FOR DRUGS ‘Buy At EVANS Gos 7 When over-exposure to ge sun cannot be avoided, get TT aid cut with oT it on Hand Aire sale? to use at a moment's notice. 5c For Your Teeth HALF PINT Floods the teeth with ~ rich, cleansing bub-- bles. Floats away food particles that are likely . to'decay and cause bad | breath. : only PRODUCT 2 5° ) A at Lost your appetite? Feel drag- gy? When due to simple or | nutritional’ anemia, Vineland Tonic can help you ‘feel like a billion’. - Fou pin PINT $1.19 [VR {eRe GASTRIC ACIDITY - 50°. : e DEODORIZES AS IT CLEANS “ FOR BATHROOM © FOR SICKROOM © FOR KITCHEN © FOR ALL FLOORS SHA VERTOWN “ON THE NEW HIGHWAY” ‘Where you see all the cars Lieut. Sidorick Killed In English Plane Crash (Continued from Page One) tended by all the officers and men of the squadron whose duties per- mitted it.” Lt. Sidorick was a veteran pilot with twenty-two missions over enemy territory to his credit. He recently. received the air medal and was promoted to First Lieutenant. He had been in England since last October. Born in Edwardsville on May 24, 1919, he was the youngest member of the large family of the late John and Mary Sidorick. When he was nine years old his parents died and his older brother Thomas and sister Agnes, took the responsibility of rearing the .younger members of the family. Francis attended Dallas Town- ship High School where he played basketball and graduated with the class of 1937. For a time he was employed by Jacob Laux Manu- facturing Company as a machinist and later became an airplane me- chanic at Olmstead Air Field at Middletown. He enlisted in the air cadets at Harrisburg and trained in Florida, Tennessee, Alabama, Arizona, II- in Kentucky. A tall, gentlemanly, blond, friendly and a natural lea- der, he made a striking appearance in his Air Corps uniform. Although Francis Sidorick will not be coming back, he will be remembered long by "his friends as a brave and fine young man. Beside Agnes and Thomas, he leaves the following brothers and sisters: Mrs. Wavela Evans, King: ston; Mrs. Anna Berdy, Edwards- ville; Mrs. Johanna Rizeski, Trucks- ville; Mrs. Verna Romask, Newark; Joseph with the Signal Corps in the Pacific, and Edward in the Chelsea Massachusetts Naval Hos- pital where he is recovering from back injuries received when his ship hit a mine off the coast of France. Entertains Pupils Mrs. B. Aubrey Ayre entertained several of her music pupils at her home on Carverton Road, Trucks- ville, Monday evening. An attrac- tive ‘Raggedy Ann” salad was served to Mary Stephens and Catherine Gilbert, Carverton; Betsy Reynolds, Trucksville; Mary Joan Williams and Sylvia Brown, Leh- man; Elvira Thompson, Wilkes- Barre, and Mrs. Ayre. A POST CLASSIFIED AD The TRADING POST IS THE PLACE TO GET RESULTS QUICKLY AND CHEAPLY PHONE DALLAS 300 @ THREE CENTS PER WORD @ 80¢c MINIMUM For Sale— Help Wanted— | SCREEN DOORS, window screens, curtain stretchers, 2-lid coal stove, glass door high-oven gas stove and miscellaneous household furnishings. Must be sold by. Wed- nesday and therefore low-priced. 33 S. Washington Street, Wilkes- Barre. Telephone 2-6422 27-1t THOROUGHBRED white cat. Call Dallas 181-R-16. angora PIANO; large fruit cupboards; oak dresser; bedsprings; large rub- bish = burner. Anderson, next to American Store, Trucksville. 27-1t Heating Stove. Myrtle Martin, Beau- mont. Phone H. L. 3416. 27-1t Timothy and Clover Hay to give away if you come and get it now. Mrs. W. H. Nevil, Idetown. 27-1t Cow coming fresh this month. Stan- ley Szela, Kunkle, Dallas R. D. 1. 0 27-1t Bay horse, eight years old. Weight 1400 pounds; good worker, cheap. Giles Wilson, Fernbrook, DeMunds Road. Phone 298-R-16. A. Zar- 1t Three rooms of furniture. embo, Davenport St., Dallas. CRUSHED STONE Mountain quarry. Coon Certified | Concrete, Kingston, 77-3177. 27-tf ‘CABBAGE CAULIFLOWER plants. Dallas 127-R-11. 26-2t from North and Arthur Newman, CELERY PLANTS. Thomas Earl cand Sons, Wyoming R.F.D. 3, Phone Centermoreland 37-R-0 : 26-2t REAL ESTATE: Lots, farms and homes. George L. Stolarick, Leh- man. 15-tf. HORSES, Collars, harnesses, saddle pads, riding bridles, Western saddles, baled hay and straw. Sto- larick Brothers, Lehman. 15-tf \FREE for the asking. 18 pups, "mother a hound, father German shepherd. Arthur Gay. Phone Centermoreland 62-R-3. 27-1t | = Male Help Wanted—Assistant cook, two pot washers and sandwich man. Apply Irem Temple Country Club. 27-1t TWO BOYS, must be 16 or over, to fold papers Thursday nights. The Dallas Post. 27-1t CLEANING WOMAN; four hours daily: desirable wages. Apply im- mediately. Cotton Club, Harvey's Lake. 27-1t Two waitresses for Saturday nights only. Apply Irem Temple Coun- try Club. 27-1t LABORERS WANTED Mountain Crushed quarry. COUPLE for work as cook and housekeeper for summer home .and city apartment, year around work, or if can’t get couple have steady work for cook. A. J. Sor- doni, Harvey's Lake. 26-2t at North Stone Co. 26-5t | ‘Wanted To Buy— ELECTRIC MOTORS not in run- ning condition. Dallas 410-R3. 22-1 FOLDING CHAIRS for Dallas Youth Center. Phone Mrs. Lloyd Kear, 179. 21-1t. Small Farm or house with several acres of land within a few miles of Dallas. Write Box F C/O The Dallas Post. 12-3t By Ike Mellner, Livestock dealer. - Fresh cows and close springers and all kinds of beef cattle and calves. Will buy reactor cattle as well as straight cows. Will pay highest prices. Write to Ike Mel- Iner, 114 Second Ave., Kingston or phone Kingston 7-2746 and we will call on you. tf 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. Baby Chicks, best stock State blood tested, New Hampshires and crosses. Trucksville Mill. Baby Chicks. New Hampshire Reds. Hatches twice a week. Hilbert's Hatchery Beaumont. 5-tf Slab stove wood, $1 per cord. At mill, near Beaumont, Ruggles Bros. 10-¢ PIANOS: A 36¢c classified ad sold an old-fashioned grand piano within 48 hours after the ad ap- peared in this column. Little ads get big results. Real Estate— Home ownership made easy. Monthly payments. Inquire Rural Building & Loan Association, First National Bank, Dallas, or Thomas G. Reese, Dallas. For Rent— FIVE-ROOM HOUSE on Carverton Road, Carverton, July 1. Inquire on premises of Glendon Prynnm, Bunker Hill. Phone Leon Minard, Dallas, 323-R-3. 26-3t 0-4f 19-R-4. Phone charges paid. Who To Call— We remove dead stock free of charge. Call Dallas 433-R-9. Las- kowski Rendering Works. 51-1t For prompt removal of dead, old disabled horses, cows, mules phone Carl Crockett, Muhlenberg We 24f 23-tf buy waste fats and cowhides. 397. Miscellaneous Electrical work. Russell W. Shaver, 118 Main St, Dallas. Phone 290-R-7. 50-1t Let Marguerite give you your next permanent wave, if you like ex- perienced workmanship. Right on the bus line. Marguerite’s Beauty Shop, Main road, Fernbrook. Phone Lost One of the Barnyard cats. Black with white throat. A girl. Finder kindly return to Howard Risley’s Barnyard or phone Dallas 300 27-1t linois, Kansas and at Center College | handsome | POSTOFFICE TIGHTENS : RESTRICTIONS ON MAIL . TO MEN IN SERVICE The Army, Navy and Marine Corps have tightened their re- strictions on segond class mail addressed to military person- nel, and refuse to forward copies of publications where directory service must be used to locate the man. They will, however, provide directory ser- vice for first-class mail. Following ‘this rule rigidly they have returned the Dallas Post addressed to the following men and have asked this news- paper to remove their names from our mailing lists until more complete addresses are forwarded to us by their par- ents or next of kin: S/Sgt. Stephen Watlock AMM. 2/c George Schmoll RT 3/c William N. Smith GM 3/c Wm. D. Schoonover F 1/c Elwood Dymond CM 3/c Michael J. Butry James N. Martin Ens. Karl Rohrbach S 1/c Carl Burns Lt. Nelson Booth A/S Albert Stolarick F 2/c Russell Rishell S 2/c Arthur Parrish S 1/c Guion S 1/c Edward Tutak Lt. Francis Sidorick A/S Richard Spencer Pvt. William Gerrity Pvt. Michael O’Boyle A three-year record of no drown- ings at Harvey's Lake was broken Sunday afternoon when Harry F. Sorber, 16, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sorber, Sr., of 44 Carle street, Kingston, drowned while swimming at Warden Place. In company with John Mason, 16, of Kingston; Charles Howell, 16, of Wilkes-Barre; John Kearney, 17, of Kingston and John Hagen, 13, also of Kingston, the youth went tq the lake where a boat was rent- ed from Bryant's at Sunset. They rowed the boat to 65 feet from the shore at Warden Place and were having fun ‘rocking the boat” which was partly submerged. It appeared to capsize and for a time the boys swam around the craft, and then called for help. The Sorber boy disappeared un- der the water. Efforts of nearby boatmen and swimmers to locate him were fruitless because of the muddy condition of the water. Fi- nally grappling operations recov- ered the body at about 4:40. Chief Swanson and other volunteer work- ers applied artificial respiration for an hour in an attempt to revive the youth, but at the end of that time Dr. Benjamin S. Davis of Ply- mouth pronounced him dead. The drowned boy graduated from the eighth grade last month and would have entered Kingston High School this fall. He was a mem- ber of Kingston Methodist Church. Besides his parents he is survived by five sisters and his paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sorber, of Kingston. Sgt. Hayes Wins Army Air Medal Gen. Kenny Commends Work In Philippines sS/Sgt. William J. Hayes, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Hayes of Main Street, Dallas, has been awarded the Air Medal “for opera- tional flight missions from 18 Aug- ust 1944 to 26 February 1945” with the Fifth Air Force in the Philip- pines. He is an aerial] gunner with the 312 th Bombardment Group, an A-20 bomber unit known as ther “Roarin’ 20’s,” serving during the New Guinea ‘Campaign and now participating in the liberation of the Philippines. In a letter to Mrs. Hayes, Gen- eral George C. Kenny, Commander of the Allied Air Forces, Southwest Pacific Area, said, “Your son took part in sustained operational flight missions during which hostile con- tact was probable and expected. These flights included bombing missions against enemy instal- lations, shipping and supply bases, and aided considerably in the re- tent successes in this theatre.” A graduate of Pelham Meevial High School, Sgt. Hayes studied at Colby « College and Columbia Uni- versity and was a member of the Pi Alpha Sigma Fraternity. Prior to enlisting in the Air Force in March 1942, he was an investment advisor for Chase’ National = Bank in New York. Sgt. Hayes has ser- ved ‘overseas eleven months and is credited with 50 combat missions in the Southwest Pacific Theatre. {from prisoners, Sat. Maury Is Safe In France Wants Apple Pie For First Meal Mrs. Henrietta Schultz of Harris Hill Road, Trucksville, received a letter , recently dated May 16, from her nephew T/Sgt. Alfred E. Maury, saying he is safe in France and on his way home. That's the news she has been waiting for all during the past year when his let- ters came marked “Kriegsgefangen- enpost”’ from the German prison camp where he had been held since February, 1944. She waited from February to April of last year before receiving word that he was no longer “miss- ing’.. but a prisoner. His address came in May, but he didn’t begin receiving her letters until October. When the first ones arrived he wrote back, “A letter does more good here than it ever did before.” Mostly, he was concerned about the health of the family back home and asked them to be sure to keep the car running. For himself, he wanted some ‘home-made stuff” to eat, and a good book on carbure- tors to study. Mrs. Schultz is thankful for the Prisoners of War Bulletin, publish- ed by the American Red Cross. The articles about prison camps, letters and information about communicating with prison- ers gave her much help and com- fort. ‘She has been thankful, too, for the letters from relatives of other crew members. Mrs. Mildred Collins of North Car- olina wrote that Sgt. Maury was the youngest man in the crew, the “pet” of the others, and sent Mrs. Schultz a prayer for prisoners of war which she had found comfort- ing. Sgt. Maury who celebrated his twenty-first « birthday May 22, has asked his aunt to be sure to have plenty of apple pie ready for him when he comes. Holds Open House Carverton Youth Center held an Open House Friday June 29, when everyone in the com- munity was invited to come and in- spect the youth center. There was a program by the teen-agers and members of the Adult Commit- tee. Robert Currie, Harold Flack and Harry Hirsch, who started the organization of youth centers in this area, were present. Cleo Follmer was program chair- man, assisted by Miss Susan Cas- sedy, Thomas Earl and Edgar Sut- ton of the Adult«Committee. Cooked A Fine Dinner; Then Threw It To Dog One lady recently stated that she used to throw her own dinner to the dog most of the time. _It made her sick just to look at anything to eat. She was swollen with gas, full of bloat, had headaches, felt worn out and was badly constipated. Finally she got ERB-HELP and says she now eats everything in sight and digests it perfectly. Bowels are regular and normal She is en- joying life once more and feels like “some other woman” since taking this New Compound. ERB-HELP contains 12 Great ‘Herbs; they cleanse bowels, clear gas from stomach, act on sluggish liver and kidneys. soon feel different all over. So don’t go on suffering! Get ERB- HELP. Bert & Co's Store. —Adv. FIRST EER TIE GET TO! * There's work to forces, and our allies. On cape. The world knows “one—how well have you Dallas Mr. Farmer . . . Yes, you have a real job to do—to provide for and protect your family, and to feed our nation, our armed fold responsibility, neither one of which you can es- There is a Farm Bureau life insurance contract that can help you! Check with us today! Ernest Gay ~ Telephone Centermoreland 62-R-12 Farm Bureau Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. Home Office — be done your shoulders rests a two- how well you're doing the provided for the other? RFD 3 Columbus, O. . CHEK- Efficient. R-TON Kills 93. aT large Soundwonns SS hrllons, Will not fr birds Evuomital., 6 Ibs. treats 100 birds Leave the large roundworms out on six eat range. Use Purina Chek-R-Ton the last week before housing. Feed pounds per 100 birds. Mix it with the amount of mash they will in seven days. Although tests show Chek-R-Ton kills 93.6% of large roundworms it will not upset the birds. TRUCKSVILLE MILL Stanley L. Moore, Prop. Trucksville, Pa. A Carverton Youth Center | Miserable people = LEGAL SEALED PROPOSALS SEALED BIDS OR PROPOSALS will be received by the Borough of Dallas, Pa., until Friday evening, July 20th, 1945, at 8 o'clock, at which time the same will be pub- licly opened and contract awarded as soon thereafter as possible to the lowest responsible bidder for fur- nishing to the Borough oil and/or other bituminous products in such quantities as may be necessary for the repair of roads, streets, gutters, curbing, etc., on certain streets of the Borough during the year 1945, to an amount of approximately 3,000 gallons, in accordance with , specifications now in the hands of the Borough Secretary, copies of which may be had upon application. Each bid shall be accompanied by certified or Cashier’s check in the sum of One Hundred ($100.00) Dol- lars, made payable to the Borough of Dallas, as a guarantee that the bidder, if awarded the contract, will execute the same and furnish bond or bonds as required by law, and which amount will be forfeited as liquidated damages in the event of failure so to do. The Borough reserves the right to reject any or all bids. JAMES F. BESECKER, Borough Secretary. = a Buy More War Savings Bonds And Stamps two-fold drinking water medicine, af: fording tonic benefits to my chicks cecal coccidiosis when this disease threatens. It's cer- tainly ‘a welcome help in raising chicks. Better buy a good sup. ply when you get your chicks. ’ DE , ZAIRE 2 0 IPR 2 NATION-WIDE x [DISET A714 LET US HELP YOU WITH YOUR POULTRY PROBLEMS STAPLETON'S Next to the Luzerne Post Office The Best Bargain This Week And any week U.S. Government WAR BOND Buy Another DALLAS HARDWARE & SUPPLY Telephone Dallas 121 Main Street Dallas ° “If we don’t have 1t— we'll do our best to get it.” A) £7 v » y \ : 3 /
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers