ot LEE EE OH NSO IE IEC IIE IL XMAS GIFTS POCKET KNIVES (4-Blades) $2.00 a——— WOODEN WAGONS $1.50 mee WOODEN WHEELBARROWS $1.98 to 52.69 Smee COSTUME JEWELRY $1.50 to $15.00 ese. TREE HOLDERS $1.00 PIPES $1.50 to $5.00 mene. ~ VACUUM BOTTLES $1.39 MEN'S TRAVELING | KITS $3.00 to $12.00 BATH POWDERS $1.00 — BOXED CANDY (Christmas Wrapped) $1.10 to $5.00 etn PHOTO ALBUMS 19c — AUTOGRAPH BOOKS 10c to 60c EVANS DRUG STORE SHAVERTOWN “ON THE NEW HIGHWAY” PS SPSS rR E SETTER 32 ESS PA RA A TE ; SE PR ETE TR TE TE TE TE TEE TE TET TE TE TE CECE TRAE IRI IR BEER RRR RRR RR Where you see all the cars Has aRN0n Oe BO NEDO SEIDEL DELILE i i TT TR PEE TBE PETE TE TIE TRIE PEIRCE TE ETE TEI PEARCE CUI EARTH RUT R RBA ABU RRR BRU RR URAL REALE RIERA RAIN, WHA NRE E RAK R KURA EER ERR A POST CLASSIFIED AD The TRADING POST IS THE PLACE TO GET RESULTS QUICKLY AND CHEAPLY PHONE DALLAS 300 @ THREE CENTS PER WORD @ 30c MINIMUM For Sale— PHILCO CABINET RADIO, good condition, $25. Joseph Stolarick, Lehman. FINEST TURKEYS, roasting chick- ens (six to eight pounds) and young pigs for roasting. Orchard Farm, George Rice and Son, Dallas 348-R-2. BROAD BREASTED. Bronze Turk- eys—place your order now for these delicious eating birds. Tele- phone Dallas 469-R-9. RED and BLACK COCKER Spaniels, 8 weeks old. Dale K. Myers, Phone Dallas 9-R-16 or Tunkhan- nock 3956. RUG (9x12) handsome, plain blue, all wool pre-war broad loom KARASTAN; also boys ELGIN bi- cycle with head and tail lights, bell and tool kit, excellent con- dition, $35. Dallas 204-R-2 WELSH TERRIER PUPPIES, 8 weeks old. A.KIC. champion blood lines. © Perfect (Christmas gifts. Call Dallas 204-R-2. BROWN SNOWSUIT, trousers, flecked jacket. Size 16 to 18. Black shoeskates, size 6. All practically new. Pre-war. $15 complete. Box R, Dallas Post. ONE DOUBLE SASH, two single sash with weights and metal weather stripping, 24 by 24 lights each, and eight 24 by 24 windows; one 16 by 40 leaded glass window with frame. Phone Dallas 391-R-3. USED SNOW PLOW for mounting on ton and a half truck. Dallas Borough. J. F. Besecker, Sec. FOUR GARAGE DOORS, 8 ft. 6 in. by 7 ft. 6 in. Call Bob (Culp be- tween six and six-thirty. Phone 493-R-8. NO HUNTING— No Trespassing Signs—any quantity from one to several thousand—get our prices on quantity lots. The Dallas Post, Lehman Ave. ENGRAVED WEDDING Invitations, Announcements, Business Cards and (Stationery. Fine quality work- manship. The Dallas Post, Leh- man ‘Avenue. BABY CHICKS are now available solid brown by order. Hilbert’'s Hatchery, Beaumont. Baby Chicks, best stock State blood tested, New Hampshires and crosses. Trucksville Mill. Slab stove wood. $1 per cord. At mill, near Beaumont, Ruggles Bros. 10-tf Real Estate— Home ownership made easy. Monthly payments. Inquire Rural Building & Loan Association, First National Bank, Dallas, or Harold Titman, Dallas. Wanted FIVE CENTS PER POUND paid for clean cotton rags—no buttons. Woolens, outing flannel, silk not acceptable. The Dallas Post. Wanted To Buy— USED TRICYCLE and SLED. for child. Phone 236-R-13. HEATING STOVE, either egg stove or heatrola. Phone H.L. 3400. OLD OIL LAMPS, china figurines ete. Grandmothers Attic, 468 Union Street, Luzerne, Phone 7-7278 : PIANOS—highest cash price paid for Baby Grand—Spinel or Studio Upright. Lizdas, 247 South Main, Wilkes-Barre. 3-2644. SUBSTANTIAL REWARD for infor- mation that will help me to rent a six or seven room house, all im- provements, in Dallas. Write full particulars Box J, Dallas Post. Help Wanted— HOUSEKEEPER, family of four, to go to Boston for winter. Expenses paid. Good home for right person. $15 weekly. Phone 477-R-2. Work Wanted— REPAIR WORK wanted. Founda- tion cellar work, stone cement, patch plaster. Otis Thompson. Phone Dallas 339. Found— TRISH SETTER, male, about one year old strayed to home in Shavertown. Owner may have same by identifying and paying for this ad. /Call Dallas 300. {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 19-R-4. Phone charges paid. We buy waste fats and cowhides. 24f 397. 23-tf Reward— WILL PAY REWARD for informa- tion leading to arrest of the per- son or persons who are breaking, windows in the Watt property, re- cently purchased by the Dallas Post, on the triangle between Ma- chell avenue and the Harvey's Lake Highway. Howard Risley, Dallas 300. Miscellaneous IF YOU HAVE CHRISTMAS tree ornaments that you are not going to use this year and are willing to lend or give them to Back Mit. Memorial Library, phone Dallas 452 today. Girl Scouts expect to trim the library tree over the weekend. ROOM FOR RENT, on bus line, garage. Two desks for Phone 351-R-2. sale. HURRY, HURRY! Just a few days left to buy that Christmas tree. We have a fine selection of fresh cut Balsum, Spruce and Scotch Pine. Jack Hislop’s Store, Art Newman. WATER WELLS a specialty. WAll work guaranteed. R. B. Shaver and Son, (Contractors, Drillers. Ide- town, Dial Harvey’s Lake 3156. PAINTING, PAPER HANGING, dec- orating. Elwood Lutsey. Phone Dallas 300. Land and construction surveys. Wil- liam J. Carroll, registered profes- sional engineer. Machell Ave. Dal- las. Phone 260-R-2. 40tf Electrical work. Russell W. Shaver, 118 Main St, Dallas. Phone 290-R-7. 50-1t HAULING. ASHES and garbage re- moved. Fire place logs, furnace wood. Phone Dallas 124. POULTRYMEN, why be short of labor? Buy a Greenbriar Poultry Picker. Automatic Poultry Scalder on Display. Hilbert's Hatchery, Beaumont. ROOFING, SIDING building. Al inquiries given prompt attention. Write Lester L. Hoover, Orchard Avenue, Dallas. and genera] 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 MERRY CHRISTMAS and a Happy New Year, folks, Marguerite Douglas, Marguerite’s Beauty Shop, Main St., Dallas. 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. SHAVER THEATRE FRIDAY—SATURDAY “Northwest Mounted Police” in technicolor with Gary Cooper, Paulette Goddard, Madeleine Carroll SATURDAY MATINEE 2 P.M. Shavertown { Theatre closed Monday night “Xmas Eve” TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY “Captain Eddie” with Fred MacMurray, Lynn Bari, Thomas Mitchell THURSDAY ONLY Charlies Dicken’s “Xmas Carol” with Terry Kilburn, Reginald Owen, Kathleen Lockhart COMEDY and SHORTS LEGAL NOTICE In Re: Change of Name of Al- fredo Nardslico. In the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne (County, No. 171 January Term, 1946. A petition has been filed in the Prothonotary’s office praying for a change of name of the aforemen- tioned petitioner to Ralph Nardell, The Court has fixed February 18, 1946, at 10:00 a. m. as the date and time for hearing, at which time anyone objecting thereto may be present and heard. PATRICK J. FLANNERY, Attorney for Petitioner. LEGAL NOTICE In the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County, No. 9, January Term, 1946. In re: [Petition of Patrick Mur- phy and Elizabeth Murphy, his wife, for satisfaction of mortgage, recorded in Mortgage Book 149, page 195. NOTICE TO: John Pugh, or whoever may be the holder of the mortgage hereinafter mentioned: Take notice that on December 3, 1945, Patrick Murphy and Eliza- beth Murphy, his wife, presented their Petition to the above Court to the above number and term, averring that they are the owners of certain land situate in the City of Wilkes-Barre, (County of Luzerne and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows: Beginning at a point on the Northerly side of Empire Street 141.3 feet from the intersection of Empire and the Westerly side of South Streets; thence along said Empire Street south 59 degrees 18 minutes West 30.1 feet more or less to a corner; thence North 29 degrees 45 minutes West 178.12 feet more or less to an alley twenty feet wide; thence along said alley North 60 degrees 15 minutes East 30.1 feet more or less to a corner; thence South 29 degrees 45 minutes a corner on the Northern side of Empire street, the place of begin- ning. Being known as Lot “O” on a plot of lots of the Estate of Fred- erick B. Parrish. That an unsatisfied mortgage, in- cluding, inter alia, the said de- scribed premises, remains of record in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds of Luzerne (County given by Joseph Ments to John Pugh on March 18, 1904, recorded in the office for the Recording of Deeds in - Luzerne County, in Mortgage Book 149 at page 195. (A period of more than twenty-one years has elapsed since the principal of said mortgage became due and payable, and no payment of either principal or interest has been made within twenty-one years. The [Petition to hte Court now prays for a decree directing the Recorder of Deeds of Luzerne (Coun- ty to enter. satisfaction of said mortgage upon the records of his office. You are required: to appear in said Court on January 14, 1946, at ten o'clock a. m. to answer said Petition and show cause why said degree should not be entered. DAVID C. VAUGHAN, Sheriff of Luzerne County, Pa. R. J. JOHNSTON, Attorney for Petitioners. LEGAL NOTICE LETTERS TESTAMENTARY Notice is hereby given that Let- ters Testamentary have been grant- ed in the Estate of Ray A. Van- Horn, late of Luzerne County, Pa., to Mrs. Minnie W. VanHofn. All persons nidebted to said Estate are requested to make payment and those having claims or demands to present the same without delay to the Executrix, Mrs. Minnie W. VanHorn, ‘Shickshinny, R. D. 1, Pa. SHERIFF'S SALE Friday, January 11, 1946, at 10 o'clock By virtue of a Writ of Ley. Fa. No. 44 December Term 1945, issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County, I will expose for public sale for cash at Court Room No. 1, ‘Court House, Wilkes- Barre, Pa., on January 11th 1946, at 10 o'clock, a.m. to be sold to the highest bidder, the following described rea] estate: “All the surface of a lot of land on Beekman Street, in Wilkes- Barre (City, Luzerne (County, Pa. described as follows: BEING Lot No. 90 as laid out on plot of lots known as [Irving Park Plot, and being the same premises conveyed to Mrs. lotte Cosloski by deed of John IA. Williams and Esther Williams, his wife, dated the 30th of November 1926, recorded in Luzerne ‘County D.B. 653, page 120 etc, and being 25 feet wide by 110 feet in depth. RESERVING coal and other minerals as fully and to the same extent as the same have been ex- i cepted and reserved in the former East 177.62 feet more or less to; Char- deeds in the line of title. IMPROVED with a frame dwelling house known as 46 Beek- man ‘Street, = Wilkes-Barre City, Luzerne ‘County, Pennsylvania.” Taken in execution and sold at the suit of Ernest H. Bennett, Trus- tee for the Estate of John Brad- shaw, Deceased, Assignee, vs: John A. Williams, Defendant, and Mrs. Charlotte (Cosloski, Terre Tenant. DAVID C. VAUGHAN, Sheriff. ‘George IL. Fenner, Sr., Attorney. SHERIFF'S SALE Friday, January 11, 1946 at 10:00 A.M. By virtue of a writ of Lev. Fa. No. 7 January Term 1946 issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County, to me directed, there will be exposed to public sale by vendue to the highest and best bidders, for cash, in Court Room No. 1, Court House, in the City of Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, on Friday the 11th day of January 1946, at ten o'clock in the forenoon of the said day, all the right, title and in- terest of the defendants in and to the following described lot, piece, or parcel of land, viz:— All that certain lot of land, with improvements thereon, lying and being in the City of Wilkes- Barrre, County of Luzerne and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows: BEGINNING at the north side of Sherman Street at the south- west corner of lot mumbered Fif- teen; thence westerly along said street, forty feet, to the southeast corner of lot numbered thirteen; thence northerly along east line of said lot, one hundred ninety feet, to an alley; thence easterly along said alley, forty feet, to the northwest corner of lot numbered fifteen; thence southerly along west line of said lot, one hundred and ninety feet to the place of begin- ning. Containing seven thousand and six hundred square feet of land, and being Lot numbered fourteen in Block numbered thirty on plot of lots laid out in the said city by the said Lehigh and Wilkes- Barre Coal Company, a corporation of the State of Pennsylvania. Improved with a 3-story, stucco, three-family dwelling, a 2-story, be sold by ROBERT F. DILLEY, pi ATTORNEY. stucco, two-family dwelling, and a 1l-story, stucco, storage house. Seized and taken into execution at the suit of Louis Linker, assig- nee vs. Verna K, Shaffer, and M. S. Shaffer, mortgagors and Bertha Kennedy, Frances Kizer, Augusta Collins, Sylvia Peck, Dahlgren Ki- zer, Grace Cobb, and Mabel Snel- son, real owners, Marjorie Wood, James Kizer, real owners, and will Happy Old Age . . is not an accident. Years of work well done; of thodical saving can re- years careful, me- sult in a carefree happy period of living. Don’t steal from your future by laying nothing 0 % 7 %/ aside for it now. % Z 77 % 72 Wii Z 24% THE KINGSTON NATIONAL BANK Kingston Corners Shooting Match SATURDAY AFTERNOON December 22, 1945 CORY MIERS FARM Kunkle, Pennsylvania PRIZES—Turkeys and Chickens 12-Gauge ‘Shells Available On Grounds TO OUR FRIENDS A 8 oz /4 =z M4 — RALPH K. GARRAHAN GEORGE L. RUCKNO STEWART CASTERLINE MRS. STEPHEN JOHNSON JAMES P. KELLY SHAVERTOWN BUILDERS SUPPLY CO. Successors To SHAVERTOWN LUMBER : COMPANY Phone Dallas 42 = rR a ELI of Ty can "hhcomparable ee ge RL 11] ORDINARY GASOLINE are low in octane quality. cules are high octane 4 .é é but the “light” mole- . The cylinders receiving the low grade "heavy" D oloonles do not receive the same high knockless quality as other cylinders. AND HERE’S THE REASON! ALL gasolines (including Sunoco Dynafuel) are composed of “light” and “heavy” mole- cules. As the gasoline goes into the cylinders from the carburetor, some of the “heavy” molecules separate from the rest of the gasoline and go fo certain cylinders which get most of the “heavy” molecules while other cylinders get mostly “light” molecules, SUNOCO DYNAFUEL IN ORDINARY GASOLINE the “heavy” molecules power DYNAFUEL'S UNIFORM POWER IN EVERY CYLINDER GIVES YOU A SWEETER-RUNNING CAR 0] extra- priced PE can excel its fC SLE 0 iN SUNOCO > DYNAFUEL, all molecules, both “heavy” and “light” deliver ‘equally high octane . No matter whether a cylinder receives “light” or “heavy” molecules, that cylinder and all cylinders receive uniformly high knockless quality. IN] ACCELERATION - TT TA “UNIQUE INTE 1) LE JUTE High oo DAVID C. VAUGHAN, *
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers