The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, August 26, 1949, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE SIX
THE POST, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1949
Form New Fire Company [Soloist At Idetown
Robert Shewan of Shavertown
was guest soloist at the Idetown
Methodist Church on Sunday morn-
ing.
Noxen, long without fire pro-
tection, has organized a volunteer
Fire Company.
™
Purina Layena gives you “more” eggs because
it has extra Vitamins, extra Protein Quality,
extra Palatability.
Stop in and get the facts about Purina Layena
today at Jim Huston's
OLD TOLL GATE
FEED SERVICE
Phone 520-R-2
dazerne-Dallas Highway
Two-Fold Club Meets
The monthly meeting of
Two-Fold Club of the Huntsville
Methodist Church was held in the
Church basement on Auguast 5.
The Club decided to sell Christmas
cards. After a brief business meet-
ing, refreshments were served by
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Laskowski and
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Lamoreaux
| fo: Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kittle,
Mr. and Mrs. John Fielding and |
Mr, and Mrs. Russell Bertram. |
The next meeting will be held
on September 2 at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. John Fielding. A
corn and wiener roast will be held.
Each couple is to bring their own
buns, wieners and corn. All mem-
bers should attend,
officers.
the |
HRT EREEEs,
STORE TALK
We pay for Frigidaire prospects.
Art says—tell on your neighbor
and win a set of dishes. Have you
| noticed the nifty set of ruby glass-
ware in our front window ? If not,
it's worth a look and better yet
you can get one free by giving
us a tip on anyone you know who
is interested in buying a Frigidaire
Refrigerator, electric range, water
heater or other major appliance.
We in turn call on your prospect
and if they buy, you get the set of
dishes. You'll be surprised how
easily this works.
Thiss it
161611!
“Mi ily,
“uy In Ww
New Fall Patterns In
Armstrong linoleum are show-
ny
ing on second floor and we
can supply you any size 6—9
or 12 foot material. 40 pat-
terns of roll goods and as
many rugs. Give a look when
Big Reductions
While Stock Lasts
8-12 Cu. Ft. Deep Freezer
Electric Washers
Power Mowers
Garden Tractors
Electric Refrigerators
Deep & Shallow Well Water Pumps
Air Cooled Engines
Vacuum Cleaners
Radio Sets, Electric Clocks, Elec-
tric Grinders, Drills and saws.
EE. F. SCHMALTZ
“Everything Electrical”
314 Wyoming Avenue
KINGSTON, PENNA.
you're ready to brighten up.
We Offer
Something new in linoleum ser-
vice, Both Dick Shoemaker and
Leo Stroka are graduates of the
laying schools. They do an expert
job . with inlaid linoleum, rubber
and asphalt tile.
Back to school days are the
next big excitement. We can
supply the lunch kits, gym
suits and shoes and the foot-
balls to usher in the fall sea-
son.
Silo time is here—Salvation for
old silos is what we call this Pier-
pont Silo Preservative that you
! paint on the inside while you fill.
It stops air leaks and rot—saves
your ensilage. OK for concrete
block silos too.
New silos or repairs for the
old—and in a hurry, Speak
now, and we can still furnish
you a Maple City Silo—either
spruce or concrete block. Al-
uminum roofs, extra staves,
hoops and doors are available
for your old timer, LETS
TALK SILO!
PHONE 5050
Gay-Murray Go.
4 Another Great Labor Saver...
he NEW HOLLAND
FORAGE HARVESTER
from only 30 h.p. motor.
ling.
material while it cuts.
nary scissors-type machines.
hairl as H. Long
agent With Specialized Service
{ALLEY, PENNSYLVANIA
® Sturdy, strong but light weight due
to simplified design. Plenty of power
@ To change from row to windrow at-
tachment, or vice versa, remove and
replace only 5 bolts and a sleeve coup-
@® New Holland slicing action grips
Knives draw
down and across cutter bar toward
power source. Slices like a knife—
does not squeeze forage as in ordi-
Tunkhannock, Pa.
{ Kenna
to elect Li
IDETOWN
and Mrs. Sherwood Me-
and daughter Joan of |
Washington, D.C. spent the week-
end with relatives and friends in
the Back Mountain area,
Anna Marie and Claude Lapp,
Jr. of Bethesda, Maryland have re-
turned to their home after spend-
ing some time with friends and
relatives in the Back Mountain
area.
Miss Helen Williamson of Phil-
adelphia spent the weekend with
Mrs. Della Parrish. Callers at the
Parrish home on Sunday were Mr. |
and Mrs. Herbert Updyke and sons |
Robert and John of Shavertown, |
Mr. and Mrs. John Cadugan, Mr.
and Mrs. Benjamin Cadugan of |
Mr.
| Knapp of Kingston.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Farver of |a group of friends at the home of
Miami, Fla. returned to their home
on Monday after spending the
summer with relatives and friends
in the Back Mountain area.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Sutton spent
the weekend in Atlantic City.
Miss Faith Hackett, student at
Bloomsburg State Teachers’ Col-
lege spent the weekend with Lor-
raine Keller,
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Hilbert
spent the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Gordon Matthews and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Campbell of
Chenango Bridge, N. Y.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Mal-
kemes of Shavertown, Mr. and Mrs.
James Casterline, Mr. and Mrs.
William Casterline spent two days
in Bethesda, Maryland where they
attended a house party to
serve the 8th wedding anniversary
of Mr. and Mrs, Claude Lapp.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Smith
Trucksville, Mrs. Thomas Reese
of
of
Sunday. They also attended the
morning worship service at the
church.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Chesko
and son Albert Jr. and James of
Johnson City, N. Y. are spend-
ing some time with Mr. and Mrs.
Albert London.
Mr, and Mrs. Z. E. Garinger of
Dallas and Mr. and Mrs. Loren
Keller visited the North Eastern
Internatinal Society Gladiolus
Show in Binghamton, N. Y. on
August 17.
Wesley Hilbert Jr. of Easton is
spending his vacation with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Hil-
bert.
Mr, and Mrs. John Garringer
and children Lois and Jackie spent
Sunday at Lake Silkworth.
The Confidence Class will have a
bake sale on Saturday, Sept. 4 on
Shaver’s lawn.
SWEET VALLEY
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Long and
family and Jay Long spent Mon-
day at Carlisle where Charlie at-
tended a dealer’s meeting.
Miss Bess Klinetob attended the
flower show at Lehman Saturday
evening and took her cousin, Mrs.
Fay Brown home to spend the
weekend with her, Sunday Miss
Klinetob and Mrs. Brown, along
with several others from this place
attended Patterson Grove Camp
meeting.
Mr. and Mrs. Byron Naugle of
Mohawk, N. Y. have. returned to
their home after visiting the for-
mer’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. O, E.
Naugle for a week.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Deets have
returned to their home in Phila-
delphia after visiting their daugh-
ter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
George Wesley.
Don’t forget the Fair sponsored
by Kings Daughters at Church. of
Christ this evening.
Rev. and Mrs, Charles Dempsey
and son, Richard of Binghamton
spent Wednesday and Thursday
with Rev. and Mrs. Ira Button.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hildebrant
of Loyalville spent Tuesday with
Bess Klinetob.
Mrs. Frank Hazlett, Mrs. Anna
Hoover, Miss Dylis Hunter and H.
L. Culver spent Tuesday evening
with Mr, and Mrs. Carl Congdon
“UHRA
of East Dallas.
The Beacon
We believe no other system of feeding compares
with the Beacon Feeding Plan for high egg pro-
duction. You combine scratch grains, supplementary
fleshing pellets and dry mash and always in
those proportions that best suit the age, breed,
season and the level of production of your birds.
You simply follow the chart we provide. it's easy,
it's effective!
egg production and sustain it.
SICHERMAN FEED CO.
1072 Wyoming Ave., Exeter, Pa.
PHONE PITTSTON 2147
Authorized BEACO N Dea
Feeding Plan helps you get higher
FY
Ea OS
ob- |
Shavertown, Mrs. Arlene Cook of
Wyoming, N. Y. were callers at |
the home of Mrs. Harry E. Ide on |
BEAUMONT
Are those ‘first graders” vac-
cinated yet? If not, you had
better hurry for school starts Wed-
nesday, September 7.
Edward MacDougall’s ‘Mercury’
took third place at the Lake Silk-
worth outboard motor races last
Sunday.
Bill Belles has returned from
the General Hospital.
Romaine Lewis of Wilkes-Barre
has been with her sister, Mrs.
Warren Johnson.
Mrs, Raymond Denmon and son,
Sherwood, have returned
New Jersey where they visited
Mrs. Denmon’s brother, Conrad
Hilbert.
Mrs.
Maude Scovell of Wilkes-
Scranton, Mr, and Mrs. Ralph B. | Barre was guest of honor at a
birthday surprise party given by
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hilbert.
David Schmid, who has com-
pleted his boot training at Great
Lakes Naval Training Station, is
visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Rodney Schmid,
The personnel of the school
lunch program served the G.L.F.
Party at the high school Thursday,
August 25.
The corn canning season is in
fupll swing at the cannery, so call
H. L. 3418, won't you? Then too
many local people have corn to
sell!
Centermoreland
Mr. and Mrs. W. Leland Gay
and three daughters spent Sunday
and Mrs.
|in Dunmore with Mr.
| Floyd Stanton.
| Misses Ruth and Florence Mon-
| tross and Florence Weaver spent
| Sunday in Mehoopany with Mrs.
| Blanche Love,
| Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Griffin
and daughters of Virginia spent
the past week with Mrs. Griffin's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Dickinson.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Labar,
BLUE STREAK
Distributed By
OLD TOLL GATE
Feed Service
Trucksville - Phone 520-R-2
Ll)
(1 1
}
}
daughter Donna Mae of Shaver-
town and Mrs. Sam Margellina,
son Robert of Trucksville were
Sunday dinners guests of Mr, and
Mrs. Clarence Schoonover,
Mrs. Karl Besteder son,
are spending their vacation
Johnson City, N. Y.
Mrs. Victor Swartwood and dau-
ghters, Maria and Dora Mae have
returned to their home in John-
son City, N. Y. after spending
some time with relatives here,
Karl
in
Talent Entertainment
The Young Ladies Sunday School
| Class of Center Moreland Metho-
from |
dist Church will sponsor a Home
Talent Entertainment in the church
parlors on Friday evening, August
26th. A silver offering will be
taken. Refreshments sold. Come
and enjoy a lovely evening.
Mrs. Floyd Pope Is
Hostess at Shavertown
Mrs, Floyd Pope, Roushey street
Shavertown was hostess to mem-
bers of the Wesleyan Circle of
Shavertown Methodist Church at a
Wiener roast on Monday evening.
Those attending were: Mrs. Char-
lotte Remley, Mrs. Catherine New-
hart, Mrs, Mildred Edwards, Mrs.
Audrey Chappel, Mrs. Betty Brace,
Mrs. Isabel Stevenson, Mrs, Irma
Eicke, Mrs. Fanny Williams, Mrs.
Hazel Honeywell, Mrs. Hilda Hughes
Mrs. Dorothy Pope, Mrs. Howard
Harrison and the hostess.
The first organized government
| on Pennsylvania soil was created
| in 1643 by Governor Johan Printz.
Never have we seen a car that per-
forms like these wonderful 1949 Eng-
lish Austins do. Here are the facts
about a car that simply hasn’t an equal!
30 MILES PER GALLON AND
MORE! Compare that with what
you get anywhere else. You save 30¢
of every dollar on gasoline.
PERFORMANCE! The hill-climb-
ing power of the Austin is almost
unbelievable! It has faster getaway.
Does 70 miles per hour smoothly and
easily. Steers “with your little fin-
ger,” parks where most cars just
can’t.
RIDING COMFORT! A dream of
a ride! ... level around sharpest
curves! Roominess where you want
it...inside...not needless overhang!
Plenty of legroom and headroom!
GOOD LOOKS! These handsome
new Austins have trim, smart styl-
ing...upholstery of genuine leather!
AUSTIN SERVICE! Our mechan-
| ics give expert Austin service. Com-
| plete stock of parts. A network of
| Austin dealers in the U. S. and Can-
ada offers you efficient service.
BUILT-TO-LAST VALUE! When
you buy a car look at what you get
for your money. Here’s just part of
what you get in this amazing 1949
Austin: Body of heavier gauge steel
...for safety. Semi-convertible top!
Built-in heater and defrosters!
“Feather ride” independent front
wheel suspension! Ride stabilizer!
Safe, center-frame jacking, operated
from inside the car. Valve-in-head, high
Drive the ENGLISH CAR
that AMERICANS LIKE BEST
—the Beautiful New 1949
ENGLISH AUSTIN!
compression engine...for power plus!
Double voltage battery for positive
starting!
t
A down
Remember —
It's yours for
Plus 24
Small Monthly Payments
The Price Is Right!...actually sev-
eral hundred dollars less than you'd
pay for any other car with the same
features.
WHAT U.S. OWNERS SAY:—
“Performance and riding qualities of
my Austin are superior to any car I
have ridden in...”—EAH—-Ohio
“Quietness...responsiveness...pleas-
ant riding qualities I would never
have believed possible...”—JWH —
Mass.
“It is so obviously practical and good-
looking that everyone admires it and
asks all about it . . .”—RRG—N. J.
“Gas economy is exceptional ...with
our ever-changing weather, my Aus-
tin gets me out of the snow and mud
where other cars fail...”—BCM, Jr.
—Mich.
In fairness to yourself, drive this
wonderful 1949 English Austin! Then
decide. See us...write us...or phone
us, right now!
KUNKLE GARAGE
Daniel E. Meeker, Prop.
Kunkle, Pa.
Phone 458-R-13
GASOLINE E
4s
GASOLINE B
LS
NET
: 8%
GASOLINE B
12%
513 FOREMOST AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERS in the
Detroit area were asked what brand of gasoline
they used in their own cars ...and more said
Sunoco Dynafuel than all other gasolines com=
bined! To find out why Dynafuel is the 4 to 1
choice of men who know motors best...try just one
tankful in your own car. Then judge for yourself.
55% prefer Sunoco Dynafuel
SURVEY WAS CONDUCTED in
the Detroit area by a nationally
known research organization. 513 en-
gineers in the area who belonged to a
leading automotive engineering society
were asked: — ‘What brand of gaso-
line do you ordinarily use in your car?”’
55% of them interviewed said they used
: Sunoco Dynafuel. .. 4 to 1 over the
next nearest gasoline!
SUNOCO DYNAFUEL IS 4101
CHOICE OF AUTO ENGINEERS
Proved by this Detroit Gasoline Survey ™
FOR BEST RESULTS FROM YOUR CAR, don’t dilute
Sunoco Dynafuel with other gasolines. Wait until
your tank is nearly empty and then fill up with
Dynafuel...the gasoline that more auto engineers
use in their own cars than all other gasolines
combined. You’
without paying premium price!
Il get high-test performance...
Save up to 2¢ a gallon over
other high-test gasolines
ee
= 79 prefer Sunoco Dynafuel
*