iy 7 YoU desire of all the fresh flo tate C . Vor and eqting them, a end hr Fon Homer ang YoU kno, ” w that yo, Caiure, I shopping will be o real pl, - Lancaster Brand Quality Exceedingly Delicious CHUCK ROAST & Round Bone Roast it 57" * k hk hk kk Kk k k k hk kx kX kX kx kx kx kx * Juicy, Flavorful, Tender Pork Loin Roast um 25 on 35 ® Center iy Lb. Cc = <HOPS or ROASTS .... 59 Lancaster Brand Quality us 2 SHORT CUT 7” STANDING Rib Roast [ C Distinctive SY Delicious Flavor Sa Lb. * k-Kk kk A XxX ok Kk Kk A Kk Kk Kk hk Kh Kk BONELESS BUTTS wowesonisoss , , , , , . .......t% 59° LONG BOLOGNA wow . . . . .. TENDER BEEF LIVER ........... SMOKED HAM HOCKS . . ..............uv23¢ * Sea Food Specials x ile POLLOCK FISH FILLETS ...............w 19° 0D FISH FILLETS . . . . «ctv oi vive vn... 529° HADDOCK FISH FILLETS . ..............w 39° FANCY NO. 1 SMELTS . ...............u»29° 0 OY oo Green Beans Frozen Foods V Dairy B x any . Ea g Ideal Rind! Qc A Your 10-02. ® \ No : Succotash : $ » aste! Or, Cut or French Choice Pkgs. a 4 No W gindless . Is a 59°) » 59" 3 |] OL BY Sem poe ) 2H, é Ideal bor. § 1 5 : CHEE \b. Orange Juice Cans 0) t! d Blue Star, ; ; C ot the Be uarante® Chicken, Turkey, Beef or % Pgs. $1 i 8 it ith a 09 J B99 Tuna Pies = 22¢ . ® ac : ia nt ry Rv t § TMI Sh ) & rail Stainless Steel Tableware Offer Still Going On! 5-Pe. Place Setting—O0uly Q9¢ , tA. | CRISCO c. 32° c.86¢ | WESSON OIL &: 35¢ :. 65° » | CADET &% 3 '%: 29° | BLUWHITE rues 5.9% “5 25¢ id Bell For Duty At Somebody in this area must have a farm bell that is no longer in use. The Girl Scouts need it for Camp Onawandah. If there is no farm bell, perhaps there is a large dinner bell with a good distance range of sound. Mrs. Robert Weaver is on the look- out for one. She had an ad in the Trading Post column for the bell and for a canoe for the same camp. She says two canoes would be bet- ter than one, but one would be fine. The Girl Scouts would like to get these things for free, but they are prepared to pay a moderate price for them if necessary. Giving a bell to the camp would be a real me- morial for somebody, as it would be in use for many years, as long as the camp is in operation. No bet- ter disposition could be made of a farm bell which is no longer in use, than to call hungry little Girl Scouts to supper. The old Goss School bell was sug- gested, but nobody knows where it is. It blew away early one morning. The bell was destined to hang in the Prince of Peace tower. Taken down by a crew of husky men, it was tried for size, and proved to be too large for the narrow aper- ture in the stone tower of the new church. Onawandah Four men eased the heavy bell back onto a truck, and it was taken to the triangle between Tunkhan- nock and Dallas highways where the church was having a fund rais- ing fair. A contribution entitled the donor to a whack at the bell. The bell was left overnight on the fair ground, to be picked up the next morning by crew and truck. And that is the last that has been seen of the bell. It would be a nice bit of resurrection if that bell should blow back, ready for hanging at Camp Onawandah. It has called a good many chil- dren to school in its day. Calling little girls to the swimming hour or to vespers or to the dinner table would please that old bell to death. Kistlers Florida-Bound Mr. and Mrs. Al Kistler, Harveys Lake, started unexpectedly for Bab- son Park, Florida, Thursday at noon, to see their daughter June, and the new granddaughter, born prematurely Wednesday morning. There are two other little girls, Ann, 4, and Emily, 2%. Albert L. Adams, June’s husband, teaches at Weber College. Balance on hand January 1, 1955 $ 2,756.94 Book Club .._.... $ 429.91 Book Sales ......... 27.17 Book Transfers 63.99 Dallas Borough Couwneil 0... 20 2 owl = 300.00 Dallas Borough-Kingston Twp. School District 550.00 Dallas Jr. Woman's Club. nino a 100.00 Dallas Sr. Woman's Club 125.00 Dallas Township School District .._..................... 400.00 Fairmount Township School District 75.00 Bes Ee 326.25 Franklin Township School District ... 75.00 Friends of the library... J... coal oo, 645.00 Hutson Estate Vo 0 alls 1,327.48 Income from Endowment Funds ... 131.20 Lake Township School District ._............_._ Lehman-Jackson-Ross School District .......... _....__ 250.00 Memory Books ..._....... eh NL) 50.18 Nesbitt Auxiliary ($50.00 for 1954) .... 100.00 Other Donations 2 i hil a de nl hi 6.00 Miscellaneous oo nl alii ol vn hd Le 72.88 *Auction ‘Receipts... ol cl oil (on 15,943.68 $20,998.74 $20,998.74 $23,755.68 1ibrary: Supplles 0. iin hl 3d 275.81 Water (Library—$37.60) (Annex—$24.00) 61.60 Fuel (Library—$192.60) (Annex—$146.80) __... 339.40 Electricity (Library—$230.52) (Annex—$57.02) 287.54 Library Maintenance "oi. 0 0 Le dn 192.62 Annex Maintenance 56.31 Library Furniture .__.. 119.64 Telephone _. ....... 5 129.64 Petty Cash i... Sct ond 0 0 Lele®y lo 315.00 Annex Roof cil [gid oe 385.00 Insurance... .... 474.16 Librarian’s Salary _... 2,050.08 Assistant Librarian ao 960.00 Jardbor « daradnbi ln Sl arr p] E 600.00 Social Security Tax 72.16 Projector i ii ul 1 25.00 Miscellaneows =. op dehy Ge er a 192.47 To Endowment Bund’. bo ld fwiin ine io 6,248.79 *Auction BXpenses «i. on ie ae 4,688.33 * Auction Net — $11,255.35 $19,021.21 $19,021.21 $ 4,734.47 Balance January 1, 1955. 0 Received from General Fund TOTAL RECEIPTS ............ Postage and Cards «(00 0 arian Books and Periodicals . Office: Supplies. j= ay © Le) Travel Expense ..._....._. Assistant Librarian 315.00 41.29 i HE 26.91 7.05 188.00 a $ 305.09 WAAR 15.93 $ 321.02 Securities Held: January 'l, 1955: Series J—+V18824J _... V18825Jd .... #M121,946] M121,947J M121,948J 110.563 Shares Wellington Fund Bonds Purchased 1955: Cost Present Value $ 3,600.00 $ 3,710.00 3,600.00 3,710.00 720.00 729.00 720.00 729.00 720.00 729.00 AlN ay 720.00 729.00 $10,336.00 | SGN Tn i 02,525.00 2,985.00 $13,321.00 eben eh 01° 4,899.79 4,850.00 $18,171.00 Certificate #R685295 for 5 Shares American Tel. & Tel. Stock Fund “A” and Re 883.18 900.00 SD 1,349.00 630.00 | ny 630.00 $20,331.00 and certify that to the best of our knowledge and belief the foregoing as listed. FRANCIS BARRY, JR. ROBERT W. BROWN Ducks Flew In All Directions Many of the 6624 mallard ducks reared, banded and released by the Game Commission in the spring and early summer of 1955 were report- ed taken in states and provinces far from their liberation point. Of the 796 bands returned to January 20 of this year, 711 were from birds bagged in this State. But more venturesome fowl were taken at great distances north, east, south and west of Pennsylvania. Twenty-one were reported from the Province of Ontario, and one from the Province of Saskatchewan. Reports in quantities from other states came from: New York, 29; Michigan, 6; Virginia, 6; New Jer- sey, 4; Ohio, 5; and Maryland, 10. Other states reporting one or two ducks bearing Pennsylvania leg bands were: Delaware, North Caro- lina, South Carolina, Wisconsin, In- diana, Tennessee, West Virginia, Florida, and Kentucky. Since 1951, when the Game Com- mission initiated its waterfowl band- ing program, 30,915 ducks, mostly mallards, have been reared and re- leased in the State. Total band returns, to January 20, 1956, ag- gregated 3,702, or 11.9%. Band returns received during the 1955 season and until January 20 showed: 728 were from birds re- leased in 1955; 50 were from 1954 releases; 14 were from 1953; 2 were 1952; end 2 were 1951. Information gathered on these ducks is custom- arily compiled late in January to allow time for band returns from states having a later waterfowl season than Pennsylvania’s. Such data provides state and federal wildlifers with information helpful in planning management programs for the birds, and it is important to them in setting future seasons. Robert E. Latimer, who heads the Game Commission’s wild water- fowl program, says that late sum- mer wanderings of released ducks is normal. He explains that as the birds develop wing strength they also develop a desire to see new places—and they don’t seem to care which direction their maiden flights take. Therefore, the band returns from ducks bagged in northern States and Canada. A hidden value of state-reared ducks on ponds and marshes in the Commonwealth is that they tend to pull in migrating birds in fall Waterfowl coming to these water areas often stay in the localities for days, thus providing shooting sportsmen would otherwise not er- joy. Winter Game Management Many game management prac- tices are best employed in winter. Game Commission employees inten- sify their woodland operations at that season in preparation for pro- grams to be conducted in the warm months. They plan and supervise timber sales on State Game Lands, doing the necessary cruising and marking of merchantable timber. On these lands and others admin- istered by the wildlife agency, thin- nings are made and competent labor crews engage in edge develop- ments along roads and fields. This stimulates new shrub and sprout growths valuable to game species as food and cover. Management plans for the plant- ing of seedlings and food plots are worked up in the winter and orders are prepared for seed, seedlings, lime and fertilizer — and other re- quirements for the coming planting season — so that there will be no delay when spring arrives. Meanwhile, the current needs of wildlife are not overlooked. Though much grain is accessible to wild birds and animals on Game Lands, leased .areas and private holdings, it is necessary to supplement the available foods with grain, particu- larly ear corn, for the numerous wild turkeys. Periodic trips are made to fill large feeders in remote mountain areas during the critical months. Among their other winter activi- ties Commission men release and prune many apple trees, build new trails, maintain the present road system, keep buildings and boun- dary lines in good condition, repair and maintain vehicles and equip- ment, clear prospective food plot and marsh impoundment areas, construct and erect wood duck nesting boxes, and trap and release game. Harveys Lake Mr. and Mrs. Garvin ‘Smith and son, Gary visited Mr. Smiths’ uncle in Danville, on Sunday. Mrs. Hattie Rauch and Jackie had Sunday dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Rauch and family. The oc- casion was to celebrate Mr. Rauch’s birthday. The WSCS of the Alderson Metho- dist Church will meet at the church on Thursday evening. The theme will be on the American Indian. In- dian refreshments will be served. Mrs. Herman Garinger and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Armitage visited Mrs. Amanda Yaple and family, at Dallas, and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ross, in Luzerne, on Sunday. Arnold Garinger ,of West Chester R. D., spent the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Garinger.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers