The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, November 20, 1942, Image 5

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THE POST, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1942
PAGE FIVE
Trucksville Mothers To Send Boxes
To Boys In Service On Christmas
Mrs. Harry Montz of Harris Hill
Road, Trucksville, entertained Ser-
vice Mothers Club at her home on
Monday evening. The meeting op-
ened with singing of America with
Mrs. William A. Rhodes at the
piano. Mrs. Herbert Williams led
devotion. Birthday boxes were sent
to boys whose birthdays are in Nov-
ember and plans outlined to send
Christmas boxes to all boys in the
service. Next meeting will be held
at the home of Mrs. Eugene Piatt on
December 28. Present were: Mrs.
Wilbur Nichols, Mrs. William
Rhodes, Mrs. John Richards, Mrs.
Harold Yorks, Mrs. John C. Lewis,
Mrs. Albert Williams Jr., Mrs. Evan
W. Evans, Mrs. Bruce Long, Mrs.
Arch Woolbert, Mrs. Herbert Wil-
liams, Mrs, Eugene Piatt, Mrs. Leo
Carey, Mrs. Fred Williams, Mrs. C.
A. Perkins, Mrs. Leon Dalley and
Mrs. Paul Hughey.
Limited Twenty
Elect Officers
Club Owns Two Cabins
On Forkston Mountain
Members of the Limited Twenty
Gun Club who own 140 acres of wild
land and two cabins on Forkston
Mountain in Wyoming County, held
their annual meeting and election of
officers Monday night at the home
of Dr. F. Budd Schooley.
Officers unanimously reelected
were: Frank Turner, Noxen, presi-
dent; A. A. Dimmock, Noxen, sec-
retary-president. James Traver,
Noxen, was elected to a $100 mem-
bership.
The club made plans for the big
game season and voted to raise the
daily charge for guests to $1.50 a
day from $1.
Among the other members of the
club are: Lewis Hackling, Noxen
postmaster; Richard Richards, James
Strohl, Albert Ruff, Oscar Hackling,
Edgar Engleman, Thomas Patton,
John MacMillan, all of Noxen; Clar-
ence Boston, Nicholson; W. Fassett
Crosby, Baltimore; Cory Crispell,
‘Wilkes-Barre, and Dr. Schooley, Dal-
las.
Guests during the current season
will be Harry Beam, Noxen; and
Daniel Berlitz, Hazleton.
Rev. Prynn To Preach
On Famous Painting
On Sunday evening at the First
Methodist Church, Rev. Austin L.
Prynn will preach a sermon based
on the painting by William Holman
Hunt, “The Light of the World.”
Hunt painted this picture in 1854
and crowded into it such a wealth
of symbolism that it is quite im-
possible to see all that is there
without a guide to point the details
out and to offer some interpretation
of their meaning. A steropticon
slide in which the coloring of the
original has been faithfully copied
will be used in explaining the teach-
ings o’ this great painting. Enough
copies of the picture in colors have
been ordered so that each person
attending the service may have one
to remind him of its lesson. A
notebook and pencil will enable
those present to take notes, if they
so desire.
Idetown Scouts
Idetown Girl Scouts enjoyed a
treasure hunt at their meeting Mon-
day evening. Dorothy Fritz found
the treasure. Others present were:
Evelyn Keller, Elsie Jean Ide, Mar-
ilyn Williams, Jean Ide, Irma Cal-
kins, June Swan, Ethel Ide, Betty
Warner, Hazle Garinger, Larain Kel-
ler, Mrs. Rossman and Miss Eliza®
beth Sorber.
FIRSTAID Emergency Needs are your safe-
guard against infection at home — so often
caused by neglect of minor cuts and bruises.
Keep a supply of these famous products
handy always. They're made and packaged
under rigid supervision =— many are double
sterilized to give you the utmost in protec-
tion. Don’t take chances =— buy FIRSTAID
Emergency Needs now. They are sold only
at the Rexall Drug Store.
3
Evans Drug Store
On the New Highway in Shavertown
fr) 3
a, LIE
= | Subject,
George Turn Is
Now Lieutenant
Insurance Man Given
U. S. Navy Commission
George Turn has been“appointed
a Lieutenant, Junier ‘Grade, in the
United States Naval Reserve and
will leave December 1st for Har-
vard University, Cambridge, Mass.,
where he will be indoctrinated and
later take a course in communica-
tions before being assigned to active
duty.
Mr. Turn is a partner with his
sister, Ruth Turn Reynolds, in the
George J. Reynolds Insurance Agen-
cy in Wilkes-Barre, His home is on
Oak street, Trucksville, where he
has been a resident for the past
five years. 3
Before coming to this region Mr.
Turn was District Agent for the
Equitable Insurance Company of
Iowa in Scranton, and before that
with the Traveller's Insurance Com-
pany in New York City. He gradu?
ated from Lehigh University in
1930.
He is a member of Trucksville
Methodist Church, president of the
Men's Club of that church and for
two years was secretary of
Greenwood Kiwanis. He is program
chairman of the University Club. Mr.
Turn was sworn into the navy at
Philadelphia on Friday.
District Youth Council
District Youth Council will meet
at East Dallas Methodist Church
Monday evening at 8 o'clock. Next
Friday the Youth Council will have
a Night of Fun at the church.
Beaumont Union
Have you dropped in lately to
one of our old-fashioned gospel ser-
vices? If not, do so next Sunday
night and you will enjoy the old
gospel songs and time of old-fash-
ioned fellowship together.
School, 10:00; Gospel Hour, 8 P. M.
Pastor K. K. Elgena.
Silver Leaf Club
Silver Leaf Club will meet at the
home of Mrs. Victor Rydd Tuesday
night. Hostesses will be Mrs. Leroy
Hess, Mrs, Victor Rydd, Miss Fran-
cess Hess and Mrs. Ray Henney. All
members are urged to attend. Elec-
tion of officers will take place and
all outstanding ‘‘talent money” to
be paid.
| DALLAS CHURCH NOTES
| First Methodist Church. Rev.
Austin L. Prynn, Minister. Mrs. Har-
old Rood,. Organist-Director.
The Church School at 10 A. M.
Morning Worship at 11. Sermons
i by the minister.
“Am I Poor In Spirit?”
Air
Junior = Sermon—*‘Fires or
Raids”.
The Methodist Youth Fellowship
| at 6:30 P. M. :
*:| Evening Worship at 7:30 P. M.
Sermon — “The the
World.”
Wednesday at 7:30 P. M.— The
Mid-Week Prayer Service.
Subject—*‘Suffered Under Pontius
Pilate, Was Crucified, Dead, and
Buried.”
Thursday at 10 A. M.—The An-
nual Thanksgiving Service.
Sermon subject— ‘The Test of
Thanksgiving”’—1 Timothy 4:4.
Friday at 8—The Durbin Class.
Light of
Coffee Rationing For
Institutions Starts
Coffee rationing for institutional
users will start on Monday. All
restaurants, colleges, and other
places where coffee is brewed for
resale will register with the local
board. Applications will be taken in
alphabetical order as follows, Mon-
day, November 13, A to H inclu-
sive; Tuesday, November 24, I to R
| inclusive; Wednesday, November 25,
Is to Z inclusive.
Two new inspection stations for
tire and gasoline rationing have also
{been designated by the Dallas Board.
They are Harold's Garage 20-13 at
Lehman Heights, and Johnson’s
Mt.
Sunday | women in every commu-
| torchlight parades, fash-
Garage 20-12, Main Rpad, Trucks- !
J ville.
Gobble Your Thanksgiving Pie
BEEP dessert traditional for
A Thanksgiving. Serve Pumpkin
Pie but give it a new touch with a
special pastry and a top shaped
lie the holiday bird itself. To
make the turkey simply cut a paper | 1; cup All-Bran .14 teaspoon salt
pattern, lay it on the pastry and |13 cups flour ¥% cup shortening
cut around it. e 4 tablespoons cold water (more or less)
Complete directions follow: ho All-Bran val Anes combine
s with flour and salt. Cut in shorten-
1 ren Hone Umikin Die ing. Add water, a little at a time,
Bran pastry Kin until dough is moist enough to hold
(350°F.) and continue baking 45
minutes or until a knife inserted in
the center comes out clean. Yield:
One 9-inch pie.
All-Bran Crust
2 shell ¥ cup honey oh together. Roll out on lightly floured
egRS easpoon s 01 i
3 wile Foon board to about one-eighth inch
in thickness.
Turkey Silhouette
Roll out leftover pastry. Draw
outline of turkey on white paper,
place on pastry and cut around pat-
tern with sharp pointed knife. Bake
in hot oven (450°F.) 10 minutes.
Place on top of baked pie.
1% cup cream namon
= 15 teaspoon ginger.
Prepare All-Bran pastry shell.
Beat eggs slightly; add remaining
ingredients and mix thoroughly.
Pour into unbaked pastry shell and
bake in hot oven (450°F.) about 15
minutes. Reduce heat to moderate
Record War Bond Sales Is Goal
Of Women At War Week Nov. 22
WASHINGTON, D. C.—America’s women in the cities and on the farms
—in war factories and in their homes—are determined to make Women At
War Week the greatest War Bond selling effort since Pearl Harbor.
Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt sounded the keynote for the Treasury Depart-
ment’s Women At War Week, Nov. 22 to 28; with an appeal to women to save
.on ‘little things’ to pro-
vide money for War Bonds.
‘““We women want to
work hard, we want to be
a part of this strenuous
period because unless we
are, we will not be able to
face the men when they
return and claim our
share of the future respon-
sibility for building a
peaceful world,” the First
Lady declared.
The overall direction of
Women At War Week rests
with the Women’s Section
of the War Savings Staff
under the leadership of
Miss Harriet Elliott,
Associate Field Director,
and Mrs. Henry Morgen-
thau, Jr., Chief of the
Special Activities Unit.
From coast to coast
a2
nity have made plans for
During Women At War Week volunteer War Bond
S jalesyomen win Lid an Zhang simjlaz to pe one
store window displays, being attached to the sleeve of Mrs. Henry Morgen-
Stamp and Bond booths, thau, Jr., by Miss Harriet Elliott.
pageants, civic sings, balls and mardi gras. In each locality administration
of the one week drive rests with the local War Savings Committee which
has worked out activities adapted to their areas.
Mrs. Morgenthau, in a special message for Women At War Week, de-
clared that the spirit of America’s pioneer women lives today more strongly
than ever.
‘The average American woman began to rise to new heights on Sunday,
Dec. 7, 1941,” Mrs. Morgenthau said. ‘This winter the average American
woman will be spending less in order to save more to invest in War Bonds
and Stamps. She will not, please God, ever have to fire a gun or fly a
bomber. But she will, please God, always do everything she can to help
buy anything—and the best of everything—that fires or flies or floats in this
terrible war.”
ion shows, teas, rallies,
WOMEN AT WAR—Overalls, wrenches and drills replace fineries as these war
workers in an Army Arsenal march to tank repair shops. Note the determination
on their faces. These women are typical of hundreds of thousands who are working
in war factories and investing part of their earnings in War Bonds.
Mrs. Roosevelt (left) says women Relp men at front by buying War Bonds. At
right i the lapel tag which volunteers will wear during Women At War Week, Nov.
22 to 28.
CONTACT
for
Service
Men
Hicks Praises
Local Training
Air Cadet” Warren Hicks, former
associate jeditor of The Dallas Post,
has about completed his primary
flight school work at Souther Field,
Americus, Georgia, and is ready to
be sent elsewhere for basic training,
probably Macon or Greenville. Of
the eight boys who took the final
checkup a week ago, seven “washed
out.” The remaining pilot was War-
ren. He believes the civilian course
which he took at Wyoming Valley
Airport was of great value in giving
him the feel of the air ahead of
time.
Guadalcanal Weather Hot
In a V-mail letter written to his
parents on October 21, Willard
Shaver, with the United States Ma-
rines on Guadalcanal, says the
weather has been very nice al-
though hot. He also says his cous-
ins, Howard and Elwood Whitesell
are still with him.
Fogle On Tulagi
Many of his old friends in Dallas
will be glad to know that The Post
has established contact with Pvt.
Eugene J. Fogle, a former local
boy who is now serving with the
United States Marines at Tulagi in
the Solomon Islands. This week a
free Post, as it will every week, will
start its long trip to the Solomons
to give “Gene” the news of his old
home town. Of Tulagi, “Gene” says,
“This is a nice place except when it
rains and that’s often.” The address:
Pvt. E. J. Fogle, unit 310 U.S.M.C.
c-0 Postmaster, San Francisco.
Girvan Drills And Reads
While Pvt. Bob Girvan was home
on furlough last week from Camp
Shelby, Miss., he stopped in the
| office of The Post to subscribe for
the paper for his brother John who
is now located in Milwaukee. Ore-
gon. Bob also said that the Post
has got him in a lot of trouble at
different times because he always
reads his copy as soon as it lands in
camp and hag frequently taken it
out on the parade grounds with him
only to be “bawled out” by officers
for inattention to the job at hand.
Local Boys
On Guadalcanal
Two local families received letters
from their sons recently saying that
they were with the United
States forces in Guadalcanal. Mr.
and Mrs. Leo Carey received a V for
Victory letter Monday from their
son, P.F.C. Carl K. Carey. A Ma-
rine in active duty there, he is in
fine health and spirits.
The other home town boy is P.F.C.
Robert Davis of Dallas, who sent
word of his location to his mother,
Mrs. Paul Scott, on October 26.
Both boys want the folks to write
as often as possible. They are all
on the watch for mail.
Rusiloski Brothers Home
P.F.C. Daniel Rusiloski and Ches-
ter Rusiloski, Seaman 1st Class,
spent the last weekend as guests of
their mother, Mrs. Frances Rusiloski
of Huntsville. This was the first
time the boys have met since en-
listment.
Dan brought home a rattlesnake
skin which he himself had tanned.
He and another Marine killed this
5% foot snake while on jungle ma-
neuvers in North Carolina.
Ehrets Promoted
Corporal Technician Sheldon
Ehret of Camp Lockett, Campo, Cal-
ifornia, has been made Sergeant
Technician, fourth class, according
to word received by his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Ehret of Lehman.
His brother, Private Glenn Ehret
has been made Private First Class,
recently. Glenn entered the service
July 15, 1942 and is going to school
at Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Mary-
land.
Oney In Inquirer
The Philadelphia Inquirer in its
Picture Parade recently carried the
photographic story of Carlisle Bar-
racks, United States Army Medical
Training Center. In one of the pic-
tures is Corp. Norman Oney Jr., son
of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Oney of
Trucksville. Norman is the soldier
with the simulated broken leg upon
which Army medical men are work-
ing.
William Baker, son of Mr. and
Mrs. William Baker of Lehman ave-
nue, has been made sergeant tech-
nician at Mitchell Field, L. I.
William Sutton is spending a fur-
lough with his family, Mr. and Mrs.
Gilbert Sutton on Pinecrest avenue.
Bill is stationed at the Great Lakes
Naval Training School.
P.F.C. Donald Gabel has arrived
safely in England, according to a
letter received by his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Gabel of Trucksville.
He enjoyed his trip across.
Alfred. J. Brown, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James E. Brown of Shaver-
town, was promoted to the rank of
Corporal on September 9th. Cor-
poral Brown enlisted in December,
1940 and is now stationed at Camp
Livingston, Louisiana. Hig brother,
Arja E. Brown, joined him in
the service of Uncle Sam on Nov-
ember 2nd. He is now stationed at
Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri. These
two are all the sons Mr. and Mrs.
Brown have.
Sergeant William J. Snyder, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Snyder of
Claude Street, is spending a ten day
furlough with his parents. Bill is
stationed at Key Field, Meriden,
Mississippi.
Reupholstering—
Lowest prices—guaranteed work-
manship write or phone 7-5636
John Curtis, 210 Lathrop Street,
Kingston.
Other Beauty
Items
Dallas 397 — FERNBROOK
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-~ j
EVANS DRUG STORE
On The New Highway At Shavertown
When you buy any Rexall product, you get better values
—but when you buy the Economy Size packages shown
in this advertisement, the values and savings to you are
tremendcus—check these prices now!
60c Alka-Seltzer 49¢
60c Sal-Hepatica 49¢
75¢ Dextri
Maltose -...63c
WAR BONDS
AND STAMPS
ECONOMY SIZE
REX-EME
MEDICATED SKIN CREAM
Used by men and women
alike. Ideal for pore cleans-
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“FULL PINT 49¢ SIZE
MASCAL’S ALMOND
PRESCRIPTION
POINTERS
When you bring your doctor’s
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Our double - check system
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The next time—try the Rexall
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HAND LOTION
Softens, smooths, helps pro-
m roughening effect
of wind and weath-
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after washing for
extra hand care.
32
PRODUCT
JONTEEL VELOUR 3 for
POWDER PUFFS {Qc
fine quality 2%"
A Rexall PRODUCT
REMEMBER THE Rexall DRUG STORE FOR BEST VALUES ALWAYS
1] NLA
60c Pertussin 5lc
85c¢ Sloan’s Liniment . .. 29c¢
60c Bromo Seltzer ........ 49c
35¢ Bromo Quinine .._ Ric
25¢c Ex Lax ............__. Heri 19¢
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