SE __PAGE TWO N THE POST, FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1948 Herridbere became the capital ) Mother : er : a of Pennsylvania in 1812. Centermoreland Mothe THESE« WOMEN! By d’Alessio And Daughter Party ies 3 Country Fl avor Mothers and daughters of Cen- f L 0 U I E Ww . A Y R E ter Moreland held a party in the we 8 church last Tuesday with Mrs. SCARECROW Teacher of Piano, Organ and Theory Registration for Summer Session now being taken at 60 Carverton Road Trucksville or 48 Simon Long Building WILKES-BARRE, PA. SPECIALS Now unloading carloads Kiln dried 1x3 B and Btr and 1 common Yel- low Pine Flooring. Also in stock— B and Btr Fir Flooring Fir and Y.P. Ceiling : Clear 6 in.—8 in. Cedar Siding Idaho No. 2 W.P. Boards Idaho 10 in. W. P. Siding Spruce and Y.P. Roofers Rubberoid Shingles Plywood-%in-3%in.-%%in-5%in.- 34in. Brick and Asbestos Siding Celotex Ceiling Tile White and Colored Tile Board Boat Oars and Extension Ladders Bathtubs, Sinks and Toilets CLARK LUMBER & SUPPLY CO. 367-378 W. Main St., Plymouth Dial 9711 or 9-2629 NEEF Wind Proof LIGHTER @® Precision made ® Triple Plated ® A Beautiful Gift In Chrome $1.50 24K Gold 5.00 The gold model is guaran- teed for three years. EVANS DRUG STORE SHAVERTOWN E. Lee Brehm as hostess. Mrs. Leona Thomas gave the toast to mothers and Mrs. George Enke that. to daughters. Mrs. Frank Williams sang several selec- tions and Mrs. Clarence Schoon- over gave a reading. were: Mrs. Margaret Mrs. Eva Smail, Mrs. Verna Gay, Lola and Lois Gay, Mrs. Ruby Besteder, Mrs. Nona Schoonover, Mrs. Ruth B. Schoon- over, Barbara, Mrs. Zana Dymond and Vivian, Mrs. Maude Armstrong, Charlotte, Mrs. Leona Thomas and Wilma, Mrs. Peg Matersavage and Sally, Mrs. Alice Fiske, Mrs. Sara | Woomer, Mrs. E. Lee Brehm and | Georgia Lee, Mrs. Thomas Dickin- | ‘son, Mrs. Romayne Williams, Mrs. Yh Felter and Sandra, Mrs. Ruth | | Present Warburton, Schoonover and Ida, Mrs. Mary Sickler, Mrs. Helen Besteder, Mrs. { William Boyce and Edna Beth, Miss | Marian Jackson, Gene and Clarence | Schoonover, Jr., Robert Brehm and Carl Sickler, Jr. I Am Now a Local FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE for the Lovely Dress Line FASHION FROCKS I will be glad to call at your home and show you the thrilling new styles for Spring and Sum- !| mer. Just drop me a card for an appointment evenings or Satur- day. EDNA RAY DALLAS R. D. 2 MEN’S, WOMEN’S, CHILDREN’S ® O'Sullivan : @® Goodyear @® Catspaw Rubber Heels Rubber, Leather Or Composition Soles | SHOP DALLAS FIRST AND SAVE EER £2 f 7 ed Dallas Shoe Repair Shep MAIN STREET DALLAS TEACHER OF PIANO, STUDIOS SARAH REESE FERGUSON ENROLL NOW FOR SUMMER SCHOOL “The richest child is poor without a musical education.” TELEPHONE DALLAS 392 146 LAWN ST., SHAVERTOWN 230 WEST MAIN ST., PLYMOUTH ORGAN AND THEORY REO TRUCK w OOD WILKES - BARRE Soles -Parts-Service € Bus CO. STREET PHONE 2-7572 TRY TIOGA’S BROILER RAISING PROGRAM FEED CHICATINE the first 6 weeks Change to TIOGA BROILER Mash & Pellets Market your Broilers Younger and Heavier on this Schedule TIOGA FEED SERVICE Phone 337-R-49 KUNKLE, PA. DEVENS MILLING COMPANY A. C. DEVENS, Owner . Phone 200 DALLAS, PA. | Mother-Daughter Tea last Tuesday Feo Pr CF ODP INS Er CE] “Well Dear, congratulate me—I finally found a teacher for our miniature piano!’ Mr. Webster puts it succinctly and covers the technicalities. Scarecrow: an object, usually sug- gesting a human figure, set up to frighten crows away from crops; hence, anything terrifying without danger. Scarecrows have been adorning fields and gardens for generations and are now a pleas- ant part of the countryside folk- lore. By and large they resemble human figures; they offer a com- fortable perch to the crow which acts as a lookout for his mates that are pulling corn. Some scare- crows may be terrifying to grass- hoppers or June bugs, but as far as the countryman has been able to determine none yet has terri- fied Corvus brachyrhynchos. Sophisticated urban dwellers may not get the distinction but a scrae- crow has little to do with crows. On a raw, rainy day a man likes to build a fire in the old stove in the cluttered farm shop and con- struct a very special scarecrow. THE DALLAS POST “More than a newspaper, a community institution” ESTABLISHED 1889 Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers’ Association A mon-partisan liberal progressive newspaper pub- lished every Friday morning at the Dallas Post plant | Lehman Avenue, Dallas Pennsylvania. Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa., under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subscrip- tion rates: $2.50 a year; $1.50 six months... No subscriptions accepted for less than six months. Out-of state subscriptions: $3.00 a year; $2.00 six months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 10¢c Single copies, at a rate of 6¢ each, can be obtained every Friday morn- ing at the following newsstands: Dallas— Tally-Ho Grille, LeGrand’s Restaurant ; Shavertown, Evans’ s+ Drug Store; Trucksviille—Leonard's Store; ldetown—Caves Store; Hunts- ville—Barnes Store; Alderson— When dress their requesting a change of ad- subscribers are asked to give old as well as new address. Allow two weeks for changes of ad- dress or new subscription to be placed on mailing list We will pot be responsible for the return of unsolicited manuscripts, photographs and editorial matter un- less self-addressed, stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will we be responsible for this more than 30 days. material = for National display advertising rates 80¢ per column inch. Local display advertising rates b50c per column inch: specified position 60c per inch Classified Minimum rates 3c per word. charge 380c. Unless paid for at advertising rates, we can give no assurance that an- nouncements of plays, parties, rummage |} sales or any affairs for raising money will appear in a specific issue. In no case will such items be taken on I'hradavs Preference will in all instances be given to editorial matter which has not previously appeared in publication. Editor and Publisher HOWARD W. RISLEY Associate Editor MYRA ZEISER RISLEY Contributing Editor MRS. T. M. B. HICKS GIRL SCOUT NEWS The Girl Scouts of Troop 149 entertained their mothers at a in the Odd Fellows Hall. The program opened with the Flag Ceremony. Second Class and Hostess Badges were given to those who had earned them during the past year. The girls then presented each] mother with a sweet pea and violet corsage which they had made. A program planned by the girls then followed. Scouts and their mothers who attended were: Ann Marie Dun- ham, Diane Bowman, Joanne Lew- in, Nancy Fitch, Mary Catherine Polacky, Jean Franklin, Carol Ann Hilferty, Helene Thevenon, Charlyn Reinfurt, Patricia Keller, Diane Jenkins, Jean Broody, Mildred Kingston; Peggy Ann Niaza, Gladys Wilson, Sally Kear and Jean Monka. Mrs. James V. Hilferty is the leader of the troop and her assist- ants are Mrs. Fred Butcher and Mrs. Jonah Williams. The troop will leave for Wild- wood July 26th at 4 P.M. for their camp vacation. Troop 54 will start their camp vacation at Wildwood on July 28th. Important Meeting A meeting will be held at the Trucksville Fire Hall Thursday, June 10, at 8 o’clock to make plans for a Trucksville Grade School par- ent and teacher association. All persons interested are urged to attend. Deater's Store t HAAN: FANCY 5 5 FAH 5 3 CRY SC oo) aR UR RA SA Te Sv Fr RTC YOUR NAME PRINTED ON EACH CHECK NO REQUIRED BALANCE *ND CHARGE FOR DEPOSITS OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT WITH ANY AMOUNT AT ANY TELLERS WINDOW IN f NG NATIONA| EEA LAH TT vom BANK 114 YEARS OF BANKING SUCCESS AT Corner Market & Franklin Streets Member Fed. Deposit Insurance Corp'n. According to the psychologists who so ably use seven-syllable words to express everyday mental pro- cesses, each of us has an uncon- scious yearning to express himself artistically and creatively. A man can really go to town on a scare- crow without deep inhibitions act- ing as a brake. The body is easily made of a board. Then with a series of holes, arms and legs can be fastened by bolts at peculiar and arresting an- gles. With several available arms and legs sawed out at peculiar an- gles one can fashion unusual poses. The main artistic outlet, however, is the carving of heads to fasten to the neck piece. With an easily whittled wood such as pine a man with imagination and a modicum of skill can make several silhouette caricatures that bear a recogniz- able likeness to certain citizens of the town. It is easy to exaggerate noses, chins and brow formations. It is a pleasant day’s work to build a first-class scarecrow and whittle out a few faces. A good scarecrow shows that a man takes pride in his craftsmanship. It adds a spot of interest to the countryside scene and furnishes chuckling amusement to passersby. The crows have no objection. They are intelligent birds and probably approve a man’s handiwork. Alfred D “As near as your telephone’ . Bronson FUNERAL DIRECTOR SWEET VALLEY, PA. 3 —is not based on the price per gallon but on the amount of surface each gallon will cover and on the number of years of satisfactory service and appearance. money’s worth when buying— PRATT & LAMBERT PAINT.AND VARNISH Paint and varnish quality becomes evident only after the material is ap- plied and subjected to long exposure. For economy and satisfaction, use. products bearing this seal of protection. : Rebennack & Covert 265-267 Wyoming Ave., Kingston,Pa. Dial 7-4514 PAYING . . . A receipted bill is your “admission” to better business relationships and greater social stature. When it’s hard to pay promptly, a small loan from us can keep up your good credit. Kingston National Bank KINGSTON CORNERS Dear Barnyard: Poor Susit—for her natural and ancient urge to keep nature in balance she has been condemned to exile. The Barnyard, we have been informed, does not want its cat because she killed an oriole. I don’t think it’s fair, so I have elected myself Susit’s champion, to see if I can get her a pardon. Long long ago, before Susit’s ancestors had been adopted by man- kind, the cat had to feed itself. By stealth and by speed it learned to provide its own food. Small ground animals which could be caught away from sanctuary, little birds which could be surprised before they reached the distant safety of the air, comprised its diet. Susit’s kind has always done it that way. : Not even man could change the ways of the cat. He fed it milk and table scraps, and once, thousands of years ago, even made it a god and pampered it to the limit. Yet the cat refused to go soft and the wild ways were retained. When it caught vermin it was praised; when it caught something in the other category the cat was beaten and bullied and shot. But still the bravely independent cat refused to give in. The dog, a sycophantic animal, soon learned to do what was expected of it; but the cat, never! Therefore, when last week Susit killed the oriole she fell from grace, but how was she to know? Something dim and distant turn- ed in her brain and in her belly and with cunning she swooped down upon the bird and did it in. It wouldn't be at all unjust if she were to ask, “What is wrong with what I did ?” Susit destroyed beauty, that is true. But the kind of beauty Susit destroyed can be replaced. Life and reproduction are not static, but Susit’s hunger and the hunger of her kind is forever. The bird meant beauty and it was sad to see it lost, but on the very day the Post told about her, I saw our own black cat leaping through the garden, lithe, full of the joy of existence, loving the power and rhythm he felt in himself. the hunter or the victim ? : Please believe me, there is nothing personal in my defense of a cat I never met. I think very much of all the people who belong to the Risley Barnyard. I think very much of all song birds. This time, though, I'm completely on the side of Susit, to the point of vehement prejudice . . . . She ’s the one that is misunderstood. , Dale Warmouth TWO PALOMINO COLTS Dear Barnyard: The following is part of life around a stable. yard stories and especially liked last week’s. As you know, when a mare is in foal you never know what color to expect; so for over eleven months we worried about two Palomino mares, Golden Saint and Golden Lady, hoping they would be O.K. and also hoping for nice healthy colts, and it is a worry. Well, the first colt was eighteen days late so we spent most of our days and some of the nights in the stable. > We have speakers from the kitchen to the stables and we had one of them in the maternity stall so we could listen at all hours of the night and on hearing any unusual sound we would run out to the stable. After days and nights of this the colt was finally born at 9:40 in the evening, March 30th. The mare was bred to our 5-gaited stallion, Beau King, who is a chestnut, and of course we were hoping for a Palomino; however, we had about a fifty-fifty chance, so that was one of our main thoughts "also during the long months of waiting. Well, our wait was finally over and much to our delight was just what we wanted, a beautiful, big Palomino colt. We were thrilled with him; we stayed and looked at him until 4 o’clock in the morning. Now the time was getting near for the next one and we began going through the same thing. Much to our surprise however, the colt was born Saturday evening at 7:30, May 22nd, only 14 days late. This mare was™lso B¥e& to the chestnut stallion and tie foal was also a cute little Palomino colt. He refused to eat, however, until 3:30 in the morning; so we had to feed him with a bottle. We also discovered soon after birth that he had colic so we went to work on that and at 5 o'clock he seemed much better. But at 6:30 he became worse and was in terrible pain. Dr. Hogg came around 10 o’clock and he became much quieter in the afternoon. But around 6 o’clock he began to roll with pain and believe me it was a very pitiful sight. The doctor worked on him a couple hours having returned at 7 o'clock, but in the meantime we felt sure he was going fast. At times he had very little pulse and of course couldn’t stand up or even eat from the bottle. Around midnight he got a little stronger and started to eat, and in the morning at 10 o'clock he got up by himself and ate without help and his pains stopped entirely at 11 6’clock. To all indications if the pain does not return he will be O.K. Believe me that was an experience. We stayed with him day and night, not getting any sleep and forgetting to eat until Monday. Loving horses as we do we were pretty badly broken up about it. It was very pitiful watching the poor little thing suffer and think- ing about the effect it would have on the mother if she lost it as the mares don’t want them out of their sight for a minute until they are about 5 or 6 months old and I can’t imagine what it would be like for the mare if one died. Sunday evening at our barn was like a combination of old home week and a wake, with many of the horsemen from the valley and Back Mountain meeting each other there on the one hand, and everyone sorry for the suffering of the little fellow, on the other. All in all it was wonderful to have the sincere sympathy of the many friends and neighbors who came. I enjoy your Barn- Sincerely, Ann Stoeckert . Mt. Evergreen Stables THE SPARE TIME GARDENER You don’t have to go “all-out” and try to grow all the vegetables you eat. The big charitable organizations are supported by many not the few. A hundred pounds of food to each Freedom Garden would make two billion pounds of food. Sounds astronomical, but you should get 100 pounds of tomatoes from a dozen plants. Let’s get to work. You need a sunny spot; 5 pounds of 5-10-5 fertilizer or Vigoro to 100 square feet; or 10 pounds of dried sheep or cow manure. You need a spading fork, a steel-toothed rake, and a hoe. Of course, you can go fancy and clutter up the garage with a myriad of tools, one for each shot as in golf; but the Fork, Rake, and Hoe you need, and you need good ones. > If you use Vigoro, apply it after spading the ground, and rake it into the top three inches. If you use dried sheep or cow manure, spread it on first, and spade it in. Do not spade the ground until it crumbles on the fork, or you will have brick-bats all summer. Spade only as much ground as you will need to plant in three or four days, a heavy rain will mean the spading should be done over again. . t After spading, rake the ground thoroughly. Get the rake teeth into the ground 2 or 3 inches, don’t just smooth the surface. It’s hard work; but develops a wonderful appetite. Don’t make the rows too close, leave enough room for cultivation and harvesting. Line up rows with a garden-line and put a label at one or both ends. Plant now: peas, beets, lettuce, radishes, onions, carrots, etc. Take a chance on bush beans. If you do not have a reliable source handy for cabbage and tomato plants, sow seed right in your garden and transplant later to their regular spot. Tomatoes grown in this manner are generally not so liable to blight as those grown in hot- beds. Save room for a few flowers for cutting. Spot Gladiolus through the garden for color and for cutting. Sure, there’ll be bugs later on, but modern them easy to control. If you need additional information, a penny post-card to ‘The Spare Time Gardener” C/O The Dallas Post, will bring you a garden chart showing when to plant, how deep, how far apart, and how much seed is required for a given length of row. insecticides make a Rurnyard Notes § IN DEFENSE OF SUSIT Who can truly say which was the greater in beauty, | | 3