| Dallas Twp. ASE BRUCE WHITE MEETS FRIENDS AT BROADCAST OF “STRIKE IT RICH” Thirteen year old Bruce White won a dollar and a great big hand at C. B. S.s “Strike It Rich” television broadcast Wednesday morning in New York City—the dollar because he “clapped the hard- est’ in a young folks’ contest —the applause from local Shriners when he said he came from Dallas, Pennsylvania. Bruce, vacationing in New York with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Niles White, took part in the broadcast. The Shriners, attending the Con- vention, sat in on it. The program is sponsored by Palm Olive Soap. wt The width of United States ships is determined by the = Panama Canal, and the height by the Brooklyn Bridge. Voters of ; You have two votes for School Director. a aR May I have one of your votes? C. M. Laidler FOR School Director DALLAS TOWNSHIP A i * Bg No. 4 On Your Ballot 1 teaspoon salt 14 teaspoon pepper 3% teaspoon ground marjoram or sage 6 lean pork shoulder steaks, 14” thick #* * * 2 slices bacon, chopped 1% cups toasted %” bread cubes * * moderate oven (350°F.) for on scraped small carrots and peeled serole forty-five minutes before remove strings, place pork birds Yield: 6 French Pork Birds. NUTRITIOUS FRENCH PORK BIRDS By Marguerite Mickelsen High in its good eating and nutritional qualities is this one-dish meal of frenched pork birds and vegetables. The bread stuffing holds the rich gravy flavor and food value of the meat juices of the pork, which is particularly high in protein and B vitamin values. FRENCH PORK BIRDS Combine salt, pepper and marjoram. Sprinkle over pork steaks. Fry bacon until crisp. Place bacon and drippings in a mixing bowl, re- serving 2 tablespoons drippings for browning meat. Add toasted bread cubes, carrots, onion, beaten egg, salt and pepper. Add bouillon and mix well. Spread stuffing on pork steaks, roll up and tie with string. Roll in flour and brown birds in bacon drippings. Place pork birds into a 1% quart casserole. Add cider. Cover and bake in a gravy from the casserole over them. Thicken gravy if desired. g PAGE © THE POST, FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1951 YMCA Da-Camp Opened Monday Wyant Leads Boys; Karen Lamb, the Girls YMCA Da-Camp of the Back Mountain Area opened Monday. Registrations may be submitted to E. L. Wyant, Executive Secretary, Dallas, Pennsylvania, or call Dallas 244-R-3, The Back Mountain head- quarters. Da-Camp will run for a six week period on Monday, Wed- nesday and Friday of each week. The children will carry their own lunch, but the “Y” will furnish milk. Transportation .is to be fur- nished by parents to and from Shavertown, but when travel is necessary to other points of in- terest it will be under the super- vision of the “Y”. The nominal fee will give the children all the facilities of the Da- Camp, registration in the Back Mountain “Y”, plus the milk to drink. The Da-Camp will afford activities that boys and girls like, including crafts, games, athletics, 1% cup finely chopped carrots 1% cup finely chopped onion Two Boys Assigned For Further Training : Two Back Mountain boys, Leland T. Honeywell of Harveys Lake, and Donald A. Bombick of Trucksville, have been advanced to Private First Class at Sampson, N. Y., Air Force Base and will be assigned for technical training as clerk typists. Honeywell, son of Mr, and Mrs. Leland Honeywell, will receive his training at North Dakota State Col- lege, Wahpeton, N. D. Bombick, story hours, swimming, trips, na- ture, Indian lore, etc. Miss Karen Lamb of Lehman is in charge of the girls’ program. Miss Lamb it a graduate of Cor- nell University where she was active in the Syracuse City Recre- ation Center, acting as swimming instructor and supervisor of play- ground activities. The boys will be guided and di- rected by E. L. Wyant, ‘“Y” Secre- tary. Mr. Wyant is a graduate of the Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College. 1 egg, beaten 14 teaspoon salt 1, teaspoon pepper 14 cup hot bouillon or milk tm ee. 14 cup flour 1 cup cider Fully Developed Means during the fall. That means money, too. your pullets right. So follow i needs today. e and one-half hours. (If desired, small onions may be placed in cas- pork birds are done). To serve: on a platter and pour a little of the When you can grow big, fully-de- : veloped pullets in just 20 weeks— : they're sure to be laying earlier eggs, extra eggs and bigger eggs Yes, it pays to grow ena with Growena—Purina all the way. See us for your pullet growing Ready to La extra Start- —_ LEAGUE SCHEDULE Wednesday, July 18 St. Therese’s vs. Shavertown Methodist at Dallas Township. Trucksville Methodist vs. Prince of Peace at Kingston Township. STANDINGS Shavertown Methodist 4 0 1.000 St. Therese’s 3d 750 Prince of Peace 2:2 .500 Trucksville Methodist 1 3 .250 BI-COUNTY LEAGUE STANDINGS Orange ' Beaumont Vernon East Dallas Shavertown Dallas Carverton Noxen a Tunkhannock HNWWEe Ao Jenks CE VV vv VY eve YY Balloon Breaks Away A five-foot helium filled balloon used for advertising purposes at Bill Purcell’s Service Station in Trucksville broke loose from its moorings Friday night and has been unheard from since. 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It’s a new iridescent fabric of Avisco rayon, in which tiny raised design gives a beauti- ful shimmering two-color effect in the sunlight. REG'LAR FELLERS The Painted Wagon No Matter What Happens - - - . whose fault it is. details now, without obliation. Dallas 557! C. WAYNE GORDON Local Agent—Farm Bureau Mutual Auto Insurance Co. Main Highway, Shavertown COVERED Someone tries to beat a light .. . a*car looms up that you just didn’t see in time . . . and there you have it. A crumpled fen- der, your engine demol- * ished - or perhaps worse. fe . no mat- Call us for protects you . . Phone 557 " GENE BYRNES : 5c | MARY WORT H'S YAMILY g OF COURSE ! BUT I HOPE YOU'RE RN Ek ) SUGGESTING INTO YOUR PARLOR, ARY ? EITHER OF LS IS A 1 SPIDER OR A FLY, COLONEL CANFIELD), WHAT I HAVE. TO SAY Is VERY SERIOUS ee]l+-ER<+ TRUST WE SHALL BE FREE FROM INTRUSION HERE? 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FOURTH ST...ROYAL DAK, MICHIGAN To The Voters Oo Dallas Township I am seeking the nomina- tion for Supervisor in Dal- las Township. I am an active member of Harry S. Smith Volun- teer Fire Company and have been a forest fire war- den twenty-one years. Also owned and drove school bus seventeen years in Dallas Township and have always taken an active part in both social and community af- fairs. I will not be able to call on you all, but nevertheless, your vote and support will be appreciated. Philip Kunkle REGULAR REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR SUPERVISOR Worked Way To Own Success In College, War, Civic Duties TOIL WAS HIS LOT Republican Candidate for District Attorney Is A Product of Will To Win Against Many Handicaps HAS PUBLIC ACCLAIM Night-school and a jacking of all trades with handyman jobs, to win higher education, offer an in- teresting background to the career of Attorney Louis C. Feldmann, Republican-endorsed candidate for District Attorney of Luzerne Coun- ty. A native of Wilkes-Barre, Mr. Feldmann is State Commander of the Veterans’ of Foreign Wars and has his home and law offices in the city of Hazleton. One of his best-remembered jobs while a col- lege student was with the last staff of the Philadelphia Public Ledger whose last publisher was Cyrus H. K. Curtis of the Saturday Eve- ning Post. A home of the “old Wilkes- Barre” type was the birthplace of Mr. Feldmann. It was situated at the corner of South Main and Northampton streets in. the county seat. His father, John Feldmann, was last office manager of the old Evening News whose publishers were the late Ambrose West and the late George J. Stegmaier. First schooling for Feldmann was in old Mayflower School. From there he went to grade school at Hill Street building and then to St. Mary's High School from where he was graduated in 1927. Jobs as laborer and helper fol- lowed in Bethlehem and Chester and Feldmann was able to enroll for evening study at University of Pennsylvania in 1929. Loss of his newspaper job by shut-down brought a temporary halt to form- al education. But, as many an- other boy did, Louis Feldmann found a new opportunity by taking work as a waiter, cook’s chauffeur, hosiery salesman ‘and caterer’s salesman. In 1930 he was able to alternate toil with day-school at- tendance at Wharton School of University of Pennsylvania and in 1933 he won the degree of Bache- lor of Science in Economics with graduation. Awarded the Charles B. Coxe Scholarship, which became a grad- uate scholarship, Mr. Feldmann once again had to seek supporting labor and he found it as odd-jobs man at the fraternity houses about the college campus. He subse- quently added to his Pennsylvania degree the degree of Bachelor of Laws with graduation from Du- quesne University. He was assign- ed to the first Adult Education Program and taught at Penn Treaty High School. A competitive examination won for Feldmann a position as Stores Inspector for the State of Pennsyl- vanian Liquor Control Board under Gifford Pinchot. He was promoted to the Control Board in 1942 and then was appointed Chief Investi- gator for O.P.A. at Pittsburgh. De- | spite the combination of work- and-school, Louis George Feldmann was top man in his graduating class, and despite success and prof- fered exemption he enlisted in the United States Marine Corps in June 1943. It was upon discharge from the Marines in 1945 that Mr. Feld- mann opened his principal law of- fices in Hazleton with a branch office in Wilkes-Barre. A native of Wilkes-Barre, later a resident of Kingston where he was a member of St. Ignatius Church congregation, Mr. Feldmann has had a unique career since Sep- tember 10, 1909, the day of his birth. At present. he is a mem- ATTY. LOUIS G. FELDMANN ty Law and Library Association, Pennsylvania Bar Association, American Bar Association, Ameri- can Legion, Marine Corps League, Kiwanis Club, Pioneer Firs Com- pany, Elks, Eagles, Moose, Catholic War Veterans, Veterans’ of Foreign Wars, Knights of Columbus, with a long record of practice before Supreme and Superior courts as well as the courts of the county. In announcing that Louis George Feldmann had been elected Com- mander of the Pennsylvania State Department of the Veterans of For- eign Wars, that patriotic group’s convention said: “This veteran of the Asiatic-Pacific conflict was in the Third Marine Corps Division, Ninth Regiment, Company C. His rank of Sergeant was achieved in the bitter days of the Mariana Is- lands, but it is remembered that he was that kind of Marine who also was given special duties in various camps as well as at Marine Base, Parris Island, where he sery- ed as Drill Instructor.” Drake-Wear Post at Hazleton found Feldmann adept in adjudi- cation of many organizational prob- lems and in 1946 he became Post 589 Commander. He was elected Judge Advocate, then Council Com- mander, Department of Pennsyl- vania Judge Advocate, Junior Vice Commander, and after notable and varied service he rose to the high- est state post of Pennsylvania Com- mander of the VFW in 1950. He is a member of the President’s Con- ference on Children and Youth, and in promoting citizenship and its privileges and duties he has travel- ed every state of the nation. Married to the former Anne R. McKernan, Mr. Feldmann and his family reside at 9 West Diamond avenue, Hazleton. Prominent in congregational work with Holy Trinity German R. C. Church, the Republican candidate for District Attorney of Luzerne County never theless has added to tremendous responsibilities in law and patriot- ism the active assistance that has has given him recognition by the Salvation Army, Catholic Charities, Physically Handicapped Committee, Industrial Development Organiza- tion, Civil Defense Council, National Americanism Committee and other citizen organizations that have given the United States its present background of solidarity for what- ever emergency may lie ahead. In 1948 Mr. Feldmann won the Greater Hazleton Award as “the man who did most for the war veteran.” For two years he was CHairman of the Civil Improvement Committee of the Chamber of Com- merce. . ot —Advertisement.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers