The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, June 13, 1941, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
THE POST, FRIDAY, JUNE 13, 1941
CLASSIFIED ADS
FOUND
From
Pillar To Post
Three keys on chain at Lehman
Memorial Day. Owner may have
same by identifying and paying for
this ad. The Dallas Post. 23-1t
HELP WANTED
Girl to take care of one-year-old
child during day. Call at Balut’s
next to Fernbrook Dairy. 24-t
FOR SALE
Cook stove; fruit jars, 25c¢ dozen;
Inquire Mrs. Eugene Banta, Fern-
brook. 24-1t
Heavy pair of mules, may be seen
on Smith’s lumber job at Phillips
Creek or by contacting Ralph Har-
vey, Bethel Hill, Sweet Valley R. F.
D., or call W.-B, 3-0819. 24-1t
One Fairbanks-Morse Gas Engine,
3 H. P, 475 RPM. $35 cash.
Sandel Hunt Spring St., Dallas.
24-2%
Baby Grand piano, mahogany case
with bench to match. Guaranteed,
$145. Lizdas Piano Store, 247 South
Main St., Wilkes-Barre, 24-6t
Queenbeaver Range, $5.00; Dan-
ish Ball Cabbage Plants, $1.50
per thousand. Mrs. Sarah Moss,
Dallas. : 24-2t
Reo sedan, excellent condition, $50;
ice refrigerator with water tank
seventy-five pound capacity. Det-
rick, Terrace Ave., Fernbrook. 24-1t
8-piece oak dining room suite, very
nice condition, reasonable. Will
sell separately, if desired, Telephone
Kingston 7-2954. 23-1t
1927 Ford Ton Truck. R. L. Brickel,
Dallas. 23-1t
Baby Chicks—N. H. Hatches every
Saturday. Breeders blood-tested
and consuming best possible ration
to develop strong chickens. 8c de-
livered. Joseph Davis, LeRaysville,
Pa. Telephone 31-R-11. 1-tlf
1941 Westinghouse and Norge Elec-
tric Refrigerators and ABC, May-
tag and Westinghouse Washers—
Buy the best. Easy terms. Empire
Furniture Company, 106 S. Main
street, Wilkes-Barre.
D&H anthracite. Pea $6.25; Nut
$7.75; Buck $5.15; Firewood $1.50
ton box delivered. Edwards Coal |
Company. Phone, Dallas 121.
Guaranteed rebuilt Ford V8 engires.
4000 mile guarantee. $7 month.
Stull Brothers, Kingston, Pa. 19tf
Washing Machines, Vacuum Clean-
ers. Parts and service. All makes.
267 Wyoming Avenue, Kingston.
7-4514. 34tf
FOR SALE OR RENT
New modern 4, 5 and 6-room houses,
all improvements in Dallas and
vicinity for sale or rent.
Mathers Construction Company
Telephone 195 R-13
WANTED TO BUY
Wanted: All kinds of beef cattle.
Calves wanted every Monday and
Thursday. , Nathan Connor, Pittston,
Pa., R. D. 1. Phone Harding 34.
22-14%
MISCELLANEOUS
Dead Stock removed free of charge.
Call Dallas 433-R-9. Laskowski
Rendering Works, 23-26%
For prompt removal of dead, old, ;
disabled horses, sows, mules,
phone Carl Crockett, Muhlenburg
19-R-4. Phone charges paid. 24tf
REUPHOLSTERING—
Beautiful fabrics—guaranteed work-
manship. Write or phone 7-5636, |
John Curtis, 210 Lathrop st., King.
Board Will Examine 28
Twenty-eight young men from
Draft Board, No. 1, will be given
physical examinations at the army
(for a putting contest on the ninth-
(Continued from Page 1)
the words “Back Mountain.”
Somehow we think we'll continue
to say “Back Mountain” when we
think of this country in preference
to Dallarea, Mountain Parkway,
Dallwood Heights, Suburban Hills,
King-Dal-Lake-Mont or any of the
other names that dress it
up like a whore at a picnic. We
learned that from a dad who earned
and lost some money in these hills,
but who was born with a love of
natural beauty that compounded
with. every sunrise; whose great-
est joy was the chance to catch
the last brilliant rays of a sunset
over these back mountains. He
never lost that.
As for us, we're a Back Moun-
taineer and will be ’til we die. When
that time comes we'll take our
chances with eternity in a little
cemetery like that at Lehman where
underneath the guarding pines,
those who come to remember us,
can look out at the distant hills and
the fading sunset as we did on
Memorial Day. And when that time
comes, we don’t want any new-
fangled “mortician” from his “‘slum-
ber room” telephoning a country
editor not to use “Back Mountain”
in our obituary. For if he does, our
spirit will rise from its pine box and
make an old-fashioned undertaker
out of him.
Jackson Host To
Pomona Grange
All-Day Session
Scheduled Saturday
Pomona Grange, No. 44, will meet
with Jackson Grange on Saturday,
June 14, Installation of officers
will be held in the morning session
with George Schuler of Fleetwood
as installing officer.
At 2 o'clock the afternoon ses-
sion will open with devotions by
Rev. Frank Abbott of Lehman. Mr.
Schuler will give the address.
J, D. Hutchinson, county farm
agent, will show motion pictures on
seasonal topics. Home economics
committee will give a short program.
Instrumental music by young peo-
ple of Lehman will also be part of
the program.
The evening session will conclude
the day’s business and the worthy
chaplain will present the annual
Memorial service.
To Spotlight Golf Green
Irem Temple Club golf officials
will try something new Saturday
when they turn on huge spotlights
hole putting green near the club
house. Prizes will be awarded to
the field. On Wednesday Irem golf-
ers defeated Fox Hill in an inter-
club match 7-4 on the Irem course.
Seminary Graduates
Among those from this area grad-
uating from Wyoming Seminary this
week were: Hobart Jeter, Harry R.
Edwards, and Betsy A. Albert, all of
Procession In Damascus
‘ :
This scene was made during the annual procession of the Holy Carpe
in Damascus, capital of Syria, first objective of British and Free French
forces which marched into the French-mandated country.
forces acted to occupy Syria to forestall similar action by the Axis.
The Empire
(Central Press)
Children’s Day will be observed at
Huntsville Christian Church with a
splendid program Sunday evening at
7:45. Miss Hannah Culp, superin-
tendent of the Junior Department
of the Sunday School, and Mrs. Wal-
ter Covert are in charge. Rev. C.
H. Frick, pastor of the church, who
is stationed at Indiantown Gap with
the 109th Field Artillery, will come
home for the program, his first visit
since going to camp.
The theme of the program will be
foreign missions. The following will
Huntsville Children To Present
Program On Foreign Missions
take part in a play on Chinese mis-
sions: Marion Elston, Alvah Jones,
Donald Frantz, Billie Eckert, Dale
Warmouth, Jack Culp, Royal Culp,
Dorothy Culp, Esther Culp, Arnold
Price, Elliott Perrigo, Howard Per-
rigo, and Jackie Roberts. Recita-
tions will be given by Donald Eck-
ert, Jackie Covert, Virginia Culp,
Ear] Piatt, Gertrude Frantz, Shirley
Covert, Mary Dargoy, Frank Palka,
Alice Culp, Mildred Culp, and Rose
Palka. Junior choir will give sev-
eral selections.
Rustin Is Transferred
By Army Air Corps
Leon M. Austin, Dallas, R. D. 3,
is one of 95 men who are scheduled
to be transferred from Chanute
Field, Illinois, to the new air corps
technical school field at Wichita
Falls, Texas. All of the men trans-
ferred are sergeants.
John Robinson Promoted
John M. Rosinson, Second Lieu-
tenant with the 109th Field Artillery
at Indiantown Gap, has been pro-
moted to First Lieutenant. John
has been in the service for about
19 years and was an aide to the late
General William S. McLean on the
staff of the 53rd Brigade until he
transferred to the Service Battery
of the First Battalion of the 109th
Regiment.
Marriage Bureau Closed
Marriage license bureau at the
Court House will be closed tomor-
row, Flag Day.
Dallas.
69 Beavers Trapped
Mountainous sections of Luzerne |
County contributed 69 beavers to
the total of 1195 trapped in Penn-
sylvania last year. Fur value of the
pelts was approximately $12 each.
JOHN LEIDINGER
(“Red,” formerly with Frey Bros.)
GENERAL LEATHER REPAIR
WORK
Cases Made To Order
Zippers on Almost Anything
117 S. WASHINGTON ST.
examination station in Wilkes-Barre
on July 3.
Dial 3-9459 Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
|
1 — 4
4
i
EE
SED
+
ditioned used cars that can
Chevrolet Show Rooms.
1938 FORD
J { Sedan, original blac
p
i
fect.
No Trade
Market and Gates
97-1171
CITY CHEVROLET CO.
ARIT%
Here are two car values of the 125 thoroughly recon-
Stop in and see them.
tudor
FAR finish like new. Ex-
$8. ~ ceptionally clean in-
side. New tires, mechanically per-
$205
CITY CHEVROLET CO.
' “OUR NAME REMOVES THE RISK”
YOUR WILKES-BARRE CHEVROLET DEALER
A. L. STRAYER, Pres.
Open Evenings and Sundays
be seen and driven at the City
938 1939 FORD Deluxe
¢ Coupe, perfect run-
k § ning order. Low
mileage. Everything
about this car is original, includ-
ing paint and uphols- $350
tery. No Trade...
k
Streets, Kingston,Pa.
7-1171
HARVEY’S LAKE 3092
Templin Denies Story
R. J. W. Templin of Dallas, super-
vising principal of West Pittston
schools, was quick to take exception
this week to newspaper accounts
that Joseph Yuscavage, 19, graduat-
ed at the head of his class.
age, sentenced to 2% to 5 years for
his part in Fox Hill Country Club
hold-up, graduated in 1939 in the
first sixth of his class, but was not
Yuscav-
voted “the most likely to succeed.”
froggy :
Bppeal Is Dropped
Court proceedings instituted by
Wilkes-Barre school board last fall
involving claims of Miss Alice How-
orth that she should be reinstated
as teaching principal have been
terminated with her appointment
as principal of the Carey Avenue
building. Miss Howorth filed claims
and the board appealed when she
was replaced as principal in an East
Michael Kuchta
Has Your Number
(Continued from Page 1)
member and always has a part in
Community Welfare drives.
“Mike” has one all-compelling
hobby—reading. He doesn’t give
a hoot for fiction but obtains his
greatest enjoyment out of history
and non-fiction. One of his favorite
forms of recreation is browsing
among the book counters at the
Boston Store or digging through
musty volumes in a bookseller’s
collection to build up his own
library at home. That library is
probably one of the reasons why he
isnt’ concerned about wrong num-
bers most evenings. The other is
the companionship of his own
family.
Mike's father and mother have
been residents of Alderson for many
years, rearing their family of five
boys and one girl near the shores
of Harvey's Lake. The elder Kuchtas
came to this country from the Suda-
ten area of Austria long before that
beautiful region knew the turmoil
of today. They were married in
‘| New York City and after some
years in New York moved to Har-
vey's Lake where John Kuchta, the
father, was employed by Albert
Lewis Lumber Company.
If there is one thing “Mike” likes
as much as his books it is travel.
For a number of years he has made
it a point to attend the races at
Saratoga and to take frequent motor
jaunts to Washington, New York,
and points of historic interest
throughout the east. He has never
been to Niagara Falls—and if he
ever gets the right number, we
suspect that is the first place he'll
strike out for with his “Maid of the
Myth.”
West Point Tops
Sins
Alfred J. F. Moody, of Hamden,
Conn., has been designated the No.
1 cadet of this year’s graduation
class at West Point. Under the
academy system of rating, Moody
received 2,853.52 points of a possi-
ble 3,$54.00 during his four years.
? (Central Press)
Bucknell Graduates
Shirley Higgins, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Higgins, formerly
of Dallas, but now of Plymouth, was
among students compieting work
with honors at Bucknell Junior Col-
lege this year. Others from the
Dallas area were: Margaret L. Bach-
man of Carverton; Fred W. Girton,
Dallas, and Clarence W. Jones
Trucksville.
{838 Ford Tudor Sedan
25 Ford, Plymouth
Real Values—Come In And See
Bonner—VanCampen Used Cars
1935 Chevrolet Coach
1939 Plymouth Sport Sedan
1936 Chev. U-License Dump Truck
while they last, $35 each
and Chevrolet Cars
662 WYO. AVE., KING.
3 DIAL 7-2118
BONNER—VANCAMPEN
401 Market Street, Kingsion
694 WYO. AVE., KING.
OPEN EVENINGS
Brthur Turner Dallas
Solicitor, Called By Death
(Continued from Page 1)
lin Federal Savings and Loan Asso-
ciation at the time of his death.
He had at times served as solicitor
for Dallas Borough School Board
and Kingston Township School
Board.
Politically during earlier years he
gave his support to the principles
and candidates of the Democratic
party and was active in the affairs
of the county.
Fraternally he was identified with
Wilkes-Barre Lodge, No. 665, F. &
A. M.; Shekinah Chapter, Royal
Arch Masons; Dieu le Veut Com-
mandery, Knights Templar, and
Irem Temple. He was a member
of Westminster Presbyterian Church
of Wilkes-Barre,
Beside his wife, the former Jean
U. Trimmer, he leaves a son, Chaun-
cey W. Turner, a sergeant with the
109th Field Artillery at Indiantown
Gap, and two daughters, Mrs. Ralph
Evans of Harrisburg and Alice Turn-
er, at home.
Funeral services will be held from
the residence on Huntsville Road
this afternoon at 2 with Rev. W.
Herbert Sugden officiating. Inter-
ment will be in Oaklawn Cemtery.
No Sales Talk
But Real Bargains
1936 Terraplane $45.00
1936 Ferd Coach $195.00
1935 Chev. Coach $135.00
1934 Ply Sedan $125.00
i93{ Ford Coach $45.00
193( Chev. Sedan $65.00
1934 Ply Coupe $50.00
1934 Ply Coach $50.00
1935 Graham Sedn $50.00
35 other, $35 to $150
All In Good Running Condition
E Z TERMS WILL TRADE
USED CAR LOT
LIBERTY and HAZLE STREETS,
NEWTOWN
DIAL 4-1752 OPEN EVENINGS
JOE BUCKMAN,Manager.
fr
End building by George T. Bowen,
formerly supervising principal of
Dallas schools.
Ny
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Bi
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BD,
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LTT rE
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FOR HOME DELIVERY, CALL
WILKES-BARRE 2-8171
There
Brs the way of men when they get together—to talk
about their business, and then about their families, and
what they're doing to make their children’s futures secure.
isn’t much sentiment about the head of the
family . . . but don’t you think he doesn’t get a kick out
of “all this silly business” of Father’s Day. Some little
gift—some little courtesy will make dad think that he
isn’t just the fellow who lends the family car, pays the
bills and comes home late for dinner.
Remember Father's Day, June 15
THE DALLAS POST
More than a newspaper—a community institution
DALLAS, PA.