es ' DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA. SATURD Funeral of Dr. | Stoeckel Was Held Thursday —:0:— Dr. Louise M. Stoeckel, one of the pioneer professional women of this county, died at her home at Cliffside of pneumonia on Monday, Januafy 144 in her eighty-third year. TI n- eral was held at the Stoeckel amily homestead on the Huntsville Road, near Dallas, at 2 p. m. yesterday. Rev. F. L. Flinchbaugh, pastor of St. Step- hen’s Episcopal Church, Wilkes-Barre, | officiated. - Interment was in the fam- ily. plot in Woodlawn Cemetery, at Dallas. Dr. Stoeckel was born in North- ampton County, the daughter of William B. and Katherine Stoeckel. She taught in different localities in 1 the county for a time and by her own efforts graduated from the Women’s Medical Collegd® Philadel- phia, in 1890, and located shortly thereafter in the Hillard block on North Main Street, Wilkes-Barre. She later purchased an office prop- erty on North Franklin Street, the present site of the Spring Brook Water Co.’s office building, her last residence in the city before her re- in satin-fini t cabi tirement being at the corner of] 3 ; ; / : J 2 2 iad Soh Ss mating Union and North Franklin Streets, ERP itd PYG i oil ; Ey RR where she resided and had her office tube. S17 (ithout tubes). % "= for many years. Dr. Stoeckel was a consistent member of St. Stephen’s Church, a member of the Luzerne County Medical Society, an honorary mem- ber of the Quota Club and a member of the Luzerne Council of Republi- can Women and various other organ- izations. She is survived by a sister, Mrs. Helene C. Butler, who has been in California, now on her way home, but will not arrive in time for the funeral; also by one brother, Theo- The Dallas Post : An independent paper, of the people, devoted to the great farm- _ ing section of Luzerre and other counties. SPE 3 ~ Trucksville, Shavertown, Lehman, Dallas, Luzerne, The Greater West Side, Shawanese, Alderson, Centermoreland, Fernbrook, Lake- = ton, Sweet Valley, Harvey’s Lake, Huntsville and Tunkhannock are circulated by The Dallas Post. y . 2 Also 100 copies for Wilkes-Barre readers; 150 copies outside of ~ Luzerne and Wyoming Counties, but within the boundaries of Penn- sylyania; 200 copies to friends far away. Entered as second-class matter at the Post-Office at Dallas, Pa., ander Act of March 3, 1879. Subscription $1.00 per year \ Nestling in a chimney corner in the home of Irvin S. Cobb Payable in advance Address 211 Communications to - THE DALLAS POST Lehman Avenue Phone Dallas 300 Dallas, Pa. Beneath ihe favorite ship- model in the home of Booth Tarkingion : i EDITORIAL COLUMN ' Devoted to the Current Topics of the Day ... PROPOSED EXTENSION OF STATE HIGHWAY" There is a considerable debate, agitation, if not to: say worry by the Dallas-Shavertown folks these days over the rumors of the State and County re-locating the State Highway starting from the end of the new highway at Trucksville and continuing up to d even through Dallas. “Dame Rumor” has it planned to move the trolley track over to the right from Mt. Greenwood to Fern- rook. Then take a large portion of the present trolley bed for ew highway. The plan has two major advantages. First, the raightening of the highway. Second, eliminating the two trol- at Mt. Greenwood and Fernbrook, respectively. Both advantages are highly commendable, well worthwhile and in fact needed. There are some disadvantages, chiefly, first, that of whole loss of real estate values to present owners situated on the highway. Second, a loss due to scrapping present business loca- tions along the highway. ; + Itis trué that from the total appraisal value of property there will be no loss, because where property value slump because of the roposed move, the property values facing newly located highway will increase. It’s just robbing Peter’to pay Paul so to speak— taking value from one pocket and putting it into another. There |dore W. Stoeckel, living in the old will unquestionably be quite a loss to the several merchants now | homestead at Dallas. cated on the highway. da, \ o MODEL 52 A.C. SET Combining electric receiver and speaker Newest 1929 model 4 — ALL-IN-ONE! OMPLETE—because At- water Kent has combined a fine all-electric receiver end a true-toned speaker in ons In- strument, housed in a ezbinet otf rare beauty. It is only 30 inches high. ‘Al- luringly finished too, with the top and the screening of the 5 ley crossings grities at both front and back— wherever you sit, you hear the (without tubes) programs clearly. its performance — the full, rich tone, great reserve power, widerrange, speed and accuracy of the Furr-vision Dial—you can prove for yourself. Po In the last analysis after I sented and decision made, if the hig all the data is collected, facts pre- way is moved—it will then just be another case of “Demo racy’ speaking, i. e. the greatest > ®e og ge 4 speaker in gold, and the four sides in deep brown, golden bronze or taupe as you prefer. An nusval feature is speaker We will gladly demonstrate. this new ali-electric Model 52, and show you how our terms make it easier for you to own fine all-in-one radio. i Joram a= em good to the greatest numb Gta } VERSUS BUSINESS EFFICIENCY 020 EO SO wD Fern Brook JILIN y : Mrs. E. H. Williams and Miss ( il and the Dallas Township Council | 1,oyise Williams ave ill at their home ‘in the popular sense of the word. They on ‘Terrace Street. highway—they had public money (or % A % to. fix the road—they were and still| Jean and Ann Detrick, who have . ; ; 7 ~pyrm— R dy por) 1 4 ° Ao blic funds. They have, collectively, Shown | heen ill the past seven weeks have en- ess judgment and equally keen business’ ef- | tirely recovered. i ud Main Street — how much? Shall we say approximately ted surveys, estimates, attorney fees and the like. Mr. and Mrs. John Lowe had as The money is spent, the road is still dangerous, especially in icy | their ‘guest Mrs. James Lambert of : ‘weather; either the borough or the township is liable for a heavy | Seattle, Washington. ; i damage should an accident occur; depending on while side of road CA it might take place and the road still has to be fixed. ; : Now that’s even poor politics—a really good politician now- ~ adays may spend yours and my tax money but he is wise enough to show some results. These citizens haven't spent—they have squandered public funds—now they have to spend some more money and this time fix the road. We have Center Hill Road in question. If individually and collectively these same councilmen elect to conduct their private ~ business on this same basis it’s their affairs and they personally pay the bill. In this case you and I pay the bill. Maybe we bét- ter begin to turn the searchlight on their spending—not to ques- tion their honesty, but to question their business judgment. Yn : i % 5H 3 * . # i * Miss Helen Freeman leaves Febru- ary first to enter the Philadelphia General Hospital training school for nurses. 5 * * * Mr. and Mrs. Myron E. Steele and daughter Aletha Myrl have returned home after spending the past two |® months with Mrs. Steele’s parents at |f8 Larksyville. | Mr. Walter Rossman has accepted a | #8 position with the Shavertown Baking | #8 Company. ; ed BYRD EMPHASIZES THE MAGIC OF RADIO ) rw i In a recent story from Commander Byrd in the Antarctic, ‘he says: . Huh 7 [~ “The radio is one of the things that at the moment impresses . > Hevmon, of Nanticoke, on 8] tame. The wonder of the thing—that I can sit out here in this Pheer. hg Ca ’ God-forsaken hunk of ice, in a small tent, giving instructions to my shipmates 2,700 miles away.” | : And he might have added, the wonder of it that he could tell his story as it unfolds to the whole round world in the same fashion. . 4 = J Time was when a band of explorers plunged into the void and | te tain a party of friends on Satur- | {#8 . were lost. No one knew, no one expected to know anything about | jay evening. : them for months, for years. x x x rk 5 wn : In Polar explorations, an expedition would disappear, the| Services at the Glenview Primitive |} world would wait a year or two, and then send another expedition | Methodist Church on Sunday will be 3 to trace the first. It was lucky if a third expedition were not|as usual. Sunday School at 10 a. m. | HE needed to trace the\second. in charge of Mr. Myron E. Steele, and ~, Nowwearein ouch with these adventurers from the moment Divine Worship at 11 2. m. and 7:15 they quit the home base. [p. m. The subject of the morning : The radio is the most magical of all our means of communi- sermon will be: “Fulness of Blessing,” fg cation. Even a half century ago it would have seemed sheer and that of the evening sermon: “Sec- | witcheraft. Will those of the new generation, growing up in.a ond coming of Christ—Will He Come |§ Yor where radio is taken for granted, realize what a miracle | —When—How ?” it is? : ADVERTISEMENTS BRING YOU USEFUL NEWS Mrs. Ross Lewin visited Mr. and | [i Mrs. Clyde Cooper, of Kingston, is | if | the guest of her parents for a few [8 days. 3 X Sr Ao READ THEM! OF 0B Mr. and Mrs. Ross Lewin will en- |} 3 dF OF The diplodocus was the most gigantic animal that ever lived. It was eighty-five feet long and weighed sceres of tons. Yet despite its tremendous bulk it had a brain the size of an English walnut. Millions of years ago the diplodocus flourished. But when con- ditions changed, it was unable to adapt itself to a new existence. Other animals, less strong, but more intelligent, inyaded its do- main. And so, with the unceasing march of progress, its race & ~~ died out and vanished. DALLAS, PA =. - It is just as necessary today as it was in Upper Jurassic period to keep abreast of the times. Conditions are changing under our very eyes. New inventions, new products are constantly being brought forward to make life easier and happier. If we do not take advantage of them, we fall behind the procession. wok Ak ER 3 2 eT os 1K _ “MUSSY” QUITS WHEN BLUFF IS “CALLED” | First National Bank | ~ Hipolito Irigoyen—we don’t pretent to know how to pronounce oh ~ it—is president of the Argentine Republic. : He is also a “first-class fighting man.” That was revealed years ago when he kept his country out of the European war de- | spite all kinds of pressure and propaganda. It was demonstrated again last week when he “called” one of Mussolini's “bluffs” and the noisy dictator “quit” within forty- eight hours. Mussolini holds that children of Italian parents, EVEN IF BORN ON FOREIGN SOIL are still Italian and subject to his whims. : He recently tried out his theory on an Argentinian of Italian 7 extraction. Hipolito Irigoyen filed a polite but firm dissenting opinion. Mussolini, thinking he had the upper hand, ignored it. ~ Irigoyen promptly closed the port of Buenos Aires to Italian shipping, thus shutting off one of Italy’s most profitable markets. C. A. Frantz, 2nd Vice-Pres. Two days later Mussolini withdrew the obnoxious regulation. W. B. Jeter, Cashier ~ Trigoyen was recently re-elected by a big majority. Evidently, : + + 5 ‘the Argentinians recognize and appreciate a MAN when they “Jhree Per Cent. on Savings meet him. : Deposits “Hearts” of Fishes Members American Bankers’ Association * * * DIRECTORS R. L. Brickel, C. A. Frantz, D. P. Honevwell. W. B. Jeter, Sterling Machell, W. R. Neely, Clifford W. Space, Wm. Bulford, George R. Wright. Advertisements are the modern bulletins of progress. They tell you where to find the latest and most efficient aids to human com- fort, they knit together the great fabric of consumers with needs to fill, and producers with good to fill them. Read the advertise- ments. They give you the information which is essential for the wise and economical expenditure of your money. . : OFFICERS George R. Wright, President D. P. Honeywell, 1st Viee-Pres. No account too small to assure Time for “Filling Up” j careful attention "In lowest fishlike forms the heart educed to a simple pulsating tube. typical fish it consists of three ts—auricle, ventricle and the thick- | part of the large artery. “If you tells all you knows,” sald Uncle Eben, “you kin finish dat job in ten minutes. Den you may need to lay off a year or two to find out sump- in’ mo’ "— Washington Star. ) ‘Deposits Payable on Demand Vault Boxes for Rent Self-Registering Saving Bank Free ed