The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, December 28, 1945, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
From
Pillar To Post
(Continued from Page One)
toward Baltimore, the little horses
rocked sedately on the back seat,
through a pair of round little eyes
fringed with up-curled eyelashes.
As the car made its steady way
* dipping and swaying with each
change of pace and shift of gear.
The sailor who thumbed a ride
just south of Petersburg had been
fortifying himself against the
weather. It was chilly, it was
growing dusky, and a fine drizzle
was misting the windshield. The
passenger stretched his legs and
relaxed. Then, under the influence
of the heater, the soothing motion,
and the gathering darkness, he be-
came garulous. Shifting in the seat
and draping his arm along the
back, he held forth on the joys of
homecoming. He was going to
give the Little Woman a real treat
this time. No more wandering, no
more straying from the straight
and narrow. He was on the wagon
(hic) and he meant to stay there.
In the meantime a little nip from
the brown bottle wouldn't hurt
. anything. Weather like this ‘wasn’t
fitten for man or beast, and the
best and kindest thing to do with
it was to forget it in a rosy haze.
Thus persuaded, he uncorked the
bottle and took a prolonged swig.
Wiping his mouth on the back of
his hand, he offered the driver the
courtsey of the bottle, still half
full. The drivergdeclined on the
grounds that driving and drinking
did not mix.
At this point a large truck
stopped dead in the left-hand high
speed lane of traffic. A brisk man-
euver brought the car into the right
hand lane just in front of a jeep
whose driver cursed bitterly, con-
signed all lady drivers to a super-
heated climate, and applied smok-
ing brakes.
‘The sailor passed a shaking hand
across his brow, retrieved his bot-
tle from the floor, and resumed the
conversation. The blue horses,
galloping fiercely on the back seat
under the influence of the sudden
swerve and acceleration, caught his
glazing eye. The sailor froze in
his tracks, brown bottle half way
to his lips. He fumbled for words.
“Lady,” he croaked thickly,
“whotcha got in that back seat?”
‘Not a thing,” responded the
R Good
New Year
Resolution...
To buy all
your
Building
Materials
during 1946
from
Shavertown
Builders
Supply
Company
SHAVERTOWH
BUILDERS SUPPLY CO.
Successors To
SHAVERTOWN LUMBER
COMPANY
Phone Dallas 42
| Union Street,
driver blithly, “you must be tight.
Probably you're seeing things.”
“Lady,” abjectly, “I coulda swore
I saw something moving back
there, something that looked at me
and winked. Maybe I got’em
again.”
His voice trailed off into an un-
happy mumble, and he stared fixed-
ly at the windshield.
The car passed under a street
light on the edge of a small town.
The sailor stole a haunted look at
the back seat. Three little blue
horses rocked away in perfect
rhythm, up and down, up and
down, three pairs of glittering eyes
surveyed the cringing passenger in
the front seat. Se
The sailor gave a strangled
moan, and hoarse words burst from
him.
“Lady, you lemme outa here.
First place I don’t want to get my
neck broke on account of no blank
lady drivers, and next place them
things on the back seat look like
they bite. Lemme outa here, I
say.”
The driver drew up in front of
a convenient hamburg stand. The
sailor, wrenching open the door,
dived into the night, and hotfooted
it in the direction of warmth and
more beer and fewer horses. He
turned up the collar of his pea-coat
as he ran. The brown bottle
glugged itself empty in the gutter.
The driver slammed the door, pat-
ted three little blue rocking horses
on three painted moses, and picked
up speed.
“Tain’t a fitten night for man
nor beast,” she ‘reflected philo-
sophically.
Buy Victory Bonds
And Stamps
A POST CLASSIFIED AD
The TRADING POST
IS THE PLACE TO GET
RESULTS QUICKLY AND CHEAPLY
PHONE DALLAS 300 ® THREE CENTS PER WORD @® 80c MINIMUM
For Sale—
ROASTING PIGS for New Years.
Hilbert’s Hatchery. Phone H-L
3422.
Who To Call—
We remove dead stock free of
charge. Call Dallas 433-R-9. Las-
kowski Rendering Works. 51-1t
OLD SCHOOL HOUSE with con-
siderable amount of new wood
interior. Inquire 117-R-2 Dallas.
ROASTING (CHICKENS and broilers.
George Rice and ‘Son. Phone
348-R-2.
February Hatches, Rock-Red Cross,
straight run 12c. N.H. (Cockerels
10c delivered. R.O.P. breeding and
blood tested. Joseph Davis and
Son, Leraysville, Pa.
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.
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 ‘quentity 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
by order. Hilbert's Hatchery,
Beaumont.
Baby Chicks, best stock State
blood tested, New Hampshires
and crosses. Trucksville Mill.
Slab stove wooed. $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 Daniel
Richards, 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—
OLD OIL LAMPS, china figurines
etc. Grandmothers Attic, 468
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.
Work Wanted—
REPAIR WORK wanted. Founda-
tion cellar work, stone cement,
patch plaster. Otis Thompson.
Phone Dallas 339.
Card Of Thanks
Mrs. Joseph Skopic and family
wish to thank
sisted during the recent illness and
death of their husband and father,
Also all those who sent flowers,
furnished cars. Mrs. Joseph Skopic
and family.
{money and etc.
all those who as- |.
Fer 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
Miscellaneous
WATER WELLS a specialty. WAH
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.
Lost—
REWARD for return of six chicken
crates lost on Main Road be-
tween Luzerne and Centermoreland.
Please call Frank Heitsman, Cen-
termoreland, 68-R-9.
BROWN ALLIGATOR PURSE, con-
taining wallet, driving license,
Will the finder
kindly mail the purse and
other articles to Mrs. Thomas B.
Robinson, R.D. 1, Dallas and keep
the money as a reward.
LEGAL
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.
Found—
TIGER CAT, strayed in, chock full
of Christmas spirit; dark brown
and gray, full grown, well kept,
part Persian angora, female. Owner
phone Dallas 300 or 396.
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 mame 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 17812
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
East 177.62 feet more or less to
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 ICoun-
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. VanHorn. 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 Lev. 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 OIrving
Park Plot, and being the same
premises conveyed to Mrs. Char-
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-
cepted and reserved in the former
Have Anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Eddinger,
Honeybrook Farm, East Dallas,
celebrated their twenty-fifth wed-
ding anniversary with a family
dinner yesterday. The occasion
was also the birthday of their
daughter, Rhoda, a commercial
teacher at Bloomsburg High School,
who is now-on Christmas vacation.
They also have a son, Ralph, of
Gary, Indiana.
Miss Muriel Hotelling, Washing-
ton, D. C., has been a holiday guest
at the Eddinger home.
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, vizi—
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
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,
stucco, two-family dwelling, and a
1-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
ICollins, Sylvia Peck, Dahlgren Ki-
zer, Grace Cobb, and Mabel Snel-
son, real owners, Marjorie Wood,
James Kizer, real owners, and will
be sold by
DAVID C. VAUGHAN,
ROBERT F. DILLEY,
LACT
"A 3 GER AEN SS oS
HE (of € 8 FI
YOUR NAME PRINTED
ON EACH CHECK
*NO REQUIRED BALANCE |
NB CHARGE FOR DEPOSITS |
OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT
WITH ANY AMOUNT AT
ANY TELLERS WINDOW IN
WroOMING NATIONAL BANK
OF WILKES-BARRE
114 YEARS OF BANKING SUCCESS AT
Corner Market & Franklin Streets
b Member Fed. Deposit Insurance Gorp'n.
along said alley, forty feet, to the|
Church Choirs
Gave Pageant
Louie W. Ayre Directs
“The Holy Nativity”
The Pageant of “The Holy Na-
tivity’ arranged by Leonard Young
and David Williams was pres-
ented at Trucksville Methodist
Church, ‘Sunday, December 23rd.,
at 7:30 P.M. under the direction
of Louie Wiegand Ayre.
Mrs.
Rey-
The following took part:
Herbert Williams, Betsy
nolds, ‘Shirley Kleigling, Helen
Roushey, Patty Roberts, Louise
Karin, Dawn Dick, Barbara Davis,
Eugene Gordon, Dwight Dick, Frank
Wenger, Harold Croom, Herbert
DeWitt, Warren Taylor and Bruce
Long.
The Choir sang the accom-
panying musical selections with solo
parts by Ruth Turn Reynolds, Wil-
liam Henninger, and Sam Davis.
New staging was built by
Sheldon Bennett and installed by
William Hewitt, assisted by Doris
Finney, Norman Stookey, Bruce
Long and James Dick,
At the morning service the girls’
and senior choirs sang special
Christmas music arranged for two
choirs.
Mrs. Nancy Howell
Dies At Son's Home
Nancy” L. Howell, 86, of
who died Wednesday
. Howell, will be buried this
afternoon with services from the
home.
She had been in ill health for
some’ time and died as a result
of complications following an at-
tack of influenza.
+ Born at Mount Zion, she was
the daughter of the late Stephen
and Elizabeth DeWitt Lord. ©On
December 14, 1881, she married
the late Whitney Howell who
farmed in East Dallas on what is
now part of the Payne estate.
Since the death of her husband
on November 6, 1943, she had re-
sided with her son. She was a
member of Mount Zion Methodist
Church.
Besides her son, she is survived
by a sister, Mrs. Ada Hice, Dallas;
two grandchildren, Alberta Howell,
a teacher at Trevose, Pa., and Mrs.
Fred Myers, at home; two grand-
children, Irend Frederick Myers
and Sharon Lee Myers, home.
Rev. Frederick W. Reinfurt will
officiate. Interment will be in
Cedar Crest Cemetery, Trucksville.
Pallbearers were John Hildebrant,
George Snyder, Alfred Moore, Les-
lie Spencer, Scott Newberry and
Charles Moore.
Bumper Turkey Crop
For Holiday Trade
Not only were there plenty
of Pennsylvania turkeys for (Christ-
mas but the supply is ample to
provide for the rapidly developing
family custom of buying another or
several turkeys for use in the later
winter months, the State Depart-
ment of Agriculture has announced.
Turkey growers of the State—
sensing the increasing “before and
after holiday’’ demand created in
pre-war years by hotels and res-
taurants in featuring the big birds:
on the .menus from September
through spring and even summer
months—are prepared to meet con-
sumer requests with the biggest
turkey crop in the history of the
State. Production this year totals
1,670,000 birds, 30 per cent high-
er than 1944 and the fourth con-
secutive year the Pennsylvania
crop passed the million mark.
Either way, you're a winner
when you put your money on
Watkins Mineral Compounds for
Hogs, Stock and Poultry. Make
money by speeding up production,
getting faster growth and saving
on feed.
Hens need Watkins Mineral
Compound to cut cost of produc-
ing eggs. Do it by saving on feed
and getting more of the eggs the
hen is bred to lay. Just four extra
eggs a year pays the cost of the
Mineral per hen.
Stanley Mashinski
The Watkins Dealer
DALLAS R. F. D. 3
Telephone Dallas 276-R-7
¥ A Principal Had :
Retired” November 7
The funeral of Walter E. R
67, retired principal of Lake Town-
ship School, was held yesterday
afternoon from his home in West
Pittston. Mr. Roberts passed away
Sunday afternoon at 4:30 at “his
home following a lingering illness.
Born in Pikes Creek, October 8,
1879, he was the son of the late
Russell and Nettie Roberts. He
graduated in 1902 from Strouds-
burg State Teachers’ College and
taught school for many years. : Be-
fore coming to Lake Township nine
years ago he had been supervising
principal at Hughestown and West
Wyoming Schools. ¥ RR
Lake Township saw sotdble] Tro: r
gress during his tenure of office,
the most significant improvement
being the addition of classes in.
vocational training. In addition to
his duties as principal, Mr. Roberts
also taught bookkeeping.
He was a member of the West
xa
>
Pittston Methodist Church and be- Eas?
longed to Bruce Rickett’s
Sons of Veterans,
Springs. 2
Because of failing health he ail
not resume his
Camp,
November 1. He was succeeded
by George W. Taylor. Mis
Fairmount ‘
duties at ake 2
Township this fall and resigned on
He leaves his wife, the former By
Bertha Ruggles, Pikes ‘Creek, and
three sons, Willard and Rus: rs Pe
both of Brookline, Pa. and Wa or,
Houston, Texas. nk
Rev. Roy T. Henwood w
ficiating clergyman and interment
was in the Maple Grove Cemete
Pikes Creek.
Elevated Parks
The Department of Forests :
at more than 2,000 “toot above 5
level. aE
Many farmers raised turk
in numbers for the first this
with the result that the State
of the Mississippi River, in th
number produced. California
with 4942, 000 of the uations
From all of us to all re
and prosperous New |.
Year.
Dallas
Supply
Telephone Dallas 121
Main Street Dallas
gi we don't ave it—
we'll do our best to
of you, a very happy te
Hardware a ie