The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, November 07, 1930, Image 1

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    GIVE A JOB!
Classified Column FREE for Employ-
ment Ads
aii ANA
-]
_
MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION
CIRCULATION THIS ISSUE
3871
NET PAID IN ADVANCE
PRESS RUN—4,000
VOL. 40
Uncle Sam
~~ Goes to
Sea Again
American Flag Now Flies in Every
Pori
Only Rival.
Uncle Sct as taken to the sea
again.
We have been hearing a great deal
about the American Merchant Marine,
these past few years, but few realize
the extent to which shipping flying
our national flag has regained ‘the
commanding position on.the high seas
4hat it used to occupy before the Age
of Steam.
Before the Great War there were so
few American ships sailing to foreign
shores that our flag was almost totally
unknown in many of the most import-
ant ports of the world. For nearly
sixty years that condition had. been
zetting worse from year to year.
Today the United States ranks sec-
ond only to Great Britain in the num-
er of our ships engaged in foreign
~ commerce, and only Great Britain ex-
ceeds us in the annual volume of ship
construction. And that condition is
getting better, from our point of view,
from year to year.
In the old days of wooden sailing
ships the United States led the world.
In the first 75 years of our national
existence Yankee shipyards built more
craft than were built anywhere else.
Our shipbuilders and designers strove
to improve their models, until in the
1850’s the Yankee Clippers, the towel-
ing wooden sailing craft which pene-
trated to the utmost reaches of thé
globe, were the fastest and most
profitable merchantment afloat. They
were at once the admiration and the
despair of the British, our only rivals
on the Seven Seas. *
Then three things happened, almost
at once.
The iron ship and the screw propel-
ler were introduced into the shiyp-
building picture, and the United
- States became embroiled in a war be-
tween the States.
So long as ships were built of wood |
and propelled by sails, we had the ad-,
vantage over everybody else; we had
4he timber, and the workmen and the
expert knowledge of ship construc-
tion; we also had a population living
almost entirely along the seacoast,
with a natural taste for the sea, and
from this costal population we could
# man our ships with the best naviga-
“tors and sailors to be found anywhere.
When it came to manufactures or
jron and steel, we were woefully be-
hind Great Britain. We had built a
cood many steamships, to be sure, but
4hey were mostly sidewheel craft for
river and coastwise use and unfit to
voyage to China, India and around the
¥orn, in the wake of the old sailing
clippers. We had not trained up a
body of seagoing engineers who un-
derstood machinery. Anr just as there
innovations began to demonstrate that
the day of the wooden sailing ship
was past, all of our national energies
were concentrated upon our own in-
‘ternal war.’
The Civil War over, we found that
4he British had captured our foreign
carrying trade with their iron steam-
ships. We did not worry very much,
for we had the problem before us oi
opening up and developing our own
West. Stell ships succeeded iron, but
it was almost fifty years before we
had developed sources of iron ore; ana
steel mills to utilize it, in suffiicent
gtrength to enable us to divert any
considerable part of our product to
the building of modern ships. And
just as we got to the point where we
could compete on even terms for the
water-borne traffic of the world an-
other war broke out.
As we had lost our ocean commerce
to Great Britain when we were deeply
involved in a war, so we began to re-
capture it when Great Britain got into
the greatest war in history. We
seized our opportunity, and a com-
prehensive system of Governmental
aid to merchant shipbuilding and op-
eration was adopted, comparing with
‘the Ciovernment subsidies with which
the British had stimulated their own
shipping industry.
Now, as I have said, we are second
only to Great Britain, and a very
close second; and we are gaining
every year. ee .
Last year, for example, 41 per cent
of all of .the ocean commerce between
the United States and the rest of the
world, was carried in American ships..
This year’s figures will be larger. In
(Continued on Page 8)
FIFTY APPLY FOR JOBS
In last week's
DALLAS POST carried two
small classified ads: ‘“Workmen
Wanted.” In commenting on the
ad which she ran, Mrs. A. J.
Moores, of Fernbrook, says that
twenty-seven persons applied for
the 7 job." The gother ad for
“Woodsmen Wanted” was in-
serted in: the POST by H. L.
Johnson, of Willow Grange
Farm, ‘Trucksville, Pa. Be-
tween twenty-five and thirty
men applied for this job. An ac-
curate check of the classified
ads run in THE DALLAS POST
during the past two months
shows that per cent of these
little ads produced results. It
pays to read and use the classi-
fied ad column of THE DALLAS
POST. The classified ad column
makes an ideal place to seli
farm products.
issue THE
75
etl 4
' | tion
SCOUTS MEET
‘Troop No. 7, Dallas
meet in the High School Auditorium,
Wednesday afternoon, at 2 o'clock.
There was a good attendance.
The meeting gopened with singing,
following which games were played.
The meeting continued with instruc-
in First Aid for the various
classes, and closed with the singing
“Taps.”
This Troop is very
present are working
plays to he
Girl © Scouts,
active and at
on several short
given in the near future.
Telephone Rates
To Be Changed
Luzerne Telephone Company
New Schedule With Commission;
Sweet Valley, Lehman and Part of
Lake Township Effected.
THE LUZERNE TELEPHONE
COMPANY furnishing telephone ser-
vice from Central Office Districts at
Dallas has filed with the Public Ser-
vice Commission a new tariff, which
makes increases, decreases and
changes in existing rates, effective De-
cember 1, 1930.
The territory effected includes all
subscribers of the Luzerne Telephone
Company on its lines between Dallas
and Sweet Valley. It does not effect
subscribers’ of the Commonwealth
Telephone Company.
INCREASES:
The rate for extension bells with
large gongs is increased from 20 cents
to 25 cents per month.
The mileage charge for individual
line stations outside of the base rate
area is increased from 40 cents to 50
cents per quarter mile.
The mileage charge for two party
line stations outside of the base rate
area is increased from 25 cents to 30
cents per quarter mile.
The minimum period for which ex-
change service will be billed is in-
creased from 6 to 7 months.
Extension station business and resi-
dence rates are increased from 50
cents each per month to $1.00 and 75
cents per month, respectively.
The service connection charge for a
wall type of telephone is increased
from $1.50 to $3.00.
The charge for a change in location
of a telephone is increased from $1.00
to $2.00.
DECREASES:
The rate for
small gongs is decreased from
cents to 15 cents per month.
The charge for change in type
instrument is decreased from $5.00
$2.00.
The service connection charge for a
desk. type instrument is decreased
from $5.00 to $3.00.
CHANGES:
A complete set of toll rates and pro-
visions applicable thereto are estab-
ished.
The rules and regulations are re-
vised .and re-written with new pro-
visions.
WFS:0
November
extension bells with
20
of
to
5, 1930.
Wyoming County
All Agog Over Oil
Big Companies Lease Land for Pros-
pecting Wyoming, Sullivan and
Bradford Counties, :
runni high in
Wyoming county over e prospects
of finding oil and gas wells there.
With more than 300,000 acres’ of land
in Bradford county already under
lease for gas and oil prospecting, the
citizens of that county are getting
alarmed lest millions of dollars worth
of fuel will be shipped or piped away
with little to show for it.
The recurrence of the gas and oil
fever along the Susquehanna was
caused by the striking of a gusher in
Farmingham township, Tioga county,
a few weeks ago. The uncontrolled
flow of this gusher, which is the
largest gas Well struck east of the
Mississippi river in a generation, was
23,000,000 feet per day until it was
capped with concrete two weeks after
it was struck. This flow of gas was
worth $100,000 per dayfl The well is
now flowing at the rate of 2,000,000
feet of gas’a day into three and one-
half miles of six-inch surface pipe
connected with a trunk line.
Many of the farmers in Tioga
county now have their land under
lease to agents who came there as
soon as the gusher began to flow. The
first price offered was 10 cents per
acre to hold the land for one year.
Competing agents began to bid the
price up raising it first to 25 cents an
acre and then to 50 cents until now
it has reached $1.00 per acre.
Oil and gas prospecting is a reoc-
curing phenomenon in Wyoming
county, considerable money having
been spent at regular intervals during
the past twenty years to drill wells in
various sections of the county. Week
before last H. IL. Daugherty, of Cities|
Service Company,
to view the situation and this week
three other agents visited the scene.
One of them is supposed to have rep-
resented the U. G. IL of Philadelphia,
another Cities Service, and still an-
Excitement is
visited the county | joo
_DALLAS, POST, DALLAS, PA. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7
(1930
Tuesday, November 11,
the weapons of war.
cease.
feeling of discontent and unrest
the men and women of America
for their sacrifices will be best
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11,
institutions of learning.
prayer to Almighty God for the
the price of their devotion.
KO
burg, this
JIU
and thirty,
IEC
By the Governor:
BO
the armistice which terminated the World War.
a holiday by both National and State law and the President has
proclaimed it and directed its observance throughout the Nation.
The lessons of this great struggle should ever be kept in mind:
They become more manifest with the passing of time.
tha awful destruction of life and property, the bitter hatreds
engendered and the evil passions loosened upon humanity, the
unsettling of the social forces which enter intor the stability of
government and the peaceful intercourse of peoples and nations,
and the horrifying increase in the number and effectiveness of
/ Under the influence of these memories we
. call upon every agency and invoke every noble impulse in our
humanity for the establishment of good feeling, kindly relation-
ships, and justice throughout the world to the end that all war may
We earnestly hope and pray that the present widespread
of the world may find peaceful solution.
On this Armistice Day the patriotic service and sacrifice of
remembered. The ideals for which they struggled are realized
in greater freedom for individual citizens and more democracy
in the forms of government throughout the world. Our gratitude
votion to the cause for which they gave or offered their lives.
Now, therefore, I, John S. Fisher, Governor of the Common-
wealth of Pennsylvania, in obedience to law, do hereby set apart
1930, as a legal holiday, to be
commemorated by all citizens of this Commonwealth, and es-
pecially by patriotic organizations and the public schools and all
“I enjoin upon all our people to abstain, in grateful remem-
brance, from their usual occupations, and, at the hour of eleven
o'clock in the morning, to suspend all business and employment for
two minutes, when every head may be bowed and every heart
may reverently remember the sufferings
heroic dead, who offered their lives as a sacrifice for country and
humanity; and let all citizens join in offering thanksgiving and
year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred -
one hundred and ffty-fifth.
. Secretary of the Commonwealth.
Proclamation
1930, 1s the twelfth anniversary of
It has been made
We recall
now so manifest in many parts
i:
and her allies will be gratefully
RN RL
WN
manifested by our renewed de-
WAR]
ROM
WOU
1
DORR
and
secifices of our
blessings of the peace which is
Given under my hand and thg Great Seal
of the Commonwealth, at the City of Harris-
1
fifth day of November, in the
RB
RO
and of the Commonwealth the
OR ARAR
{
Ca Sa
Scores Knockout
Harvey's Lake Boxer Wins Fans With
Fine Sportmanship, an Living
and Ability. 7
yd
pr
Johnny Loposky, Harvey's Lake's
contribution to the fighting ring,
fought his opponent, John Leonard, of
Binghamton, N. Y. to a stand still
Tuesday night at Carbondale Casino.
Loposky, a boy of 150 pounds, has
developed into rare form during a
month of strenuous training at his
private gymnasium at Sandy Beach,
Harvey's Lake. In the five bouts that
he has fought this season he has
scored four knockouts and received
referee’s decision in’ another.
Loposky is a clean living, high type
young man who through hard work
and strenuous ‘training has attracted
the attention of all local sports fans.
The sportsmanlike way in which he
conducts himself in the ring and his
ability as a fighter cause many fans
to favor him as the next welterweight
champion of the Anthracite region. He
is managed by Ben Rood, of Laketon,
Both boys are products of Lake town-
ship high schocl.
LLOYD LAMOREAUX DIES
Following a lingering poss, Lloyd
Lamoreaux, aged 69, dnd’ a life long
resident of Hunlock Créek, died at his
home yesterday afternoon. He leaves
the following children to mourn his
passing: Mrs. Josiah Stephens, of
Plymouth, Mrs. Dayton Lewis, of Hun-
lock Creek, Clark and Luke, of Muu-
lenburg, Howard, Millard and Bernard
at home; also 26 grandchildren and
three great-granchildren survive.
Collector Makes
Final Settlement
School Board Grants Permission to
Local Gymnasium.
The school board on Wednesday
night authorized the payment of the
following bills: Books and supplies,
C. R. Andrews, $20.60; Henry Holt &
Co:;, $2.08; Allan & Bacon, $1.44; W.
M. Welch Mfg. Co. $46.81; Webster
Publishing $3.04; Scott Foresman
Co., $32.05; Kurtz Bros. $2.84; South-
western Publishing Co., $11.36; Will-
iam Krause, merchandise and service,
Co,
| will enforce
$15.00; George T. Bowen, $3.67; Good-
Farm, $12: J. M. Reese, $12; R. !
L. Brickel, $15.95; Mrs. A. G. Kocher, |
$32; Risleyr Major Co. $26.13; Rem-|
ington Rand Co., $7; A.J. Roat Supply |
Co., $14.28; Howard Leek, $18; 2us- |
Oth r from that ever interesting com-|
ity Wilkes-Barre.
! he
LADIES’ AID TO MEET
orem
| The regular monthly meeting of Dat-J
| las Ladies’ Aid Society will be held at|
the home of Mrs. Harold Titiman,
| L ake street, Nov. 13.
Serving committee:
jwines Oliver, Dean Still, C. A.
. Stevens, Miss Mary Still.
i
Mesdames:
Frantz,
| 333. 39;
| tric Co,
| $22.42;
[ $50.
sell Evans, $7.50: J. R. Oliver, $9.69; R.|C
I. Hallock, plumbing and repairs, |
Luzerne County Gas and Elec-
$43.89; stamped envelopes,
New Jersey Seating Co., $100;
Dallas Water Co. $60.50; Earl
Monk, final payment on heating work,
$19.60; J. H. Garrahan, stoker rental, |
F. M. Gordon final
submitted set- |
| keeping
| consumers have failed to co-operate by |
| notifying the company of their removal | Searfass;
house.
| — Retains
Chief of Police
Discusses Merits of Mushro
‘At Dangerous Street Inte
Town council met Tuesday night and
paid the monthly bills for salaries and
street work, including $224.15 for
stone. Temporary loans aggregating
$3,000 were ordered paid. This is the
entire amount of temporary indebted-
ness, approximately $14,000 in bonds
being outstanding.
Committees reported regarding the
installation of a mushroom light at
the intersection of Main and Hunts-
ville streets, the establishment of a
dumping ground, and adjustment of
the complaint of C. N. Booth that re-
grading Lehman avenue had inter-
fered with the approach to his resi-
dence.
After discussion council decided to
dispense with the services of the sec-
ond officer during the winter. Officer
Edward Avery was retained during the
winter at a part time proposition at a
salary of $25 per month.
A committee was appointed to in-
spect proposed lots in an effort to pro-
vide some adequate parking space
near the center of the town.
HUNTSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
With the banquet on Friday night
the Huntsville Christian church closes
the celebration of its 87th anniversary.
Mrs. C. H. Frick, wife of the pastor,
will fill the pulpit ‘Sunday morning at
9:30 as Rev. Frick speaks to the regi-
ment of the 109th Field Artillery in
the First Presbyterian Church in
‘Wilkes-Barre. Bible School follows
the service.
Water Company
To Enforce Its
Vacancy Rule
Water Users Cause Trouble When
They Fail to Notify Conipany of
Vacancies. ¥
As will be seen in au advertisement
appearing ¢lsewhere in this paper, Dal-
las and Shavertown water companies
“rule 5” of the general
rules and regulations of the companies
pertaining to allowancses for vacan-
cies. This rule applies especially to
those instances where families move
from from one house to another and
ail to notify the water company of]
their removal, thus not permitting |
| water company employees to shut off |
the water and obtain record of va-|
ancy. In the past the company has|
experienced considerable difficulty in |
accounts straight because the
H. {and have then subsequently objected | Skapic;
to paying for any portion of the bill
| contracted ‘during the vacancy of the
In order to overcome all misunder-
{overwhelming
(| STATE SIGNS MAY |
BE COSTLY TARGET
rm |
Removal or destruction of signs or|
posters put up by any department of |
the State government is punishable |
with a fine of not less than $10.00 or
more than $50.00.
State officials cite the act of the
last session of the Legislature in
warning hunters that State signs may
prove costly targets.
All fines collected under
direct to the county in
the act go
which the
offense was committed.
Republicans Win
In Rural Region
Only One District Carried By Demo-
in Wyoming sylvania since the final report of the
“The outlook for our native chests
‘nut is more hopeful this fall than it
crats—Terry Wins
County.
Voting districts of the back moun-
tain region ran true to form in the
General Election on Tuesday and gave
majorities to the Re-
publican candidates for election. Out-
side of Luzerne borough the only other
nearby district which was| carried for
Hemphill, Democratic nominee, was
West Wyoming, second district, where
Governor Pinchot trailed his Demo-
cratic opponent by nine votes, and
Kmetz led Turpin by 100 votes.
How Local Districts Voted
Dallas
Dallas
Dallas
Dallas
Jackson Twp,
Kingston TE -D....
Kingston T nwd....
Kingston T swd
Lehman T swd
Lehman T ned
Lehman T M D
Lake T N
56
13
152
118
72
106
W Wyoming 1D.... 172 181
W Wyoming: 2D.... 211 55
WYOMING COUNTY
Charles IL. Terry, of Nicholson
borough, Republican. nominee for
Representative from Wyoming county,
defeated Percy Brunges, of Faston
township, Democratic nominee, by 624
votes. Governor Pinchot carried every
district in the county, and L. T. Mc-
Fadden ran far ahead in the Congres-
sional race. With the exception of
Noxen and Easton townships, where
he carried good majorities, Brunges
broke about even in the other dis-
tricts on this side of the Susque-
hanna rviver. While ' Tunkhannock
borough came to ‘theair of Brunges
with good majoritiés, Nicholson bor-
ough and township and Factoryville
gave Terry almost a clean sweep.
9
21
28
14
5 225
74
£
Bobby Eipper
Breaks Ankle
In Football Game
Local Gridders Defeat Lehman 40-0
in Practice Game, But Lose
Quarterback With Injuries.
Dallas borough high school showed
rare form on Friday afternoon when it
held Lehman township hiigh school to
one first down, while the Dallas ball
carriers tore through the line,
gambled around the ends and kept the
Lehman backs bleary eyed looking for
forward passes.
When the dust of battle raised Dal-
las had rolled ‘up as score of 40 points
and Lehman was scoreless.
Lehman showed a splendid spirit
throughout the game and its good
sportsmanship was evidenced when it
allowed Dallas to play an ineligible
man,
The game was marred during the
last quarter when Robert Eipper, Dal-
las quarterback, received a broken
ankle. Eipper played a splendid.game
throughout the first three quarters,
and his injury will probably remove
him from the game for the remainder
of the season. 3
rr pe Ci pr ty
‘LEHMAN BOYS ATTEND DISPLAY
Several members of the vocational
agriculture class of Lehman High
School attended the display at Irem
Temple. The boys won several prizes
in judging and their exhibits.
second prize in judging potatoes;
The boys who won prizes in the
Chestnuts Show.
More Signs of ¢
Beating Blight
Continued Survey Bolsters Forecasts
Made Earlier in Season
Continued field investigations of the
chestnut tree during the past summer
support the findings of the Pénnsyl-
vania Forest Research Institute, which |
last spring made public the results of
4 survey purporting to show that
chestnut is slowly working its way
back into Penn's Woods. The report
then published by the State Depart-
ment of Forests and Waters, was the
first official document expressing the
status of the chestnut blight in Penn-
Chestnut Blight Commission in 1913.
has been any year since the chestnut 3
blight made its appearance in Penn-
sylvania,” says Research Forester
John E. ‘Aughanbaugh, who has con-
tinued the field studies up to the pres-
ent time.- “This is particularly true
in the eastern half of the State, which
represents the region of earliest infec-
tion. After a lapse of twenty years
the sprout growth of chestnut is pro-
ducing a crop of nuts.”
During the past month of field ex-
aminations by Aughanbaugh he saw
and heard much encouraging evidence
in favor of the chestnut tree. “The in-
creased production of nuts has had
much to do with stimulating interest
in the eventual recovery of the tree inj/f
Pennsylvania,” he said. “More chest-
nuts are being gathered from sprouts )
this fall than any year since the origi- a 4
nal stand of chestnut fell victim to the
blight.” ?
Gathers Nuts AS >
Blair Kauffman, towerman on the
Snowy Mountain forest fire tower in
the Mount Alto State Forest, Franklin
county, collected a quart of chestnuts
in, that section of the South Moun-
tains. Forester Aughanbaugh also
gathered more than a pint of nuts
from sprouts which were only five
years of age. At least one-tenth of
the chestnut sprouts are now bearing
fruit on ‘this particular area, which
was burned over in 1926. Individual
sprouts, ranging from six to ten feet
in height, are each bearing from two
to twenty burrs and older sprouts
many more. Ome 12-year-old sprout
on Pine Knob, Mount Alto State Forest.
is carrying eighty-two well-formed
burrs this fall. Another sprout has
fifty-four burrs and counts on several
others showed from twenty to thirty
burrs present. r
The encouraging feature of this
vear's crop of chestnuts is the high
percentage of well developed nuts
which the sprouts are bearing. In
previous years even when a few burrs
were present, nearly all contained un-
developed nuts. A large percentage
of the burrs this year contain not only
one, but three nuts, and most of them
are of large size.
The returning crop of nuts is hope-
ful evidence that the chestnut tree can
in time regain its lost ground. Aug-
hanbaugh believes. Without new nuts
there cannot be new trees and it is
certain that the old chestnut stumps
cannot indefinitely produce sprouts.
Thees of seedling origin, furthermore,
offer the greatest resistance to the
chestnut blight. It is evident, there- .
fore, that the chestnut is entering a
new era in its fight against extermina<
tion.
-
—0
MOUNT GREENWOOD
KIWANIS CLUB
As a result of the election held on
Wednesday evening, the Kiwanis
Club of Mt. Greenwood will be gov=
erned for the year 1931, by the follow-
ing officers:
President—Clinton Roberts; 1st V.
P.—Rev. H. F. Henry; 2nd V. P.—Rev.
J. J. OLeary; Treas.—Archie Wool-
bert; District Trustee—A. C. Kelly,
and Directors—Dr. G. L. Howell and
Sam J. Anthony.
The Club’s major objective for the
1930-31 season will be the establish=
ment of an upper valley Neighborhood
Club for the benefit of boys and young
men over the scout age.
The following young men of the sec-
tion met with the club and formed thes
nucleous of such; an organization:
Kenneth Woolbert, Temp. Chairman;
James Garey, Phil Anderson, Daniel
Richards, Phil Reynolds, Lester
Squier, Fred Eck, Elwood Swingle,
Willard Garey, Warren Phillips and
Leonard Machell. Entertainment was
judging were: Fred Winter, won
Arthur Miers, second prize in judging |
apples; Glenn Brown; fifth prize in|
judging apples, and Kenneth Rice, first’
price in judging corn. !
Individual winners were: Fred Win-
ter, John Nnezgoda and Wilbur Sear-
fass, corn; Glenn Brown and Ziba
Smith, onions; Fred Winter and Paul
Rice, rutabagars; Wilbur Searfass and
Ziba Smith, beans; Hale Branson,
Robert Disque and Philip Disque,
carrots; John. Niezgada, Alfred Iam-
ereaux -and © Philip Disque, cabbage;
John Niezgoda, Paul Rice and Alfred |
Lamereaux, hickory nuts; Kenneth
Rice and Basil Smith, walnuts; Ken-
neth Rice, oats); Arthur Miers, squash;
Michael Skapic, potatoes; Philip Dis-|
que, pears; Hale Branson, eggs; Ken-
neth Rice. i
1 Jumbo exhibits won by Lehman
were: Largest apples, Wilbur;
largest cabbage, Michael!
largest potato, Harry Dietz. |
prizes were awarded to
potatoes, and to!
boys
Sweepstake
{ Philip Disque for
| Fred Winter for apples.
The boys attended a banquet at frem
tlement of 1929 tax accounts as fol-! standings in the future the company Temple, after which they saw Amos
(Continued on Page 8)
tonnes on Page 8)
‘n Andy in Check An’ Double hec!
[furnished
by Pompilio Forlano, of
Wilkes-Barre, cornet soloist, wand
Lloyd Pohnson, pianist.
GIVE A JOB
Fifty men answered two small
classified adds for work. That
doesn’t just mean that MEN
NEED WORK! Many of them
need it badly to support their
wives and children. If you have
a job that will give a man an
hour’s work, a day's work or a
week’s work, give it to him
NOW. "If you have any kind of
job for a man or for a woman,
THE DALLAS POST will be
glad to run a classified ad for
you free of charge. Don’t hesi-
tate to make use of this service.
Telephone THE POST right
now while you think of it so that
some worthy person can have a
job this = week. The holidays
aren’t far off. The spirit of
good will is in the air. Make
some hod, happier. Give a job!