WE ARE PROUD that nowhere in the State are prices for these nine items and hundreds of oth- ers lower than ours— ALKA SELTZER 60c size, 49¢c *x * Xx BROMO SELTZER 60c size, 49c¢c * * LYSOL $1 size, 89¢ * ok Kk ANACIN $1.25 size, 98¢c *x x * BISODOL 60c size, 49¢c *x kx x VICKS VAPOR RUB T5¢c size, 59¢ * * kx BAYER ASPIRIN 5c size, 59¢ * Kk * DEXTRI-MALTOSE ‘Pound Can 65¢ x * X EX LAX 25¢ size, 19¢ Tn addition to the popular standard items above we call your respectful atten- tion to the following spec- ialties, reasonably priced: 4-Blade Pocket Knife, $1.98 Fountains Pens, 83c to $2.75 Perfume Lamps, $1.00 Eversharp Repeater Pencils, $1.50 New Metal Game Sets, $1.00 Berkeley Windproof Lighter, $2.00 All-Metal Flashlight (com- plete), $1.79 Miniature Flashlight, (com- plete), 39c. Lustro Costume Jewelry, $1.00 to $15.00 Leather Wrist Watch Straps, 39¢ to 50c Gem Micromatic Razors, $1.25 Scripto Pencil Sets, 35¢ Yello-Bole Pipes, $1.00 x. % For Your Health's Sake and For Real Comfort in Living % % ok STOP AND SHOP for merchandise listed above and hundreds of other items The TRADING POST A POST CLASSIFIED AD IS THE PLACE TO GET RESULTS QUICKLY AND CHEAPLY PHONE DALLAS 300 ® THREE CENTS PER WORD @ 80c MINIMUM For Sale— BROODER STOVE, 300 capacity, coal. A. Zarembo, Davenport St. NEW HAMPSHIRE 12%e¢, Rock Red 10c. All straight run. Cock- erels 5c bloodtested and R. O. P. breeding. Car delivery. Telephone 31-R-11. Joe Davis, Leraysville. ROASTING | George Rice and Son. 348-R-2. ICKENS and broilers. Phone BABY CHICKS are now available by order. = Hilbert’s Hatchery, Beaumont. BABY CHICKS, March hatches, New Hampshire and Rock Red. Straight run 12%c delivered, cock- erels 8c. Bloodtested and R.O.P. breeding. Joe Davis, LeRaysville, Pa. FIREPLACE logs and furnace wood ‘Call Dallas 124. SIX-ROOM semi-bungalow with im- provements. Corner Parrish and Moffett Sts., Dallas. For informa- tion phone Dallas 514. Who To Call— LIFE INSURANCE for children from 0 up. Full protection age 5. George Turn, 201 Center Street, Shavertown. Telephone 336-R-13. LAND and construction surveys. William J. (Carroll, registered pro- fessional engineer. Machell. Ave., Dallas, Phone 260-R-2. WATER WELLS a specialty. (All 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. Electrical work. Russell W. Shaver, 118 Main St., Dallas. Phone 290-R-T. 50-1t ELECTRICAL service of all kinds. House wiring. Dallas 337-R-9, R. W. Prutzman. INSTRUCTION piano, band and or- chestra instruments. Alfred Mil- liner-Camp, Lehigh St., Trucksville. Phone Dallas 304-R-8 or Meshoppen 5-R-0. Wanted To Rent— 7 ANYTHING ' with roof and four walls, apartment, furnished ro ior house by April 1. Phone 453- R-2. SMALL APARTMENT or light housekeeping. Middle-aged couple. Best references. Box MN. FIVE TO SEVEN room house be- fore May 1. Adults only. George L. Harvey, Machell Avenue, Dallas /| kowski Rendering Works. VETERAN AND WIFE desire to rent small house, Shavertown, Trucksville or Dallas. Mrs. Griffiths Morgan, 332 1S. Hancock St., Wilkes Barre. Real Estate— Home ownership made easy. Monthly payments. Inquire Rural Building & Loan Association, First National Bank, Dallas, or Dr. F. B. Schooley, Dallas. Real Estate For Sale— SIX-ROOM House, Noxen, improve- ments, fireplace, private water supply. Terms cash or G. I. Loan. Dr. F. Budd Schooley, Dallas. LOT, 50x181, Davis Street, Trucks- ville. Phone Kingston 77-2953. Wanted To Buy— ONE LARGE or two adjacent lots in Dallas. State price, size and location. Box D. Dallas Post. 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 OLD JEWELRY-DIAMONDS. 128 Franklin Street. 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. Help Wanted— WANTED WOMAN to do cleaning one day a week at Idetown. Call Dallas 300. Situations Wanted— EXPERIENCED farmer wants job as herdsman, vegetable gardener, truck driver, watchman or care- taker. Charles F. Kinsman, Dallas, R. D. 1. Miscellaneous LEASE FORMS, one of the best on ‘the market, 10c each, 3 for 25c. The Dallas Post. We remove dead stock free of charge. Call Dallas 433-R-9. Las- 51-1t WEEAD ANIMALS removed promptly, free of charge. (Call Carl Crockett, Muhlenburg, 19-R-4. 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 ~ FOR “PROMPT SERVICE ! REBENNACK & COVERT 267 WYOMING AVENUE, KINGSTON 5 (Opposite Hoyt Library) @ WORK LE Ra ISIN Er | Harold C. Home for moderate rates. Provides the same efficient, modern service in the Dallas Area as in town . . . at the same 64 North Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Telephone Wilkes-Barre 3-0400 Snowdon——— Funerals T, FRIDAY, MARCH 1, a CENTERMORELAND GIRL, / NOW IN WASHINGTON, HAS PICTURE IN LIFE Pictured in last week’s issue of Life magazine is Miss Ada Jackson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clark Jackson, of Cen- ter Moreland. She is flanked by two huge stacks of testi- mony of the Pearl Harbor hearings which fill sixty-one volumes, totaling twelve times the length of “Gone With the Wind.” Miss Jackson is a graduate of Dallas Township High School and is employed as a teletype operator in the Senate Office Building. Editor's Note: What inter- ested us most was that Miss Jackson displayed the nicest pair of Nylon clad legs that have gone out of the Back Mountain Region in years. a "Questions People Ask” The concluding service of a series on ‘‘Questions People Ask” will be held at Dallas Methodist Church service Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. Subject: “Does Charity Be- gin at Home ?” 100% Asphalt Roofing For your barns and farm buildings use our asphalt roofing. Tough, long-lasting —easy to apply. Free roof- ing estimates. EDGAR B. SUTTON TRUCKSVILLE ROAD 'CARVERTON, PA. Telephone 423-R-17 Mailing Address Wyoming R.D. 3 STORE TALK This is. chick time, and high time that you see us for your supoly of feeders, fountains and Dr. Salsburys medication—Eureka Coal Brooders and Royal Electric Brooders. | 48" Coal Brooder—$17.95 100 Chick Royal Electric $14.75 350 Chick Royal Electric $31.00 500 Chick Royal Electric $35.00 Surplus goods keep roll- ing in— Milk kettles and bed blankets are among the best values. Also saddles, halt- ers and some dandy pocket knives too. You can still get a Stoker! We have the famous Stokol now, in several sizes, and can give you an immediate installation—give us a call and enjoy automatic heat at a saving in fuel cost. Steel Stanchions and stalls are available for prompt delivery. Maple City Barn equipment still sells at pre-war prices. $10.50 for stall and stanchion com- plete. Three styles are set up here for your inspection. (Including the State College Comfort Stall.) Ready sized linoleum rugs are rather scarce, but we can make any size from rolls of 12 foot wide ma- terial—Both living room and kitchen patterns are in stock now. Do you need a new iron- ing board? We have them ! Gay-Murray Go. ~ Incorporated TUNKHANNOCK, PA. Aged Woman Dies At Trucksville Mrs. Cease, 92, Came From Line of Patriots Funeral services §6r Mrs. E fe | S. Cease, 92, d deny an illus- trious line of mi men, will be held tomorrow afternoon from the home of her daughter, Mrs. Ray- mond A. Finney, Carverton Road, Trucksville. Mrs. Cease, the widow of Charles W. Cease, was born in Plymouth September 17, 1853, and after her marriage lived in Nanticoke and Dorranceton until the death of her husband twenty-two years ago after which she lived with her daughter. She was the daughter of Ira and Mary Smith Ransom of Plymouth. Her father served in the (Civil War, and her grandfather, Colonel George P. Ransom, fought in the Revolu- tionary War, for eight years en- listing as a drummer, under General Washington. ‘ Through her great grandfather, Captain Samuel Ransom, who came from Ipswitch, England, she was related to Mrs. Adda Ransom Gar- inger, who was buried on Wednes- day. Mrs. Cease came from a family noted for its longevity. Her father lived to be ninety-five and her mother, ninety. Her grandfather, ‘Colonel Ransom, died at the age of cighty-seven, while her great grand- father fell in the Battle of Wyom- ing. She suffered a broken hip five years ago, and due to her advanced age, was forced to remain a shut- in for the rest of her life. She was formerly a member of the Dorranceton Methodist Church and on moving ito Trucksville trans- ferred her membership to the Trucksville Methodist Church. Besides her daughter, a son, War- ren R. Cease, Erie, and a grand- daughter, Doris R. Finney, at home, survive. Rev. George Roberts will officiate and interment will be in Lehman Cemetery. Arrangements by Ralph L. Brickel, Dallas. Bible Class Meets Men’s Bible (Class of Lehman Methodist Church held a meeting Wednesday evening in the Church basement. Thirty men, including guests from the Jackson and Ide- town charges were present. Games were played and an evening of fellowship was enjoyed. Refresh- ments were served and a motion picture on ithe Dominican Republic was shown. Nominating Committee Named By Rotaryanns Dallas Women of Rotary held their annual monthly dinner meet- ing last Thursday at Turner’s res- taurant in Kingston. Mrs. James Lacy, Mrs. George Metz and Mrs. Harry Ohlman served on the com- mittee and Mrs. John M. Corliss presided. The club voted to make contri- butions to the annual Red (Cross Drive, to Dallas and Shavertown Teen-Age Centers and the veterans’ Home in Trucksville. Mrs: Budd Schooley was appoint- ed to get information on ithe Cancer Clinic at Wilkes-Barre, and a nom- inating committee, consisting of Mrs. Warren Yeisley and Mrs. Os- wald Griffith ,was appointed to se- lect a slate of officers for the com- ing year. Miss Mildred Gittens entertained with a program of musical selec- tions. Huntsville Class Holds Meeting Friday Night Friendship (Class of Huntsville Christian Church held its monthly meeting at the church Friday might. Following the business meeting games were played and refresh- ments served. Present: Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Culp, Wendell Jones, Phyllis Elston, Hannah Culp, Royal Culp, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Brobst, Mrs. Ed Hopa, Mrs. Jeff Wagner, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Culp, Mrs. L. M. Culp, Mrs. Iva Jones, Edith Dietz, Carl Warmouth, Mrs. Elva Warmouth, Mrs. Wilbur Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Mauro. Mrs. Crocker Buried Funeral services for Mrs. Grade Watt Crocker, wife of D. H. Crocker, Wilkes-Barre, were held from the late home Saturday afternoon with large attendance. She was the mother of Mrs. Milford Shaver, Cen- ter Hill road, Dallas. Rev. William K. Russell, St. Ste- phen’s Episcopal Church, officiated and interment was in Hollenback Cemetery, Wilkes-Barre, Pall bear- ers were L. H. Howe, George F. Frey, ‘Louis Leger, Arthur Schrage, Dallas Borough Jayvees Defeat Dallas Township Dallas Borough Junior ’Varsity flattened Dallas Township JayVees 40-21 on the Borough floor Wednes- day afternoon. Allen Knecht, Bor- sotigh, was high score with four- teen. Jake Duda and Dick Peirce, Borough, and Warren Fowler, Township, had ten each. Other players were: Dallas Borough— Waters, no points; Shaver, four points; Price, two; P. Sedler, none and Harris, none. Dallas Township —Bunney, four; Hope, two; Kuhn- ert, four; Stine, none; Wallace, none; Veitch, one and Perrego, none. Officials were Steve Sedler, referee, and Tex Wilson; umpire. A beautiful room costs only 98 WHEN You THE MIRACLE WALL FINISH ide te SHAVERTOWN PAINT AND SPECIALTIES CO. Mrs. G. Harold Lloyd Telephone Dallas 10 52 West Center Street Opposite Grade School Chicken Supper Sponsored by KUNKLE FOREST FIRE CREW KUNKLE COMMUNITY HALL WEDNESDAY EVENING March 6, 1946 Serving from 6 to 9 —Tickets— Adults—T75¢ Children—50c¢ INSTALL Combination Storm Sash and Screens now; for year around comfort and savings! Phoenix Summer screens and winter panes are easily, | quickly and safely in- | stalled from inside your | home. Phoenix Combination Storm Sash and Screens are complete with par- ent frame, two storm sash inserts and one bronze screen insert. Come in and see this wonderful window to- day. Mrs. Johnson says all other storm sash are ob- solete. Even a woman can change Phoenix Combination Storm Sash and Screens. SHAVERTOWN BUILDERS SUPPLY CO. Successors To SHAVERTOWN LUMBER COMPANY Phone Dallas 42 Received THIS WEEK 2-TONS SCHELL'S Famous GARDEN AND FIELD SEEDS PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW WHILE THE SELECTION IS LARGE ASK FOR CATALOGUE On page 6 of this year’s Schell Seed Catalogue you will see a picture of our customer, Stanley Kreiger of Conyngham Valley, Stan- ley has come to Bulford’s for years to buy equipment. The picture shows him in a beautiful field of beans which he grew from Schell’s seeds. GEORGE Bulford The big, friendly International Store HILLSIDE, PA. Telephone 311 R. B. Watt and Herbert Austin. Just Received 1i 0 ited supply of GALVANIZED WARE No. 17 Open Galvanized COAL HODS Well made with handles and bales. 19¢ each strong Galvanized 12-quart size WATER PAILS 55¢ each No. 2 Size GALVANIZED TUBS $1.45 each Large Size extra heav galvanized : ASH CANS $6.75 each POULTRY SUPPLIES We have a complete line of galvanized Feeder S, Waterers, Brooder Stoves and poultry wire. Now is the time to pur- chase your poultry supplies. You will find our stock most complete. | SPRING is just around the corner. Soon you will be thinking of a garden. We want you to think of us as your seed and garden supply headquarters. We have a fine supply of Genuine Burpee’s Bulk GARDEN SEED and all kinds of garden tools at most reasonable prices. Dallas Hardware and Supply Telephone Dallas 121 Main Street Dallas
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers