The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, August 10, 1951, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Parish School Buys
§ 48 Passenger Bus
A school bus with accommoda-
tions for 48 pupils has been pur-
chased by Gate of Heaven Parish
for transportation of students when
the new parish school opens in
Dallas in September. The bus will
pick up children in the three par-
ishes concerned, Our Lady of Vic-
in tory, Harveys Lake; Gate of
: Heaven, and ‘St. Therese’s.
Registration days will be an-
iit nounced shortly.
Main Street Resurfaced
The State Department of High-
ways this week completed the
blacktop resurfacing of Main
Street from the Newberry Estate
to the intersection with Memorial
Highway.
Past Councilors Picnic
Past Councilors Club, Mount Vale
Council 224, D. of A. will hold
their annual covered dish picnic
at Harveys Lake on Wednesday.
Each member is asked to ‘bring a
covered dish ‘and sandwiches.
Big, luscious peaches—
om That's Fresh Peac!
in hand-dipped pints, quarts
Do not accept substit
Loo!
and plenty of the
h lce Cream os only Bi
and the money-saving
utes! Ask for Br
Kk for the name Breyers on ice cream
in ri den
—_ smothered in rich, gol
i oe makes it. Ask for it
Half Gallon.
eyers—and be sure you get it.
packages and paper wrappers.
A ———
EVANS DRUG STORE
Shavertown Penna.
of
| YOU ABOVEALL, MUST
BE SATISFIED . . . and
you will be if you buy a
USED CAR or
A A RRs
A SRST
50 Dodge 2-dr.
| '48 Plymouth 4-dr.
| 47 Dodge 4-dr.
es ST AN TST se
'47 Dod
BE .
L. L. RICHARDSON'’S
USED CAR LOT
Your Back Mt. Dodge-Plymouth Dealer
You Can Now Hawe 18 Months To Pay The Balance
tli fn
’47 Dodge Panel (like new)
’A8 Dodge 1'/> Cab-Chassis
Truck Payments Up To 24 Months
Phone 420 Main Highway Phone 515-R-13
TRUCK from
48 Hudson 4-dr. cy)
’A8 Nash “600” 4-dr.
47 Ford Club Coupe
ge 12 Pick-Up
{ Orange batting order
THE POST, FRIDAY, AU
its twelfth victory with a magnifi-
cent 2-0 no-hit, shut-out. Martin,
invincible to the East Dallas bats- |
men, faced only 29 batters which
is just two more than the perfect
game of 27. Only one East Dallas
batsman, Stanton, hit the ball out
of the infield. With almost perfect
control, Martin had the batters
eating out of his hand as he mixed
an out-drop with a change of pace,
very effectively throttling East Dal-
las with eleven strikeouts.
Warren Stanton, East Dallas
pitcher, matched Martin up to the
sixth inning when Len Ballas got
the ‘first hit of the ball game, a
short fly to right field. If it had
not been for some very loose de-
fensive play behind Stanton in the
ninth inning the two teams would
in all probability be at it yet for
both pitchers seemed to get stron-
ger as the game lengthened. While
Martin's pitching chore was monu-
mental, Stanton’s was only slightly
less so as he faced the power laden
and held
them to two clean hits, the other
was a misjudged fly, and two for-
tunate runs,
Len Bellas was unquestionably
He garnered two hits, one a double,
to have his credit two thirds of all
the hitting done for both sides.
Paul Kunkle had one hit, a single,
which started out the proceedings
in the ninth.
Kunkle opened the last half of
the ninth with a sharp ground sin-
gle down the third base line into
left field. The throw-in went
through the second baseman allow-
ing Kunkle to take second. Len
Bellas then lifted a routine fly ball
to center field which fell for a
double when the fielder lost it in
the sun at the last minute. Kunkle
scored easily. Al Bellas was a
strike out victim for the first out.
Harry Hughey bounced a slow rol-
ler down the third base line
which flirted with foul territory all
the way. East Dallas claimed it
foul, the umpire claimed it fair and
Orange scored its final run.
Orange 2
»
oT
Milliard, rf
Kunkle, 3b
L. Bellas, cf
A. Bellas, ss
Hughey, 2b
Evans, 1b
Martin, p
Smith, If
Brace, If
Bittenbender c
CH NB WW BBW
OOOO OOOHHKHO®HR
coo oOoOOONHRON
ow
=
nN
Ww
East Dallas 0
»
NWWWWWWdh ho
Stanton, p
Kozemchak, 1b
B. Race, cf
Wilson, 3b
Ostrum, ss
Shultz, 2b
Stevens, c
Kubasti, If
R. Race, rf
COO OOoOOoOO0OOoOO™R
OC OOOO OON
28.0.0
Runs batted in—L. Bellas, Hughey.
Double, L. Bellas. Double play, Ste-
vens to Wilson to Shultz to Stan-
RR
AUDITORS
A
LE Bl
’ REPORT
For the Lake Township School District
For the Fiscal Year ending July 1, 1951
RECEIPTS
Balance on hand July 1, 1950
$10,249.90
Property. Tax, 1950: ...... U0, $32,754.71
Per: Capita Tax, 1950... iu. 3,725.40
Delinquent Tax (Prior to 1950) 4,792.73
State Appropriation: ..... cL. 40,361.04
Tuition, non-resident Pupils .... 425.66
Amusement Tax. J... Go ooria on 7,976.64
| Other Sources... ... L000 aly 3,732.71 $ 93,768.89
Total Receipts, including be-
ginning balance: 4, ...L babs 0 $104,018.79
CURRENT EXPENSES
i A. Expenses of General Control.. $ 3,724.85
B. Expenses of Instruction 58,964.19
i C. Expenses of Auxiliary Agencies
! and Coordinate Activities 17,675.83
i D. Expenses of Operation of
{ School: Plant... ..../.05 0 8,765.52
; E. Expenses of Maintenance of
i School Plant ©... 1.0... ... 2,869.80
F. Expenses of Fixed Charges. . 3,704.12
Total Current Expenses .... $95,704.31
H. {Capital Outlay -...0. co 2,608.48
Ly 3 y i
v ol Total Payments .......... $ 98,312.79
Balance on Hand (to be :
available for School Year 1951-52 $ 5,706.00
; ASSETS
School Buildings and Sites at Cost ........ $114,948.07
Text Books and Equipment at Cost ...... 29,555.49
Unpaid Taxes- (Current Year} ........... 3,047.96
Tuition Receivable |... «0 La 0h ag ol 1,905:27
United States Government Bonds .......... 10,000.00
: $159,456.79
: « LIABILITIES
Due Tax Collector A/C Commissions ...... $ 1.60
Audited August 3, 1951
Signed:
A. Rodell Kocher
Otto A. Biery
Auditors
4
ton. Walks—Stanton 3, Martin 0.
Strikeouts, Martin 11, Stanton 7.
the batting star of the afternoon. |
Hit Batsman—Martin (R. Race).
Umpire, Barboise.
Innings r h e
Orange 000 000 002 2 3 2
E. Dallas 000 000 000 0 0 3
OFFICIAL BI-COUNTY LEAGUE:
STANDINGS
L
Orange’... 0 oi %0s 1
Beaumont |... ly 3
Verron; Co Taian og 4
East Dallas 5
Dallas... 6
Shavertown 7
Tunkhannock 8
Noxen: «..... x 9
denks i... 13
Carverton oon iit 3.10
SCHEDULE
Sunday, August 12
Noxen at Dallas; Shaver-
town at Vernon; Tunkhannock
at Jenks; Beaumont at East.
Dallas; Orange at Carverton.
Wanted By F. B. I.
JAMES EDWARD JACKSON, JR.
The FBI has requested alert ci- |
tizens and law enforcement agen-
cies to be on the lookout for
James Edward Jackson, Jr., Sou-
thern Regional Director of the
Communist Party, USA, who was
indicted by a Federal Grand Jury
at New York, New York, on June
20, 1951, on a charge of conspiracy
to advocate the violent overthrow
of the government. A description
of Jackson is as follows:
Age, 36, born November 29, 1914,
Richmond, Virginia; height, 5’ 61/5";
weight, 160 pounds; build, medium;
hair, black, curly, bald in front;
eyes, brown; race, Negro; national-
ity, American; scars and marks,
small star scar outer corner of left
eye.
Jackson received a Doctor’s De-
gree at Howard University of Phar-
macy in Washington, D. C. He has
resided in Richmond, Virginia;
Washington, D. C.; Arlington, Vir-
ginia; and .in Birmingham, Ala-
bama.
He has been employed as a
druggist, labor organizer, writer
and lectured. He is described as
well-groomed and neat in appean-
ance. He sometimes wears a mus-
tache.
- Any person having information
which may assist in locating James
Edward Jackson, Jr., is requested
immediately to notify the nearest
FBI office. The phone number will
appear on the first page of the
telephone directory.
*
For Built in
QUALITY
Foam Rubber Seats
Rich Leather Upholstery
Center Arm Rest
Inside Car Jacking
Chain on Gas and Oil Caps
show you. See the AUSTIN
KUNKLE
Kunkle, Pa.
And many other REFINEMENTS we would like to
DANIEL. MEEKER, owner
idlore
at.
GARAGE
Phone 458-R-13
ORANGES Valencia
CANTALOUPES
PEACHES Freestone
WATERMELONS
3 doz. 99c¢
_ 2 for 25¢
Basket 39¢
15¢
SRE 6 for 10c
U. S.
No. 1
POTATOES
100 Ibs $2.50
pk 45c
THE PRODUCE CENTER
LUZERNE-DALLAS HIGHWAY
Large Parking Space Available — Open evenings and Sundays
PRA
ee o GUST 10, 1951 a sai ey PATENT
Martin's Magnificent No Hitter
Gives Orange Its Twelfth Victory
Harry Martin hurled Orange to®
8
‘Know Your Neighbor
(Continued from Page Eight)
N a
feeling. Red is the color of action
as well as danger, and almost in-
variably preferred by men and
young children. Blue, to most men,
especially in the colder tones, is
the least desirable.
Take a long, narrow room, says
Mr. Smith, and its proportions can
be corrected by proper painting as
well as by thoughtful arrangement
of long pieces of furniture. Paint
both ends a darker tone of the two
long side walls, and the room
seems more nearly square, losing
that Pullman car effect,
Mr. Smith likes to work with
rough stone and with split rails.
The side of the house is apt to
show a pile of rough flags almost
any time, waiting to be transpor-
ted by wheelbarrow to the back
yard for use in another stone wall
or an expanded terrace surroun-
ding the outdoor grill.
Using the recommended methods
for broadening a structure by cor-
rect painting and horizontal lines,
he has worked out a nine-rail fence
made - of two-by-fours and painted
white, set between two rough
stone piers and easily unassembled
in case a car should need to use
that opening between house and
next door neighbor's fence on Pio-
neer Avenue. On the other side,
flanking the stone terrace at the
rear, he has lovingly erected what
used to be known as a snake fence,
rounding up the split chestnut
rails from somebody’s moderniza-
tion project.
This fence does not prove
enough of a barrier to dogs, so a
bit of unobstrusive chicken-wire
supplements it at the bottom, with
the black cocker spaniel and the
little cafe-au-lait spaniel able to
get only their noses over the ob-
struction. They are affectionate
little creatures with the melting
eyes and soft ears of their breed,
and one long wag from stem to
stern.
Herbert’ attended Kingston
schools until ready for Seminary,
his family having moved there
from Wilkes-Barre when he was
ready for the second grade. After
finishing Seminary, he attended
Cornell for two years, where he
studied architecture. In 1927 he
went into business with his father,
Herbert Smith Senior, present Bur-
gess of Dallas, and learned the de-
corating business from the ground
up. In January of this year he took
over the business.
He married the former Mary
Daniels in 1938, Mary kept on tea-
ching school in West Pittston until
fairly recently, all during the war
years when Herbert was away.
In the Ordnance Department
when he first entered the service,
he was soon transferred to M.IT.
for special training. The army at
that time was anxious to discover
potential engineers, and gave ex-
aminations to determine eligibility.
One of 400 who were sent to
Massachusetts Institute of Tech-
nology, he was one of the seventy-
five who completed the course.
Whereupon, the United States
Army with its customary non se-
quitur, put him back into the Ord-
nance Department and sent him to
Burma,
Six months after landing in Bur-
ma he was in China, where he re-
mained until troops were sent
home after the cease-fire. Coming
back, he flew over the Hump,
boarded a troop ship at the coast,
and spent twenty-one days on the
water before arriving at Indian-
town Gap, the separation center.
Four days later he was home
again.
And the day after that, he was
back in his office.
The firm has done some out-
standing work. The list includes the
Kirby Health Center; the Central
YMCA; the Derr Memorial Presby-
terian and Kingston Presbyterian
Barnyard Notes. .::
Mountain area should make it.
(Continued from Page Two)
able galleries at the work of these master craftsmen.
Our stay at Corning was not long enough, but we will return on
another day. The trip is so short that any one living in the Back
On the return we varied our route by driving down Route 15 to
Mansfield and Williamsport. At Steam Mountain we stopped at Fry
Brothers Turkey Ranch for one of the best Turkey Dinners we have
had since Thanksgiving—and all for a $1.25 per plate. Thousands
of turkeys were on range there, and we watched them being fed as
we sat at our table in the Ranch Restaurant.
The trip from there on in to Williamsport, through Benton and
Kitchen Creek was as beautiful as that up the river.
We reached home after dark. We had completely forgotten the
slow start and Myra’s birthday, and that’s what we wanted.
Next time you are invited to a Clambake take a trip to Corning.
You'll enjoy it.
Stephen M. Glova
Service Of Satisfaction
FUNERAL HOME, H. L. 4000
Cuts Calf Feeding Costs
One bag of Calf Startena saves
about 40 gals. of milk on the Calf
Startena Plan. Helps keep down
scours, too. Easy to feed ... no
messy buckets to clean, no gruel
to fix. Helps develop big, growthy
calves. Some of your neighbors
feed Calf Startena. Come in and
let us tell you about results they
get.
In Two
an ME hn? fl
OLD TOLL GATE FEED SERVICE
Trucksville Phone 520-R-2
p
p
p
p
b
p
p
p
b
>
p
p
p
p
p
p
p
p
p
p
b
p
p
p
p
p
p
Brokenshire’s Harveys Lake Hotel
VV PV PU VV VV VV Vr vr vr vr vv ov yo vveovevvvvvvvv vor vee
Enjoy Your August Vacation In The
Cool Pine Woods Overlooking Lovely Harveys Lake
t Visit Our
MARINE DINING ROOM
Try Our Delicious Food
and hear the beautiful music of
AL KEIPER
on our Hammond Organ
assossssasssssdossosossonnd
Complete Hotel Facilities - Phone Harveys Lake 3731
4
tntedtsteeilibentteilies tidied dati a 4 2 a
A
For
INSURANCE
@® Farm Bureau Mutual Auto Ins, Co.
® Farm Bureau Mutual Fire Ins: Co.
‘® Farm Bureau Life Ins. Co.
ARTHUR GAY
ERNEST GAY
Dallas RD 3 346 Bennett St., Luzerne
+ Centermoreland 62-R-3 . Kingston 8-1191
Home Office: Columbus, Ohio ”
“EEE OE TOAD
i 3 A x - Y
gs
churches; the Bell Telephone
Building; the Newell Wood home,
and more recently the Jack Wilson
place.
The interior of the bank at To-
wanda is specially noteworthy be-
Towanda as it was a century ago.
There is the covered bridge with
its runway for a mule team. There
are the coal barges drawn by mule
from Wyoming Valley mines to To-
and streets, landmarks still in ex-
istence, with the winding river pre-
dominating, the same then as now.
Anything from palaces to chi-
cken-coops, says Herbert. His firm
has done them all.
He unfolded his lean length from
the deck chair, loped up the lawn,
and hurdled the white rails, plac-
ing one hand lightly on the top.
“See”, he beamed, “They didn’t
come down.”
Then, with a grin, “And if you
are going to cut in under my bu-
siness by painting your own porch,
don’t forget that new brush”.
SHOP
Pometoy’s
FIRST
It's easy to get to!
You NEVER
Saw Anything
Like It!
You know folks I just don’t
take up with everything that
comes ‘‘down the pike”, especi-
ally medicines for animals. But
by golly I've got some Poultry
Preparation here called MOYEX
that I know is good . . . I know
‘cause I've seen it work. MOYEX
is a non-poisonous preparation
that successfully treats Coec-
cidiosis, Liver diseases, New-
castle, Blackhead and etc. It’s
made by a fellow 'I know real
well who's been in this business
a long time, and he comes from
Bloomsburg, maybe you know
him. Anyway, if you have some
sickness in your flock, give it
a try... .4tll do: the ‘job.
Six Ounce Bottles 5c
Quarts $3.00
Gallons $10.00
TRUCKSVILLE MILL
Stanley Moore, Prop.
Trucksville, Pa.
WRADETMARK ““CALSO"*
om
- -
Parker’s Service Station
Body and Fender Repairs
Auto Refinishing
Official Auto Inspection
AAA Member—Towing Service
Open 7:30 a. m. to 11:00 p. m.
MAIN HGWY, SHAVERTOWN
PHONE 111-R-0
Miller’s Auto Electric
Specialists In Ignition Carburetion
and Motor Tune-up
Official Auto Inspec’ion
AAA Member
EAST DALLAS
' PHONE 394-R-7
Snyder’s Garage
Specialized Lubrication
ORANGE
PHONE 58-R-11
Pen-Fern Qil Co.
Complete Automotive Service
Fernbrook Corners
PHONE DALLAS 79 -
<
cause of its 100 foot mural showing *
wanda. And there are old houses