PAGE EIGHT CLASSIFIED ADS HELP WANTED Girl for general housework. Apply between 9 and 10 o'clock. Mrs. A. R. Tyson, Elizabeth St., Trucksville. Phone 429-R-3. 321 Opportunity for capable farm ma- chinery salesman who knows farm problems and how to promote sales to progressive farmers for work in the Dallas area. Previous experience preferred. Apply 103 N. Welles St., Kingston, or Phone Kingston 7-4979. | 302 WANTED TO BUY We pay best prices for clean cot- ton rags, no buttons. The Dallas Post. 32tf 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 Garnet Cabinet Range in good con- dition, $15; replaced by electric range. Call Dallas 152. 321 GRAIN BINDERS: 1 International, like new $190 1 Massey-Harris, like new $140 THRESHERS: 1 No. 1 ‘Doylestown on skids $40 1 No. 3 Doylestown mounted $135 FARM WAGON: 1 Steel Wheel Wagon— like new $35 BOTTLED GAS SERVICE—$9.75 You can cook quick, cheap and safe in a cool kitchen if you have a stove, our gas will fit it. If you need one, see our line of Bengal Ranges. LINOLEUM REMNANTS: Regular 39¢c—Now 20c cq yd. Regular 55¢c—Now 29¢ sq. yd. A BAD SITUATION—Can be avoided if you let us install a Westinghouse milk cooler for you now. You know the quality. Prices are very attrac- tive. 312 GAY MURRAY COMPANY, Inc TUNKHANNOCK, PA. Baby Chicks—N. H. and B. R. July hatches every Friday. Finest breeding. Penna. official blood-test. Price 7c delivered. Joseph Davis, Leraysville, Pa. 26tf Finest quality crushed blue stone and screenings. Call Kingston 7-3177. North Mountain Crushed Stone Company. 316 Wedding Announcements, Engraved Stationery. Highest quality. See our samples and save money. The Dallas Post. 21tf Leases, No Trespassing Signs, For Sale Signs, Rent Signs and other display cards. Dallas Post, Dallas 300 Farms for sale or rent. Inquire Box Y, Dallas Post. otf 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 MISCELLANEOUS August Special—Duart Permanent Wave. Regular $5.00, now $2.50. Marguerite’s Beauty Shop, Fern- brook. Phone 397. 314 For prompt removal of dead, old, disabled horses, cows, mules, phone Carl Crockett, Muhlenburg 13-R-4. Phone charges paid. 24tf Elocution and Expression Class- es now forming. Call Dallas 434 for appointment or details; also pri- vate instructions. Mary Williams Sowden, Terrace Drive, Shavertown. 304 REUPHOLSTERING— Make your fine old furniture new with its original wear and comfort —Beautiful wide range of fabrics. Low prices, guaranteed workman- ship. Write or phone John Curtis, 7-5636—210 Lathrop St., Kingston. 311 ‘Cloudy With Showers’ Is New Play At Nuangola A new play, “Cloudy with Show- ers’ appears to have gained the rep- utation of being the most laugh- provoking play produced in New York in several seasons, and for that reason has been selected by the management of the Grove The- atre players for presentation during the week of August 12th to 17th. “Cloudy with Showers” is from the pen of Floyd Dell, a well-known novelist, and Thomas Mitchell, a well-known actor. It has to do with a young college professor, recipient of an international prize for his treatise on the morals of the mod- ern world, who is goaded by his brightest pupil into taking her for + a sly auto ride only a few hours be- fore he must exhibit himself at a stately banquet and over the radio. The professor with the girl go on that ride. Through thunder and rain they go, into a ditch, into a nearby roadhouse for shelter, into a sleep- ing apartment, equipped with ro- mantic firelight, champagne and also in one of those nests of gang of men and State police which frequently provide twists in plots and throw thrills into comedy. HOLD YOUR FIRE TIL YOU'RE SURE! N A MN SY N SN ALL RIGHT MENTE THOSE BOYS ARE DOWN’ HERE, THEY MUST BE IN THE HANDS OF df THAT GANG BY NOW,S50 zQ bn A 87: OQOUTA HERE RIGHT V/GOT ALL THAT STUFF TOGETHER? WE'RE BLOWIN 7) | H RIGHT! THIS JOINT NOW/! Wh s\_15 GIVIN' ME TH’ 7 CREEPS! /Q V # oe Of (= /, x Sa 2M 702 right 1039 Lincoln Newspaper Features, Ise. NOT SO FAST COPPERS!? # 7k 1 FIGURED YOU BOYS MIGHT BE NEEDIN' A'FOURTH', FER Postscripts (Continued from Page 1) I get over there?” we asked. “Only way is across them planks,” he said, waving his corncob pipe at the slip- pery lumber. So we breathed a short prayer and inched slowly along the disjointed trail of planks. The bone was inside the shack, and at first sight we had to admit it was a mighty big bone. It stood about three feet high and it had knobs on both ends. The excava- tors had dug it out of a bed of quicksand about 30 feet under the surface that afternoon. It certainly looked like a mastodon bone, but nobody had identified it yet, and we didn’t want to write the story and then have somebody prove next day that it was just the hind leg of a jackass so we told the watch- man we were from the government and not to let anybody see the bone until we came back. : —— THE PROBLEM then was to find somebody who could identify a mas- todon’s skeleton. We settled down for a session in a pay station and began calling all the librarians, bi- ology teachers and learned scholars we could think of and the trail led finally to an instructor in a rep- utable local institution of learning. was taking it on the lam for the an- nual senior ball. He would be glad to come over the next day, he said. We don’t recall now what argu- ment it was we used to lure him away from his social duty to come over and identify our mastodon’s leg immediately. We can only re- member the sinking feeling we had when he stepped out of his car at- tired in spotless white flannels. We closed our eyes in horror at the thought of him crossing the muddy flat to the watchman’s sanctuary. He was a little frigid because we'd yanked him away from the ball, but quite civilized and we explained, with a forced laugh, that the rickety planks were really a lot safer than they looked. He peered at them dubiously over his glasses and then, before he could flee, we pushed off, waving to him to follow. We were half-way across and go- ing quite well when we heard a grunt, followed by a sucking noise and an emphatic expression of peda- gogic wrath behind us, and when we turned it was to see our professor pulling one white-clad leg out of the soupy mud. He had, it seemed, slipped. “No use stopping now,” we said, and hurried across the remaining planks, well out of reach of the muddy professor. When he saw the big bone his eyes lit up and he forgot about his ruined flannels. He was sure it was a mastodon thigh bone, about 250,- 000 years old, and probably wash- ed down from New York State in quicksand. Fortunately, he said, there was an eminent archeologist speaking at a city hotel that very evening and he could confirm the identification if we were still skep- tical. We thanked the professor and he left and we told the watchman we had arranged to borrow the bone to We got him to the phone just as he! Mickey Rooney, Lewis Stone, return to the Kingston Theatre today and Saturday in “Andy Hardy Meets Debutante”, their latest hit, Judy Garland. “Mr. Duck Steps Out”, the latest Donald Duck cartoon, is an added attraction on the program. ; and the rest of the Hardy family which also boasts the presence of take a picture of it. It made quite a good-siden burden, and people turned to watch us, all the way around Public Square and as we walked through the lobby of the hotel. “Check this while we go in here and see a fellow,” we told the girl at the cloakroom, depositing the three-foot bone on top of a natty fedora. “Cheez!” she said, her eyes popping. “Whatizit ?” “Just something for my dog!” we said, and went in and got the arch- eologist, who not only agreed that it was a mastodon’s leg bone but tried to coax it away from us. So we car- ried it back to the news room and stood it up beside the desk while we wrote the story. When we went home at midnight we entrusted the bone to a friend | who, we heard later, lost it playing blackjack with the printers in the women’s rest room about dawn. It | didn’t matter, anyway, because; when we came to work the next af- ternoon they told us the P. P. and L. had sent for the bone and raised cane with the reporter who'd stolen it. For a while the light con. had it in the window and a few] people stopped to look at it and af- ter that, we heard, they gave it to Wyoming Historical and Geological Society. Then we lost track of it. It was a mighty fine mastodon'‘s leg, though, and after all the trouble we took we ‘thought the least they could do would be to let us keep it. | by Australian farmers for fence posts, smells like raspberry jam. Mahogany trees do not grow in| forests—two trees to the acre is about the limit. | Wood of the umbrella tree, poo | | with L140 LOW PRICE bY SIMPLY... Curl As You Comb the NEW "AUTOMATIC Fobtorl TRADE MARK PAT. NO. 2156255 How do you keep your curls CURLED? With troublesome curlers? With tricky gadgets? Your troubles are over now with the new “Automatic” Rollocurl. A regular comb of one end and o magic disappearing comb of the ather, yoo simply curl as you comb. At your local department, variety or chain store. For ofl Types of Carls, Ringlets, oz. Kozemchak Produces Fine Raspberry Crop One of the finest crops of red raspberries harvested this year in this vicinity was that of the Depart- ment of Agriculture inspected ber- ries on the Kozemchak farm, Over- brook Avenue, Dallas. The crop was abundant, exceeding all expec- tations and the berries were large and luscious. Early Thursday morn- ing Mr: Kozemchak called The Post to say that the entire crop had been sold and asked that his classified ad in The Post be discontinued. “I was amazed,” he said “with the re- sults from that ad. Dozens of peo- ple mentioned it. It was the only advertising we used in any news- paper and it kept a steady flow of customers coming to our place for berries every day.” — Industry's increased effort to safe- guard its workers—the amount Jim Oliver Host At Hudson Party 1940 Models Shown At Country Club Meeting One hundred Hudson dealers and their representatives from 15 North- eastern and Central Pennsylvania counties were the guests of James R. Oliver, Hudson distributor, at a preview showing of 1941 Hudson cars at Irem Temple Country Club on Wednesday. Factory representa- tives, carrier representatives and others in allied trades were also the guests of Mr. Oliver. The new Symphonic Styled Hud- sons, first of the automobile indus- try’s new model offerings, began rolling off the assembly line several weeks ago at the company’s huge Detroit plant, after many months of preparation involving important chassis changes and an advanced style design. Public announcement of the cars will follow in a few weeks. The dealers were enthusiastic over the striking new body styling and longer wheelbases and the extensive list of improvements and refine- ments offered in the three new 1941 Hudson models Spotlighted was the advanced development in color harmony appearing for the first time in a full line of cars in standard production. The new development termed “Symphonic Styling” offers a wide selection of interior color combina- tions which harmonize with exterior colors. Carpets, floor mats, interior trim and upholstering harmonize with exterior colors and tones. For example, a green Hudson exterior is matched with an entire green en- semble of interior trim. This is en- tirely new in motor cars and is an application of the same harmonious color trends observed in well- planned home furnishings and en- sembles in women’s apparel. Eight of these new Hudsons, out of 20 recently received by Mr. Oliver, were on display in the Country Club pavilion where lectures on factory production, merchandising, dealer organization and other kindred sub- jects were given by factory experts after an address of welcome and introductory remarks by Mr. Oliver. William Baker, director of sales; F. C. Hammond, regional manager, spent by it for medical care has risen 480 per cent in 20 years. and Byron Luce, wholesale manager, RICHARDS MARKET 12 MAIN STREET DALLAS, PA. SHAWANESE HARVEY’S LAKE A complete FREE New York World’s Fair Tickets book admitting two persons to seventeen stellar attractions at the Fair as well as admission and parking tickets - - Smoked Sausage E Sliced Bacon Fresh Ground Beef # Center Cut Chuck Hormel’s Pigs Feet 2 Ibs. 39¢ Ib. 25¢ Ib. 23¢ Ib. 25¢ 25¢ (large jar) Cabbage Fresh Peas Lopes Larze Lemons doz. 35¢| Peaches Ib. ic | Tomatoes ib. 10c|Plums 10c | Grapes Ib. 5¢ ih. 5c each fc Ib. 10c § Viking Coffee Sugar 3 Ibs. 3% § 10 Ibs. 45¢ | NEW GOLD MEDAL KIX TOMATO JUICE can 5¢ pkg. 10c : FIGBARS 21lbs. (7c § The Most Complete Food Market In The Back Mountains BIRDS EYE FROSTED FOODS PHONE DALLAS 450 WE DELIVER | are invited. Plane Will Stunt Over Trap Shoot Overbrook Club Invites Public To Event Sunday Herbert Hardy, president of Wyo- bing Valley Flying Club, will give a flying demonstration above the Kozemchak Farm on Sunday after- noon at 1 during the last summer trap shoot of the Overbrook Gun Club, The public is invited to attend the shoot and make an all day af- fair of it. There will be a conven- ient spot on the farm, away from the shooting grounds, set aside ‘for those who take picnic lunches and there will be no charge for parking. Experienced shooters and begin- ners are invited. Everyone who wishes to learn to handle a gun safely and learn to shoot will have a man to coach him. Women also There will be extra guns for those who have none. Shells will be furnished on the grounds. A fox gun will be awarded and three prizes will be given to the highest scorers in each class. The shooting grounds are on the Fern- brook-Huntsville Road. discussed the 1941 models in detail. Formal features of the meeting were followed by a dinner at the club, informal dealer get-to-gether and sports and entertainment in the afternoon on the club grounds. Les- lie Warhola’s orchestra furnished music. In discussing the 1941 Hudson, Mr. Oliver said, “For honest value there isn’t a car on the market that can touch the Hudson in its three price classes. All I ask is compari- son. Let any man take one of these Hudsons and drive it for a day instead of his own car, over the same routes he drives daily, and I'll wager he'll choose the Hudson for his next automobile.” . Proof of dealer acceptance came Wednesday night when men from Stroudsburg, Bloomsburg, Williams- port, Scranton, Wilkes-Barre, Potts- ville and distant points drove home in 1941 models. Only one of the many 1941 models remained for dis- play in Dallas at the conclusion of Revived Army Has SmallUnits, Geared For Speed (Continued from Page 1) The job facing the nation today is to provide adequate manufactur- ing facilities to supply those weap- ons for the existing divisions as rapidly as possible and to deliver them to the new divisions as fast as they are ready for them. That calls for special steels for the gun bar- rels. It calls for machines that can convert that steel into weapons. And it calls for men who can oper- ate those machines. The Army knows its needs. It is the job of the National Defense Advisory Com- mission to find out how to fulfill those requirements without crowd- ing and confusion. ‘But that list above is only what a modern infan- try regiment can more or less carry over its shoulder in the way of weapons, There are also fast modern tanks which carry substantial armor and machine guns. We will have small ones capable of galloping over good roads at thirty-six miles an hour, and moving over rough ground at a good clip. And there will be big ones capable of slugging it out with anything that comes along. Under new contracts, these steel turtles are being turned out in the middle west. The steel industry has already told the Advisory Commission that prep- arations are under way to increase production of light armor plate to meet requirements. Ammunition Needs That more or less settles the wea- pons that the infantry has handy. But these modern, agile, war ma- chines can dispose of a surprising quantity of ammunition in a short time. For example, the M1 rifle, with a good man on the trigger end can fire over 130 shots in five min- utes. A machine gun can loose about 2,500 shots in the direction of the enemy in the same time. So it is evident that there will have to be considerable expansion of the na- tion's ammunition facilities in a hurry. And, this in turn, will call for more powder plants, and step- ping up of production of brass shell cases, and steel-jackets. All this has to be done without creating bottle-necks, without waste motion. (An article on the cavalry will be published next week.) the showing. Seventy-five more 1941 Hudsons are expected this week by the Oliver organization. These will be distributed to dealers through- out the territory to be followed im- mediately by more which will soon be in the hands of users. “Hudson is the first manufacturer to be out with 1941 cars,” Mr. Oli- ver says, ‘because sales during the past year far exceeded anything the company had planned on. Before the 1940 season was well along Hudson executives were aware that their stocks of materials for the 1940 car would be exhausted early and plans and work on the 1941 model started immediately.” FREE TICKETS NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR Each week we are giving away a book of nineteen tickets admitting two persons to seventeen of the leading attractions at the New York World's Fair as well as admission and parking lot tickets. for details. 25¢ Listerine Tooth paste 3 for 49¢ 25¢ Palmolive Shave Cream 2 for 33¢ $1.50 Lydia Pinkhan’s Veg. Compound 50¢ Phillip’s Milk Magnesia $1.39 Lapel Pocket Watch JERGEN’S 50c LOTION 25¢ ALL PURPOSE CREAM Both For 39¢ Get a FREE 10c roses WATCH THE BUBBLES CLEAN. FALSE TEETH No trouble now to clean False Teeth. One tablet in water cleans, purifies and deodor- izes plate in a jiffy. Watch the bubbles bombard the plate — penetrate every crevice. Definitely checks denture breath" B ECONOMICAL fll MO MEASURING -NO WASTE 4 AMAZING CONVENIENCE 28¢ 98¢ HOPE Plate -Hloenor. TABLETS Get your free package today. No obligation to buy anything. Fill in coupon below and present at our store. = Sign your Name on this Ene. ] BERT & COMPANY 89%¢c | See us $2.50 Absorbine Jr. CIGARETTES Camels, Luckies, Raleigh, Philip Morris, Chesterfields $1.39 a carion TGBACCOS Penn, Scotch, Granger, Bugler, D & H. 3 for 23¢ $1.79 Half & Half, Velvet, Prince Albert {0c each me 3 Bi) SIR CUT RATE STORE Dallas Pennsylvania