PAGE TEN The TRADING POST a POST CLASSIFIED AD 5 THE PLACE TO GET | RESULTS QUICKLY AND CHEAPLY PHONE DALLAS 300 ® FOUR CENTS PER WORD ‘e 75c MINIMUM For Sale— OIL-HEATING unit capable of heat- ing three rooms. Good condition. Call Ringston 8-1250. |18 YOUR TRUCK, tractor or euto- mobile using oil? Your mechanic or garage will recommend SEALED POWER guaranteed piston rings, COMPLETE MACHINE SHOP. | STULL BROTHERS, KINGSTON. THE POST, FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 1952 Upholstering— FINE OLD furniture made sturdy and freshly upholstered. Wide range of Colonial and modern pat- terns. Reasonable prices. Excellent workmanship. Write or phone John Curtis Kingston, 7-5636, 210 Lath- rop Street, Kingston. Coal and Hauling— GLEN ALDEN COAL . delivered promptly. Call 910 Back Moun- tain Lumber and Coal Co. PEDIGREED black cocker spaniel, male, full grown, house broken, good child's pet. Phone Dallas 327-R-9. HONEY, both comb and extracted. Reasonable. W. C. Roushey, 58 Franklin St., Shavertown. 1949 MASTER Frigidaire, 9 cu. ft. $200. Excellent condition, owner needs larger refrigerator. Dallas 599-R-7, very good condition, with - horsepower motor. = $40. Dallas 267-R-12, APPLE CIDER, cooking apples, small eating apples. Sunday afternoons. Route 29 at Loyalville. Phone 8648. BALED Timothy; hay. Cragg Herd- man, Kunkl¢. Phone ' Dallas 410-R-8. ; : ANTIQUE cherry drop-leaf table, six legs, excellent condition. As- bestos pad to fit. Phone Dallas 378. VIOLIN in excellent condition, Call Richard Oliver, 235-R-7; GOSS MANOR, a very attractive selection of -new ranch style homes, 2 and 3 bedrooms, large re- stricted lot, attached garage. Priced $11,500 to $25,000. Monthly pay- ments $59.39 to $82.33. Lloyd A. McHenry. Phone Kingston 7-8912. QUALITY BABY Chicks, U. 8. Polorum clean. N. H. Reds, Christie strain, order in advance. Hilbert’'s Hatchery, Beaumont. Phone Harveys Lake 3422. 12 NEW RANCH style homes under construction, 2 and 3 bed-. rooms, large lots, priced $11,000 to $25,000 with terms. Lloyd Mc- Henry, Kingston 78912. LUMBER, stove wood, fireplace: “logs for sale. S. J. Ward, Har-} veys Lake 4000, eR FERN Knoll Cemetery, _ six-grave lots, $275-$400. ‘ Perpetual care. J. F. Besecker, Dallas 536-R-2. . |. ANTIQUE chairs, old, old, Hitch- cock and different styles, with new fibre rush seats, newly de-- corated, Frank Jackson, Pole 172, Harveys Lake, ‘Phone ‘H. L. 265. MIXED pick-up, baled hay. Nesbitt, Farm. William Eckert, phone 458-R-16. : : 6 GRAVE lots, Eysrgres®, Ceme- \ tery. Will sacrifice. T. B. Bun- Rery Sr., Fernbrook’ R. 5% a: TIME TO think about that blue- ~ bird. Frank Jatkson, Harveys Lake, Pole ‘17,2 has bluebird houses that will interest the fus- siest house-hunter. Plenty of suet and peanut ‘butter feeders in stock. Spring is Just around the corner. pf iF Whom To Call— TWENTY-FOUR "hour ' servicé' ‘on auto tags. James Davenport, Dal- las 8597, will go to Harrisburg March 17 to purchase tags. BURROWES aluminum storm win- dows and screens; aluminum storm doors; Gardner radiator en- closures. C. S. Nicol. ‘Phone 324R16 or 106R2. T Phone! | REFRIGERATOR, washer, .y anteed. .§ service, Ide’s Fruit Stand’ FRIGIDAIRE PRODUCTS — ABC, Maytag, Easy washers, Bengal, Prizer, Magic Chef. Boyd R. White, Appliance and = Hardware Store, phone Dallas 568-R-3. PLUMBING * and heating. Gould pumps our specialty. DeLaval Milkers, = Jamesway Barn and Poultry equipment. Westinghouse Farm and home appliances. Phone Mubhlenburg, 2331. Rural Supply : '| Co. Shickshinny. SHOPMASTER 12 inch drill press, electric motor repairs. All work guar- Bulford’s Refrigeration 122 Main street, Dallas. Phone Dallas 568-R-7. ‘WELL DRILLING a specialty. In business over 40 years. All work guaranteed. R. B. Shaver and Son, Dallas R. D. I. Phone H. L. 3156. SEPTIC TANKS, reinforced con- crete, buy the best. Costs less in the long run. C. E. German and Son, Kingston 8-1448 or your local supply dealer. FUEL OILS, Atlantic Products. Meter Service to insure you of || accuracy. Montross Oil Company. 436 Main Street, Luzerne. Phone 7-2361, BOTTLED GAS, prompt service to your home or business place. It's cheap, clean and convenient. Complete line gas ranges, water and space heaters. Harold Ash, Shavertown, Phone 409-R-7, BOTTLE GAS—Metered gas is re- liable, convenient, economical. Call Cutten Gas 30 W. 8th street, Wyoming. Phone Wyo. 327. LAWNMOWERS Sharpened. Ma- chine shop work. Power mowers and’ garden tractors. . Garinger Machine Service. Phone 416-R-10. RADIO and Television is our busi- ness. Call 286-R-9 for service with the most modern equipment. Trucksville Radio Service. PLUMBING and heating for new homes or old. Oil burner sales, service and installation. = Water pump’ ‘service.” Phone Willis Ide, Dallas 284-R-3. r 1 Building— BUILDING Contractor. New homes, ' remodelling and roofing. Call M. Quare and Sons, Dallas 390-R-7. LOW COST homes built to your specifications, as low as $7700. Work started immediately. Esti- mates without ‘charge. Phone Whitesell Brothers, Dallas 416-R-7. Sanitary Service— SEPTIC TANKS, cesspools and privy vaults cleaned. J. A. Sing- +] er, City Scavenger, 137 Dagobert street, Wilkes-Barre, Dial 3-4529. Animals Wanted— CATTLE of all kinds, also horses. Call Wilkes-Barre 3-9147 and ask for Art. Piano Tuning— PIANO TUNING and repairing. Muhlenburg 2152. Oscar White- sell, Hunlock’s Creek, RFD 1. DALLAS, Z OR NIGHT. ts convenient! FIRST NATIONAL BANK Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation PENNA. i iam Haas, Harveys Lake, 3656. GENERAL HAULING—wood, coal, freight, etc. Ashes and garbage removed. Prompt, dependable serv- ice. Norti Berti, Dallas 277-R-2. Real Estate For Sale— LEHMAN CENTER, 8 room house, | 548-R-2. LOYALVILLE, 13% acre farm, seven rooms, heat, light, water, school bus, macadam road, some out build- ings. Eugene Gordon. Dial 8-342. REAL estate and insurance ser- vice. Local agent, J. Besecker, Dallas 536-R-2. Wanted To Buy ALL kinds livestock, pigs cows, calves, sheep. Call me for best prices, Alfred Miller, licensed dealer, 127-R- 14, Dallas R. F. D. 3. CLEAN COTTON RAGS. Highest prices. Cannot use silk or wool- ens. Must be without buttons. The Dallas Post. For Rent— APARTMENT, six rooms, bath, hardwood . floors, modern im- provements. Available, March.” Wil- DOUBLE and single rooms, Hunts- ville Drive. Phone weekdays after 5 o'clock or weekends. Dallas 251-R-4, Found— TWO KEYS on chain in Dallas. Miniature license number 3 SM 5. Owner identify at Dallas Post and pay for ad. Legal— NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that letters of administration in the Estate of John Carl Fleming, late of 63 Main Street, Dallas, Pa., have been granted to Robert Lewis Flem- ing, Attorney-at-Law, 21 South Franklin Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. All persons indebted to said estate | are requested to make payment, and those having claims or demands to present the same without delay to the administrator named. NOTICE Estate of William R. Neely, late of the Township of Lehman, County of Luzerne and State of Pennsyl- vania, deceased. Letters testamen- tary thereon have been granted to the undersigned, and all persons having claims or demands against the estate of the said decedent are | hereby requested to make known the same, and all persons indebted to said decedent are requested to make payment without delay to Walter M. Neely, Executor, R. D. 5, Bloomsburg, Penna. EDWIN SHORTZ Attorney NOTICE NOTICE is hereby given that the Board of Supervisors of the Town- ship of Lake, Luzerne County, Penn- sylvania, intends to adopt a resolu- tion ‘at a regular meeting to be held on Saturday, April 5, 1952, at 10 AM. in the Township Fire Building, Lake Township, imposing a per capita tax in the sum of Three Dol- lars ($3.00) per year on each and every individual resident in said Township who is of the age of twenty-one years or more, for the year 1952, and every year there- after until rescinded for general revenue purpose. Said. resolution will provide for the collection of said tax and for the enforcement of collection of: said tax. The Board anticipates $2,025.00 per year from said source, which is needed to balance the budget without levying an exces- sive real estate levy. By Order of the Board of Supervisors. E. E. Booth, Secretary ESTATE NOTICE Notice is hereby given that Let- ters of Administration on the Estate of Charles F. Coombs have been granted to the undersigned. All per- sons having claims or demands against said Estate are requested to make known the same, and all per- sons indebted to said Estate are re- quested to make payment to the undersigned without delay: Mrs. May Coombs, 91 Gilligan Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, Admin- istratrix, or William A. Valentine, Esq., 730 Miners National Bank Building, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsyl- vania, Attorney. NOTICE Notice is hereby given that appli- cation will be made to the Court of Common Pleas, Luzerne County on Friday, March 14, 1952, at 10 o'clock AM, under the “Non-profit Corporation Law,” approved May 5, 1933, P.L. 289, and amendments thereto, for a charter of an in- tended corporation to be called “The Old Plugs’ Sportsmen's Club.” Purpose and objective of this cor- poration are to maintain a commu- | all improvements. Phone Dallas | _ nity interest in betterment of good- will and sportsmanship; to encour- age social and sports activities in the community through facilities of the club; to take and hold land; to recéive donations, gifts, or devices of the same; and to buy, sell, grant, bargain and convey land or real property. Said application for charter has been filed in the office of the Pro- thonotary of Luzerne County. EDWARD D. MORGAN, Attorney. NOTICE Sealed bids will be received until March 22 for the construction in Jackson Township of a Fire House for Jackson Township Volunteer Fire Department. Plans and specifi- cations can be obtained at the home of Louis Wilcox. Edgar Lashford, secretary Trucksville, RFD ESTATE OF HATTIE M. HONTZ, deceased Late of Huntington Township Letters of Administration having been granted, debtors will make payment and creditors present claims without delay to Milton D. Hontz, Administrator, Shickshinny RR. D. 1, Luzerne County, Penn- sylvania. Bedford, Waller, Darling & Mitchell Attorneys LEGAL NOTICE The proposed budget for Franklin Township has been prepared and is available for public inspection at the home of the secretary, Willard Arm- strong, Dallas R. D. 3. Noxen The firemen decided to buy the Fire Hall from Mr, and Mrs. Earl Crispell at their February meeting. The hall can then be used for parties and public gatherings. Dogs and cats are being very well confined since rabies is spreading so rapidly. Children have also been kept close to home. Mrs, William Keiper has been ill at her home for the past three weeks. She is somewhat improved. Noxen Native Dies In Philadelphia Mrs. Inez Wyant Kabusk, native of Noxen, but resident of West Wyoming since marriage, died in Philadelphia last Thursday - while visiting her sisters, Mrs. Thomas Smith and Mrs. George Space. Mrs. Kabusk, 46, was stricken with a heart attack. The body was sent to Nulton's Funeral Home, where services were conducted by Rev. Ruth Underwood ' on Monday, followed by burial in the family plot in Beaumont Ceme- tery. Mrs, Kabusk was a daughter of the late Arthur and Anna Newberry Wyant. She is survived by her husband Thomas; five children, one of whom is with the armed forces in Korea, Corporal Thomas Kabusk Jr.; Patsy, Betty, Paul and James, at home; The Interesting Experience Of Being Hospitalized By EDWARD H, KENT Have you ever been sick for a few weeks? = To. say hothing of months—Well, it's no fun but it is interesting. "You just don’t feel right, you go to the doctor, that just makes sense, Don't try to doctor yourself. You very seldom hear of a man acting as his own lawyer, and if he does he gets in a jam. All right, the Doc looks you over, pokes you a’ few times where you don't like to be poked, asks a lot of personal questions, puts a blow-out plate on your arm, takes your blood pressure, sticks some needles in you for blood tests, has a few X-Ray pictures taken, all suitable for fram- ing—and comes up with the verdict that you have the XYZ's. Oh boy, you think—XYZ's—I've only heard of three people who ever had that—two in New York and one in. Moosic—I wonder if this doc knows much about the XYZ's. Be- fore the week is out you hear of two dozen people who have had the same thing and you feel deflated. You are no longer a medical curi- osity. Perhaps ‘the doctor does know about it after all The doctor hands you a prescrip- tion—“Take these pills, do so and so, don't eat anything you like, come back in ten days.” In ten days you go back, feeling like the end of a misspent life. The doc looks you over again and tact- fully suggests that you would have better care, be less of a burden to your family, and get well sooner if you went to the hospital for a few days. Good night, you say to yourself, that will cost me as much as my income tax. Well, it won't, especially if you have hospital insurance as over half the people in this country do. There is no place where you get as much for your money as in a well-run hospital, especially when a big per centage is insurance company money. All right, you decide you will take the doc’s advice and go to the hos- pital. Now there will be some things about it you may not like. There are probably some things you would not like about the newly renovated White House if you occu- pied it after 1953—but don’t scream to heaven about things for the first fifteen or twenty minutes, give the place a chance. Don’t lean too heavily on the buzzer for the nurse for the first few minutes. You know that busi- ness about catching more flies with sugar than with vinegar? That goes for nurses; too. It would be very difficult to find a more conscientious, hard-working, pleasant group of people than the general duty and student nurses in a hospital. Just give them a chance. The bed—sure it's high. You climb on a stool, crawl in, and find it's very comfortable. Every time the doctor drops in to see you he and the two sisters mentioned | carefully kicks the stool under the middle of the bed where you can’t above. 10 E. CENTER ST. April Showers Bring May Flowers and LEAKING ROOFS Protection with Certain-teed SHINGLES Complete Stock of all kinds of Roofing Materials Shnverrom LUMBER CO. PHONE DALLAS 42 reach it. This is known as “Medical about it. Then there is the very important matter of gelatin. It seems to be the cornerstone of at least two meals a day in the hospital. There is red gelatin, orange gelatin, blue gelatin, green gelatin, and the chemists are now working on a rainbow gelatin. Now if you are not passionately fond of gelatin, don’t raise -er- don't kick about it for a couple of days. Then get word to the diet kitchen, tactfully, that you think the gelatin in that hospital is the most delicious you ever tasted, but too much gelatin is not good for fallen arches, and much as you love it you must ease up a bit, and could they substitute some ordinary ice cream ? If you work it right, you might get away with it. Doctors, nurses, administrators, surgeons, pathologists, and firemen are all a necessary part of the hos- pital team, but the quarterback who calls the signals and makes the place click is the dietitian. A poor dietitian can ruin a hospital before your incision is healed. The great thrill that comes from being sick is to find how many won- derful, marvelous friends you have. You never realized it before, and it almost makes being sick worth while—if it doesn’t last too long. Your friends will go to no end of trouble to come to see you, send you flowers and books, write you letters, send Calvert and Old Crow, send plants, get-well cards and candy. This last is very welcome. I never heard of a nurse who hated candy. So many people do so many kind things for you that you are just overwhelmed, It's a very interesting experience. Try it. J. T. JETER Registered Engineer Engineering and Land Surveying Phone Dallas 174-R-3 Fresh ROASTED 7 PEANUTS 8a: -THE-SHELL CAVE’'S STORE IDETOWN Phone H-L 4561 2 lbs. Ethics" and nothing can be done To Choose All-Stars The Dallas Post is mailing its ‘All Star ballots to the respective high schools in the Back Mountain League in preparation for selecting #s fourth annual All-Star squad. The varsity teams of each of the five schools will select ‘their top choices of players on teams other than their own and these choices will be com- puted by the Post’s Staff. The com- plete results Of the balloting mlong ‘with pictures of the top five will appear in a subsequent issue of the Post. SAFETY VALVE (Continued from Page 8) the many dog owners who always allow their dog to roam at large perhaps causing hours of pain and agony and jeopardizing the lives of their pets daily due to the heavy traffic on all streets not to men- tion annoying their neighbors and doing damage to plants ete. And even now, with the terrible rabid fox situation one sees dogs unleashed. Wouldn’t it be nice if people who do not love or value their pets would find homes for them or if that is too much trouble have them put to sleep? And wouldn’t it be nice if the Btate could find a way and means to help the Humane Societies other than by having the agents turn in dog ears as the means of helping maintain the Societies? Then the agents would also have more time available to attend to the duties for which the Humane Societies were founded. Just went into a huddle with Bill and we have come to the con- clusion that, old age or no old age we don’t like not having colts to look forward to as we are anxiously awaiting Spring, so we hope to ob- tain some Pony brood mares and expect to be able to announce the arrival of new Pony foals next spring to delight the hearts of the many children who come each year to see our colts. Ann Stoeckert Mountain Evergreen Stables FOR RENT | furnished rooms with kitchen and garage privileges if desired. Huntsville Drive. Phone Dallas 251-R-4 after 5 o’cleck at weekends PLUMBING For Prompt, Dependable Phone Dallas 426-R-16 HARRY A. PEIFFER| STERLING AVE. & HEATING ASK FOR = fresh - killed daily. Treat your family or guests this weekend to a tasty meal of good old fried chicken. Give ’em napkins and let 'em dig right in with both hands . . . Emily Post says you don’t have to use forks. And if you want to serve chicken with the finest taste stop in here — ours are FRYERS ROASTERS STEWERS Combination @® Breasts PHONE 58 82c 1b. ® Backs and Necks, 2 Ibs. 28¢ Trucksville Mill Poultry Shop Oven - dressed 65; 1b N. Y. Dressed 51c 1b. Combination STANLEY MOORE, owner Listen to “LITTLE BILL PHILLIPS” Show WBAX Mon. thru Fri. 2 :30 to 4:00 p.m. T b