PAGE EIGHT remem 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— Set of light DOUBLE HARNESS, rubber trimmed, call Dallas 300. Female BOSTON TERRIER, 3 years old registered. (Call Dallas 189. A few gallons OUTSIDE WHITE, arsenate of lead, bluestone, ro- tenone, Vigero, aluminum cultiva- tor, electric irons, phono radio, oil heating stoves, vimlite, garden tools, canners, O-cedar mops, ¥%2 HP electric motor. George Stolarick, Lehman, HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS, din- ing room suite, library suite, beds, dressers etc. Pole 252 Harvey's Lake. EIGHT HORSE POWER gasoline engine, mounted. George Lan- don, phone 337-R-7. VICTROLA and records. Machinski, 276-R-7. Stanley BOOK CASE and desk combined; library table.” Reasonable, Phone 265-R-16. MOWING MACHINE, 6 ft. cut; one- horse rake. Gilees Wilson, Fern- brook-Demunds Road. Phone 298- R-16. : Gray and white enamel COAL RANGE, with hot water back. Good condition, call Dallas3. HAY on ground cheap. Mrs. Frank P. Smith, Kunkle. Phone 421-R- 19. BUFFET, table, six chairs, $50; lib- rary table, $5. Phone 159-R-16. TWO 20-rod rolls 11 gauge 54-inch woven wire. $15 per roll. Henry Shupp, Kunkle, call 337-R-3. FOUR ACRES standing oats ready to harvest, Centermoreland 53- R-10. E. D. Roderick. Black Stewart Warner kitchen STOVE, hot water front, excellent baker, 40 gal. boiler. (Cheap also double drainboard, slate top, fits sink 17 by 28. Phone 146-R-13. CLOCKS, fire extinguisher, garden tools, Oliver typewriter, tables, chairs, rugs and household goods. Call Dallas 320-R-2. RUBBER-TIRED FARM WAGONS We have for sale for im- mediate delivery = rubber- tired farm wagons. Good- win Auto Co., 651-653 Wyo- ming Avenue, Kingston. CHILDREN’S outgrown clothing. Spring coats, suits, dresses in excellent condition. 779 Wyoming ave. Open daily from 10:30 to 5. SLAB STOVE wood, $1 per cord. At mill near Beaumont. Ruggles Brothers. Grey enamel Wilkes-Barre RANGE, hot water front. Good condition. Phone HL. 3275. RED ASHES for driveways. Truck- ing service. Phone Kingston 7-4404. Ray Pisaneschi. Real Estate For Sale— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE, well, elec- tricity, good garden plot. Located on main highway at Demunds cor- ners. Immediate occupancy. (Call 2 to 8 p.m. Miss Emily Goldsmith, Dallas 357-R-12. : BUNGALOW, 5 rooms, all improve- You don’t meed us to tell you how necessary money is! But what we can tell vou is how to obtain extra money you need right now! We are ready to make vou a loan on low-in- terest, e a s y-to-repay terms. Come in today, talk over your needs with us and we will arrange a satisfactory loan for vou. FIRST NATIONAL BANK DALLAS, PA. Member Federal De- posit Insurance Corp. land on state Inquire David ments, 2 acres highway. $4,500. Ide, next door. __THE POST, FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1946 _ Wanted ‘WANTED, a good home for mother cat and litter of cheerful little baby kittens. The perfect combina- tion to make quick work of a barn or store full of rats. Would even prove very useful in some houses. Not the Barnyard brood cat but one most as good. Owner is moving to city. Phone Dallas 300, Howard Risley’s Barnyard. Male Help Wanted— AN EX-G.I. who is interested in handling a business of his own. Only an ambitious man will be con- sidered. My company will finance the right man. For further details call or write Stanley Machinski, Dallas 276-R-7. Female Help Wanted— WOMAN to do washing and ironing at her home. Will call for and deliver. Phone H.L. 3446. GIRL or middle-aged woman for general housework at Idetown. No small children. Mrs. Arthur Stair, phone H.L. 3172. GIRL over 16. Housework for three adults. Go home nights. No laundry or cooking. Hours 10 to 7 daily, one full day per week off. Call H.L. 220 for appointment or interview. ’ Wanted To Buy— 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 Who To Call— CINDERS, red ash, top soil, sand, gravel. Fiske Trucking Service, Dallas 489-R-3. TAXI SERVICE—25¢ first mile, 20c second. No trip too long or short. Back Mountain Taxi (Company. Phone night or day 413-R-2. BUILDING CONTRACTOR, mew work, remodeling, repairing, also lumber for sale. Wayne King, Dal- las RFD. 2. Telephone 361-R-11. 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 €ur- tis, 7-5636—210 Lathrop street, Kingston. SEPTIC TANKS, cesspools and privy vaults cleaned. J. A.. Singer, City Scavinger, 137 Dagobert street, Wilkes-Barre. Dial 3-4529. BLUE CRUSHED ISTONE. Coon Certified Concrete, North Moun- tain Quarry. Dallas 465-R-9. PERSONALIZED Stationery, printed with name and address in a wide variety of paper sizes and colors. 100 sheets and 50 envelopes $1.50. Two weeks delivery. The Dallas Post. GENUINE ENGRAVED personalized note paper with your mame, 50 engraved sheets and 50 plain en- velopes to match $2.50. Two weeks delivery. The Dallas Post. DEAD STOCK removed promptly. Call Dallas 433-R-9. Laskowski, Rendering Plant. DEAD ANIMALS removed promptly, free of charge. Call Carl Crockett, Muhlenburg, 19-R-4. WELDING: Farm, automotive household—also portable equip- ment. Wyant Brothers, Noxen road, Harvey's Lake 3490. SAND, GRAVEL, TOP SOIL, fill and general excavating. Swanson Brothers, Harvey's Lake 3228. PLUMBING, Heating, oil burners. Robert R. Phipps, North Lehigh, Shavertown. Phone 342-R-2, LAND and construction surveys. William J. Carroll, registered pro- fessional engineer. Machell Ave. Dallas, Phone 260-R-2. WATER WELLS a specialty. All wopk guaranteed. R. B. Shaver and Son, (Contractors, Drillers. Ide- town, Dial Harvey's Lake 3156. (CINDER BLOCKS (8x8x16), also corner blocks. Dallas Block Com- pany, Park Street, Dallas. Phone 413-R-T. REFRIG TION service and re- pairs. Commercial and domestic. Harold Ash, phone Dallas 409-R-7. COPIES of new, old or faded photo- graphs. E. P. Gardner, Ellis, Drive, ‘Shavertown, Telephone Dal- las 249-R-2. INSTRUCTION piano, band and or- chestra instruments. Alfred Mil- 5-R-0. liner-Camp, Lehigh St., Trucksville. | WANTED A good home for a lovely little kitten, fine selection from litter of one maltese, one tiger and one black and white. Guaranteed to have that distinctive aroma a la cat so eloquently glorified by Mrs. T. B. M. Hicks in Pillar to Post. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Don’t wait until you see that rat— KEEP him over in the neigh- bor’s yard. Howard Risley’s Barnyard. Phone Dallas 300. Mrs. Anna M. Lozo Buried Last Monday The funeral of Mrs. Anna M. Lozo, 85, who died Friday afternoon at the home of her son, Willard, Pioneer Avenue, Shavertown, was held Monday afternoon from Brickel Funeral Home in Dallas with ser- vices in charge of her pastor, Rev. Herbert Frankfuft, St. Paul's Luth- eran Church. i Born in Kufikle ofpibneer stock, Mrs. Lozo had lived in this area throughout her-lifetime. Her hus- band Ford M. Lozo died in 1940. In frail health for sometime, she had, however, been able to be about until a few days before her death. Besides her son, Willard, she leaves two daughters, Mrs. Stella Cummings and Mrs. Richard Palmer of Dallas and a son, Howard of Harrison, N. J. Twenty-two grand- children and eighteen great grand- children also survive, 2 Interment was in the, family plot in Woodlawn (Cemetery. " Paulbearers were: Robert Lozo, Willard Lozo, Jr., Harold Thomp- son, M/S Walter Thompson, Wil- liam Rau and Mat Mahon. Take New Jobs George Ide and son, Glen of Huntsville, are employed by East- man Kodak Company at Rochester, N.Y. The Ides formerly conducted the Mahaffey Gas Station on Wyo- ming avenue. | the Seventeen Boys Choose The Navy Kozemchak Is Proud 0f Local Sailors Seventeen Back Mountain young men have enlisted in the Navy since the beginning of the year according to figures released this week by Chief Petty Officer Andrew Kozem- chak in charge of the Wilkes-Barre Recruiting office. Kozemchak says the Navy has now revised its enlistment policy and except in a few instances is taking no more two-year enlist- ments. The exceptions are: 1. former Navy men with one year of pre- vious navy service; 2, young men’ who pass the Eddy Radar test; and 3, seventeen-year olds who will be discharged a day before they are twenty-one. All other persons must enlist for a term of four years. Kozemchak says there has been a stiffening of Navy physical re- quirements and thinks that enlist- ments may be increased to six years before the first of the year. Until October 1 all who enlist will be eligible to the benefits of the G.I Bil] of Rights. Those under twenty-one who wish to enlist must have their par- ents’ consent and must be accom- anied to the recruiting station by their father if he is living. Birth certificates or baptismal certificates are the only papers mecessary. There were 132 enlistments from Luzerne County area during June. The seventeen who have en- listed from the Back Mountain area since January 1 are: Paul P. Helfrick, Trucksville; Williiam Maceiko, Dallas; Paul C. Shakalum, Shavertown; George L. Owen, Trucksville; Charles C. Cooke, Dallas; Leland Knecht, Dal- las; ‘John R. Cook, Dallas; Frank IC. Gelsleichter, Dallas; Howard W. Garbutt, Dallas; Victor E. McCarty, Dallas; Bernard Siperko, Dallas; William H. Durbin, Shavertown; Russel K. Beck, Shavertown; Rob- ert S. Bachman, Shavertown; Harry E. McCarty, Dallas; David H, Shav- er, Dallas; Dean S. Dodson Shaver- town. STATE POLICE SAY When you take your car out for an afternoon joy ride or an evening spin—use the side roads and avoid heavily travel- led main arteries of traffic. Side roads often are more scenic—and they permit you to travel at a leisurely pace without interrupting the norm- al flow of traffic. Check On Plantings James Hutchison, county agent, and A. O. Rasmussen, Extension Ornamental Horticulturist of Penn- sylvania State College made a tour of inspection this week to check up on previous ornamental plant- ings made at Dallas Township High School, East Dallas, Orange and Mt. Zion Methodist Churches and at Lehman High School. They are also making plans for ornamental plant- ings at Carverton Grange Hall. Call Heck’s 3326 Harvey's Lake Dry Cleaning & Dyeing QUICK—CONVENIENT DEPENDABLE Harvey's Lake Highway West Dallas (Opposite The Castle) DYMOND'S ORANGE, PA. HOME MADE PIES BAR-B-Qs — SUNDAES A beautiful room goss only 98 THE MIRACLE WALL FINISH ook ie G. HAROLD LLOYD PAINTS Wallpaper—Specialties Center Street (Opposite Grade School) SHAVERTOWN, PA. Open from 8 a.m. until 8 p.m. YOU'VE 30a ILE EVER HOPED FOR IN A GASOLINE erio gh-tes For best results, dont dilute Sunoco Dynafuel with other gasoline. Wait until your tank is nearly empty —then fill up. Compare its action against best gasoline you ever used rmance W» Pp rice WONDER FUEL the Why Buyers Are Buying BREYERS In 1866—just 80 years ago—an ambitious young man in Philadelphia—William A. Breyer—had an idea. It was to produce good ice cream for sale. Not ordinary ice cream—but ice cream made of real rich cream, real cane sugar, real fruits, nuts, berries, and other natural flavorings. The success of his ice cream proved one all-important thing to Mr. Breyer. It was that people appreciated and preferred a quality ice cream. So he determined that his ice cream should always be made of the finest ingredients. No cream substitutes. fillers. No powders nor No artificial flavorings of any kind. This ideal of quality later became the famous ‘“Breyers Pledge of Purity.” When you buy ice cream from an authorized Breyer dealer you KNOW your children are getting SAFE Ice Cream eo eo eo protected by the famous Breyer “Pledge of Purity” From a few hundred gallons of ice cream in 1866 the Breyers Company now manufactures millions of gallons annually. Let’s look at some of Breyers raw materials require- ments for a single year. 30,000,000 gallons of milk and cream 12,600,000 pounds of sugar 1,000,000 pounds of eggs (800,000 dozen) 3,500,000 pounds of luscious strawberries 2,000,000 pounds of ripe ruddy peaches 1,405,000 pounds of chocolate 150,000 pounds of fresh butter 500,000 pounds of pecans 15,000 pounds of coffee 30,000 pounds vanilla beans 2,225,000 pounds of bananas 800,000 pounds of pineapples 700,000 pounds of cherries 600,000 pounds raspberries 600,000 pounds hazel nuts TRY A QUART TODAY Back Mountain Distributors EVANS DRUG STORE SHAVERTOWN
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers