ow EE I { THE POST, FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1952 PAGE ELEVEN Pvt. John L. Bronson Reaches Japan Pvt. John L. Bronson, son of Mrs. Beulah Bronson, Ruggles Hollow is in Japan, with possibility of orders for the Korean front. Bronson has been in the service for a year, training at Fort Jackson, South Carolina. He has just been John was educated at Lake Town- ship school and attended Mansfield State Teachers College for a time. For a year he was Dairy Herd In- spector for Wyoming [County. Hope you get your paper regu- larly, John. We're trying. More states in the United States have names which originated from Indian words than from any other sent overseas. language. Richard H. Disque Funeral Service DALLAS, PA. Efficient Considerate Dignified Friendly Recommendation from families served. Phone Dallas 474-13 DAIRY FEED TIOGA 16% AND 14% PROTEIN DAIRY FEEDS Pasture season is here — Make more summer milk — Feed Tioga 16% or 14% Protein on early pasture. Help your cows maintain body condition and more milk. DEVENS MILLING COMPANY A. C. DEVENS, Owner PHONE 200—DALLAS, PA. Pennies That Teach The pennies insurance costs not only provides for financial protec- tion, but also teaches our young the value of foresight. It Can Happen Anytime— C. WAYNE GORDON Local Agent—Farm Bureau Mutual Auto Insurance Co. Main Highway, Shavertown Phone ‘B57 THESE WOMEN! By d’Alessio “A fine place for a couple of schoolteachers to pick for a vacation!” Reports Over 400 Pounds Donated Library Auction Meat Committee Over 400 pounds of meat has been promised the hand working meat committee for the annual Back Mountain Memorial Library [Auc- tion. [Solicitors have contacted all Back Mountain stores, and some meat has come in through other committees. An unexpected donation of ten pounds was reported through David Schooley, gift of ‘George Dean, Shrine View. Cash donations of over $100 will make possible purchase of still more meat, if the crowd warrants it. Mrs. (Clarence Butler heads the meat committee, with Mrs. Francis Ambrose and Mrs. Wiliam Klisch co- chairmen. Assisting in solicitation are Mrs. Robert Hale, Mrs. Ralph Flannigan, Mrs. [Sheldon Evans, FARMERY NIGHT MARKET Pierce St. KINGSTON (Adjacent To’ The Railroad) Fresh Strawberries ednesievs 9230 pm. Wednesdays Fridays 102-4-6-8-10 SHOP Wilkes-Barre's Finest Furniture Store For Best Values WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD Our Policy— 0 If you can buy the same furniture anywhere in Lu- zerne County, regardless of Extra sales or factory offers we Savings will refund the difference Guaranteed plus 6%. FREE PARKING IN REAR | "FURNITURE CO. SOUTH MAIN ST. W.B. OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT" Read the Classified Column CLOSED June 30th fo July Tth HECK DRY CLEANING Harveys Lake Highway and Mrs. Robert Evans. Mexican sauce will be made as it was last year in, the Dallas-Franklin Township school kitchen, with Mrs. W. B. Allen in charge. The recipe is the one used by Mrs. Constanza Weir, Mary Weir's mother, now too ill to superintend. Use of the school kitchen is made possible by Mrs. Raymond Kuhnert. Ice-cream, donated by Al Bow- man, is in charge of Mrs. Charles Wheaton Lee. Mrs. Robert Bachman handles baked beans. Mrs. W. H. Derolf is chairman of solicitation for potato salad. Mrs. Charles Nuss and Mrs. Alden Wiagner have lined up donations of coffee. Miss Agnes Gregson will have charge of iced tea, something new this year. though suggested on many previous occasions. Two coolers have been secured, to insure cold drinks. Mrs. Donld Clark will have charge of procurement of paper articles for serving; Mrs. Arthur [Culver of sup- plies such as silverware. Mrs. John Girvan will make signs for the stand. Mrs. Fred Eck and Miss Patricia Reynolds, chairmen of workers, will announce their committee. Mrs. Walter Elston is lining up the dairies for both plain and choco- late milk, and reports excellent co- operation. [She is assisted by Mrs. Stanley Davies, Jr. General chairman of refreshments is Mrs. Ralph Dixon, co-chairmen are Mrs. Dan Robinhold and Mrs. Milford Shaver. Mrs. Dixon says that her com- mittee has been working since early in 'April, with all workers appointed by the time of the Library Auction dinner early in May. Though the auction does not start until 6:30 on the first day, July 10, the refreshment stand will be open for business early enough to handle the crowd. Kingston Twp. WESLEYAN CIRCLE Wesleyan (Circle of Shavertown Methodist Church met recently at the home of Mildred Edwards. Those present were Catherine Newhart, Bettie Brace, Alvirda Cook, Thelma Rood, Irma Eicke, Charlotte Wescott, [Shirley Jones, Charlotte Remley, Audrey (Chappell and Marian Katacinski. The next meeting will be a covered dish dinner at the home of Miss Ida Hunt on July 28. Mrs. Harvey Sink, Harris Hill ORL CALL US FOR . Fill Your Bin NOW at opin Dallas 2771-R-2 for immediate delivery of GLEN ALDEN COAL . Rich Top Soil, Blue Stone, Fill, Red Ash, Cinders, "Stove Wood, F ireplace Logs or GENERAL HAULING LOWER SPRING PRICES | Rich Top Soil BERTI Franklin St., Dallas & SON Phone 277-R-2 Road, is ill at her home. Word tas been received that Johin Jacobson, formerly of Mt. Airy Road, Shavertown, now living in iSt. Petersburg, Florida, has been ill for some time and is mow a patient in a hospital] down there, Mr. and Mrs. David Namey and children of Main Highway, Shaver- town, are leaving on Tuesday for St. Petersburg and [Sarasota, Florida where Mr. Namey is looking over the prospects of going into business. The Namey’s now operate Namey’s 'Ser- vice ‘Station, on, the Main Highway and Franklin Street. MISSIONARY SOCIETY Ladies’ Missionary Society of the iSavertown Bible Church met re- cently at the home of Mrs. Elmer Hoover, Idetown. Miss Roxie Hoover brought the missionary talk, using the flannelgraph to illustrate her message. Those present were: Mrs. William Hanna, Mrs. Oscar Culp, Mrs. Wil- liam Belles, Mrs. Ernest Bell, Mrs. ISamue] Keast, Mrs. Russell Edmond- son, Wanda Louise Culp, Roxie Hoover and the hostess, Mrs. Elmer Hoover. [Chuckie Malkemes, has returned to his home on [Franklin Street, Shavertown, after being a patient at the Nesbitt Hospital. Chuckie suf- fered a fracture of the leg several weeks ago. Leroy Piatt thas returned to his home on Carverton Road, after being a patient at the Nesbitt Mem- orial Hospital for several weeks. Kenneth Bath is a patient at the Nesbitt Hospital. Beaumont [Charles Everett twirled a won- derfu]l game downing Noxen 15 to 6 on Sunday. The Byron Woods of Virginia are vacationing with Mrs. Wood's par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Heber Belles. The Willard Welzels, Deloris Hodg- don and Barbara are enjoying the shore in New Jersey. {Sally Jean Dietz who fell out of her father's moving car is going to spend a quiet summer nursing a broken leg. Congratulations to ICarlton, Shupp and Dorothy Sickler who were mar- ried on Friday. Rosemary Kozak spent the week in New York City with her Aunt Ann. [Wanda and Charles Everett plan to go to Niagara Falls where Charlie is employed. Eddie Denmon, Jack Patton and (Charles Hobbs are a few among the many from here who are employed at the Bendix Aviation at Montrose: Sunday School of Beaumont Union ‘Church held its picnic at Nay-Aug Park, Scranton, recently. William (Smith is feeling ‘mighty low” as a result of a collision Sat- urday night when his car was dam- aged. Don’t forget the “All Star” game at Beaumont, July 4. Romayne Smith started to work at the Telephone office in Dallas on Monlday. Here Comes Help From Virginia Chuck Harding,9, lives in Virginia, but he has nonetheless made his contribution ito the Library Auction, four hours of intensive work down in the basement of his grandmother’s house on Pioneer Avenue. With a can of black stove enamel placed in the center of a shiny new pie-tin to discourage spilling, Chuck painstakingly painted a small round heating stove and an iron firesbasket, taking out grates and disconnecting doors to get complete coverage. It's a swell job, just the ticket for somebody’s lake cottage. Did you your furnace last winter? If you're fed up with shoveling coal and ashes . . . tired of big coal bills. if you've cussed your old furnace . . . and com- plained about spotty heat . . . Coal-O-Matic ANTHRA-FLO heat is the heat for you! Burn low-cost Rice coal . . . automatically! 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The booklet is offered to you as a service by IL C.S., the famous school more money . . . a better job... pos- that has helped millions of men and sessions . , . friends . . . respect. YOU women carve successful careers for can be proud of yourself and can have themselves. I. C. S. can help you, tool 7 Start today, in TT TT rr mr sim Now! Mark and { International Correspondence Schools, Box 8841 Scranton 9, Pa. mail the { Please send me a free copy of success booklet. coupon. Your 1 FREE copy e i Name of the valuable booklet will ] Adfvess be rushed toyou | City. State by return mail. ! Occupation Age $9000 : Protection AGAINST POLIO Phone your Farm Bureau representative now for this valuable protection. Pays expenses up to $9000 for each case. Covers parents, children under 18. Two year family policy $10, individual $5. FOR INSURANCE GAY 30 Lake St. Phone 468-R-7 Ly BUREAU LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY HOME OFFICE: COLUMBUS, OHIO Phone Dallas 138 * JULY €70 « INDEPENDENCE - DAY “LIFE, LIBERTY AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS” Is It Time For Another Declaration of Independence? The men who wrote the first one struggled to put ew ideas into simple words. Humbly, they tried to set down clearly certain rights of man that could be called God-given, and hard-to-say things of a spiritual nature —truth, equality, freedom. And the words came alive, and the ideas shone clear. The idea that each man is more important than his gov- ernment, his independence more precious than his secu- rity; his spiritual strength more lasting than his armies. Upon these ideas, a nation grew great. There are always people who fear such ideas—even today, even in America. These people feel that man ‘can- not be trusted with his destiny. They are working to make government the master—instead of the servant— of the people. — Their distrust of the individual has spread frighten- ingly in the past few years. It can be stopped by ideas—the same ideas spelled out in the Declaration of Independence. Maybe it’s time for all of us, privately and in public, to declare once again our independence—to speak for freedom, and against anything that threatens it. THE TREND TOWARD MORE AND MORE GOVERN- MENT CONTROLS IS A THREAT TO EVERY BUSI- NESS, EVERY FAMILY, EVERY INDIVIDUAL. THAT'S WHY WE BRING YOU THIS MESSAGE. Luzerne County Gas And Eleetrie Corp.