Editorially Speaking: The Balance Sheet For Dallas Township There are many reasons why the people of Dallas Town- ship should look upon the coming primary election as one of considerable importance. school directors elected over mighty good ones. And in for the good of the Township and its children. There have been plenty of the years, including some general they have worked But in the recent past there has been an atmosphere clouded with suspicion, distrust and selfish interest in which the political ambitions of a small clique have been placed ahead of the interests of the community. A look at the record will show why this must not be allowed to go on for six more years. Here are some of the accomplishments of your candi- dates seeking relection: 1. The stirring up of suspicion and personal animosity. 2. Policy making on the basis of political considera- tions. w tax sources. Bungling and waste in the handling of prospective 4, The permitting of unnecessary overcrowding of classrooms. or costs for tuition pupils Saddling Dallas Township Taxpayers with excess from outside the township. 6. The formation of a costly jointure with Franklin Township without public hearings. The list could be expanded. These are merely typical activities of men asking to be the chief requirement is an in children. perhaps they have lost sight of what it’s all about! continued in an office where terest in the welfare of your Having no children in the school themselves, This is certainly suggested by a campaign in which their hopes seem to be based on the fabrication of false rumors and the avoidance of any clearcut public statement of prin- ciples. The citizens of Dallas Township now have the oppor- tunity to regain control of the school board in the election of Roberts ‘and Schooley. Both these men have shown their true interest in the schools and they are in this fight now—not because they have any political ambition— but because they do have the dren the best possible educatio Charlie Roberts has been ambition to give their chil- n. a leader in the PTA, Boy Scouts and other civic organizations, he is the father of four children in the Township schools. Harry Schooley is a young attorney, a veteran of World War II, and the father of two children who will soon attend the Township School. Both men are college trained; both have studied the needs of these schools and can be counted upon to give unselfish service to the community and its children. Schooley and Roberts were interested in the schools long before they were interested in public office. reverse is usually the case. The What more can any community ask for when it is seek- ing real men to fill a man sized job? * * * FROM PILLAR TO POST DOT 17, ‘By Mss. T. M. B. Hicks, Jr. Rules for grandmothers, published annually in the Dallas Post just before invasion by the third generation, vary from year to year, but they always include nailing down the furniture and building a barricade around the Grandfather clock. All venetian blinds should be The windows will look delightfully. removed, all curtains taken down. airy without draperies to shut out the light and sunshine. Small china ornaments should be rescued from horizontal surfaces and parked under lock and key. Alarm clocks are sure-fire bait, irresistible to anything up to and including the four-year-old level. The top bureau drawer is a good place for the alarm clock until after eight P. M. Always wax the bannisters before the children arrive. This makes for easy sliding, with the minimum wear and tear on the pants. Take up the rug in the dining room, or feed the zoo on the back porch. This maneuver saves heart- burn when the inevitable spillage or droppage occurs. A large blob of oatmeal on the linoleum or bare floor is easily removed. On a rug it will be with you until you send the rug to the cleaner. Wash all high chair trays and rungs after each meal. Have on hand a supply of terry cloth bibs. One medium sized towel will make six bibs. The cookie jar will not be large enough. Your largest cooker will be, about right. Per capita con- sumption of cookies will astonish you. Don’t go in for fancy stuff. Children like large : cartwheels, molasses or sugar. Be sure to roll sugar into the tops before baking. This guarantees a thin sifting of sugar at all times on the kitchen floor, and insures a daily mopping, thus safeguarding sanitation. If there is sugar on the floor, you can’t be lax. Supplement your dairy supplies by laying in quantities of dry milk. Children get thirsty. Most chil- dren love chocolate milk. Supple- ment the between-meal cookie snack with a glass of chocolate milk, and the young can then hold out until dinner time. No kidding, that chocolate milk gag is the cats. Everything that fluid milk has in it, except the fat content, is in the dried powder. The chocolate adds the fat. All the proteins are there, all the minerals. Dried milk does not have the cooked taste that children sometimes object to in canned milk. A comparison of cost will amaze you. Make up a chocolate syrup with two cups of sugar, one cup of cocoa, one cup of water, a pinch of salt, and a teaspoonful of vanilla. Boil it for about five minutes, and store in the ice-box until needed. Put up swings in the back yard, ‘nothing fancy like a commercial outfit, just ropes attached to tree limbs. If you don’t have a sand pile, and feel that sand ruins the lawn, invest in a load of topsoil. You always need topsoil. Children prefer something that will adhere. Sand runs off, leav- ing no trace, nothing to show for a morning’s efforts. Mud is far more satisfactory. Keep a large tub of water out of sight behind the house, and route the children through it on their way in to meals. Whisk off the sodden sun suit on the back porch and there is the child, clean and naked as a hound’s tooth, ready for a dry sunsuit and his lunch. Keep a first-aid kit handy. If your place has poison ivy, spray it before the children arrive. They have an affinity for those nice glossy green leaves. And remember, for Pete’s sake, the time when your own cherished child carved his initials on your own mother’s table when you took him home to give your parents a treat. Be, conveniently blind at times. Farmers Market Picks Up Speed New Location Seen Successful Handy Luzerne County Farmers Market will have all of its 72 spaces filled very shortly, says James Hutchison, Agricultural Agent in charge of the project. All spaces have been reserved, and with truck crops beginning to mature, the offerings are more extensive each week and the re- sponse more enthusiastic. The low spot in the center has been filled, with no more trouble from surface water after heavy rains. Church groups or granges de- siring to serve refreshments and stage bake sales are asked to make arrangements at once so that times may be allocated. Jackson Grange served all of the week of June 25-29. Many local groups served last season. The market is open Monday, Wednesday and Friday, beginning at 7 p.m. It is located on Pierce Street between the river and the connecting railroad embankment. There is ample parking space. DAaLL MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION D DA J __ MoO Vol. 61, No. FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1951 FIFTH AUCTION STARTS 8 Cents Per Copy—Eight Pages ODAY AT 11 . Coal-O-Matic Stoker Co. Earl H. Monk Anthra-Flo Heating Unit . Anthra-Flo Installation ($50 toward) _. ' Anthra-Flo Free Interest on Unpaid Balance, g A ATA ER AY, _ First National Bank, Dallas Automobile Tire novel 0 el hi Jack Williams Automobile Battery ............ James R. Oliver, Inc. Automobile (used) "1 ulna Ralph Davis Auto Back Up Lights 2) Soh Lester Pontiac Baby Ducks =x. il nt Arsen gn Paul Warriner Bird Houses and Feeders Frank Jackson Bananas Tulaney Produce Black Leaf 40 (gal.) . . Penn State Seed Co. Bond ($200 value) Daddow-Isaacs Post Amer. Legion Congoleum ‘Rug! (9x12) 0.00 7 2) . John Nash Corsages (value $125) Hill the florist Charcoal . Motor Twins Chickens (crate) Henry Pool Chickens (4 roasters) _.......___._. Trucksville Mill Coal (4 tons) i rot mie M. J. Brown & Son Crushed Stone (4 tons) ...... Coon Construction Co. Chest of Drawers (val. $125) A Friend Clock Sid Hayes Town Hall Service 1 fr NRE Se LEI UOT SUE USE Henry Jones Duplicating Machines (2) ...._.. Post-O-Graf Mfg. Co. Dog Food (several bags) .... Blue Streak Dog Food Co. Desk Radio John Manley Dry Cleaning ($10 vehie) . Davis Cleaners Dry Cleaning _. Peoples Laundry Dogwood (pink) and Evergreen Tree, Hall’'s Nursery Enamelware Brown & Fassett Faucet (Dual Mix, val. $14) Mack Supply Co. Fuel oil (200 gallons) or equivalent in gasoline . Purcell Oil Company Shavertown Lumber Co. ade King Floral Co. P. & R. Clothing Co. Lewis & Bennett Lavatory (porcelain) Joe Hughes Magazine Racks (2) David Schooley Membership (val. $7.50), Wyoming Valley Motor Club Peanuts (bagged) Obici Peanut Shop Playhouse (large) Ray Hedden Pressure Cookers (3) Phillips Frozen Foods Permanent Wave Druid Hill Beauty Salon Hot Water Heater Garden Tools & Fertilizer Ladies Suits (several new) _ _.. Lawn Mower Rabbits: oo lo alos ian nl ath Thomas Andrew Rabbits Henry Jones Rabbits? 00.0 cos pl hiss fo daa William Bertels Roll Roofing (5 rolls) Simonize Job Soap (144 cakes) Septic Tank (large) Sheep (Black lamb) Suit or coat (men’s val. $45.95) Sewing Stands (Mahogany 3) Toilet Set Tool Box (steel) Top’ 'Soil {large Joad): =o om i A. Hudak Top Soil (large load) Yellick Brothers Tumblers & Coasters (24), Greenwald Furniture Co. Vacuum Cleaner, $74 Trucksville Radio Service Vigoro (several bags) Miner-Hillard Milling Co. General Roofing Co. Ray Chappel Tucks Drug Store . C. E. German & Son Herman Thomas Crawford Clothes David Schooley Cooks Drug Store Frank Henry Ham Joseph Schmerer Ansco Cameras and film (2) val. $12, PDQ Photo Ser. Free developing on above PDQ Photo Service Spidel Watch and Band, (val. $11.95) Henry-the-Jeweler Sterling Silver Bon Bon Dish (val. $9.00) Henry-the-Jeweler Cocktail Peanuts (2 cases) 25.00... P. N.& C. Co. Traveling Kit $5.00... 0 2 Earl’s Drug Store Electric Toasters (3) 4-slice, $18.50... L & L Supply Electric Toasters (3), 2-slice, $9.60... L & L Supply Motor Oil (Sunoco) 4-gal, $6.76... Caddie LaBar Motor Oil (Sunoco 4-gal., $6.76, Old Toll Gate Ser. St. Tires, General 6.70x15 (2) $25.69 ea... City Chevrolet Auto mats, rubber (2) $2.25 ea. .... City Chevrolet Auto mats, rubber (2) $2.69 ea... City Chevrolet Auto fender side lights $12.95! City Chevrolet Dual Fog Lamps $15.75 City Chevrolet Rear View Mirror, $3.95... City Chevrolet Spotlight, portable, $7.95... City Chevrolet Outside Rear View Mirror, $3.00. City Chevrolet Electric” Vanity Mirror, $4.50... Sd City Chevrolet Chevrolet Seat Covers, $29.95... Bonner Chevrolet Auto Seat Headrest, $15.00... la Goodwin Auto Camp Cook Kit, aluminum, $11.50 J. F. Bonfanti Kitchen Stool, $9.00 Roat Hardware Refrigerator food covers (10) $1.50, Roat Hardware Spigot ‘strainers (41) $8.20... Roat Hardware Sauce Pans, flameware (4) $2.00... Roat Hardware Sauce Pan, Pyrex $1.75 Roat Hardware Sauce Pan, Pyrex, $1.35... lL Roat Hardware Metal Polish (2) 50c Roat Hardware Motor Oil (1 case) $9.60 Penn Fern Oil Auto Seat Cushions (2) 2.00 ea... .. Caddie LaBar Wallle Tronic il i is ier Andrew Fisher Watermelons: 8 Conia James Thomas Chocolate Milk and Milk Harters Dairy Chocolate Milk and Milk Forty Fort Dairy Chocolate Milk and Milk _. Orchard Farm Dairy Chocolate Milk and Milk Dallas Dairy Chocolate Milk and Milk .....______ Shady Side Dairy Creamy on son ion, nis ate Woodlawn Dairy Say fe a Cr aS RT Boyles Inn Ham .. Brokenshire Harveys Lake Hotel Harm ove en aps we ta nf Sheldon Cave Ham leat rc se hs Torchy Wilson Hom lnc cnn tanh a Marty Walsh Barres BT nd lise Wl SAT Hislop’s Tally-Ho Ham A Shrineview Friend Hom prion ls ee hn Herman Kern Harn nd eal Ni i Herbert Lundy Ham . Masonis Beaumont Inn Ham . John Nothoff Ham bo oben dae ob ia olny Castle Inn Ham. to fn, stage Laing Atty. Roscoe Smith’ Ham... noid Bowman's Early American Restaurant Ham Checkerboard Inn Purkey “li linn Cee LE as Richard Brace Ham . Donahue Restaurant Partial List of New Merchandise for Auction Fan Heater $10.95 Serving Set, silver, Gladioli Bulbs, Martin Lectric $2.00... Finkelstein Jeweler choice, (1,000) 65.00 Broody Floral Shop Auto oil, MacMillian 1 case, 7.00... Samuel Holvy Electric Sander, $15.00... Standard Equipment Co. Electric Hedge Clipper, $40.00... Standard Equip. Co. Porter Cable Saw, $52.00... _Standard Equip. Co. Metal Porch Stands (2) $8. 00 ANE L Dallas 5c & 10c, $1 Store Lemp. Shades (4) $6.00, Dallas, 5¢ & 10c, $1 Store Braided Rug $5.00 D. T. Scott Dress, new summer 3 Brook St. Dress Shop Breyer’s Ice Cream (all needed) $150.00 AR Rmiat ee So SC LB Evans Rexall Store Theatre Tickets, adult (50) Himmler - Theatre Electric Blanket, Westinghouse, $50 ... . Dallas Hardware and Supply Metal Poultry Nests $15 ._. Dallas Hardware & Supply Hot Water Heater, $25 Whitesell Bros. Portable Record Player, $50 Rebennack & Covert Relgetone Record Player, $35.50, Rebennack & Covert Shaving Mug, $1.50... Merritt's Drug Store Cutex Manicure Set, $4.20... Merritt’s Drug Store Reflex Camera, $9.95 . Bert's Drug Store Pennzoil (1 case) $7.20... Franconi Auto Parts Dunlop Tube 7.00x16 heavy: duty $5.50... _ Morton Connelly Community Buick Power Pack $7.50 Spot Lamp $7.95 . David Ertley Ladies Suit (14) $25.00... _. P. and R. Clothing Ladies Suit (16) $25.00... .......... P. and R. Clothing Shovel, longi handle, $3. |... oi} Rural Supply Auto Tire 6.70x15 $26.25... Williams Brothers Lawnmower (hand) $16.00 __. Garinger Machine Co. Pound Cakes (plenty) Ruben Levy Soap, mechanic (2 cases) Jack Sordoni Hand Truck, ballbearing, $20... Eastern Penn Supply Plastic Hose 50 feet .........._.._. Eastern Penn Supply Chrome Nozzle, $1.20 Eastern Penn Supply Claw Hammers (3) $2.20 ea., Eastern Penn Supply Paint Brushes (all sizes) $35... Pitt Plate Glass Medusa Rubber Paint $7.50, West Side Bldg, Material Orchidsisa. nao cay 0) Dae liad Paul Mulcey Top Soil (large load) . Hoover & Milbrodt Ton of “Boal: i ill Ll Tn Frank McGarry Electric Shaver $24.95... L. L. Richardson Bienjic Jug, $3: cen iL Arthur Keefer Sump Service, $25 - J. A. Singer Bottled Gas and Stove ..... Harold Ash Deluxe Toilet and Seat, $70... Henry Deater Baby Chicks (50) $9 Hilbert Hatchery Chev. Hood Ornaments, $5.85 ea., .. Roy Stauffer Auto Seat Covers, $10.85... Roy Stauffer Permanent Wave $10.00 ..._..___ Marguerite’s Beauty Dress Goods Bloomsburg Mills Bottle Sterilizer, $6.95 Renville Radio Door Chimes, $4.95 David Namey Atlantic Oil $2.00 . David Namey Extension Lamps. an.0 00h ici Claude Crispell Peat Moss 7 bales Devens Milling Co. Roof Paint, 5 gal Devens Milling Co. Lawn Chair (child's) Carleton Kocher Plastic Toilet Seats (6) $6.00 ea.” J. L. Turner Co. Sauce Pan, $2.45 Lewis and Bennett Rack, o$1.000 dn wee ah Lewis and Bennett Home Churn, $1.25 Lewis and Bennett Buff Brick (1,000) $78.00 J. A. Schmidt Sons Drying Rack Lewis and Bennett Electric Toasters (2), 5.88 $ea, ........ John C. Janoski Pin Up Lamps (2) $2.00 ea. ....___. John C. Janoski Reading stand, $5.95 Lewis and Bennett Sling Set (3% ton load) Hazard Wire Rope Wire Cable | 109 feet Y%-inch; 45 feet 3/8, Hazard Wire Rope 28 feet 5/16; 50 feet 5/16, Hazard Wire Rope 265 ft .%4; 50 ft. Toc 33 ft. 5/16, Haz. Wire Rope Baby Scales, $11.50 . Luzerne Lumber Elec. Portable Saw 17.95 Luzerne Lumber Crushed Stone (4 tons) 15.00, Mathers Construction Bone China cup saucer 3.25 Treasure Gift Shop Argyle Socks (2 prs.) 5.00 pr. Janet Smith Set of Dishes,: $20,000 David Schooley Dole Fruit Cocktail (1 case) ... Donald Trethaway Cup Cake Mix (1 case) Donald Trethaway Watermelons (4) 80c ea. ........._. Produce Center Shrubs and plants 10.00 . Rave’s Nursery Lace (140 yds) asst. 50.00 ............_.... Natona Mills Auto enamels (16 qts.) ..........._ Harris Hardware Auto enamels (25 gals.) Harris Hardware Auto Lacquers (20 qts.) ........... Harris Hardware Galv. Metal Primer (1 gal.) Harris Hardware Dri"iClear (72 cans) i. Au Harris Hardware Veneer-O-Lac (2-doz.) ......... Harris Hardware Liquid Vaneer (2 doz.) ......._._. Harris Hardware Neverleek Tire Fluid (6 doz.) .... Harris Hardware Pyrolaxin Surfacer (3-gal.) Harris Hardware Coffee Pots, gal. size (3) ........ Harris Hardware Hydraulic Bumper jack (3) .._._.. Harris Hardware Wooden Rakes (5) . Harris Hardware Towel Stands (38) Harris Hardware Splint Baskets: (28)... Til > Harris Hardware Shoe Ice Skates, 10.00 Miriam Lathrop Calf Starter, 50 lbs. (2) 3.10 ea., Old Toll Gate Feed Dog: Food, ‘5: 1b. bags (20) 65¢c ea. i... ii Addison Woolbert = Rabbit Pellets 25 1b. (4) 1.55 ea. ti soe i Vo = Addison Woolbert Jr. George Bulford Sauce Pans (8) 45c ea. __ George Bulford Coffee Pots (2):°1.50 ‘ea... George Bulford Pot (1) Ldben. ia iyi beim George Bulford O’Cedar Polish (3) 45¢c ea. ......... George Bulford Miss. Glassware (12) 15c ea. ........... George Bulford Star ‘Molds (2). 75¢ ea... ....\.. George Bulford Wash all windows in private home W.-B. Window Washing Service King Midas Flour 110 Ibs. Woolbert Market Wrought Iron Rails (2), ‘W.-B. Iron Wire Co. Ojl Change (2): 6.50... -.50 Shaver Gas Station Electric Roasters (2) $40. ea. ...... ...... _. R. B. Wall KINGSTON TOWNSHIP "ROSS LAKE Ti BOX SCORE Back Mountain Highway Deaths and Serious Accidents Since V-J Day S Hospitalized Killed 10 13 5 1 42 3 1 5 BE | Hundreds Of Visitors Expected To Throng Dallas For Two Days More Than $4,000 Worth Of New Merchandise Will Supplement Antiques And Used Goods New Pharmacist ROY ELLIOT Ed Hall of Hall's Pharmacy an- nounces that Roy Elliot, registered pharmacist, will work with him at the store in Shavertown. Eliot received his B. S. degree in pharmacy from the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy & Science and during the war served with the Army Medical Corps. He is form- erly of Coaldale, and also resided in Easton for a time. His period of apprenticeship was served at Hall’s Pharmacy last summer. Last June, Eliot married the former Marian Gregory, daulghter cf Mr. and Mrs. William Gregory of ‘Trucksville. They live 612 Rok Street. Mr. Hall states that a new pre- scription service will be inaugura- ted and that there will be a regis- tered pharmacist on duty at all times. Ask PTA Groups To Contribute Kindergarten Needs Special Equipment If the proposed kindergarten for Dallas Borough-Kingston Township schools becomes a reality, there are a variety of articles which will be- come necessary. Some of them .can be obtained through coopera- tion of the three PTA’s concerned, and some items such as stout tables and chairs are better purchased through regular channels to in- sure uniformity. Zinc-lined sand tables will be a must, one for each of the two rooms, Two aquariums for goldfish and snails would be a nice addition. One-inch wooden beads for stringing; materials for finger painting; playhouse equipment; doll house; soft pine blocks, hammer and nails; large play blocks, will be necessary. Rhythm band instruments such as triangles, drums, tambourines, wrist-bells, will be asked for. Michael Strub represents Dallas on the committee; in Shavertown, Mrs. Frederick Eck and Mrs. John Stahl are co-chairmen, with Mrs. Granville Sowden and Mrs. Gil- bert Austin on the committee. Rob- ert H. Williams, newly elected pres- ident of Trucksville PTA will co- operate. Meetings have been held at the home of Mrs. Charles Eberle, gen- eral chairman, to discuss equip- ment, and action awaits only final decision of the school board, which in turn awaits legislation from Harrisburg. It was the suggestion of Charles James, Supervising Principal of Dallas Borough Schools, that the PTA organizations be asked 'to help in equipping the rooms for this first year, as much preliminary expense will be incurred by the school board in getting the pro- gram under way. Park Cars At Distance Visitors are urged to park their cars at a distance from the Auc- tion grounds. Protected parking accommodations for about 100 cars will be available on the playground at Dallas Borough High School, The charge will be 25 cents per car. More than 6,000 persons, many of them coming from great dis- tances, are expected to attend the fifth annual Back Mountain Me- morial Auction which opens this morning at 11. The auction will continue for two days, closing tonight at mid- night and opening again tomorrow morning at 11. ‘ All traffic on Lehman Avenue was halted yesterday by order of Borough Council, busses have been rerouted and special traffic regu- lations are in effect with extra police on duty. ; Unless weather should interfere, the Auction is expected to far sur- pass any previously held. There will be many new booths and thou- sands more dollars of new mer- chandise and antiques. The Barn, sparsely filled, until the beginning of the week, is now bulging under its burden. Truck- load after truckload has been housed, until only narrow lanes re- main in between the stacks of fur- niture, All day, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, family cars and trucks pulled up to the barn to unload their quota of offerings to the big sale. It was a picture that would have gladdened the heart of any one interested in community en- deavor. Among the more recent deli- veries are two tall walnut book cases, a quaint old sleigh with high driver's seat and graceful seat in the rear, a completely rebuilt Sto- kol stoker, an electric dishwasher, three gas ranges, four fine electric refrigerators, an RCA combination record player and radio, Washing machines, dozens of be wicker porch - furniture, kitchen chairs © and, .g¢hairg” snitalle needlepoint, glassware and kitchen- ware, several good bicyeles, pic- tures and frames, three organs, a dozen canoe paddles, old guns, Bad- minton sets, tennis rackets, guitars, mandolins, kitchen ranges, toilet stools and seats, porcelain lavato- ries, sink grease traps, costume jewelry, bearskin rugs, portable re- cord players, glassware of every description, end tables, coffee ta- bles, football equipment, and thou- sands of other items too numerous to enumerate. y Never before has the committee collected so fine an assemblage of good used merchandise. All junk has been discarded. There are thousands of books and odds and ends of all kinds. For the collector there is a pair of milk glass covered dishes, long and narrow shaped like a ship, with “Remember the Maine” motif and Admiral Dewey’s bust on the cover. Uncle Sam is crouched on a battleship on the cover of the other. There are some pieces of Sandwich glass, and a beautiful end of the Day pitcher. There are brass candlesticks, spinning wheels and carding wheels, four spool beds, and a spool cradle, a grandfather’s clock, dainty little occasional tables, a wide variety of glass and brass lamps, fireplace tongs and andirons. Antique toys, dolls and doll dish- es have been supplemented with a rare pair of doll’s swan shaped sadirons and matching trivets. There are small cane seated doll and child’s rockers and chairs. Rugs and mirrors abound. There are used lawnmowers and pressure cookers. ; For the gardeners there are all kinds of garden tools, wheel culti- vators, shovels, hoes, and two ma- mmoth cold frames. : For those of mechanical bent there are tools of every description. Across from the Barn stands a large white playhouse with lino- leum floor, windows and doors that easily open, ventilating louvres in the gables, and gay Dutch boy and girl trim. Painted in blue on its side is ‘Back Mountain Library Auction 1951”. Other features of the Auction are an ancient walnut melodian that plays, a corner cupboard, a walnut marble topped dresser, a marble topped washstand, an English din- ing room suite and a medieval high backed chair elaborately carved with pheasants, rabbits, dogs and guns. There will be a greatly enlarged refreshment booth, plant and ve- getable booth, baked goods booth, book stall, candy booth, comic booth stall and odds and ends booth. The Anthraflo heating unit which will be auctioned Saturday night will be on display and in op- eration all during the Auction. (Continued on Page Five) Basy = for