5 - oe . THE POST, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1944 ™ x ¥ rem Z try vegetables LEHMAN - W. S. C. S. will be held at the church September 27. Hostesses: Mrs. Wilbur Hoover, Mrs, Robert Scott, Mrs. Charles Snyder and Mrs. Carichner. Dinner will be served at noon. : Mrs. F. K. Abbott and children, Priscilla and Billy, are visiting rela_! tives in Connecticut. of her husband, who celebrated his birthday anniversary, Mr. and Mrs. John Cowan, Betty Joan, Jimmy Cowan, Mr. Witter and Charles Witter. MOORETOWN Tech. Sgt. Arden Steele, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Steele, is with | the air force somewhere in India. Mrs. Engene Lamoreaux has re- (Sgt, Steele has been there for some turned home after visiting two weeks in Vestal, Marietta and Syracuse, N. Y. The Lamoreaux had as weekend guests Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lamoreaux and Nancy of Manlius, N. Y. and Mrs. Irvin Par- sons and son, Robert, of Dallas. Mrs. Mabel Honeychurch of Pike's Creek spent Monday with Mrs. Lamoreaux. Mrs. William Parks has returned home after spending several days at Ocean Grove. daughters, Nancy and Laura, visit- ed her over the weekend. Mrs. Donald Deans and Donna Jean are visiting the former's par. ents, Mr. and Mrs. F. U. Zimmer- man. Mrs. Lamoreaux. has received word that her son, M/Sgt. Alfred, is on his way home from the South Pacific war area. Al has spent three birthdays overseas. y Professor L. A. Pelton, head of the Junior High School at G. A. R. School in Wilkes-Barre, will preach at Lehman and Idetown Methodist Churches on Sunday. ALDERSON Franklin Leinthall is spending some time at his mother’s cottage here. Mrs. Florence Conden, Mrs. El- wood Conden and Mike Torney spent Sunday with Mrs. Merle Con- den of Kunkle. Miss Helen Roberts, Mrs, Otis Allen, Jr., Miss Wilda Zimmerman, sang several selections in church Sunday morning. Phil Thomas is a patient at Gen- eral Hospital. He is improving. Mrs. Mattie Michael of Wilkes-| Barre and Mrs. David Richards of, Pittston spent Sunday with Mr. and | Mrs. George Smith. . Alfred Hoffman of the Air Corps, | who was employed at Sterling Farms prior to entering the service, is enjoying a fifteen-day furlough. | He visited Mr. and Mrs. John Cowan and Mr. and Mrs. George! Higgins Saturday. : Mrs. Morrison Witter entertained, at dinner Saturday night in honor Better late than never Galvanized Screening 26” wide, 16-mesh 12¢ foot 28”-wide, 16-mesh 13c foot 32” wide, 16-mesh 15¢ foot This is a fine quality gal- vanized screening, potitively guaranteed to keep out small insects. Galvanized Poultry Feeders and Waterers We have just received a good supply of these gen- uine A galvanized waterers and feeders. 1-gal. size waterers ---1.10 2-gal. size waterers ---1.65 Extra large feeders for a large flock of layers, 1.45, 1.75 and 3.15 each. Metal Tool Boxes These are fine quality boxes with trays for special tools and double clasps on cover. Complete with lock and easy handles. $2.95 Small Large $3.95 Hanging Scales Just the thing for farm- ers. Fine for weighing poul- and other farm products. Complete with large glass dial and and large galvanized tray. $3.5 Only One Genuine cast aluminum pressure cooker with guage. $16.75 DALLAS HARDWARE & SUPPLY Telephone Dallas 121 Main Street Dallas @ “If we don’t have it— we'll do our best to get it.” While there her] TT [ time. He flew by way of North Africa where he stopped off for a few days, then to Egypt and now to India. Miss Annetta Keller has been as- sisting at Steele’s barbecue stand this season. Mrs. Fred Saeger is occupying her brother’s house here. and family, John Steele, on Sun- day. Forrest Roese has moved his fam- ily from Luzerne to his home here. Mr. and Mrs. Basil Steele and children, Joy Lou and Johnny, vis- ited Mrs. Steele’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. Blaine, at Berwick Satur- day. SHAVERTOWN Linbergh Hunt, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Hunt of Johnstown, former residents of Shavertown, was guest of Mrs. Alonzo Prutzman of Ferguson avenue over the week- end. Mrs. J. A. Batey of Franklin street is spending some time in Ashely where her sister is seriously ill. Miss Wilma Hunt of Spring street is visiting friends in Allentown. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Philips of [Lehigh street have returned from a | trip through the southern states. | John Fink of Lehigh street has returned to camp after spending a | furlough with his parents, Mr. and | Mrs. Clifford Fink. ; Pvt. John Chappell and Pvt. Jack Jones have returned to camp after spending ten days with their wives and families. i Mrs. Ann Lattick of Wyoming was guest of Mr. and Mrs. William Chappell of Summit street recently. Trucksville 5:30. Methodist Church at Miss Kay Warden of Shavertown and Mrs. Sherman Kunkle of Trucksville left Friday for Fort OUTLET Knox, Kentucky, to visit Pvt. Sher- man Kunkle. Mrs. Kunkle will re- main there for a while. Mrs. Burton Wilcox and daughter, Charlotte, have returned to Har- isburg after spending several weeks at their home here. Betty Sutton, daughter of Mr. Pvt. Benjamin Earl of Baltimore, Md., spent the weekend with his wife, Mrs. Ruth D. Earl of Terrace Drive, and his parents, Mr. and|and Mrs. John Sutton, submitted to Mrs. John Earl, of Carverton. an appendectomy at Nesbitt Hos- Thomas Hontz has returned to! pital Monday. Norfolk, Va., atter spending a five-| Pfc. Donald Kocher, son of Mr. day furlough with his parents, Mr. | and Mrs. Laura Kocher, has ar- and Mrs. Thomas Hontz of Terrace rived safely in England. Pfc. Kocher Drive. He recently was graduated|is in the airborne division of the 7 night, Friday, September 22, go to| sons of th Dendlers in service, Phil-| day with Mr. and Mrs, Albert Hol-' id and David are both in the Navy.! comb. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hobbs and! Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Klinetob and IMrs. Blanche A f Meh Stor £34. - blanche Ayers o €. oopany | Bess were dinner guests of Mr. and | were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.| Mrs, Parris Callender of Berwick { Charles Hobbs. | Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Fassett Crosby of! | Waterbury, Conn., | Crosby had dinner i recently, Ralph Small and son of Kingston and Mrs. Mary called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. at Mt. View Inn| DG. Klinetob Sunday. honoring Mrs, Crosby, | The choir of the Christian Church | who celebrated her 70th birthday. [held a covered dish supper at the | Mr. and Mrs. Russell Perrigo and] cottage of Mr. and Mrs. William | son, Robert, and Miss Alta Prutz-| Geyer Saturday night and was en- man of Arlington, Va., recently vis-| joyed by ell. ited Mr. and Mrs. Charles Prutz-i man. D. E. Davenport and, party have | returned from a fishing trip to Can- Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Blizzard re-'ada. cently visited’ Mr .and Mrs. Charles] The Church of Christ served a Blizzard at Endicott, N. Y. HOSPITAL PATIENTS Each week this box contains the names of your friends and neighbor? who are in the hospi- tal. Miss Betty Sutton, Outlet— Nesbitt, Phillip Thomas, Alderson— General. Mrs. Ralph Frantz, Huntsville —General. Mrs. James Knecht, Demunds road—General Hospital. from Storekeeping ‘Aviation School! in Jacksonville, Fla. ‘His parents | and Mr. and Mrs. Franke ac-| adelphia. | TRUCKSVILLE Pvt. nd Mrs. Earl Williams have | returned to Savannah, Ga., after | spending two weeks with Mr. nd: Emanuel Mission at Harvey's Lake, | phia spent the weekend with Miss Mrs. street. Ruth Johnson, age 11 years, is! convalescing at her home after sub- mitting to an appendectomy at Nes-| bit Hospital. Pvt. Thomss Hiighes. of Camp Croft, S. C,, is spending two weeks | with his wife, the former Jessie Williams. Miss Joan Phillips, daughter of | Dr. and Mrs. Hayden Phillips, has enrolled at Drew Seminary, Carmel, NY. Mr .and Mrs. Wallace Perrin re- cently entertained the following guests: Mr. and Mrs. William Strange, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Miers, Mrs. Stephen Stengel and Mrs. James Miers. Mr. and Mrs. Royal Lyons of An- napolis, Md., are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Perkins. Pvt. Luther Gregory of U. S. M. C., and Lt. Albert Morse of A. A. F., were in the congregation of the White Church on the Hill Sunday morning. ’ For a good roast beef supper to- Albert Williams of Lehigh] glider infantry. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Hoover en- tertained over the weekend Mr. and Mrs. Emma Steele visited her son | companied him as far as Phil- | Ms, Geoge Patterson of Buffalo, N. Y. Mr. Hoover is ill at his home. Miss Doris Rossman has returned after spending a few days at At- lantic City. Rev. and Mrs. Ira Moore, who are holding revival - meetings at the are staying with Mr. nd Mrs. Harry NOXEN Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kresge have moved into the Crispell house on the Tunkhannock road. Julia Comstock of Tunkhannock is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Ida Keip- er. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Taylor of Wilkes-Barre recently visited her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Fran- cis Belles. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miller of St. Mary’s have been visiting her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. David Edwards. Mr. Edwards has returned from General Hospital where he was a patient. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Dendler, Jr., and son of Endicott spent the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Dendler, Sr. Albert, Jr., will leave for service in the army September 28. This will make three Fine Memorials § LARGE SELECTION Summit Hill Marble & Granite Co. Luzerne-Dallas Highway is good enough for SEND THEM TO your Only Quality Cleaning CIRCLE Cleaning & Dyeing Co. To contact driver, Call Dallas 300 i 987 Wyoming Ave., Forty Fort clothes Kingston 77-1645 I = \ ar - FTL ENJOY A NEW OF HARVEST later cutting. One operator, Sweet Valley, Pa. IS ER by KIND" Traveling through the field under its own power, the Massey-Harris SELF-PROPELLED Combine has no tractor ahead of it beating down grain on the opening swath . . . saves up to a bushel of grain per acre . . . works up close to borders and fences. . . allows selective cutting, getting the ripe grain today—leaving green sections for dust, handles the harvest alone; One engine both propels the combine and operates the threshing mechanism. All these important advantages plus a bonus of time saved in the field add up to Massey-Harris SELF-PROPELLED field-proved Combine for tomorrow’s heavy harvests. Stop in soon and get the complete Self-Propelled story. When You Think of SELF-PROPELLED witha MASSEY-HARRIS {HILT Nd] ITT of SAVES GRAIN...up 70 A BUSHEL PER ACRE (no tractor to beat down grain on opening cut) V SAVES MARPOWER... only ONE OPERATOR | SAVES FUEL..only ONE ENGINE v SAVES TIME..on every JoB 2 . YOUR TRACTOR IS FREE _FOR OTHER RUSH WORK | N\ BL * 2 ¥, re W Sasi ARRAN 5a 3) so Ye than sitting up high out of the For More Modern Out-Standing Lines Of Farm Equipment See CHARLES MASSEY-HARRIS Sel §-Propelled “CLIPPER” Anyone familiar with Combine harvest- ing knows the brilliant success story of the Massey-Harris “Clipper.” Since the day it was first introduced, the ‘‘Clip- per” has rated “top honors for fast, clean, grain-saving combining in more Propelled, the 7-foot ‘‘Clipper” brings you all the advantages of its original 3-Point construction features plus the 4-way savings of Self-Propelled com- bining as pioneered by Massey-Harris. Available in grain tank or bagger models. H. LONG .. Think of MASSEY-HARRIS . . . The Pioneer Builders (7-FOOT CUT) 110 different crops. Now Self- Phone Dallas 363-R-7 . 3 | chicken supper to the rural mail Elwood Miller of Endicott spent) carriers on Saturday night in the the weekend with his grandmother, dining hall. Mrs. M, 0 Miller. : | Pvt. Sterling Mead has returned Ray Wilson of Endicott spent the, camp after spending a few days weekend with his wife here. { with his father and children. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mack and] Word has been received by Rev. granddaughters, Judy and Patty| and Mrs. Ira Button that their son, Carey, of Kingston were recent pte. Lewis Button, is in the hos-| guests of Mrs. Mary Crosby. | pital at the base in Presque Isle, Miss Emma Updyke of Philadel. | Maine. | 1 } 7 i 3 - 3 & A 3 CK S A'/ FOR EVERYONE Lael AAA Ade] A | Rat 20 CHECKS #139 YOUR NAME PRINTED ON EACH CHECK Miss June Long, student nurse of Shirley Hackling. | General Hospital, visited her par-| S/SC Clifford Casterline spent the! ents, Mr. and Mrs. McKinley Long, ! weekend wiht his parents, Mr. and on Friday afternoon. Mrs. Russell Casterline. | Mrs. Sarah Roberts spent a day Mr. and Mrs, William Keiper, | With her daughter in Wilkes-Barre! Mrs. Albert Ruff, Mrs. Daniel Mor. | last week. ; i ris, and John Gailey recently visit-| Mrs. Eva Major spent Friday with ed friends at Tobyhanna. | Mrs. Elizabeth Smith. . : i Mrs. Scott Horiacher of Tunkhan.- | Mrs Tlisabeth Smith, Mrs. Ber. nock spent Thursday evening with; { tha Lewis and Mrs. Harold Cragle: nT. | called on Chauncey Smith of Ply- | Mr. and Mrs. William Coolbaugh. tout who. 3 seriously ll ‘at the! home of his daughter-in-law, last week. | Mrs. Mary Hess and son spent the weekend at their home. Mrs. Hess is teaching mathematics and history at Laceyville and Wheeler is attending school there. fhe Miss Mary Auvil has resumed her > teaching duties at Mt. Holly. | 8 SWEET VALLEY | Mr. and -Mrs. William Cryden and family and Mr. and Mrs. Wil- | liam Varner of Berwick spent Sun- «NO REQUIRED BALANCE +NO CHARGE FOR DEPOSITS OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT WITH ANY AMOUNT AT ANY TELLERS WINDOW IN PR WYOMING NATIONAL gx CREE TCC 14 YEARS OF BANKING SUCCESS AT | Corner Market & Franklin Streets I. Member Fed. Deposit Insurance Corp'n. Keep that bird in the hand! It won’t pay you $4 for every $3 you invested . . . if you cash it in. So, please—besides buying all the extra Bonds you can scrape the pennies to- gether for—hold onto the War Bonds you've already bought! Yes—hold on for dear life! Keep that bird in the hand! It won’t be worth two in the bush if you cash it in—that War Bond, we mean. It wor’t buy your boy, or your neigh- bor’s boy, enough extra ammunition maybe to save hislife...if you cash it in. It won’t help bring that final victory nearer . . . if you cash it in. War Bonds_ to have and to hold This advertisement is sponsored by the following Back Mountain citizens and business firms who believe that its message is highly’ important to the furtherance of the ali-out war effort in their home community. JOHN DYKMAN RALPH ANTRIM EMILY K. GOLDSMITH MRS. GEORGE SMITH MR. and MRS. HARRY SNYDER REV. CARL BRANDON HAROLD E. FLACK WALTER ELSTON ROBERT CURRIE HENRY PETERSON W. O. WASHBURN HERBERT A. LUNDY COMMONWEALTH TELEPHONE COMPANY HARVEY'S LAKE LIGHT COMPANY DALLAS WOMAN’S CLUB PETER D. CLARK F. BUDD SCHOOLEY, M.D. DR. ROBERT BODYCOMB HARRY OHLMAN T. NEWELL WOOD F. GORDON MATHERS SHELDON EVANS HOWARD W. RISLEY DALLAS HARDWARE & SUPPLY THE RO an Ho SORDONI CONSTRUCTION COMPANY JACK HISLOP SHERMAN R. SCHOOLEY, M. D. D. L. EDWARDS STANLEY MOORE JOSEPH MacVEIGH DON WILKINSON “JUD” H. HAUCK (Your name will be gladly added to this list if you approve of this weekly series of messages.) 2 EE 2 A xo ok 5 nl A Se g : 2 y ER a a iY AAPM AMS, AMA Il Lill BE _ii tr rt ie A 8 CR ii I ss A i aE EM
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers