TRUMPET, first The TRADI A POST CLASSIFIED AD er Ee x NG POST IS THE PLACE TO GET RESULTS QUICKLY AND CHEAPLY PHONE DALLAS 300 @ THREE CENTS PER WORD @ 50c MINIMUM For Sale— PRIVATE owner offers four grave : plot in Pinelawn Section Me- morial Shrine Cemetery at $100 less than prevailing price for quick - sale.” Call Centermoreland 53-R-8. PLATFORM for next Christmas, complete with Lionel O Guage 0-6-0 switcher outfit, ' remote switehes and scale size buildings, See it on display. Phone 530-R-2. STORKLINE Stroller, chrome and blue leather, excellent condition, hood, balloon tires, one-year-old, phone 716-R-0. mahogany, stand- Kingston SPINET piano, “ard ‘make. - Pnone 7-1635, Baris _ ELECTRIC STOVE, good condition $75. ' Jack Barnes, -Elmcrest Drive. : Phone 719-R-7. 1936 FORD Motor, complete. Per- . fect condition. $75. Call 453- ‘R-10. : 250 EGG hot water incubator; wheelbarrow sprayer; egg stove; 5 mash hoppers. H. H. Ritts, 157 Pioneer avenue, Shavertown. class condition, . used very little. Call Jerry El- ston, 421-R-13. 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. 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- 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— LIFE, Fire and Auto Insurance. Capable and experienced. Rep- resenting the Home Fire Insur- ance Company—the largest in the country—for 27 years. Call Dallas 328. C. L. Albert. ELECTRICAL REPAIR SERVICE. Al makes commercial and do- mestic refrigerators and home ap- pliances. Leave small items at 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. DIESEL tractors: Farmers! Save up ‘to 75 per cent on fuel costs and have plenty of power to spare. Let us demonstrate the Sheppard Di- esel on any of your jobs. Joe Skop- ic Farm Equipment, Route 115, Lehman Heights. Phone Dallas 368-R-10. DITCHING. Make all your acres productive acres. Let us drain your wet spots. ditching with 13-ton Buckeye Ditch Digging machine. Call John Hewitt, H. L. 3280. FUEL OIL, Calso 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- 18. FUEL OILS, gasoline, kerosene, hubrics. Meter service to insure you of accuracy. Montross Oil Co., 436 Main St, Luzerne. Phone 7-2361. FOR REFRIGERATION work, eom- mercial or domestic, call Theo- ‘dore Reed, Church Street Phone 256-R-13. For PERFECTION in machine, ma- . chineless or cold permanent wav. ing, finger waving or dyeing—see Marguerite, Main Road, Fernbrook. ‘Phone 397. 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 convenient, Complete line gas ranges, water end space heaters. Harold Ash, Shavertown, Phone 409-R-7, FRIGIDAIRE PRODUCTS — ABC. Maytag, Easy washers, Bengal, Prizer, Magic Chef. Boyd R. White, Appliance and Hardware Stere, phone Dallas 568-R-3. IS YOUR TRUCK, tractor or auto- mobile using 6il? Your mechanic or g1 age will recommend SEAIL.1D POWER guaranteed piston rings, COMPLETE MACHINE SHOP. STULL BROTHERS, KINGSTON, BOTTLE GAS—Metered gas is re- liable, convenient, economieal. Call Cutten Gas 30 W, 8th street, Wyoming. Phone Wyo. 327. 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. CELLARS, trenches, etc. Powell Brothers, excavating Contractors. Mountain Top 389. Building— BUILDING Contractor. New homes, remodelling and roofing. Call M. Quare and Sons, Dallas 390-R-7. Wanted To Buy PAIR BOOT hockey skates, boy's size 8%. Phone Dallas 513-R-0. 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. Upholstering— LET US restore the original wear and comfort to your fine old fur- Al types ofl niture. Large selection of beauti- | ful fabrics. Low prices. All work ! guaranteed. Write or phone Stock 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. J 4 Gilt Cliecks The perfect gift — enclosed in the loveliest greeting cards . . . ONLY 25¢ calendar of remembrance. and Greeting Card costs amount from $1 up. A gyre presngptres DALLAS, There's one for every important date on your Ask to see them. The combination Gift Check FIRST NATIONAL BANK “\ only 25c—issued in any PENNA. WELDING ANYTIME, anywhere. Dallas Portable Welding Co. Dal- las 551-R-7. Male Help Wanted— MARRIED man for dairy barn, small family, four room apart- ment available. Hillside Farm, Trucksville. 173-R-5. Piano Turing— PIANO TUNING and repairing. Muhlenburg 2152. Oscar White- sell, Hunlock’s Creek, RFD 1. Coal and Hauling— GLEN ALDEN COAL delivered promptly. Call 710 Back Moun- tain Lumber and Coal Co. 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. SAND, GRAVEL, TOP SOIL, coal, fill dirt, excavating. Bud Mitchell, Dallas 458-R-4. For Rent— 3 ROOM house, bath, furnace. Be- tween Beaumont and Kunkle. H. L. 3424. Arch Austin, across from Beaumont School. 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. I, FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1951 [Folklore Chief Tells Tales Of Loyalsock Lumber Drives Historians of the Loyalsock Val. ley like Major Bowles, Fred Cole- | ‘Roaring Joe’ was out as he had’ man, and Bill de Lancey, are fond of telling old tales of the Three Musketeers of the ‘Sock,’ ‘Roar.ng Joe’ Campbell, ‘Lost’ Connors, and Bob Gable, ‘the giant of Hensler- town,’ a trio of favorite woodsmen employed by Ario Pardee whose 0g drives eventually took every- thing from a spar to a toothp.ck down the turbulent stream. ‘Roaring. Joe’ was the highest paid woods boss in Pardee’s em- ploy, receiving $3,000 a year, while Connors and Gable received almost as much. “There must be a head to everything,” said Pardee, em- phatically, in his office at Hills- grove, “and Roaring Joe is the ooss of all my 20 splash dams.” H. W. Shoemaker, chef of the Folklore Division, Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commis- sion, tells these tales of the Loyal- sock lumber drives: “In the log driving season, about 1880, Pardee arrived at the Slot, the narrowest part of the Loyal- sock, where the stream rusnes straight down hill for a mile be- tween ledges of rock, several hun- dred feet. high, a Pennsylvania counterpart of the Au Sable Chasm in New York State. There was a rafting flood and the rafts for the mills at Loyalsockville and Mon- toursville were given the right of way before Pardee’s friendly rival woods bosses let loose their splashes, each determined to be the . first in Pardee's basin at ‘Montour.’ “There was another sort of riv- alry between two of the mighty jam crackers. Connors and Gable Yoth were paying court to old Gid Brownaway's gal, Sal, whose cabin was at the foot of Indian Rock. She had intimated she might DEAD STOCK removed promptly, day or night. Barney Laskowski & Son. Phone Dallas 433-R-9. SEPTIC TANKS, cesspools and privy 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, Legal NOTICE NOTICE is hereby given to Flor- ence A. Sullivan, William Keating Jr., Robert Keating, Lillian May Scott, and their heirs, executors, administrators and assigns and all other interested parties, that James H. Hopper has filed an Ac- tion wherein you are the Defend- ants in the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County to No. 749 Jan- uary Term, 1951, to Quiet Title to a parcel of land situate on Park Street in Dallas Borough, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, being 70 feet in front on Park Street and 240 feet in depth and being Lots Nos. 46 and 47 on Plot of Lots of Joseph and Elizabeth Wallo. Said Lots are more particularly describ- ed in the Complaint in said Action to Quiet Title filed to the above number and term. You are here- by notified to appear and defend this Action on or before Febru- ary 5, 1951, and if you fail to file an Answer or enter an appearance by said date, Judgment will be entered against you by default, and unless you bring an Action in Ejectment within thirty (30) days after’ .the entry of judgment, the title to the said James H. Hop- per will be adjudicated as inde- feasible against any and all claims or rights of whatever nature they may be and you will be forever barred from asserting any right, lien, title or interest in said land inconsistent with the interest or claim of the Plaintiff set forth in his Complaint. \ WILLIAM A. VALENTINE, Attorney. At a regular meeting of the Board of Supervisors of Dallas Township held at Dallas Township High School, January 3, 1951, a resolution was passed that, at a regular meeting at Dallas Township High School at 7:30 P. M. on February 7, 1951, the fol- lowing proposed ordinance will be enacted. AN ORDINANCE Regulating the deposit or burn- or abandoned automobiles on land situated in Dallas Township. Be it ordained and enacted by the Board of Supervisors of Dallas Township assembled at a regular meeting this 19531. I That hereafter it_shall be unlaw- ful to deposit or burn or permit the deposit or burning of garbage, rubbish or abandoned or junked automobiles on any land situated FOR ATLANTIC PETROLEUM PRODUCTS Call Purcell Oil Service 20 Mt. GREENWOOD ROAD TRUCKSVILLE Dallas 26-R-11 wholesale “Atlantic” D aler Sip ing of rubbish, garbage or junked SCTE Vaults Protests velusbles of less then la o day A First Peer = Street Lavel No Stains & EOI IL NAT'L BANKor WILKESBARRE within this township unless such material is ‘deposited or burned at least five ‘hundred feet from any established residence; ' Provided, however, that this restriction shall not be construed to prohibit the deposit or burning of materials in- cidental to the use of the particu- lar land for residential purposes unless, upon public hearing before the Board of Supervisors of Dallas Township, following presentation of a petition signed by two thirds of the competent adult persons physically residing within five hun- dred feet of any such deposit or burning, it appears that a public nuisance exists by reason of such deposit or burning. I That the penalty for violation of this ordinance shall be five dollars for the first wiolation, ten dollars for:'the second violation, twenty dollars for every violation thereafter; such fine to be collected by suit or summary proceeding brought in the name of the town- ship before any justice of the peace. m All. Ordinances or parts of Or- dinances inconsistent herewith are hereby repealed. Enacted and ordained this day of 1951. Charles Martin, President of Dallas Township Supervisors Attest: A. George Prater Secretary of Dallas Township Supervisors “NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to all members of American Legion Post 672 Home Association, Dallas, Pennsylvania that a special meet- ing of the members will be held at 9 o'clock, P. M., Friday, Janu- ary 5, 1951 at the registered office of the corporation, Huntsville road, Dallas, Pennsylvania for the pur- pose of action on a resolution to authorize the borrowing of Ten Thousand Dollars - and the mortgag- ing of corporate property as secur- ity therefore. Richard J. Vanderbrouck, Secretary Robert L. Fleming, Attorney” It's BLUE STREAK or nothing for_ DOG FOOD BLUE STREAK Distributed By OLD TOLL GATE Feed Service Trucksville - Phone 520-R-2 favor the one who drove past first. a wife and kids, but Connors and Gable were keen competitors for the smiles of the Indian-looking, blackeyed, little beauty. “Out of Roaring Run came ‘Roaring Joe's splash, most of the logs standing on end in their fury like wild horses out of a corral, to be first in the main torrent, then from Three Runs came Con- nors’ drive, he was a true leader in the water, though he got his name from being lost in the woods a hundred times, and out of Salt Run swept Gable's mighty splash, “At the Slot, where all these fierce impetuous streams come to- gether at Wallis’ Run before they hit the Main ‘Sock,’ the three driv- ers came ‘head on’ at Elephant rock with a crash and a roar that only a million feet of logs, three layers deep can make. Yet the three intrepid. Jam Crackers, and their helpers, were on top of it all, jumping from upright log. to upright leg, their peaveys and jam pikes gleaming in the frosty air of early fall. “Over and over they went, the huge sticks of white pine, spruce, and hemlock seeming to enjoy the turmoil like they were race horses at the barrier and as they came out of the Slot it was hard to tell who was ahead. Every crew was intact, not a soul had gone down in that great pell mell “On the cliff at Indian Rock stood the imperturbable Pardee, his long white hair blowing out from under his ten gallon hat, looking more like a preacher than a financier, church builder, and benefactor of schools and colleges. Beside him were his pal woods- man, Robert McEwen, and the veteran driver, Hughie Dewar, also Gid Brownaway's gal, her parents and brothers and sisters, and her grandfather. “At Loyalsockville the three Musketeers were abreast. At the mouth of Fairfield Run it was still anybody's race, but there a raft had snagged and the others ‘pack- saddled it,” making a barrier which piled up the log drives into a solid barrier. “Here ended the log driver's race for supremacy, and the ‘Three Musketeers’ and their gangs un- wound themselves as best they could from the confusion of up- ended, swaying logs, and tangled driftwood. The hand of Gid Brown- away's Sal was still ungiven, though both her lovers came out of the fierce melee with scarcely a bruise. It took all fall and all winter to open a channel, and get the timber to the Montoursville Mills, hundreds of teams of horses being required inthe operation and Sal was worn to a shadow by the long uncertainty. ‘Lost’ Con- nors was a little ‘chunky’ man, Gable was a giant, how could she choose? Gable suggested a foot- race just before log driving season tr Thrilling BASKE Back Mountain SATURDAY NIGHT KINGSTON TOWNSHIP HIGH SCHOOL GYM. DALLAS VS, MT. ZION SHAVERTOWN VS. PRINCE OF PEACE ST. PAUL'S VS. TRUCKSVILLE METHODIST Admission Free TBALL Church League 1:15 | eT ! JUST A BREEZE —g ‘CHANGE Srl TRADE MARK Your screw driver changes Jy from storm sash io screens in a jiffy. IMAGINE! AS LOW AS EACH $9.40 COMPLETE! J/if*y SELE-STORING STORM AND SCREEN WINDOW Easy to Install! Install the “Jiffy” in a jiffy! Change to glass in winter—screen in summer— easily—from inside the house. Made of Clear Pine! Treated with special preservative. Wood is sealed against moisture. Self-Storing! Section not in use stores in upper half of the “Jiffy” Window! Come in and see this Amazing Value! SHAVERTOWN LUMBER CO. 10 E. CENTER STREET » — PHONE 42 Enjoy the Fun and pleasure of Attracting Wild Birds to your windows this winter PHONE 121 This Is The Food The Birds Love Bulk Sunflower Seed 1b. 20c 5 Pounds for 95¢ A very special delicacy for Chickadees, nuthatches, juncos, cardinals, song sparrows and even squirrels. WILD BIRD SEED MIXTURE 3-pound bags $ 45 10-pound bags This mixture contains favorite seeds and grains to attract all types of wild birds. YOU CAN ALWAYS DO BETTER IN DALLAS DALLAS HARDWARE & SUPPLY “5 1.35 13 CHURCH STREET opened in the spring, br nors declared it was not fair, he would get lost on the course and Gable could not find a horse big enough when a horse race on the ice was suggested. A modest trou: fisherman, with gold S whe often ‘stayed at the Brownaway cabin, settled the case for all. ‘Sal why don’t you end their wrangling and come with me to Danville, and be married by Rev. Irwin H. Tor- rance,’ he said. Sal calculated she would, and she did, and Lost Con- nors and Giant Gable shook hands over it like two good losers. Leaves For Fort Dix Ignatius Gavek, Dallas, left for Fort Dix Wednesday with 90 inductees. ¢ wh other Nothing Like | A New Car . i TO Pui YOUR HEAD ‘IN THE cLOUDS | So Why Not Plan to Get § “R Better One ns” -} THESE BARGAINS MAKE IT EASY! YR. MAKE TYPE As Low As 00 VY $1495 '50 FORD 50 £2 $1495 ag 107 $1295 '49 FORD $1095 48 FORD — ¢805 7 un $745 46 2 $TIS Sedan $695 $695 42 tunvy 42 CoantoU™ $385 3 ox on vrata JW ] A] rom $395 40 [ACKARD 738 PLYMOUTH #38 PONTIAC 51 STUDEBAKER $110 36 [om 885 $895 § $115 46 CHEVY $425 42 CHEVY $425 40 CVY $245 ’39 CHEVY 337 DODGE 35 GE 865 '49 FORD YT ov Fees SAG HUDSON 539 FO=D TERMS: LONG. 65 Weeks To Pay Our Guarantee Is : Good for One Year MOTOR TWINS Nobody But Nobody Undersells Us! iy TWO BIG PLACES ~——THE ONLY TD Place in KINGSTON Is At Rutter & Market PHONE 3-2159 WILKES-BARRE Ws. 240 S. Main St. 1 PHONE 2-2144 | Both lots open evenings