The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, July 18, 1941, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE EIGHT
CLASSIFIED ADS
MALE HELP WANTED
Married man with small family for
farm work. Good wages with nice
home and farm products furnished.
Willard Cornell, Hunlock’s Creek, R.
F. D. Phone Dallas 361-R-11. 29-1t
FOR RENT
Five-room house, improvements,
$25 month, Carverton
Phone Dallas
29-1t
garage,
road, Trucksville.
257-R-10 or 318-R-10.
Five-room modern apartment—heat
and hot water furnished. Centre
Street, Shavertown across from
school. $30. Call Dallas 244-R-10.
28-1t
WANTED TO BUY
Wanted to buy old horses. We pay
highest cash prices for old live
horses. Must not be diseased.
Ralph R. Balut, Dallas. Phone
371-R-3. Reverse charges. 28-tf
ROOFING, SIDING
Home owners—here is your chance
to get that new roof or siding job
done before winter sets in 12 to 36
months to pay. No down payment
necessary. 10% discount on shingles
and siding during July. Call Wilkes-
Barre 4-0871 or Dallas 444, ask for
Van. 32 Church St., Dallas. 27-5t
FOR SALE
Nightwalkers.
son, Harvey's Lake.
Billy Morgan, Alder-
29-1t
Black enamel Pittston Range in
good condition. Reasonable. ‘Mrs.
Jean Kuehn. Phone 477. 29-1t
$18 Fruit Press, never used, $6;
hand and power cider press, $5;
Mission type leather 3 pc. living
room suit—like new—$10; singles
solid walnut low antique bed and
spring; large R. R. type egg stove,
$4: library table, other furniture,
238 Pierce St., Kingston. Phone
King 7-4851. 29-1t
Team horses $185. Team mules, prize
winners Bloom Fair, value $500,
for quick sale $350. Eight milch
cows, two blower threshing ma-
chines, cider press, used dump
rakes and tedders. Complete line
new Massey-Harris Machinery and
Repairs. Charles Long, Sweet Val-
ley. 29-1t
Shavertown: 6 rooms and bath,
breakfast nook, concrete cellar,
garage, screened in porch and win-
dows, all improvements, lot 50x125.
Sacrifice for quick sale. Also prop-
~rty in Kingston. Inquire Bonnell,
Ferguson Avenue, Shavertown.
Used Electric Refrigerators, recon-
ditioned washing machines, parts
and service all makes. 267 Wyoming
Avenue, Kingston, 7-4514. 27-tf
Fireplace logs and stove wood, all
oak—also coal and ice. Claude
Shaver, 356. 27-5t
Corey Ransom home, Demunds, all
conveniences, $40. Summer care-
taker. Not seasonable. Centermore-
land 17-R-9. 27-3t
Wedding Announcements, Engraved
Stationery; Highest Quality. See
our samples and save money. The
Dallas Post. 26tf
Cabbage and cauliflower plants for
sale; all leading varieties late sow-
ing. Phone Conyngham 18-R-14;
Milton W. Bloss, Drums, Pa. 26-3t
Farm Machinery Parts: We have
parts in stock for John Deere,
Deering Ideal and all McCormick-
Deering mowers, binders, reapers.
Also one used Thresher. Devens
Milling Co., your Allis-Chalmers
Dealer. 25-6t
Baby Grand piano, mahogany case
with bench to match. Guaranteed,
$145. Lizdas Piano Store, 247 South
Main St., Wilkes-Barre, 24-6t
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
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 engines.
4000 mile guarantee. $7 month.
Stull Brothers, Kingston, Pa. 19tf
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-18
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
Custom Combining done with a
Massey-Harris Tractor and Clipper
Combine—noted for good work.
Willard Cornell, Hunlock’s Creek,
R. F. D. Phone Dallas 361-R-11.
29-1t
Dead Stock removed free of charge.
Call Dallas 433-R-9. Laskowski
Rendering Works. 23-26t
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.
THE POST, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1941
Lacey Is One-Man
Building Boom
(Continued from Page 1)
partnership with Col. Thomas A.
Atherton under the name of Lacey
and Atherton, and practices archi-
tecture from offices at the Sterling
Hotel.
He spent his boyhood in the
Finger Lakes section of New York
State at Skaneatilis, which, if you're
a connoiseur of fine foods, is the
home of Kreb’s, the internationally
famous restaurant.
After graduating in architecture
from Cornell University, he spent
some years in Washington, D. C.,
and New York City, coming at
length to this vicinity as a partner
in the architectural firm of Cook
and Long.
He was remodeling a cottage at
Harvey's Lake for Cook and Long
when he became acquainted with
Andrew J. Sordoni, and shortly
thereafter entered the latter’s firm
to take charge of and develop a
building construction department.
During his 16 and a half years with
Sordoni, Mr. Lacey has designed
many other buildings, among them
the Forty Fort Town Hall, Exeter
Township High School, and the
Thomas Mackin School in Wilkes-
Barre, for other companies.
Since late in 1920, Mr. Lacey has
made his home on Pioneer avenue
in Shavertown. He and Mrs. Lacey
have three children, James, 23, who
is studying architecture at the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania; Prentice,
17, and Janice, 13, students at
Wyoming Seminary. He is a mem-
ber of the Masonic Bodies and a
past master of King Hiram Lodge,
and is also a member of Wilkes-
Barre Rotary Club. His principal
recreation is playing golf at Irem
Temple Country Club, where his
greatest triumph so far has ‘been
breaking 100.
Mr. Lacey has had a hand in
most of the building contracts com-
pleted in this section by Sordoni
Construction Company, among them
the wings at Misericordia College,
the remodeling of Irem Temple
Country Club and the Irem swim-
ming pool, and the home built for
Adam Kiefer at Shrine View. He
designed and built the home at
Shrine View now occupied by Wil-
bur Manning, the residence of Wil-
liam Williams in Dallas, and the
homes of H. J. MacIntyre and I. J.
Werner on Pioneer avenue in Shav-
ertown, and also the milk plant at
Hillside for Harry J. Harter.
As a matter of fact, Mr. Lacey's
accomplishments are legion. A few
of the others he designed and Sor-
doni built are the Kingston High
School building, the million dollar
U. S. Department of Agriculture
laboratory near Philadelphia, three
buildings for the State Teachers’ Col-
lege at Mansfield, four buildings for
Bloomsburg State Teachers’ Col-
lege, and a number of additions
and remodeled buildings for Buck-
nell University at Lewisburg.
During this past year Mr. Lacey
has been busily engaged for the
Sordoni company in building five
pumping stations and three relief
culverts in connection with the
Kingston-Wilkes-Barre flood control
work and several structures for na-
tional defense work at the Ameri-
can Car and Foundry plant at Ber-
wick. He is connected, too, with
the construction of a huge airplane
repair dock at Middletown, Pa., for
the War Department. Just the doors
on that particular project are a
marvel of design, not to mention
the rest of it. 250 feet wide and
49 feet high, the huge portals.are
motor operated.
The building which gives Mr.
Lacey the most satisfaction, how-
ever, is the Forty Fort Borough
building. Because of his fine work
on that structure, he has been
chosen architect for the proposed
town hall of Kingston borough, an
arrangement which suits both him
and the Kingston Council to a “T.”
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
LUZERNE COUNTY, ss:
| ber Term,
In the Court of Common Pleas of
Luzerne County, Pa., No. 26 Octo-
1940. Libel in Divorce
a vinculo matrimonii. Georgette
| Kaylor vs. Freas W. Kaylor: To
| Freas W. Kaylor: .Take notice that
an alias subpoena having been re-
turned. by the Sheriff of Luzerne
County, that you could not be
found in this county, you are here-
| by notified and directed to appear
before the said Court on Monday,
September 8, 1941, at 10 o'clock
a. m., to answer the complaint filed
in the above case.
DALLAS C. SHOBERT,
: Sheriff.
STEPHEN TELLER,
Attorney.
ESTATE OF EMMA WALL RAE,
late of Plains, Luzerne County, Pa.
Letters of Administration on the
above estate have been granted to
the undersigned. All persons in-
debted to the said estate are re-
suested to make payment, and those
having claims to present the same,
without delay, to J. William Wall,
Administrator, 146 East Carey
Street, Plains, Pa., or Henry A.
Gordon, Attorney, 302 Second Na-
tional Bank Building, Wilkes-Barre,
Pa. 25
ESTATE OF NORA E. ROW-
LANDS, late of Larksville Borough,
Pa., Dec’d. - Debtors will make pay-
ment and creditors present claims
without delay to Sarah G. Larkin,
Executrix, 287 Courtdale Ave.
Courtdale, Pa., or to T. M. Lewis,
Atty., Wilkes-Barre, Pa, 24-6t
From
Pillar To Post
(Continued from Page 1)
bathing suits so raucous, that the
metamorphosis was effected with
very little pain. It was lost sight
of in the turmoil about the right
of women to not only own legs but
to exploit them.
ladies were being sternly ordered
from the beach on account of bath-
While weeping
ing suits too low or too high or,
too white, men were quietly and
imperceptibly emerging from the
striped circus tent of yester-year.
Tops vanished into the never-never
land, and the blue flannel shorts
gave place to a scant eight inches of |
lastex, guiltless of belt. |
Last week I saw a group of Amish |
people enjoying a holiday at the!
beach. The rail atop the sea-wall
was lined with sunbonneted folk,
goggle-eyed with sinful delight at
the spectacle of the uninhibited
bathers on the sand below. Never
would this group of plain people be
caught dead thus disporting them-
selves, but there is nothing in their
creed that says they are not allowed
to get a load of the worldly people
being sinful. The week-enders
rubbed oil on each other, preparing
for the sacrifice, and the audience
gasped with vicarious enjoyment.
Doubtless they went home sated
with pleasure and took a bath in
the dark.
It is absolutely amazing what you
can see on the beach when you
haven't got your gun. Here is a
well-upholstered lady threatening
to roll out of a form-fitting bathing
suit, squired by a hundred-pounder
of a Mr. Milque-Toast whose legs
would look far happier under a
desk. Here are two squealing
females who are determined to have
a good time if it kills them, stand-
ing in the exact spot along the
edge of the water where the waves
break the hardest. They are afraid
to wade out into deeper water
where the swells are gentler, and
each successive wave washes them
up on the beach in a smother of
foam. They rise shakily, spit out
the sand, and return grimly to the
fray.
Here is a romantic couple lying
entwined under a striped beach-
umbrella rented from the Life-|
Guard. It seems too hot for such,
a lot of l'amour, but they may as
well make hay while the sun shines.
When they finally stagger into their
hotel they will find that romance
has unaccountably lost its flavor,
and it’s ho for the tannic acid.
Here is a lady who is making a
mistake in wearing that kittenish
pink play-suit. Too reminiscent of
that famous cartoon showing a man
reflectively eying a lady entering
a taxi, and remarking in an aside
to his wife, “That reminds me, dear,
let’s have ham for supper.”
But no matter how hopefully I
scan the beach, there is no coun-
terpart of the Englishman I once
saw in Honolulu. He has a place
in my memory that no-one else can
ever fill. The mental image of
that impressive creature seated
solidly upon the sands of Waikiki
remains with me as the high spot
of that month of liquid sunshine.
His pink and plushy back rose in
folds above the scantiest of Hawai-
ian flowered trunks; his cane was
planted firmly in the sand at his
side; he wore a monocle screwed
into one eye—I don’t remeber
which eye—an elephant hat shaded
his brow, and he was reading a
Summer Starlet
7
variety show held forth.
. This pretty 14-year-old miss has the responsibility of carrying on Bob
Hope through the Summer vacation period. She is Ann Gillis, playing the
title role in “A Date With Judy,” light comedy drama series heard over
the NBC-Red Network Tuesday evenings in the spot where Bob Hope's
Death Comes To
Mary E. Kocher
Deceased Widow of
Pulaski Kocher
Mrs. Mary E. Kocher, widow of
the late Pulaski Kocher of Harvey's
Lake and a native of this region,
passed away yesterday morning at
her home in Mt. Pleasant, Columbia
County, after a lingering illness.
The 85-year-old woman, sister of
Mrs. Gertrude Honeywell of Shav-
ertown and William Crispell of
Sweet Valley, lived most of her life
in Lake township, moving to Mt.
Pleasant nine, years ago.
She was the daughter of the late
William H. Crispell and Sarah
Wright Crispell, early settlers of
Noxen, and resided at Harvey's
Lake more than half a century ago.
A lover of social and church activ-
ities, she was well known to a host
of people in this section, and was
a member of Center Moreland Bap-
tist Church.
Surviving are two daughters, Miss
Phemie Kocher and Mrs. Maude
Lamoreaux, both of Mt. Pleasant; a
sistet, Mrs. Gertrude Honeywell of
Shavertown; two brothers, William
Crispell of Sweet Valley and Cory
of Wilkes-Barre, and one grandson,
Floyd Lamoreaux of Mt. Pleasant.
Sewing Project Resumed
Bfter Two-Week Layoff
Closed down two weeks ago in a
drastic WPA cut throughout the
county, the Dallas Sewing Project
was re-opened Wednesday morning
and 20 local women went back to
work, as a new allocation for the
job was approved. The project, in
operation for the past five years, is
supplied with material by borough
council at an average cost of $50
copy of the “London Times.”
NAPPY
a month.
Wife Of Local
Minister Dies
Mrs. Waterstripe Sweet
Valley Leader 12 Years
Funeral services for Mrs, Alice
Waterstripe, prominent Sweet Val-
ley resident, will be held this morn-
ing, Friday, at 8 at the Sweet Val-
ley Church of Christ, with further
services this afternoon at 3:30 at
Richmond, N. Y., and interment in
Richmond cemetery. Rev. and Mrs.
M. S. Kitchen of Berwick will of-
ficiate at Sweet Valley.
Mrs. Waterstripe, a resident of
this section for the past 12 years
and wife of Rev, E. J. Waterstripe
of Sweet Valley Church of Christ,
died at her home Saturday night.
She was 59 years old.
Well known to many of this re-
gion, she was a church and social
lender in Sweet Valley, was past
president of the Willing Workers’
Club, teacher in the Young People’s
Sunday School Class and presiding
officer of the King’s Daughters
Class.
Surviving are her husband, two
daughters, Mrs. Howard Sprague of
Sidney, N. Y., and Mrs. Harold
Britt of Baltimore, Md., and two
sons, Burnice of Pulaski, N. Y., and
Glen, a soldier at Angel Island,
KUNKLE
Felice Miers has been spending
the week with her grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Devens, at Per-
rin’s Marsh.
Fred Honeywell, Conrad Honey-
well, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Honey-
well and sons, Thomas and Russell,
Jr.. visited Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Schnure at Watsontown Sunday.
Donald and Forest Smith are
spending their vacation with their
| grandparents at Southdale.
)
Poultrymen Plan
To Go On Tour
Two-Day Visitations
Start From Bloomsburg
A two-day tour is planned by the
Pennsylvania State Poultry - Asso-
ciation. Points of interest in north-
eastern Pennsylvania will be visit-
ed on August 20 and 21, announces
County Agent J. D. Hutchison.
Assembly and registration will be
at 9 o'clock standard time, two
miles west of Bloomsburg, at the
junction of State Route 42 and U.
S. Highway 11, on the morning of
August 20.
The first stop will be at the farm
of Kester E. Diffenbacher near
Bloomsburg. He houses 2,900 White
Leghorn and 1,100 New Hampshire
layers in a four-story metal house.
Carter Bache Turkey and Poultry
Farm, near Benton, will be the next
| stop. Here 5,000 White Holland
turkeys, 25,000 chickens, and the
eggs from 5,000 White Leghorns
and 2,000 New Hampshires are
marketed each year.
After lunch at or near Benton,
the next visit will be to the Burr
Poultry Farm, near Meshoppen.
Here are 2,800 White Leghorns, 900
under trapnesting, and 5,000 pedi-
greed chicks are raised.
The overnight stay will be in
Ceranton, and the next morning an
enthcacite coal mine will be visited.
Blumer Brothers Poultry Farm,
rear Moscow, will be the next stop.
They specialize in White Plymouth
Rocks, having 3,000 of these birds
and 1,000 White Leghorns kept in
emall unit houses. They raise 6,000
pullets, 1,000 cockerels, and 700
turkeys.
Following lunch at or near Mos-
cow, the tour will proceed to the
(lest stop at the Al. Robinson Poul-
try Plant, near Seeleyville. He
keeps 9,000 layers comprising 6,500
Rhode Island Reds, 1,000 New
| Hampshires, 1,000 Leghorns, and
500 Barred Rocks.
3,500 turkeys are raised. The tour
will disband at this point,
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Elston, Mrs.
Ralph Hess, Doris and Janet Hess
motored to Elkland Thursday to
visit Mrs. Jennie Norton.
Mrs. Harold Smith has been
spending the week at Providence,
Rhode Island, with her husband
who has been there on business for
several weeks.
Silver Leaf Club
Silver Leaf Club held their an-
nual picnic at Elston’s Grove Fri-
day evening. Present were Mrs.
Edgar Nulton, Mrs. William Weaver,
Mrs. Guy Rothery, Mrs. Thomas
Landon, Mrs. Raymond Elston, Mrs.
Walter Elston, Mrs. Frank Hess,
Mrs. Fred Dodson, Mrs. Gideon Mil-
ler, Mrs. Ralph Hess, Mrs. Paul Hil-
bert, Mrs. Ralph Ashburner, Mrs.
William Brace, Mrs. Stanley Elston,
Mrs. Gertrude Smith, Mrs. Olin
Kunkle, Mrs. Anna Weaver, Mrs.
Oliver Ellsworth, Mrs. Florence
Klimeck, Mrs. Victor Rydd, Mrs.
Roy Hess, Mrs. Ray Henney, Mrs.
Clarence Root, and Mrs. Forrest
Kunkle.
Mrs. Devens Entertains
Mrs. A. C. Devens was hostess at
a picnic at Perrin’s Marsh Wednes-
day to the following: Helen Lan-
don, Martha Elston, Joy Elston,
Marie Rydd, Amanda Herdman,
Dorothy Dodson, Elizabeth Hess,
Wilma Miers, Jennie Miers, Calvin
and Jerry Miers, Aderine Nulton,
Sherry Nulton, Laura Rothery,
Stella Isaacs, Gertrude Smith, Mrs.
Frank Smith, Margaret Kunkle,
Eleanor Frederick, Currie Kunkle,
Ella Brace, Billy Brace, Lillian Kun-
kle, Emma Miller, Mable Miller,
As a sideline, |
Son Of City Policeman
Arrested For Hit-Run
Gerald Roche, 18, son of Peter
Roche of the Wilkes-Barre police
force, was arrested as a hit-and-
run driver this week by Police Chief
Ira C. Stevenson of Harvey's Lake.
Sunday night Roche backed his car
into a machine owned by Louis
Cohen of Wilkes-Barre, which ‘was
parked in the rear of the Casino at
the lake, and drove away without
notifying Cohen of the damage. He
was traced by Stevenson through
his license number, taken down by
a witness of the accident.
At a hearing before Squire Ralph
Davis Tuesday night, Roche was re-
leased on request of Cohen after
agreeing to pay damages of $18. He
was the first to be arrested in a
number of hit-and-run accidents oc-
curring at Harvey's Lake this sum-
mer.
Carverton Man
Buried Today
Clifford Gay, 65, Was
Native Of Harveyville
Clifford T. Gay, long a resident
of Carverton and prominent mem-
ber of an old Back Mountain fam-
ily, will be buried this afternoon
in Carverton Cemetery following
funeral services at Carverton Meth-
| odist Church at 2:30, conducted by
Charles Gilbert, pastor.
Mr. Gay, 65, died Wednesday
| morning at his home in Carverton
| after a brief illness.
| A native of Harveyville, he was
| the son of Harrison and Mary Gay
and moved to this section when a
| young man. He was a farmer all
his life, active in civic and church
| affairs in his community and be-
| loved by many close friends and
relatives,
! He is survived by his wife, Mrs.
{ Mary Haines Gay; a daughter, Mrs.
| Giles Lewis of Tunkhannock; three
| sons, Lewis of Wyoming and Harry
and Thomas of Carverton; a twin
brother, Clayton, of Carverton, and
two other brothers, Abe of Carver-
{ton and Lewis of Endicott City, N.
Y., and four grandchildren, all of
this section.
Water Company Agrees
To Install Fire Eydrants
¢« (Continued from Page 1)
borough, Dallas township, Lehman
| and Jackson townships.
Several years ago, Council and
the fire company planned to dam
Toby's Creek near the foot of
Machell avenue to provide a con-
centration of water in case a fire
got beyond the control of chemicals.
It was feared, however, that foreign
matter in the creek water would
clog the pump and hose lines of the
truck, and the plan was given over.
Felice Miers, Anna Richards, Rev.
iand Mrs. David Morgan, Mrs.
Loomis of Athens, Arline Kunkle,
| Allen Kunkle, and Margaret Ells-
worth.
| Celebrates Birthday
{ Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Nulton en-
tertained at a supper Saturday
evening to celebrate the latter's
| Iirthday anniversary. Guests were
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Nelson, Mr.
and Mrs. James Goodwin, Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Ide, Mr. and Mrs. Reb-
ert Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
| Whitney. Mr: and Mrs. Walter
Elston, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cook,
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Elston, Mr.
and Mrs. Wilson Maury, Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Garris, Sherry Nulton,
jand Miss Mildred Devens,
ROUD
rwD
COMING UP IN
THIS BATTLEOF
THE CENTURY..
THERE GOES THE
BELL AS THE
BOYS RECIEVE
FINAL INSTRYC-
TIONS FROM
THIER CORNERS.
iq
>
NTE TTR,
4 c'mon Kip!
PULL Y'SELF ¥
T'GETMER! GIT
INDERE AN'GIVE ¥
7
‘IM DE BIZ
FACTS YOU NEVER KNEW
A wv, Jes F<
LOOK AT'CHA! J
Y'LOOK AS
DRY (2
TRL 2
T'FIGHT!
{ 5-A-Y!WHAT'RE YA TRYIN'T'PULL!
UY AIN'T IN NO CONDITION
By Irv Tirman
{
*
4
AUSTRALIA'S SLEEPING
INSTITUTE IS THE BODY OF A BEAUTIFUL
CAME TO IDENTIFY HER, BUT NONE KNEW
SHE WAS RETURNING WITH 2
SHE NEVER GOT THERE..,
OTHER WOMEN AND THE
317
PRESERVED IN ALCOHOL IN THE SIDNEY PATHOLOGICAL
WAS FOUND MURDERED ON THE MAIN ROAD FROM SIDNEY TO
ALBURY, IN AUGUST 1934... MORE THAN 3,000 PEOPLE
THEN AN AMERICAN LADY @73 WIRED THE SIDNEY POLICE THAT
| PROOF OF THE GIRLS IDENTITY...
Copyright 1940 Lincoln Newspaper Features, Inga.
Beauty”!
BLONDE GIRL, WHO
WHO SHE WAS....
N LOS ANGELES MEN WERE ONCE FORBIDDEN TO WEAR
BEARDS "WHETHER COMPLETE OR PARTIAL" AND MEN
OF BRAINERD, MINN, AND CENTRALIA, WASH. WERE
NAH Hl1'm
MOVING TO
MINNESOTA!
a,
iy GET THE NAME FROM THE CHINESE
CHOW", MEANING FOOD..THE CHINESE i
CONSIDERED THE DOG AVERY PALA-
TABLE DELICACY.
Core PN _
TI A
POPULAR FAL- Ng
LACY THAT DOGS SHOULD >
B) BE BLACK-MOUTHED TO INDICATE PURITY OF BREED
By Bob Dart |
ES
-,