DALLAS, PE NSYLVANI AL IGANTIC 66th Brand standing Emon i ) > Top Quality § Lancaster J ES Brand Chicken ; Furkey Each 22¢ 5 s” .. 533¢ w §9¢ w. JG¢ . = 69 39° | Lb. 39¢ 51, TEMPLE ORANGES “5 . . . . BRUSSEL SPROUTS cin... .. sd 25¢ MUSHROOMS Fearsome | oo 0 ooo 49°F mows x « tom 3c iAEENEEEENNENEEEEEENEEEEE RENNER ERES NEE NEE NER a £3 Ideal Brand TOMATO ye, 1 SOUP Hm HUNTS PURPLE PLUMS nook $1 IDEAL TOMATO JUICE Yes 55 IDEAL TOMATOES en 2 "> 39° IDEAL CORN ..ccKeme 120s cen 2 co 29° IDEAL PORK & BEANS No.2: 35° IDEAL KIDNEY BEANS Ne 33 46° IDEAL SAUER KRAUT Ne 2: DQ IDEAL GRAPEFRUIT JUICE Sood 2 35 49 "IDEAL BLENDED JUICE 2 5 49° IDEAL PINEAPPLE JUICE 2%: 53 Large Solid Ripe TOMATOES oe. OF Large Sweet EEENEEEEEESENNEEEENSDENEERREP FEBRUARY FAMILY CIRCLE o 7c! “Way to Your F amily’s Heart” Swift's Corned Beef . 20:cn 45¢ be | 5 . rg §O¢ - 5 . Pkg. 5 ¢ NH #58 “ BR ar BEN - u JE yo] = BH le Pie” | = . lb fa. 49c T= nt [80 5 .| CAMPFIRE Jd Warshmallows Cracker Jacks ig, 30° 3 rice 25F Mrs. Filbert’'s | Swift's Pork Sausage wo.cn 39¢ Salad Dressing er 3T¢ AD “The advanced detergent” ar 30 Se rep I RE EE a, b Mayonnaise er 45° : FLORIENT TS er aba rye : Aerosol Deodorant ME LOOK Jdoifac { dor. January 28 February 5 February 3 cn 49° FR er ReaD THE DALLAS POST, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1957 OBITUARY Frank Hazlett, For Five Years Blind, Dies At Home Frank M. Hazlett, 88, completely blind for five years, died at his home in Sweet Valley Sunday after- noon, passing away quietly after months of failing health. He had been confined toeshis bed and a wheelchair’ sine€ he hurt his hip in a fall in October. Services were held from the home on Wednesday, Rev. Ira Button of- ficiating, and men of the family acting as pallbearers: Harold Culver, Harold Freeman, Harold Cornell, Arden Hunter, Kenneth Hunter, and Reynold Davenport. He was buried in Maple Grove Cemetery. Mr. Hazlett, a member of the Eighty-Plus Club, operated a small store in Sweet Valley at the turnoff to North Lake for thirty-five years. Prior to that he operated a hotel in Sweet Valley for three years. He was born in Bloomingdale, son of the late George and Narcissa Lutz | Hazlett. His wife, the former Ella Davenport, died less than a year ago, March 1, 1956. He is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Luther Hunter, who shared a home with him; a foster son, Harold Free- man, Hunlock Creek; four grand- children: Mrs. Harold Culver, Bloom- ingdale; Mrs. Harold Cornell, Meek- er; Kenneth Hunter, Dallas; Sgt. Arden Hunter, Fort Dix, N. J.; sis- ters: Mrs. Laura King, Wilkes-Barre, and Mrs. Courtney Carkeek, Hun- lock Creek RD. Arrangements by Bronson. Services Saturday For Richard J. Williams Richard J. Williams, “East Center Street, Shavertown,”will be buried tomorrow afterngfi at Fern Knoll. Rev. Thomas M. Jones, pastor of Parsons Primitive Methodist Church, will officiate at services from the Frederick Sons Funeral Home in Forty Fort at 2 p. m. Mr. Williams, 79, native of Wales and resident of Shavertown for the past ten years, died Wednesday afternoon at Nesbitt Memorial Hos- pital, where he was admitted two Mrs. Daisy M. Ruggles, Pikes Creek, Dies At 75 Mrs. Daisy M. Ruggles, 75, passed away yesterday morning at. Pikes Creek, after steadily failing in health for the past four months. Services will be held tomorrow af- ternoon at 2°'from the Bronson Funeral Home, followed by burial in Maple Grove Cemetery. Rev. Paul Clemow, new pastor of the Maple Grove Charge, will conduct. Mrs. Ruggles, wife of former tax collector Torrance Ruggles, was born in Pittston, moving to Pikes | Cresh when fifteen years old with her parents, the late Hiram and Florence Montanye Geiger. Mr. and Mrs. Ruggles celebrated their fifty-fifth wedding anniversary in December. Mrs. Ruggles leaves her husband; a daughter, Mrs. Sheldon Mosier, { Dallas R. D. 1; a son, Clifford, Wil- mington, Delaware; six grandchil- dren; five sisters: Mrs. Frank Miller, Hughestown; Mrs. John Waple, ville; Mrs. Charles Burlingame and Mrs. Ralph Davie, Berwick. weeks earlier. He was a miner in Wilkes-Barre from 1907 until 1925, when he left the area to work in the slate quar- ries in Granville, N. Y. Mr. Williams leaves a son, John E. Williams, Dallas; daughters: Mrs. Stuart David, Endicott, N. Y.; Mrs. Owen Thomas, at home; and Mrs. Donald G. Lloyd, West Lawn; a sister in Wales, and six grandchil- dren. A daughter, Mrs. Mary Sow- den, Shavertown, wife of Granville Sowden, Back Mountain Lumber Company, died in 1954. Dr. Otis Todd, Vancouver Has Fatal Heart Attack Dr. Otis Todd, professor of Greek | at University of British” Columbia, attack in a Vancouver hospital. Dr. Todd, a graduate of Harvard Univer- sity and collaborator in writing of standard Greek textbooks, was an uncle of Mrs. T. M. B. Hicks, Dallas SEE THESE NOW @0 Bargains, reconditioned, guaranteed and winter- MY) ized. Trade-ins accepted/easy terms. SER CHEV. Bel. $ SEQ BUICK 56 4-Dr, Sdn. 1995 53 4-Dr. Sdn. #1095 R&H, PG R&H, Dynaflow 5 CHEV. Bel. $ 3 CHEV. Bel. $ 59 2-Dr., Hard Top, 1795 53 4-Dr. Sdn, I 145 V8, R&H, PG R&H, PG, PS 3 FORD 2-Dr. $ 3 CHEV. 2-Dr. $ 55 Sdn., R&H, 1495 52 Hard Top, 195 Fordomatic R&H, PG : 5 CHEV. 4-Dr. $ L) CHEV. 4-Dr. $ 54 Sdn., Heater 1095 ol Sdn., R&H, PG 495 Many Other Makes and Models In Stock BONNER CHEVROLET CO. BU 8-0319 694 Wyoming Avenue, Kingston, Pa. BU 7-2118 : a WOR 6 “EH i Heres il; IEE Banner Bargains in iy 756 3% rt 2395 CHEVROLET CHEVROLET 756 555 un $1905 FORD 56 san. nen 1799 Low Mileage. cEmyROLEr "85 sin raup, *1599 CHEVROLET "84 sin. ro mn *1295 "OK" USED CARS! "84 Sin, eeu, * 1140 CHEVROLET : 54 cin. non. ‘1090 CHEVROLET "84 sin. Eo. 99D ———————————————— ) Ve 2 Dr. Sdn. § 54 Equipped. 945 3 "PONTIAC 53 ar. men. 1045 PONTIAC 52 ar. ren “140 GOOD VALUE SPECIALS CHEVROLET B52 rc. nen. 595 FORD "2 Radio & Heater. “O45 PLYMOUTH "52 Robot neater. 495 DE SOTO Bl Eire 208 . PONTIAC "0 Radic & Heater "30 CHEVROLET "850 Eauiveea. “390 fl D2 Radio & Heater 39D Sty. Del_2 Dr. "49 scion. man *199 PObak & "81 Radios Heater 309 PONTIAC A] rauroer *145 TERMS TO SUIT YOU STRAYER’S CITY CHEVROLET CO. Market & Thomas Sts. Kingston BU 7-1171 \ 308 Hazle Street, 2 Wilkes-Barre VA 3-636 Espy; Mrs. Edward Bower, Orange- | died Friday afternoon of a heart. ville; PAGE FIVE Mrs. Ida Ward Costa Dies In Ridley Park Mrs. Ida Ward Costa, formerly of Trucksville, died in Ridley Park Fri- day night after a short illness. She was buried in St. Mary's Cemetery, Hanover Township, Thursday morn- Mrs. Costa was a graduate of Temple University School of Phar- macy. With her husband, William, also a druggist, she carried on a pharmacy, for twenty years. Two sisters:. Mary Ward, a nurse in New York City, and Katherine Ward, a school teacher in New Jer- sey, survive. The last of the Ward family in this area is a brother-in- law, James McHale of Cliffside Ave- nue, Trucksville, who lives in the old homestead. Mrs. Costa was the daughter ‘of Anthony and Sarah Sweeney Ward, who moved to Trucksville from Wilkes-Barre in 1910... Mr. Ward died in 1934, and Mrs. Ward in 1927. Funeral services were originally scheduled for Wednesday, but due to an error, the body was taken off the Lehigh Valley train in Allen- town; causing delay, and necessity for sending on the. casket by hearse over icy roads. John James, Mount Zion, Is Buried At Harding John L. James, Apple Tree Road, Mt. Zion, died Monday afternoon at Nesbitt Memorial Hospital, the day after he was admitted following a violent heart attack at his home. He was buried in Mountain View Cemetery, Harding, Thursday after- noon, Rev. Charles Gilbert officiat- Son of the late David W. and Jane Lloyd James, Pittston, he was associated with the Cohen Brothers clothing store in Pittston. For many years he was a lay leader for Pitts- ton Methodist Church, and a mem- ber of the official board. His interests resolved about church work and singing, with flow- er gardening as a hobby. He be- longed to St. David's Society and the American Legion. He leaves his widow, the former Mildred Brunges; two sisters and a brother: Mrs. Harry Owens, Trucks- Mrs. John Morris, Wilkes- Barre; and Lloyd James, Hazleton. Gate Of Heaven . Altar And Rosary Gate of Heaven Altar and Rosary Society will receive Holy Commun- jon at the 9 a. m. mass on Sunday. The regular monthly meeting will take place Monday evening, follow- ing Novena services, recitation of the Rosary preceding the business session, presided over by William Carroll. PILLAR TO POST (Continued from Page 2) We were not bludgeoned with the facts of life. Times changed, the little girl who viewed the new baby grew up and had a baby of her own. Modern psychology instructed that he must never be turned aside with a soft answer. He should know the TRUTH. 3 : : > So when a new baby was immin- ent, he got the truth, in large and unvarnished chunks. : ' He was bewildered, but interested. I took him into the grocery store, and he broadcasted his ‘information. It wasn’t really necessary for him to do so as the condition was fairly obvious. IN He would have been much better off if he had not been burdened with the facts of life at the tender age of four. : ; Children have enough troubles of their own withotit inflicting adult problems upon th em until they are réady for them.” “™ * Gifts & Greetings for You — through WELCOME WAGON from Your Friendly Business Neighbors and Civic and Social Welfare Leaders On the occasion of: The Birth of a Baby Change of Residence Arrivals of Newcomers to City PHONE DOROTHY D. LANDIS Dallas 4-3211 or Dallas 4-1101 DOROTHY GODTFRING Dallas 4-0431
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers