ON KL ) NN SH BSS o ¥ i | LONG ISLAND “Ready For The Oven” N. Y. DRESSED icks = 49° - 39° \(ENDE. SKINNED = 4 i Full Shank Half 49¢ ; mo ams fT LOCAL DREBSED FRESH HAMS uit , 49° > - - . . We Lead in Quality With Price 2549 : vo. 25¢ | Price nd h Hallowi 3¢ i TES No Pits Lb. 25¢ ) LA Good for Stuffing AS 4 Lb. 5¢ 8 | Med.-Heads \BBAGE oie! : Danish OMATOES 2:25 EAS 9 = 35° EDA FLOUR 49° E MICE =29 R-- 2-33 = 2925" 2 : 35° 1d} Lang’s 2 | : io ; Re “Ready C fu \ LB , for Lh { The Oven” STORE HOURS—THIS WEEK Monday Open "til 6 P. M. Tuesday Open "til 9 P. M. Wednesday Open “til 6 P. M. Closed—Thanksgiving Day—Thurs. 11-27-52 VIRGINIA LEE LIGHT FRUIT CAKE wi 99° $1.98 A $3.25 The 3 Lb. Cake Is Packed in a Deluxe mc = Pumpkin Pie Overseas Shipping Tin Cc Each WARM UP AND SERVE Clover Leaf Rolls -. 15° EXTRA SPECIAL—THANKSGIVING Layer Cake 99° arturo Aarau “OLE FASHION” ad AAs Ararat FILL YOUR WALNUT BOWL ETE) CALIFORNIA DIAMOND = 2 2 C2 waLnuts ROLL 3 Georgia Pecans 43° Mixed Nuts = 53 Almond Nuts = 0% Fis eA : u ; \ ¢ Brazil Nus ~~ = 99 5 THE POST, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1952 by McFeatters STRICTLY BUSINESS RN \\ \N\ WN x MIN ARN BN A \ WAY NN SAN \ “Funny—things are blurred to me, too!” Karl Squier Is Six Karl Squier, som, lof Mr. and Mrs. Lester Squier, Lehman, celebrated his sixth birthday with a birthday party in fhe first grade iat school on Monday, and bad as dinner guests on Tuesday his teacher, Mrs. Alden LeGrand To Enter University Next Semester Alden A. LeGrand, discharged from the Marines on October 8, plans to enter University of South- ern California next semester. He and his wife, the former Adelia Forest Kunkle and her husband. Thirty-two children enjoyed ice- cream, cake and popcorn, School celebration was arranged one day in advance because of the big | duty in the Marines entitles him Thanksgiving dinner on Tuesday in the cafeteria, training. Sparks, a native of Los Angeles, will establish residence there be- fore school opens. He will take up an engineering course. His tour of to forty-eight months of college Fill Your Bin NOW ¢O & ~ BEFORE HIGH Phone Dallas 4-7396 for immediate delivery of GLEN ALDEN COAL CALL US FOR . .. Rich Top Soil, Blue Stone, Fill, Red Ash, Cinders, Stove Wood, Fireplace Logs or GENERAL HAULING BERTI & SON Franklin St., Dallas Phone 4-7396 PAGE ELE Library Lists New Book Club Books Recently placed on the Book Club shelves in Back Mountain Memo- rial Library are fifteen books, the selection including mysteries, pe- riod pieces, autobiography, fiction, historical novels, and romance. “Fill ’Er Up,” by Bellamy Part- ridge, recalls the early days of automobiling, written in his usual amusing manner, “Valse Macabre,” Kathleen Knight; ‘Ladies’ Bane,” Patricia Wentworth; and “The Sunburned Corpse,” A. Knight, are the new whodunits. “The Nine Wrong Answers,” by John Dickson Carr (Carter Dick- son) is a top-notch mystery, guar- anteed to keep the reader guessing until the very last page. “Mrs. Tom Flies Home,” D. C. Stevenson, contains all the minor crises familiar to his readers. “The Tender Age,” Thatcher, shows an adolescent boy growing up over one weekend. “The Curve and the Tusk,” by Stuart Cloete, is a story laid in In- dia, its charm, tenderness, horror and humor mingled. “The Juniper Tree,” for readers who like Faith Baldwin's novels. “The Bicycle Rider in Beverly Hills” is a bit of youthful auto- biography by William Saroyan. “Queen’s Gift,” Inglis Fletcher, is another in a series of novels of Carolina, beginning with “Roanoke Hundred.” “My Island Home,” is by James Hall. It has been selected as a memory book for Mrs. Champlain. “The Great Enterprise,” is by H. A. Overstreet. “Your Committee in Community Action,” C. King, is self-descriptive. “The Giant,” is Edna Ferber’s latest novel, with scene laid in Texas. “The Wonderful Country,” Tom Lea, classifies as historical fiction. Shavertown Auxiliary Plans Christmas Party Shavertown Branch, Nesbitt Hos- pital ‘Auxiliary, will hold a combined Christmias party ‘and business meet- ing December 5, at 2 P/M., in Back Mountatn Memprial Library Annex with Mrs. William Bond presiding. ° Mrs. Theodore Baker, program chairman, announces that Mrs, Edna Gilroy will give a Christmas reading, and the membership will sing Christ- mas carols. Fifty cenit presents will be exchanged. Mrs. Howard Appleton and Mrs. William Nunlist will serve on the reception committee. Mrs. Charles Behee, chairman of serving committee, announces her committee for December: Mrs. El- mer Fry, chairman; Mesdames Rus- sell Frantz, John Girvan, Albert Groblewski, J, H. Gabel, Zel Fava =" = inger, Raymond Greenwoo., Frank Garris, Peter Gallegher, James Godt- fring, William Griffith, Edward Gil- roy, G. H, Howell, and Miss Lina Garinger. ¢ Annual School Dinner Annual Thanksgiving dinner, tur- key and all the fixings, was served Tuesday noon at Lehman-Jackson School. ws 4° 1 7 = Ms ay IN (ZT D SRI ames vse LAR RE ; = & ry R BREDA | 7 p LPN fF iss Goa = BB slippery. Pn (22a © 1950 AT WCo AUTHORIZED YOU CanBe On Slippery Roads! . .. Have your tires equipped with this PROVED Safety Tread and you will have greater freedom from driving worry the year around . . . Thou. sands of steel claws are embedded in the Hawkin- son Wire Tread to ‘‘dig in” when the going is Have Your Tires Made SAFER By This Better Method . . . Any make or size of tire can be given this SURE-GRIP Hawkinson Wire Tread quickly and economically . . . Traction, Extra Protection — and that means SAVING through longer mileage as well as accident prevention. 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