EJ » . | ; FRIUA YY, DHEGH ER MBER 8 ) ni A POST CLASSIFIED AD The TRADING POST RESULTS QUICKLY ANB CHEAPLY IS THE PLACE TO GET Lip “PHONE DALLAS 300 ® TWO CENTS PER WORD @ 25c MINIMUM ED For Salo Brown enamel Heatrola. Heating capacity 3 or 4 rooms. In excel- lent condition. Reasonable. Phone Dallas 360-R-14. 49-1t \ 8 piece oak dining room suite. Rea- sonable. Phone 298-R-3. 49-1t x Baby Chicks—New Hampshire and Rock Red Crosses. Breeders all blood tested since October 20, 1942 and all consuming best ration to ‘produce strong chicks. 10c delivered. Telephone 31 R 11 Joe Davis, Leraysville, Pa. tf Cow Stanchions— Victory Model, made mostly of wood, has a good } ~~ lock and is plenty strong. You'll iV ~~ like them as well as steel. Price HW $2.25. 48-2t * Gay-Murray Co., Inc. il Hie New Hampshire Red and Barred : ~ Rock pullets, will lay in January. J $1.35 each. Take your pick of the it flock. Howard Risley, Dallas. HR Baby Chicks—New Hampshire and 3 Rock Red Crosses. Breeders all iho blood tested since October 20, 1942 and all consuming best ration to a . produce strong chicks. 12¢ delivered. i Telephone 31 R 11 Joe Davis, 1 Leraysville, Pa. tf Trappers—we give 3 day service on trap tags. Prices postpaid to you. 15 tags 50c—25 tags T75c—40 tags $1.00. We also have No. 1, No. 1%, and No. 2 traps. 48-2t Gay-Murray Co., Inc. Nei ae” For Sale—Rental Leases, For Sale signs, No Trespassing signs, No Hunting signs, For Rent signs, etc. The Dallas Post. Who's got lice? and they cost plenty. A large can of Graylawn SSeS Most cows have, the dairyman 5 ia 3 b louse killer will successfully treat 12 4 cows. It's guaranteed sure. $1.00 i postpaid to you. 48-2t a Gay-Murray Co., Inc. CL — Used Electric Refrigerators, recon Sol ditioned washing machines, part . | ~~gnd-service all makes. 267 Wyomin « Avenue, Kingston, 7-4514. 27- SRE Coal—Ralph D. Lewis, 128 Shaver Ave., Shavertown. Phone Dallas 253-R-8. 43-tf Who broke your harness? We don’t care who broke it—Emerson can fix it and oil it too, ready for another years’ work. Bring it in now. 48-2t Gay-Murray Co., Inc. Wanta sell that old car, or sofa, or even a piano? POST Classified Ads can do it. For Sale— Clearance Sale of used Baby Grend | Pianos. Every piano has been thoroughly reconditioned and guar- anteed like new. Prices especially low. Included are some of the world’s finest: Steinway, Chickering, Sohmer, Ludwig, Lester,” Doll and Sons, Wurlitzer and others. Terms or cash. Lizda’s Piano Store, 247 S. Main St., Wilkes-Barre. 49-41 Man’s pony skin fur coat. Excellent condition. Phone 472-R-2. 49-1¢ Male Help Wanted— Two men with some mechanical ability for night shift. Men past middle age will be considered. Must be U. S. citizens and able to prove citizenship. Post-O-Graf, Inc. Trucksville, Pa. 49-1t For Rent— Lawn Acres, 7-room house, all con- veniences, barn garage, 4 acres, Wyoming 118. 45-tf Wanted To Buy— Beef cattle, calves, fresh and com ing fresh cows. Highest price paid. I. Mellner, Kingston 72746. Miscellaneous— For prompt removal of dead, old disabled horses, sows, mules, phone Carl Crockett, Muhlenbur 19-R-4. Phone charges paid. 24% Dead Animals removed. Highest prices paid for dead er 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 Who To Call— We buy live horses, alse remove dead stock free of charge. We re- { fund telephone call expense. Call Dallag 433-R-9. Laskowski Render- ing Works. 30-tf THRIFTY PEOPLE APPRECIATE THE POST CLASSIFIED ADS Ruction Sale— Auction Sale: Dubil] Farm, 3 miles from Lehman on Nanticoke Road, Tuesday, December 15, 1 o'clock sharp. Good Farm Team (3,000 pounds,) four cows, three heifers, 1 bull, farm equipment. Terms cash. George Fedor, owner, Herman Sands, auctioneer. 49-2¢ Reupholstering— Make your fine old furniture new with its original wear and com- fort—Beautiful wide range of fab- rics. Low prices—Guaranteed work- manship. Write or Phone John Cur- tis, 7-5636—210 Lathrop street, Kingston. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF BIDS Bids are asked for an addition to be made to the Trucksville Volun- , teer Fire Company building. Those interested may obtain plans and specifications from Lewis Roushey, 63 Carverton Road, Trucksville, Pa. Phone Dallas 338-R-4. From Pillar To Post (Continued from Page 1) In one spot the script called for a chorus of voices, all reassuring Mrs. Wagstaff that her skin was lovely, positively girlish in fact, that she had slimmed down remarkably since embarking upon the course of beauty treatments, and that she didn’t look a day over thirty-five. Having yelped according to sched- ule and been reassured as to my charms, I was ready to call it a night and go home. Mr. Young restrained me. “Now right here,” he said, ‘is where you waddle out on your heels, plugs of cotton between your toes to avoid smearing the polish. Your cue is right after the pedicure says, ‘Now don’t put on your stockings yet, you'll smear that lovely big toenail!” Having waddled out on my heels, I made for the door. Once again Mr. Young forestalled me. z “Don’t go yet, I'm not through with you. You are going to be. the old sour-puss in the third act, third scene, the dowager who berates her debutante daughter for guzzling champagne and leading the Conga.” In this scene, the dowager halts in the middle of the stage, yanks down her girdle, and pins back the ears of her tearful daughter in a blistering diatribe. I began to feel a pardonable curi- osity, coupled with a faint but grow- ing suspicion. “Mr. Young,” I in- quired,” how did you happen to land on me for this particularly poisonous part? I realize that fig- uratively speaking it is a good fat part, but there are doubtless other well-preserved and overstuffed ma- trons around Wilkes-Barre and en- 11 a \ 5 | \ ol A \ FREEDOM OF SPEECH OUR DEMOCRACY— FIGHTING Fi NASER LAAN mn WW WN ee ry by Mat ea, ORR A848 THE RIGHTS OF ALLMEN EVERYWHERE =) If / ~~ FL) nw EDOM FROM — — WANT FREEDOM OF = RELIGION [viens who are better qualified to | carry this particular spear than I am “Darling,” he replied sooth- ‘ngly—all stage directors say dar- / 'ing—‘“There may be others who aave the figure, but it takes more than a figure. It takes a tough old bird who has no objections to mak- ing a fool of herself in public.” Or words to that effect. The play, in case you have not already guessed it, is “The Women.” The place, the Irem Temple. The date, two nights running, the thir- tieth and thirty-first of December. And in recognition of the glory reflected upon it by my participation in the coming event, I expect a bou- quet of cabbages or similar garden vegetation from the Dallas Post. But don’t strain your eyes look- ing for my name on the program. It won’t be there.- Along with thir- ty other supers, I carry my spear entirely anonymously. JACKSON Mrs. John Roskus and Miss Mal- vina Shouldice entertained mem- bers of the W.S.C.S. at the Should- ice home Wednesday. Steve Sparr of Allentown and Paul Tompkins of Wilkes-Barre are spending this week with Mrs. Emma Linsinbigler deer hunting. Olga Swelguyn who is employed at Newark spent the week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Swel- guyn. | Norman Franklin and Carlton returned to Philadelphia on Thanks- giving Day. Mrs. Ella Smith is quite ill at her home. Mrs. Margaret Eads and Mrs. John Sholtis have recovered from the influenza. Misses Jane and Marjorie Smith who are employed in Newark spent the weekend with their parents, Mr. {and Mrs. Corey Smith. THE LISTENING POST - ‘By THE VETERAN Post and note that of eleven fore- casts printed in regard to national and war situations there have been nine fulfilled and only two left to unfinished business. Coal companies are suspect in Washington. The reason they are under a pall of doubt is that field agents of the United Mine Workers have reported a plan among the mine owners to use the war as a means of breaking-down not only the five-day week and the short day but also for putting a premium price on hard coal. President Roo- sevelt and his War Cabinet, as well as the War Labor Board, have com- plete knowledge of the fact that the ‘demand for a full six-day week in tirely on a scheme for adding costs to delivered tonnage. 5 An extra day of work would be accepted by the miners if they were permitted to draw time and one- half pay. The companies say they will give that extra compensation if they are permitted to raise the ton price of coal. The increased coal prices would apply on tonnage for all days of the week, covering not only the time-and-one-half pay but also bloated profits on production for five regular-hour days. Back of that scheme it has been discovered A8 a definite shortening of present output. The sudden change, as re- ported to official quarters, is the result of co-operative work between i the railroad brotherhoods and the | mine union. Checking of coal trains shows that i some of the large corporations have cut down as far as two-thirds on a | day’s output of coal. At one of the largest collieries in the Luzerne County region it was shown that a day’s normal haul of one hundred | twenty cars of prepared coal had { dwindled to only forty cars ready {for the markets. The result was that the railroaders suffered in wages just as the fuel-famished East suffered in reduction of stock piles. Only the intervention of the union workers and their agents foiled the effort to foster the extra day’s work as a cost-boom scheme. At least two approaches have ' been made to United Mine Workers | Chief John L. Lewis on the proposi- tion of resuming earlier pleasant re- | lations with the New Deal. No one i would openly say that!' President | Roosevelt himself had dictated any ! course of action; nevertheless, it . definitely has been suggested to | Lewis that if he would call around he would find a welcome. To the | intermediaries the answer of Lewis | has been that he is too busy looking | after war production from the | mines, labor schedules and other | matters, but he remembered to | bring to. the front the tremendous | investments the mine unions are | making in their country’s present | safety and future prosperity. The United Mine Workers have ‘taken out war bonds to a total of i hundreds of thousands of dollars, in as large amounts as the Treasury | allows and as often as the subscrip- | tions are open. Lewis sees to it | that monthly accounting is made public in that regard. And, too, he {is on the inside of every govern- mental development, thanks to the fact that his secretary-treasurer, Thomas Kennedy of Hazleton, is a member of the War Labor Board and is excused for at least half of every business day from the United Mine Workers offices so that he may | ottond War Labor affairs. * Lewis has rejected all appeals that he take to the radio, just as he has rejected the suggestions of making a call at the White House. But, in the quiet of his offices off Franklin Square in Washington he foretold what was going to happen to the New Deal in the recent elections. Democrats who have been in con- } tact with him for old time's sake | were given warning that the Re= publicans would make a come-back in such Congressional strength as to put an end to fiat government when next the Congress goes into session. Politics is no small diversion in government. The New York State interference with world affairs was only a sample of how closely the | country is being watched. It has come to be settled common sense with the New Dealers that if the y Labor strength is divided in the | 1944 elections there will be a change of party so far as the Presidency is concerned. Meanwhile, as between the coal operators and the unions, the public needs for its own good to stand with the Lewis outfit. Any increases in the price of coal will badly jangle what is left of the an- thracite market and make worse than before the economy of north- eastern Pennsylvania. { Pear] Harbor Report It will be a year late, but exactly the anthracite region is based en-- Reprimands for anthracite-producing corporations and a definitely new understanding between President Roosevelt and International Pres- ident John L. Lewis of the United Mine Workers are forecast in circles upon which all behind-the-lines war efforts impinge. gard to predictions it may be well to look over back issues of The Dallas By the way, in re- what happened at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, will be explained to the American people by Elmer Davis on the anniversary of Japan's shattering blow against the United States Navy. There will be no sur- prise if, within four weeks of the Davis report, there also is announ- ced official retirement of Davis from the Office of War Information. No newspaperman, excepting one actually in need of a job, could very long tolerate the evasions and snub- bings under which the Davis office has ‘existed as long as it has. And Davis is one man who has no need to hunt for a job. Either as repor- ter, war correspondent or radio commentator he can connect within a minute of announcing willingness Farmers Want Machines Farmers Co-Operative Association, operating out of Benton with Roy Hess as policy maker, will join var- ious other agricultural units in an ultimratum to Washington before the planting season is here again. Tak- ing the United States as a whole and despite the labor shortage and potato blights, there was produced by the farms twenty-two percent more food than in the year 1941. Added to the crops was a fourteen percent increase in milk production. This week it was announced that another cut of twenty percent will be made in farm machinery. Of all durable goods output, counting only goods made from iron and steel, farm machinery is exactly two percent. With two million men taken from the farms by draft and enlistment and another half mil- lion posted for service, the farmers will make it clear that unless more machinery, instead of less, is given them they cannot equal last year’s performance. One-third of their crops went into United Nations Lend-Lease support and their argu- ment will be that with the cause of democracy on the path to victory the year 1943 should have no re- tardations against food supplies. If their request for machines is rejected there will be a flood of retirements from farms that already are a drug on the market. Longest War "mia am LAB) ALAAAAAA ANALY ~—— aT dy 5 THESE CHINESE SOLDIERS holding a height above a river have been fighting the war against the Axis longer than any other United Nations forces. For 11 years, since the invasion ¢ Manchuria on Sept. 18, 1931, they have stubbornly resisted J. apan.y:.e front where they are now fighting here is in Suiyuan Province mn ianer Mongolia. FREE POSTS FOR SOLDIERS Bpplication And Change Of Address Form Soldiers Name. on Bl A Home Address eniodi lala rh ature bas im Lol ol a Barents NaI Ln rR ds a Address oR a Telephone Number or nearest Telephone Soldier’s Birthday If married, wife’s maiden name.......__. SS EN EE EE CO Soldierls Present Address....o......co lt LT No Free Posts will be sent to any soldier unless this coupon is completely filled out, properly signed by sender and filed at the Dallas Post. . v ~ arn e + SS ERLE Have You a Man in the Service of Our Country? Son? Husband? Brother? Father? Employe? (Daughter? Sister?) Then You Must Be Proud Enough of Him (or Her) to : Display An Official War Service Flag In the Window of Your Home or Store or Plant. Think What They're Secure Your Flag at: ‘THE DALLAS POST « i E =X : : Doing For You. ® Size 8" x12” 3 : ® Guaranteed Washable ® A Blue Star for each person in service ® The added *“V” Symbolizes the Service Flag of Today ® Not a print but a heavy woven material @ This is 1942 version of official Service Flag used in World War 1 Only each 7