The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, August 21, 1942, Image 7

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_THE POST, FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1942
ell Articles Not In Us
The TRAD
ING POST
PHONE DALLAS 300 ® TWO CENTS PER WORD @ 25c¢c MINIMUM
For Sale—
For Rent— .
Wedding Announcements—En-
graved Stationery — Highest qual-
ity — See our samples and save
money, The Dallas Post.
Save your corn in a silo. Delivered
prices. 10x20 Wyoming Fir, $179.
12x24 Wyoming Fir, $249.50. All
sizes available. Order now and be
sure. GUNS FOR SALE—22 rifles,
$5.00 and up. Deer rifles, $12 and
up. Shotguns, $7.50 to $100. Your
choice from our stock of 150.
BINDERS and THRESHERS—2 used
McCormick Binders, $150 each. 11
Threshers in all sizes, $50 to $300.
Own your own machine and be in-
dependent. GAY MURRAY CO,
INC., TUNKHANNOCK, PA. 32-2¢
Firewood and fire place logs, coal,
ice, Phone Miller, Dallas 112-R-7.
For Sale—Rental Leases, For Sale
signs, No Trespassing signs, No
Hunting signs, For Rent signs, etc.
The Dallas Post.
Used Electric Refrigerators, recon
ditioned washing machines, part
and service all makes. 267 Wyomin
Avenue, Kingston, 7-4514. 27-
Guaranteed rebuilt Ford V8 engines
4000 mile guarantee. $7 month
Stull Brothers, Kingston, Pa. 19
Perfection Egg Graders. Hilbert’s
Hatchery, Beaumont. 31-3t
Chicks For Sale—
August and September Baby Chicks,
New Hampshire Reds. Tuesday
hatches. Finest blood-tested. 10c
each delivered. Joseph Davis, Le-
raysville, Pa. Phone 31-8-11. 32-tf
Wanted To Buy—
Horse radish root. Phone Dallas
300, Dallas Post. 344f
Beef cattle, calves, fresh and com
ing fresh cows. Highest price
paid. I. Mellner, Kingston 72746. tf
Wanta sell that old car, or sofa,
or even a piano? POST Classified
Ads can do it.
Five Room House. All improve-
ments. Garage, garden. Adda
Kitchen, 301 Pioneer Avenue, Shav-
extown. 34-4t
Bungalow on Cliffside Avenue,
Trucksville. Inquire Harry E.
Post, or call Dallas 286-R-3. 32
House, 7 rooms; 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, unfurnished. Modern kitch-
en, new electric range, stoker steam
heat, venetian blinds, beautiful
grounds, 2 acres, in excellent location
on Pioneer Avenue, Dallas Twp. For
information contact the Dallas Post.
29-tf
Help Wanted—
Girl for upstairs work. Mrs. E. B.
Mulligan. Phone, Dallas 310-R-2.
? 34-1t
Two dry hand milkers. Apply John
Dershimer, Sterling Farms. Call
4191. 34-2t
Man to work in garden at Dallas;
$2 for 8-hour day. Write Box
D, Dallas Post. 31-tf
Who To Call—
We buy live horses, alse remove
dead stock free of charge. We re-
fund telephone call expense. Call
Dallas 433-R-9. Laskowski Render-
ing Works. 30-tf
Miscellaneous—
For prompt removal of dead, old
disabled horses, sows, mules,
phone Carl Crockett, Muhlenbur
19-R-4. Phone charges paid. 24tf
Dead Animals removed. Highest
prices paid for dead or disabled
horses, cows and mules. Phone,
Laceyville 65. Bradford. County
Rendering Works. tf
Well Drilling—For twenty-five years
we have specialized in well drill-
ing. No job too large or too small.
Better water wells at lower cost.
Tell your water troubles to Cress-
well Drilling Company, Kingston.
Phone 7-4815. 14-tf
MAKE EVERY
5 : PAY DAY
{ are
| _s%BOND DAY"
STOP SPENDING — SAVE DOLLARS
PLAY GOLF?
Take any sport and you'll be
more efficient if your eyesight is
normal
Dr. Abe Finkelstein
OPTOMETRIST
Main Street, Luzerne
Reupholstering—
Beautiful fabrics—guaranteed work-
manship. Write or phone 7-5636,
John Curtis, 210 Lathrop St., King.
JOHN LEIDLINGER
(“Red,” formerly with Frey Bros.)
All Kinds Of ’
LEATHER WORK REPAIRING
Very Neatly Done.
Harness, Collars and Horse Supplies
Dog Supplies and
LUGGAGE
117 SO. WASHINGTON ST.,
Dial 3-9459 Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
OUR DEMOCRAC
UNCLE SAM
SETS AGOO
vy ay N
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SL
Though the prospects are reas-
onably assuring: that commercial
vegetable and flower seeds will be
sufficient for requirements next
year, many Victory gardeners are
planning to save their own supplies
of seed of certain kinds which are
producing satisfactory crops ‘this
year, says Mrs. Edward Kent,
Huntsville, chairman of the Luzerne
County Victory Garden Committee.
Results in the form of next year’s
crops may be disappointing, how-
ever, unless the proper methods of
selection and handling of seeds are
observed.
An enthusiastic gardener will be
tempted to save an especially fine
tomato, cucumber, squash, ear of
corn, or annual flower for seed, ex-
pecting to harvest a crop-like it in
the next or in succeeding seasons,
said Mrs. Kent.
Unless, however, the fruit or
flower is fairly representative of the
plant which bears it—that is, un-
| less the plant is producing a fine
crop throughout—and unless one is
sure that the plant itself is not a
hybrid, or has not been pollinated
by other plants of unknown char-
acter, the chances are that seed
from it will produce a crop no bet-
ter than average, if as good.
Presence of diseases which are
transmissible on the seed also re-
duces one’s chances.
Many of the best varieties of
sweet corn and annual flowers are
hybrids—that is, seed is produced
by crossing of two distinct, careful-
ly bred stocks: or lines which are
grown separately and selected care-
fully in preceding seasons for no
other purpose than to produce hy-
brid seed; never is seed for plant-
ing saved from the hybrid crop.
Certain other vegetables, includ-
ing squashes, pumpkins, melons,
cucumbers, radishes, and turnips,
are cross-pollinated by insects or
other agencies. Their seeds, there-
fore, convey the characteristics we
see in the plants on which they
are borne, as well as those of the
plants which produced the pollen,
and nobody knows what combina-
tions of the characteristics of both
parents will appear in the prog-
eny.
Tomatoes, on the other hand, and
certain annual flowers of the com-
posite or daisy family, are self-
pollinated to a great extent; fruits
or flowers from plants which are
producing a uniformly good crop
may be saved for seed with some
assurance that the resulting crop
will ‘be very similar to the plants
selected. The fruits should be
ripe when picked, and seeds may be
scraped out with the surrounding
pulp into a suitable container, and
left to ferment for two or three days
in the pulp, to free them from a
mucilaginous coating which, if left
on them, would cause them to stick
together when dried.
After fermentation, which when
complete results in the settling of
the seeds to the bottom of the con-
tainer; the seeds are washed on a
screen, dried in a short time in the
sun or in a well-ventilated room,
i | and stored in a dry, cool place.
TYPICAL ARMY CAMP MENU:
BREAKFAST — FRESH FRUIT,
FRESH MILK, CEREAL,
BACON AND EGGS, BUTTERED TOAST z
OR BREAD, COFFEE, SUGAR. ;
DINNER — SOUP, MEAT, POTATOES, 2 VEGETABLES,
SALAD, PIE OR CAKE.
HOT OR ICED BEVERAGE.
MEAT, POTATOES,
SUPPER
VEGETABLE,
DESSERT, HOT OR ICED BEVERAGE.
THE MODERN FIGHTING-MAN'S MEALS ARE MODERN TOO—
SCIENTIFICALLY BALANCED, EXPERTLY PREPARED,
GOOD TO EAT — AT A COST OF 45¢ PER DAY,
AN ARM Y= AND A NAVY ~STILL TRAVELS ON I7:5 STOMACH.
AND OUR MEN ARE GOING PLACES!
Peppers, which are self-pollinated
to the extent of about 85 percent.,
also may be saved in the same man-
ner. Seed of self-pollinated flowers,
las well as other plants such as
beans and peas which are dry when
mature, are easily saved. One
should be sure, however, that they
are free from insects and diseases.
KUNKLE
Please call 410-R-10, Mrs.
Ray Henney, if you have any
news. The boys to whom the
Post is mailed each week want
to hear from all of you. Don’t
hesitate to call or send in your
items.
Mr. and Mrs. Minor Lozo and Mr.
and Mrs. Phillip Fry were callers at
the home of Mrs. Amanda Herdman
on Sunday.
Mrs. Cragg Herdman is a patient
at Nesbitt Hospital where she sub-
mitted to an operation on Tues-
day.
Mrs. Gertrude Baliome is the
guest of Mrs. Stella Isaacs this week
at her cottage.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sweezy en-
tertained friends on Friday.
Wilma Hess has returned from a
visit with Mr. and Mrs. Nile Hess
at Harrisburg.
Henry Shupp and Russell Miers
spent the weekend at their homes.
Both are employed in New Jersey.
Mrs. Harold Smith visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Dendler at Berwick for a few days.
Melvin Mosier has returned after
a visit with his sister, Mrs, Alan
Scattergood in New Jersey.
Care Is Required In Selecting.
Seeds For Your Garden Next Year
e
MEEKER
Miss Esther Drabick has return-
ed after spending a week with her
grandparents in Hazleton.
Mrs. Eugene Robinson is spend-
ing some time with friends in New
Jersey.
Mrs. John Hildebrant and daugh-
ter, Charlotte, have returned from
a trip to Maryland.
Mr. and Mrs. James Davenport
entertained Tuesday evening for
Thomas Brady of Luzerne, who will
leave this week for the service, Mr.
and Mrs. William Drabick and
daughter, Edna, Mrs. Leonard Har-
vey and Miss Mary Jennings.
Mrs. Edith King is entertaining
her cousin and family from Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. William Drabick
were dinner guests Sunday of Mr.
and Mrs. James Davenport.
Mrs. A. B. Hufford submitted to
an operation at General Hospital
last Tuesday. Her conditon is fair.
Mr. and Mrs. George Weintz en-
tentained at dinner recently Mrs.
Catherine Mackert and daughter,
Elizabeth, Mrs. William Zeiser of
Sunbury, Bert Mackert and George
Corrigan of New York City, Mr. and
Mrs. Leonard Harvey of Dallas, Miss
Mary Jennings of Wilkes-Barre, Mr.
and Mrs. F. P. Oliver of Kingston,
and Mr. and Mrs. James Davenport
and daughter, Margo.
Miss Esther Decker, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Decker, is em-
ployed in New Jersey.
Mr. and Mrs. Rogers spent Sun-
day in Trenton, N. J.
Ice Cream Social
W. S. C. S. will hold an ice cream
social in the church basement this
evening, Friday.
SHERIFF'S SALE
Friday, September 11, 1942, At
10 A. M.
By virtue of a writ of Fi Fa No.
60, October Term, 1942, issued out
of the Court of Common Pleas of
Luzerne County, to me directed,
there will be exposed to public sale
by vendue to the highest and best
| bidders, for cash, in Court Room
No. 1, Court House, in the City of
Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, on Friday, the 11th
day of September, 1942, at ten
o'clock in the forenoon of the said
day, all the right, title and interest
of the defendants in and to the fol-
lowing described lot, piece or parcel
of land, viz:
ALL that certain piece or parcel
of land situate in the Township of
Kingston, Luzerne County, Pennsyl-
vania, bounded and described as
follows:
BEGINNING at the Northwest cor-
ner of land now or late of Mrs. Mol-
kinburg on a cross street; THENCE
along line of said Molkinburg North
46 degrees 10 minutes East 73.5
feet to the Northeast corner of said
Molkinburg’s land; THENCE North
41 degrees West 87 feet to a corner
of land of the Estate of C. D. Fos-
tex; THENCE along the same South
49 degrees West 78 feet to a cor-
ner in the East line of the street
first aforesaid; THENCE along the
same South 44 degrees East 91.5
feet to the place of beginning. CON-
TAINING 6652 square feet of land,
more or less. IMPROVED with a
single two-story frame dwelling,
outhouses, etc. BEING the property
devised to Cleora B. Chamberlain
by the will of Clara Gould, recorded
in Luzerne County Will Book No.
53, page 53. ‘
Seized and taken into execution
at the suit of Rural Building &
Loan Association of Dallas, Pa., vs.
Karl Chamberlain and Cleora Cham-
berlain, and will be sold by
DALLAS C. SHOBERT, Sheriff.
B. B. LEWIS, Atty.
y
a
~
northeastern Pennsylvania.
PAGE SEVEN
- A
Pennsylvania Resorts Lure Many Vacationists
Penna. Department of Commerce Photos
Pennsylvania resorts are attracting many vacationists when wartime demands physical and mental
fitness to carry forward the big job.
Above are scene s at Eagles Mere, in the heart of the mountains in
LEGAL NOTICE
In the Orphans Court of Luzerne
County. Estate of R. D. Harrison,
deceased, No. 474 of 1941.
Notice is hereby given that Flor-
ence Wint Harrison, widow of the
said decedent, has filed in the said
Court her petition claiming her ex-
emption to the value of $5000 as
provided by Section 12 of the Fidu-
ciaries Act of 1917, out of premises
located in Cambra, Huntington
Township, Luzerne County, Pennsyl-
vania, described as follows:
BEGINNING at a point near Col-
umbia County line; thence along the
Kingsley line, South 68 degrees 00
minutes West 1,756 feet, more or
less, to a point; thence North 11
to a point; thence South 77 degrees
50 minutes West 170 feet to a point
on the road leading to Cambra;
thence along said road, North 10
degrees 05 minutes West 205.30
feet to a point; thence North along
a lane 61 degrees 52 minutes East
583.80 feet to a point on the State
road to Benton; thence along said
State road to Benton, South 79 de-
grees 52 minutes East 675 feet, more
or less; thence South 81 degrees 52
minutes East 142 feet to a point
along said road to Benton; thence
South 87 degrees 38 minutes East
227 feet to a point along said road;
thence North 86 degrees 10 minutes
East 221 feet to a point along said
road; thence North 78 degrees 37
minutes East 141.20 feet to the
place of beginning. Containing 15
acres of land, more or less. Im-
proved with a one-story frame
dwelling, bungalow type.
Excepting and reserving out of
the above described land the follow-
ing conveyances of record: One con-
veyance to Jacob Kerry by Welling-
ton Hughes and wife by deed dated
1888 and recorded in Deed Book
325, page 104, showing conveyance
of 125 perches of land; one con-
veyance to Alfred McHenry for 2
acre of land, recorded in Deed Book
684, page 426, conveying 42.2 acres
of land and a smaller piece; and
one conveyance to Charles Boyle,
dated August 22, 1932, recorded in
Deed Book 728, page 399, convey-
ing one acre of land beginning at
the intersection of the Susque-
hanna-Tioga Turnpike, with the ap-
purtenances. 2
And that the same may be ap-
proved by the Court on Sept. 8, 1942,
unless exceptions thereto be filed
before that time.
JOSEPH P. FLANAGAN,
Attorney for Petitioner.
READ THE POST
CLASSIFIED ADS.
KINGSTON, PA.
DIAL 72181
Mail Coupon
[J] Repairing
New Roofs, Siding
O
Please mail me complete
terial and labor, with no dow
charges.
Name
Address...
It is understood this coupon is for information only and
Ruggles Lumber Co.
RAILROAD AND UNION STREETS
I am interested in
Payment Plan on Building Costs which covers all cost of ma-
does not obligate me in any way.
Ruggles Lumber Co.
INCORPORATED
RAILROAD AND UNION STREETS, KINGSTON, PA.
For Information
[0] Remodeling
Rooms, Porches
Building
information about your Time and
n payment or other added finance
Dial 7-2181
degrees 55 minutes West 332.50 feet |
LEGAL NOTICE
Estate of Marilla E. Hoover, late
of the borough of Dallas, Luzerne
County, Pennsylvania, deceased.
Letters testamentary upon said
estate having been granted to the
undersigned, all, persons having
claims or demands against the es-
tate of the said decedent are hereby
requested to make known the same,
and all persons indebted to the said
decedent are requested to make
payment without delay to
Blanche M. Anderson,
Huntsville Road, or
Bertha M. Gordon,
22 Norton Ave., Dallas, Pa.
Executrices.
Edwin Shortz, Jr., Atty.
Wanta sell that old car, or sofa,
or even a piano? POST Classified
Ads can do it.
Me dod ths
PERSONAL, AUTOMOBILE
FARM EQUIPMENT
LOANS
QUICK, CONFIDENTIAL
COURTEOUS SERVICE
ov ese
IT IS NOT'NECESSARY TO BE
A DEPQSITOR TO APPLY
EOR A LOAN
THEW YOMING NATIONALBANK
STA REY GR YG ddd
FRANKLIN STREET ENTRANCE
fren "
Condition Your Dry Cows
Start getting them in condition NOW for heavy
milk production after freshening with
TI-0-GA DRY-FRESH DAIRY FEED
You'll see the difference.
DEVEN'S MILLING COMPANY
A. C. DEVENS, Owner
Kunkle, Pa. Dallas, Pa.
Phone 837-R-49 Phone 200
ATT
HEAR THE ROOSTERS CROW
Food for Freedom
Have you considered this business of raising broilers?
We've talked a lot about it lately. You know, of course,
that meat is going to be rationed . . . that there are short-
ages of beef, pork and lamb . . . that egg prices are
higher this summer than in years . . . that submarine
warfare off our coasts has reduced the available supply
of fish.
All this has a lot to do with the broiler business. You
can raise food for freedom in twelve weeks. That is the
time required to bring a chicken to 314 pounds.
For years chicken has been considered a food for
Sunday family dinners or for something a little special.
Do you know any reason why it shouldn’t be considered
in the same category with beef, pork and lamb, to be
served as an every day food? That is just what is happen-
ing. There aren’t enough broilers being grown to meet the
increasing demand.
If you have the buildings . . . if you are willing to give
the time . . . if you want to make some extra money,
come in and let us explain this broiler business to you.
Not a man this mill serves has lost a cent in the broiler
business. All have made nice profits and all are increas-
ing their flocks. That’s why you can—
“Hear the Roosters Crow”
Trucksville Mill
Stanley L. Moore, Owner
Main Highway Trucksville, Pa.
ET ET