The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, February 15, 1946, Image 8

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    The TRADING POST
A POST CLASSIFIED AD
IS THE PLACE TO GET
RESULTS QUICKLY AND CHEAPLY
|
PHONE DALLAS 300 ® THREE CENTS PER WORD © 30c MINIMUM
For Sale—
For Sale—
RADIO, Cabinet model. Call 246-
R-11.
COAL STQVE chick brooder. Five-
hundred capacity. Complete with
wire runway $35. Call 203-R-0.
FIVE BURNER oil stove, = Weber
Piano, 5 piece living room suite,
dresser and washstand, ice box. J.
B. Frank, Claude St., Dallas.
COAL BROODER STOVE, complete,
for 500 chicks. A. Zarembo, Dav-:
enport St., Dallas.
GOOD MILCH COWS, freshen soon.
Holstein— Purebred Ayrshire,
~ Dallas 219-R-2.
TWO iron beds, dining room fable
and other household furniture.
186 Shaver Ave. Shavertown,
Phone 236-R-8.
NESCO electric roaster with time
clock, practically new. Harvey's
Lake 2130.
LOT, 50X181, Davis IStreet, Tirucks-
ville. Phone Kingston 7-2953.
ELECTRIC orthophonic victrola, ‘Call
Dallas 330. 5
SIX-ROOM house at Noxen all im-
provements, fireplace, private
. water supply, three out buildings.
Terms cash or (GI Loan. Dr. F.
Budd Schooley, Dallas.
DESIRABLE LOT 70x120 with 2-
room building. Park Street. In-
quire William Price, Park Street,
Dallas.
ROASTING CHICKENS and broilers.
George Rice and Son. Phone
348-R-2.
BABY CHICKS are now available
by order. Hilbert's Hatchery,
Beaumont.
. BABY CHICKS, New Hampshire
and Rock Reds, straight run,
February 12c, March 12%c deliv-
ered. R.O.P. breeding and blood
tested. Joe Davis and Son, Lerays-
ville, Pa.
See Us
For...
Lumber
Windows
Doors
“Plaster Board
Plaster
Lime
Rock Lath
Metal Lath
Rockwool
Insulation Board
‘Hard Board
Terra Gotta Pipe
Brick
Cement
Calcium Chloride
Hardware
Paint
Roofing
and many other items.
SHAVERTOWN
BUILDERS SUPPLY CO.
Successors To
SHAVERTOWN LUMBER
COMPANY
Phone Dallas 42
Twenty five 4% ft. extra
heavy cross cut saws with
handles on each end. Special at
$5.00 each or $4.50 for the lot.
LEIDINGER
117 S. Washington St.
Wilkes-Barre
SIX-ROOM semi-bungalow with im-
provements. Corner Parrish and
Moffett Sts., Dallas. For informa-
tion phone Dallas 514.
Wanted To Rent—
FIVE TO SEVEN room house be-
fore May 1. Adults only. Write
Box H, Dallas Post.
VETERAN AND WIFE desire to
‘rent small house, Shavertown,
Trucksville or Dallas. Mrs. Griffiths
Morgan, 332 iS. Hancock St., Wilkes
Barre,
Real Estate—
Home ownership made easy.
Monthly payments. Inguire Rural
Building & Loan Association, First
National Bank, Dallas, or Dr. F. B.
Schooley, Dallas.
Real Estate For Sale—
PROPERTY of Jr. O.U.AM. will be
sold on February 23 at 2 p.m. at
auction for cash. Lot containing
1% acres of land, two-story build-
ing—main floors 30 by 50 feet with
lights and drilled well. Would
make good business place or factory
location. Main Road, Sweet Valley
‘near North Lake.
Wanted To Buy—
OLD JEWELRY-DIAMONDS.
Franklin Street.
128
CLARINET for youngster in school
band. Box (C Dallas Post. =
Miscellaneous
LIFE INSURANCE for children from
0 up. Full protection age 5.
George Turn, 201 Center Street,
Shavertown. Telephone 336-R-13.
FIREPLACE logs and furnace wood
Call Dallas 290-R-7.
LAND and construction surveys.
William J. (Carroll, registered pro-
fessional engineer. Machell Ave.,
Dallas, Phone 260-R-2.
[Ware WELLS a specialty. All
work guaranteed. R. B. Shaver
land Son, Contractors, Drillers. Ide-
tow, Dial Harvey’s Lake 3156.
PAINTING, PAPER HANGING, dec-
orating. Elwood Lutsey. Phone
Dallas 300.
The two animals in the picture
are owned by Hiram Stevens,
Jennysville, Wyoming County.
The cow is a grade Holstein, born
October 17, 1939. This animal is
the oldest daughter of Piebe Ger-
ben Creamelle, one of the sires
used at NEPA Artificial Breeding
Coop., Tunkhannock, Pa.
The heifer calf was the first test
tube calf, or the first artificially
bred offspring. It was born October
31, 1945, and was sired by King
Arrow Aaggie. This sire is also used
at NEPA Artificial Breeding * Co-
operative.
Lady, barn mame of the above
cow, has completed four lactations
.
THE POST, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1946
First Test Tube Calf
with a total of 48, 463 lbs. milk and
1,789.9 lbs. butterfat. In her fifth
lactation in the first three months
of the D.H.I.LA. report, she has pro-
duced 214.9 lbs. butterfat and
5,296 lbs. milk. The average cow
in the state produces about 200
pounds of butterfat in a year’s time.
By proper breeding, feeding, and
care, this animal has equaled that
production in three months’ time.
Hiram Stevens and his son, Rich-
ard, operate the farm. They have
a herd of grade Holsteins. Mr.
Stevens has made a practice of
using purebred Holstein herd sires
for the past ten generations and
has developed a high . producing
herd of cattle.
Durbin Class Box Festival Is
Success Socially and Financially
The Durbin ‘Sunday School Class:
of the Methodist Church held a
Valentine Box Social at the church
social rooms on Tuesday evening.
The social] was a money making
project of the class, the object being
the
to purchase new lights for
Sanctuary.
Ladies packed lunches that were
auctioned off by Mrs. Robert Body-
comb, assisted by Mrs. Lettie Cul-
ver. The boxes sold from $1.50 to
$3.00. Donations of $19.00, made
a total of $72.00.
The highlight of the program was
“Dallas most outstanding tenor,”
Nile M. White singing “Let me call
you Sweetheart” to Dallas’ most
outstanding Sweetheart, Richard
Disque. Margaret Brace, Marjorie
Wood, Janet Garinger, Nelson Nel-
son and John Joseph told “Why
They Never Got Married.” Mr. and
Mrs. Ray ‘Shiber gave Edgar Guest's,
“Father gives his Version and
Mother tells her story.”
The courtships of interest were
told by Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Brace,
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Varker, Mr.
and Mrs. William Cairl, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert VanHorn, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. Har-
old Payne and Mr. and Mrs. Ray-
mond Kuhnert.
Mrs. Harold Payne rendered sev-
eral solos accompanied by Mrs.
James ' Huston. Mrs. Robert Van
Horn, as ‘Post Lady” distributed
mail to those present. Mrs. Edgar
Brace read ‘“Welsh Love Letters,”
Zel Garinger entertained with
jokes. A quiz and games were en-
Electrical work. Russell W. Shaver,
118 Main St.,, Dallas. Phone
290-R-7. 50-1t
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.
Who To Call—
We remove dead stock free of
charge. Call Dallas 433-R-9. Las-
kowski Rendering Works. 51-1t
DEAD ANIMALS removed promptly,
free ‘of charge. Call Carl Crockett,
Muhlenburg, 19-R-4.
Found—
AT HUNTSVILLE Christian Church.
Lady's valuable handkerchief.
Identify and pay for ad. Call 472-
R-10.
To Trade—
WILL TRADE my 1936 blue Ford
convertible coupe body for 1936
2 or 4 door sedan body. Dallas
477-R-T. z
i
joyed by those present.
Present were: - Mr. and Mrs. Ray-
mond Elston; Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Brace, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas ‘Cease,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Peterson, Mr.
and Mrs. James Huston, Mr. and
Mrs. William Cairl, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Owens, Mr. and Mrs. Nile
M. White, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Payne, Mrs. Richard Robins, "Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Scott, Mrs. O. L.
Harvey, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Vark-
er, Mrs. Lettie Culver, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Shiber, Mrs. R. M. Bodycomb,
‘Mr. and Mrs. Zel Garinger, Miss
Margaret Brace, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
LeGrand, Miss Janet Garinger, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert VanHorn, Miss
Marjorie Wood, Mr. and Mrs. How-
ard Bailey, Miss Josephine Stem,
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Kuhnert,
Rev. F. W. Reinfurt, Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Dettmore, William Archard,
John Joseph, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Disque, Nelson Nelson, and Dan
LEHMAN
Mrs. Norman (Clark and daugh-
ters, Ferel and Sheila, and Miss
Janice Ruggles left La Guardia
field Thursday for Seattle where
Mrs. Clark will join her husband,
Lt. Cmdr. Norman (Clark.
WSCS Study Class met with Mrs.
Ella Major Tuesday, January fifth.
Judith Simms, Student Nurse at
Johns Hopkins Hospital spent the
weekend with her parents, Mr. and
,| Mrs. A. B. Simms.
Mrs. Florence Hartzell and Mrs.
(George Lewis are spending a few
days in New York City.
Mrs. Hilda Anderson spent Thurs-
day evening with Mrs. George
Lewis. ‘
Navy Veteran
Is Appointed
Lt. Norbeck To Assist
Farm Agent Hutchison
Luzerne County Agricultural and
Extension Association has announ-
ced the appointment of Curtis C.
Norbeck as full time assistant to
county agent James Hutchison.
Mr. Norbeck, whose home is at
Sugar Grove, Warren County, was
born and reared on a large dairy
and poultry farm. The farm also
produces 500 gallons of Maple syrup
annually. .
He graduated from Pennsylvania
State College school of Dairy Hus-
bandry in the spring of 1943 and
since his graduation has been a
lieutenant, junior grade, with the
U. S. Navy until his discharge on
January 3. He is still a member of
the Naval Reserve.
While in service he acted as liai-
son officer between the Navy and
the Army and Marine Corps. He
took part in the Normandy invasion
with the First Army Division and
was wounded during that engage-
ment. Later he served witth the
Sixth Marine Division on. Okinawa
and directed Naval gunfire against
many of the Jap big guns that
guarded the airport there. He was
in the first group to land with the
Fourth Marine Division on Japan.
Thence he was sent to China with
the Headquarters unit of the Sixth
Marine Division. He saw active
duty for thirty months.
Mr. Norbeck is married and has
a daughter nineteen months of age.
His wife is living in Harrisburg with
her parents until they can find a
home here.
Township PTA
Meets Monday
Dallas Township Parent Teacher
Association will meet Monday night
at eight. All teachers will be in
their rooms after 7:45 for consulta-
tion with parents. The entire build-
ing will be open for inspection.
A variety program with all grades
participating will be followed by a
business meeting. The PTA, through
the Athletic Committee, wil] com-
plete plans for a farmer dance Feb-
ruary 27. Proceeds will go to the
athletic treasury.
ENTER COLLEGE
Harold B. Elston and Royal J.
Culp, Huntsville veterans, will start
classes at Bucknell, Monday.
ELECTROLUX
REPAIRS
Electro Sweeper Service Co.
446 N. Main Street
WILKES-BARRE
Phone 3-7470
Work called for and Delivered
NEW FILTEX CLEANER
is ready for delivery.
Call for free demonstra-
tion.
A. ATIYEH
Manager and distributor
Shavertown Teen-Age
Center Is One Year Old
(Continued from Page One)
Shavertown to help organize and
set up a Teen-Age Center. At this
meeting a committee was appoint-
ed to wait on the school board to
petition them for the use of ithe
abandoned grade school annex of
the Shavertown school. At a meet-
ing a week later an organization
was effected, officers elected and a
report filed on the prospects of ob-
taining a suitable location for the
Center. Tt was mot until a month
later, however, there was any as-
surance of obtaining the desirable
site, in the grade school annex and
that work could be started on ren-
ovating this abandoned building.
Funds were solicited by the teen-
age youth of the community from
their parents and friends and a
total of approximately $300 was
raised by this means. Most o fthis
money was spent in making the
building habitable, installing water
lines, toilet fixtures, wash basins,
and in repairing and painting old
furniture, which was donated by
parents and friends. A separate
power line had to be run to the
building and separate service had
formerly been run from the main
grade school building.
Opened Last Easter .
The Center was officially opened
on the Wednesday after Easter, and
the youth who had not helped with
the arduous jobs of renovating the
building, and their parents found,
to their surprise, a delightful Cen-
ter with ping-pong table, pool table,
card table, snack-bar, dance floor,
juke box and brightly colored
chairs and tables.
A youth organization was per-
fected, complete with constitution,
by-laws, officers and committees.
Membership cards were donated by
the father of one of ‘the members
and approximately 140 members—
teen-age boys and girls began to
assure Shavertown
enjoy a clean, healthful recreation
center in the heart of their own!
community, operated under their |
own rules; financed by their own
efforts, and destined to succeed or
fail by their own whims and de-
sires. The fact that this Center is
functioning successfully at the end
of its first and perhaps most diffi-
cut year, indicates that the youth
of this community are interested
in clean, healthful recreation if it
is made available to them.
The Adult Committee and the
officers have on a number of acca-
sions left discouraged and at times
have wondered if the results were
worth the-effort; what, with lack of
funds to meet necessary bills, nu-
merous parents unwilling to act as
hosts and hostesses when called
upon; refusal of the Community
Welfare Federation to assist the
project financially, and the specter
of other nearby Youth Centers fold-
ing up, apparently for the same rea-
sons. This Adult Committee, how-
ever, is made of sterner stuff and
refused to admit defeat. Their ap-
peals, locally, for assistance met
with more favorable response; the
Junior Women’s Club is now op-
erating the snack bar with one or
more of their members on hand |
each evening the (Center is open
by the Adult Committee in setting
up a recreation center which is pro-
viding clean sanitary recreational
facilities for more than 140 teen-
age youth of the community, they
find themselves faced with a debt
of about $350 which must be met
or financed at this time. Many of
the parents and friends of the Cen-
ter met the plea for funds for this
project in a most generous manner;
some promised but never paid while
others, all too many, just ignored
the plea. It would certainly make
the job of those responsible for
what success has been achieved
much easier if those 'of the parents
and friends who have mot contrib-
uted to date would dig down and
come up with a few dollars to as-
sure the continued success of this
worthy undertaking.
Your presence at the meeting on
Sunday afternoon; your participa-
tion ins the election of officers for
the next year; your ideas and sug-
gestions for improving the Center,
and your active support of ithe of-
ficers and committee by taking your
place when called upon to help, will
of the best
Youth Center possible.
Legion To Hear
Insurance Talk
Lt. George Turn
Will Be Speaker
George Turn, former lieutenant
in the insurance department of the
Navy and now member of the Nav-
al Reserve, has been invited by
Commander Frank Ferry to speak
on government - insurance at the
meeting of Daddow-Isaacs . Post
American Legion next Wednesday
night in Back Mountain Memorial
Library.
Commander Ferry invitees all
veterans whether members of the
Legion or not to attend the meeting
and present any questions they may
have on veteran’s insurance to Mr.
Turn.
There will also be a discussion
of the Legion’s plans for organizing
a baseball team this spring and
further discussion on the selection
of a lot for a new Legion Home.
The Legion now has 106 members.
Bldhde—“Is it proper to hold a
soldier’s hand in the dark?”
Brunette: “Yes, and often neces-
sary!”
GAY-MURRAY
“STORE TALK”
Watch us: for Govern-
ment surplus items, in the
near future. We can’t tell
you what kind, how much
or how many yet, but we
can assure you that you'll
do well to see them.
Power log saws are here!
with the result that the snack bar
is beginning to show a profit which!
together with income from the |
juke-box is paying for the light and!
heat.
The several women of the com-
munity who have taken on the task
of ‘securing hosts and hostesses have
done an exceptional job in securing
adult supervision for the Center on
the evenings when it is open; their
job has not been made as easy as
it might have been because many
parents seem to feel that the re-
sponsibility for operating ithe Cen-
ter is not theirs, but is the job of
the Adult Committee or anyone else
that will do it. Nevertheless, the
job has been done and it is the
feeling of those responsible that
more and more of the parents are
beginning to realize that they can
and should assume this little duty
one evening every several months.
There are over one hundred fam-
ilies represented in ‘the member-
ship of the Shavertown Tee-Age
Center; two couples are needed to
provide adequate supervision on the
evenings the Center is open,’ and if
every mother and father would co-
operate by taking their turn they
would be called upon once in five
months or approximately twice a
year.
Install $1,000 Improvements
Last fall with the coming of cold
weather a heating plant was in-
stalled at a cost of $600 to keep
the Center comfortable. This was
the second and last major expendi-
ture needed to make the Center
a complete and adequate recreation
center for the youth of this com-
munity. * The total investment in
the Center, including ‘the installa-
tion of water and toilet- facilities,
recreation facilities including a full
size pool table, two full size ping-
pong ' tables, snack-bar, new card
tables, juke-box ,well sanded and
waxed dance floor, small pool table,
and magazine rack had cost the
comnunity less than $1,000. Not-
Come in and see them.
Here's one! Armstrong Die
Sets for threading % in.,3%
in. and 1 in. pipe. Every
farm could use one, and
they're a bargain at $9.00.
A. S. Avery at Mill City is
already a customer.
Art says: $7.95 buys a
slick Flourescent lighting
fixture for your kitchen.
You know why they’re pop-
ular: More and better light
for the same amount of cur-
rent—and any one can have
them. Who's next?
If you want to see a beau-
tiful black eye, see Mrs.
Anwyl; she says she got it
while splitting wood, BUT
we are all skeptical; besides
see the teapots, can openers
and pottery just arrived in
her department.
There’s no end to the ef-
fect of this steel strike on
farm supplies, but we still
have a stock of steel posts,
fencing, turkey wire, and
other items. W. F. Wil-
marth of Kingsley bought
his supply. How about
yours?
Gay-Murray Co.
Incorporated
withstanding this small expenditure
i :
TUNKHANNOCK, PA.
BUY THESE
REXALL
PRODUCTS
AT EVANS
Radio Advertised
Rexatt oq. RADIO SHOW
CBS COAST-TO-COAST FRIDAY NIGHTS
QUICK relief for simple head-
aches, neuralgia and muscu-
lar pain...
Rexall puretest .
= ASPIRIN
TABLETS
Buy the economy
size bottle
ALL VITAMINS known to be
essential to human nutrition
— plus LIVER and IRON —
are contained in
Rexall Pyretest
PLENAMINS
A Jexal? propuct £8
72 CAPSULES
ACCIDENTS CAN HAPPEN
TO ANYONE
3
— Wr
TT
£] =
me —
3 Ee ———
Emergency Needs
Buy a full supply for your
Medicine Cabinet — NOW!
OF THE NATION'S HEALTH!
yg
YN
9
Thee Doctor is the dominating factor in
Materia Medica because his knowledge
of medicine and his skill in diagnosis
eminently qualifies him to select proper
drugs to suit the individual needs of his
patients.
Yous Rona Pharmacil. piays «
highly contributing part in Materia Med-
ica. It is his grave responsibility to inter-
pret and prepare prescriptions exactly as
your doctor orders . . . to dispense them
with the certainty that all ingredients have
been carefully tested for absolute purity,
uniform quality, maximum effectiveness.
Lie Vrse justly deserves the grateful
praise of the nation. Through her unself-
ish zeal to allay human suffering she, too,
has an important place in Materia Medica.
®*MATERIA MEDICA implies knowledge,
responsibility and care in medical matters.
s