The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, June 01, 1956, Image 10

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    PAGE TWELVE hala | THE DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
Y Oo U R : B E S T Prices in this ad effective thru Sat., June 2nd, 1956
J
“Cut From Young Tender Beef”
Cancaater Brand
Rich, Lean and Tender FT.
Chuck
Roast
Added Zest “for Sandwiches”
Olivar Olives os or. Pail 3T€
Ideal Cucumber Pickles y JIERENS [-
Heinz Ketchup 2 14orbo. 45¢
Krafts Miracle Whip +» 35¢c ©: 59¢
Hellmann's Mayonnaise ¢ = bbc
Tender
Chuck Steak
* ke %k ok
For Snacks and Sandwiches
bo TANS ai Te yy 4 Kraft's Velveeta 2b. Lost TYE
r eC Ne VC NN) TT Kraft’s White American Cheese =» i 98¢
IE 5 Glendale Sliced Cheese «+ veri: serps 496
Kraft’s Handi Snack Links Asch. Varities 26
Kraft’s Cracker Barrel Cheese :::39¢ 3 65¢
Aa
Serve with . . .
Birds Eye Frozen Cauliflower to-oz. Pig. 206
Birds Eye Frozen Fr. Green Beans 2 &c: 39¢
Birds Eye Frozen Rhubarb rigs. 49C
Supreme Sandwich Bread . . . 2 1 29F
For Cold Plates or Sandwiches Te : as es
Virginia Lee Fresh Rolls .%:5. "i 20°
SLICED
Boiled Ham
49° 98°
“Quick 'n’ Easy Economy Meal”
Large Golden Ripe
Bananas
2 = 29°
Home Grown Green Onions ~~ 3 buch: 19¢
Home Grown Radishes . . . 3 che 19¢
Fancy, Large, Western 3 i 39¢
Winesap Apples
Juicy Florida
Seedless Grapefruit
Pork and Beans '......9¢&>%.
Campbell's Pork & Beans ....... 4c" 49¢
K. P. Luncheon Meat ...... 3 5 85¢
&> __Agars Chopped Beef ............ 3&2 85¢
Stock Up Now!
Wise Potato Chips..." ts 29¢
mi
“Thirst Quenchers”
Hawaiian Punch ‘Perro 2 50 69¢
Bala Club Beverages Aifoserfioos 3 0 29%.)
Hi-C Orangeade ................. 2cu’° B5¢
Ideal Apricot Nectar ............. 2c 69¢
| Birds Eye Frozen Lemonade ....... Con 33¢
Birds Eye Frozen Orange Juice 4 cn T3¢
Strained Junior
Gerber's Baby Foods 6 + 59° 4 50¢
Mrs. Filbert's Margarine 2: 51° 2 ny. 61°
3
1 Powder Special Offer!
INSO Soap
Ri n SO H ! U 0 Special Offer!
oy U if Special Offer!
Clark's Teabeiry GUM «vesesesescsssssssesssesvses'3 Pkgs. 10c
Qt. Instant Frosting ceececesecscscesesss Deal Offer 2 Pkgs. 27c
Qt. Snow Whip Frosting seceesesesesess Deal Offer Pkg. 18c
“Perfect Dessert Treats”
Virginia Lee + capa. §9¢
ICE CREAM Dairyland i cal. Pia. TOC
Virginia Lee |
Fresh Apple Pie forfeatmede |... EB 39¢
$
FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1956
Depressed, Dies
By Own Hand
Amos Whitesell, 50,
Shoots Himself
Amos R. Whitesell, 50, Hunlock
Creek RD, died by his own hand
Friday night, while in a mood of
deep depression about his failing
health. He left his apartment above
Guy Kindig’s store sometime dur-
ing the evening, and was discovered
early Saturday morning in the store
basement when his wife, alarmed
at his absence, noticed a light burn-
ing. The inquest by Deputy Cor-
oner Alfred Bronson and Joseph
Yaskus, Shickshinny barracks, re-
vealed that Mr. Whitesell had shot
himself with a rifle, the bullet pen-
etrating the axillary artery in the
shoulder and causing death by ‘ex-
tensive hemorrhage,
Funeral services were held from
the Bronson Funeral Home Tuesday,
afternoon, Rev. Oscar Saxe conduc-
ting. Burial was at Mossville Ceme-
tery.
He was born at Hunlock Creek,
son of the laté Fletcher and Ella
Hummell Whitesell.
He is’ survived by his widow,
Edna; four children: Mrs. Arden
Lanning, Johnson City; Robert,
Binghamton; Peggy and Beth, stu-
dents at Shickshinny schools! at
home; three grandchildren; brothers
and sisters: Stanley, Mrs. William
Neville, and Mrs. Charles Wilson,
Hunlock Creek; Lyman, Vestal,
N.Y. Herman, Sweet Valley; Mrs.
Roland Culver, Bloomingdale; Mrs,
A. Cragle, Muhlenburg; Mrs. Chates
Bound, Binghamton; Mrs. Alfred
Burman, Mountain Top.
Harold F. Ross Victim
Of Sudden Heart Attack
Harold F. Ross, native of Ross
Township, recently of Philadelphia,
died of a heart attack at his sum-
mer home in Broadway Baturday
afternoon, on his 48th birthday. He
and his wife had arrived the night
before to get the place in shape for
the summer.
He was buried in Maple Grove
Cemetery Thursday afternoon, fol-
lowing services from the Bronson
Funeral Home, conducted by Rev.
Oscar Saxe.
It is a matter of common con-
jecture that Ross Township was
named for Mr. Ross's forebears,
pioneer settlers of the area.
Mr. Ross, a sufferer from heart
trouble, expected to retire to the
home in Broadway upon retirement
from his employment as dispatcher
for the M & M Transport Company,
in Philadelphia. He was a member
of the United Brethren Church in
Germantown.
He is survived by his widow,
Phyllis; children, Barbara and Fhyl-
lis, at home; Mrs. Edward Sikora,
Wilkes-Barre; Harold, Dushore; ‘one
grandchild; his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. L. Ross, Fairmount Spring; a
brother, Herbert, Bloomingdale; and
a sister, Mrs. Robert Dohl, R. N.,
Wilmington, Del., with him at the
moment he dropped dead.
Mrs. Adda Kitchen, 92,
Lies At Cedar Crest
Mrs. Adda Kitchen, Trucksville,
one of the oldest members of the
Dallas Post’s Eighty-Plus Club,
passed away suddenly just before
midnight last Thursday, at the age
of 92, suffering from a heart attack.
She was buried in Cedar Crest Cem-
etery Monday afternoon, the body
lying in state in Trucksville Free
Methodist Church for an hour be-
fore funeral services were conduct-
ed at 2 by Rev. Dana Dimmick and
Rev. Herbert Olver.
Mrs. Kitchen had been in failing
health for the past year, but was
able to be up and around. Five
years ago she made spectacular re-
covery from a grave illness when
‘87 years old.
She was born in Columbia County
near Mordansville, her maiden
name Beers. After marriage to the
late George W. Kitchen, deceased in
1938, she moved to Millville. In
1903, Mr. Kitchen became manager
of a stock farm in Mifflinville, and
six years later moved to the Steg-
maier farm near Trucksville. In
1913 the family moved to the fam-
ily farm on Mt. Airy Road, and since
1940 have lived on Pioneer Avenue.
Survivors are her daughter, Mrs.
Ianthe K. Sommers, with whom she
lived; a son, Walter, secretary of
World University Service, New
York City; two grandchildren and
three great-grandchildren.
Funeral arrangements by Wool-
bert.
Methodist Men Are
Organized At Orange
A new organization of Methodist
Men in the Orange Methodist
Church, Dallas, has been char-
tered by Methodism’s General Board
of Lay Activities in Chicago. Offi-
cers of the new group includes:
president—George Henderson, vice-
president—Henry E. Hess, and sec-
retary—Harold Hoover.
It is estimated that 2,000,000
men in the Methodist Church are
prospective members of Methodist
Men clubs.
Robert G. Mayfield, executive sec-
retary of the board, states that,
“We seek to mobilize through Me-
thodist Men the tremendous power
and enthusiasm of Christ and His
Church through consecrated service
of men in every local church of
Methodism.”