18 1 ket ‘Avenue, * FURNITURE \ ~The TRADING POST A POST CLASSIFIED AD IS THE PLACE TO GET RESULTS QUICKLY AND CHEAPLY PHONE DALLAS 300 @ THREE CENTS PER WORD @ 50¢c MINIMUM For Sale— NOW ON DISPLAY—New 1948 wallpaper patterns in every price range. Ellis Bloch, 649 Wyoming Kingston. IL. C. SMITH TYPEWRITER, $20. Robert Culp, Huntsville, Phone 493-R-8. FLOOR SURFACING, sanding, re- finishing, waxing and polishing. H. W. King, 224 Pierce St., King- ston. Kingston 7-7264 or Dallas 338-R-13 VENETIAN BLINDS tailored to fit your home and taste. One week service. J. T. Elias, 119 Dana St., Wilkes Barre. Dial WB 3-9369. 1936 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR SEDAN, Radio, heater. Good condition throughout. Joseph Hudak, Parrish St., Dallas. Phone 467-R-9. THREE WHEELED Tricycle for child 6 to 10 years old. New last Christmas. Richard Rowlands, Main Road, Trucksville. Phone 236-R-13. WOMEN’S winter coats, sizes 16 and 18; 6 cu. ft. Frigidaire; 12 antique Waterford tumblers. Phone 7-3216, Kingston. WEIL-McLEAN STEAM BOILER in good condition. $75. Call Dallas 300. Also two McCord Blower Heat- ers. TURNER ROLLER BEARINGS, Saw Mills, Edgers, Hay Driers, Hardie Sprayers and Equipment. Rural Supply Co., Phone Muhlenburg 9- R-716. Address Shickshinny R.D.1 Whom To Call— LADIES would "you like to have home-made bread and ' pastries delivered to your door? Call Mrs. George Schmoll, Dallas + 112-R-11. FURNITURE repaired. Antiques a specialty. Carlton B. Kocher. Phone H. L. 3387. LEHIGH VALLEY COAL’ delivered promptly. Call Paul D. Eckert, 299-R-3 or 592-R-11. Also fire wood. Custom sawing and lumber. FUEL OILS, gasoline, kerosene, lubrics. Meter service. To insure you of accuracy. Montross Oil Co., 436 Main St., Luzerne. Phone 7-2361. CRUSHED BLUESTONE, all sizes for highways and driveways; broken flagstone for walks and ter- races. Coon Certified Concrete, Kingston 77-3177 or the quarry at Pike's Creek, Dallas 465-R-9 LIFE INSURANCE for you and your family. Fire and other in- surance written. George Turn, Dallas 581-R-2 or 336-R-13. JOHNS-MANVILLE blown rock wool insulation installed by ex- pert crews. Up to 36 months to pay. Phone W.-B. 2-0580 or Kings- ton 8-1275. repaired and re- finished. Antiques a specialty. Carlton D. Kocher, phone H. L. 33817. BOTTLED GAS, prompt service to your home or business place. It’s cheap, clean and convenient. | CLEAN COTTON RAGS. For PERFECTION in machine, ma- chinless, or cold permanent wav- ing, finger waving or dyeing—see Marguerite, Main Road, Fernbrook Phone 397. Coal And Hauling— GENERAL HAULING—wood, coal, freight, etc. Ashes and garbage removed. Prompt, dependable serv- ice. Norti Berti, Dallas 277-R-2. SAND, GRAVEL, TOP SOIL, coal, fill dirt, excavating. Bud Mitchell, Dallas 458-R-4 y Furniture Repairing— Make your fine old furniture NEW with its original wear and comfort— Beautiful wide range of fabrics. Low prices— Guaranteed. workmanship. Write or phone John Curtis. 7-5636— 210 Lathrop street, Kingston. Wanted Highest prices. Cannot use silk or wool- ens. Must be without buttons. The Dallas Post. Wanted To Buy— WRECKED AUTOMOBILES, regard- less of condition, parts and junk. Andrew Zosh, Phone Dallas 362-R-8. FRESH COWS and close springers. Must be T. B. and blood tested; also all kinds of beef cattle and calves. If you have any livestock to sell, write or phone me and I will call on you at once. I am in the country everyday in the week. I buy direct, I sell direct and there- fore pay you more money. lke Mellner, 114 Second Ave., Kingston. Phone 7-2746. Piano Turing— PIANO TUNING and repairing. Muhlenburg 18-R-61. Oscar Whitesell, Hunlock’s Creek, RFD 1. Electrical Contracting— Palmer Updyke, ELECTRICIAN. House wiring a specialty, new or old. Call Dallas 410-R-9 Keys— KEYS made while you wait. 20c each, 2 for 35c, or 3 for 50c. Hub Auto Supply, Trucksville. Farmer Dances— MODERN and Farmer dances will be held in Kunkle Community Complete line gas ranges, water | Hall every Saturday night. Ber- and space heaters. Harold Ash, | wick orchestra, Abe Bellas caller. Shavertown, Phone 409R7. Door prizes. 7-R-2 f 1i = CALL DALLAS 597-R-2 for quality Dressmaking— dry cleaning and fast service. Circle Dry Cleaning and Dyeing, Wyoming Avenue, Forty Fort. BABY CHICKS, Pennsylvania and U. S. Pullorum clean. Orders for fall and winter. Hilbert’s Hatchery, Beaumont. FLOOR SANDING and Resurfacing, expert workmanship, moderate rates. Lawrence B. Wolfe. Dallas 361-R-3. CASH FOR DEAD HORSES, mules or tows. We pay $2 cash when we load if the animal is not dragged Dragged animals half price. Ward Dead Stock Co. Clarks Summit, Pa. Phone 229-R-2. CUSTOM WEIGHING, anything, any time on new Howe heavy duty scales up to 19 tons. Back Moun- tain Lumber and Coal Co. LADIES’ COATS, suits, dresses re- modeled. Ann Stahl, 3rd house from Fernbrook Dairy. Phone 490- R-13. Private Instruction— INSTRUCTION piano, band and orchestra instruments. Alfred Milli- ner-Camp, Lehigh street, Trucksville. Phone Dallas 304-R-8. Sanitary Service— SEPTIC TANKS, reinforced concrete buy the best. Costs less in long run. C. E. German and Son, Kings ton '7-5348 or your local supply dealer. DEAD ANIMALS removed promptly, free of charge. Call Carl Crockett, va Safe Deposit Boxes Now Available Cost less than one cent per day FIRST NATIONAL BANK DALLAS, PENNA. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Muhlenburg, 19-R-4. ii THE POST, FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1949 Miracle of Remodeling Provides Home for Vet |A MIRACLE OF REMODELING is. demonstrated by these “Before” (and “After” pictures of an abandoned horse barn which was | turned into an attractive five-room cottage for a war veteran and his family in Montclair, N. J. The white clapboard siding iis set-off with green shutters, and a roof of matching green { asphalt shingles, | In remodeling the impossible sometimes is possible. The accompanying illustrations demonstrate the miracles that can be accomplished, even with an old horse barn, which was transformed into an attractive five-room cottage for a war veteran and his family, desperately in need of a home. The run-down, abandoned barng stood in the backyard of a home with an acre of lawn in Montclair, New Jersey. The owner’s son served as a Navy lieutenant in the war and was married in Florida. When he was demobilized, he icame home with his wife and little daughter, and, like so many other veterans, found no place to | live unless they doubled-up with his family. He had given up his search for a home of his own when he got an inspiration from the abandoned barn where he had played as a youngster. He called in a friend, C. Wesley Townsend, a Montclair contrac- tor, and put the problem up to him. Could he remodel the barn and make it a livable cottage? At first dubious, Townsend finally accepted the challenge and went to work. The result is a pleasant, white clapboard cottage, set off with green shutters and a roof of matching green, fire-resistant as- phalt shingles, selected for their added protection and beauty. Horse Stalls Now Living Room On the first floor, where horses ‘once munched hay, there is a large {living room, 12 feet, six inches by 19 feet, six inches, with a brick fireplace; a bedroom, with adjoin- ing lavatory; a compact kitchen and three storage closets. In the bedroom, the door to one of the stalls was kept intact, to give the appearance of a Dutch door, with the top and lower half swinging open. The only addition was a laundry room built on the side of the barn which became the rear of the cottage. The second floor, formerly the hay mow, contains the master bedroom, with four closets tucked away under the eaves, a nursery and bath. The: dormer, through which hay was once hauled into the mow, now provides a window for the nursery. The only major structural prob- lems confronting Mr. Townsend were overcoming the steepness of the steps which led to the mow; raising the rear half of the roof to ‘provide additional headroom, and installing an adequate shower in the second-floor bath for the former lieutenant, who is a tal man. : The entire remodeling job re- quired only a short time, but the young war veteran and his family were so eager to move in, they set up housekeeping in their new home before it was completed. Births Exceed Deaths (Special to The Dallas Post) Harrisburg, January 6—(PNS)— Luzerne County is recorded as hav- ing had 758 live births and 352 deaths due to all causes during the months of October according to final statistics for the month just compiled for Pennsylvania News Service by the State Bureau of Vital Statistics. SEPTIC TANKS, cesspools and privy vaults cleaned. J..: A. Singer, City Scavinger, 137 Dagobert street, Wilkes-Barre. Dial 3-4529. ET TD fh. “i eer eee. Lost— CAMEO RING between Machell avenue and Irem Country Club, New Year's Eve. Finder phone Dallas 61. Welding— FURNACES WELDED. Welding anytime, anywhere. If it’s metal, we can weld it. Dallas Portable Welding: Co., Dallas 551-R-T7. Poultry— BABY CHICKS, New Hampshire Red. Barred Rocks, Sex Link and Barred Crosses. Penna Pul- lorum clean and U. S. approved. Yetter Hatchery. Phone 461-R-3. TREC RECR/ER|EDE DCT DISTINCTIVE FLORAL ARRANGEMENTS See us for | Funerals, Anni- Birthdays, Special Weddings, versaries, Events. “The Best In Flowers” Lam Ld HAUCK’S FLOWERS , TELEPHONE 535 Memorial Highway—Dallas This compares with 604 births and 230 deaths for the county dur- ing the preceding months, the bureau said. Wells Reopen Shop Floyd Wells has reopened the barber shop over Gregory's Store, Carverton Road, where he started in business twenty-one years ago. The shop will be open every week |. day from 9 A. M. until 7 P. M} and on Saturdays from 9 A. M. until 8:30 P. M. It will be closed Wednesday afternoons. Floyd says there is plenty of parking space and he will be glad to serve his old friends. Wins F. F. A. . ... One of three Dallas Town- ship High School students to win State F. F. A. awards, Willard Race was in Florida last week when the Post published the pictures of the two other winners. Willard’s cucumber project was one of the first ten winners in the State. His award was a silver medal. His home is in Centermoreland. Last year he was secretary of his. school F. F. A. and took part in the judg- ing contest at State College. Electronics Graduate Donald Hazeltine, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hazeltine, will be grad- uated from the Navy electronic school at Memphis, Tenn., today. A graduate of Dallas High School in 1947 he enlisted on Jan- uary 5, 1948 and received his basic training at Great Lakes, Ill. nobod y but... nobody UNDERSELLS THE BIG PLACE IN WILKES-BARRE These Prices Purely Personal Mr. and Mrs. Donald Clark, Huntsville Road, entertained re- cently at their home. The event was a post-Christmas party, and luncheon was served to these guests: Mr. and Mrs. Oswald Griff- iths, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd W. Cham- berlain and Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Evans. Mrs. Paul Goddard, Hilldonia Avenue, Goss Manor, is visiting several weeks in Florida, at the home of her sister. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Blassic, Mrs. John Schoenwetter and son, Jackie, and Carolyn Jane Blassic of Lu- zerne were recent guests of Mrs. J. J. Voitek "at Demunds. Mrs. Leon Fredd of Shrineview i was a recent guest at the Ira Frantz home. i’ Announce Engagement Announcement has of the engagement of Miss Jane Czar, granddaughter of Mrs. Jen- nie Jones of 231 Ashley street, Plymouth, and H. Eugene McCarty, son of Mr .and Mrs. Elwood Mec- Carty of Wellington avenue. Miss Czar is a member of the Senior Class of School. Eugene is a graduate of Dallas Borough High School and a Naval veteran of World War 2. 3 He is employed by the Tally Ho Inn. No date has been set for the wedding. SHAVERTOWN, PA. Shavertown Builders Supply Co. 10.E. CENTER STREET Select, For Effect! We Knotty + Pine, selected to provide charming have character in the walls of any room you wish finished in this old-time manner! Mere pine ‘with some knots—that soon may be knotholes!—will not do. Our Knotty Pine will re- tain its beauty, all the long years it serves you! PHONE DALLAS 42 Cold—No Coal ? been made Plymouth High Legal— NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT an application will be made to the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County on January 10, 1949, at 10 o'clock A. M. under the ‘Non-Profit Corporation Law”, approved May 5, 1933, P.L. 289 and Amendments thereto, for a charter of an intended corpora- tion to be called “Back Mountain Protective Association.” The pur- pose and objectives of this corpor- ation are to engage in the extin- guishment of fires and the protec- tion of life and property therefrom; to promote good fellowship and un- derstanding through social and rec- reational activities; and for such other natural, ordinary and cus- tomary purposes as are naturally and properly incident to the funct- ioning of the proposed corpora- tion. Said application for charter is now on file in the office of the Prothonotary of Luzerne County, marked to 605 of January term, 1949. William A. Valentine Attorney for Petitioners 730 Miners Nat. Bank Bldg., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 55—OTHERS—55 ALL MAKES & MODELS Long, Low, Easy Terms * REMEMBER Most cars carry the famous Motor Twins written guar- antee good for one year. MOTOR TWINS 240 S. MAIN ST., W.-B. Telephone 2-2144 Open Nights & Sundays Prove It! Don’t wait until your coal runs low—order idan your supply now. Call 215 for that quality— 46 Fords (4) $1375 slow-burning—high heat Glen Alden Coal and NO oh relax in comforting warmth no matter how cold the weather gets. ’46 Dodges (2) $1245 2 Poti @) $995 Prompt, friendly attention answers your - - call always at the Back Mountain Lumber & 2 Fors (3) 3998 Coal Co. : 42 Plyms. (2) $995 \ 42 Chryslers (2) $995 41 Fords (4) $795 ‘41 Olds, (2) $895 ’41° Dodges (2) $865 ’40 Fords (2) $395 40 Chevs. (3) $595 "40 Plyms. (2) $585 39 Fords (2) $395 ’38 Chevs. (2) $365 37 Pords (2) $295 37 Chevs. (2) $295 37 Packards (2) $145 ’36 Fords (2) $225 DON'T ARGUE "35 Buick (1) $195 When It's So Easy ’34 Fords (3) 8125 / \ To Beautify Those "34 Chevs. (2) $125 3 Old Floors! 33 Ply. (1) $95 p! ’32 Chevrolet (1) $75 lustrous, beautiful surfaces. are beautiful and lustrous. OUR LOW COST RENTAL PLAN FURNISHES EVERYTHING YOU NEED Famous Clarke Speedy sand- ers, edgers and polishers — sandpaper, varnish, stain filler and, brushes — full instructions. PHONE TODAY FOR ALL INFORMATION Phone 121 Rent our easy-to-use equipment and re-finish dull, worn floors with Do it yourself with our easy-to-use Rental Equipment and save time and money — change those dull, worn surfaces into floors that Dallas Hardware & Supply “We Deliver” Eaten CURA § .