Ate Millions Across Without A Loss SEND MAIL © © © IEEE 15¢ - 25¢ - $1.25 Per Package | $1.00 - $2.97 i 43c - 8%¢ yous 49¢ - $1.69 IPENTA DROPS $1.13 ERMIFUGE (Jaynes) 15¢ jj os TEROL 25¢ -RFACUUM BOTTLE $1.39 ICEROY CIGARETTES 15¢ APO CRESOLENE 29c EGETABLE COMPOUND 98¢c jane 10c yes 21c - 39¢ ITAPETS For Dogs 49¢ ERACOLATE TABLETS 100—89¢ EVANS DRUG STORE sua\/ ErTowN “ON THE NEW HIGHWAY” From Pillar To Post (Continued from Page One) spade along with the seeds and buy the fresh vegetables at the corner grocery. Fortunately, civic pride combined with a good health egotism combine to keep the amateur digger up on his toes and down on his heels, and the second week of intensive culti- vation brings with it the second wind. Many a front yard paved with hard-pan and furnace ashes is about to get the surprise of its life, and many a personal spare-tire is about to melt away under the influence of the spring sunshine, the prelimin- ary spading, the eternal hoeing and weeding, and the pursuit of the agile potato-bug. Such activity has a way of pro- moting complete relaxation immedi- ately after sundown, with an over- whelming desire to hit the hay with the nightingale instead of the morn- ing robin. Expensive body contour- ing salons charge real folding money for stream-lining the figure. Stream- [ine it yourself, and have a truck- patch instead of a depleted pocket | book to show for the lost poundage and the increased muscle fiber. With the point-system of food rationing in full swing, and the point requirements for each canned vegetable twice as high as foreseen by the most pessimistic, Victory | Gardens are promoted from the pa- triotic-gesture class to the class of absolute necessity. There need be no hardship in the matter of rationing food, if each family is willing to do its share. There are plenty of cereal foods on hand, plenty of wheat, plenty of rice. There will undoubtedly and inevitably be a lack of the variety that we have been. accustomed to [expect on our dinner tables. So what? If everybody makes a point of growing tomatoes for summer use ba for winter canning, the vita- mins and minerals contained in this most versatile of vegetables will ad- equately balance the starches. Tomatoes are probably the most important vegetable that can be grown. People crossing the desert take along canned tomatoes to allay thirst. Tomatoes make a marvelous tomato-butter, and their use in ev- eryday cookery is varied as the patches in an old-fashioned quilt. It seems reasonable to suppose that only those people fortunate to have large and sunny plots of ground should attempt to grow anything that takes up as much room as potatoes and corn, but surely almost everybody has room for a few tomato plants. Several years ago, in fact, imme- diately after the last world confla- gration, with the Armies of Occupa- tion still in Europe and the Stars and Stripes flying from the Ehren- breitstein, I had occasion to take a trip down the Moselle River. After twenty-five years, the terraced gar- dens along the river stand out in my mind as marvels of engineering ingenuity. The slope was so pre- cipitous that walls of solid masonry assisted nature in providing space {Resolutions Sent To Mrs. Thomas Him for the grave vines. A perpendicular twenty-foot wall provided precari- | ous toe-hold for three little grape- vines. There was, of course, no pos- | sibility of cultivation except by | hand, as nothing less sure-footed ! than .a mountain ‘goat could have | negotiated those precipitous slopes. From the road along the river far | below, the walls had the appearance of actually leaning toward each: other, and I have always been con- vinced that the harvesting of the done with a vacuum cleaner. | Nimble-footed children of six, wearing little work smocks of black sateen, worked side by side with smocked oldsters of eighty-four, | painfully scratching the thin soil on | the narrow ledges and exercising | great care that not a spoonful of the precious soil be lost. Fertilizer | was carried up the winding cork- | screw paths in wicker baskets ar- | ranged papoose-fashion on the back of the gardener. One mis-step and | the gardener, basket, fertilizer'and | jall, would have been in the river | | below. | There is enough rich land lying | crop was j | {idle in this country to feed the starving people of the world, and with no such expedients as those | practiced in overcrowded lands | | where each square foot must earn | | its board and keep. But people will : have to spend energy and time over | | and above the forty-hour week if | anything of real value is to be ac- | complished. | | State Expert Here | Disease and insect control for po- | tatoes and vegetables will be dis- jcussed by O. D. Burke and John | Deal, State College experts, at a | meeting to which all growers are | invited Wednesday morning, March 10 at 8 p. m. in Carverton Grange legal, Grieved by the loss of one of their most faithful members and church workers, members of the Official Board and Board of Trustees of Dallas Methodist Church have prepared the following resolutions to be published in The Dallas Post and sent to the wife and daughters of the late Thomas P. Him. The resolutions: : Official Board of the First Metho- dist Church of Dallas, Pennsylvania, is faced with a real sense of loss in the passing of Mr. Thomas P. Him, who at the time of his death was a member of the Board of Trustees, Treasurer of the Current Expense Fund, Church Lay Leader, member of the Board of Stewards and of the Finance Committee. He was in- tensely interested in the program of the Church and was helpful in plan- ning and carrying out that program. His thoughtful and common sense advice was a real contribution to the Boards and the minister. Therefore, we desire to record our feeling of loss and to express to his wife and daughters, our deepest sympathy in our common loss. Through prayer we have already and will continue to claim for you the sustaining power of the grace of God. : The Boards by their actions on March 2, 1943 directed that a copy of this expression of sympathy be sent to the family of Mr. Him and to The Dallas Post. FOR THE OFFICIAL BOARD William M. Baker, President, ; Board of Trustees. Arthur P. Keefer, Secretary, ~ Official Board. Austin L. Prynn, Minister. Eleven Thousand Register For War Ration Book Two (Continued from Page One) of equalling the populations of Jef- ferson, Montour and Wyoming coun- ties. Registrations follow: Dallas Bor- ough 1,540; Dallas Township 2,131; Lake Township: Laketon, 1,002; Loyalville 476; Jackson Township: Ceasetown school, 171; Hillside school, 214; Mountain school, 194; Oakdale school, 179; Rome school, 259; Kingston Township: Trucksville, 2,050; Shavertown, 1,589; Lehman Township, 1,397. Fire Damages Home Fire damaged the home of O. H. Gordon at Pike's Creek yesterday morning to the extent of $3,500. Daniel C. Roberts Fire Company re- sponded. Horrified Workers Unabl ‘to Free Former Dallas Man (Continued from Page One). I while waiting for the second loco- motive to pick up their train. ‘train reached Kingston four hours late with all traffic on the line tied up for that period. Before moving to Koonsville about two years ago, “Billie” Davis was employed by Arthur Newman. He was a youth of excellent character and in the words of Mr. Newman, ! “a wonderful kid, who could be de- pended upon to do a job well?” Un- ' til last Thanksgiving his mother and step-father, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Scott, lived on the old Dallas Fair Ground, Mr. Scott being employed by Mr. Newman. Shickshinny. About three months ago, ‘Billie’ Davis married Claire Schultz of Koonsville and the couple had been ‘living with her grand- mother, Mrs. Abie Search. Besides his wife and mother, he leaves a brother, Robert Davis who was with the U. S. Marines on Guadalcanal, and a sister, Mrs. Peter Bomboy of New York City. A graduate of Dallas Township High School, he had been employed by the Sordoni Company for the past two years. He attended ser- vices at the Koonsville Methodist Church. The funeral was held Tues- day afternoon from Markle Funeral Home in Shickshinny with inter- ment at Shickshinny. Jimmy Kresge Dies On Way To Hospital (Continued from Page One) pallbearers. Neighborhood children, | Harold ~ Niemeyer, Betty Nelson, | Morris Kline, Harry McNeal, Steve | Pabliclk and Kenneth Warden, car- ried the many beautiful floral tri- butes from the school, his class, neighbors, the family, and friends. Rev. John W. Ashelman officiated. Interment was in the West Pittston Cemetery. Lenten Service Subject Reverend Clayton W. Hoag, pas- tor of the White Church on the Hill of Trucksville, announces that dur- ing the Lenten season, the messages on Sunday Evening will be on the general subject: ‘Personalities of the Passion” in which biographical sketches will be given on some of the men and women associated with Jesus in His latter days upon the earth. A Post Classified Ad is the place to get results quickly and cheaply! ‘MARY WORTH’S FAMILY The | The family now lives in | Who Will Win The Ch Dallas Borough The Dallas Boro Boys’ Basketball team, trying to take its fourth { championship in a row, has had one of the best seasons since it en- {tered the Back Mountain League | quite a few years ago. The team | has suffered one setback during the | ten-game schedule, that being to Dallas Township who is tied for | first place with the Boro. The Boro team averages 52.7 j points per game, while their op- { ponents average 43.2 points per ' game. The success of the team is due to the cooperation of the team it- self, the Coach, Howard C. Tinsley, |and the managers, William Bogart, land Paul Helfrich. The individual scoring is as fol- lows: Player Pos. Pts. Henry. Urban F. 121 Bob Moore F. 107 | Harold Brobst, (Capt.) G. 106 Clinton Brobst C. 88 Bob Gross G. 29 Ed. Tutak F. 28 Bob Roberts F. 16 Charles Moore G. 15 i Harold Roberts G. 13 | Jack Nelson C. 4 | | Total = 527 Of these ten players, four will be {leaving “this year, namely, Harold | Brobst, Bob Moore, Harold Roberts, land Ed. Tutak. —Boro Reporter. |Entoriain Neighbors At Benefit Tea Party Mrs. Joseph Schmerer and Mrs. David Brace entertained about twen- ty of their neighbors at a benefit neighborhood tea at the Schmerer home last evening. These neighborhood teas spon- sored by the Ways and Means Com- mittee of Dallas W. S. C. S. are be- ing enthusiastically received by women of the community. Plans have been outlined for an antique show to be held some time in May when several local dealers will ar- range displays and every woman of the community will be asked to help. By June it is expected that the budget of the Ways and Means Committee will be met. | | | | Recapped Tires Persons needing recaps for pas- senger cars will no longer apply to | the local rationing board but may go directly to their dealer. Recaps for passenger cars are no longer ra- tioned. MRS.WORTH? I'M GRIFFIN: J) SPECIAL INVESTIGATOR FROM THE FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY! COME IN GOVERNOR BLACKSTON SAID YOU WOULD CALL: , PLEASE! POINT - - THE FIRE WAS DISCOVERED BY YOUR SON, WAS IT NOT ? I'LL GO RIGHT TO THE BIFF WAS WORKING! SLIM . CARRIED OUT THE TWO Dallas Township The game to be played tonight on the Kingston Township floor be- tween Dallas Township and Dallas Boro will decide who will take the championship cup this year. Town- ship team has had a good season so far, winning nine games and losing only one to Dallas Boro. Much of the credit for the team’s success goes to the coach, Lloyd Drake, who replaced Gerald Snyder at the beginning of the season. This is his first year at Dallas Township. Individual scoring at this point of the season is as follows: Player Pos. Pts. Martin F. 119 H. Dymond F. 97 Bittenbender C. 67 Morris G. 53 Brace F. 15 Kozemchak G. 52 Wilson F. 8 Kozik G. 6 Sheppellman Tv 5 Garbutt C: 3 Hughey G. 3 Szela G. 2 McManus G. 2 Patrick F. 0 Cooke F. 0 Total © 432 —Twp. Reporter. akes Second Place The Back Mountain Girls’ Basket- ball League ended its season with a bang last Friday night when: Lake- ton met Kingston Township on the latter's floor. Laketon won over K. T. with a 43-20 score and took the cup for the second successive year. after a not too easy struggle with Lehman for the title. Betty Ann Newhart brought in 20 of those 43 points for the winning team. Betty seems to be an expert at “bringing home the bacon”, for her ) seasons’ points add up to 118. Mary Delany isn’t far behind with 93 points, followed by Lois Grey, 48 points, and Margaret Bombay, 24 points. Bouquets to the guards for their splendid work during the sea- son—“Shorty” Genevieve "Gulitus, Bertha Kern and Jean Newhart —. and also to the coach, Florence Hausch, who certainly did a grand bit of coaching. Other members of the Laketon squad are Doris Kocher, Marjorie Shiner, Naomi Huntzinger, Francis Crispell, Audrey. Boone, Doris Ross- {man and Elaine Avery. Manager of the team is Helen Szafran; assistant ‘manager is Elaine Avery. “Give me the works!’ RN «+ YES SO I'M TOLD! I WAS PE OUT OF TOWN AND MR. TELL ME, CHILDREN! THE PAPER ABOUT HIS: «HEROISM! SON LIVED WITH YOU LONG ? ! QUITE A PIECE IN MRS .WORTH, HAS YOUR TTT SEVERAL MONTHS: SINCE HE'S BEEN--ILL! BUT WHY DO YOU fT PERSON WHO STARTED ASK THAT ? THIS FIRE WAS __ FAMILIAR WITH | L THE HOUSE! HI BECAUSE THE NUTHIN' POP COME ON SON, ‘FESS up! vou CAN TELL ME? AFTER ALL, WE'RE PALS, AREN'T WE 2 Aw’ NUTHINT WELL --I'M TRYIN’ T' START A TRAININ' CAMP LIKE TUEFV'S 4 AN'I CAN'T EVEN re (1) y 4 en i AN AN Ml GET ONE 1p ASL N\ FIGHTER! 4 | | = = Ci NN RN WW J X 3 x 0 \ BEEN MISIN - FORMED AS TO THE FATE OF DAN RILEY.... BART BREWSTER THE CONSUL'S SECRETARY, TELLS RILEY THAT THE CONSULATE HAD RECEIVED INFORMATION OF HIS DEATH FROM ONE FELICE MOLIERE. 8740 SHE'S AN UNDERCOVER OPERATIVE FOR THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT! LOOK SONT JACK DEMPSEY ONCE TOLD GEE DADS WELL ,DON'T TELL ME , IF A FELLOW HAS NO CONFIDENCE JUS' WAIT TILL THEM I CAN FIGHT IN HIMSELF, HE'S LICKED BEFORE HE ” 1 TELL TH AS WELL AS DEMPSEY, STARTS! FELLERS ABOUT ) ‘CAUSE I'LL NEVER £2 GosH pop! DID YOU KNOW JACK DEMPSEY ? WHERE DOES SHE OPERATE FROM 2 THE HEADQUARTERS OF “THE SPHINX"... HELLO T HERE'S b WELL T’LL....DAN RILEY, RETURNED FROM HIS WATERY GRAVE.....COME BACK TO HAUNT = THE LIVING, 1 mpossiaLE coop 10 SEE YOU,DAN HARD? 2 PRACTICALLY