The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, July 14, 1950, Image 3

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“CER ERRRERRRA ERENT RGRAY
Call
GAY
For
INSURANCE
® Farm Bureau Mutual Auto Ins. Co.
@® Farm Bureau Mutual Fire Ins. Co.
® ‘Farm Bureau Life Ins. Co.
CENTERMORELAND 62-R-12 ot 62-R3
ARTHUR GAY ° ERNEST GAY
Home Office: Columbus, Ohio :
J ERIE Rr
NEW HOME FOR SALE
LUZERNE AVENUE
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
GARLAND
4 rooms, vestibule, bath and dinette
Kitchen cabinet, medicine cabinet, linen closet,
attic stairs, attic flooring, flower boxes and
shutters included in selling price.
F.H. A. Approved
Dan Robinhold
Representative for Bennett Ready Cut Homes
Machell Avenue, Dallas Phone Dallas 61
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*
Free Trizl
MN
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|
EN
Air condition your bedroom or office today!
Telephone 2-5104
ACME
REFRIGERATION CO., Inc.
Air Conditioning Experts At Your Service
299%
Youu be cool as an ocean breeze all day long... all night
long... with a Fedders Room Air Conditioner! Install in
any window, plug in any standard outlet. You get a complete
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convenient
terms available
Immediate
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Only Fedders offers all these EXCLUSIVE FEATURES
TWICE THE COOLING CAPACITY... Twin evaporators with double-row
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HINGED LIFT TOP... Conceals all controls. Hermetically sealed re-
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FINGER-TIP CONTROL... Rotatable comfort-circle grille aims the cool
air in any direction... . up, down, right or left.
Air-
4 w No Conditioning
Obligation Survey Free!
Eine
4 GREAT NAME SINCE 1896
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__ THEPOST, FRIDAY, JULY 14,1950
Miss Ruby Jones Becomes
Bride Of Granville Scouten
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Jones, Har-
veys Lake, announce the marriage
of their daughter, Ruby, and Gran-
ville Scouten, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Scouten of Noxen road,
Harveys Lake, Thursday, June 29
at 7 o'clock. Rev. David Morgan
performed the ceremony in Court-
dale Methodist Church.
Attendants were Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Patton of Buck Wheat Hol-
low.
The bride wore floor length
dress of white fashioned with tight
bodice, full skirt and short sleeves.
Her small white hat was trimmed
with blue feathers and she wore
a shoulder. bouquet of white roses
and lilies of the valley. Mrs. Pat-
ton chose pink dress similarly
made and shoulder bouquet of pink
roses and lilies of the valley.
Following the ceremony, Miss
Mary Jarver and Miss Louise Wy-
ant served a dinner at the Lewis
home to members of both fam-
ilies, the bride and groom, the
attendants and Mrs. Lewis's
mother, Mrs. Henrietta Geater of
Philadelphia. The couple . spent
their honeymoon in Canada and
now reside in the George Smith
cottage at Harveys Lake.’
Mrs. Scouten is a graduate of
Laketon High School and has been
employed at the dress factory at
Noxen. Mr. Scouten was gradu-
ated from Noxen High School and
is associated with his brothers in
the plastering business.
Prior to her marriage Mrs.
Scouten was guest at a variety
shower given by Mrs. Morrison
Witter. Monday evening Miss
Louise Wyant and Miss Audrey
Patton will entertain at a variety
shower at the Wyant home.
Harvey's Lake
Mrs. Florence Conden has re-
turned from Brookville, Pa., where
she visited her sister.
Mr. and Mrs. Lucuis Eldridge
of Wilkes-Barre were guests at a
picnic supper, given by Mr. and
Mrs. Peter Kuchta at the Herman
Garinger home, on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Nolan Wilson and
daughter, ‘Roxy of Runnemede,
N.J., and Ernest Langel of Shaver-
town were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Armitage on Saturday eve-
ning.
The Board of Education of the
Alderson Church will meet tonight
(Friday) directly after choir re-
hearsal. All officers and teachers
are urged to be present. Mrs. Ray-
mond Garinger is chairman of the
board.
| SAFETY VALVE
(Continued from Page Two)
SS —
who were beginning to sprout their
seeds of destruction. In our fight to
suppress this modern Pagan, all
sects of Christians, Jews and all
races united to uphold and perpet-
| | uate what was handed down to us
| | by our ancestors.
This year Rome observes a Holy
Year. How timely that is, with the
whole world still confused and ill
from the recent holocaust. During
this Holy Year it is a breath taking
sight to see the Pilgrims coming
from all over the world to pay
homage to their Spiritual Leader,
the Pope. Twice a week His Holi-
ness holds an audience in the huge
St. Peter’s Basilica. Our guide, telis
us this magnificent church holds an
estimated 60,000 people. It is not
only a church but also a museum of
the rich past history. Upon conclu-
sion of the audience with the Pope,
it was an awe inspiring sight to see
the mass of humanity being dis-
gorged from this massive edifice.
Its likeness can only be compared
to a huge bee hive with swarms of
bees going out to perform their mis-
sions.
Upon conclusion of our two-day
tour, every one of us in the party
felt richer in experience and educa-
tion, regardles of our beliefs or re-
ligion. Our only regret was that we
had to leave so soon.
Andrew Kozemchak, G.M.C.
U. S. Navy
Tobacco Camps
Draw Local Boys
Luzerne County Sends
230 To Connecticut
Vacation work in the Connecti-
cut tobacco fields is now in full
swing. 180 boys from Luzerne
county left for the three big camps
Friday, forty more Tuesday morn-
ing. This year there are no girls
included in the trek to the fields,
as there are plenty of girls avail-
able in nearby towns. Mrs. Martin
Porter, who for the past five years
has superintended a dormitory for
girls, says she misses the exper-
ience, and has a feeling every time
the phone rings that it is the to-
bacco camp, faced with a possible
general exodus of boys on account
of the Korean situation, calling on
her to round up the girls as re-
placements.
Tom Phipps, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Phipps, Fernbrook, is assist-
ant to Robert Waters, Forty Fort,
director of Camp Pennwick, just
across’ the border into Massachu-
setts near Babb’s Beach. The other
two large camps, Hazlewood and
Holcomb, are situated about seven
miles from Hartford. Members
come to Babb’s Beach to swim with
boys from Pennwick, part of the
organized recreation program for
vacation workers.
Ninety-nine acres of tobacco
must be hoed and suckered, the
first activity of the workers on
arrival early in July. By the end
of July, sufficient growth is made
so that picking can start, two
leaves from the base of each plant.
Girls sew the leaves together and
prepare them for drying, tho dur-
ing the war emergency they work-
ed in the fields.
Workers are lavishly fed. They
are charged $9 per week for dorm-
itory space and board. The big
farms produce milk and butter and
meat in quantity. Six Back Moun-
tain folks are doing the cooking,
two to each camp, all of them
familiar with the requirements
from several successive years of
vacation work. Marvin King, chef
for Kingston Township High School
cafeteria, Mrs. Mabel Eastwood of
Jackson Township, Mrs. Grace
Martin of Laketon, Mrs. Marshall
Downs and Mrs. Morgan, Shaver-
town, and Katherine Houghwout,
SAME DAY
SERVICE
CIRCLE CLEANERS
specialize in keeping their customers’ clothes new
looking and well groomed. If you plan a vacation,
let Circle get you off to a splendid start with expert
dry cleaning of Summer wear.
Bellen care Means Lorgel Wear
TELEPHONE
7-1645 or Dallas 597-R-2
for
24-HOUR
SERVICE
“4 little finer. . .
RCLE
CLEANING & DYEING COMPANY
1231 WYOMING AVE., FORTY FORT
- “Routes Throughout Wyoming Valley”
A little more careful”
Trucksville, are handling the cater-
ing.
Robert Underwood, a student at
Carlisle, and Robert Antanaitis,
Indiania ~~ State, are registered.
Ages for workers start at = 14,
though an effort is made to em-
ploy nobody younger than fifteen.
Workers are well paid. A boy who
attends to business is able to come
back before Labor Day, toughened
by two months of healthful work
in the fields and with three hun-
dred dollars in his pocket to show
for his vacation project.
There are rigid rules for going
to bed, as a six A.M. rising hour
calls for a ten P.M. curfew. Break-
fast is at 6:30, with work starting
at 7 A.M. Mrs. Porter says that
dormitory rules are strict because
the young folks who work in the
tobacco camps are a selected group
with parents who appreciate super-
vision and would not permit at-
tendance otherwise. She was prac-
tically drafted into the camp se:-
vice during the war when Wilson
Cease applied enough pressure to
enlist her cooperation. Last year
there were one hundred girls from
this county.
Read the Classified Column
NEW 18-INCH
SPORTLAWN
MOWING IS FUN when you
stroll along behind this power-
packed lightweight Toro. ..all you
do is guide! Simple controls. Husky
1 h.p. engine takes you up steep
slopes, speeds you through heavy
grass. The most mower for your dollar
offered by the makers of the Toro
machines you see on champion-
ship golf courses everywhere! 3
Come in and compare! 9
Big, fast, super- =e
owered 21-inch 4g
52 //8 all p 1
oro Sportlawn
1]
aleo on display. 0)
3 l
RIES
$114.00 ’
Garinger
Machine Service
Memorial Highway
DALLAS
Phone Dallas 416-R-10
NF
4
EE SE aR Lr NG CPS te
PAGE THRER
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
AUSTIN 4-DOOR SEDAN
Two to three weeks delivery on A 90
Convertible and other models
Authorized Austin Distributor
KUNKLE GARAGE
Daniel Meeker, owner
KUNKLE, PENNSYLVANIA
WHY WORRY ABOUT
WEATHERPROOFING?
e weather strips
e calking
e wall or roof insulation
e 2-in-1 storm windows
and screens
Yes, turn those weatherproofing headaches
over to a local, factory-trained Chamberlin
Man. He's got just the answer for those
Sensible
Prices
hot, stuffy rooms
Easy
Terms
Local Representative—
P. M. WINTER
Shavertown—Phone: Dallas 49-R-7
Fuel Saving Products
Also Stokers and Boilers
drafty windows and doors in winter. No
fuss or bother for you! He'll measure,
estimate, install precision-built Chamber-
lin equipment with the same care he'd use
in his own home. Call this specialist today.
Free home demonstration and estimate.
Chamberlin Co. of America
214 So. Washington Street
Wilkes-Barre—Phone: 2-2212
in summer and those
Installed
Read The Classified Column
MINUTES
WITH US
CAN SAVE V
$1000
A BIG NE:
NOW YOU CA}
FOR MUCH LESS THAN YOU THINK!
YES. 5 minutes behind the wheel of today’s big Dodge is all
it takes to prove you could pay $1,000 more and still not
get all Dodge gives you!
New Dodge models are rolling off the production lines in
record-breaking volume, -and we can
livery on your favorite model.
assure you early de-
' So why put off enjoying Dodge extra room and riding com-
fort, the flashing performance of the big “Get-Away” Engine,
the smoothness of Fluid Drive! Your present car will probably
more than cover the down payment . .
. and terms are easy.
Yes, you could pay $1,000 more and not get all Dodge
room, ease of handling and
famous dependability!
—y | Cig
== mm |
"L. L. RICHARDSON
50 Lake Street, Dallas, Pa.
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