The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, May 13, 1932, Image 1

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- VOL. 42
I'HE DALLAS PUST, DALLAS, PA, FRIDAY, MAY 13, 1932.
o— ° More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution
3 No. 20
1
1S | a3 . i
: To fe Debate
On Borough Plans
"Mt. Greenwood Kiwanis Club To Hear
Discussion Before Taking Action.
Arghiviente: for ‘and eats the crea-
tion of Shavertown borough will be
wood Kiwanis club next Wednesday
night in Colonial tea room before the
club takes action in opposing or sup-
porting the move.
‘At the meeting
last Wednesday, Ki-
“agreed that action should be’ taken
on the projeet, which has. caused con-
siderable interest i sec
tion. A
In order that club “members may
form an intellig ent opinion, it was
planned to have a debate between op-
ponents and proponents of ‘the plan,
Each of the two teams will be allow-
ed twenty minutes for debate and ten
minutes for rebuttal. Important por-
tions of the arguments will be pub-
lished, together with
cision. ~ :
Committee for investigating feasi-
bility of a joint high school reported
progress on securing data and promis-
ed a complete report for the club and
I" the public in two weeks.
Dr. G. L. Howell, chairman of the
underprivileged child committee, re-
ported a school child badly in need of
spectacles and without means of se-
curing them. The club authorized the
committee to buy the spectacles.
The committee also reported that
the club's de-
the school physician has reported
some , forty children in Kingston
township schools with defective ton-
sils, a condition prevalent in
school district. Plan was outlined for
free removal. Parents of children ef-
fected, will send the children to Dr.
Howell for free examination and regis-
tration.,
negotiate with the staff and directors
of Nesbitt Memorial hospital- to = ar-
range a date this summer to be known
as Kiwanis Day, which the
* group registered will undergo opera-
tions free of charge. The club voted
to sponsor the movement for the bet-
terment . of the’ health of Kingston
township children.
PLANS HOME HERE
The Kiwanis committee will
during
Though Mrs. John N, Conyngham of
South River street, Wilkes-Barre,
clined to explain details; it was repor-
ted this week that Mrs. ‘Conyngham
will construct a $200,000, residence at
de-
Lehman.
Tt is estimated the total
building land improvement
nearly $300,000. Definite
nouncement of plans is expected with-
The “site on which
cost of
and will
reach an-
Yn the next week.
past
road
about five miles
Conyngham farms on the
from Hillside to Lehman.
believed to be
*the
leading
Birthday Dinner
Patterson celebrated
with a din-
Table dec-
scheme of
Mrs. Thomas
birthday
ner at her home recently.
orations followed a color
white and yellow.
— ne
MOTHER DIES
—Q—
her anniversary
Prof. Warren Taylor of Xingston
township high school was called to his
home at Shade Gap, Huntington Co.
recently because of the illness of his
mother, who died a week ago Monday.
Mrs. Taylor had been ill during the
winter but was believed to have been
improving until she was stricken at
the age of 70.
rem eR Qe
COMMENCEMENT PLANS
Commencement at Kingston town-
ship high school will be held on June
The Class Day
on June 8 and the Baccalaureate ser-
program will be
=
paon will be on June 5. " Dorothy Hay
will be Valedictorian and June Palmer
gvill be Salutatorian.
debated at the meeting of Mt. Green-|
wanians discussed the movement and |
immediately to decide the club’s stand.
every
the beautiful home is to be erected is.
Sorte Possess
“Great Food Value
Agricultural ‘Authority Finds New In-
Modern Farmers
(Note: This is the second of a series
of articles on The Story of Soybeans
appearing in The Post. Future _ ar-
ticles will pertdin to the ntany inter-
esting phases of soybean growih, and
utilization.)
By Everett E. ‘Roquemore.
In a prevous article the fact was
mentioned that the soybean was a
plant of very early cultivation in Chi-
na. Nearly 5000 years ago—in the year
2838 B. C. to be more exact—refer-
ence to the nutritional value of the
soybean was made by Emperor Shen
Nung in the ancient Materia Medica,
“Ben Tsao Gang Mu” written by him.
Supplemental soybean proteins have
the peculiar faculty of enabling one
to subsist on a Strictly vegetarian diet.
‘The soybean contains double the
amount of the “protein and calories
present in beefsteak. %,
For example, the Midwest yariety of
soybean, one of the common types now
grown ‘in America, analyzes 35% per’
cent. protein and slightly under 20
per cent. fat. Let us compare this with
other foods: :
Protein
Fat
Lima Bean ......0....181 1.5
Eggs 14.8 10.5
Lean Meat 19.2 ©10.7
Whole Milk 12.2 1.1
Milk 3.2 35
Starch is present only in traces,
while in cereals starch is the chief
ingredient. Soybeans constitute a val-
uable food for diabetics. ‘A Soybean
diet increases the protein ‘content and
raises the phosphorus constituency of
the blood and contains all the essential
amino acids necessary for the building
ganism.
Ams Ouawandah, 1}
terest In Ancient Plant Among |
“| June 27 with a program of new and
{unusual features, specially prepared to
Jones,
up of the proteins of the human or-. to
The soybean protein
comparable !
40 habiesf
teins
proteins,
for a period of two months
on a diet the sole source
of which was soybean flour, w
cidentally very eco.
as efficient protein sou
which forms som
minerals of bon
to tissue dev
maintenance; ) r
the extent of 0.2 6 pet
calcium content
is “a
well
Calcium,
of the
essential
cent
also
and is
beans to
while the
ets, fu weakness and
eS. eo
The soybean occ upies az
ing “foodsiTan
position among ~
tein, mineral aid iain
made.
Bread, pastries, “eandy/tpancake and
other types of foodstu Sy made from
flour having a soybean “ba ie, have giv-
splendid satisfactior "from the
(Continued © on Pe ge 9)
en
FRIDAY IS :
BUT FRIDA'Y THE
THIR’ EEANTH, WOW!
1 Slik who keep
Grog sed all day Fri-
e puey ve heard it’s
Ho x ay of the week
will ‘have. a ) Tyous twenty-four
hours because it's Friday,
the thirteenth, “the combination
which, accsording to old maid's
tales, brinsss the worst luck of
alk ERE
No one. knows why Friday
should be dan unlucky day when
it falls om: the thirteenth of a
month, bat, everyone steps care-
A
a
fully until; ‘the day passes. .If
you're su o erstitious, watch for
black ] 1 under
6 until
< lities,
leaves the camp for a hike or any pur- |
Girl Scout Ca
To Open June 27 :
Near. Tunkhan- |
mock To Have Many New Features
This Seamer
Camp Oh andat onthe camp of
the local Girt ‘Scout organization at
White's Ferry, along the Susquehan- |
na River near Tunkhannock, is pre-
paring to open its eighth season on
attract girls of all ages and appeal
to their parents as well. This camp,
operated under the supervision of the
Community Welfare Federation, has
an unusually fine health and safety
record and in preparing the program
for this year, Mrs. E. K. Conrad, chair-
man of camp activities has laid spe-
cial stress on these two features.
- The services of a full-time nurse
have “been secured for "this summer,
this post being filled by Miss Audrey
who occupied the same posi-
tion last summer. A staff of train-
ed dieticians will ‘supervise the meals
and the £ood consumed by the young
campers. Special attention be
given to the diets of both underweight
and overweight’ youngsters, and the
exercise of the children ‘in = these
2roups will be under rigid supervision.
Competent Cc00Ks have been’ secured,
so that all food wlll be prepared by
those who understand the proper han-
dling of food. After the camp is in
readiness to open, but before the sea-
gets under Dr.
Charles Crittenden, chief of the Kire
by Health Center will make
ough inspection o the sani
will
\
son actually way,
ing admit:
precaution taken to
alth of the individual
t the others from un- |
exposure of any maladies.
resses in use will undergo a
~ renovation and laundering
he end of each camp period.
With this stress laid on the health
features. elaborate net-
: k of safety measures will be car-
out. Waterfront is. of
) e importance, and this will be in=
ured by a corps of Senior and Junior
Red Cross Life
Counsellors will superintend all activ- |
an equally
safety
Savers.
and -whenewver a group of girls |
‘pose whatever, there will be one coun-
sellor in charge of every six girls.
While camp
for as little as one week, the
entire ‘period of eight weeks, those in
urge, the importance of their |
i
for
for
girls may .register
or
charge
attendance for at least the two-week
period. This is the unit into which the
| season has heen divided. The pro-|
gram is a two-week plan. Many shy
youngsters only begin -to enter into
the spirit of camping at the end of
one week and make the friends and
contacts which are among the essen-
tial features of camp life. Under-
weight and none-too-robust girls have
simply
a better physical condition at the end
lof seven days and it is during the
second week that they begin to show
marked improvement.
Camp registrations will be received
after May 1st, in the Girl Scout head-
quarters in the Anthracite Building,
where those in charge will be glad to
give further information and outilne
the details of the camp program to
all who are interested.
TO HAVE HAM SUPPER
Senior class of Kingston township
high school will conduct a baked ham
supper in the Trucksville M. E. church
on Tuesday night. The supper con-
ducted by the class recently was a
decided success. The class will also
hold a bake sale in the Firemen'’s hall,
Many N ew Men
Tomorrow’ Games
tic opening"
| will be many more new faces to be
seen on the clubs which will go into
action this Saturday.
Beaumont because the players the lo-
cals dependéd on went with
clubs,
Pointack,
and Sorber will be on déck when Dal-
las meets Shavertown this week: Lee
pitched a. masterful game last: week
but bad support spelled his
Beaumont played one of the snappiest
games to be seen at Dallas for some
time.
gets much credit as his curves and
speed made the locals look like school
boys.
get some of the. extra material from.
last season was in the same b
Dallas,
time in rounding toget
bination that put the
ertown.
the League.
| town, Orange at Fernbrook to be play-
Twenty-one |
Local Boy Wins
Iwas inaugurated in 1864, is Democratic
had the groundwork aid for |
* League; Clubs Strengthened For
Nation-wide ih for the kidnaped son of Col. and Mrs. Charles Lind-
bergh ended in tragedy last night with announcement that a skeleton found
on Mount Rese, four and one-half miles from the
mountain home, had been identified as the kidnapped baby.
Tomorrow's Games
The rural league had an enthusias-|
last Saturday but there
Dallas had a. weak club against
other
but such stars as Freedman,
Johnson, Fredrick, (Chicko
defeat.
Traver, Beaumont ace, also
Fernbrook, which expected tol
but the manageme
PEOPLE HERE
RECEIVE NEWS
IN POST EXTRA
News ‘that the hunt for the
Lindbergh baby had ended in
tragedy ‘was given first to the
residents of this region last
night by The Post, which print-
ed an extra edition carrying de-
tails of the discovery shortly af-
ter 7.
Informed that the baby had
been found, The Post made im-
mediate arrangements to verify
the story and secure detailed in-
formation from an authentic
source. Memb rs of the news
and mec ; a , already
Thi
omélbein, Bedner and |
their roster and it looks like
the best battles in the career of
‘Tdetown went down to a
4 to 0 defeat at Orange when they |
were unable to solve the offerings of
Harris ko is considered one of the
fastest ball pitchers in the league.
Saturday will find Dallas at, Shaver-
ed at Dallas, and Idetown at ~ Beau-
mont.
League Standing
. ; Won Lost
Beaumont x 0
Orange 3 0]
Shavertown , 0 0
Fernbrook +0 0
Idetown 0 1
Dallas 0 1
— a
College Honors
HE —
Hugh Ransom of Dallas, i#“one of
the students taking
cratic Mock Convention to be held at
Oberlin College today and tomorrow.
Ransom, a senior in Oberlin this year,
will ‘be a member of the delegation
from Texas.
The Oberlin Mock Convention, the
17th to be held since the tradition
this year for the first tme. Beginning
with ' Abraham Lincoln, ast conven-
tons have nine times nominated the
man selected afterwards by the nation-
al Republican party.
Around 1200 students are taking
part in the Convention, and political
fervor on the campus runs high.
Breckenridge Long of ‘Washington, in-
ternationally known lawyer and dip-
lomat, will aet as temporary chairman
of the Convention tonight. Songs, ral-
lies, costumes, bands and al’ elaborate
pre-Convention parade will provide the
A
tent with a seating capacty of over
traditionally festive atmosphere.
2500, pitched on the campus, is to be
the scene of the two nights’ proceed-
ings.
BASEBALL GAME"
Fernbrook will play Orange at Dal-
las on Saturday afternoon. Both
teams have strong combinations and
part in the Demo- /
body preceded the crowning,
ing roads of the campus and
York, crowned the beautifub
Blessed Mother
presence of the largest crowd
statue of Our
have ever attended
ercises.
her sister,
Daley, daughters of Dr.
Daley of Kingston, as : flower
en, Jr., and Frank Kelly, nephews’
the dean of women at the college.
immediate attendants of the
were the Misses Mary ~Frances
wanda and Wilkes- Barre.
ies of Kingston;
the Blessed Virgin's = Sodality;
Mary Margaret Convery,
bers of the classes, the clients
Mary, concluded the procession.
The students walked from McAuley
Hall to the college chapel on the wind-
entered
the chapel where the May Queen, Miss
Helen Guy Lyon, of Binghaniton, New
marble
in the
‘that
the devotional ex-_
Miss - Lyon was attended by
aged. five, li acted as
crown-bearer, and the diminutive Miss-
es Mary Alice and Catherine Patricia
and Mrs. Dan
The train bearers were John J, O’Bri-
of
The
queen
Mc-
Gov ern and. Mary TA Homan of To-
The court ladies included the Class
President, Miss Virginia Worden Dav-
Miss Harriette Ce-
cilia Rizer of Towanda—President of
2 Miss
Vice-Presi-
dent of the Sodality, the various mem-
of
=
STATE OFFICIAL
ASKS SCHOOLS TO
HONOR F. B. MORSE
——
Co-operation in the nation-
wide observance of the 100th an-
niversary of the discovery of
the telegraph is asked of Penn-
sylvania public school teachers
by Dr. James N. Rule, State Su-
tion. The celebration is to be
observed today, commemorating
the invention in May 1832, of
the telegraph instrument by
Samuel F. B. Morse.
Dr. Rule reminds teachers
that it is a fitting time to re-
view the history of different me-
thods used in communication
ad so important a parte in the
Trucksville, on Saturday.
a good game is. expected.
perintendent of Public Instruc-:
and to honor the man who play-
jevelopment of communication.
lt 2 sh ’ y “La
Driver Discovers Body
meni
nounced the discovery of the baby at’
3:15 by William Allen, a negro, who
had been riding from Mt. Rose, New
Jersey, to Hopewell, on a truckload of
lumber.
Orville Wilson.
near a woods on Mount Rose hill and
walked from the road. Allen lowered
his head to pass under a bush and saw
the skeleton and a person’s foot on the
ground.
notified Hopewell authorities.
officials went to the scene of the dis-
covery immediately and found the
body of a child estimated to be e-
!tween one and one-half and two y
old in a bad state of decompositi
Blonde hair was discernible, as were
the undershirt and flannel
which the body was identified.
|
girls. |
dirt 2nd brush
| the Lindbergh’s
| ago.
Lindbergh’s Sourland
“>
Col H. Norman Shwaikoph an-
Allen was accompanied by
Allen and Wilson stopped the track 4
Allen called to Wilson and the ie
These
ra
i
ig
band by
The body was concealed by leaves, X
ol.
broken at the tragic end of
the sensational search for their twen-
ty-two month old, curly-headed son,
they were bearing up bravely under the
terrific strain last night..
The infant, known as the world’s
most famous baby, was kidnapped
from the Sourland mountain home of
seventy-three days
The body was found one week
before the fifth anniversary of Colon-
el Lindbergh’s Ione flight from Curtis
field, near New York, to Le Bourget
field i in Paris. ¥
The baby was taken by persons who
leaned a crude, home-made ladder
against the side of the home to the
window of the baby’s nursery. Wild-
erness-like scrublands about the home
were scoured and in the ensuing days
[the search spread even to Europe.
Great names were drawn into the
search. Chiefs of police and police
authorities from Eastern cities met in
Trenton, N. J., for a conference. Great
detectives were asked for theories. '
Throughout the nation people watched
vigilantly for any babies which would
answer the description broadcast. ;
Secrecy shouded many of the ac-
tivities of the police and, in order to
help bring the criminals to justice, the
press of the country co-operated with
officials. Several newspapers offered
large rewards and others placed their
men at the command of authorities to
print as little or as much news of the
case as Colonel Lindbergh wanted.
Charles Augustus Lindbergh, Jr.
was born at the former home of his
mother, who was Anne Morrow before
her marriage, in Englewood, N. J., in
June, 1930. ;
Police had little to say concerning
the case last night but they intimated
they were determined to apprehend
the bestial criminals and bring them
to strict justice. J. Edgar Hoover,
chief of the Bureau of Investigation,
said: “It is quite possible that now the
police may have definite clues as to
the kidnappers. It is quite certain
they will go after them hard and we
of course will help in any way we
can,”
The nation was shocked at the tra-
gic news and messages of sorrow pour-
ed mio th: sugh and Morrow
households iast night. ‘Nothing will be
undone, police promised, in capturing
the criminals.
Opinion was expressed that the dis-
covery may give definite clues to the
identity of the kidnappers and
night authorities worked to find some-
thing through which they wig trail
-
the fiends,