220 San The TRADING POST a POST CLASSIFIED AD RESULTS QUICKLY AND CHEAPLY IS THE PLACE TO GET IONE DALLAL 300 @ THREE CENTS PER WORD @ Soc MINIMUM For Sale— : FIVE healthy six-week-old puppies. { Mother thoroughbred English ; Setter. Phone Dallas 508-R-7. ‘ HICKORY NUTS, walnuts, butter nuts, nut meats, popcorn, apples. * Carlin's, Martz road. Phone 316-R- F230 11940 NASH 4 door sedan. Good "tires, new seat covers, motor “overhauled. Robert Mathers, Maple iSt., Trucksville. “SANTA CLAUS suit, cap, bearded ! rubber mask. Excellent condi- ‘tion. Call Dallas 426-R-13. Price :$11.50. ‘14 ACRES Hard Wood Timber. { Wayne King, Outlet-Meeker Rd. PRACTICALLY new clothing for boy 12 years old, girl 14 years old. Suits, top coat etc. Phone 554-R-9. LARGE TRICYCLE, chain drive, | balloon tires, Mercury, good con- dition. Phone 497-R-2. ELECTRIC band cleaner, Westing- house. Perfect condition. Phone ‘Dallas 160-R-2. SPINET Piano for sale. care of Dallas Post. FURNACE boiler, steam or hot | water, thermostat, hot water ‘coil, suitable for five room house. Reasonable. Phone Harveys Lake 32117, HOT WATER boiler in perfect con- . dition, $10; 2 McCord Hot Air Blowers for steam plant, perfect condition, $30 each. Both for $50. Call Dallas 300. WHITE HOLLAND turkeys, oven ; dressed. Galletti, Lehman- Out- let Road. Phone Dallas 548-R-T7. GIVE BIRD HOUSES and feeders for Christmas presents to the birds. Your friends and your fam- ily. Stop in and pick them out. Also see all the varieties of wild birds at our feeders. Frank Jack- son. Pole 172 (next to Jackson's Pattern Shop) Harvey's Lake. TYPEWRITERS, new Corona port- - ables. Easy terms. Also fine selection of guaranteed reconstruc- ted machines. Typewriters repair- ed. W. B. 28768 or C, M. 61-R-2. 1939 HUDSON 4-door sedan, two new tires, looks good, needs some work. Will accept reasonable offer. The Dallas Post. SAVE FUEL—keep warm. Cham- i berlain combination storm win- dows, weather stripping, rock-wool, calking. Free estimates. Easy terms arranged. Fuel Savings Products Co. - Dallas 49-R-7. MORE OF those fine flavored New- ‘man potatoes. Starks Delicious and Spy apples. Sold at Art New- man’s farm, East Dallas. Bring own container, FRYERS and roasters, dressed to order, delivery. Dallas 127-R-2, W. D. Evans, Demunds road. Whom To Call— Box R, LIFE, Fire and Auto Insurance. Capable and experienced. Rep- resenting the Home Fire Insur- | DIESEL tractors: Farmers! Save up to 75¢ on fuel costs and have plenty of power to spare. Let us demonstrate the Sheppard Diesel on any of your jobs. Joe Skopic, Farm Equipment, Route 115, Leh- man Heights. Phone Dallas 368-R- 10. DITCHING. Make all your acres productive acres. Let us drain your wet spots. All types of ditching with 13-ton Buckeye Ditch Digging machine. Call John Hewitt, H. L. 3280. FUEL OIL, Texaco gas, kerosene. Large or small delivery. Prompt ' service, Guaranteed delivery. Harry Crispell, Dallas 327-R-13. WATCH REPAIRS checked to tim- ing machines. We sell Elgin, Bul- ova, Benrus, and other fine watches. Diamonds, Jewelry and Gifts for all occasions. HENRY'S JEWELRY, Main Street, Dallas, Phone 274-R- 16. For PERFECTION in machine, ma- chineless or cold permanent wav- ing, finger waving or dyeing—see Marguerite, Main Road, Fernbrook. Phone 397. FOR REFRIGERATION work, com- mercial or domestic, call Theo- dore Reed, Church Street Phone ~ | 256-R-13. WEDDING INVITATIONS, An-|. nouncements, printed or engraved in a wide range of styles and prices. The Dallas Post. BOTTLED GAS, prompt service to your home or business place. It’s cheap, clean and coavenient, Complete line gas ranges, water end space heaters. Harold Ash, Shavertown, Phone 409-R-7, EXCAVATING, land clearing and general contracting. Good quality fill dirt, top-soil, and red ash de- livered. Dodson and Hudak. Phone office 123-R-10, residence 467-R-15. FRIGIDAIRE PRODUCTS — ABC, Maytag, Easy washers, Bengal, Prizer, Magic Chef. Boyd R. White, Appliance and Hardware Store, phone Dallas 568-R-3. IS YOUR TRUCK, tractor or auto- mobile using oil? Your mechanic or garage will recommend SEALED | POWER guaranteed piston rings, COMPLETE MACHINE SHOP, STULL BROTHERS, KINGSTON, BOTTLE GAS—Metered gas is re- liable, convenient, economical. Call Cutten Gas 30 W, 8th street, Wyoming. Phone Wyo, 327. Wanted To Buy HALF or full crate fresh eggs twice every week. Phone Dallas 300. | BUSHEL or half bushel fresh hick- ory nuts, husked. Phone Dallas 300. CLEAN COTTON RAGS. Highest prices. Cannot use silk or wool- ens. Must be without buttons. The Dallas Post. ALL kinds livestock, pigs, cows, calves, sheep. Call me for best prices, Alfred Miller, licensed dealer, 127-R- 14, Dallas R. F. D. 3. 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. Ike ‘| Mellner, 100 N, Welles Ave., Kings- ton. Phone 7-2746. Upholstering— LET US restore the original wear and comfort to your fine old fur- niture. Large selection of beauti- ful fabrics. Low prices. All work guaranteed, Write or phone Stook Upholstery, Hillside Ave., Harvey's Lake. Phone H.L. 4416, FINE OLD furniture made sturdy and freshly upholstered. Wide range of Colonial and modern pat- terns. Reasonable prices. Excellent workmanship. Write or phone John Curtis Kingston, 7-5636, 210 Lath- rop Street, Kingston. Welding— WELDING ANYTIME, anywhere. Dallas Portable Welding Co. Dal- las 551-R-7. Piano Turing— PIANO TUNING and repairing. Muhlenburg 2152. Oscar White- sell, Hunlock’s Creek, RFD 1. Sanitary Service— SEPTIC TANKS, sumps, cleaned and repaired. Call us before you have trouble. Ralph Fitch, Dallas 419-R-7. SEPTIC TANKS, reinforced con- crete, buy the best. Costs less in the long run. C. E, German and Son, Kingston 8-1448 or your local supply dealer. DEAD STOCK removed promptly, day or night, Barney Laskowski & Son. Phone Dallas 433-R-9. SEPTIC TANKS, cesspools and privv vaults cleaned. J. A Sing- er, City Scavenger, 137 Dagobert street, Wilkes-Barre, Dial 3-4529. DEAD “ANIMALS removed promptly free of charge, Call Carl Crock- ett, Muhlenburg 19-R-4. LAWNMOWERS SHARPENED. Saw filing - and retoothing. Machine shop work. Power mowers and gar- den tractors. Garinger Machine Service. Phone 416-R-10. REFRIGERATOR, washer, electric motor repairs. All work guar- anteed. Bulford’'s Refrigeration service, 122 Main street, Dallas. Phone Dallas 568-R-7. FUEL OILS, gasoline, kerosene, lubrics. Meter service to insure you of accuracy. Montross Oil Co., 436 Main St, Luzerne. Phone 7-2361, CELLARS, trenches, etc. Powell Brothers, excavating Contractors. ance Company—the largest in the Mountain Top 389. country—for 27 years. Call Dallas 328. C. L. Albert. ELECTRICAL REPAIR my All makes commercial and do- mestic refrigerators and home ap-' pliances. Back Mt. Lumber and Coal. P.W. Liem, Electrical Appliance Service, Shavertown. Call 579-R-2. ROBERTS’ Radio Service. All work guaranteed, called for and delivered. Cliffside avenue, Trucks- ville. Phone 109-R-16. | Found— STRAYED to my place on Hunts- ville Road, two small Beagles, 6 months old; male and female. Own- : Leave small items at]er may have same by identifying and paying ‘for this ad. Call Dal- las 300 and ask for Box J. Building— BUILDING Contractor. New homes, remodelling and roofing. Call M. Quare and Sons, Dallas 390-R-7. 7 I calendar of remembrance. and Greeting Card costs amount from $1 up. FIRST NATIONAL BANK DALLAS, Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation t Checks The perfect gift — the loveliest greeting cards . . . There's one for every important date on your Ask to see them. The combination Gift Check 3 enclosed in ONLY 25¢ only 25c—issued in any PENNA. Coal and Hauling— FOR PROMPT service on Glen Al- den Coal and all types of general hauling, call Frank L. McGarry, Dallas 305-R-8. GENERAL HAULING—wood, coal, freight, etc. Ashes and garbage removed. Prompt, dependable serv- ice. Norti Berti, Dallas 277-R-2. GLEN ALDEN COAL delivered promptly. Call 710 Back Moun- tain Lumber and Coal Co. SAND, GRAVEL, TOP SOIL, coal, fill dirt, excavating. Bud Mitchell, Dallas 458-R-4. Female Help Wanted— COOK—MAID for couple in Dallas, five days a week, 11 A, M. through d‘nner. Phone 155-R-8 after 5 P.M. Work Wanted— LADY wants kitchen work part- time through holidays. Call Tunkhannock 3956. i For Rent— THREE-ROOMS and bath, new apartment, elderly couple or young business couple preferred. Call 244-R-10. $42 with lights and heat. Lost— MALE BEAGLE, year and half old, white with black ' markings. Finder 219-R-12. Legal— SHERIFF SALE Friday, January 12, 1951 at 10 o'clock A.M. Friday, January 12, 1951, at 10:00 A. M. Court Room No. 1, | Court House, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., bY if "writ of Lev. Fa. No. 3, January Term, 1951, issued out of the ' Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County, real estate of James L. Kinney, Dec’d., Anna Kinney, Admr, of Est. of James L. Kinney, Anna Kinney, Widow, James E. please phone YOUR PRIVATE SAFE A Sofe Deposit Box in our Fire-and-Thefi-Preof Vaults Protects veluables af loss than le 0 day A Kut Boor = Struct Love! —Ne Stein @ SW YOMING LT yn 8 BANK or WiLKESERRRE Sy ‘NATURE'S CHILDREN TOO ARE VICTIMS OF STORMS Game Protector E. M. Woodward, Bedford, reports “On October 29 we had a bad thunderstorm. That afternoon a phone call notified me that deer had been killed on a farm in Juniata Township. An electric fence runs through a field there. During the storm lightn- ‘ng struck this fence and killed 3 young cows. About 300 feet from the dead cattle lay a large 7 point buck, also a victim of lightning. ~The hair was burned the length of all of its legs.” PHEASANTS ROUT ENEMIES Two game protectors recently submitted stories attesting to the fighting courage of male pheasants in encounters with—of all animals —domestic cats. : sma Kinney, Marie K. Park, Helen K. Livingston, Margaret K. Balestrinj, Elizabeth K. McCarroll, James C. Kinney and T. A. Krzywicki, situ- ate in N, W. side of Burke St, Plains Twp., Luzerne County, Pa., at corner of Custern; thence N. W. 250 ft., thence S.W. 50 ft, S. E. 187 ft. to Armalay; thence N. E. 24 ft, side of Burke St., ft. to beginning. Known as No. 115 Burke St. and improved with a single frame dwelling house and together with and subject to right to the use of a 12 foot wide private driveway extending 63 feet in depth on Southwesterly side of above de- scribed property. Excepting and reserving coal, ete. Robert Sherrock, Fenner & Fenner, Attorneys thence N. E. 26 Sheriff NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT Andrew Perzel and Helen Perzel, his wife, have filed a Petition in the Court of Common Pleas of Lu- zerne County, Pa., to No. 1426 December Term, 1950 pray.ng that they be permitted to change their surname to Purcell. Hearing on said Petition will be held on Feb- ruary 8, 1951 at 10:00 A, M. when all persons interested may appear. Leroy Long, Esquire ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION Notice is hereby given that Ar- ticles of ‘Incorporation will be filed with ‘the Department of State, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, on Tuesday, December 19, 1950, under the Business Corporation Act, ap- proved May 5, 1933, and amend- ments and supplements thereto by Wilkes-Barre Construction Co., a proposed corporation to be formed for the purpose or purposes of making and purchasing materials for the construction of buildings; to erect buildings; to own, man- age, operate, lease and sell build- ings; to conduct and carry on the business of builders and contract- tors for the purpose of building, erecting, altering, repairing or do- ing any other work in connection with any and all classes of build- ing and improvements of any k'nd and nature whatsoever, including the locating, laying out and con- structing of roads, avenues, docks, slips, sewers, bridges, wells, walls, canals, railroad or street railways, power plants, and generally in all classes of build'ngs, erections and works, both public and private, or integral parts thereof; to do each and every thing necessary, suitable or proper for the accomplishment of any of the purposes or the at- tainment of any one or more of the objects herein enumerated, or | which shall at any time appear conducive to or expedient for the protection or benefit of this corp- | oration. LEIDINGER’S 117 S. Washington St. Wilkes-Barre, Pa.—Phone 3-9459 Don’t sell your antiques be- and brown fore calling LEIDINGER'S. Rifles, Revolvers, Guns, Fur- niture, Glass, Silver, and Coins. Entire Estates Bought. Schw.n nn & Cotumpiz BICYCLES ‘“ Autos, tractors, trains & wagons Selection still good d SICKLER’S ~~ ATLANTIC PETROLEUM PRODUCTS Call Purcell Gil Service 20 Mt. GREENWOOD ROAD TRUCKSVILLE Dallas 26-R-11 thence to center of private; alley; thence S. E. 63 ft. to N. W.. wholesale “Atlantic” Dealer Samuel C. McFarland, headquar- tering at Drums, says that two of his deputies on patrol in Luzerne County witnessed a battle between a cock pheasant and a cat in which the feline was- forced to retreat after being badly beaten. Follow- ing the fight, a hen and her young stepped from the brush, disclosing the cause of the bird's belligerency. Edward W. Cox, Meyersdale, says a farmer near Berlin reported that when a ringneck rooster en- tered his barn a cat decided to drive it out. The cock pheasant did not choose to run. He turned on the cat, flogged it and drove it to cover. DEER CASUALTIES TREMENDOUS George L. Norris, Supervisor of the Game Commission’s Southwest Division, writes: “As expected, large numbers ‘of deer were being killed by autos in November. On Route 22, within a single 100 yard stretch of road, 8 deer have been killed during this month.” From Acting Game Protector Russell L. Thomas, Jersey Shore: “Deer on the highways hereabouts have been taking a sound beating. It is not unusual for three or four to be road killed in my district in a single night. “Deer casualties on paved roads and at railroad crossings have tak- en my area total over the 200 mark since the first of the year.” ODD HAPPENINGS From 8S. E. Carpenter, Doylestown “Of all the deer I have checked in many years of service with the Game . Commission I saw the most unusual in October—a dead day- old fawn.” (Fawns are normally born in May in that locality.) Ralph L. Shank, Uwchland: “One ‘of my Farm-Game Cooperators told |! me that several families of musk- rats have taken residence in his livestock watering trough. They have carried about 5 bushels of grass and reeds and piled them over the supply pipe. This pipe is used as a through-traffic highway to the springhouse where the farm- er keeps his produce.” MONKEY BUSINESS IN CAMBRIA On November 21, the Johnstown Democrat carried an article and picture on the 1950 small game season's oddity—a monkey bagged in mistake for a squirrel by a Nan- ty Glo man. A plausible explanation of the monkey's presence is that it es- caped from a county fair or a traveling carnival. GROUSE BREAKS INTO ACTOR'S DAD’S STCRE In their “crazy flight” period in fall grouse show on regard for borough limits, often announcing their arrival to a startled house- wife amidst a shower of window glass. Game Protector Bruce W, Cath- erman tells that on October 11 a grouse crashed through the win- dow of the Indiana hardware store owned by movie actor Jimmie Stewart's father. UNLAWFUL BOUNTY CLAIMS Despite the findings of research- ers and ornithologists to the con- trary, many hunters still place all hawks and owls in the predator classification. Every year, many beneficial birds—even little screech owls—are killed indiscrim’nately and are presented for bounty pay- ment. At present, only two birds, the goshawk and the great horned owl, are bountiable. r= ’ GREETINGS & GIFTS are brought to you from Friendly Neighbors & Civic & Social Welfare Leaders through WELCOME WAGON On the occasion of: The Birth of a Baby Change of residence Arrivals of Newcomers to Phone 260-R-8 (No cost or obligation) rr 2 quoted: “It is unlawful for any person to collect or attempt to collect . . . a bounty through the As a warning to those who ‘might become involved through submitting a protected bird for! bounty, this: excerpt from the! Game Law of Pennsylvania is —— presentation of a skin or a carcass, or any part thereof, of any animal CHRISTMAS TREE PLATFORMS “MADE T0 ORDER" %” HARDBOARD Sizes4x8-4x10-4x12 . § ONLY (Gc PER SQUARE FT. an i ¢ SHAVERTOWN LUMBER co. 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