The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, January 11, 1952, Image 9

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

    "
sr wi Se.
— SN AES i
¥ |
A ——_—
Four Chickens Make
A Lot of Fricassee
Chicken thieves, a little loopy
from New Years, decided it was
all in the family when they raided
Dewey Hoover's chicken coop on
Wednesday and went off with five
plump Rhode Island Reds. Lawr-
ence Dobson is Mrs, Hoover's
brother. It was Mr. and Mrs.
Dobson who decided to have a
post-holiday. dinner on the family.
Fred Swanson, summoned by
Mrs. Hoover, followed the tracks
to the main highway, and applying
principles of deduction, located a
car liberally smeared with blood
and chicken feathers—red ones—
parked outside a house on Trox-
ell's Switch. Following his clues,
he found the chickens simmering
in the pot and escorted the cul-
prits to Justice of the Peace R.
A. Davis. Squire Davis ordered
the prisoners to restore the chick-
ens to their rightful owners, or
replace them with others of sim-
ilar weight and breed.
Distributed By By that time the idea had worn
a little thin, and four chickens
oLD TOLL GATE (one had been dropped outside
2 i the coop) seemed a little too much
Feed Service fricassee for two people.
PURCELL OIL SERVICE
FUEL OIL
‘Dallas 9001-R-16
I$ IT GOOD?
JUST ASK
Give Your Dog a Chance To
Choose Whichever Prepared
Meal Food He Likes Best.
VI LT LE
006
1d 11
FOR THE BEST DEAL -
IN ey Ask for Lal Ray
Phone W-B 2-2144 or Dallas 151-R-7
at MOTOR TWINS
| ®
~ STOCK
REDUCTION
21 Cars Must Be
Sold Regardless Of Costs
———
-
$1695
$1595
$1545
$1445
$1445
$1395]
$1295
51 Ford 4-dr. deluxe, radio and heater
'5( Plymouth (Cranbrook) 4-dr., equip.
’50 Dodge Coronet cl. cpe., rad. & heater
’50 Ford cus. eight 4-dr., rad. & heater
'50 Plymouth deluxe 4-dr., rad. & heater
’50 Chevrolet 2-dr., radio & heater
'’50 Ford deluxe 2-dr. eight cyl., heater
'49 Ford cust. eight, 4-dr., rad. & heater $1195
: B’49 Plymouth deluxe 4-dr., black, heat. $1095
| B’49 Ford deluxe 2-dr., radio & heater = $995
"48 Pontiac 4-dr., radio and heater $1095}
‘AT Ford eight 2-dr., radio & heater. $795
'46 Olds sedanette, 6 cyl., hydramatic $895
'46 Chevrolet 4-dr. A clean car $795
46 Nash club coupe, radio & heater _.. $595
; 42 Chevrolet 4-dr. Runs good $295
{ Bl ’A0 Chevrolet special del, 4-dr. R. & H. 1 owner $325
No 40 Chevrolet club coupe, runs good, looks awful $125
A AAS i hi
wise ee eel a ee ae a ele
/ ; ’39 Chevrolet 2-dr., good work car ............ $150
} Ti 238 Ford 2-dr., very clean ............« uovsnsia $145
Tf rang 0 ei a a $75
| 37 Chevrolet 2-dr.
No Down Payment
Necessary on Pre-war Cars
em ———
ete,
| ne © nce
* IMOTOR TWINS
Our Only
TWO BIG
LOTS
Sma
in
Kingston
it’s
Rutter Ave.
Corner
Market St.
| In
it Wilkes-Barre
> it’s
ty 240
| iS South
~ Main St.
Fo
~WpHONE 2-2144 PHONE 3-2159
{ Bf BOTH LOTS OPEN NITES AND SUNDAYS
THE POST, FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 1952
Has Eye For ‘lke’
SINCE politics are very much
fashion, Terry Angelino, of Phila-
delphia, a staunch supporter of
Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, has
started a new'fad. She has turned
“I Like Ike” buttons into earrings
and also uses one of them monocle-
style, (International Soundphoto)
Streams To Be Stocked
With Trout In Spring
The Pennsylvania Fish Commis-
sion announced that no plantings
of legal trout were made last fall
because of extremely low water
conditions in most streams,
Executive Director C. A. French
state that investigations made by
Fish Commission biologists and
wardens showed that many
streams were dangerously low last
fall and, in extreme cases, stream
beds became nearly dry.
While the fall of 1951 was
marked by unusually low stream
conditions, it is generally true that
streams are less suitable for stock-
ing in the fall than at other per-
iods of the year. Creel census
studies in Pennsylvania and other
states have shown repeatedly that
spring-planted trout give the high-
est returns to the angler.
Mr. C. R, Buller, Chief Fish Cul-
urist, pointed out that in previous
years less than ten percent of the
total annual planting of catchable
trout were released in the fall. He
also assured that streams pre-
viously stocked in the fall will now
receive plantings in the spring.
Bobby Rice To Exhibit
Baby Beef At Farm Show
Robert Rice, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Rice, Ohchard Farm, will
exhibit at Pennsylvania State
Farm Show a baby beef raised
under the auspices of the 4-H
Club. Robert belongs to the Luz-
erne County Baby Beef Club.
Robert will also have on exhibit
an Ayershire heifer, two years old
in April, which went grand cham-
pion in the summer show at
Trucksville in July.
The Rices, father and son, will
go to Harrisburg tomorrow and re-
main there for the week.
Construction Does Not
Interfere With Games
Work on the gymnasium at Leh-
man-Jackson School is progressing
slowly, due to bad weather and
difficulties in synchronizing work
of carpenters and electricians.
Hardwood flooring is laid in the
main auditorium, and plastering is
completed in the new Home Eco-
nomics room.
Basketball schedules have been
arranged so that all games of the
first half of the season will be
played away from home. Practice
is being held in the Dallas Borough
gymnasium. It is hoped that the
gymnasium will be completed in
time for the second half games.
T-BAR-A SAYS:
I've just hit a mighty fine recipe
that I must pass on to you. It’s
CONEJO FRITO A LA MEXI-
CANA. It must be the Spanish
in me, but wait till you hear me
out. Take a 3 lb. T-Bar-A Rab-
bit. Roll each piece in a mix-
ture of 1 tsp. salt, % cup flour,
and 1 tbsp. Chili powder. Brown
meat in % cup hot fat then
reduce heat. Add % cup rice,
1 small chopped onion, 1 green
chopped pepper, 1 cup tomatoes,
1 tsp. Chili powder and 2 cups
of water more or less. Cover
this and allow to simmer until
done—Say, in about 40 minutes
you'll be droolin’ at the mouth
especially if you use a
T-BAR-A
DOMESTIC RABBIT
~ FROM
T-BAR-A RABBITRY
SHAVERTOWN
Phone Dallas 158-R-10
Mrs. Alfred James, Trucksville,
recently received from her son,
Captain Alfred James, a booklet
of letters written by Korean chil-
dren and selected for publication
by the Office of Public Information.
It is entitled, “Letters to Tall
Soldiers from Small Koreans.”
The title originated in the first
of the published letters, where
little Jung Hae Ja, pictured in a
sailor suit, her black hair parted
sedately in the middle, writes,
“You tall soldiers, your names are
different from ours. I think how
hard it must be to fight against
the Chinese Communists. You are
longing for meeting, embracing,
dear ones of your family, daddy,
mummy, wife and babies? I pray
thousand times God may let you
see again the faces of your sons
and daughters at home.”
Lee Hyun Sook writes, “The
scene of Kaesong streets on the
day ‘when you U. N. forces liber-
ated that city shall never be for-
gotten. We rushed to the streets
to welcome’ you and we shouted
at the top of our voices for free-
dom.” Lee Hyun Sook is from
Myungdok Girls’ School. She wears
long pigtails, and her face is fair
and round and pleasant,
Park Yung Hae, a third year
student in Samkwang Primary
School, in Korean garb with her
hair parted neatly on one side and
drawn back behind her ears, pleads
with the tall soldiers to “not be
killed or wounded by the enemy.
If you do, the children in your
home town would not be happy.”
Two High Schools Send
Students To Farm Show
The two high schools in the
Back Mountain area that have an
established Vocational Agriculture
program, Lehman-Jackson and
Dallas-Franklin Township, will
send representatives to the Penn-
sylvania State Farm Show in Har-
risburg next week.
Lehman - Jackson’s delegation
will start Thursday morning at
5:30 in a chartered bus with a ca-
pacity load of forty. Juniors and
seniors from Vocational Agricul-
ture and Home Economics will be
accompanied by Larry Drabick, in-
structor of Agriculture, and Mrs.
Ruth Shellhamer Stolarick, head
of Home Making Department. They
will return Thursday night.
There will be, no exhibits from
Lehman. The students are plan-
ning to observe demonstrations at
the show. .
Dallas-Franklin students will go
in private cars, with ten delegates
from the Vocational Agriculture
Department. Sheldon Mosier, head
of the department, will accompany
them. They will stay two days,
Thursday and Friday.
Johnson's Luncheonette
Bt Pike's Creek Entered
Mrs. Louise Johnson’s Luncheo-
nette at Pikes Creek was robbed
late Saturday night, sometime after
2 A. M. Investigation by Fred
Swanson, Harveys Lake Chief of
Police, and John Lukavitch, his as-
sistant and a resident of nearby
Sweet Valley, established that can-
dy and tobacco had been taken,
and merchandise wantonly strewn
about the place,
This burglary shows the same
earmarks as that of October 7,
when DeRemer’s store was entered
and the same type of merchan-
dise stolen. In that case the cash
register, not yielding to tamper-
ing, was removed bodily with its
eight dollars contents, and has not
vet been located.
SAVE
ON THESE
Good Value
USED CARS
35
1935 Dodge
Coupe
1936 DeSoto
Sedan
1940 Chevrolet
2 Dr. Sedan
1941 Chevrolet
4 Dr. Sedan
1940 Buick
4 Dr. Sedan
1940 Plymouth
4 Dr. Sedan
1942 Oldsmobile $395
2 Dr. Sedan
G. M. A! C. Terms
City Chevrolet Co.
Market St., Gates to Thomas
Streets,
Kingston Phone 7-1171
690 HAZLE ST., NEWTOWN
PHONE 3-6736
THE PLACE TO BUY
$295
OK USED CARS
Booklet Of Letters To Tall Soldiers
From Small Koreans Say Thanks
She goes on to say, “My home is
in Seoul. Don’t shoot artillery
shell on my house. Only kill the
bad men. I shall thank you, and
when I grow up I shall give you
gifts for you have not destroyed
my house.” She ends her letter
with, “After you win the war and
go back home, please return and
bring children with you. We will
welcome you with your flags in our
hands.”
Moon Chang Wha is a boy with
a military cap. He attends Kyung-
nam Middle School. He says, “We
don’t worry about having outdoor
classes because we know the sol-
diers need our school buildings.
* #% * We are sure that when the
U. N. flag will fly over Mt. Paiktoo
on the northern border, peace will
be restored in Korea. We are de-
termined to keep resolute in re-
sisting Communist invasion * * *
twenty refugees are staying with
me at my home. How wonderful
it must be for refugees to go back
home. * * * A few days ago I saw
an officer give clothing and stock-
ings to a waif on the streets. I
blessed him whose sympathy for
the dirty little boy was so hearten-
ing to my mind.”
Kim Soo Whan says, “Dear
soldiers of the U. N. forces, we
are guarding the home front. We
are defending our homes in co-
operation with the national police
and national guard, wiping out
Communists from our villages. Sit-
ting at my desk, I wonder who
might read this letter from me
and pray that he may return home
victorious.”
“May brightness come soon and
shine over us,” prays Ahn Jung Ai,
from Holiness Church, Suhmyun,
Pusan. “I am now staying at a
refugee camp in Pusan. My fam-
ily is living on rice meal. I am
anxious to go back to my home
in Seoul, but I don’t worry about
my house being destroyed by
bombs. Bomb as you wish, so that
the bad men may be wiped out of
this land.”
PURCELL OIL SERVICE
FUEL OIL
Dallas 9001-R-16
EXPERT
PLUMBING
HEATING
Phone Dallas 284-R-3
WILLIS IDE
DALLAS
65 ELIZABETH ST.
_ PAGE NINE
answer to a request for letters ad-
dressed to men and officers of the
United Nations, but only a few
could be printed from ‘the deluge
of replies.
The children pictured in the
booklet are as appealing as any
child in the United States. Their
faces shine with earnestness. Hun-
dreds of letters were received in
You Better ‘Take A Look At
This One!
1941 CHRYSLER
WINDSOR 4-DR. SEDAN
“Duke” Isaacs
USED CAR LOT
Main Hgwy. 4 PHONE 920
PRICES SLASHED
The Best Guarantee In Town!
1950 CHEVROLET 1948 CHEVROLET
_ 2Dr.Styline $1395 Town Sedan
1949 CHEVROLET 194% CHEVROLET
2-Dr. Fleetline $1195 Town Sedan
1949 FORD 1946 CHEVROLET
2-Dr. Sedan $995 Town Sedan
Join The Thousands Of Satisfied
Customers At BONNER CHEVROLET CO.
: EVERY CAR WINTERIZED
Many Others—Open Eves. and Sunday—Easy G.M.A.C. Terms
18 MONTHS TO PAY
BONNER CHEVROLET CO.
USED CAR LOT
662 Wyoming Avenue, Kingston—Phone 8-0319
"(Ve timed it to go oft
on Vahuaty (qth so | wont
miss the new (452
© $975
$865
$735
Remind yourself to see it at
W. E. BOSTON CHEVROLET CO.
Pikes Creek - Hunlocks Creek Phone 8523
or
weet c/o.
99
THE SHOW DOWN WAY
CARS Costing APPR
$100 | s300 |
OXIMATELY
ORIFLOW RIDE $1000
More
123% INCH
WHEELBASE
“"KNEE-LEVEL” 5
(Corbin he Foss ATS
Front and Rear)
EASY-ENTRY DOORS
{Door ing Height)
FULL HEADROOM
{Rear Seat )
GET FREE DODGE “SHOW DOWN”"BOOR ON CAR VALUE
Here's proor .
Way to judge car value.
facts, not fancy claims.
The “Show Down” Way lets you compare
the ’52 Dodge with cars costing hundreds
of dollars more . . . for roominess, visibility,
. . free proof . . . that the
exciting new 52 Dodge makes your money
worth more. We call it the “Show Down”
riding comfort, safety. It’s the sensible way,
the money-saving way, to decide.
Come in the first chance you get. See
and drive the big, beautiful, new *52 Dodge.
See . . . compare . . . discover . . . you could
still pay hundreds of dollars more for a car
and not get all the extra-value features this
great new Dodge gives you.
You get straight
Specifications and equipment subject to change without notice.
2 DODGE
r———
NOW ON DISPLAY
L. L. RICHARDSON
: 50 Lake Street, Dallas, Pa.