The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, September 14, 1951, Image 8

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PAGE EIGHT
PURCELL OIL SERVICE]
FUEL OIL
Dallas 9001-R-16
For the best
IN
DRY CLEANING
THINK
HECK
PHONE
H. L. 4256
Men's Shirts Laundered
Read The Clavsificd Column
See The Perfect
Cooking Ranges
for the
Rural Areas
GALORIC
RANGES
Enterprise Ranges
New Models Are In
Harold
Ash
Plumbing - Heating - Bottled Gas
Phone 409-R-—Shavertown
Kunkle Completes Plans
For Their Food Venture
Kunkle Methodist Church has
added a roast beef platter to its
menu for Bloomsburg Fair Food
concession, September 24-29. Lunch
will feature home made soup in
addition to the usual items, and
breakfast, an innovation this year,
will specialize on bacon and eggs
as well as cereal, fruit juice and
hot buttered toast.
Members of various societies
and clubs meeting at Kunkle
church will collaborate in raising
the fund for building new Sunday
School rooms. Committees in-
clude representatives from Joy
Class, WSCS, Silver Leaf Club, Of-
ficial Board, Board of Education,
and Kunkle firemen.
Mrs. Dorothy Dodson is general
chairman, Rev. Ruth Underwood
adviser. Committees include Mr.
and Mrs. E. R. Kerlin, Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Brace, and Mesdames
Naomi Ashburner, Anna Weaver,
Betty Meeker, Gertrude Eckert,
George Landon, Helen Landon,
Emma Miller, Florence Hoyt, Arline
Kunkle, Agnes Elston, Elva Elston,
Stella Isaacs, Jason Kunkle, and
Irene Transue.
Committee will meet Monday at
8 in the church. Mrs. Helen Lan-
don is in charge of procuring work-
ers and transportation, Mrs. George
Landon in charge of donations of
fresh vegetables for soup. Workers
and donors are asked to make
Monday their deadline for offers
of service or food. The entire
community is urged to help, as new
Sunday School rooms will benefit
everybody.
WHY WAIT!
Examine your fur coat now.
Have it restyled into the
newest fashion or have a
jacket, cape or stole made
from it. We will make your
old coat look like new. We
guarantee our. work, no down
payments necessary, free stor-
age no job too big or too
small. We also remodel and
reline cloth coats.
BETTER TAILOR
and FURRIER
147 Main St., Luzerne, Pa.
Phone 97-2562 or 71-7126
Jr CCT TTT
Call
GAY
INSURANCE
@® Farm Bureau Mutual Auto Ins. Co:
® Farm Bureau Mutual Fire Ins. Co.
@® Parm Bureau Life Ins. Co.
ARTHUR GAY
Dallas RD 3
Centermoreland 62-R-3
Home Office: Columbus, Chio
For
*
ERNEST GAY
346 Bennett St., Luzerne
Kingston 8-1191
AAG”
nat
THE POST, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1951
THESE WOMEN!
By d’Alessio
‘Remember when we used to sit out dances, Fred—when it
wasn’t just to rest?”
| -
ad
Back Mountain Library Book
Club will open its fall and winter
season with a luncheon in the
newly remodelled and redecorated
Library Annex next Wednesday at
1. It has been planned as a Round-
The-World luncheon by chairman
Mrs. James Gross.
Mrs, Joseph Schmerer will pre-
side at the business meeting and
Mrs. Harry Stuhlmuller will lead
a discussion on travel,
Chairman of the hospitality com-
Book Club Opens Season Wednesday
With Luncheon In Library Annex
mittee is Mrs. Ralph Garrahan, co-
chairman Mrs. Harold Flack, as-
sisted by Mesdames Arthur Ellum,
A. A. Mascali, Walter Elston, Da-
vid Evans, Charles Flack, George
Flack, J. C. Fleming, Z. E. Garin-
ger, Charles W. Lee, Lewis Le-
Grand, W. E. McQuilkin, Antoinette
Mason, Fred Morris, Edward Blake,
A. J. Brooks, and John Blackman.
Reservations must be made by
Rustin Again
Heads Appeal
Beaumont Salvation
Army Seeks Funds
William A. Austin will serve
again as chairman of the Beaumont
Salvation Army Service Unit an-
nual appeal which will. commence
September 15. Mr. Austin has
served for the past four years as
chairman and realizes the valuable
services rendered by his committee.
Mrs, William A. Austin will again
act as Treasurer Unit. Members
of the committee are as follows:
Mrs. Harry Clark, Mrs. Julia Den-
mon, Mrs. Alden Dietz, Mrs. Char-
les Smith, Mrs. Dorothy Johnson
and Mrs. Hope Smith.
This committee administers your
Salvation Army Service Unit funds
and are volunteer, unpaid local
leaders from your own community.
Many of these members have serv-
ed loyally and untiringly year after
year. Remember part of your gift
remains in the Beaumont area for
local welfare needs. It is a unique
Salvation Army Service Commit-
tee operating in your community.
In times of national crises and
of emergencies confronting individ-
uals and families, The Salvation
Army has always performed mar-
velous tasks and no sacrifice is
too great. 2
Thursday Art Club
To Meet September 20
Thursday Afternoon Art Club
will meet September 20, 2 PM, at
the home of Mrs. Fred Howell,
Shavertown. Hostesses are Mrs.
Howell and Mrs, Auber J. Robbins.
“Yankee Exodus” will be review-
ed by Mrs. Robbins, “All the Best
in Switzerland” by Mrs, C. H.
Monday with Mrs. Ray Shiber, Dal-
las 187, or Mrs. Thomas Graham,
463-R-2.
Safety lessons taught by rhyme
and jingle are already on the
agenda in Mrs. Harold Rood’s first
grade in the Dallas building, with
children skipping around the room
in a circle, stopping dead when
they encounter a red light.
There is a jingle that says:
I look to left,
I look to right;
I always watch
The traffic light.
You can’t start too early to in-
Trucksville Show
Awards Blue Ribbons
Trucksville Methodist Church’s
sixth annual flower show this year
omitted the hobby show that usu-
ally accompanies it, and specialized
on two features, framed pictures
and monochromatic arrangements.
Mrs. Leonard Adamshick, Leh-
man, took blue ribbon for a mono-
chromatic niche in tones of yellow
and orange, featuring bittersweet.
Blue ribbon for framed pictures
went to Mrs. John Sherk, Forty-
Fort, for a Flemish arrangement of
flowers and fruit.
Mr. and Mrs. John Letson, Truck-
sville, won a gold ribbon for out-
standing dahlia exhibit; Mrs. Clar-
ence Woodruff won first for out-
standing floral arrangement.
Prize for best house plant went
to Mrs. Sam Davis for a luxuriant
begonia.
Eugene Misson took first for prize
vegetables, an award which he has
won consistently for years.
The KOZY
Now Under New
Management
Mr. Thomas Simon, pops
(Formerly with Kearney’s Barbeque)
KORNER Is
Specializing In
OTHER SANDWICHES ® CURB SERVICE
BAR-B-Q’s
* GROCERIES
* CUT MEATS
+ CONFECTIONS
Serving Anislocral Jee Cream
KOZY KORNER
3 MAIN ST., SHAVERTOWN
* HOME MADE PIES
PHONE 253-R-16
Want Profitable
First Calf Heifers?
Yes, folks, I've seen it happen
time after time. Those customers
of mine who use Glidden’s Com-
plete Calf Builder develop heifers
that sure show they've had the
right start. Glidden’s Complete
Calf Builder develops a large
feed
scours, and supplies all the nu-
capacity, helps prevent
tritional needs of the growing
calf. It's a known fact that
one bag of this calf builder can
save 35 to 40 gallons of milk.
You owe it to yourself to in-’
this calf
vestigate complete
builder. Stop in and see us.
AGILE
NE oes 7
TRUCKSVILLE MILL
Stanley Moore, Prop.
: Trucksville, Pa.
First Graders Get Safety
Rules In Games And Jingle
still principles of safety into small
children, Rood.
The new desk and seat assem-
blies, easily movable, have been
arranged in a circle instead of in
ordered rows, which leaves a large
free area in the center for play
or projects.
Mrs. Rood says that the auditor-
ium will be of great benefit to
grade school children, for rehears-
als for school pageants and for
play in bad weather. It is directly
across the corridor from first, sec-
ond and third grade rooms. Last
year it was necessary to put out-
door clothing on the pupils before
taking them to the auditorium, and
the high school schedule did not
permit much latitude.
says Mrs.
Rohlff.
|Kindergarten
Enrollment 84
With A Few More
Children Expected
With enrollment not yet com-
plete, due to prolonged vacation
and miseries of a first vaccination,
Dallas Borough-Kingston Township
kindergartens already have a mem-
bership of eighty-four children, al-
most equally divided between
morning and afternoon sessions,
enough to fill all the small chairs
provided for the two large rooms.
Mrs. Charles James and Miss
Helen Mills are in charge. Miss
Mills has taught first grade in
Shavertown schools for the past
three years, but has always wanted
to teach kindergarten. She grad-
uated from Mansfield, took the de-
gree of BS at Misericordia, attend-
ed Columbia and took her MA at
Bucknell.
The school bus filled with kinder-
gartners comes at a few: minutes
past nine for the morning session,
a little past one for the afternoon.
Some * parents are still bringing
their children personally, but the
bus will apparently be used more
and more as pupils become accus-
tomed to school life.
Each child wears a large printed
tag for easy identification during
the first days of school.
* Mrs. James and Miss Mills have
both had a few chronic weepers
in their classes, with one discon-4
solate child affecting the others,
but they both agree that this is
normal for beginners and advise
parents to ignore it. Most of the
children are very happy, and al-
ready becoming accustomed to
working with a group. The children
love the playground apparatus,
especially the slide.
Va
ice of
Your Choice ©
VANILLA JUDeE A
STRAWBERRY VA
” (
2XPD
ICE CREAM
Veit Cake /
(All ice cream)
EVANS DRUG STORE
Shavertown Penna.
v
-
“WHAT HAPPENED TO YOUR TEAM?"
“WE REPLACED EM WITH A
MASSEY-HARRIS PONY."
® ... and it didn't take much convincing when my Massey-Harris Dealer
showed me the different jobs I can do with the Pony. Not only that, but I'm plan-
ning on putting a couple of cows on the pasture that kept my team. You know,
I never realized what a genuine pleasure farming with a tractor is as compared ©
to farming with a team. The best part of it is my Pony has the power, weight,
traction and tools to handle every l-plow job on the place. And I do my work
in less time too. Believe me, I'm sure glad I asked for a demonstration right here
on my own farm. If I were you, I'd look into the Pony way of farming—it can’t be
beat in the 1-plow class.” .
Charles H. Long
SWEET VALLEY, PENNA .
Listen to the latest farm news every day at 7:30 and 12:55 over Station WHWL
PHONES 8421 -
8431
Enrollment For
Joint District
Shows 1019 Pupils
On Third Day
Enrollment figures for Dallas-
Borough-Kingston Township schools
on Monday, the third day of school,
show:
Kindergarten, at Dallas Borough,
86, Dallas Borough Elementary
School, 131, Shavertown Elemen-
tary School, 183, Trucksville Ele-
mentary School, 185, Junior-Sen-
ior High School, 434,
The Joint Board of Education an-
ticipated an enrollment in the first
and second grades that would re-
lease one teacher from each grade
for another assignment. Miss Helen
Mills, who has been teaching a first
grade in Shavertown, was re-as-
signed to teach in the Kindergar-
ten. Miss Mills had expressed an in-
terest in teaching a class in the
Kindergarten. She received her
Bachelor of Arts degree from Col-
lege Misericordia and her Master
of Arts degree from Bucknell Uni-
versity.
Miss Bertha M. Sutliff, who had
been teaching third grade in
Trucksville School will be re-as-
signed to teach at one of the other
schools.
Federal lunch program provides
two cents for each bottle of milk
consumed in. the schools and seven
cents additional for each lunch
eaten by a student in the cafeteria.
Milk consumed by pupils on Mon-
day was:
Dallas Borough Elementary
School, 93, Kindergarten at Dallas
Borough, 86 Shavertown Elemen-
tary School, 80, Trucksville Ele-
mentary School, 86, Junior-Senior
High School, 390.
STORE TALK
With Summer work out of
the way, most of us can plan
such sensible things as Dog
Training, Pickerel Fishing,
Hunting Season and other out-
door fun. NOTE—Our Sports
Department can supply you
for the sport of your choice.
MAE Yr
ARCHERY— Deer Hunters
will take to the woods this
fall for the special season Oc-
tober 15 to 27. We- predict
that few deer will fall, but
all hunters will
have a big time.
$12.95 buys a
complete. hunting
outfit with 50 Ib.
Bow at our
Sports Counter.
BASEBALL—Can’t tell you
for sure where to order your
World’s Series Tickets, but
sure can tell you where to
find good baseball right at
home. Just check your local
team—they’ll tell you; or ask
us.
ROOFS— That's something
you better look after before
you take off, for leaks, you
might try our famous MAPLE
CITY Asphalt, Asbestos Coat-"
ing. It'll stop a 14 in. hole—
Don’t reckon you can equal
our buy on 3 in 1 shingles if
you need a new roof. $7.25 a
square for a rugged roof.
ALUMINUM ROOF—Our car-
load didn’t arrive yet, but
we'll soon supply you 24
gauge sheets in all lengths—
Price, just a bit higher than
steel.
CORN HARVESTERS—Elmer
just put his “O:K.” on two
more that are ready to work—
good makes and in good con-
dition—Better use the phone.
BARN EQUIPMENT—Ask for
our book on “MAPLE CITY”
STALLS—We can give you
immediate delivery—the style
you want and rock bottom
price.
Gay-Murray
Co., Inc.
TUNKHANNOCK, PA.
PHONE 5050
As