2 Established 1889 roo 2 “Published by THE DALLAS POST, IN¢ : Publication Office Lehman Avenue, Dalias, Pennsylvania LAL MeHenry ........... . .President Harold Wagner..........Secretary W. Risley..Mng. Editor and Treas. An independent newspaper. devoted to the great suburban and agricultural district of the Greater, West Side, e@omprising Dallas and twenty-seven surrounding communities. Subscription, $1.00 Per Year ~ (Payable in Advance) ‘THE DALLAS POST PROGRAM The Dallas Post will lend its sup- port and offers the use of its columns to all projects which ‘will help this community and the great rural-subur- an territory which it serves to at- tain the following major improve- ments: l. A free library located in the Dal- las region. . Better and adequate street light- ing in Trucksville, Shavertown, Fernbrook and Dallas. 8. Sanitary sewage disposal system for Dallas. Closer cooperation between Dal- las borough and surrounding townships. " Bb. Consolidated high schools and better cooperation between those that now exist. ~ The appointment of a shade tree commission to supervise the pro- tection and see to the planting of shade trees along the streets of Dallas, Shavertown, Trucksville ~ and Fernbrook. The formation of a Back Moun- tain Club made up of business men and homeowners interested in the development of local insti- tutions, the organization of new ones and the development of a community consciousness in Dal- las, Trucksville, Shavertown and Fernbrook. ‘A modern concrete highway lead- ing from Dallas and connecting the Sullivan Trail at Tunkhan- 7s nock. { 9. The elimination of petty politics from Dallas borough council and ,all school boards in the region covered by The Dallas Post. And all other projects which help to make the Back Mountain sec- tion a better place to live in. Eo. UNITED STATES POLICE ~ One of the’ reasons why ‘criminals are caught more speedily in England ‘than in America is that England has a single: police force for the entire country and in the United States we ‘have as many different police depart- ‘ments as we have towns, each oper- ating under a different system and ‘with no coordination between them ‘except in rare instances. ~The Commonwealth of Pennsyl- yania has made a start toward remedying this. A network of tele- graph wires connecting every impor- tant town in the state with all the rest and with four main centers of opera- tion, operates a typewriter-telegraph system in every police headquarters. ~ The moment a crime is discovered ‘anywhere, all the facts and possible clues to the criminal are printed in the office of every chief of police and the whole criminal-catching machinery of the Commonwealth is set in motion. ~ We shall never get our criminal element under control until such a ti- ‘up is in effect in every state and throughout the nation. Then we may have a change of equalling England’s rece d for the suppression of crime. 4 A TRIBUTE Every week we read Robert Quil- len’s Fountain Inn (S. C.) Tribune, and every week we get from this paper a new thought. Consistently, Mr. Quillen fights the ~ good fight against hypocrisy, and tor . decency and tolerance. His battle is waged on such a fundamental basis that what he says about Fountain Inn becomes the truth not only for that town, but for every other city. And is searching sketches of local people that New York is just a bigger Foun- tain Inn. It is no wonder that hundreds of ~ newspaper and magaizne editors all ~ pver the country are (paid) subscrib- ers to Mr. Quillen’s paper. In it they find those verities that are often for- gotten in the rush of life in big cities. ~ Mr. Quillen also writes for the Wilkes- Barre Record and draws the famous cartoon, Willie Willis. In his weekly they find a microcosm of human events not only reported humorously and shrewdly, but trans- _ muted into literary cameos whose sig- nificance is no moore local than the Merchant of Venice is a drama of Venice. is work. Thousands of years from now historians, read 2 com The Dallas Post | ~ . BOROUGH FINANCES ~ There is always plenty of criticism for the man who holds public office, and few are the taxpayers, news- papers and citizens who appreciate the amount of detailed work which faces the conscientious man holding such public office. No matter how he make his decisions, certain fac- tions are bound to offer criticism. Many men seeking public office know that criticism - follows election, but think = through some lucky stroke of fate that they will escape it and prove the exception to the rule. Many is the disillusioned office- holder, a good citizen and a good official, who finds that he has! had enough of official honor after one term in a borough office. It is this same fear of public criticism = that keeps many good men from ever running for office. : ‘Recently there has been consider- able criticism of Dallas borough council, but a list of the accomplish- ments of this body of men during its term of office might be worth look- ing into. On April 1 there was. in the borough treasury a balance of $6,000. At no time in the past six or seven years has there been a council which could show that amount of money in its treasury. This surplus was accumulated not- withstanding the fact that council has adopted a progressive road build- ing program and now has two hard surface roads to its credit and is contemplating the completion of an- other hard surface road during the coming summer. Council has also materially cut the cost of police protection in the borough and has reduced expendi- ture along many other lines. Criticism there may be on minor Issues, but no taxpayer can overlook the fact that the present borough council has put the finances of the borough in the best condition that they have been in for years. WHAT MAKES A JOB GOOD One morning the elevator starte: was running the car alone. He had on a uniform and was starting and stopping with the confidence of a veteran. From apprentice to professional in a couple of hours. What thoughts are in that young fellow’s head as he receives his in: structions from the gray-haired vet- eran? How can he fail to look forward and see in the older man a picture of himself twenty| years from now. He is taking up a low paid job—-a job with no future. Twenty years from now he will be just where he is today—only older, with a grasp on the job somewhere less secure. His ex- perience will count for nothing, be- cause it is experience that any other man can gain in a couple of days. He may from time to time force an increase in his pay. But the increases will not be large. Why? Because he learned the job in two days. And in any other two days the company can find plenty of men who will learn just as fast and take the job away from him. Recently a young man returned from England after taking special work in surgery under some of the greatest men in the world. 3 He is thirty-one years old; it is fourteen years since he entered col- lege. For ten of those fourteen years he has been in medical schools ,in hos- pitas, and in foreign countries study- ling. Fourteen long years of hard, un- interrupted study. Years made more difficult by the necessity of self-sup- and events ring so true that we feel! Robert Quillen mist be thanked fori, | for sueh a’ rend and. fet den ge port, and filled sometimes with ques- {lionings, as he has seen his college {class-mates moving forward to then places as well paid physicians, and he lingering still in school. Yet with what result? He has acquired a specialized train- ‘ing such as only a few other men in New York possess. ; He will begin life with an income of several thousands; he will pay back his educational debts in a couple of years; in ten years his income will be tens of thousands. Fourteen years of his life went into the mastery of his profession. But he need have no fear of losing what he has gained. No other man can dis- place him, except at the cost of four- teen years of work. & And when he said it he epitomized the philosophy of business. fe The job that the gods sell for two hours’ training is worth just what it costs. : or Only that job is worth much which ‘has tied to it the price tag of con- stant, unceasing study and work.” ct] —— i .. Do you want a eoncrete read from il} Dallas to Tunkhannesk, eennecting| t d} with the Sullivan Trail at that peint?| oh Bordeni lo ‘working ‘on’ plane 3, : or in the Prejest te, reat, Pa. jest te & | oes chai Bow Gime i i Lo4 4 oll ave ved, aetusily, the equie- by ARTHUR BRISBANE Workers Live Longer Really Big Figures. British Worry. Sodom and Gomorrsh. A report publiched by Mr. Freder: ick H. Ecker, president of the Metro- politan Life Insurance Company, con- cerning 19,000,000 industrial policy holders in the United States and Canada, shows that workers are liv. ing longer than they used to. Thanks to science and prosperity, the "death rate among wage earners ~hag diminished. ' Mr. Ecker’s statisti- ‘cal bureau shows a new low death rate of 9.4 per 1,000 during March. More adults that live, fewer babies that die, is ‘a good programme. If big figuses fascinate you, read about an extesgordinary bridge game, thoroughly authenticated, in which the man of Glastonbury, England, held a hand. Each partner had thirteen cards of the same suit. The man with 13 spades made a big slam. Mathematicians say the chances against such an occurrence are two thousand two hundred and thirty-five million trillion to one. The British trillion is a million mul- tiplied by a million multiplied by a million. } With us it is only a million multi- plied by a thousand multiplied by a thousand. Britain has a new worry in India— fear of treachery among native troops. Only a few British are in India, less than the population of a small Amer- ican city, among 300,000,000 Hindus. To what extent native troops and police can be relied on, in view of intense national feeling,” is a serious question. . The British are shifting native troops, official reports referring to “unsatisfactory conduct,” which means that natives would not obey orders to shoot their own people. Cost of travel by air and rail be- tween New York and the Southwest is reduced to less than regular rail- road and Pullman car travel. Flying from New York to Dallas, Texas, or Oklahoma City, you save $6.24 in cash, 18 hours in time. And these cuts are made by the Pennsylvania Railroad itself. Wise General Atterbury, head of the Pennsylvania, decides that if he must have air competition, he will own the competition. Archeologists, according to the Jewrsh Telegraphic Agency, have dis- covered ancient Sodom and Gomor- rah, buried in the ashes of a fire that destroyed, and punished wickedness with fire and brimstone. Father Mel- lon, scientific priest, made the dis- covery. In the ashes were found skeletons of wicked men and women. Imple- ments discovered show that the city, destroyed twenty centuries before Christ, was in the Bronze Age. They had not learned how to use iron cr steel. When fire and brimstone, as you remember, destroyed the wicked cities near the Red Sea, only Lot and his wife escaped. And she, poor thing, was turned into a pillar of salt be- cause she disobeyed orders and looked backward. In the Middle Ages bishops and others testified that they had actual- ly seen Mrs. Lot, made of solid salt} still unchanged by the rains of three thousand years. They even furnished extraordinary biological data of peri- odical events, to prove the sex of the salt statue, Nobody has seen the statue re- cently. Dr. Kuhlmann, Norwegian scientist visiting Mexico, carrying letters from high government officials, visited in Holy Week the remote Indian village of Amozoc. At his request, Indian children di- rected him to a bathing pool. A young Indian mother, Avelina de la Rosa, seeing him with the children, spread the report he had come to cut off their heads and boil their bodies to get oil for flying machines. The Indians, driven to superstitious frenzy, immediately stoned the un- fortunate man to death. Of all curses, superstition is the worst. It has butchered, burned alive and tortured millions. And its hold is still fixed solidly on more than one thousand million human beings. In daylight saving regions tbe elock is advanced one hour. For some that means an extre hour of early work. For others it means another hour's play.’ For’ the majority it Woon be: as usoal. nde pan Yuills A + 5 t 4h Unconscionsly, a majority have es ‘tual hours added to thelr days end 4 man who dies at g: baring Ghant at 040 poten; tnotend of 80.1". i: vi | pa Be Bi ha A ke Sl 2 RF om ro i 3934, Bing Peninsel Gradicese Fak) a1 1 Ri Ta Sly Ta) 8 DALLAS POST, FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1930 This Week | from Pike county” ‘will have to quit ; while and. get Duy. cali te Bel wt al A AVOTOCAITREL_~ ~ HEARD AROUND THE CORNER Politics Makes Strange Bedfellows The old saying that ‘politics makes bedfellows” in the present congressional strange is vividly por- trayed contest, where C. Murray Turpin is desperately trying to return to Con- gress. One of Turpin’s chief backers is none other than “Jack” Kehoe, who is one of the strongest political bosses the City of Pittston ever pro- duced. Being independently rich through his large connections as a retired brewer, Kehoe holds the City of Pittston in the hollow of his hand. Kehoe has stated that he.is for Tur- pin one hundred per cent. Turpin. in return, has stated at banquets that he would rather have Kehoe shouting for him than any other man in Lu- zerne county. Quite An Acrobat Congressman Turpin, who is quite “dry” when in Congress, and most decidedly “wet” when attending some banquets, could be styled the “acro- batic congressman,” in view of his most comical attempts to be dry in one district and wet in “another. However, Murray is taking orders and is trying very hard to carry them out. Gainging Strength John Kmetz, ‘the regular Republi- can candidate for Congress, is mak- ing rapid strides in his candidacy, and the !Turpin forces are becoming alarmed at the strength that Kmetz is showing. At first thought, Kmetz appeared strong only in the mining and laboring centres, but he is now showing exceptional strength in the farming sections. Coming from old German parentage and a hard worker, Kmetz is making an active and direct appeal to the rural dis- tricts. Senatorial Contest The contest for State Senator of -Alderson- Art Exhibit Much interest has been taken in the |art exhibit which was given all this in the Lake | week township high ! school auditorium. Many parents as well as surrounding schools viewed the pictures and expressed their ap- preciation of them. The walls of the auditorium ware lined with those pictures which are familiar to everyone, and each had an | explanatory note giving the name oi the author, when painted, etc. On Tuesday the high schools of Dal- las and Monroe township viewed the pictures and expressed their apprecia- tion for the harmony of coloring, etch- ing and design. In the afternoons our own students were in the audi- torium studying the pictures. This was the English lesson for the week. The latter part of the week was given over to the rural schools of Lake township. Busses accommodated all students. Relatives and friends of Mrs. Phoebe Kitchen called at her home on Friday afternoon and tendered her a pleasant party on the occasion of her eighty- fifth birthday. A delightful afternoon was spent in recalling old times after which a delicious lunch was served to the following: Mrs. Phoebe Kitchen, Mrs. Nettie Perrigo, Mrs. Hattie Rauch, Mrs. ‘Fanncy Jackson, Mis. Carrie Fraley, Mrs. Anna Kraft, Mrs. Jane Kocher, Mrs. Walter Kitchen, Mrs. Albert Gebler, Mrs. E. E. Davis, Mrs. Herbert Davis, Mrs. Helen Wil- son, Mrs. George Jenkins, Mrs. Har- vey Kitchen, Mrs. J. E. Rosengrant, Walter Kitchen, Lois Miller, Martha Humphrey, Smith, Jess Kitchen. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Searfoss of Wilkes-Barre spent Sunday with the former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Searfoss. Mildred Kitchen, Ruth pres Miss Kitchen Wiarried Mr. and Mrs. Amos Kitchen an- nounce the marriage of their daughter, Virginia ,to Mr. Alfred K. Harvey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Harvey of Scranton. The couple have been at home in a newly furnished apartment on Jefferson avenue, Scranton, since May. Mrs. Harvey is a well known young woman of the community ami Mr. Harvey is associated with station WGBI at Scranton. term of office Senator has worked for Luzerne whole. Cities have not been favored at the expense of rural communities; neither have the urban Lehinan-Pike’s Creek road, Shick- skinny-Benton, Kingston Narrows, Harvey's Lake road, Kingston town- ship road, Plymouth-Kingston road, the road eliminating the dangerous Edge Hill at West Nanticoke and the elimination of dangerous underpasses and railroad crossings on the Ashley boulevard and the new and shortened Hazleton highway were all Sordoni projects.~adv. Sailors’ Superstition During his A J. Sordoni County as a To mention certain animals on board a fishing vessel is regarded as unlucky, the animals varying in different parts of the country and including hares, cats, pigs. horses. spiders and in some cases aven dogs Sage Philosophizes “The time spent in gambling,” said Hi Ho, the sage of Chinatown, “is more valuable than the money that may pass. Gaming should be only for those of leisure who have so much Margaret Rosengrant, Mrs. Guy wealth that they do not need to win.” Scouten, Guy Scouten, Edna Miller, —Washington Star. a — —— the Twentieth Senatorial district he- tween Senator Sordoni and Adrian H. Jones of Hazleton is causing comment around the corner. Senator. Sordoni, who has a lap on Atterney Jones due to his being a resident! of this end of the county, is leaving | no stone unturned to present his candidacy before the voters. Attorney Jones, who has made a few trips to this section, is planning on spending the last week of his campaign here making a direct ap- peal to the voters. some Pinchot Making Explanations Ex-Governor Pinchot is quite busy these days making explanations ‘why he resigned ‘his office as Secretary of Forestry under the late Governor Sproul,” in order to be appointed the next day at an increase in malary of $8,000: per ‘year... This statement has been /earried in all ‘of. the principki papers of the State and the “man shing for a little Henace te life leng marked travel between . Luserne. and Truekeville, points on the important route te Har later Borde rt hake aid t. plasen.: Bens So Te Ps 1 To The Voters of Wyoming County YOUR SUPPORT IS SOLICITED AT THE PRIMARY ELECTION, MAY 20, 1930 I AM A CANDIDATE FOR THE OFFICE OF REPRE- ABILITY. SUCCESS. ~~ = OF THE PEQ SANE. NTE] 1 HAVE, BU INESS. {a of e3 ¢ ’ a dl WF - AW. “PO saNEe £ nxn 350 “brought Btate «aid te ‘removal of ‘oid narrow highwayi=: VAS (pd ae Ay SENTATIVE IN THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. IN THE MAJORITY, SUPPORT ME, HONESTLY, CONSCIENTIOUSLY AND FAITHFULLY WORK FOR YOUR INTERESTS TO THE BEST OF MY T YOUR SUPPORT WITHOUT SENTATION ON MY PART; SIMPLY PROMISING TO DO MY BEST FOR YOU. ' £2 How abies Charles onada; ¥ IF YOU I PROMISE TO FOR THE PAST TWENTY-SIX YEARS I HAVE BEEN ENGAGED IN BUSINESS IN NICHOLSON BOROUGH AND 1 FEEL THAT I HAVE MET WITH SOME MEASURE OF [F"NOMINATED AND ELECTED I WILL SERVE ALL EOPLE, OF WYOMING COUNTY WITH THE SERVED MY PATRONS IN: ANY MISREPRE- FRAO on $45 Y YOURS, ¥