SECTION A — PAGE 2 Area Women Attend Missionary Workshop Local women who attended the missionary workshop of United Church Women at Wyoming Aven- ue Christian Church, Kingston, Fri- day from [Shavertown Methodist Church were: Pearl Averett, Mrs. ~ Milton Evans, Mrs. . : ’ jin the wide meadow half a mile ee oe. ym north of Evans Falls on Route 309: Kimble, Mrs. John ‘Cortright, Mrs, | It is a pleasant ten-mile drive Eo 8 . | from Dallas. Hours are 10 am. to ~ William Davis, Mrs. Ralph Lewis, 6 d chairman for the day Mrs. S De : oh H . as Thirty-seven dealers are signed up 3 or ai reuiMive.l Jolin to show their wares, with station Hons ir $ Bid e: Dn i: wagons and trestle tables used as Edgar Se ov > Be Be: | display counters, report Robert S. Miss Catherine Gilbert, Mrs. Arnott Foote and ‘Herman 'D- Baltimore, Jones, Mrs. Raymond Swanson, Mrs. | Fred Eck, Mrs. Charles Sieber, Mrs. fred Eigam, Mrs. Oliver Rome, Mrs. | Paul Tiebe, and Mrs. Leon Beisel. Polished red apples in bushel baskets, shocks of corn, and mounds of pumpkins will add color on Sat- | urday to the annual Haymarket Out- ein Portes | door Antique Sale and ‘Art Show, Haymarket Outdoor Antique Show Scheduled For Saturday, Route 309 show . managers. Mr. Foote’s Country Store antique shop is close enough at hand at Evans Falls to make it possible for him to show a good selection of wooden ware and Early Americana. Since last ‘year’s successful show, he has been promoting the idea of a second show, larger and more com- prehensive than last September’s. ‘With a much larger registry than that of last year, antique lovers are assured of finding almost any- thing they are looking for, from china dolls to drop-leaf walnut tab- les, copper kettles to rocking chairs. Rocking chairs, says Mr. Foote, THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1961 Fox Kills Peafowl There has been a considerable increase in the number of foxes in the Larksville Mountain area this season. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Frantz had a prize peafowl carried away by one of them. ‘will be a strong drawing card this year, because of [President Kennedy's strong advocacy of rockers in eas- ing an aching back: For a time, rock- ers were low in popular esteem, but times have changed. The meadow where the show will be staged, at a foot of a mountain along Bowman's Creek, has ample room for easy, level parking. In case of rain, the Haymarket Show will be held the following Saturday, September 30, same place, same time. Lake Service Club Makes Plans For Party Harveys Lake Women’s Serviee Club will stage a Month-Of-The- Year party .at Lake-Noxen school Friday, September 22. General Chairman is Mrs. Lee Bicking. Mrs. Charles Williams is in charge of program; Mrs. Al Chepan- omnis, of reservations; Mrs Owen Rowland, refreshments; Mrs. Harvey Kitchen and Mrs. Ruth Deets, host- esses; Mrs. Carrie Rood, transperta- tion; Loretta Nelson, publicity. 100F To Elect Officers Toby Creek Old Fellows, Lodge 1078, announce election of officers ‘Tuesday at 8 p.m. in Trucksville Fire Hall. THIS COUPON Entitles you to 70c off the regular price of $1.49 on one 4 - piece } place setting. =p Luzerne-Dallas Hwy. 148 So. Main, W.-B. ¢ ¢; 100 BONUS TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH $10.00 PURCHASE OR OVER REDEEMABLE AT ALL GIANT MARKETS THRU SAT., SEPT. 23rd LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER 100 HE (i TOP VALUE STAMPS § © With Purchase of 3 Lbs. § : i FRESH GROUND BEEF Rl § Redeemable at All Giant Markets 3 E COUPON GOOD THRU SATURDAY, SEPT. 28rd } ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER US Ee A AAT CRP RRR Re] =e DR FA HS EAR 50 Bonus Top Value Stamps With the Purchase of 8 Pkgs. * ROYAL GELATIN NF NF. Fo ? RL AN he’ LEGGS - 39¢ © VALUE : cup, SAUCER. DINNERPLATE, BREAD AND BUTTER DISH Redeemable thru Sat., Sept. 22° Kedeemable at All Giant Markets COUPON GOOD THRU SATURDAY, SEPT. 23rd ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER Up Bh TRAD PT Eo oA PORK LOIN 4. Piece Place Setting "Golden Wheat" DIVBERIARE REGULAR PRICE bs 02 FRESH DRESSED CHICKENS devas tucsonsisreet $1.49 OF THIS COUPON... 10 YOUR COST . . 79¢ 23rd—>5th week coupon CUT -UP CHICKENS 23% BREASTS ~ 49¢ 1b. ® LEG & BREASTS Quarters 29¢ 1b. Keen: LEG = RUMP VEAL - 49° © SHOULDER VEAL CHOPS ® RIB VEAL CHOPS . . . . . ® LOIN VEAL CHOPS © CUBE VEAL STEAK oth BiG WEEK! —IMPORTANT— THIS DINNERWARE IS GUAR. ANTEED TO BE OF “FIRST QUALITY” . , . led by what may be ‘seconds’ at other stores. Soup Dishes Dessert Dishes . Sugar Bowl, Reg. 98c ....ea. Creamer, Reg. Meat Server, Reg. 8c... Vegetable Server _ =~ Do not he mis- 2 for 98c Reg. 2 for 79¢ . 3 for 9c Reg. 3 for 770 5c . “38¢ . 5% : 3% 5c creeseens eg. 79¢ ROAST » 53¢ mn 73¢ n 79¢ » 98¢ a 50 ) Bonus Top Value mi SY * Redeemable at AH Giant Markets COUPGN GOOD THRU SATURDAY, SEPT. 23rd ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER Re "Be ON FRESH Sf w [44 3 = w Sl} © = < [44 2 Hi = ® 2 2 3 | = » Nt With the Purchase of 2 Jars (18-0z.) hen ea RIB END . Ib. 29¢ To 50 Bonus Ton V Value Stamps ) ER 4 With the Purchase of 2 Pkgs. (12-o0z.) ) d DROMEDARY FUDGE MIX PJ | LOINEND...Ib.3% i * Redeemable at All Giant Markets i) Sliced ...... Ib. 43¢ 3 i 5 BD COUPON GOOD THRU SATURDAY, SEPT. 23rd 4 Centercut Chops 1b 79 & ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER % EL z = Hy rms “FISHERMAN FRESH” SEA FOODS 4 With the Purchase of One Pkg. = aL. eak 55¢ § DIAPER SWEET DETERGENT 4 sling Steak Ib. t | WHITING . . 2 29¢ Z FANCY—NO. 1 SMELTS . . . . CLAMS . . 50 $1.00 FLAV-O-RITE OR ARMOUR STAR SKINLESS FRANKS » 49° n 23¢ MILD OLD VIRGINIA OAK FARM FRESH EGGS SLICED SWISS CHEESE «wm IMPORTED BLEU CHEESE CHEDDAR CHEESE DAIRY FOODS —— MEDIUM SIZE (GRADE-A) 45: dz ®o eo pie. 69c¢ n 89¢ » 55¢ JELLIES or PRESERVES ¥ Redeemable at Al Giant Markets EAN COUPON GOOD THRU SATURDAY, SEPT. ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER INSTAR 2rd & 5 25 Bonus Top Value Stamps With the Purchase of 1Y2-Lb. Pkg. Modern Choc. Chip Cookies ~~ - ov — 4 COUPON GOOD THRU SATURDAY, SEPT. 23rd ITALIAN PI U. S. NO. 1 ALL PURPOSE POTATOES . . . . CALIF.—VINE RIPENED HONEYDEW SWEET, JUICY CALIF. ORANGES . JUMBO SZE NES =~ 3-35 50-Lb. Bag 93¢ + 85 « “39¢ ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER ; Nylon Hosiery 51 GAUGE 3 oo $1 00. 15 DENIER FULL FASHION | fl 100 NEEDLE $4.59 : | | oie Sovuss 8a 17) Chose & Sanborn INSTANT COFFEE So" #17 sar rrars—— SKIPPY PEANUT BUTTER . . . . .""50¢ CHOCOLATE ‘TOPPED BOSTON CREAM PIE ~~ 49c POPPYSEED or CHEESE FILLED ® we: 2Q¢ ® CUT-RITE WAX PAPER HUNT'S PEACHES suces ox mvs, oo FORT APPLESAUCE . . . . . . KRAFT OIL SALAD OR COOKING ° ° NESTLE CHOCOLATE QUIK . NESTLE STRAWBERRY QUIK. . 125 FT. ROLL @® SCOTTIES FACIAL TISSUE 200 sHEeT ROLL BANANA NUT LOAF CAKE . APPLE TURNOVERS .. . .. 3 = 20¢ COFFEE CAKE swwr enc 38¢ FROZEN FOODS ve ei o D9C 4 : Ne 250 49¢ No. 303 Cans o Lb. Ekg. 39¢ o 1b, Pig. 39¢ Rotts 47¢ 10c BIRDS EYE FR. FRIED POTATOES i: 2 Fras SEALDSWEET ORANGE JUICE SWANSON TV-DINNERS ~-. ==. . . . 39¢ "re 29c os 89c 2 co 69c New Highway (Continued from Page 1 A) old Johnson store property and all other business and residential prop- erties on the left side of Roberts Gasoline station opposite the inter- section with the Hillside-Huantsville Road. It will be noted that there are considerable land damages at all intersections. This is because the engineers have designed the inter- section for broad vision for motor- ists approaching from any direc- tion: On the right side of the highway leaving Dallas (these properties will be affected: Quaker Courts, Hawks Trailer Sales, and Births Esso Stat- ion will lose some land; California Fruit Market goes; so does Noon's Garage. Some land will be taken from the front of Forty Fort Dairy Bar. Beyond the Overbrook Avenue overpass little will be disturbed ex- cept land. A fifteen foot strip more or less will be taken from Back Mountain Shopping Center for right of way: ‘Walter's Service Station and the ‘Shoemaker Shop at the intersection with Center Street, will go. So will a strip of land from in front of Dr. Bucan’s ‘office and home. Whit- ing’s gas station will remain, so will Purcell’'s Gasoline Station - but the home of Doris Nesbitt and the new Texaco Gasoline Station (owned by F. Gordon Mathers) and all properties now close to the present road will be razed including the Goery home, Henry Kahn's home, Dr. Bradbury's home, Back Moun- tain Used Car Lot, Daily Property, and Frank Mather Home, and King- ston Township Building. Howard Isaacs Sales Rooms and Garage will remain, but the Vanecho home and Sinclair Gasoline Station at the intersection ‘with Mt. Greenwood Road will go. Bears Make . . . (Continued from Page 1 A) no more food he sauntered slowly up the road to the next camp. He ‘must have weighed between 450 and 500 pounds. Luckily we had kept the rest of our food in the car. The next morning we had to borrow some cooking oil to fry our eggs. This was one morning we ate dry toast. A fellow camper told us of his experience that same afternoon. When his wife had set the table and. all were ready to sit down to eat a bear showed up. Wife and child ran to the car but there our camper ‘was, the bear on one side of the table and he on the other, looking each other in the eye. He picked up some uncooked potatoes and rolled them down the road, the old bear went chasing after them. Despite all the bears, the camp site was crowded. [Experienced campers know how to keep food out of their reach. They say, “if you don’t molest them, they won’t mo- lest you. All they want is some- thing to eat.” The garbage cans are wedged in by four concrete pillars to prevent nightly overturning by the bears. Forgetting all this bear talk, if you ever have opportunity to wisit the “Great Smokey Mountains” you will be overawed by their majestic splendor. Proceeding down the North Car- olina side we came upon a Cher- okee Indian Reservation--real live Cherokee Indians walking around, mostly in civilian attire but some dressed in long feathers and Indian garb. From the ISmokeys we traveled to Williamsburg, Va., via the Blue Ridge Mounain Parkway. Some of the mountain peaks are a mile high. Here, again, you will see Nature in all its beauty and strength. The roads are very winding. We again camped in a National Park and when we awoke the next morning the {fog had closed in and we were barely able to find the road, so we left the mountains and proceeded to Williamsburg. Here we morning went to Jamestown where began to rain, forcing us to forego our trip by foot. We did manage to see many interesting places rid- ing driving around the road which covers the historic site. We returned to Williamsburg and took the historic bus to tour the Citiy reconstructed by the late John D. Rockefeller. We visited the places where George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry and other patriots started our country on its way to Independence: Don’t miss this trip! We then proceeded to Washing- ton where we visited the House of Representatives where they were arguing about increased mail fees and as to whether the vote was to be taken on a ’gag rule’ vote or on an ‘open rule’ vote. The ‘open rule vote’ won and now the rep- resentatives will be able to make any amendments law they wish, but we will probably get an increase in the postage rates. While at Wash- ington we visited with my brother who is a patient in Washington Hospital, but who is making a rapid recovery from his operation. Legally Adopted Michael Slimak, Chase-Hunts- ville Road, acording to information received for publication from Atty. Jonathan Valentine, adopted Robert Allen Kittle, son of Mrs. Ruth B. Slimak, who will be henceforth known as Robert Kittle Slimak. Decree was granted by Ed- ward W- Lopato, President Judge slept at a Tourist Home and next | has legally |: of the Orphans Court, ‘September 115, 1961. g J READ THE POST CI Dallas Schools Enroll 2,610 Dallas school enrollment sets an all-time high of 2,610, a figure which includes 19 special education stud- nts, and 243 kindergarten child- ren. Elementary students number 1,- 257; junior high school, 613; senior high school 478. Westmoreland has 428 pupils: 69 in first, 72 in second, 98 in third, 84 in fourth, 72 in fifth, 33 in sixth. Dallas Borough, 375 pupils: 63 in first, 57 in second, 63 in third, 54 in fourth, 70 in fifth, 68 in sixth. Shavertown, 242: 54 in first, 61 in second, 25 in third, 40 in fourth, 34 in fifth, 28 in sixth. Trucksville, 212: 27 in first, 29 in second, 29 in third, 31 in fourth, 35 in fifth, 61 in sixth. Horseshoe 4-H Club 1 Next meeting of the Back Moun- tain Horseshoe 4-H Club will be held on Saturday, nine thirty, at Center Hill Acres. This is a new day and time. On Friday the club traveled to Doylestown. to see a horse auction. Present were: Tom Estus, Ricky Ed- wards, Ronnie [Post, Judy Crispell, Marge Waschek, Ellen Bidwell, Fran- cis Wenzel, Houstan Day, Stuart Lacy, Connie Bogdon, Leslie Vivian, Erica Vivian, Laverne Kindler, Res- ia (Carroll, Linda Tag, Mr. and Mrs. Tony Dogdonand, Mr. E. V. Chad- wick. Gift Shop To Be Sold The former Frantz Card & Gift Shop ‘Building at Shavertown will be sold at Sheriff sale on October 29. People’s Bank of Edwardsville holds the first mortgage against it. | ion. \ DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA Williams Explains Military Ballots Harry J. Williams, Director, Coun- ty Bureau of Registration and Elect- ions, today issued a release to “ clarify the apparent confusion ex- isting with regard to military ballots for the November 7th General Elect- ” Our Bureau, Williams said, has been besieged these past few weeks with numerous requests for infor- mation concerning application for military ballots for service person- nel. The rules, as set forth in the election code, are specific. To qual- ify, a person in military service, he said, need only follow these rules: “Any qualified elector in actual military service may apply at any time before election for an official military ballot on form USWBC Form No. 1, or any other form sup- plied by the Federal Government. Application for military ballot may also be made by requesting in writ- ing to the Secretary of the Common-~ wealth of Pennsylvania or the Coun- ty Board of Election of the County in which his voting residence is located. “The request for military ballot, the application, shall contain the fol- lowing information, residence at the time of entrance into. actual military service, length of time applicant is a citizen, length of time applicant is a resident of voting district. The ap- plication must also contain the vot- ing district of the applicant, party choice in the case of a Primary Elec- ction, name, rank, military grade, address branch of service and ser- vice serial number. “Application for military ballot, in any election, may be made on in- formation supplied over the signa- ture of any person who is familiar with the voting qualifications of the military elector, so long as the pre- ceding requirements are met.” SUBSCRIBE TO THE POST chief cause Note this MC-70 tire print, showing three-rib tread design. Fewer ribs than in ordinary tires means mars tread strengih and rigidity . Ig: Note how ordinary tread, weaken- ed by 5 to 7 ribs, tends to buckle in the center. ADVERTISED IN GY ES *Naortheast edition SEE YOUR DEALER FOR THE FULL STORY ON MCCRIEEARY MEMILEAGE M Revolutionary three-rib tread dosigns makes the difference! THE MOST IMPORTANT ADVANCE IN TIRE DESIGN IN 17 YEARS! n ew MECRIEARY ends EG os of tire wear AA RT PS] Bs foot 13 buckling in the center of the tread under normal driving. Result: more rubber on the road, better grip, even ‘wear, longer tread life. Result: tread wears unevenly, and wears out faster on the edges than in the center. COOK ‘Recapping Service Dallas-Tunkhannock Highway (6 Miles North of Dallas) HE 89-8440 THE Going to remodel? Let "The Miners" help you! We make loan: for all kinds of home repairs at low bank rates! ‘Take Up To L= 3 YEARS TO PAY FRIENDLY ‘Miners in Dallas” Miners National Bank --- Main St, Dalles, Pa. ‘Member Fotera ‘Deposit mirage Corporation HOME REPAIR LOAKS FOR: Roofing Painting Heating Plumbing Kitchens Bathrooms Game Rooms Patios Landscaping Built-in Appliances bh oi gs ]