PAGE TWO “| THE Noxen-Jackson In Semi-Finals Shavertown and Noxen Are Now Out in Front Noxen came from behind to score one run in the ninth inning and nose out Jackson 3-2 Sunday on the Noxen diamond. This was the first game of the semi-final best-of-three series. The second game will be played Sunday at Jackson. A large crowd saw “Daddy” Shal- ata pole out a home run with one man on in the eighth to tie the game at two all. The winning run was scored on Jackson's first er- rors of the game and gave Mack Taylor the nod over Joe Levi in a well-hurled pitching duel. In the other semi-final Shaver- town broke a 2-2 tie in the eighth inning by scoring three runs and then added two more in the ninth for a decisive 7-2 victory over East Dallas. Anthony, winning pitcher, was in top form as he allowed only five hits. Stanton, East Dallas hurler, al- though striking out 15, was touched for eight hits. Newhart and Brown had two hits apiece for Shavertown as did Martin for East Dallas to take hitting honors. These teams will play again Sunday at Beau- mont. This leaves Noxen and Shaver- town one up on Jackson and East Dallas with the all-important sec- ond games to be played Sunday. Victories by Noxen and Shavertown would conclude the semi-finals and these teams would then meet in the final playoff. Vogrin bested Bill Laurnitus in an 1l-inning battle won by Vernon over Harding on the Harding field Sunday. The two teams are en- gaged in a three-game consolation series. Rev. Frederick Reinfurt To Address Auxiliary Shavertown Branch Nesbitt Hos- pital Auxiliary will meet Friday af- ternoon, October 7 at 2 in Trucks- ville Fire Hall. Rev, Frederick Rein- furt will be guest speaker. Hostesses will be Mrs, Jessie Day, Mrs. Gwilliam Evans, Mrs.|| Lewis Evans, Mrs. David Evans, Mrs, J. C. Fleming, Mrs. John Gir- van, Mrs. Ray Finney, Mrs. Albert Groblewski, Mrs. John Gable, Mrs. Nesbitt Garinger, Mrs. Lina Gar- inger, Mrs. Zelza Garinger, Mrs. Ray Greenwood and Mrs, Frank Garris. : Scout Leaders To Meet Dallas District Girl Scout lead- ers and committee will hold their first supper meeting of the season on Monday evening at 6:30 at Lehman Methodist Church. Train- ing program will be in charge of Miss Dolores Morris. Executives Meet Members of the Executive com} mittee of Dallas District Girl Scouts met Thursday evening at Back Mountain Memorial Library. Present were . Mrs, Richard Prynn, chairman; Mrs. Stanley Davies, Mrs. Edgar Sutton, Mrs. George Kromelbein, Mrs. Harold Dixon, Jr., Miss Dolores Morris, Mrs. Harrison Smith. Alumni Meeting There will be a meeting of Dal- las Township Alumni Association on Wednesday, at 8:00 in the high school library. All alumni are urged to be present as by-laws will be formally adopted. "DUKE" MAIN HIGHWAY Open evenings till 9 LOW OVERHEAD CAN SAVE YOU MONEY ON "YOUR NEXT USED CAR 1947 Packard Super 4 door sedan R. H. 1948 Chrysler New Yorker 4 door sedan R. H. 1947 Mercury 4 door sedan R. H. 1939 Plymouth 4 door sedan 1938 Dodge 4 door sedan Plus several other good used cars to choose from. ISAACS ISAACS - TRUCKSVILLE PHONE DALLAS 100 __First Row; 24 Carl Johnson, 34 Carl Henning, 20 Bob Richard, 38 Glenn Carey, 40 Ronald Kester, 33 Dean Johnson, 23 Bob Gordan. Second Row; Ted Szela, Coach, 27 John sottle, 32 Edward Carey, 26 Jack Pesavento, 42 Joe Young- blood 35 Jack Connors, 22 Jack Red and White Plays At Avoca Coach Kennedy Will Rely on Fleet Backfield Dallas Township will travel to Avoca Saturday in the remaining Back Mountain game. Avoca, which defeated the Redskins 18-0 last year, has already been defeated this season 19-0 by Jenkins Town- ship. The Redskins will field their fleet backfield of Redmond, Bloom- er, Bellas and Creamer and will have their bolstered front wall all primed for the encounter. All the Redskins miss for an all- round good team is a serious aer- ial threat. This will hamper them against some of the stronger Val- ley teams whose forward walls will be better than Dallas has faced so far. Coach Joe Kennedy's Avoca squad committed many miscues last week and showed a dismal passing attack completing only three passes out of sixteen, but ths Green and Gold has probably picked up and will be a real test of strength for the Redskins. Firemen Can't Find Auto Fire MacCullum—The Diamond The late Bill Wilkes-Barre Recaqrd’s Dust—would have enjoyed the pre- | dicament of Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Company on Tuesday night when it answered an alarm but was unable to find the fire. Someone rushed into Bowman's Restaurant around 11 P.M. and shouted that an automobile was on fire “near the theatre.” The firemen raced to Himmler Theatre, then to Dallas Dutdoor Theatre. There was no automobile on fire at either place. The firemen re- turned to their homes disappointed. There had been such a large turn- out, such a waste of energy. Bill MacCullum would have chuckled, He it was who created the famous epic of the Espy Fire Department and its all night search to put out the Northern Lights, “WINTER HOLDS NO TERRORS "FOR OUR FAMILY” "blue coal’ GUARANTEES OUR COMFORT AND OUR FURNACE IS IN TIP-TOP conNDiTION | “Save up to 30% on Fuel Bills! The ‘blue coal’ TEMP-MASTER £5") with “Electric Eye” Thermo- stat regulates dampers from upstairs — ends overheating and underheating. Fuel sav- = ings pay for it! Free home demonstration. When vou have a furnace in good condition and a supply of ‘blue coal’ in your basement you can’t imagine a more care- free way to face winter. You've got the safest, most dependable fuel known — and one that gives healthy heat be- cause it’s steady heat. As house- holders everywhere say, “When you heat with ‘blue coal’ you feel the difference”. Phone us today. BACK MT. LUMBER & COAL CO. Shavertown, Pa. Heat your home with '6lue coal’and feel the OIFFERENCE Phone Dallas 215 Kingston Township Gets Set For Lehman POST, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1949 -Richards, 21 Bruce Cleasby, George | Gale Spare, 36 William Oney, 38 i McCutcheon, asst. Coach. Stanley Davis, 25 Bernard Sherin, Third Row; 28 Donald Purvin, |12 Ted Hinkle, 6 Gordon Beck. 41 Wililam Fine, 39 Philip Culver, Fifth Row; Bill Winters, Richard 48 John Cashmark, 49 Paul Hugh- | Parry, Jack Connor, 8 Frank Pas- ey, 46 Carl Follmer, 29 Gerald |coe, James Dolan, Donald Zieker, Culver, Ken Malkemes, Mgr, James Sisco, Dennis Ide, mgr., War- Fourth Row; 5 Tony Greener, 18 | ren Liem, mgr. Raymond Balut, mgr, . Jackson Baseball Team First row, left to right, Mekeel, E. Niezgoda, S. Salansky, Ide. Second row: J. Niezgoda, A. Levi, A. Salansky, Urick, Chet Rusil- oski. Third row: Robert Disque, manager, Stolarick, Joe Levi, New- hart, Fedor. Noxen Baseball Club 8 Front row, left to right: mascots Gailey, Wilson and Kovalick; Second row: Joe Bowers, Max Taylor, Clayton Taylor, Caesar Kop- cha, Mike Session; Third row: Calvin Strohl, Jack Wall, John Jones, Fred Case, Granville Scouten; Back row: Lewis Hackling, manager; Daddy Shalata, Arthur Blizard and George VanCampen. Entertains ‘Club Mrs. George Dodson entertained To Serve Ham Supper Joy Class of Kunkle Methodist the A.S.T. Club on Saturday even- ing at her home. Present were Mrs. Raymond Garinger, Mrs, Oscar Dy- Church will sponsor a ham supper in the Community Hall on Wednes- day, October 5. Mrs. William Eck- N i 3 Kingston Township-Lehman Tilt Will Hold Spotlight Tomorrow Scotties Are Given Slight Edge Over Coach Szela's Inexperienced Eleven Kingston Township will entertain Lehman tomorrow afternoon on the Katie gridiron in the first inter- Back Mountain game of the sea- son. Kingston Township triumphed last year 12-0 in a night game at Kingston Borough Stadium, This season however, promises to be a different story with the small but powerful Lehman favored to de- throne the Katies, last year’s Back Mountain Champs. Tony Marchakitus, Lehman, and Ted Szela, K.T., are both pointing their teams for this contest and will field full strength teams at the op- ening kickoff, The game will open the competi- tion for the coveted ‘‘Golden Foot- ball Shoe” awarded annually by Dallas Rotary Club. The Red and Blue of Lehman will field a rejuvenated team fresh from its 19-0 victory over Pittston Town- ship and will feature a star-studded backfield composed of Mont, Nuss, Roskowski and Graham, backed by a rugged line with flankers Kern and Hutchinson as anchor men. Kingston Township's Orange and Black will field a predominantly in- experienced team still smarting from last week’s drubbing and will’ rely on Cleasby, Richards, Young- blood and Pesavento to handle the backfield chores. Szela has smoothed out some of last week's kinks and has inte- grated his doubtful ground attack to the successful aerial ventures. Trucksville PTA First ‘meeting of Trucksville Par- ent Teacher Association will be held Monday evening at 8 p.m. Thomas Shelbourne, newly elected president will be in charge, The theme of the evening will be “Get Acquainted”. A musical program will be presented by Sam Davis. Refreshments will be in the form of a tea to welcome the teachers. Babies Christened Rally Day and Promotion Day were observed at the Alderson Church on Sunday. The following babies were christened: Donna Claire Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald D. Smith, Mary Mar- garet Keener, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Alfred Keener, and Robert Duane Elston, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Elston. 188 MAIN STREET Rib and Pork Loin Lean Boiling Beef Round Steak Pork Liver - Pure Lard Chicken Noodle Soup Pork and Beans Woodbury Soap LARE:S MEAT MARKET Open Friday and Saturday evenings till 9 p.m. Fresh Ground Hamburg Country Style Scrapple Dh 3 can 29¢ ed 3 reg. bars 25¢ LUZERNE 49c¢ 43¢ 25¢ 69c¢ i5¢ 39¢ 49c¢ i9¢ 2 lg. cans 19¢c Main Road “DON'T MISS THE WORLD SERIES” Does’ your radio fade in the last half of the ninth inning??? If so, bring it to us before the first inn- ing for reasonable and expert repair. “Guaranteed Satisfaction” Expert Radio Repair on all Models Trucksville Radio Service BILL GUYETTE — JOHN HART Phone Dallas 286-R-9 Trucksville, Pa. mond, Mrs. Martin Porter, Mrs. Russell Case, Mrs. William Morgan, Mrs, Anthony Novy and Mrs. Blanche Ward. ert is chairman Farmer Dance The Junior Class of Kingston Township High School will sponsor a farmer dance Friday, October 14 at 8:30 p.m. in the high school aud- itorium, Bob Scott and his orches- tra will furnish music. Al Derhamer will be caller. The public is in- vited. 1) fA + WL x POR Ser NERC EA ER RAEN Sas a 20 CHECKS $150 YOUR NAME PRINTED ON EACH CHECK Repairing Windows The Men's Club of Trucksville Methodist Church has taken on the project of repairing the stained glass windows of the church, They will sponsor several projects to raise needed funds. If you care to contribute, call Mr. C. sBHemenway. «NO REQUIRED BALANCE . +NB CHARGE FOR DEPOSITS OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT WITH ANY AMOUNT AT ANY TELLERS WINDOW IN DANCE AT The ROSE ROOM 80 Main Street, Luzerne DANCING Every Saturdav and Sunday Nites Penang WYOMING NATIONAL Bayk OF WILKES-BARRE 114 YEARS OF BANKING SUCCESS AT Corner Market & Franklin Streets ber Fed. it Insurance 8:30 to 11:30 > DIXON'S Swift’s Premium Sirloin or Porterhouse Steaks 8c Ib. ' Ground Beef, Veal and Pork | 53cib. HAMS 59c Ib. STANDING RiB ROAST WEEKEND SPECIALS Cream Puffs {0c each Cocoanut Bars 43c ea.| Pumpkin Pies, 49¢ ea. Hunt’s Y.C. Peaches, halves, 21/4 cans, 2 for 23 Campbell's Vegetable Soup, Reg. Cans, 2 for 25 Franco-American Spaghetti, 15% oz. 2 for27 Seaside Lima Beans, 1 1b. Pkg. ................. 2 for 49 Fox Hill Fancy Catsup, 14 oz. bottle ......... 14¢ POLRIOOS itis iin Der eet 55¢ peck Lettuce .... is 3 1%7¢ each California Oranges .................... 2b. 25¢ Tokey Grapes 2 1b. 25¢ FAIRLAWN MARKET # RE T_T, TS geen 2 . a Pe eR RS prey a a a ae A——r ep