PAGE EIGHT THE POST, FRIDAY, JULY 12, 1940 CLASSIFIED ADS HELP WANTED—Female Girl for housework. To go home evenings. References. Phone Dal- las 405. 281 WANTED TO BUY Folding baby carriage. Good condi- tion. Reasonable. Phone Dallas 107-R-10. 281 WANTED TO RENT Wanted to rent—farm with option of buying. Write Box W, Dallas Post. 261 FOR SALE Beautiful Lake Carey lot. 115 feet lake frontage by 380 feet deep. Three small buildings, garage and cabin. Will sell cheap to settle es- tate. Howard W. Risley, Executor, Dallas. 19tf Registered St. Bernard puppies for sale. Reasonable. Furneaux, Holm- Postscripts (Continued from Page 1) luctant to have the incident end. Later that evening we were in the city and we saw a newspaper bulletin board upon which were scribbled late flashes from London and Berlin and Rome. People passed by, back and forth, but no one stopped to read. In a topsy turvy world such as this, it is peculiarly appropriate that death, conquest, a bloody elec- tion, a torpedoed ship and the flight of homeless refugees should be taken for granted and that men and women should consider precious the simple things which once were the commonplace elements of mo- notony. To hike along a country road, ob- i livious to the hum from the silvery speck in the sky; to breathe deeply of air untainted by the smell of rotting flesh; to speak and write as you .please; to go to sleep knowing there can be no siren signalling hurst Farm, Falls, Pa. Phone Lake Winola 2270. Twenty acres of hay for sale. $30. | Wayside Duck Farm, DeMunds, Pa. Phone Dallas 457-R-16. 281; Seed Buckwheat for sale. W. E.' Schoonover, Centermoreland 55R3 | 282 | | Baby Chicks — New Hampshires. | July hatches every Friday. Finest | breeding. Penna. official blood-test. | Price 7c delivered. Joseph Davis, ! Leraysville, Pa. 26tf Cabinet model Victrola. A-1 condi- tion. Forty-five double records. Al real bargain. Phone Dallas 241-R-T7. Seed buckwheat for sale. W. E. Schoonover, Centermoreland 55R3. 253 Wedding Announcements, Engraved | Stationery. Highest quality. See our samples and save money. The Dallas Post. 21tf Leases, No Trespassing Signs, Yor| Sale Signs, Rent Signs and other | display cards. Dallas Post, Dallas 300 Finest quality crushed blue stone and screenings. Call Kingston 7-3177. North Mountain Crushed Company. 216 Auto radio in good condition, $10. Inquire Harry Smith, Dallas Post. 233 Farms for sale or rent. Inquire Box Y, Dallas Post. tf 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 Guaranteed rebuilt Ford V8 engines. 4000 mile guarantee. $7 month. Stull Brothers, Kingston, Pa. 19tf 10 acres farm land, on cement road, near Lehman, $1,000. 7 acres. Dallas Borough, spring | water, electricity. Only $800. one- | half cash. Finest 7 room, all modern home. Fernbrook. $4,000. Only $1,000 cash. 6 room modern bungalow. Shav- ertown. Only $2,500. Half cash. Dallas. 2 acres. $400. Bargain. 70 acre farm, near Benton, large house, barn. $1,400. $500 cash. Lot on Claude St., Dallas. 100x 190. Dry, rich land. $450. 281 ELMER PARRISH, DALLAS 230 Ice refrigerator $5. Chest of draw- ers. Other household articles. Phone Dallas 397. 281 Raspberries—by the quart or crate. Delivery on crates. Kozemchak Bros. Phone 467-R-16. 281 MISCELLANEOUS For prompt removal of dead, old, disabled horses, cows, mules, phone Carl Crockett, Muhlenburg 13-R-4. Phone charges paid. 24tf WANTED TO BUY Used Chicken Coop. Approx. size. 14x24. Either portable or one that can be removed. Call Dallas 300. 262 Wanted To Buy—Old 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— Beautiful fabrics, guaranteed work- manship. Write or phone 7-5636. John Curtis, 210 Lathrop Street, Kingston. 281 Absolutely guaranteed 4% first mortgage, principal reduction and interest payable monthly. If you have $1,500 drawing low interest in a bank savings account, here is an opportunity for you to make a safe investment that will pay a good return regularly. Write Box B., The Dallas Post. 282 For better water wells at lower prices call Cresswell Drilling Co., Kingston. Phone 7-4815. 281 LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT Notice is hereby given that Jos- eph P. Lowe has filed his application for a license to conduct the business of a detective or detective agency under the provisions of the Act of Assembly approved May 23, 1887, P. L. 173, in the office of the Clerk of the Courts of Luzerne County to No. 408 June sessions, 1940, and will present the same to the Court of Quarter Sessions on Wednesday, July 24, 1940, at 10 o'clock a. m. JOSEPH P. LOWE. WILLIAM A. CORCORAN, Attorney. { Grove Theatre during the week of I sible for his host’s - disasters; | John M. Dudrick, Att'y. death’s presence; to cling tenacious- 281 ly to the conviction that nations!from a recent illness. are agencies for collective progress, not engines for conquest; to live— just simply to live—these are the things of value in this changed world. | —_—— NOW THERE IS unaccountable | weeks with his grandparents in|and Ruth May Hazel of Huntsville pleasure in the comradeship of friends who drop in for a soda and | conversation with you after the | movies. been blind until now, the velvety- green lawns and the sun-dappled i gardens you pass every day on your | from West Nanticoke where he vis-' way to work. It is an exciting priv- ilege to be able to argue about the | Dodgers or Joe Louis along Cig lunch counter at noon. In this strange, new kind of day there is|charge of the supper for the cast | : : E scarcely a moment which passes of “West of the Rio” Tuesday even- | the Ladies’ Aid Society on Wed- Albert i of Scranton. which does not provide material! for an hour’s reflection. We cannot remember when the flowers were so lovely as they are is like this in England and Ger- today. We wonder sometimes if so] many and Italy and if the Mediter- raneaf is bluer this summer, and if the Black Forest is more magnifi- cent, and if the English countryside is unusually verdant. We wonder, too, if there is some ! cosmic balance, some infinite law of compensation which functions in times such as these, conceding a double portion of beauty to com- pensate the unhappy and matter- of-fact destruction of so much life. The days are richer, and slip past more swiftly when they are numbered, it appears. ‘Dinner At Eight’ At Grove Theatre Next Week When Edna Ferber and George Kaufman collaborate on a play, it's a guarantee of enjoyment. And when “Dinner at Eight” by these: authors is presented by the cast of July 15th you may prepare yourself for .a tingling view of life behind the society page's glamorous head- lines. Deftly, with irony and wit, the lives of a fashionable dinner party are outlined. There is the worried host, secretly faced with financial ruin and certain death from heart trouble; the coarse, scheming finan- cier from the West, secretly respon- E. R. Griffith Takes Big Bass From Lake | One of the biggest fish taken from Harvey’s Lake in recent years was landed yesterday by E. R. Griffith, | Plymouth school principal, near his cottage at Laketon. Mr. Griffith net- ted a large mouth bass which weighed 6 pounds, 2 ounces and measured 22 inches. He took it with a minnow. Chief of Police Ira C. Stevenson, himself a crack fisher- man, said Griffith's bass was the biggest of several recent near-rec- ord catches at the lake. KUNKLE Mrs. Amanda Herdman entertain- ed at luncheon Tuesday Mame War- den, Stella Isaacs, Jennie Norton, Helen Honeywell, Maggie Fisher, Frances Hess, Mae Howell, Geral- dine Howell and Marie Rydd. * ¥ x Mr. and Mrs. George Landon have returned from New York City. Herbert Wertman has recovered | * * x | Mrs. Edgar Nulton entertained the Larkin Club: on her lawn Tuesday. * *¥ * Bobby Henney is spending two | Longhorne. es ¥ = JACKSON Mrs. Sarah Ashton entertained relatives from Pittsburgh recently. Ralph Cease is recovering at Nan- ticoke Hospital from injuries he re- ceived when he fell from a scaffold. Miss Caroline Rice spent two days iconos as the guest of Miss Ruth | Newhart. Misses Gladys and Jessie Ashton have returned from a week’s visit at Middletown, where they were guests of their uncle ‘and aunt., Mr. and Mrs. Marvel Ashton. Mrs. Earl Newhart returned home after visiting Mrs. Emma Rice. Bert Smith is erecting a cabin at Canvas City. Mr. and Mrs. Irving Ashton en- tertained the following a week ago Sunday: Albert Wall, Parsons; Mr. and Mrs. Albert Andrews and Lloyd Evans of Scranton. Mr. and Mrs. John Sholtis and children visited relatives at Vernon | recently. | Mr. and Mrs. Orville Cragle and children of Sweet Valley visited Mrs. Blodwin Williams recently. The children of Mr. and Mrs. Wal- ter Shouldice are recovering from | chicken pox. Frank Wyrisch of Johnson City | visited Mrs. Gustav Splitt. recently at Indian Lake in the Po- |. | normal Artillery's Roar Brings War Home (Continued from Page 1) an air raid or if an incendiary bomb hits our house. It is a jolly life, but curiously enough there is less sign of worry to be found among the people. They are cultivating their gardens and playing their cricket and tennis ! and shopping just as if it were a summer. I have found among those I have spoken to two determinations, both equally grim. One is to get this war won and the other is to bring about a lot of badly needed changes afterwards. People who used to do little serious thinking about the future of the world are now thinking very deeply indeed and have come to some strange conclusions. That is one of the things that makes me feel that this war is not by any means the last of the mighty forces we shall see in action. Carleton Franklin has been ill. Misses Gladys and Jessie Ashton recently spent a week with their vel Ashton at Middletown. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Castner of LEHMAN Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Brown of Philadelphia have returned home after spending the past several days with Mr. and Mrs. Francis Lewis. Mrs. Kirk McCarty and daughter, Alice, are spending a few days with relatives at Philadelphia. Hayden Ambrose is attending Percy Crawford's Bible conference at Pinebrook, East Stroudsburg, for a week. | Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Brown of Philadelphia, Kenneth Alling of Wyoming, Mr. and Mrs. Francis | Lewis and family spent Sunday with | Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Ide at Abing- jton Hills Country Club. Shirley Elston, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Elston, had the misfortune of breaking her arm re- cently. W. A. Neely is on a trip to Chi- go and other points of interest with his two sons, George and Walter. Mrs. Frank Abbott is visiting friends in New England. Mr. and Mrs. Mack Bourne and family of Binghamton, N. Y., called on Mr. and Mrs. Francis Lewis on July 4. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Willis of | Chatham, N. J., spent the week-end | liam Ambrose. | A surprise party was held at the { home of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Brandon Mr. and Mrs. Steve Spear of Al-|Forty Fort visited Mr. and Mrs. | a week ago Thursday night by mem- The Silver Leaf Club held their |lentown spent the week-end with] Gustav Splitt on Sunday. You notice, as if you had | annual picnic at Harvey's Lake on |IMrs. Emma Linsinbigler. Thursday. ited Mr. and Mrs. Walter Phillips. * 3k x Mrs. Stella Isaacs.is chairman of the committee of Ladies Aid in ing. CRUSHED TO BITS IN MID HIS DISINTEGRATOR B¥ DO YOUR Re "STUFF GUN-— OR WE'RE LOST #/ £0) 3. A) 7, id 7 0 1 CLT i AYE if GX GQ 2 KO THE [= his common wife with the mind of an ill-tempered child; late hat-check girl at the Hottentot Club, who has snared another of the guests, a fa- shionable physician risen from Tenth Avenue; his long-suffering wife; and Larry Renault, movie idol past his prime, arrogant, foolhardy, dissipated. There is some minor blackmail, adultery, suicide, a duel in the butcher’s pantry. There is a host of other activities, exciting situations, plot and counter-plot, as the lives of the characters go under a microscope—there to be displayed in amused, entertaining and merci- less fashion. The dialogue is racy, especially in the raucous bedroom brawl between the Westerner and his wife. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT LUZERNE COUNTY, ss: In the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County, No. 1554, March Term, 1940, Libel in divorce a vin- culo matrimonii, Helen Murray wv. Joseph Murray. To Joseph Murray: Take notice that an alias subpoena in divorce having been returned by the Sheriff that you cannot be found in Luzerne County, you are hereby notified and directed to ap- pear before the said Court on Mon- day, August 12, 1940, at 10 a. m., to answer the complaint filed in the above case. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT LUZERNE COUNTY, ss: In the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County, No. 547, May Term, 1940. Libel in divorce a vinculo matrimonii. Louise Jean Mangini v. Joseph Mangini. To Joseph Man- gini: Take ‘notice that an alias sub- poena in divorce having been re- turned by the Sheriff of Luzerne County that you cannot be found in Luzerne County, you are hereby notified and directed to appear be- fore the said Court on Monday, August 12, 1940, at 10 o'clock, a. m., DETECTIVE WHERE KE SAW THE ROG DESPERATELY DASH TUGS AT Se J 47 29% ; 3 SN iy a ’ EV hs 7 2 VF Wl / 15) oy TIN —<=3 THERE MAY BE 1 CANNIBULES HERS SO I'M A'GOIN INLAND TA' { Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Beyer spent | Austin Wertman has returned ' several days at Buttonwood. Mr. and Mrs. John Sholtis and children recently visited relatives at | | Vernon. | adelphia. | | nesday. = DASH , DARLING, YOU'RE SAFE // WHAT WAS on , TRAT FORCE < GUN \UA N THE DISINTEGRATOR GUN DOES THE TRICK- DOT AND DASH REGAIN “THEIR FEET— KNOW -LET'S Miss Caroline Rice spent the!Church at Sweet Valley. The occa- | week-end with Mrs. John Hewitt. sion marked Mr. Brandon's 30th | Mrs. Earl Newhart returned to her ; birthday and their ninth wedding | home at Wilkes-Barre after visit- anniversary. After a very enjoyable | i bers of the choir of the Christian | with the latter's si . Wil- | Uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Mar- | wy 2 Sites sister, Mrs. Wil Dallas Softball Team | Defeats Firemen, 19-6 The Dallas softball team won its second victory of the season on Tuesday night when it overwhelmed the Shavertown firemen’s team, 19 to 6. It was the firemen the Dallas ten defeated in its only other vic- tory. Tonight the local team will play the Shavertown Methodist Church team on the Dallas Town- the Dallas ten will play the Shav- ertown firemen at Dallas Township diamond. Youth Camp To Open At Dimock July 21 Two Youth Camps will be held at Dimock camp grounds above Tunk- hannock this'summer, one for Jun- | for high youth from July 21 to 28 and another for senior high young people from August 4 to 11. Rev. Francis F. Freeman of Dallas will be dean of the first camp and Rev. Robert Coward of Ashley will be dean of the second. There will be a program of planned study, with a trained faculty; a directed sports program, including swimming; inter- est groups, such as craftsmanship and nature study, and good food. Persons interested in attending can secure information from Rev. Mr. Freeman. g ing Mrs. Emma Rice for a few days. | evening a lunch was served to the |line Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Piper, Mrs. Sarah Ashton recently enter- Durwood Splitt is visiting in Phil- tained relatives from Pittsburgh. Mr. and Mrs. Irving Ashton re- Mrs. Pearl Coolbaugh entertained | cently entertained Mr. and Mrs. Andrews and Lloyd Evans I DON'T LOOK - WHIRLING BLADES SHARP AS KNIVES - IF WE HAD EVER REACHED HERE , WE'D HAVE BEEN CUT TO | following: Robert Benscoter, Elinore | Roderick, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Button, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Long, Doris Long, Mr. and Mrs. John Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Adams, Mr. | Beatrice Roderick, Lewis W. Button, land Mrs. Clayton Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Loren Cragle, Michael Adams, | Thelma Updyke, William Ferry, Ar- Mr. and Mrs. Car! Brandon and son, Mrs. Clara Shupp, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Brandon and daughter. RILEY N By Teddy TIME LURC a — ANN AN ZV / HES ON— THE NATIVES FRIENDLY? AN I AHoY! FRIENDLY, THEY'RE A'GETTIN TOO DERN THEY'RE NOT ON Ly L FAMIL'YAR / RILEY AND VIOLA GO TO THE UNITED STATES CONSULATE iN SHANGHAI — — WHAT CAN WE DO FOR YOU ? N _—_——__E= NP SNR N S\N TX) Upon EXAMINATION and answer the complaint in the above case. DALLAS C. SHOBERT, Sheriff J PAUL R. SELECKY, Attorney. Ry TWO HUNDRED TEETH MI = IT 1S IMPORTANT > THAT 1 SEE THE Yor re CONSUL AT ONCE— HIM AT THIS WILL, TELE NOU ONCE SIR/ JEVER KNEW!!! | BY HER DENTIST, MISS MARTHA SARSON OF NEW YORK WAS FOUND TO HAVE SCORES OF TINY LITTLE , TEETH IMBEDDED IN HER GUMS 0. AND ROOF OF HER MOUTH & * MARTHA SARSON HAS I WiLL = 5 Ec Ne, J = “a ECON NS \\ NN \ RTE : = = Ht SN AN N \ 5 NONURARY NASR NO) WN rr or 2 AV. eN SEEN SPECTRAL ECTRES™ > EVER z \N THE BROCKE! R - GER MANY FE SRES I WANT TO th | THE PRIVATE GO IN WITH ¢& PZ OF FICE OF THE =RTAINLY YOU TOO, a Livi il AMERICAN CONSUL— MR. RILEY 4 No goDY SAID Jig Va Bo = T HAVE LEARNED \ - THAT B THE LocATION OF COULDN/T/ IT WILL BE IMPOSSIBLE TO 2 RN dt DD) Cy LES aT = ___. Lincoln Newspaper Features, Inc.Z l ya J WA AA j7# | oors ito THE © CHINESE INTENTLY CONSULS WINDOW? By Bob Dart N AS THE 8 NO EXPLAN BY THE BRITISH = Sea LIONS WERE TRAINED WORLD WAR TO DETECT THE PRESENCE OF GERMAN SUBMARINES IN THE ENGLISH n CHANNEL! pr DURING THE h, —- [THE MAN WHO MAILED HIMSELF. mA AN ENGLISHMAN WHOSE MR. W.M.EDWARDS ON THE EXTERIOR OF THE 5 NEAT PARCEL POST PACKAGE HE WAS PACKED IN, ARRIVED SAFELY IN PARIS FROM LONDON IN A MAIL PLANE .... ship diamond. Next Tuesday night: 5 ” ¥
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers