To Present Mrs. Conrad Reading “‘Spoonhandle” The Friendship Class will present Mrs. Elizabeth Conrad at the Trucksville Methodist Church on Friday evening, September 20. She wil] read ‘“‘Spoonhandle” by Ruth Moore, a current best-seller. The public is invited to attend. Tickets may be purchased from any, mem- ber of the class. The committee on arrangements is as follows: Mrs. N. B. ‘Stookey, chairman; Mrs. Sheldon Bennett, Mrs. Vought Long, Mrs. Lester Sheldding. ’ Those desiring to be patrons should give their names to any of the committee members not later than September 13. Y PROPERTY MANAGEMENT RENTING SELLING APPRAISING se116 J. W. Young Realtor Si caty %o Ha DENTAL nite ends messy, harmfut brushing. Just Kies your plate iy in a glass of water, pr ¥ little Kleenite. Presto! Stains, dis- colorations and denture odors disappear. Your teeth sparkle like new. Ask your drug= ist today for Kleenite. Or for generous free Sample, write Kojene Products Corp., Rochester 11, N. Y. KLEENITE the Brushless Way 1c AT er LES eae "OR EV do], | PR A 28 JW 4 A TASH EAN) 20 CHECKS $150 YOUR NAME PRINTED ON EACH CHECK LN NO REQUIRED BALANCE *NDB CHARGE FOR DEPOSITS OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT WITH ANY AMOUNT AT ANY TELLERS WINDOW IN OF WILKES-BARRE iene WIOMINC ZomNAL BANK 14 YEARS OF BANKING SUCCESS AT .Corner Market & Franklin Streets Member Fed. Deposit Insurance Grp'n. Let us help you with your FALL HOUSE CLEANING We clean SLIPCOVERS DRAPES and MOST EVERYTHING Call Heck’s 3326 Harvey's Lake or Dear Customer: Now is the time to have your fur coat repaired, remodeled, and stored. We have the latest 1946-1947 fashions. You can have it done now at a very low cost. - No job is too big or too small. L REICHLIN BETTER TAILOR & FURRIER 147 Main Street : LUZERNE, PENNA. Dry Cleaning & Dyeing. : From Pillar To Post (Continued from Page One) daily menu. Spinach is a delightful vegetable when properly prepared and served with plenty of butter, but average cookery reduces it to a gray and soggy mass, tasteless and wholly’ uninspiring. Pigs, it may be noted, turn up a fastidious snout at spinach. However, there are certain articles of diet which seem pretty | important, including that standard quart of milk per day and a reason- able number of eggs. Four eggs per week, according to most pedia- tricians, constitute the minimum re- quirement for ifusts nourish-. ment. ~ ‘The quart of milk goes down the hatch with liquid ease, but Red- | | head views eggs with suspicion if not actual distaste. There are Have your prescriptions filled at Earl's Drug Store, Trueksville. 50-Gallon Hot-water Boiler ‘extra heavy $18.50 HONTZ’S Fairlawn Store Groceries and Hardware SHAVERTOWN, PA. pL florida’ Eczema Itching, - Burning - Distress Gets Quick Ease and Comfort Get a bottle of stainless, power- ful, penetrating Moone’s Emerald Oil. The very first application should give you comforting relief and a few short treatments convince you that you have at last found the way to overcome the intense itching and distress. Moone’s Emerald Oil is easy and simple to use—grease- less — stainless — economical — pro- motes - healing. Ask for Moone’s Emerald Oil. Satisfaction or money back—good druggists everywhere. | ! i + A beautiful room tosis only 2% THE MIRACLE WALL FINISH * ok % G. HAROLD LLOYD PAINTS Wallpaper—Specialties Center Street (Opposite Grade School) SHAVERTOWN, PA." Open from 8 a.m. until 8 p.m. EIEN IE ‘Now here's a warning for poultry folks, This is ho time for cracking jokes, It's time to start that AVI-TON plan, Jast mix it in my growing bran." Birds heawly infested with large roundworms and cecal worms can't do their best. Control : these worms with a systematic 3-day Aw-Ton | treatment each month. Easily mixed wm mash. TREATMENT EACH MONTH Stapleton’s Drug Store LUZERNE, PENNA. plenty ‘of things that he prefers to eggs, including baked beans out of a shiny tin can. Wishing to do our full duty by the diet list, the female members of the family went into a huddle. Perhaps the psychological approach was the solution, and it surely could do no harm to try. The conversation went something like this: Nonnie: “Do you know what I'd like for lunch? Something we haven't had for a long time. A LOVELY poached egg on toast.” Redhead, interested but casual: “Dis week, I fink I'll have beans.” Nonnie, still in the ring and slugg- ing strongly: “Barbie, what would you like for lunch?” Barbie, enthusiastically and dra- matically: “l want a LOVELY poached egg on toast, and some cinnamon toast along side.” : Nonnie to P.C.: “P.C. what do you want for lunch ?” ; P.C. between gritted teeth and veiling ‘a poisonous glare, but will- ing to play ball: “Why of course I'd like to have a LOVELY poached egg on toast,” and then, in a mut- tered aside, “ and I hope you all choke.” Barbie to Redhead: “And now what is Mamma’s Chucklebunny going to have for his lunch?” Suspended animation all around the circle. Mamma’s Chucklebunny, beaming in key with the general ecstacy, pat- ted his striped polo shirt in the region where a gentle protuberance indicated the lunch basket. “Mamma’s Chucklebunny”, he crowed happily, “is going to have a LOVELY plate of beans.” Tomato Blight .~ Closes Canneries Fifty Percent Of Crop Threatened Harrisburg, Sept. 3—Pen yl- vania’s tomato growers, mapy of whom suffered a set-back py late x ’ /| vegetables, except sweet cofn, from spring floods, are now face to face with the late tomato blight, which the State Department of Agriculture said today already threatens 50 per cent of the State canning to- mato crop. Full effects of this will be felt ‘by housewives throughout the next year as canning plants are unable to find a sufficient supply of can- ning tomatoes for processing as a result of the disease. During the past week, one can- ning plant and three receiving sta- tions closed operations as a result of the late blight having so reduced production that tomato growers are unable to make deliveries The De- partment said dolefully that there are indications now that “many more’. of the nearly 50 canning plants throughout the Common- wealth, will be forced to close this week due to lack of a suitable to-' mato crop. The desperate situation is reflec- ted in the example of the Martins- burg and New Paris stations, which during the past week were open three days for basket distribution. Only one grower appeared at each place during that time. The canning variety tomato grower has not been the only pro- ducer hurt. Tomatoes intended for _ THE POST, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1946 | Beetles Inlest Most Counties Only Crawford, Mercer And Erie Appear Free Harrisburg— (CNS) — Sthte regu- lations requiring inspection of cer tdin shipments of alll fruits# and the heavily infested’ Japahese Beetle area in Southeasterfi’ Pennsylvania, were lifted officially August 31, State Secretary of Agriculture Miles Horst reported. He said however that restrictions on sweet corn will be removed Sep- tember 14, while on October 1, all bans on the shipment of cut flowers from the area will be revoked. Quarantine regulations requiring inspection and permits for ship- ments from Bucks, Chester, Dela- ware, Lancaster, Montgomery and Philadelphia Counties, and parts of Berks, Cumberland, Dauphin, Leb- anon, Lehigh, Northampton and York, have been in effect since June 24, Only refrigerator car or motor fresh market sales and those grown in home gardens have been serious- ly blighted, with a gray, brown or black rot noticeable just beneath the skin. Late blight, the same disease that for years troubled potato growers of Pennsylvania, has attacked to- matoes in almost every section of the State this year, and despite extensive spraying and dusting, cool and damp weather has encouraged spread of the disease. truck shipments were affected. Per- mits have been required for unpro- cessed, fresh, cut flowers when re- moved in bulk from the field or greenhouse where grown, or from a distributor, and for all fresh fruits and vegetables. Last Saturday's order does not effect the year-round ban covering nearly all the State, én the move- ment of soils, composts, manures and nursery plants, Secretary Horst said. The only.free areas from this permanent ban are parts of Craw- ford, Erie and Mercer Counties where the Jap Beetles have not made their appearance up to this year. The Jap Beetle has caused ex- tensive damage from year to year and every effort is being made to control the pest., This has been partly successful in the prevention of spreading of the heavily infested areas through the use of quarantine regulations. Past Councilors Hold Banquet At Lehman Past Councilor’'s Club of Mount Vale Council No. 224 held their annual banquet at Lehman Meth- odist Church recently. Present were: Mr, and Mrs. Edward Elston, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Fiske, Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Ide, Mr. and Mrs. El- wood McCarty, Mr. and Mrs, Silas Long, Mr. and Mrs. John Nulton, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Perrego, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Eipper, Mrs. Mabel Mitchell, Mrs. Grace Lloyd, Mrs. Sarah Schmerer, Mrs. Goldie Ide, Mrs. Lena Misson, Mrs; Emily Par- rish, Miss Ruth Fiske and Miss Ruth Stookey. PAGE FIVE Iowa’s Farm Lands About 97.4 percent of the acreage of land in the state of Iowa is in- cluded in farms. Of this 89 percent is improved. Get Ready FOR COLD WEATHER We have GALVANIZED FURNACE PIPE and ELBOWS in all sizes fei Eke Just Received ne BERRY ALUMINUM GARAGE DOORS SIZE 8x 7 368 Shavertown Builders’ Supply Co. 10 E. Center St. SHAVERTOWN, PA. PHONE 42 [EPRICE TEXTURE Ro TET [PRO UIST EE Your used fats are still needed to help ease the soap shortage. The supply of fats allocated to industry te make soaps and other peace- time goods is still far below minimum requirements. Any slackening in your saving of used fats means the supply will be shorter and there may be even less soap available. So keep on saving every drop of used fat and help return soap and other goods to your dealer’s shelves. THE DALLAS POST
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers