The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, June 27, 1930, Image 2

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    the American farmer as a “Rube” and]
caricaturing him as a low-brow Euro-|
never
about the change has been the de-
The Dallas [Post
NN NAA TT ARAN a N00 Tg MA af Tg Tg a ag
Established 1889 :
J Published by
THE DALLAS POST, IN:
Publication Office
hinan Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania
+ A. McHenry ....... CAA President
- G. Harold Wagner......... .Secretary
, H. W. Risley. .Mng. Editor and Treas.
. "An independent newspaper devoted
to the great suburban and agricultural
; rict of the Greater West Side,
comprising Dallas and twenty-seven
surrounding communities.
T
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-
ban territory which it serves to at-
tain the following major improve-
ments: j
‘1. A free library located in the Dal-
3 las region.
2. Better and adequate street light-
ing in Trucksville, Shavertown,
Fernbrook and Dallas. 0. x
3. Sanitary sewage disposal system
! for Dallas. 3
4. Closer cooperation between Dal-
las borough and . surrounding
townships.
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.
&
8 7. The formation of a Back Moun-
~ fain 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. ‘
8. A modern concrete highway lead-
ing from Dallas and connecting
‘the Sullivan Trail at Tunkhan-
nock. :
9. The elimination of petty politics
from Dallas horough council and
~ ail school boards in the region
; covered by The Dallas Post.
10. And all other projects which help
to make the Back Mountain sec-
tion a better place to live in.
WHO ARE THE “RUBES”
It is about time the city people and
the city newspapers quit referring to|
pean peasant, only slightly American-
ized by a set of chin-whiskers_ a la
‘Uncle Sam. Sho
~The trouble with city folk, especial-
ly in New York and elsewhere in the
East, is that they get their impressions
of the farmer, as of everything else,
from European sources. Because the
‘mass of people tilling the soil in|
‘Europe are uneducated, unintelligent,
peasants, tenants for the most part]
‘and tied to the soil as no American |
has ever been so tied, the city-bred,
Europe-conscious people who have!
penetrated any farther into |
America than the shores of the Atlan-|
tic Ocean think American farmers!
must be the same type.
Nothing could be farther from the
truth. - No individual or class of our|
people has been more prompt to apply |
new methods of science, new inven-!
than the American farmer. The impli-|
cation when he is referred to as a
“Rube” is that he is a stupid, unpro-|
gressive person, content to do every~!
thing as his father and ‘grandfather |
did iit before him. As a matter of
fact, practically nothing is done on]
. . . |
~ tions, new ways of doing old things, |
|
5 r . . |
fs American farms today the way it Was call on your new neighbors?
done a generation ago. ie
One of the things that has brought
velopment of the numerous Colleges
of Agriculture. Nothing like them is|
Kfiown in any part of the world. Old-|
time farmers used to sneer at the idea |
that college could do a farmer any |
. |
good; but the progressive farmers of| 'Father—Then, by heck, youll mary
7 today
are practically all college]
graduates, and the leadership in every
movement for the betterment of farm |
conditions comes from these schools. | before the magistrate, charged with
Our National and State departments |
of Agriculture have enlisted in their | their motor car. :
“sETice—tie service of the American,
* farmer—more men of high scientific|
attainment, engaged in vital research)
into the manifold problems which the}
farmer must solve if lie is to succeed,
than are engaged in any other field
"of scientific inquiry. Our agricultural
experiment stations have taught the
“man with the hoe” not only new and
better ways of domg things but the
reason why they are better ways.
Instead of the inefficient, dull peas-
ant, the type which stands for
“farmer” in the city folks’ mind, the | entitle. me to have a ch'ch notice wn}
American farmer has been too pro-
gressive, too efficient, if such a thing
were possible. By improved and
scientific methods he has increased
production more rapidly than the de-~
‘mand has grown for his products.
The ultimate result of that will be, | Walker, pastor.
T
5 ,
» IAs 3
LAUGHIF |
YOU CARE TO
By Russell Weaver
BONES -
‘Teacher: , “Name , the ‘kinds of
bones.” ; a tis of
"ohn Rice: “Human bones, animal
bones and trombones.”
¥, 5 — &g 2
PAUL REVERE
“Dot” D.—Why do you tall yi
Paul Revere? Yar
“Herb? Morgan—Because of the
midnight rices. r fis
SHALL SHE?
Earl VanCampen—That song makes]
me homesick. oy
Agnes H.—Shall I sing it again?
FOUND
‘A man so bald-headed that he has
Ito wear a night cap to keep his head
[from slipping off the pillow.
JUST BROTHERS
Two Irishmen were talking.
- Said Pat to'Mike—So yer name's
Reilly, is it? . Are you any relation to
Tim.
Very distantly, replied he. I was
me mother’s foist child and he were
the tenth.
|
HONEST SAMBO
“How many calories in this soup?”
“Boss, there ain’t none. This am a
clean place to eat.”
YES, WE HAVE NO BANANAS
A shortage of fruit is reported from
New York. We hope they won't make
a song about it as they did when they
ran out of bananas a few years ago.
CAN WHAT THEY CAN
English Tourist—Pardon, sir, but
what do you do with all that corn?
American Farmer—Well, we eat
what we can, and what we “can’t we
can. ’
Englishman's
say, John?
Wife—What. did he
they could and what they couldn’t they
could.
SKIN DEEP
Joe—You're too excited about your
beauty. : .
Anne Cz.—Why, not at all. I don’t
think I'm half as good looking as I
really am.
Among the Scotch one usually finds
the closest friends.
The young duckling must have been
terribly embarrassed when he found
out that his first pair of trousers were
down.
HEARD LAST SPRING
Prof. Carle, assigning a lesson in
physics—Start with lightning and go
to thunder.
‘SOME TIME
. Myra—What kind of a time did you
have at Dartniouth?
Howard—Daylight saving time.
BLINDNESS
Office. Boy—The boss cant’ see any-
one today.
Caler—Oh, well, tell him T hope his
blindness is only temporary.
A
« NO USE
Mrs. Nextdoor—Aren’t you going to
His Wife—What's the use? I saw
all their furniture when they. moved
i / Wy, Sp
in. / 3
OH. BUOY!
Life Guard (with girl "in ‘arms)-—
Sir, I have just resuscitated your
daughter.
her!
AND SHAME THE DEVIin
Two college students were arraigned
hurdling the low spots in the road in
“Have you a lawyer,?’ asked the
magistrate.
“We're not going to have any
lawyer,” answered the elder of the
students. “We've decided to tell the
truth.”
ADVICE
A negro preacher walked into thé
office of a newspaper in Rockmound,
N. C., and said: “Misto Edito’, they
35 forty-three of my congregation
which subscribe fo’ yo’ paper. Do that
vo’ Sad’day issue?”
“Sit down and write,” said the
editor.
“I thank you.” And this is the no-
Englishman—He said they ate what»
by ARTHUR BRISBANE
’
Must We Have a Fight?
New Sudden: Freezing Idea
Mr. Swope Has a Plan = =
Why Women Chatter
* {An English newspaper suggests that
‘Europe should unite against us in‘an
economic boycott, as European cewn-
tries united against Germany in 1914.
It would be too bad to have an in-
But, fortu-
nately, we are ready for it, if it must
dustrial, economical fight.
come. Rasy
The ten billions that we sent to our |
dear friends in Europe last time would
be spent on our own fight this tim
and 100 billions more if necessary.
Three American workmen can pr
duce as much steel as ten British work-
men.
, Ten -American automobile m
chanics can produce as many aut
mobiles as 100 French, German or
British mechanics.
We are meek and peaceful, but
they want a fight, they probably can
get it.
ee Y
News
grees below zero,
liquid cells.
Meat, separate steaks, chops, fish,
oysters, vegetables, fruits, are instan-
taneously frozen in transparent pack-
ages.
California and Florida might try this
sudden freezing process in preserving
“orange and lemon juice.
Concerning the new process,
Mr. Gerard Swope, president of Gen-
eral Electric, plans for future unem-
ployment crises.
a vote of 60 per cent or more of it:
employes, a trust fund will be organ-
ized to meet abnormal’conditions of
unemployment. y
Workers will contribute one per cen
of their earnings, the company con-
tributing an equal amount. The com-
pany guarantees 5 per cent on the
funds accumulated, until such time as
unemployment shall make it desirable
to utilize the fund for the benefit o
idle employees.
The employes will contribute half, [farm labor; Great Britain
the company half, the workers will get
all, the company none, a fair arrange- [France one horse to three laborers.
ment.
King George and Queen Mary, the |gup greater farm prosperity.
Prince of Wales, and guests from (in introducing mechanical pi
‘Windsor Castle were present at the [the farm we are still leading Europe! that tiie sehool will have four times
Ascot races recently, when, close to
them, Walter Holbein, a bookmaker,
was killed in the betting ring by a bol
of lightning. Good churchmen
Scotland will say it was punishmen
for gambling and a warning to the
from racetracks.
King to keep away
But King George, modern and en- [to 1975.
lightened, knows that the broker Was |years that workers in industry have being called “Daffydils”
not killed by a shot from Heaven, but
by vagrant electricity, returning from
the clouds to earth. He knows tha
church. bells do not drive away light-
to
cathedrals and
humble little: churches are provided
copper
spike pointing upward, emphasizing
the fact that nature has no favorites.
ning, whatever they may do
demons, since great
with lightning: rods, each
The King and Queen went to Asco
again the following day:
x;
German scieni:.is named Frieden-
thal and. €Cohn-Guben say “Woman's
chattering is physiological, mot a de-
Men's greater se-
crecy and discretion are due to lazi
ness, not to will: power or dipicmacy.
The female jaw; larynx, ahd vocal
ir motion with ex-
fault of character:
cords are set g
traordinary ease, not so man’s.”
All that is
‘Women have cha
because women ha
work when through with ‘bearin
with occupation
chatter.
Madame Curie; for
not chatter.
instance,
Sappho did not chatter, her mind
was concentrated on poetry. Queen
She talked
Elizabeth did not chatter.
deliberately, with purpose.
Give women something better to do
and they won't chatter.
Lloyd George tells
Prime Minister, that he will co-ope
,ate with the Lahcr Party in legis!
ticn to the
problem.
It will be interesting to
solve
a man as wise as Lloyd Gecrge ea
r of supply and
do to contrgl the
demand, which seems to rule us a
Thi S Week|
important to storekeepers,
farmers and the public describes a new
process of freezing foods suddenly, at
an extremely low temperature, 49 de-
preserving their
quality marvellously and indefinitely.
Violently sudden freezing prevents.
formation of crystals and breaking of
in-
vented by Clarence Birdseye, packers,
farmers, and merchants may obtain
Information by writing Mr. Chester,
president of the General Foods Com-
pany, 250 Park ave, New York City.
In every General Electric works, on
in
scientific nonsense.
d more than men
e lacked serious
does
MacDonzld,, | duce this proportion to 15 per cent. |
unemnlo-ent | figure—that eventually we shall reach |
sce what |
J A
——By Albert T: Reid
€,
0O-
e-
O-
if
CShbere oT. Reid
El is
Radio Topics
Eva LeGallienne, who broadcasts
her - plays over the’ WABC chain,
speaks, reads and writes French, Ger-
. TE man, Russian and Danish besides
More Mechanical Energy In Use Per possessing a passing knowledge of
Worker Than in Factories—Quarter| Spanish, Italian and Greek. She plays
of Population Engaged on Farms| the piano, guitar, harp and piccolo.
| Her fencing is so excellent that her
instructor continually urges her to
give up the stage and radio so that
he may make her the world’s cham-
pion with the foils. Incidentally, her
company calls her *Saint Eva.”
x ®
America Leads in
Use of Mechanical
Power On Farms
8 By Caleb Johnson
Let us think for’ a minute of farm-
ing in terms of power.
‘Animal power as well as mechanical
t |power.
Farming without power is almost
inconceivable to the American mind. *
Yet in Italy today there is only one| Rudy Vallee has been awarded an
horse to every five farm workers, At : : y 5
the beginning of the World War, when athletic letter by ‘the University. of
Maine for his popularizing of the
the use of animals on American farms A
“Maine Stein Song.” At the testi-
f was at its peak, we had more than
two horses for every man employed in| menial dinner preceding the bestowing
| of the “M” on the slight shoulders of
had less
than one horse per man Germany haa 4 : ‘
ons ‘horse for each two farm hands: the crooner, it was said that the Uni-
versity of Maine expects a record en-
Power on the farm, then, is nothing | rollment in the.coming year due to
n i i He 3 - en s . -
ew in America. It is the secret of | publicity it has received during the|
And | . |
power on Proadcasting of the song. ‘Some Say)
and the rest of the world.’ |as many students in 1930 as it had in|
In the form of tractors amd other |p, previous year.
t | power-driven machinery we had more | ST J 5
than two horsepower per warker on | what a stein and a low voice has done
t |the farms in 1900, thirty years ago. for good ole Maine.
In manufacturing industry less power | oe LR
was in use per worker than on the |
farm.
The same proportion obtained down
It is only in the past five Fans.
The newest thing to take the coun-|
[try by storm is the Radio Garden of]
Followers of Rudy Valee are |
by
These wha place Will
. |
radio
had more mechanical power per man, columnists:
at their disposal than workers on the ® ¥
farm. Wow the average worker in nef OSPR gr. the, ‘throNie are, teemed
dustry uses about five horsepower, weepin’ Willows.” Fans who adore |
while the average farm worker has at! Smith Ballew are given the title of!
his command only slightly less in| “puttercups.” Lovers of Jan Garber's |
ynechamieal power, and ote than the’ husic are called by the non-de-plume
equivalent of two mechanical horse-{ ah
power in the form of animal power. | Of “Gardenias.
And the greatest increase in the use| Evidently the chap who named the
of power, if the present tendency is a Guy
fair indication, wil be on the farm.
The horses and mules are being Te- J :
placed by engines much more power- recruited 'mainly from the underworld
ful than the aninrals are. {of Chicago and New York.’ {
| All of that means that the farm out-! If you think Ray O'Hara's ‘languor:
¥put per person employed in farm worl | ous tunes are the height of something,
is steadily growing larger. . Fewer’ y el A
men are needed to produce and’ trans- | then you're a “Shamrock. Folks who |
port to market the same amount of tune in om Neil Golden more
foodstuffs or other agricultural com-|than others are termed “Goldenrods.
modities. ; _ .. And a “Cauliflower’
This increase in farm productivity:
has been going on for a hundred years. : E .
In 1830 it took the labor of three-| Bernie Cummins.
quarters’ of the people of the United | If you're “that way’
States to grow the commodities neces- | strains of Ozzie Nelson’s band. then
sary to feed and clothe themselves | FE a oe
and the rest of the population. vou’'re nothing but a “Geranium” Those
+
L
}
Lombardo fans “Pansies” did |
i know that. Lombardo’s admirers
t
are |
’
By |
€ 11900, through the addition to the farm | that adere the white-hot Bert Lowh|
children and caring for them. Women
worth while do not
equipment of more horses and of orchestra belong to the ‘Hollyhock”
mechanical power-driven implements | family.
we had reached a stage of efficiency |
which required the work of not more | ! 1
than four-tenths af the whole Bopu- (about Don Bigelow. Don’t blame me,
lation to feed and clothe us all.
This year’s census is not complete, | you,
but it seems certain that it will show : tw
[ot not more than a quarter of the .
entire population of the United States | Did You Know
is actually engaged in farm work; and |
| the continuing increase in DpOWer | gctor, once broadcast
| equipment may, and probably will, re- | which he took all eleven parts?
* % *
That Harry Span, WABC character
a drama in
r- | in the course of another ten years.
a- | That is what the statistical experts That Merle Johnstone, the Columbia
| such a stage of agricultural efficiency
| that only 15 per cent. of the people
| will be required to grow all of the
crops and livestock which the entire
100 per cent of the people consume.
the female of the species
the male?
11
il,
and Mrs. JT.
Bloomsburg recently where they were
My, oh, my, look | entertained at the Bloomsburg Coun-
try club by Mrs. J. P, Schuyler.
often
rd
Jis just another | {
name for the cohorts of the inimitable
aa
over the smappy
Vo»
And I know you—you're (Petuniz’ |
‘|I didmt mame them, I'm just telling!
s i
system saxophone expert, maintains]
can |
| ’ i |
play the “blues horn” twice as fast as |
~Trucksville-
Mrs. W. D. Kemble entertained at
bridge Tuersday afternoon. The guests
were M‘'ss Mary Leach, Mrs. Ziba
Howell, Miss Bess Lynch, Miss Claire
Brown, Miss Nell Leach, Mrs. George
Metz and Mrs. W. E, Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Sherman and
daughters, Ruth and Lois, spent Sunday
with Mrs) Charles Palmer.
Miss Helen Reynolds is attending
camp inspection at Lake Ariel.
Miss Guida Morrow, a teacher in the
local High school, is taking a summer
course at Mansfield State Teachers’
College. ’
Mrs. A. P. Cope and children have
returned home after visiting friends in
Ashley.
Mrs. Arthur Drake and son of
Needles, Arizona, "are visiting | Mrs.
Martin Chrisianson. *
Trucksville Vounteer Fire Company
and Community Association will meet
Friday evening in Community hall.
Mr. and Mrs. J: C. Reed and Mr.
C. Lewis motored to
§
Juring in on)
v7
\ thelalkies
. "THEE movies are blamed for every=
' thing. Even “Radio Mania”
- was projectedyon the screen seven.
. years ago. :
All comets have a tail but Rin
Min Tin is the only star thus
~equipped.
© “Riding to Fame” on “The Road"
io Ambition” often ends in “Walks
: ing Back.”
Joe E. Brown"
thinks a great
place to be lost
would be in “Al
‘Wilderness of
Women.” =
{
Irene Delroy,
will Vitaphone,
for Warner
Bros. in “Nand
cy From Nae
ples” — a love
story and no
a travel film.
{
{
!
’
|
Irene Delroy
| “The Curse of Eve” was probably,
| A-dam.
! Told in Two Lines ®
| “ladies of the Night Club®
“Dumbells in Ermine.”
“ads,
Fengce-Rail Talkies "
| Farmer Silo says: “These vacas,
tion girls are golf fiends and . 2)
go around in as little as possible,%
Talk About Your Talkies
Richard Barthelmess will bid the
screen “Adios” but not good-byz |
I Winnie Lightner will be "he
| Life of the Party” in a forthco. ng
\ “talkie. |
tice the minister wrote.
S f in use
“Mount Memn- The present volume of power I
orial Baptist Church, the Rev. John
Hundreds of thousands are idle. Many |
are insuficlently ‘supplied with gooCs | at
Preaching morn and
of course, that a smaller number of| evening. In the promulgation of the
“farmers will supply the nation’s needs. | gospel, three books is necessary—the
prosper on the farms will be the ones| book. Come tomorrow and bring all
best fitted by education and intelli-
gence to do the job. And they will
be even less like “Rubes” than the
farmers of today.
| three.”
Station RFW signing off.
Please stand by until next week.
that the hundreds of
produce. Raw mat
ed. Yet the une
yed cannot
stood his Frankenstein monster.
(©1930, King Features Syndicate, Inc.
be
. ; rought in contact with the raw ma-
And the ones who will remain and Bible, the hyms. book and the pocket. id and the public need supplied. | work animals there are in use 853,000
Mysterious finance seems to control,
and those that control finance under-
stand it as little as its maker under-
the farms of America is etimated
50,000,000 horsepower. This is
| on
thousands could | givided among nearly 25,000,000 separ- yare owned by farmers, as they
ials are unlimit- | ate units, of which horses and les peiposily production machines.
the /larger proportion. | ;
18,000,000 | for human beings to do in farming.
still comprise
But in addition to some
farm tractors, 697,300
| engines, 1,000,000 windmills, 300,000 in
trucks—the
farm job is in very large part a trans-
portation job—2,500,000 stationary gas
Those figures do not include nearly |
{5,000,000 pasenger automobiles which |
are not |
"here will always be plenty of work |
| Few machines run themselves; few of
the kind that can run themselves can
|do the varied things which must be |
done on the farm. So in machine |
tending alone there will always be the |
|
dividual electric plants and 500,000 need of human labor, though not so |
| central station electric installations. | (Continued on Yage 5)
“pifty Million Frenchmen” will
soon swarm over the screen Via
Vitaphone.
As If He Had Any :
«A Husband's Privileges” is the
title of a talkie to be sent forth by
Warner Bros.
The man who titled a film “Con
gnering the Women” had a sense of,
kL oxean