? PAGE TWO DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1930 The Dallas Post PR TP TRAN NP TT Fa TN Established 1889 Published by THE DALLAS POST, INC. Publication Office Lehman ‘Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania L. A. MeHenry: .....cseovsns President G. Harold Wagner...... ....Secretary H. W. Risley..Mng. Editor and Treas. THE DALI/AS POST is a youthful weekly rural suburban newspaper, owned, edited and operated by young men interested in the development of the great rural-suburban region of Luzerne county and in the attainment of the highest ideals of journalism. Thirty-one surrounding communities contribute weekly articles to THE POST and have an interest in its ed- itorial policies. THE POST is truly “more than a newspaper, it is a com- munity institution.” Subscription, $2.00 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- %ain the following major improve- meats: 1. A free library located in the Dal- . las region. ; 2. 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. "#. Consolidated . high schools and better cooperation between those ; that now exist. 8. 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. 7. , The formation of a Back Moun- tain Club made up of business : men and homeowners interested ' in the development of local insti- Y - 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 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- i tion a better place to live in. ARM BOYS AND GIRLS 30. There is only thing about the an- nual gathering of 4-H Club boys and sition that ought to be different. That girls at the National Livestock Expo-| is the fact that all of the city folks in the United States can’t go to Chi- cago this week and see the kind of young folks the farms of America are bringing up today. If we had our way about running] this 4-H club affair, we'd arrange to pull off an exhibit of city youngsters at the same time and place and invite | all of the cocktail-drinking city smart-| Alecs, cigarette-smoking “society” women and snooty: “modern” critics of everything that is sound and whole- some in America to come and com- pare the two groups. We know which group would win. Our money would be down on the 4-H boys and girls. Seriously, we feel that there is nothing whatever to worry about con- cerning the future of the United States, rmuch less the future of Ameri- can rural life, so long as the farms of the nation to continue to produce young men and young women of the types which make up the 4-H clubs. in| | one for'which you won the Farm Bur- Mrs. Friese, we salute you! We've never met you, but we admire you. | We admire anybody who can think up| let alone cook, such a dinner as the] eau prize. We like your dinner. That 1s to say, we like to read about it. We are sorry we couldn’t have been at your house on Thanksgiving Day tof eat it. Not that we didn’t have a god Thanksgiving Day dinner at our house; we did. In fact, one of the things we like about your dinner is that it was just such a typical Ameri- can Thanksgiving dinner as nine-tenths of the coutry folks of American sat down to last Thursday—and a big per- centage of city folks as well. We are not prepared ‘to admit that theer are no cooks in our town who could have given Mrs. Friese a run for her money if they had entered the | Both major parties are tightening their lines for the Presidential cam- paign of 1932. The Republicans know .they have a fight on their hands to retain control of the Presidency; the ~ Democrats believe that if they can agree upon a candidate acceptable to all sections of the country they can win easily. That is frequently the situation two years before a Presidential election. It does not always follow that the Farm Bureau contest. In fact, we know| “out” party wins over the “ins.” several ladies who, in our humble! Having possession of the machinery od : k k 3 of Government is a great advantage. judgment, can. make a cook stove At the moment it looks as if it will be more difficult for the Demo- crats te agree upon a candidate who can rally all Democrats to his sup- port than for the Republicans to mend their political fences. JONES “Bobby” Jones has at last answered the question: How can a man play golf all the time and still keep his law practice going? The answer is that he can’t. Bobby is giving up golf, except as a means of recreation. It remains to be seen whether Mr. Jones will do as well in law as he has done in golf. He has proved that he has the important quality of thor- oughness. Those who know him say he has a natural taste for law, and high intelligence. He will not have the struggle for existence which so many young lawyers face, for while his amateur standing has kept him from making money out of his game, he is to get a sum, reputed to be a quarter of a million dollars, for making a series of educational films on “How I Play Golf.” That ought to keep him going until he has established himself in law. Probably Mr. Jones is doing only what his class and caste instincts and environment urge upon him. There are still too many people who think that being a lawyer is a more re- spectable way of making a living than being a golf professional. But it seems to me that we have too many lawyers now and not enough good sportsmen. : BELASCO David Belasco, a San Francisco Jew who dressed like a Roman Catho- lic priest, was the father of the modern realistic drama. He thought that people on the stage ought to act and talk the way people do in real life, and that the settings and furniture of the stage ought to make the scenes look like the sort of places they were supposed to represent. Belasco’s work in drama began perform more miracles than' Edison ever dreamed of. And we feel that Mrs. Friese. won this contest because she stuck to tradition and got up pre- cisely the same kind of a Thanksgiv- ing dinner that our own folks had. There was turkey, of course. Can't have a real Thanksgiving dinner with- out turkey—wijth parsley dressing and giblet sauce. - And cranberry ice, and glazed sweet potatoes and mince pie and pumpkin pie, besides all the other vegetables and “fixings” that go to makeup a genuine old-fashioned Thanksgiving dinner. We just aren't going to put them down here. We'd starve to death waiting to get home to dinner if we didn’t stop writing about good thingse to eat right now. What we were starting out to say is that with all the new-fangled notions about balanced meals and reducing diets and vitamins and calories and such-like, we had been wondering the art of cooking wasnt’ coming a lost art, outside of the homes of those lad- ies we spoke about a little way back. It’s not, praise be! The country is safe. There are still good coks left ir: the land ,and they know what a good dinner ought to consist of, and Mrs. Friese and the five hundred others who competed for the Farm Bureau are not all of them, by a long way. CHRISTMAS CAROLS By Edmund Hamilton Sears It ‘came upon the midnight clear, That glorious song of old, From angels bending near the earth To touch their harps of gold; “Peace on the earth, good will to men From. heaven's all-gracious King” The world in solemn stillness lay 2 3 To hear the angels sing. | about the time Mr. Edison mvented | = the incandescent electric light. The electric light probably did as much as any other influence to change the drama from the old .ranting panto- mime into what it is today. It enabled Still through the come With peaceful wings unfurled, | And still their heavenly music floats . O'er all the weary world; | the audience to see the actors clearly, cloven skies they | By Albert T. Reid fl ih A | Et AAT ASTOCASTRP TT I Lil ll | { y | BET ! 2X eT 2me § mesill ones 8. Cvryware SN—— oY dint coin ToSee yer | rLe Jackie acini § YoU Come gcross ff Gus Ih Gloom kidnaPper hi Because you are a good girl—still, | were fully written, it would cover the If vou want to return that little kiss, | entire history of adventure, discovery, I'll take it back—I will. | and exploration. It was the pursuit of —By Unknown. gold that brought the Spaniards to —— { America and resulted in the settlement te (oe of this continent. The lure ;of gold Day of the Gold |dréw the pioneers over the Rocky | Mountains to California. The discov- Rush Is Over Romance of Great Gold Fileds Played An Important Part in World Development Africa laid the foundation for the pres- ent control and prosperity of those re- gions. | The rewards are so great for the | fortunate prospetcor who discovers a Afra SE | gold mine, that every new rumor of By Caleb Johnson | such a, discovery starts a gold rush, in “Gold, Gold, Gold, Gold— | which thousands and tens of thousands Hard to get, and heavy to hold.” [risk everything in the hope of getting, From the beginning of recorded time, | not exactly something for nothing, but the pursuit of gold has been perhaps | great wealth at little cost to them- the most fascinating occupation known | selves. It is a gamble, of course, for ery of gold in Australia and in South | [ taking anything away from those who | lose. : But the great gold rushes of the past | are matters of the dead and buried past, and there is now no likelihood of another great gold strike anywhere in the world. That is the considered League’s experts say that in the next gold situation. Since the year there has been no increase in the an- nual production of gold, = and the League’s experts say that in the next ten years the annual supply of gold will have fallen off by at elast 2% per cent. The known gold fields of the world are. becoming exhausted and almost the whole earth has been combed for new and undiscovered gold. fields. There are a few points which have opinion of the gold delegation of the. ° completed a world wide survey of the . 1935.5. to , man. every such prospectdr, but it is a gam- It the history of gold prospecting {ble in which those who win are not| (Continued on page 6) \ | > Only $29 down - , zo EF MODEL 70 LOWBOY oe - $119, less tubes. Other models priced to $195, less tubes. Above its sad and lowly plains | - and made facial expression and care- They bend on hovering wing, Jl makeup more important than they and oysriger 3s Babel sounds | Belasco was the first theatrical pro- The blessed angels sing. ducer to realize the possibilities of electric lighting on the stage and to shape his productions with the new lighting in mind. Today everybody in the theatre business, including the movie producers, follow the principles which Belasco developed. PROHIBITION All the reports from thnse who profess to know indicate that the President's Commission on Law En- forcement, better known as the Wick- ersham Commission, will report that the present Prohibition law cannot be enforced, and wil recommend some changes. There will be more serious attempts made at the coming session of Con- gress to break down the “dry” law than at any time since it was enacted. There is little likelihood of anything being accomplished by the “wets” at 3ut with the woes of sin and strife The world has suffered long; Beneath the angel-strain have rolled The man ,at war with man, hears not The love-song which they bring;— Oh, hush the noise, ye men of strife, And hear the angels sing. For lo! the days are hastening on By prophet bards foretold, When with the ever circling years Comes ‘round the age of gold; When Peace shall over all the earth Its ancient splendors fling, And the whole world give back the song, Which now the angels sing. —0 \ RRR THE JOY They call this annual show in Chicago a Livestock Exposition. It is that, of course, but it seems to us that by far! the most important exhibit there ic! these healthy, industrious, energetic, ‘enthusiastic, wholesome young peo- ple who are sent from every part of the country because they have won outstanding success in farming and home-making. The country districts of the United States can challenge the cities to show their equal. We know of no compar- able movement in the cities looking to- ward development of the qualities of Hand, Heart, Head and Health which are the four “H’s” of the 4-H clubs. City youngsters may average ' smart- er’ in dress and manners, though we question the latfer. But the important things of life are not those which ap- pear on the surface. It 1s character alone that counts, in the long run; and we know of no finer builder of fine character than the 4-H clubs. i THE BLUE RIBBON OF COOKING Sam H. Thompson, President of the American Farm Bureau Federation, has awarded the title of ‘‘Culinary Champion of all Farm Women Cooks in America” to Mrs. M. L. Friese, of Redwood Falls, Minnesota. Mrs. Friese won the first prize offered by the Fed- eration for the best Thanksgiving din- ner menu; in competition with some 500 p “er farm women in every part nited States. of the this last session of the 71st Congress, but if the Wickersham report proves to be friendly to the modification of WAGON Set Your Troubles Aside and Take a Ride the present law, watch for fireworks | pos NS a when the Congress just elected begins Student (leavin college) “Good 5 Somany 1 x ae av 8 A 3g'e): x | bye, sir. I want to thank you for all FOOTBALL | I. have learned from you.” It took the appeal of charity to Professor: “Don’t mention it—it’s| bring the Army and Navy football nothing at all.” teams together, For several years | i] the annual Army-Navy game has been Jones: “Describe your sister's new; omitted, because of a quarrel over baby.” points of sportsmanship. Brown: “Small features, red-faced, When the two teams meet in New York on December 13, it will be frankly for the purpose of helping to raise money for the relief of unem- ployment. Early estimates of the re- ceipts indicate that they may run to a million dollars, or almost as much as ‘the “gate” at the last Tunney- Dempsey fight. It is a strange but interesting kink of human nature that people will pay fancy prices to see a football game for charity, who would never think of giving the same amourit of money clean-shaven and a hard drinker." “What was your last occupation?” “An umbrella mender in the middle - west this summer.” “My razor's awfully dull, dear, I can can hardly shave with it.” “Why, Charles, you don’t, mean to tell me that your beard is tougher than the linoleum!’ | Joe: “How were your grades las:| outright.’ As high as $5,000 was of- quarter?” fered for a box at the Yankee Stadium College: “Jules Verne.” as soon as the Army-Navy engage- Joe: “How's that?” ment was announced. i College: “Twenty thousand leagues te % i STOLEN KISS under the C.” Mrs. Gushing: “My daughter has talent. Did I hurt you when I kissed you? wonderful musical Whers| T saw a © 'rt look in your eyes; would suggest sending her for voice| were ou ary or just frightened? culture?” Tell me was il a surprise? Mrs. Gnashing (new neighbor across| Did you ren! 'y resent, it, the hall, speakin«= very quickly): “Ob, by all means, se: ager abroad!” i Or don’t vou really know? Are you satisfied and conten.ed? Gee—I hope so, Two microbes sat on a pantry shelf And watched, with expression pained, The milkman’s stunts, and they both said at once, “Our relations are getting stiuiged.” Life is a game of give and take But it is better to give than receive, }And I honestly believe That you'd her give B take a last-minute jam. home and pocketbook. Our special terms for Phone 293R2 a Into your Home for ie Uhristmas! NY TIME up to Christmas Eve we'll deliver the new 1931 Atwater L. Kent. But please meet us halfway by getting your order in now. Many people are deciding that an Atwater Kent is the perfect: Christmas gift, and we don’t want you or eurselves to get caught in TWATER KeEnT RADIO with the GOLDEN VOICE OME IN NOW. Hear that tone quality—the Golden Voice! Try the Tone Control and the Quick-Vision Dial. From among a variety of beautiful, home-like models choose the one that suits your the hotiday season make it still easier to have that modern radio. you've been wanting Tune in Monday Evening 9 tol0 p. m. Station WGBI Scranton Atwater Kent 25 piece Band Concert . J. R. OL*VER DALLAS, PA. 1 ho. Pn a >