The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, July 06, 1951, Image 7

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    J
“ weeks to egg production.
I've Seen It Happen!
Yes, folks, many’s the time Pre
seen baby chicks that were real-
ly started off just right, fail to
reach full size and good egg
production. And there’s only
one reason for it . , . improperly
balanced rations. If you want
turn to his pulpit after a three-
months
Preaching service at 11, Sunday
School at 9:45.
tion Sunday, with the sacrament of
Holy Communion for all June col-
lege and High School graduates.
Church News
SHVERTOWN METHODIST
Rev. Robert DeWitt Yost will re-
absence this Sunday.
This will be Student Recogni-
big, full developed pullets ready
for egg laying during the winter
months then get them on Glid-
Mash
they're six weeks old.
me, this Glidden Growing Mash
will do the trick.
den’s Growing after
Believe
We have it
in meal, pellet or crumble form
formulated to properly supple-
ment scratch grains from six
TRUCKSVILLE MILL
Stanley Moore, Prop.
Trucksville, Pa.
—SPECIAL—
6 P.M. to Midnite—
Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat.
Clams
Lobster Tails
Deviled Crab
ale
Half of Fried Chicken $
Fr. Fries - Vegetables
1
PHILLIPS Ocerdrocte Jun
Dallas 562-R-2 @ Overbrook Rd.
Television, Shuffleboard, Darts
- Read the Classified Column
" Post Classified Ads Get Results
PHONE
BERTI
& SON
/ AT LOWER SPRING PRICES
-* GLEN ALDEN COAL
(Nut, Stove, Buck, Rice)
* BLUE STONE
* TOP SOIL, FILL
* GENERAL HAULING
* RED ASH
* CINDERS
* STOVE WOOD
(Saw Mill Lumberyard)
* FIRE PLACE LOGS
ASHES and
COLLECTED
GARBAGE
WEEKLY
BERTI & SON
FRANKLIN ST.,
DALLAS
| Library To Be Closed
Friday And Saturday
Back Mountain Library will be:
closed all day Friday and Satur-
day to give everybody a chance
to work at the Library Auction.
Library addicts may do their
book-browsing at the book stand,
a new feature of the Auction this
year. Some very interesting ma-
terial has been turned in for this
stand.
County Auction
For Vegetables
Wholesalers Use
Carverton Site
Luzerné County Vegetable Auc-
tion got under way at Carverton
on June 20th, using the green to-
mato auction facilities.
James Hutchison, Agricultural
Agent, says the response was as
good as could be expected for a
new venture, and that with in-
creasing crop production things
should boom within the next two
or three weeks.
Green and wax beans were of-
fered, a few peas, and plenty of
strawberries. Within ten days the
first pink tomatoes will come to
auction.
Some southern buyers were pres-
ent, as well as local concerns.
The auction will be held on Mon-
days, Wednesdays and Thursdays
at 2 P. M. until business picks up,
then sales will be held six days
a week.
Noxen
By Mrs. Earl Beahm
Phone H. L. 4495
Mrs. William Keiper submitted
to an operation at Wilkes-Barre
General Hospital last week.
Noxen enjoyed one of the largest:
celebrations ever held in the com-
munity on July 4.
Anna May Space, daughter of
Mrs. Chester Keiper and John
Space, Jr., announces her engage-
ment to Carl Weaver, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Weaver of Plains,
formerly of Noxen.
Ailene Boice is visiting her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, Earl
Beahm.
The regular meeting of Firemen'’s
Auxiliary was held Monday night
on Crispell’s back lawn. There was
a hot dog roast which was enjoyed
by all.
An organ recital was held Mon-
day night at the Methodist Church
to raise funds for the new organ.
Mr. and Mrs. David Brobst, chil-
dren, and David Edwards are visit-
ing Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miller in
Parsons, West Virginia.
The Armour Leather Company
had to shut down three days be-
cause of a shortage of hides which
are rationed at 80 per cent by
government regulation.
The Ladies Auxiliary of the Fire
Company has purchased lumber
for a band stand which the Fire-
men erected and which will be
used for future entertainment.
It takes 10 inches of snow to
equal an inch of rain.
Listen to the latest farm news every day at 7:30 and 12:55 over Station WHWL
Bolonced Separation
Cutter-bar,
shoe—all
Le
GIVES POSITIVE THRESHING CONTROL
The biggest capacity combine on
wheels plus Balanced Separation .-. . that's
what the Super 27 offers you. Balanced
Separation is controlled separation
. . . control of grain and straw travel
through every step of harvesting.
feeder, rasp-bar cylinder
. .. beaters, straw walkers and
work in perfect harmony
to give you smoother harvesting
... more and cleaner grain.
Come in and talk if over.
t us show you why the
Super 27 is the machine fo
do your combining better.
Make a Maney-tfassis!
~~ Charles H. Long
SWEET VALLEY, PENNA
PHONES 8421 -
8431
THE
Ti
POST, FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1951
Herbert Olver Sr
Dies Suddenly
Lies With Family
At Beach Lake
Herbert D. Olver, Sr., 78, passed
away at the home of his son, Her-
bert Jr., at 16 Carverton Road,
Trucksville June 22.
Funeral services were held on
Tuesday in Beach Lake Free Me-
thodist Church, and burial made in
Beach Lake Cemetery in the fam-
ily plot.
Death occurred unexpectedly.
Rev. Herbert Olver, Jr. district
superintendent for Wilkes-Barre
and New York State Free Metho-
dist Church, was away from home
at the time, attending general Con-
ference in Michigan, accompanied
by his wife. Mr. Olver had not been
especially ill, had in fact walked to
interview his doctor on the after-
noon of his death.
Mr. Olver was widely known in
the Free Methodist churches here-
abouts, as he accompanied his son
frequently. The family had lived
in Trucksville for three years, hav-
ing moved here from Maplecrest,
N. Y. in 1948. Mr. Olver had made
his home with his son and son's
wife for six years.
Until that time, he had lived on
ancestral acres cleared by his fa-
ther, Moses, in Beach Lake, and
had farmed all his life. A great
reader and Bible student, he was
better versed in literature and Bi-
ble history than most men who
have had greater formal education.
He had an unusually retentive
memory, and retained all his fa-
culties until the last, alert and vi-
tally interested in local and world
affairs.
More Copperheads
Reported Killed
Another coppedhead was killed
in Trucksville at Edgewood
Heights, Saturday morning just be-
fore noon. William Vollrath, Jr.,
who phoned the news to the Dallas
Post, says his father killed it with
a hoe, and that the family dog
went off with the head.
But the rest of the description
tallies with that of a genuine cop-
perhead: rather thick body, taper-
ing abruptly to a very slim tail;
35 inches in length, reddish copper
coloring with markings the shape
of an English saddle.
This is the second that has been
killed by Mr. Vollrath, Two weeks
ago a young copperhead appeared
in the garden and was dispatched
with the hoe. Like rubber, it was,
according to young Bill, and very
difficult to puncture.
Dallas Boys Camp
At Pochanna YMCA
Ten boys from Dallas attended
Camp Pochanna, Y.M.C.A. camp in
the Poconos from June 25-27. Un-
der the direction of David Evans,
campers: enjoyed soft-ball and
swimming, and other organized
games.
Dallas boys were Bobby Richard-
son, Tommy Richardson, Lee Ohl-
man, Danny Robinhold, Richie
Bodycomb, Lee Mintzer, Jim Thom-
as, Bert Berrettini, Billy DeRemer,
and Chuck Allabaugh.
Jujitsu “the
gentle art.”
means literally
Dies of Old Age
In Huntsville
Mrs. E. B. Snyder
Passes Peacefully
One of the oldest women in the
Back Mountain region passed away
on Sunday, June 24, when Mrs.
Elizabeth B. Snyder slipped peace-
fully into eternity at the age of 94.
Her only survivor is a daughter,
Mrs. N. R. Gerges, Mount Carmel,
New Jersey, herself a patient in a
sanitarium at the time her mother
was at the Huntsville Convalescent
Home. Mrs. Snyder's other daugh-
ter, with whom she lived on Lake
Street until the death of Mrs.
Thomas Gangloff’s husband, and
later at the Sterling Hotel, died
some five years ago. Mrs. Snyder,
then 89, entered the nursing home
at this time and has been there
ever since.
Benjamin Frantz, head of the
home, says that she retained her
&
Fin, Fur, and Feather
(Continued from Page Two)
variety existed in the lake: Blue
Gill, Common sunfish, Large mouth
Bass, Small mouth Bass, Pickerel,
Yellow Pike Perch, Brown Bullhead,
Black Bullhead, Yellow Perch, Rock
Bass, Golden Shiner, White Sucker,
Spot Fin Shiner, Bluntnose min-
now, Banded Killifish, Johnny Dar-
ter, Bluntnose Dace, Spotted Sun-
fish and Brook Stickleback.
Skepticism will “out.” I
asked by a fisherman,
“Will the Top Brass of the Fish
Commission find time to study the
survey and do somethting about it,
or is this just another of their
hoodwinking plans to lull the spor-
tsmen to sleep?”
This is indeed a long question,
was
one that I cannot answer, but
time will tell.
Many sportsmen feel that at
“long last” the Fish Commission is
doing something to improve lake
fishing in the State, and are spend-
ing some of the fishermen’s dollars
for all sportsmen, for theré' are
many who fish lakes and never
drop line in a stream. With the as-
surance of both Dr. Trembley and
Paul Bittenbender, our local Com-
mission member, that the Commis-
sion will follow all recommenda-
tions when the survey is completed,
some day in the not too distant
future, we may have good fishing
near home. :
(Editor’s note) A complete re-
port of the survey of Lake Harvey
and recommendations for improve-
ments will be published in this co-
lumn as soon as received.
CAR WASHING
al
Ray
=>
Prompt ZF oe
service
MOBIL GAS STATION
Luzerne-Dallas Highway
Phone 9067-R-7
Thank You
FRYERS
ROASTERS
STEWERS
@® Breasts
Combination
@ Breasts and Legs .._80c Ib.
|
~ WE ARE VERY GRATEFUL
to the many Back Mountain
folks who stopped in this
weekend to buy chickens or
. eggs from our new
TRUCKSVILLE POULTRY SHOP
We got off to a goed start and
our dressers at the farm were"
kept busy meeting the demand.
THIS WEEK'S PRICES
45. 60:
Very Much!
New York
Dressed
Ready for
Oven
© Legs “8c Ib.
Combination
@ Backs and Necks, 2 lbs. 25¢
PHONE 58
TRY OUR STRICTLY FRESH EGGS
Open Friday Night Until 9:00 p.m.
Trucksville Mill Poultry Shop
STANLEY MOORE, owner
SPECIAL
x PAGE SEVEN
faculties until’ the last, and was
able to be up and about. She died
very suddenly Sunday morning
immediately after breakfast with-
out advance warning of any kind.
Funeral services were conducted
by Rev. Howard R. Harrison on
Wednesday from the Ralph Brickel
Home, followed by burial in Fern
Brook Park.
\-
Know Your Neighbor
(Continued from Page Two)
and any others who happen to be
nue fairly crawls with them.
Voters Of
Dallas Twp.
When you choose a man
plified. Mr. Roberts has had an op-
portunity to compare schools and
assay their worth, with background
of New York State and Philadel-
phia schools as a basis.
He was born at Avoca, N. Y.,
moving while still an infant to
Wayland, where he spent his youth
and attended high school. Immedi-
ately upon graduation from Al-
bright College, Reading, he entered
the Dairy Products Company, work-
ing there two summers before gra-
duation, a total of twenty-two
years in the organization and its Is
local company.
His wife is the former Minnie
Burdan, daughter of C. C. Burdan,
Pottstown. Mrs. Roberts has been
sheltering a den of cub scouts in
the long basement playroom. After
finding that the ping-pong table
was showing too much wear and
tear from enthusiastic assaults
upon it, she suggested to her hus-
band that he replace it tempor-
arily with a stout work bench
which would better weather the
storms of hammers and nails and
saws. ;
The whole idea of cub scouting,
explains Mr. Roberts, is that par-
ents should collaborate with their
young, finding matters of interest
to both and developing them along
interesting lines.
for any office,
Look up his record and
qualifications,
how he has served you,
how he will serve you.
Has he the experience,
education or training,
to serve you well?
he available when
you need him?
I have an established
office on Fernbrook road
and am experienced as
a Notary Public and
Justice of the Peace.
A. GEORGE PRATER
FOR
Justice of the Peace
Dallas Township
Mr. Roberts likes kids, his own, :
| Gosh! B G
We're
Yes! .. ..
Low Prices And Volume Sales
Make Us Big . . .
One thing you can be sure of when you come to Motor
Twins, you will get a square deal. We put our cards on the
table and give you all the facts. We do everything within
reason to make you a satisfied customer.
You see, being one of the biggest dealers in Northeastern
Pennsylvania, gives us quite a reputation to uphold. Our
salesmen try to make everyone feel at home, maybe that’s
why we've sold so many cars.
It does make a difference where you buy your: car and
we're ready to prove it with our low prices, fast turn over
and a guarantee that’s good for one year.
'50 FORD DELUXE
$1465
2.Dr. Sedape to. LAS a
LL $1495
We. =, $1565
ie $1595
ooh Ee EN $1675
BI re $1695
Bl Tey $1745
OE La $675
ne a _— $745
nr $795
in $495
nn $565
Mp er $595
ar he ae $95
mer $115
DS $135
eT $165
= $175
Many 1940 to 1946 Cars
AT REAL LOW PRICES
We will pay off the balance on your car.
Give you top trade-in allowance,
Plus Long—Low Easy Terms.
NOTE:
Remember—OQOur Guarantee Is Good for 1 Year
MOTOR TWINS]
TWO BIG €2> PLACES
Our Only
TWO BIG
LOTS
Arman
OPEN NITES
or AND SUNDAYS
in
Kingston
is
Rutter Ave.
Corner
Market St.
in
Wilkes-Barre
i’s
240
South
Main St.
PHONE
2-2144
around. The house on Yeager Ave-