The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, November 08, 1962, Image 4

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    ; SECTION A PAGE 4
‘Below Average
Corn, Hay And
Potato Crops
Penngylvania’s ‘corn for grain
crop today was estimated by the
State Department of Agriculture's
~ Crop Reporting Service at 41.1 mil-
~ lion bushels on a basis of surveys
completed during October.
~ . Dewey’ O. Boster, chief statisti-
cian, said this figure is nearly a
third under the" 1961 corn yield
and one fifth below
average. Anticipated
low corn
the 1951-60 | below average.
yields and the thay stortage dur- |
ing the summer drought prompted
the harvesting for silage of many
corn fields that had been planted
for grain.
Absence of severe frost in most
sections and improved soil mois-
ture enabled corn generally to
reach maturity. Rains also im-
proved prospects fors fall seeded
grains and hay, and lengthened
the pasture season.
Hay production figures remained
unchanged at 2,455,000 tons, off
40 per cent from a year ago, and
lowest of record going back to 1875.
Potatoes for 1962 were estimated
at 6.9 million hundredweight, 17
per cent below 1961 and 15 per cent
per cent on top of a’'6 per cent |
decline in acreage.
Late summer Cobbler production
was estimated at 594,000 cwt., an
average yield of 165 cwt. per acre.
Fall production was estimated at
6.3 million cwt., an average of 180
cwt. per acre. The set was re-
ported lighter than normal through-
out the state, but the tubers were
of good size and excellent quality.
Growers in northern tier coun-
quality crop. No disease or in-
sect damage was reported.
During the last week of Septem-
ber movement of potatoes to stor-
age was quite heavy in the western
part of the state. However, in the
Yields dropped 11 |
| eastern part the situation was re-
versed with most stocks
directly to processors. Potatoes in
| eastern counties, very high i in speci-
fies “weve: harvesting an gxeellons | fitness, basic military law, military
THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1962
Was At Great Lakes
Great Lakes, I1l.,, (FHTNC)—Den-
nis F. Blair, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred A. Blair, 76 Highland Avenue, !
Trucksville, completed recruit train-
ing Qctober 22 at the Naval Train-
ing Coater, Great Lakes.
tion, recruits are trained in physical
drill, seamanship, first aid, swim-
ming and survival, and customs and
traditions of the naval service.
moving |
Each recruit receives tests and in-
| terviews to determine his
| training and assignments.
fic gravity, were of good shipping
| quality.
During the nine-week indoctina-!
future |
To Celebrate Birthday
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Miller, Upper
Demunds Road, will help their son
{ William Celebrate his 28th birth-
day in Emmaus this week, visit Phil-
adelphia, then return [Sunday night.
United Fund Drive
(Continued from 1—A)
ton Evans, Mesdames Robert Walk,
Louis Spaciano, Clifford Parker, |
Wayne Troxell,
Lehman: Mrs. Gordon Daw; i :
dames Thomas Brown, Donald Cut-
ting, Thomas Hillyer Jr., Harry Ed-
wards Jr., Ray Goodwin.
{ Carverton: Mrs. George Kromel-
bein; Mrs. Robert Robbins, Mrs. |
‘Thomas Metz, Mrs. David Perry Jr.!
re \. LITTLE & IVES
pL , READY REFERENCE ¢
“ENCYCLOPEDIA.
VOLUME 9
VOLUME I
STILL ON SALE
19
only 4%c
100 BOHUS
TOP VALUE STAMPS
With $10.00 Purchase or Over
Excluding Cigarettes, Milk Products,
and Fair Trade Items
Limit One Coupon Per Customer
Redeemable At All Giant Markets
COUPON GOOD SAT. NOV. 10%H
EN [Ed Top Value EE Ln
J ® 50 Bons mn
y With the Purchase of One 10-0z. Jar
: Giant Pride Instant Coffee
3 | Redeemable At All Giant Markets
os Coupons Geog Thru Saturaay, Nov. 10th
i ONE COUPON TO A CUSTOMER
am ai a em
JE ENA ( ri
as pe = SHESHEL
Tamas Mp
i 50 Bonus TV- Sat
| With the Purchase of Two One Lb. Jars
Sioux Bee Honey
Redeemable At All Giant Markets
a
= ramen inte SHES
25 Bonus er |
} With the Purchase of 10-Lb. Bag U.S. No. 1 |
; All Purpose Potatoes
| Redeemable At All Giant Markets
S Coupons Good 1nru Saturday, Nov. 10th
) ONE COUPON TO A CUSTOMER
— eissiasiesiel]
i 25 Bons v Staes =
J) With Purchase of One 16-0z. Pkg. Frozen i
2 Icelandic Fish Sticks
| Redeemable At All Giant Markets
AN
amas
Coupons god Thru saturaay, Nov. 10th
i ONE COUPON 0 A CUSTOMER
ieee
H
SES
BEES
easiest EE EEEEVES
3 {
25 Seti s TV- Stamps a
| With the Purchase of One Pound or Over f )
Muenster Cheese B
Redeemable At All Giant Markets (
Coupons Good Thru Saruraay, nov. 10th |
ONE COUPON TO A CUSTOMER 5
ee dh Se
— > py S
Va A
25 ee Tv. Stamps
i
N
i Witk the Purchase of Any Bag of
J
a
s Apples
| McIntosh, Cortland or Red Delicious
i
1 Redeemable At All Giant Markets | I
2% Coupons Gooa Thru Saturday, Nov. 10th ||
i= ONE COUPON To A CUSTOMER x
=issieasiaiamiEd
FROZEN FOODS
JESSE JEWELLS
MEAT PIES
WESTERN
STEER
BEEF
fh.
CHOICE GRADE—BONELESS
<
/
Married Saturday =
PINK
eee F [SHERMAN FRESH SEA FOODS semmuery
FRESH DUG
CLAMS ....50 “9
FRESH OYSTERS ......
FRESH WHITE FISH
FRESH HADDOCK FILLET
FANCY SMELTS
12-0z.
Can 89¢
oh Lb. 59¢
wr Lb. 49¢
Lo... "238
FLORIDA'S
FINEST
EXTRA—FANCY
BEEF
CHOICE GRADE
WESTERN STEER
MEAT
MIX on . MATCH—FRESH
SALAD MIX or
COLE SLAW
SWISS CHEESE
2
DAIRY FOODS
OAK FARM—MED. SIZE
FRESH EGGS 2 83c
BORDEN'S GRUYERE
WISCONSIN SHARP
29
GRADE —A—
8-0z,
6-0z.
t= 29¢
* B5¢
Bulk
w 59c
FFEE .
KS (a
CHICKEN = SEA TUNA FISH 2
BEECH-NUT GO
> HIG FRUIT DR
o CRISCO OIL
REG.
DRIP
SILEX
eROYAL PUD! : 6S 4: 39°
o GREEN GIANT NIBLETS. . . . .
eSALADA TEA BAGS oe "ee Lele
with $25 worth
61-0z.
Cans
oY
(&) +BY
Ji
| ; gc
69°
48-0z.
Bottle
6-0z. 2 9
Pkgs.
12- Oz. $
Pkgs.
48 Count
(10c OFF)
3.95
EG
Christmas Gifts FREE]
WITH GIANT
ISTER TAPES
D gies 0 @ FO LDI NG CHAI R PINK REGISTER SLIPS
gids BY [SWANSON FROZEN TV-DINNERS Ae rie. 59C
LUZERNE FABULOUS -
FILLED WITH BUTTER
Chocolate Gake Roll
JELLY TOPPED (REG. 49c)
Coffee Gake Swirl
REG. 69¢
Apple Strudle -
CHOCOLATE WHIPPED (REG. 89c)
Cream | Pie -
“INSTORE” BAKING
CREAM ICING
igh h9c
Ea. 39¢
. :
© 89
So. mph
/
Patricia Marie Mundlin, daughter
of Mrs. Fogarty Mundlin, Omaha be-
"| came the bride of John Joseph Ferry,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Ferry,
Huntsville Road, Dallas, November
3 at noon. The Rev. Martin P. Con-
ley performed the ceremony.
The bride was given in marriage
Johnson. Attendants
Kathleen
by Elmer I
were Sandra K. Jacobs,
Johnson and Ann McDermott, all of,
Omaha. Allen C. Brewster was best
man, Charles H. Bedard, Gerald
Forkasdi, Gary C. Chiarattini and
James McGill, ushers.
Following the ceremony, a recept-
MRS. JOHN J. FERRY
Virginia Ferry, Wilmington, and
Eileen, student at College Miseri-
cordia, sisters of the bridegroom,
attended the wedding.
James Douglas Loder
Mr. and Mrs. James Loder, West
Reading, announce the birth of an
eight pound eight ounce baby boy,
their second child. James Douglas |
was born October 19 at St. Joseph's
Hospital. Mrs. Loder is the former
Ruth Zimmerman, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Lee Zimmerman, Harveys
Lake. There ig a little girl, Laura
Lee, nine years old.
ion was held at the Birchwood Club.
Arthur Godfrey recommends
Sanitone ||.
Drycleaning
for complete, professional
fabric care
{Tt pays to keep up
appearances. I know!
That’s why I'm for Sanitoue—as I -
my listeners on my CBS Radio program.’’
Yes, with our Sanitone Dryclean-
ing, clothes come back looking and feel-.
ing like the day you bought them .
special finishes added for softness and
all spots removed safely and
minor repairs made...
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288-1496
FREE pick up and delivery
MAIN PLANT and NARROWS SHOPPING
CENTER BRANCH STORE
\alia's |
Launchy & Dry Charing Bo
Labs Dalles Highway,
with
Enterprise 1-0843
1 Daniel, Jr.,
‘tired Methodist minister,
iey Crest Home.
_.DALLAS. PENNSYLVANIA
Fire Guts Home
On Mountain
Fire Truck Drops
Over Wooded Bank
Only the shell of the Walter Bart-
lett home on Deats Mountain was
left standing yesterday afternoon,
when fire, presumably starting in a
defective chimney, gutted the two-
story frame structure.
Kunkle and Noxen firemen, un-
able to gct close to the building with
their trucks, ran hose for a considar-
able distance,
The house is three miles off the
main highway 309 between Beau-
mont and Lutes Corners. There is
no telephone.
The middle-aged’ couple lived, a-
lone. Alan Dymond, at the foot of
the mountain, phoned in the alarm
at 1:40. By 4 p.m. the fire was out.
At last reports, the Kunkle pum-
per was still on the scene. In man-
cuvering to get around a car left in
the hilly woods road, the heavy truck '
dropped partially over the bank.
fred Dodson, Tom Landon, and
other firemen, were still working to
zxtricate it.
Dorothy Gilbert
Returns To Africa |
Tuesday morning Dorothy Gilbert,
R. N., boarded a bus ia Wilkes-Barre
on her way to Idewild International
Airport, New York City, wiaere she
Jew to Leopoldville, Republic of
“he Congo.
Miss Gilbert, a Wyoming Con-
ierence Woman's Society of Chris-
tian Service Missionary, will con-
dnue her - work at the Institute
Medical Evangelique, Kimpese v.a
Leopoldville, Republic of the Congo,
Africa.
She is a graduate of Wyoning
Seminary, Nesbitt Memorial Hos-
oital, University of Pennsylvania
and last year studied Health and
dyglene at the Johns Hopkins Hos-
pital in Baltimore, Md.
Miss Gilbert is ‘the daughter of
Rev. .and Mrs. Charles Gilbert, re-
who re-
sides in Mt. Zion. Rev. Gilbert is
the Protestant Chaplain at the Val-
Her sister, Cath-
erine Gilbert accompanied her to
|New York. Members of the exec-
‘Iutive committee of the Wilkes-Barre
District Woman's Society of Chris-
tian Service saw Miss Gilbert off.
Services Friday For
Mrs. Mattie Cairl
Mrs. Mattie «Moss. Cairl 78, died
Tuesday alteincon at the home of
ner grandniece, Mrs. Beraice West,
Harveys Lake, after two years of
illness.
Daughter of the late Jonah and
Frances Ruggles Cease, she moved
with her fam.ly from Jackson Town-
ship to Pikes Creek when ‘a small |
child, and attended Pleasant Hill
Academy in Sweet Valley, a school
no longer in existence,
Her husband Edward Moss died
in 1913. Immediately after his death
she entered the former Blockley
Hospital, now. Philadelphia General,
graduating in 1917. After two years
of private practice, she
Daniel Cairl, who died five years
ago. Of their two children one,
died in infancy, at the
beginning of ‘the dreaded ‘second
summer.”
She leaves a daughter, Mrs. Louise
Masters, Plymouth; a stepson George
Cairl, Plymouth; a foster-daughter,
Mrs. Anng Wimmer, The Bronx;
a sister, Mrs. Torrence Naugle,
Sweet Valley; six grandchildren, two
| great-grandchildren, and a number
of nices and nephews.
Services will be conducted Pri-
day at 3:30 from the Bronson Fu-
neral Home, Rev. Ruth Underwood,
former pastor of the, Alderson Meth-
odist Charge, officiating. Burial will
be at Maple Grove. Friends may
call tonights
Winners Conduct Rally
And Hend Out Flyers
Jim Hutchison, chairman, and
Mrs. Barbara Vivian, co-chairman,
were delighted with the crowd at-
tending the Scranton Rally at the
Irem Temple Friday evening. Thurs-
day and Friday were spent by Back
Mountain Committee. members giv-
ing out Scranton flyers at both the
Skavertown and Dallas Shopping
Centers. Mary Scranton, Audrey
Kelly and Mrs. Samuel Roberts were
present at the centers and the rally.
© Mary Scranton paid a special visit
to Mrs. Jean Kuehn who is ill. Mrs.
Kuehn has been a spark plug for the
Republican Party for many years in
the Back Mountain Area, campaign-
ing with Bill’'s mother,
Chairmen who worked for Bill
Scranton are William Wright, Mrs.
Harry Ohlman, Mrs. Wilfred Ide,
Mrs. Louise Marks, Gilbert Tough,
Mrs! Ziba Smith, Laing Coolbaugh,
George Bulford, Henry Hess, Nor-
man Lewis, Mrs. William Shuster,
Mrs. Tom Vernon, Mrs, H. C. Wiener,
Jr.
Other volunteers who put in long
“tours distributing Scranton flyers,
selephoning friends and working at
he polls are Mesdames James Lacy,
Suthrie Conyngham, John Conyng-
1am, Robert Weaver, William Baker,
Jr., A. G. Rutherford, Butler Bower,
Jr., Harold Brobst, Lloyd Kear,
“Ielen Mailander, Foster Rogers, Hale
Coughlin, Jr., Charles Flack, Charles
Frantz, John ‘Robinson, | Jr., Charles
In Arch. Brooke Lester
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