LT DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA, SATURDAY, MAY 11, 1929 a Established 1891 An independent paper, of the people, devoted co the great farm- ing section of Luzerre and other counties. : 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. Also 100 copies for Wilkes-Barre readers; 150 copies outside of Luzerne and Wyoming Counties, but ‘within the boundaries of Penn- sylvania; 200 copies to friends far away. ’ Entered as second-class matter at the Post-Office at Dallas, Pa. under Act of March 3, 1879. : ~ Subscription $1.00 per year Payable in advance ‘Address all Communications to Te THE DALLAS POST Lehman Avenue Phone Dallas 300 Dallas, Pa. EDITORIAL COLUMN Devoted to the Current Tepics of the Day MOTHER’S DAY : os ‘Whether mother is far or near, do not forget her on this im- ‘portant occasion. A few kind words, a little, inexpensive gift, mean more to mother than the grandest eloquence and the most elaborate entertainments mean to anyone else. ] Many a mother separated by distance from her children, pin- ng for them, is made glad on this day by affectionate messages and thoughful gifts. Others, fortunate enough to have their children about them, beam with delight at their manifestations of love on this day. Of course every day should be Mother's Day—never for a moment should her kindness and self-sacrifice be forgotten. Too often, however, mothers are taken for granted, though experi- nee has shown to mankind that the love of a mother is the only really unselfish love that one is liable to meet in a lifetime. i Those whose mothers have gone realize what a precious boon ‘has passed from their lives. They, too, may observe Mother’s Day. If your mother has passed on, put a flower at her resting- place -. surely she will know! Ha oT Sey ER ly A TEMPEST IN A TEA POT It was a great French liberal, Voltaire, who first said, “Though I may disagree heartily with what you say I will de- fend with my life your right to say it.” The founders of the American nation owed much to this philosophy and to the polit- cal philosophy of the French school of thought. When the Con- titution was framed the American leaders saw to it that there hould always be free speech and a free press in the United States. They had seen too much of the evils of repression exer- cised by the British Crown. NT ; 5 Since the Eighteenth century and the establishment of Dem- ocratic government, free speech and a free press have gone hand hand with liberty-loving, enlightened nations. It is one of America’s greatest traditions. Like many other advantages of democratic form of government it is seldom appreciated and requently abused, until today there are very few truly great liberal newspapers in America. Outstanding, however, are The ‘Louis Post Dispatch and the papers of the Scripps-Howard ai "Too often the newspaper forgets its mission as a public in- titution and focuses its attention upon the receipts of the adver- ‘tising department. Principals are frequently sacrificed to good yusiness,” and papers cater to the whims of powerful factions and nfluential advertisers who increase the paper’s revenues. On the ther hand, free speech is frequently abused by the scandal ‘sheets, which catering to the morbid, smutty side of the reader S imagination, profit with the largest circulations of any papers in » | hooks attached to one end. The pay of 2,000 employes of the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company at Sayre was ordered held up on Thurs- day last. $1 A down-state woman wired the First National Bank at that place not to honor the pay of the 2,000 rail- roaders employed there, because “I’ve bought the railroad.” Bank officials checked the telegram and found that the woman who sent it is demented. A powerful submarine light te be used for the discovery and recovery of the bodies of drowned persons was received this week by Luzerne Coun- ty detectives. The light will be kept at the office of the county detectives to be used in all cases of water fatal- ities. The mechanism resembles a periscope with electric lamps and It can be successfully used in depths up to sixty-two feet. Milton J. Cross, famed radio an- nouncer of Station WJZ, failed to show up Tuesday night when he was supposed to speak in Hazleton High School auditorium. Twelve hundred residents of Hazleton and vicinity waited late and waited in vain. Dis- appointed, disturbed, the arrangement committee telephoned WJZ in New York City. Mr. Cross, sorry, said that he had been sitting in his home when he should have been lecturing and that he had actually forgotten all about his engagement in Hazle- ton. Anxious to make amends, he sent a special message to Hazleton admirers on Wednesday night during WJZ’s “Old Man Sunshine Hours.” | Monday night he will speak in the Hazleton High School with no charge in order to atone for forgetting a date. Recently Mr. Cross remem- bered a date and delighted a Mon- fron redierce / _ Little Jack Little, famous radio ar- tist of WLW made a decided hit eo ios packed houses early this week uring his appearance at Poli’ - atre in Wil ar Sire The Prof. O. H. Bakeless, for thirty years a member of the faculty of Bloomsburg Teachers’ College, will retire at the end of the term in June. Known and loved by thousands of students «+ and former students throughout Pennsylvania, he has been affectionately called the grand old man of Bloomsburg. Prof. Bakeless first became a teacher at Bloomsburg in 1890. In 1893 he left the school to become head of the old Carlisle Indian school. In 1902 he returned to Bloomsburg and has been teaching there ever. since. _ When Mrs. George Berry, who re- sides near the west branch of Me- shoppen Creek, between Vose and Craig Hill heard her chickens making a fuss shortly after noon on Sunday, she went out of doors to see what caused the commotion. What was her susprise to see a big balloon sailing along just above the tree tops. » A man in the balloon, seeing Mrs. Berry, called out to know what State and county that was. Mrs. Berry gave him the information and he thanked her and sailed away. He was traveling in a northeasterly di- rection. The aeronaut was, without doubt, one of the entrants in the national elimination baloon race which was held to decide who should represent 1 tion. ; foe BE ntly the editor who attempts to follow a straight by keeping his prejudices out of the news and editorial col- lr er. lh down to defeat. He may ‘have high ‘ideals but the majority defeats him. He may stand for est kind of politics; he can try to keep an open mind; those v 10 should defend him cause his downfall. Such was the case wien gunmen, hired by police officers, deliberately murdered Don Mel- Jett, fearless editor of the Canton Daily News, who by Soned articles in his paper had pointed out corruption in the police e-| partment of his home city For a number of weeks The Dallas Post has been carrying olumn. wh d by editorial pencil. t contrary > the editorial beliefs of the paper, but the ar- icles have gone through unaltered. . Who is to judge whether or | ot such articles are to be run? Certainly not the man who has | a strong conviction on the subject at hand. Minorities are fre- quently right. / oh The editor of The Post assumes that the reader is intelligent, | ‘that he can judge for himself; that he wants to know both sides | of an argument before drawing conclusions. The editor who | ‘gets himself up as a judge of what goes in the Contributors Col- | umn or what stays out takes a lot for granted. In everyday life | there are a great many things which we all must decide for our- ‘selves. Things which could be better handled and decided by someone else—BUT MOST OF US LIKE TO THINK FOR OUR- SELVES even if we are sometimes wrong. The severest critic- ism of The Post and its editorial policies, if received, will be run unaltered in the Contributors Column. All that is necessary 18 ‘that it be written in good faith. And the Contributors Column ‘will exist as long as The Dallas Post remains under the present editor. There are some ideals we intend to keep—this is one of them: ~ “Though I may disagree heartily with what you say I will defend with my life your right to say it Must Go on Record By the copyright act of 1842, a copy of “every volume, pamphlet, sheet of letterpress, sheet of music, map, chart, or plan separately published” in the United Kingdom must be deposited with the British museum and, if de- mand is made, copies must also be presented to the Bodleian library and the libaries of Cambridge, Edinburgh and Dublin. WHO'S WHO IN L. T. H. S. —_— 0 Lois G. Sorber, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Sorber was born in Rug- gles in the year 1909. Lois’ school career began at the Rock school where she mastered the first seven grades. Laketon was chosen as her mext Alma Mater and here she has attended faithfully, suc- essfully overcoming all the obstacles common to early school training. Varied school activities have at- tracted Lois. She is a member of the Athletic Association and the De- bating Club, secretary of her class ond takes a prominent part in all class functions. : Lois has been endowed with a ‘harming personality which has won countless friends. No one can but agree that our secretary has OC Evil Passing for Good Evil is easy, and its forms are in- infinite; good is almost unique. But to find as what is called good; and often on this account this particular kind of evil gets passed off as good. There is needed an extraordinary greatness of soul to attain to it as as to good.—Pascal, 5% the clean- | he words of Voltaire underneath the heading of its Contributors | It has printed here the opinions of its readers unalter- | Often the communications have been en-| a certain kind of evil is as difficult | | the United States in the international | race to be held later. Twelve bal- | loons left Pittsburgh on Saturday. | Nine were down in different parts of { Pennsylvania and New York on Sun- | day and three were still in the air or | unreported Monday morning. Tunkhannock New Age. | oO ECT BARDS AROUND THE » CORNER, I , Orchestras and Orchestras . The past week Dallas branched out in the jaz music line, the old Dallas Orchestra disbanding with Frank Tro- pea, of the Dallas Hardware Com- pany and Ross Lewin, of Fernbrook, each organizing their own orchestras. We assume they- will be called the Dallas Orchestra and Fernbrook Or- chestra, respectfully. 4 The Dallas boys practised last Monday night at Higgin’s College Inn and very fine comments were heard on their playing. The Fernbrook boys played at Hig- gin’s Tuesday night. A goodly | crowd heard them. Good natured | rivalry is now shown between the boys and the various community or- ganizations planning dances in the future can have their choice of eith- er one of the two groups. Help the Base Ball Team The local boys of the Dallas base ball team are sending out letters ask- | ing for small contributions to be used for defraying the team this year. Due to the action of the Dallas Township school directors in denying | the local team the use of the high school grounds, it is necessary for the Dallas team to play its schedule away from home. A dollar or so will go along way to keep base ball here and possibly in a short time a field will be secured where home games can be played. Several Dances Planned Within the next few weeks several dances will be held for the benefit of various community organizations, School Directors Space and Machell are both in favor of allowing the use of the high school auditorium for these affairs if they are properly su- pervised and it is felt that the rest expenses of the ‘idea. The “school board should be commended for its action. for community gatherings. We a sure that the various organizati i he board of the directors will also sanction the| its a The high school auditorium is an ideal place| They old me of a famous man, who Everything Depends On Mother ’ 7 N\ I | | : [nese Sam == OUR. GREATNESS IS DUE TO OUR. MOTHERS—OF THE PAST, — OUR FUTURE GREATNESS 15 YOURS.” pal AVC SE ” Ll SN ula ¢4] IN ; DAY Zz Ful 3 THER TINGS _7o NDER — MOT GREE wa, £ TROUBLE AT ALLY BEGINNER'S ? POLICE STATION . ! * b> The Joy of Being An Editor Getting out this paper is no picnic, If Cr jokes people say we are silly; ous, If we clip things from other papers We are too lazy to write them our- serves, If we don’t we are stuck on our own If we stick close to the job all day, We ought to be out huntin’ up news, If we go out and try to hustle, We ought to be on the job in the office, If we don’t print contributions, We don’t appreciate true genius; And if we do print them, the paper is filled with junk. . If we make a change in the other fel- low’s writeup, we are too critical, If we don’t we are asleep, Now like as not some guy will say, We swiped this from some magazine or paper—WE DID. Thanks to Cincinnati, Ohio, and The Montrose Independent. “Famous Men” In many years of travel, throughout the wide, wide land I’ve met many a famous characters, and shook them by the hand I had to travel to a little town, not so far by rail To get the info needed, to compose this little tale. Famous men, I' call the tale, for of such I shall write And leave it to your tender thoughts, if my story is a blight. I motored into a quiet town, in order to get some gas ; And noticed on a sign post, the name : of the town DALLAS. ‘1 stopped into a hardware store, and just to pass the time attemp to rhyme. | reposes in this town Who knows no sense of shirking, and upon no duty fro If we don’t they say we are too seri- | | With a set of whiskers, he would not } - 2 { Li 3 ~ mK Sy a ings ot a gr 48 2 3 Riz OB | yd 7 g Ee RS v Ca 0 4% = r/ — 9 [10 mm Dunc,” - | They told me of Napoleon, Mussolini} When taking the family out for a 0 F F I C E i and the Russian Dowager ride, to watch a cow chew her cud {| But none of them are to be compared, | Don’t be so darned good natured, and D 0 G | with this Harold Wagner. get stuck in the mud. { J. H. L., Philadelphia. 2 & i 0 When your rich relations travel west, and upon life turn their backs | CENTREMORELAND FOLK You will find him there at the finish, WELCOME NEW PASTOR— to look out for the inheritance W. D. GAY EXPANDS STORE tax FR % In politics, you'll find him, too, just The new M. E. ns Rev. Mun- like Mr. Hoover, strict 5 ; ; Of: course. yiot. 50 ’ prominent, just | Yon and wife are settled in the par- 5 : At sonage and last Tuesday evening the chairman of the Sixth District. different charges, Dein, tar ae ; jDymong Hollow and Centremoreland, When visitors arrive at Dallas town, | gave him a rousing reception in the he will act as host | M. E. church parlors at this place. For he is also an official of The Dal-| There were about two hundred pres- las Post. | ent. Ice cream, cake and coffee were If misery strikes, you are broke, and | served and everyone seemed to enjoy would avoid the consequence Po evening very much. Just tell pop, he’ll fix you up, with victor Keithline and Jason Hard- some life insurance. ing have gone to Pittsburgh to work as linemen for one of A. J. Sordoni’s Want some pleasure; like the scen-| telephone gangs. ory, 2 touring you would go : The cold wet weather has greatly That's easy, sir, just tell pop, he'll| retarded the growth of every thing sell you an auto. ; in this vicinity. It is feared that If pnd are. low, Just 30, and S0, just | the fruit crop will be a failure. orrow from your lodge , : ATT RDI do Beall vou a) at JE Si desp sosyew ve aceon nice Dodge. | the death of Robert Harris on Tues- | day of last a, Robbie, 2s Be | was always calle If money you have plenty, and for | years of . ed aa Mr, fine things you are set | and Mrs. Lance Harris. He was a Tell him, its real easy, a Packard you remarkably bright and lovable little will get fellow and will be greatly missed by If you are broke and hungry, or have| the whole community. The funeral a starving wife was held Thursday afternoon. In- Tell your tale to Harold, and yowll|terment was at Mehoopany. lead a better life. Mrs. George Montross and son, Er- nest, are both quite ill at this writing. Miss Gertrude Dickinson and friend of Bethlehem, spent the week-end with her parents in this place. The schools will close this week with an entertainment in the Grange Hall Thursday evening. W. D. Gay is building an addition on his store. He’ll see you fed up plenty, with good wholesome grub For he is also President, of the fam- ous Rotary Club. Now, kind reader, do you agree with me, that this man of fame Should be envied for his ambition, and his famous name One thing more, he should have been, I see no reason why 0 Good Sticky Paste If you want to make home-made paste add about a teaspoonful of pow- dered alum to tne flour and boiling water. The paste will have 8 much greater “sticking” quality and will last twice as well. make a good Rabbi. And as I go on through the town, to travel on my way T’d like to give a bit of advance, to Pop, for another day. BE SRE nu R hy SEE a Shain, ee i 3