SECTION B— PAGE 4 FREE 150 GREEN STAMPS --= - WITH COUPONS THIS COUPON WORTH oe Extra S&H Green Stamps’ — WITH PURCHASE OF 1-LB. OR MORE REGULAR GROUND BEEF Name Address g Offer Expires Wednesday, May 10, 1961 LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER LANCASTER BRAND, BONELESS ROUND STEAK whore cuts ROUND ROAST (Boneless) RUMP ROAST LANCASTER BRAND TURKEY LANCASTER BRAND LONDON BROIL STEAK LANCASTER BRAND BEEF EYE ROAST CORNED BEEF no9¢ | Lean Sliced BOILEC HAM (Lesser Amis.—List Price) Lancaster Brand | BUTTERED BEEF BURGERS nv. §9¢ or CHEESEBURGERS i 43¢ te re rm, en es me in Se, Go GARDEN FEATURES PRUNED ROSE BUSH each $119 PENNA. DUTCH ad = ne FLORIDA © FERTILIZER or (5-10-5) t 50-Ib. $169 ow 2 bag IDEAL GOLDEN CRUSHED CORN RED BAND PEAS IDEAL, SLICED OR WHOLE WHITE POTATOES cans ACHE LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER WHOLE OR HALF 10 to 14-lIb. avg. FRESH PRODUCE SWEET LUSCIOUS STRAWBERRIES SWEET CORN NEW SOUTHERN CABBAGE GROCERY VALUES— ‘GRAPE-APPLE DRINK ne BG¢ PISTACHIO NUTS 4%." 69° COOKIES 47.2 89% \iroinia Lek 4 No 3 Qe PIES AppLE OR BLUEBERRY THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1961 THIS COUPON WORTH 50 Extra S&H Green Stamps WITH A 4-LB. BAG OF RADNOR ESTATE GRASS SEED Name Address Offer Expires Wednesday, May 10, 1961 : M\ LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER LS EEE IGOR IRI K THIS COUPON WORTH | 25 Extra S&H Green Stamps'— WITH PURCHASE OF (4) NO.' 303 CANS IDEAL WHITE POTATOES ( Mice) Name Address Offer Expires Wednésday, May 10, 1961 YOUR CHOICE 79 Lancaster Brand Semi-Boneless, Fully Cooked HAMS . 43° bn. 8° WHOLE C OR HALF Ib. Lancaster Brand V,.Lb DRIED BEEF LOAF YOUR ) Ale OR CHIPPED HAM {| CHOICE Pkg. Lancaster Brand Beef, Turkey or Chicken FROSTED DINNERS ee. CAL. SUNKIST = 6° LEMONS Saks 39¢ 5 « 35¢ doz. SEF THIS COUPON WORTH _ 25 Extra S&H Green Stamps’ WITH PURCHASE OF A I, GAL. PKG. IDEAL - FARMDALE ICE CREAM Name ‘Address ” Offer Expires. Wednesday, May 10, 1961 LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER THIS COUPON WORTH 25 Extra S&H Green Stamps WITH PURCHASE OF (4) CANS OF IDEAL PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT JUICE (46-02. can) GRAPE DRINK (32-0z.) GRAPE-APPLE DRINK (32-0z.) Name Address Offer Expires Wednesday, May 10, 1961 LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER iid TOBE ER GOIOGIEIT JOP JTITG FANON EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. MAY 6 SEAFOOD LARGE SMELTS = 18° FANCY DRESSED / A sib. box 19% n. | T¢ WHITINGS ib. 39 FROSTED SKINLESS 12-0z. pkg. h9¢ GOD or PERCH FILLET FILLET REGALE b. 3G¢ 35¢ LANCASTER BRAND soc | BEEF LIVER FROZEN FOODS GREEN PEAS 7 °= 51, CUT CORN ec 1: VEGETABLES oe Qe ORANGE JUICE 5 = 89 DAIRY VALUES J 6-oz. pkg. FIRESIDE ® CHOC-ONILLA © OATMEAL IIb. © VANILLA WAFERS ® CHOC. CHIP pk. BAKERY BUYS 2 for SUPREME, PLAIN, POPPY SEED, SESAME SEED CHEF'S DELIGHT CHEESE SPREAD 39¢ SYLVAN SEAL CREAM CHEESE 29¢ LOUELLA BUTTER Whole or Quarters 1. 3-0z. pkg. | 1¢ ib. pkg. 73+ Richland BUTTER whole tb.pka. T1¢ Leave your wills 202 jor 21¢ VIENNA BREAD tat 1 Q¢ How i Fe me ws i Rr pall wens al os i : . 3% APPLE SAUCE 250 fr 28% ORANGE CHIFFON CAKE EA. 49 SALAD OIL a. bor. GF ENRICHED GOLD SEAL FLOUR 20 21c 21'/;-0z. pkg. 34c FELS KAPTHA SOAP INSTANT FELS NAPTHA INSTANT FELS NAPTHA stor pha. TC INSTANT FELS NAPTHA woz pha. $131 GENTLE FELS LIQUID n= 3T¢ ‘Gi: 55¢ FELS NAPTHA CLEANER if. “." dle “SLIM SIZE” SALTINES br 299/58 LE) NIAGARA LAUNDRY STARCH od | LINIT LAUNDRY STARCH 2 .. 2% by GREENWOOD Red Cabbage, 2 16-0z. jars. 43c LIQUID STARCH «22° v= 41° BEETS S550 30 6c OFF! 3c OFF NU-SOFT FABRIC SOFTENER oor. 6 SOILAX iy 26¢ KASCO ©: 60¢ “ts1® == sym KRAFTOIL «37° BUTTER KERNEL, WHOLE - DOG MEAL 5b. bag G5¢ GOLDEN BOOK (va. i ENCYCLOPEDIA Now on Sale VOL. 1 STILL ON SALE—Ea. 49c ) 99c Special! FRENCH WHILE THEY LAST! POTATOES TABLE CLOTH (’%%) e. 409° PLASTIC, ASST. COLORS VASE (LARGE) (SMALL) LAUNDRY DETERGENT 7 Bo ws 4 le 4 eg 33¢ Iz, 49¢ Yoo 89¢ 1.00 ea. MUELLER'S PRODUCTS ELBOW MACARONI ib. 23¢ SPAGHETTI b. 23¢ EGG NOODLES io 27¢ {SWIFT'S BABY FOODS GERBER BABY FOOD STRAINED CHOPPED CG f5 Ge 03 HI-MEAT LAMB, BEEF, CHICKEN DINNER (STRAINED) (CHOPPED) 20s JTF Due dOF Din AOE FREE BABY LAND BIB FOR ONLY & BEECH-NUT LABELS BEEGH-NUT 75% = 6 « 65¢ + 6 « 93¢ a eS Sr rs a J . JR So. St So Sn, Son So ee ns es tit Wt So HANDY SIX PACK BiB ORANGE JUIGE ons 08° qt. 67¢ RITZ CRACKERS ~ 35¢ GOLDEN CORN 2 <=: 25° 2... 3% GREEN GIANT DEVILED HAM “er 33 CORN-=.2-2 sr flc PEAS 7: Ade NABISCO UNDERWOOD MILD : LIQUID SWAN "31° “i FROZEN CHICKEN A-LA-KING ONION RINGS BIRDS EVE .o~ 55 7 34 MILK AMPLIFIER DETERGENT 5¢ LIQUID ALL 2: T3¢ “ox sp01 a0 BEECH-NUT (7c off) COFFEE = 68¢| —REGULAR OR DRIP GRIND— PUREX PRODUCTS SWEETHEART SOAP ox 29¢ SWEETHEART SOAP 3: 43 DUTCH CLEANSER 2 on 208 BEADS 0’ BLEACH or bor 3 BLU WHITE BEADS vor box 2B DRY TREND 2 rio. 39¢ TREND uove 2 > 58¢ oi 49¢ ‘2 69 WRISLEY SOAP = 6 38 2-1b. loaf 65° / | They have blacktopped Roushey | N. ¥., former Dallas resident, wishes DALLAS, PENN SYLVAN IA 1 LaVelle Says Chinchilla Breeding Is Profitable, Pelts In Demand THis is the!season of the year for | chinchillas to bring forth their young | in the interest of the garment in- | dustry and the clothing of the Amer- | ican female in luxury. Breeders who did not get discour- | aged when the water was squeezed | out of the chinchilla business | several years ago, and peltsidropped | drastically'in price, are doing pretty | | well. Joe Lavelle is one of the breed- | ers who weathered the storm. Up on'Maplewood Avenue, his lady | chinchillas are now preparing for | the stork, or hava already produced | their litters. The market for chin- chilla furs is now pretty constant. 1 | £ Seeks Reelection Joe eases the prime fur-bearvers out of their life, using a big glass jar | with a whiff of chloroform, and skins | them. for the New York market, fif- | : : | teen or sixteen at a time. Joe says. When chinchilla breed- ing was a new thing in this coun- try, you used to pay $1,000 a piece for breeding stock. Now you can get a nice pair of prime breeders for | $800.” For his first breeders, six | animals, he paid $3,600. Right now, if you're willing to settle for B-grade stock, he says' you can get a ching) chillla for as low as $200. Dealers pay a good price for prime pelts, to meet the demand for chin- chilla coats for'the luxury trade. It is no trouble at all to skin a chinchilla, says Joe, or' stretch the pelt on thick cardboard. Pelts are shipped green, tanned upon arrival. All chinchillas in this country’ orig- inated in South America, high in the Andes, product of a pair smuggled into the United States by an English engineer. Again, the offspring of these chinchillas were stolen. There was grave doubt in the first days; of the industry, that animals accus- | | { | | FRED LAMOREAUX Probably nobody in the Back Moun- | tain area is better fitted to keep heavy road-working machinery in operation than Fred Lamoreaux who is seeking reelection as Supervisor of Dallas Township. | Fred started his training as a for- | ger on all types of machines when | he began to work for the old Vul- | | can Iron Works in 1926. He contin- ued in that occupation until twelve years ago when the Vulcan closed. For six years prior to that time he had been a foreman working on mar- ine engines and locomotives. Born in West Nanticoie, the son of the late Solomon and Anna Lowden | Lamoreaux, he grew up in the Back Mountain at Payne’s Midkiff Ken- nels where he greatly admired John Snover. He married a Dallas Township | girl, Alverna Bellas. They have a |\ | son, Fred B., 19, a graduate of Dal- | | las Township Schools, . who is em- | ployed in the office of Royal Found- ry Co. in Kingston. | As a supervisor, Fred has always felt that everything possible should be done for the improvement of the | community and for the convenience | of his constituents. To that end Dal- las Township Supervisors have al- ways seen to it that roads were plowed and cleared around school grounds without any argument. “They are our kids, and they have | to. get to school,” is the way Fred puts it, “and we're willing to do the little extra to keep everybody happy”. The Supervisors have also cooperated with the Little League in the upkeep of its grounds. ‘It's for all the kids, and we're for it” says Fred. This doesn’t mean that the Super- visors have neglected their other duties. No municipality in the Back Mountain had its roads cleared quicker this last winter than Dal- | las Township. Hill at Fernbrook. They have taken over streets in New Goss Manor and College Manor and they are oper- ating a good Police Department under the leadership of Irwin Cool- baugh. One reason for the efficiency of the Road Department is Fred’s abil- ity to maintain, repair and keep equipment in smooth working oper- ation, and to build or rebuild equip- ment as it is needed. The two cinder spreaders in oper- ation in the Township are an exam- ple. Fred designed and built them. They are labor savers and likewise money savers. He also built a street broom and reconstructed a ten-ton road roller to take a new Internat- ional motor, saving at least $5,000 for the township. Federal And State Fish Program To Dovetail Federal and State Fish Commis- sions will get together on a trout stocking program to eliminate dupli- cation of transportation, according to recent action between Bureau of Sports Fisheries ‘and Pennsylvania Fish (Commission. Three years have gone into thid agreement. All Federal trout, beginning in 1962; will go into public fishing waters, and only those waters which meet fish stocking standards of Pennsylvania will be stocked. The cooperative distribution plan is designed to eliminate duplicate mile- age of State and Federal fish trucks. Sufficient Federal trout will be reserved for farm pond programs and special projects, such fish having no connection with the stocking program covered by the agreement. Sends Thanks Mrs. Emma Franklin, Endwell, to thank all her old friends for the : ] cards. She received | | soft-grey fur looking and feeling tomed to the altitude of the Andes would survive, without degeneration. But the strain remained ‘true “to | type, and chinchillas are now com- i monly raised in many places. 4 Joe has 100 chinchillas today, but {he may have 125 by. tomorrow. Gestation takes 111 days. Litters 547 very small, usually one or two, vel) accosionally as many as four. They { mature ready for. breeding or pelt- | ing, in eight to ten months. In the wire cages stacked in Jog's | basement, small furry animals peer { forth from béady black eyes, thé soft as swansdown. They are not afflicted with vermin, because the fine hairs grow iso quickly, 60 to BO to one follicle, that no vermin could make its way between them. They are hardy little creatures, mot sub- ject to disease. A basement is exactly ‘right for them, as they thrive in a cool climate and do not care for ; heat. They eat pellets and hay, A ing the pellets critically, and discard- ing a good half of them. No. wa I pans. Chinchillas in their nati habitat lick the dew from fresh green leaves.. To approximate this, eath cage has a water bottle with a glass tube, hanging from the outside. The ; chinchillas suck the water from the | tube as from a nipple. A five-day-old chinchilla experi- i mented briefly with hay and pellets, | but returned to his mother. Like rabbits, chinchillas are mammals. A large female Chinchilla, a vet- ‘eran, permitted herself to be lightly stroked. A breath blown on. the fi showed the characteristic ring ard the deeper. tones. Chinchillas bite. They don’t take to strangers or Oily noises. They have an odd bark, use when in distress, or from annoyance. They love to bathe. But mot. in water. Each cage has an individual shallow pan half filled with an ex- tremely finely divided mineral not dusty, definitely granular; called Attapulgite, available in 100 pound sacks. Each day the pan of mineral is placed in the cage, and the chin- chilla dives into it, fluffing her fur in a shower of mineral, wallowing in it, and apparenty deriving great pleasure from the loose, cool feel: of the stuff on the skin. It is not a dust, so never adheres. The chinchilla steps out, refreshed, and as Cleans .as a whistle. Recently, Joe has been exper imenting with a new type of cage, mounted on a runway with openings into each cage, a dodge which will save him a lot of money ves in males if it is a success. The ¥e- males inhabiting the individual cages are prevented by a plastic collar from getting through the small roa openings into the runway. The m: is permitted to ramble at will. ~~ Joe took over some chinchillas | when other breeders went out-of business, and found it profitable. Litters are small usually two a year or on rare occasions three, but chinchillas are highly durable, tough little creatures, so the original in- vestment is not likely to be wiped out. Too many people, he thinks, got discouraged too soon. Joe’s chinchilla farm is a going concern, and it doesn’t take up too much time. He has recently completed a do- it-yourself' project of adding a new room to his house in his spare time. And of course everybody kn Joe Lavelle down at the Dallas Pos Office . Joe got a citation from the United- States Post office a few years ago for saving a small baby from burn- ing to death, rescuing it from a closed sedan, and beating out flames caused by a dropped: cigarette light- er. Joe just happened to be deliv- ering a parcel post package at the right time, noticed the commotion in the sedan where three children were enveloped in smoke in front of the Dallas Hardware Store, and sprang into instant action. Stork Shower Mrs. Bernard Rogers, Shavertown, was the guest of honor at a stork shower given recently by Mrs. Joseph Borton, Carverton Road. Games were played and refresh- ments served. Many lovely gifts were received. Those attending were: Mrs. Emer- son Veitch, Mrs, C. King Parker, Mrs. Otis Allen, Jr. Mrs. Alfred Rogers, Mrs. Fred Dodson, Mrs. Michael Milunich, Mrs. Cletus Holcomb, Mrs. | William Borton, Mrs. Michael Yoz- = RT Sa cp seu Ey RSS ese eww ew TEIN Be SRE % i 2 eli LW 34