JB Virginia Lee All Our Markets Will Be OPEN TUESDAY and FRIDAY TILLY P. M. i Saturday, Monday and Wednesday v Til 6 P. M. CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY FROZEN FOODS For Your Thanksgiving Feast IDEAL Whole Strawberries 15 oz. Pkg. 39 A Delicious Dessert With Cake or Ice Cream Ideal Garden Fresh Peas 7a 23¢ Ideal Asnaragus Spears 5 39¢ Ideal Broccoli Spears o> 24¢ Pensupreme—Popular Varieties ICE CREAM 2 re. § 3c st $1.00 r Lo — Thanksgiving ~ LAYER CAKE : is Each 9G “A Delicious Chocolate Cake With Butter Cream Icing and Generously Sprinkled With Shredded Cocoanut. Try One kw FRUIT CAKES --%. B 1 Pound 2 Pound 1.89 For Turkey Filling Supreme Stuffing Bread = 1 4° 5 Pound 98c 4.49 Tha Quality Foods At Low Prices They’re all there—real quality foods . . . appetizers, entrees, side dishes, relishes, salad fixin’s and desserts. Yes, Acme Super Markets should be your “One-Stop” Shopping Center for Thanksgiving. Save time as well as money—Shop the Acme Way. PORK CHOPS THE POST, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1951 nksgiving dinner ood Delicacies. . . Lancaster Brand, Broad Breasted TURKEYS ys 5 1 Cc i 5 7 C Under Dressed and Drawn EVISCERATED TURKEYS 63 EGY Tender Plump LONG ISLAND DUCKS Good or Choice, “Ideal Trim” Standing RIB ROAST Center Cut wb. 39¢ wv. 79¢ . 9c Cut from young Corn Fed Porkers DAIRY FOODS WISCONSIN Mild Cheese Lb. 53¢ Blue Seal, Rindless Domestic Mild Cheese Tangy Stella Blue Cheese Glendale Club Cheese Food Lt. §9¢ . §8¢ 2 wre 83¢ White American Cheese 5. *1-'3 “Kraft’s REPP-U-TATION Sweet Apple Cider Ss 59 Extra Fancy i Roasting Chickens Over 4 As 49¢ Under 4 So 39¢ rents, Se HAMS se Le. 59¢ Local Dressed Frying CHICKENS CUT UP PARTS LEGS & BREASTS tb. 79¢ NECKS & BACKS . 19¢ WINGS vw. 45¢ | LIVERS ... 69¢ A Must With Turkey - OCEAN SPRAY 4 CRANBERRY SAUCE = 16 oz. Cans 35¢c A Tasty Treat—Ideal Cranberry Sauce cr 29€ . 35¢ Whole or Jellied = Calif. Fruit Cocktail = 38¢ Calif. Cling Peaches én 33¢ Grapefruit Sections on 216 iT Ideal Crushed Pineapple The Choicest Of Fruits And Vegetables eper GRAPES ~~ 3 29° fits ORANGES ~~ 2 «= 49° Red Ripe U.S. No.1 Golden Maryland Sweet POTATOES 3-29 2- 29° Wared RUTAS ~~ * Vf Golden Yellow RIPE BANANAS Jun CRANBERRI Melntosh A P P L E S 4 Ibs. 29° Juicy, Seedless Florida GRAPEFRUIT 3 29° Yellow, Solid Cooking ONIONS Imported Hallowi DATES ES «25° 325° 19° Acme's Gigantic ARISTAAR Birt OFFER 2 NEW CHEVROLET SEDANS 14 COLUMBIA BICYCLES 10—$5.00 FOOD CERTIFICATES NOTHING TO BUY—NO STRINGS ATTACHED FREE REGISTRATION BLANKS TO EVERYONE Register each time you enter an Acme Super Market or an Amer- ican Store from now until December 24. Drawings will be held at the end of each week’s business for two bicycles and 10!$5.00 Food Certificates. Two Grand Prize Winners will each receive a 2-Door Chevrolet Special Sedan at the close of the 7th Week. Weekly winners are also eligible to compete for the Grand Prize. Employees of American Stores Co. and their families may not par- ticipate for the prizes. PALMOLIVE | BATH SIZE 2:«=25¢C & ge 2 10c Octagon Granulated Soap | - Lge. 30c¢c a 3 Pk ; ko ne. 31C Drei | @w72¢ o 30c | STERLING SALT wyze | A |W) WE fle | 9% | 5¢ PAGE SEVEN Beaumont By Mrs. William A, Austin Phone H. L. 3424 We appreciated the interest shown by the following who visited school during Education Week: Mrs. Harry Sweppenheiser, Mrs, Elmer - Boice, Mrs. Earl Johnson, Mrs. Charles Smith, Mrs. John Lewis, Mrs. Walter Bartlett, Mrs. Job Dietz, Mrs. Elmer Daley, and Mrs. Hayner. Mr. and Mrs. Emory Straley en- joyed last weekend with their son, Carl, at Sampson, N. Y., where he is a member of the Air Force. Edward Lewis, Lyle Crispell, and Margaret Gunton represented our high school in the Wyoming Coun- ty Band while Carol Millard, Jean- ette Dymond, Audrey Shupp, Alyce Jane Patton, Gladys Jones, Charles Lewis, Janet Traver, Phyllis May, and Richard Hobbs were members of the Wyoming County Choral Group at the music Festival at Tunkhannock, November 15. All the schools in Wyoming County par- ticipated. The students of fifth and sixth grades handled the surprise birth- day party for their teacher, Mrs. Wm. Arch Austin, with great ease and ability for they helped bake and decorate the birthday cakes in the school cafeteria kitchen! This was the menu enjoyed by the school as the “Thanksgiving Dinner”’— Turkey with dressing and giblet gravy, mashed potatoes, rolls, peas, cranberry sauce, celery sticks, milk, and pumpkin pie. Much credit is due Mrs. Raymond Denmon and Miss Florence Frear who do such a good job in the preparation of the tasty meals and to the faculty who plan, order, and manage the program. Have you found time to count your blessings,—then have a truly “Happy Thanksgiving” ? It is with regret that we learned the John Cowans plan to move to Maryland. We know they will make new friends, but we hope they come back to see their old ones. Best wishes, Cowans!!! Sweet Valley Miss Bess Klinetob, Dallas 8-624 Friends of Rev. and Mrs. Ira Button surprised the couple on their forty-fifth wedding anniversary, with a party in the Christian Church parlors Saturday night. Gifts included a Sunbeam Electric Mixer. Present were: Mr. and Mrs. Day- ton Long, Mr. and Mrs. K. L. Straub, David and Ruth Walter S. Rennie, Robert Black, Mr. and Mrs. John Black, Mr. and Mrs. Craig Herdman, Mrs. William Rennie, Mr. and Mrs. George Klenotic, Mrs. Olive Gilette, Jacqueline Benson, Mrs. Edward Cragle, Gertrude, and Frederick. Jay Long, Mr. and Mrs. Loren Dodson, Timothy Dean Shaw; Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Hann, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Henry, Mr. and Mrs. William Shaw, Mr. and Mrs, Clayton Ed- wards, Ronald Lanning, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Fred- erick Adams, Mrs. Harriet Edwards, Joyce Loren, Mr. and Mrs. John Long, with children Gloria, Dean, and Wilma June. Janice Kitchen, Mr. and Mrs. Cal- vin Hosier, Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Bradley, Mrs, Raymond Shaw, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. James Hutchinson, Ray Shaw, Mrs, Sarah Cole, Mrs. Sarah Rob- erts, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Mahoney, with Daniel and Dennis, Thomas, Robert and Rodney; Mrs. Russell Kitchen, Shirley Kitchen, and Bess Klinetob. Noxen By Mrs. Earl Beahm Phone H. L. 4495 Carl Auvil has purchased a new car. He expects to retire from Armour Leather Company where he has been bookkeeper for a num- ber of years. Mrs. Wilson Harding suffered a stroke recently and is bedridden. Although she has not been well for some time, she has been able to do her own work. ‘ A bus will leave Noxen for Wilkes Barre every Thursday and ‘Saturday night at 5 p.m. and return at 9 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Winner of Washington, D. C., were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs, Francis Belles. £ Mrs. Ora Bean and her mother are spending a few days in Sctan- ton. Mrs. Viola Kovolick and Mrs. Beulah VanCampen spent Sunday with the former’s father, Charles Sickler at Centermoreland. Floyd Diamond was squeezed be- tween two cars at his work at Armour Leather Company and ad- mitted to the hospital last week. Willard Prynn Completes Dental Technical Course Williard Hugh Prynn, grandson of Mrs. Daisy Prynn, Carverton, graduated from United States Naval Dental Technicians School, com- pleting his course at Great Lakes October 29. He is stationed at Bainbridge, Maryland. : Willard, known hereabouts ds Billy, moved from Carverton six years ago, when his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Prynn, located in Joliet, Ill. So it was Joliet High School that Bill attended instead of Kingston Township.