The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, February 19, 1932, Image 8

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THE DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1932.
: NEWS OF SOCIAL INTEREST
OF DALLAS AND VICINITY
eMrs. D. P.- Héneywell entertained
few guests Wednesday evening.
ochle was played, and lunch ser-
ved to Mr. and Mrs.: Paul Shaver, Mr.
Mrs. George Hoffmeister, Mrs.
aggie Hildebrandt, and Mrs. Doll
~ Entre Nous Club was entertained on
V dnesday evening by Mrs. Carl Ku-
hn, all of the ‘members being present
but one and Dorothy Starr who is visi-
her sister Mrs. Kuehn substituted.
Flas were ‘won by Lettie Lee, Mrs.
Dorothy Hull and Mrs. Leslie Warho:
Ta. \
Mrs. Joseph Walig entertained at
cards at her home on Huntsville Road
Saturday, February 13th.
The proceeds form the nucleous of
a fund being raised by the Dallas com-
unity Club for the Denost of the un-
High scores were made by: Mrs. E.
Newitt, Mrs. Grace ‘Welch, Mrs: F,
J. Youngblood, Miss Loretta Treacy,
Mr. Joseph O'Donnell, Mr. Joseph Lay-
Te :
The tollowing were in teRoRae:
Mrs. Leonard : O'Kane, Mrs. Grace
Jelch, Mr. ‘and Mrs. Walter Kinns,
aptain and Mrs. C. N. Booth, Mr.
and Mrs. W. J. Jones, Mrs. Joseph
Schmerery Joseph Yayaon, “Mrs. George
ugherton, Miss Ceclia Durkin, Miss
retta Treacy; Mrs. George R. Bee- |
“hler, Mrs. Frank L. McCarry, Mrs. E.
. Newitt, Mary Kane, Mrs. J.. 0. Gir-
Yan, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Youngblood.
Mr. Joseph Palacky, Miss Florence
nstett, Miss Lena Cieri, Mr. James |
Burton, Rose O’Donnell, Joseph O’-
Donnell, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wallo.
The Keller Class of the Shavertown
Methodist Church were hostesses at a
tea held at the home of Mrs. Edwin
Whirtby, Pioneer Avenue, Shavertown,
Mrs. Herbert
Williams was chairman of the commit-
Wednesday afternoon.
tee in charge of the arrangements, and
had as her agsistants: Mrs. D. M.
Corkwell, Mrs. Edwin Whirtby, Mrs.
A. C. Dampf, Mrs. Harry Bogart, Mrs.
William Boise; Mrs. Frank Werner.
Mrs. Kate Naegle, Kingston,
Herbert Williams and Miss Marjory
Sink entertained with readings. Miss
‘Mildred Smith, blind artist of Ashley,
‘| gave delightful numbers on the Haw-
aiin guitar.
50 guests.
On the evening of March 8th a card
| pirty weit ve held at Colonial Inn,
Trucksville for the ‘benefit of troop 9,
Girl Scouts of the Methodist Church
of Shavertown. The object of the par-
ty is to raise a fund “to enable every
girl in the troop to. attend camp next
Summer. ar
The public is invited te attend the
party and may make reservations by
calling members of | the committee
or Mrs. Martin Porter, ‘Shavertown.
Thomas Gangloff has returned to his
home on Lake Road from a business
trip to Yonkers.
Mrs. Augustus Gangloff of Lake
Road who has been ill for the past six
weeks is improving.
Mrs.
Tea was served to about
LEHMAN HOLDS LEAD
score 19-2 Lehman leading.
Orange
Hislop, F.
Mitchell, F.
Baird, C.
Sickler G.
Snyder, G.
Prokopchak, G.
. Fg.
Total 19
Shavertown
Salata, F.
Phillips, F.
I. Woolbert, F.
A. Woolbert, C.
Miles, Gd.
Winters, Gd. .
Van Horn, Gd.
Total w 14
20-14, Shavertown.
Dallas
W. Woolbert, F.
Disque, F.
Travis, C.
Rowland, G.
Holmgrene, G.
‘Fa.
Total =
Beaumont
J. Kuchta, F.
Deetz, F.
Jackson, C.
Kochev, G.
Austin, G.
Novejeski, G.
Total
Referee: —Davis, scorer Miss
0
3
1
SY
Referee:—Wormley, half time
6
0
IN RURAL LEAGUE
Sto-
larick, timer, Miss Johnson, half time
Fls Total
18
11
8,
4
“0-
4
Fls. Total
3
6
0
15
7
2
2
=F
35
score,
TE
Fls. Total
3
7
13
Fls. Total |-
12
i
114
FOUNDER'S WEEK SALE!
All This Week We Are Celebrating Founder’s
Week— With Exceptionally Attractive Values
‘On Many, Many Foods. Here... More Than
Ever Is a Real OPPORTUNITY. 1 TO SAVE
ER 21bs 49¢
SILVERBROOK PRINT BUTTER
Conveniently
_Quartered
2 Ibs 53¢
DEL MONTE—HAW AIAN SLICED
PINEAPPLE
With all the Neaid
Flavor and Sweetness
“Preserved!
White
Corn Sugar
Dozen cans 75¢c
String Beans
~ IONA—TENDER
BEETS
- CORN
Iona Brand
I Sauerkraut
Tender
Iona Brand
Tender Golden
Bantam
4-25
“la.18.
y
Tomatoes
FANCY—BLUE ROSE
W hole
Grains
CRISPY
Shredded Wheat 2 ™ 19¢
A Properly Balanced Food . . . For Any Meal
Delicious Fragrant
Neciar Teas i Ib. Pke.
ORANGE PEKOE . ..
Tea Balls . . . 15 for 12¢—30 for 23c
CAMPBELL'S
‘Tomato Soup 3 cans 200
GORTON'S
Codfish
New Laid
EGGS
Doz. 2%
Sunnybrook
EGGS
Doz’ 25¢
4 cans 27c¢
Is, 1 5¢
S
23¢c
INDIA CEYLON . , . MIXED
23¢c
1b. Brick
2
Pink Salmon . . .
Sultana Tuna Fish
Domestic Sardines ..
Crab Meat
Pea Beans .
Dromedary Grapefruit
Wet Shrimp
Red Salmon . .
. 29¢
White H dre Locroraied
5
MILK
tall cans 29 Cc
cans
Swati <
SOAP
4 21¢
Pure Refined
Lard
3 1b. 20c¢
mall—Smoked Sugar Cured
HAMS
W hole or
Shank 1b. LSE
Half
.2 cans 23c
V4-1b can [5c
.can Sc
5-16 can 33c
3 lbs. 10c
10c
‘can lhe
can 25¢
Try One of These Fresh
8 O’cloc
RedCircle
Bokar
Mild and
Full Strength ~
and Flavorful
Delightful Coffees
b. 1 7c
.25¢
».20¢
Mellow
Rich and
Full Bodied
Grandmother's
Twin Loaf
32 oz.
Loaf
Gyandmother’ s
100% whole
WHEAT
10c¢
Bread Loa -e
These prices effective in Dallas and vicinity
3
—
: Beaumont ° will
Referee:—Wormley, Scorer, Harri-
son, timer, Preston. Half time score
14-8 Béaumont.
RURAL LEAGUE NOTES
A surprise was tossed into the ranks
of the Rural Basketball League last
Friday night when the Beaumont -quin-
tet took a 25 to 21 victory over the
league leading Lehman outfit. Al-
though the defeat did not topple the
Idemen from the top of the circuit it
served to put the Shavertown, Orange
and Trucksville tossers within strik-
ing distance of the top rung,
The games for next week should
bring out the fans in large numbers
due to the close race in the ‘circuit.
‘A game which should draw out more
fans than have ever attended a game
at the Meridian {Hall will be the game
between Shavertown. and Lehman.
When these teams: met earlier. in the
season, Shavertown won by 2 points
over Ide’s men in a thrilling game. the
‘|game being won in the ‘last few se
conds of play on a field goal by -
lips.
The first game of the evening will
find two old time rivals meeting “for
the last time this season, Trucksville
and Dallas, Trucksville won both pre-
vious games and is sure of repeating
again. Billy Davis will referee.
Next Saturday night, February 2%,
journey: to Orange
where they will make their last stand
‘of the season with two defeats at the
‘hands of the Hislop men both by two
point margins, “Morgan will
the game.
More than 7,000 fans have paid to
witness basketball games at Meridian
referee
to this column by John Sullivan, pro-
prietor of Meridian Hall, who is doing
all he possibly can to make the sport
a paying proposition in the rural sec-
tion. This figure is based on thirty
games that have been played in the
hall, by the Meridian Big Five, the
Rural League games and four high
school games.
Mitchell still retains the leadership
in points scored for the first ten games
of the season with 137, followed clos-
ely by Hislop also of Orange with 129,
Phillips of Shavertown has 122, Rich-
ards of Trucksville has 99, Kozak, 80,
| H. Woolbert 77, and ‘Salata, 76.
One of the players in the rural lea-
gue received a Valentine with the
following inscription on it:
Of all ten men of va wooden floor,
You're the biggest chiseling bore,
But maybe you're a Pulman keeper
Taking care of every sleeper.
If you played for a salary,
Youd lead all the breadlines,
But you've got a drag and make all
~ the headlines,
And though no one else wants you,
How'd you like to be my Valentine.
Why The Referee Has a Hard Job
An interesting discusion between
two veteran basketball managers took
place recently.
One contended that a good referee
never is swerved by frantic partisan
razzing because he doesn’t hear it if
he is concentrating on his duties pro-
perly.
The other said it was not humanly
possible to be uninfluenced when rabid
rooting and razzing is all one way.
It is true a good referee is so inter-
ested in making accurate decisions he
is oblivious to everything else.
We doubt that big league baseball
umpires are influenced by the most
rabid fan abuse, and there is no.abuse
in big time football Whenever a
Old Times
Now Serving
Our Famous
World’s Best $1.00
Table D’hote
Dinner
The
Fort
Durkee
Public. Square
Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
»
Hall according to figures submitted
| sport is played in the open and there
is enough space between spectators
and officials we doubt that any amount
of verbal protest makes any difference.
But there are exceptions to every
rule, and we believe that some basket
ball layouts bring the exception at
times. In the first place, spectators
are almost up against officials in a
small basketball hall. They can reach
out and-touch them. In the second
place, a restricted area magnifies
sound to such an extent that even the
most phlegmatic referee hardly can ig-
nore it at all times.
Under such circumstances, a good
referee will not be moved into taking
sides with a partisan crowd, since the
definition of a good official is that he
must be fair and fearless. But even
the best, sometimes, will have a tend-
ency to “Lean Backward.” :
They will begin to wonder whether
club who partisans think it is being
outraged, and make allowances for it
which aren't Justified.
‘As soon as a referee begins making
allowances, he is doing something
wrong, though the plan of giving ex-
tremely doubtful decisions to the vis-
iting club doesn’t necessarily come un-
der that definition.
Good referees have been known to
lean backward, and we have known
good officials to have intimidated by
actual physical contact with specta-
tors: not often, though.
There is no argument about the of-
ficials who calls thirty-two fouls on
one team and only twelve on the other.
If he knows how many he has called,
tries to even them up or doubts his
own judgment because they are called
a one sided proportion, he isn't a
good referee.
A good referee will call the fouls as
he sees them, whether or not they are
overwhelmingly against one of the
teams. He will not consider that an-
gle at all.
So far this season the officials
the Rural League have not shown any
favoritism.
———
STATE COLLECTS
DELINQUENT TAX
in
(Continued from Page 5)
of his department, Dr. King has ac-
‘tually brought into the state, in the
form of revenue, between five and six
millions of dollars that would not
have come to the state under pre-
viously existing conditions.”
Dr. King in reply pointed out that
the additional collections would not
Pave been possible “if it was not for
the cooperative drive of the state and
the oil industry to eliminate, so far as
can be done, the gasoline bootlegger
and the gasoline tax evader.”
Figures made public at Harrisburg
lshow that the increase in comsumption
Fof gasoline in the United States, ac-
| cording to tax figures of all states for
1931 over 1930 averages between four
and five percent. In the states sur-
rounding Pennsylvania including New
York, New Jersey, Maryland, West
Virginia, Delaware and Ohio, the av-
erage increase in the consumption ac-
cording to the gasoline tax figures was
aproximately five percent. In compar
ison with these figures, the actual in-
crease in tax return to the state of
Pennsylvania in 1931 over 1930, and
disregarding any taxes that were col
lected and due in the years pre-
vious to 1931, was 18.7 percent.
If it is assumed that the actual in-
crease in Pennsylvania was not in ex-
cess of 5 percent, the difference be-
tween this figure and 18.7 percent, or
13,7 percent is tax money that was
collected in 1931 which would not have
been collected had the tax evasion
racket not been corrected and almost
eliminated.
All told, a total of $3,626,022.12 has
been paid into the state treasury which
would not have been possible without
Himmler Theatre...
TONIGHT—SAT. NIGHT
WAY BACK HOME
WITH :
SETH PARKER
NEXT WEEK
MONDAY AND TUESDAY
MATI HARI
WITH
GRETA GARBO
WEDNES. AND THURS.
Near The Trails End
WITH
BOB STEELE
pret
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
DELICIOUS
JANET GAYNOR
0
All new sound system
Admission Children 10c
they aren't unconsciously favoring. the |
the cooperative drive of the Revenue
This
figure represents a three cents a gallon
tax on 120,867,404 gallons—the actual
department and oil industry.
amount of the increase.
A year ago the Revenue officials
found a condition in deliquent gaso-
line taxes of unchecked gallonage al-
most beyond description. “In attemp-
ting to check the gasoline bootlegger,”
Dr. King said, “i
resort to railroad audits because the
o}
“it was necessary to
books, if any, reflecting the true con-
ditions in nearly "every case were
either destroyed or hidden beyond
reach. On those that have been chack-
ed, there resulted determinations of
over $1,000,000 practically none of
of the litigation started to delay, if
possible, not only the ‘criminal prose-
cution, but any effort there might be
to collect civilly. g
“It is safe to say that during 1931
this Bureau has made determinations
in excess of the normal increase: of
between four and one half million and
five ‘million dollars, of which we have Joos
already collected and turned into the 7
State Treasury over three and one-
half million dollars. The increased
gdllonage of 1931 over 1930 is equal
to over five million dollars at 3c a gal-
lon. Add to this the figure of deter- :
minations of over one million doliars
which have not as. yet been paid and
we will have an increase in 1931 over
1930 of over six million do¥ars. This
is very nearly a 20 per cent increase
in dollars in 1931 over 1930, taking into
consideration that which was collected
and deposited and that which has been
determined and not collected.”
Advertisements
FOUND—Ice Cream, 36c a ‘quart Sat--
urday and Sunday. Evans Pharm-
acy, Shavertown, Pa. Seite
WANTED TO BUY—Cabbage or Man-
gle Beets for chickens. Call Center-
more land 19-R-10. 2-19-1t
FOR SALE—Horses and cows also
baled hay at $15 a ton. John Par-
rish, Hillside, Trucksville Pa. gl98t
FOR SALE—Coal and, Fr eoTo0s. at
best possible prices. Call Dallas 107-
R-23 Milton Doughton. . 2-19- -2t
LOOK—When you want any harness
repaired or new harness. Call in
and see S. R. Kagshn, Centermore-
land, Pa. © 2-19-2t
WANTED TO BUY — Loose"
Hay. C. W. Space, Dallas,
Pa. 2-12-2t
RADIO REPAIRING—Any make, any
trouble. Expert service, Gerald Gre-
gory. Graduate of Coyne Electrical
School. Hunlock Creek, Phone 18-
R-626, Muhlenburg. 2-12-2¢
A. M. JAVER'S—Dealer in Ice, Coal,
‘Wood, Sand, Gravel and General
Hauling. For prices phone Harvey's
Lake 3506 B-6-1
GENERAL contractor and builder,
floor finishing and sanding a spec-
ialty. Estimates cheerfully given.
Clyde Vietch, Dallas, or telephone,
Dallas 300. 1-23-4t
FOR SALK:—Write for prices and
catalog of our State Certified, Sup-
ervised, and Blood tested Baby
chicks. Certified White Leghorns,
New Hampshire Reds, Rhode Island
Reds, Barred Rocks. Every chick
; tions Susquehanna,
pack Buftuutoa of~
action, Susquehanna
County Breeders, Montrose, Pa.
2-12-10¢
FARMS SOLD AND EXCHANGED—
List your property with John A. Wil-
.llams, 48 Main st., Dallas. B-12-4¢
GRIFFITH PIANO
BARGAINS
Upright Piano, new .. $250
Upright Piano, used .. $.65
Upright. Piano, new .. $185
Player Piano, used .. $.85
Player Piano, used .. $110
Baby Grand, used .. $295 .
Player Piano, used .. $135
$850 Player: Piano, like new $225
* $8256 Baby Grand, new .... $485
GRIFFITH PIANO co.
126 S. MAIN ST.
4 doors above Penn Theatre
$475
$375
$450
$600
$625
$750
$650
ELECTRICAL
CONTRACTOR
RADIC REPAIRING
PUMP WORK
HOUSE WIRING
MOTOR REPAIRS
APPLIANCES & FIXTURES
W. E. STRANGE
TRUCKS@RLLE, PA,
Phone Dall 309-R-16
“A right job aN right price”