNEW!!!
3
&
FIRST STOCK~"
INGS WERE WORN
BY THE FRENCH
IN THE 714 ;
CENTURY AND “ek
WERE MADE OF
LEATHER. .
256
PROHIBITS ESKIMOS
; FROM KILLING
SEALS AT CERTAIN
A TIMES... EVEN
1 THOOGH A COMMO-
(P<) NITY IS STARVING,
GSTR® NO ONE WILL KILL
N A SEAL FOR FEAR
OF BLASPHEMING /!
YOU SAPS\HE'S A &
WHY DOES HE MAKE
SUCH GOOFY SIGNS
WHEN HE TALKS
JONIOR ‘G-MAN AND’
HES TEACHING ME HOW
TO SAY “YES” AND *NO
"we
THE PHRASE
ADAMS APPLE”
1S DERIVED FROM
CAUSING
lJ THE LODGING OF A
PIECE OF THE :
FORBIDDEN APPLE
IN ADAM'S THROAT
THE LOMP'!
WHICH ALL
MEN STILL.
BEAR TODAY.
no recent
IN CERTAIN
PARTS OF SWEDEN,
A MAN'S PIPE AND
TOBACCO WERE
BURIED WITH HIM
WHEN HE DIED ////
1939
Copyright Lincoln Newspaper Features. Ine