. from Dallas borough council and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew ~ all school hoards in the region |and Mrs. Ray F. Henney. covered by The Dallas Post. children, of Bloomsburg, And all other projects which help | guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. to make the Back Mountain sec- dinner on Sunday. tion a better place to live in. | Charles Wertman and Jacob Conden ERT each shot a ring-necked pheasant dur- GIVE A JOB ing the past week. They will have the Now, while wages are low and cost|” irds mounted. of materials is down. is the time. to) William “Corby, Miss Hazel Corbey, p 5 o (of i . ; Ld Larksville, Archie Corby and give & man a job Even in a rural-jqaughters, Dorothy and Janet, of West suburban district like ours where there| Pittston, M. and Mrs. Stanley Price: ~ are no mills or factories, there|and daughters,, May and Florence, of i h k th d be d Edwardsville, were callers at the C. W. is enough work that needs to be done kynkje home Sunday afternoon. to supply many men out of work,l Miss Frances Hess deligghtfully en- . : qe . _ tertained the officers and Bible class with jobs. Curtailing expenditures of the Sunday School on Wednesday isn’t aliays economy. Needed repairs|of last week. The home was attrac- to homes. barns, buildings, heating|tively decorated with Halloween 2S and plumbing systems get more expen-| motifs and cornstalks and many of the Adams and were the Devens at © Ssive. os they are put off. Ti sent guests were in costumes and the fol- : . . .|lowing were awarded prizes: Mrs.! economy to wait until later to get this| Grace Ide, first; Mrs. Myrtle Hess, | work done. The delay may cost more second; also prizes were awarded for ‘than the money saved. the various -games to Mrs. Lillian Good business and sound economy | FURKle, Mrs. Naomi Ashburne, Mrs. | dictate that now is the ume to have Agnes Elston and Mrs. Edith Shoe-| : 3€ : maker. The guests were: Mrs. C. W.| ~ yepair work done. Now is the time to do| Kunkle, Mrs. Wm. Brace, Mrs. Olie| any work that is contemplated for the | Kunkle, Miss Gertrude Smith, Mrs. | near future. As a matter of sane Frank Hess, Mrs. Ralph Elston, Mrs. | ; Owen Ide, Mrs. ER: Ashburner, Mrs. business and fair play, Give a Man a|; co Frese Mise i His Avwalnn. Mis Job now while he needs it, and while|Gigeon aritier, Ais it will do the most good for the com-| Miss Roaunah Shocn Jos. Shoemaker, : | ker, Doris Hess, | | I | ~ munity and for you! Mrs. Wm. Miers, Mv. and Mrs. Seth] X To (Mrs. Wm. Miers, II nd Mrs. Seth] Howell and daughter, Geraldine, of | Fernbrook, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hess, BUY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS Fhe slogan. “Do Your Christmas | Miss Helen Hess, Mr. and Mrs. S. J. ° 8 Lo I Hess, Nile, Harold and Robert Hess | ~ Shopping Early has a genume 2 Miss Francis Hess. ~ portance this year. Usually. it 1s| Wheeler Herchman, G Landon, | "merely a remifider that if veu delay/S. J. Hess, Harry Sweezy and Thomas too- long in selecting the things you| Landon enjoyed motor: trip «to orge - . Stroudsburg and other points of in-| “intend to give at Christmas you run|i.rest on Sunday the risk of finding the things you want| Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Conden visited are “out of stock.” This year it means|Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Eggleston, of Ver- ~ that putting your money ito circula- POR, OF Friday Tends Histor. oiiPorty tion now will hasten the return of, rand: Mrs. soee Kiston, of Yorty oH : 3 Fort, and Mrs. Henrietta Elston, of} 3 good times. | Shavertown, spent Sunday with Ms. | Money passes from one person to|and Mis M. IK. Elston. : Mrs. Ralph Eiston entertainedl on another in exchange for commodities. Thursday Mrs. Owen Ide, Jane and Everybody, of course, must decide for| ponnie de and” Miss Edith Martin. himself what sort of commodities he| Mr. ond Mrs. Ralph Hess and] is willing to take in exchange for his|daughter, Doris, spent Sunday with | ¥ Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Hess and family. | money. There are some things, the Mr. and Mrs. John Bradley and Mrs. value of which is beyond question, | sarah Barney, of Plymouth, were the which can be bought cheaper now|guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Kunkle than for several years. There arejand family Sunday afternoon and even- h er commodities which o ans: : Re other ” It jos yeh nly | Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Conden spent ew can afford mn the best o times. |g ndaay with Mr. and Mrs. Edward In urging our readers to spend their| conden. money we do not want tc b> under-| Miss Vivian sHerdman and Charles stood as advocating foolish sperding,|Swesy surprized their many friends B th = ih; hi } this week by announcing their marri- # ut ere. arc Some Ings which age, which took place at Bloomsburg ‘everybody needs, and recognizes the|apout Aug. 20. Mr. and Mrs. Swegy 7 need of, and if those are bought now | will reside in Shavertown. by all who can by any possibility 0 afford to buy anything at all, the fact! -Lehman Tw that that money has been put into cir-| : culation again will hasten the day; Miss Marjorie Foss, of Sweet Val- when more of us can afford to buy jey, spent Tuesday evening with Miss Celia Whitesell. luxuries. : . Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Ide spent Sun- x The first suggestion that has Come | day with Mr. and Mrs. John Steele ~ from President Hoover's Commission|at Mooretown. on Unemployment is the proposal by| Mr. and Mrs. Francis Lewis and daughter, Betty Ella, spent Sunday Col. Arthur Woods, at its head, that a great national campaign of repairing and painting be begun. There are few houses or other buildings that are not in need of either repairs or paint- with friends at Benton. Miss Edna Lamoreau is recovering after submitting to an operation for removal of her tonsils. Mr. and Mrs. John Crispell, of Shavertown, spent Sunday with their ing. The money spent on such things : DI son,’ Raymond Crispell and family. ie money well invested. If everybody Mr. Dorsett, teacher in the local high * the acre than any previously known variety; and is at the same time re- sistant to cane diseases, is of impor- tance to everyone in the United States. We consume several times as much sugar as any other nation in the world. Our sugar producers have had difficulty in competing with foreign sources. The sugar industry in Louis- iana was practically wiped out a few years ago, by plant diseases; the Miss- issippi flood of 1928 almost finished the job. But the introduction of a new type of sugar cane from Java, known as “P. O..J. 213,” has reju- venated the Louisana sugar industry, which is now producing five times as much sugar as in 1926. The new cane developed in Florida, called “C. P. 807” yields a ton more sugar to the acre of cane than does “P. O. J. 213” That should mean, eventually, both a reduction in cost of sugar to the consumer and better profits to the grower * FRAUD A Florida man shipped a carload | of oranges to a produce dealer “in | Virginia. The dealer sent the shipper a check for $250. The Florida mar invoked the recently-enacted Federa Produce Agency Law and haled the dealer into the Federal court. The yroceedings disclosed the -fact that the net proceeds of the sale of the oranges was nearer $700 than $250. The court ordered the dealer to pay the shipper an additional $463, with interest, and to pay it before November 4 or go tc jail. It looks as if there is at last a way in which shippers of farm products san get the money due them. State and local laws don’t protect them; operate in favor of the local er and. against the shipper from another state. The Federal courts are not subject to local influences, and the new law seems to have teeth in it, Ee EDUCATION ~ We spend more money for educa- tion than for anything else, but there are still hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of American grown-ups wha .have never learned to read or write. The death the other day of Thomas Young, whose occupation was that of “public writer,” in a good-sized town close to New York city, revealed the fact that hundreds of persons ii White Plains who could not writa were: in the habit of going to him to write their letters for them. In New York State alone, by the Census of 1920, there were 425,000 persons over 10 years old who could neither read nor write, and all but 10,000 of those were over 21. Nor were they all foreigners; more than 30,000 were native-born whites. The number is probably smaller now; the 1930 Census figures on illiteracy are not yet available. But there were more than three million white folks over ten years old, and nearly two million negroes, who could not read in any language, in 1920, and the probability is that there are still three or four million illiterate citizens. school, has returned after visiting his parents at Mansfield. Fern and Jean Howell have returned | home after spending a few days with relatives in Wilkes-Barre. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ferry have returned to their home in West Pitts- ton after having spent several months with Mr. and Mrs. William Elston. Mrs. Leonard Ide recently entertain- ed at dinner in honnor of Leonard Ide’'s birthday anniversary. Those present were: Mr. J. W. Pembleton, Ruth Pembleton, Margaret Pembleton, PAGE TWO : FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1930 3 ; on f——— > - ——— _ a E : X : S TAR : k | > — The Dallas Post who has been thinking of adding a| ¥ = | ; a v. re . . 1 1 Romine ions Ea bathroom, or reshingling a roof, or = Just ihe boost That, Is ‘Needles Ere By Albert T, Reid Established 1889 i putting a couple of coats of fresh i RR : 4 : [ont on the house, or doing any of | Published by the other necessary things which ~ THE DALLAS POST, INC. | must be done sometime, would Xs uDiioation Ofice { do it now, that would help a lot to- Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania | ward making general business better. { : L.A. McHenry .............President| Such a program would give immedi- ~ G. Harold Wagner. .........Secretary | ate employment to : workers in the ~ H. W. Risley..Mng. Editor and Treas. byijlding trades, it would mean added 3 "THE DALLAS POST is a youthful, business for lumber and hardware ; ing Herel i i ae merchants, and by putting more BUILDING 4 , edited and operated by young| money into ci : men interested in the development of h y ar culation would enable iat » . : She great. rural.suburban Feglon of, 110% who receive it to buy more Building operations in the United Luzerne county and in he attainment liberally from merchants in other| States go by fits and starts. One year of the highest ideals of journalism.| lines, there will be a building boom, the Tui one suriounding comununities- =Byy Now’ is not an. invitation to] feXt year 3 depression. One reason contribute weekly articles to THE veckless dine: b bali retry Is the difficulty of financing the spread POST and have an interest in its ed- spending, but we believe 1t 1S| \atween first mortgage money and the jtorial policies. <THE POST is truly| sound advice to all who can spend| building owner's capital: “more than a newspaper, it is a com- anything at all. ; Some Chicago builders have a plan munity institution. fe whereby the people concerned in the building industry do this financing Subscription, $2.00 Per Year. -K unkl = themselves. Contractors, supply manu- (Payable in Advance) Mrs. F. P. Kunkle, Correspondent facturers, dealers in building materials, = A architects, and labor are to take a part THE DALLAS POST PROGRAM Miss Milile = Mackinson, of Forty| of their pay in junior mortgage cer- ‘The Dallas Post will lend its sup- Fort, spent several days with Miss tificates, to be paid off in instalments. _ port and offers the use of its columns Eleanor Kunkle last week. She re-| This plan will not reduce wages or ‘to all projects which will help this turned home with her parents, Mr. and profits, but generally adopted will ‘community and the great rural-subur- Mrs. Carl Mackinson, who visited at make building operations independent ban territory which it serves to at- the Kunkle home on Sunday. of general finaricis] conditions. Rin the following major improve- Jason Kunkle and Henry Shupp left ? : ments: ! for Clifton, N. J., on Sunday, where BOULDER - A free library located in the Dal- hy is Securey Smployment, Things are moving in the Hoover = : las region. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Shoemaker enter- D . ~N z ; i > am project at Boulder Canyon on ra Better and adequate street light- |{2ined on Sunday Mr. and Mrs. James| y,q te River. Power aes are EY y ing in Trucksville, Shavertown,|l@ndon, of Kingston, and Mrs. Roau-| ghout to be run to the site, to furnish % 3 Fernbrook and Dallas. nah Landon. energy for the handling of the im- ys Sanitary sewage disposal system| Wm. Shoemaker and son, Bobbie, of| mense masses of stone and concrete 3! for Dallas. Forty Fort, spent S aturdaywith Mr.| which will be required to build the 1: Closer cooperation between Dal- [and Mrs. Henry Shoemaker. dam. Engineers are being appointed, £ las borough and surrounding| Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hiedman en-{ plans have been made for the town to f townships. tertained on Sunday evening Mr. and Pi the ten thousand workmen who t Consolidated high schools and|Mrs. Charles Rydd, of Kingston, Mr.| will be employed on the job, bids have NN 3 better cooperation between those and Mrs. Herbert White, of Wilkes-| been asked for sotie of the mat rials vy : that now exist. Barre, Mr.: and Mrs. D. P. Honeywell| which will be first requized, : 5 6. The appointment of a shade tree {and Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Whipp, of Dal- It takes {ime torcarry out a great AuTo cas TER CIR Wn a el Sra ; 5 ‘commission to supervise the pro-|las. : | project like this. Five and one half : SEE : tection and see to the planting of | Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Conden and Mr.| years is the lowest estimate from the - - shade trees along the streets of [and Mrs. Sdward Conden and family | day construction begins until the great aa oe — —_—_— — ‘Dallas, Shavertown, Trucksville| were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. | dam is finished. Ii takes a lot of time Fred Case, of Trucksville; Mr. and “he: members of the Ladies’ Aid So-|guest th: “ormer’: brother, Arthur and Fernbrook. man Wardan and Shueman kundayerE| to prepare to begin work. Mrs. Lewis Ide, Mr. Ellis Ide, Mr. and ‘icty will present a play, “The Sewing Cmmanue SEW Va, The formation of a Back Moun-|and Mrs. Shueman Wardan and Shue-| That is the diff - 2hout relying and Mrs. Leonard Ide and con, Leon- Circle Meets at Mrs. Martins,’ iln Miss Gi. Miller’ recently enter-- tain Club made up of Lustnesy an Kunkle, of Shaverstown, were| upon public works to relicve a sudden ard, Jr., of Lehman. ’ iri Orange Parish House on Friday! tained he- friends at a Hallow'een men and homeowners interested |also callers at the Hirdman home on| stress of unemployment—it takes so Mrs. A. B. Ide is spcndin. a wecoi evening, November 7th. . Barbecue-|party. Lunch was served to Glenn fn the development of local insti- | Thursday. | miuch time to plan thers and provide in New York. While there she will ndwiches will be served immediately |Sickler, Frances and Elsie Dymond, . tutions, the organization of new| Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kunkle enter-| for financing them -th the time |attend the commencement exercises) after. Paul and Alice Jones, Myrtle Swart- ones and the development of a tained at dinner on Sunday Mr. and | the work is ready to t iod [for the Nurs's Training School, of| Br. and Mrs. George LaBarr visited |wood, Robert, Shirley and Mildred community consciousness in Dal- | Mrs. S. A. Durland and Mrs. Etta of unemployment may be almost over. which class her daughter, Marion, is| ihe former's mother, Mrs. Belle LaBarr| Snyder, Wallace Baird, ‘Endora and. i las, Trucksville, Shavertown and | Kochie, of Wyoming. 3 * ok ® | a member. «+ Tunkhannock on’'Sunday. Ernest Gay, Donald Boston, Geraldine i Fernbrook. | -Mr. and Mrs." Harry DeWitt and SUGAR | Fr Serta = | Ida Evans, a student at Wyoming| Culver, Rosetta. Wisekerger, Emil 8. A modern concrete highway lead- | children, of Mt. Greenwood, were | High School, spent Institute Week |Lewis and Grace Miller 8. . 2 : Mt oO ; The ni 5 ; 5 “Yr = g oS ek | LL : race 1 ; ing from Dallas and connecting callers at the Olie Kunkle home on The announcement by the Depart O: ange | with her mother, Mrs. Josephine Mr. and Mrs. Roy -Woolever and the Sulli Teall ot Tackn : ment of Agriculture that the Federal : Fo : . : e sullivan rail a; unkhan- | Sunday. : sugar cane experiment station at Canal Mary E. Sickler, Correspondent | Evans. Z children motored to Binghamton on nock. : : si Miss « Eleanore Stroud, of Wilkes-| Point, Florida, has developed a cane Betty Baird nas returned home after! Frances and Elsie Dymond, students Sunday. £2 9. The elimination of petty PONHCS | Barre, spent the week-end with Hr. Stich vigiis 2 third more sugar to visiting Mr. and Mrs. Robert Baird of|1t West Pittston High School, visited, Mrs. Paul Brace, of Wyoming, re- days with her” Kingston. their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Dy-| cently spent several Myr. and Mrs. Donald Kislop spent|mond, over the week-end. tather, Giles Gay. Sunday with the former's parents at! Miss Dorothy Brace, of Wyoming, The Ladies Aid Society will serve Wyoming. | visited her grandfather, G. E. Gay, on| their annual chicken dinner in the Mrs. Gilbert Berlew and Margaret | Thursday. Parish House on Thursday evening, - Berlew,of Kingston, called on Mrs. Mrs. Frank ‘Heitsman, of Center-| November 13th. Every one is invited.- Nora Dymond on Sunday. moreland, visited Mrs. Atrhur Gay on Church services on Sunday Ware: Miss Endora Berlew visited her Thursday. Sunday School at 1:30 P. M.; preach-- Mr. and Mrs. David Emmanuel re- ing ati 2:503P. M.; and Epworth |cently entertained as their house 2 grandmother, Mrs. Nancy Berlew, dur- League at 7:30 FP. M. 5 ing Institute Week. The NEW ATWATER Kent RADIO with the GOLDEN VOICE The new Atwater Kent with the Golden Voice, finished in American walnut. Come in. See and hear. Our convenient payment plan makes it easy to own. 119 Model 70 Lowboy, less tubes down i every one of the eight years of Atwater Ken#' leadership, the latest proved developments have char-- acterized the new set. In the 1931 Awwater Kent, the major advancements are: : : 3. Perfected Tone Con-- trol, emphasizing bass or” treble at will —four defi “nite shadings of the Gold- en Voice. 1. A new glory of tone quality—no name for it but the Golden Voice. balance out of income >. A new and exclusive Quick - Vision Dial with all stations always in sight, marked in kilocyeles and evenly spaced from end to end, for easy, instant, ac- curate tuning of any sta- tion. Ao Harmonious and beautiful simplicity of de-- sign, the kind of radio’ you like to live with. See’ and hear-the new models today!’ The New QUICK-VISION Dial All numbers as easy to read as a big clock. Lite: ot tuning from any angle. HEADQUARTERS Tune in Monday Evening 9 tol0 p: m. Station WGBI Scranton Atwater Kent 25 piece Band Concert J. R. OLIVER Phone 293R2 DALLAS, PA. Set
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers