SECTION A — PAGE 5 = > DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA — THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, DECEMBER- 15, 1960 Don- FREE ADVERTISING pupil, requesting information ; 4 : 4 In a school in one of the poorer garding the home mr | “Take Lohman Faculty And Board | Faculty And School Board Dine At Club Dyke Brown Dies FH, number of brothers and sisters, { — districts of a big city, a question: ? ant naire was sent home wtih a new i Wheeler's Cafe father’s occupation and so on. The next day.the child gesurned] | with a scrap of paper on which was | the following: “We have 18 children. My husband can also do plumbing | Lake-Lehman Faculty and School Board held their annual Christmas | Party “Wednesday evening, Decem-. ber 7 at Irem Temple Country Club Have Annual Christmas Party Store on the Hammond organ. Gifts Mrs. Mrs. Lester Anthony Marchakitus and Mr. were presented to Mr. Squier, Mr. and | and Mrs. | and | and Agarpentry work.” | NOXEN ROAD HARVEYS LAKE Delbert Hines, Ross Township | School Board member and member with brief remarks. Robert Bellas who responded Howard Newcomer brought greet- with 135 persons in attendance. PHONOGRAPHS EVERY SAT. RIGHT - LOBSTER TAIL PLATTER 1/2 Spring Chicken 75 nr AL ENA oh GE Ah 3 5, $24.95 Jacobs Music Centre Center St. Main Highway Shavertown Phone OR 5-1567 OPEN 9 to 9 f| 1 | of the faculty, offered the invocation, Tcastmaster was Arthur Nuss of the faculty. Entertainment of an unusual | nature was provided by thirty mem- | bers of the ‘School Brass Ensemble | | directed by John Miliauskas. Dinner music was played by a { Yepresentative: of § (Deluce’s Music wk Com AA —— —— I A AN YN Fn, pb Geriutn aro Pangea rarer edi | \ get your ii ~ beantiful i 4 hand i | Sper grafted... Fine China BANK AT THE MINERS collector This hand crafted bank-is a is item... colored and gift wrapped. It stands six inches high, and it's more than just a bank it's a fine china figurine ’ gloriously ings from the County Supeginten- | dent’s office. Members of the committee were: ' Hannah Culp, Hazel Baer, Turner Marjorie Cosgrove, Shelia Godwin, and John "Miliauskas. Two Local Girls In "Who's Who" Eleven Girls Are Chosen At Wilkes Major, | College, JANICE BRONSON |" Janice Bronson and Beverly Ann | | senior students at Wilkes are among the eleven stu- Janet | These were the members of Faculty and School | Board who sat at the head table when more than | 185 members of the Faculty and School Board Christmas Party = Wednesday night at Irem Temple Country Club. | Seated, left to right, Lester Squier, Supervis- | ing Principal; Mrs. Squier; Arthur Nuss, toastmast- held their annual $10 Million Damage A Year By Rats In Penna. The rat is a major pest in Penn- | sylvania. It is estimated that in the United | States the annual damage amounts [to over two billion dollars. The | Pennsylvania ‘Department of -Agri- culture estimates the state’s annual | loss is. probably not less than $10,000,000. r more litters a year, with about ten young in each litter. The first step in rat control is to r “build them out” by rat-proofing : buildings. Cement - the basement | walls and floors of buildings, ex- | tending the cement down into the | ground deep enough to prevent the |'dents chosen out of 741 men and rat from getting under. Slope the | 396 women at Wilkes for inclusion | in “Who’s Who in American Colleges "and Universities. Both girls are i suitable for any room in | Lake-Lehman graduates. your home. Janice is daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 2 Alfred Bronson, Sweet Valley. A ! | major in elementary education, she TE ST TT SN NA SR SA RA MA SARA SVE | is president oi Chapman Hall; chair- ax { man of School Spirit Committee, | captain of the Kick-Line; chairman Get Your Santa Saver at any of the Miners National Offices. Supply is limited, so get yours, NOW! | of charity of Theta Delta Rho; his- | | torian of the education club. She | { was Home-Coming princess for 1960; | was an exchange student to Hamp- | | successful for rat control. Place traps | cement outside so the rats cannot | get a foothold. Treat ail buildings | so the rats will have no refuge. Pro- tect all foodstuffs, stored cereals and grains so that the rat cannot {thave access to them. The guillotine type of trap is most | PEARL'S PIZZA The ‘rat is prolific, producing six | - - ut : — : ~ AT A OE IB AI CSA le ES The Friendly $150 | ‘Miners in Dallas” t | are Miners National Bank Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Main St., Dallas, Pa. / Chorus; | 1960. ment. |. ton Institute, | Allenberry. “Who's Who | ; > ; i = | Beverly is daughter of Mr. ; a. | ® For Christmas Savingg «Lo i ba * BANK “I 44 i3| Mrs. Bryce Major of Lehman, ma . : : ? % 'joring in English. She is editor-in- | BF i 5 ® For Holiday Decoration % TAX 06 i {chief of “Amnicola,” the college ; : id or 8 For Gift Giving 5 At Any Teller's Window ¥ | year book; manuscript and copy | EE) igs A A EA EA A SA BAR YA A SAK PA PT A EA YA | editor of the weekly “Beacon”; Students selected for the National | | receive a certificate | | of achievement in scholarship, lead- | | ership, ability, citizenship, and ex- | | tra-curricular activities. | put on the lists of the National | | Student Placement service, insuring special consideration in career place- and a delegate to | andy a | | member of student government; of | | the Madrigal Singers and the Mixed | is on the Dean’s List. Bev- | [ erly was Home-Coming Queen if They are | Featuring COTY FOSALLO . ® SAMPLER TALCUM GIFTS Wh itm an S PHILADELPHIA rOwbR ® ASSORTMENT COLOGNE CHOCOLATES Open Daily 5 p. m. to Midnight | % | | FRIDAYS — Open 11 a.m. to Midnight PHONE ORDERS | FILLED IN (0 MINUTES {§ Memorial Highway, Dallas Across From Gosart’s | OR 5-1852 Principal; Mrs. .. and Mrs. Hines. so the rat must run over it when following along the wall. It is not | always necessary to bait the trap, | but if baiting is done tie or wire the | bait to the trigger. Bacon, beef, fish, fresh liver, nuts meats or cheese are | good bait materials, Use an abund- ance of traps. In apartment houses | or large warehouses from twenty to | a medium size farm not less than a hundred well placed and baited traps are necessary to do effective work. Warfarin, fumerin and pival are the active ingredients in many pre- mended as poison for rats. They are usually mixed with dry oatmeal and by the rats for a week or ten days continue to eat until they are killed. Bait boxes should provide easy | several hundred will be needed. On | parations now on the market recom- | cornmeal. These are anti-blood clot- | ting poisons and must be consumed | before they die. Rats are not sus- | picious of these mixtures and will | er; Mrs. Nuss; Anthony Marchakitus, High School Marchakitus. Standing, Robert Belles, Elementary Principal; Mrs. Belles; Edgar Lashford, President Lake-Leh- man School Board; Delbert Hines, member Ross Township School Board, who gave the invocation, | access by rats and mice but cov- {ered to exclude domestic animals. | | REMEMBER = THAT THESE MIX- | TURES ARE POISONOUS AND | MUST BE KEPT FROM LIVESTOCK AND IRRESPONSIBLE PERSONS. | To prepare a bait with red squill, mix one ounce of the powdered red | squill with a little water to form -a | thin paste free from lumps. Add to | this ten ounces of fish and mix thoroughly. In a like way, one ounce of the powdered red squill in water {is mixed with ten ounces of fresh | | hamburg steak or ten ounces of other bait. A good active dog will do much | toward keeping a farm free from rats . Ferrets are valuable when handled by experienced men. Cats are not usually good ratters. Snakes, | hawks and owls are also enemies of the rat. Want To Sell Your House? Use The Trading Post SHOP & SAVE AT LEONARD'S At Veterans Ardent Horseman Passes Away At 71 Michael J. Brown, 71, Lake Street, died Tuesday morning at | Veterans Hospital, where he was | admitted last Thursday by Dallas | Community Ambulance. He had | been ill for some time. Services will be held Friday | morning at 10 from the Disque | Funeral Home, with a requiem |'mass at Gate of Heaven Church at (10:30. Burial will be in Fern Knoll. Friends may call tonight, 7 to 10. The rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. Mr. Brown, familiarly known as Dyke, was an ardent horseman, one of the original organizers of the Leh- man Horse Show, and a member of |Back Mountain Horsemen’s Club. During World War I he was 3 cor- | poral with the 23d Ordnance Guard { Company. He was a former coal contractor "associated with Glen Alden Coal | Company. A native of Plymouth, his parents | were the late Thomas and Mary Kinney Brown. He was educated ih | Plymouth schools, and belonged to a number of organizations in that - city, including Kiwanis Club and | America] Legion Post 463. : In 1933, he moved to the Back Mcuntain area, lived here for several | years, and moved back to Plymouth. | When he retired three years ago, the family moved to 71 Lake Street. Surviving are: his widow the for- mer Louise Burk of Plymouth; a son, Thomas, Lehman; two grandchil- dren; sisters: Mrs. Irving Miller of Scranton; Mrs. P. A. Roan, Ply- mouth; Mrs. G. Murray Leighton, Wilkes-Barre; a brother, John, Ply- mouth; a number of nieces and { nephews. Wf More than 44 million of the 50 million U. S. housécholds will receive a newspaper today. HUMDINGERS | | EE TEE CT Ee TEBE TET CETTE OS 1 ‘FAVORITE CIGARS for HIM ® MINIATURES $1. - $2.50 ke 5 er: a $ FAIR HuL SETS $2. - $6.50 : Swan xe PR A A A RR RRA ARR, Yellow Bole A Yardley PIPES TALCUM SPRAY COLOGNE DUSTING POWDER “$1.25 - $2.50 DUTCH MASTER ROBT. BURNS SETS $1.25 - $4.50 EL PRODUCTO WHITE OWL REVLON TALCUM MOON DROPS LOVE PAT $1. HAND LOTION CLE TL TET TIT TE 2h TROL IE TOILE Pe . NOTE PAPER ° . ® CARDS “=n PEN SETS $2. AMBUSH SPRAY COLOGNE BATH POWDER $3. SETS $4.50 & LANVIN “MY SIN” CHANEL 5 | TIMEX WATCHES STUFFED ANIMALS FABERGE - $3. — SETS $5. & $6. ; FOR ADULTS & CHILDREN TRAVEL SETS ® COLOGNE CHILD GUIDANCE ® Cologne ® TALC _AMITY WALLETS TOYS . Se — ; ls SETS $2. - $6. ARPEGE’ HALL S PHARMACY REGISTERED PHARMACISTS ON DUTY ‘OPEN DAILY and SUNDAY 8 to 10 | MAIN HIGHWAY _ SHAVERTOWN MAX FACTOR TALC COLOGNE BATH POWDER $1 - $2.50 SETS ‘$2. - $6. Even if he isnt king of your household, he’s part of your royal family and T sutaly eserves a princely gift. " WINNERS Give her a special lift on Christmas morning fo keep up her spirits to prepare the holi ay, feast and wash the dishes. She's a good scout! BELL RINGERS So, he is a bit lazyl So he doesn’t clean up his room! Sa he teases sister! So he’s constantly at the refrigerator] But # is Christmas SPECIALS Everybody knows she hogs the phone! OF course, she naver gets out of the bathroom! And the way she hides that diary oF hers! But we {ove her, don't we? STUNNERS Notice ie eve on the rightl Every gift is for the gal. Aren't there men sweethearts? If you find one, look of gifts ving Set “ELGIN" 19-JEWEL “BULOVA" 17-JEWEL “SEA KING" WATCH, only FULL 1/; CARAT DIA- MOND 14-K $00 WITH GOLD RING 3975 1/4 CARAT TOTAL WGT. DIAMOND 99 MOTHER'S RING with BIRTHSTONE for Family Member WEDDING RING $25 : ‘ BH i (ETRE ER [CUTE ) TTT] GIFTS ON ONE LCG “TIMEX “MERCURY” with SWEEP SEC- OND HAND Qos SMART, COMPACT ans 118 and for *5 SEWEL BOX, fireproof, @ superb design in 14-K bi Zhorbant ond Shethes ule SARs eteiy gos’ en 1338 CTE | i for likely suggestions. WATCH Farrington Sterling Clasp diomanda NU en No fin — Love Juwelow 61 S. MAIN ST. WILKES-BARRE DIAMOND ONYX RING “ELGIN" 19-JEWEL DIA- MOND “Gayety” watch SIX TRANSISTOR PERSONAL RADIO, Now Eornings or Allowance CULTURED PEARL NECK- SHOPPING CENTER FAMOUS MAKE ELEC- TRIC SHAVERS INITIAL $20 50¢ =, CUCKOO CLOCK TELLS HOUR and Qos HALF HOUR : 49° INITIAL ONYX RING fo £0 ALE (40 ALICE TA YOU ‘DON'T NEED: CASH! Pay on Easy Terms ut of Part-time 4-SPEED PHONO, Zh 19% GA TE 4 AY Sr
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers