The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, September 23, 1932, Image 2

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last vestige of cannibalism.”
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SEPTEMBER 23, 1932.
©
Che Dallas Post,
ESTABLISHED 1889
TELEPHONE DALLAS 300
A LIBERAL, INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER -
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING ’) ’
AT THE DALLAS POST PLANT e
LEHMAN AVENUE, DALLAS, PA.
BY THE DALLAS POST INC,
HOWARD RISLEY Managing Editor
HOWELL EL -REES: Li ada asia Wah hay
RUSSELL WEAVER I... ote i civil vlads
45th Street, New York.
The Dailas Post is on sale at local news stands.
mail $2.00 payable in advance. .Single copies five cents each.
Entered as second-class matter at the Dallas Post-office. f
Members American Press Association; Pennsylvania Newspaper Publish-
ers Association; Circulation Audit Bureau; Wilkes-Barre-Wyoming Valley
Chamber of Commerce. ,
Subscription
price by
Published by
THE DALLAS POST, INC :
THe DALIAS POST 1s a youthtul weekly rural-suburban newspaper,
awned, 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 editorial policies.
THE POST is truly “more than a newspaper, it is a commumty institution.”
Congress shall make no law * * * abridging the freedom of speech, or of
Press.—From the first amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
Subscription, $2.00 Per Year (Payable in Advance)
X
THE DALLAS POST PROGRAM
THE DALLAS POST Will lend its support and offers the use of its
solumns to all projects which will help this community and the great ruraf-
suburban territory which it serves to attain the following major improve-
ments:
a.
2.
Municipal lighting plant.
A free library located in the Dallas region.
3. Better and adequate street lighting in Trucksville, Shavertown, Fern-
brook and Dallas.
4. Sanitary sewage disposal system for Dallas.
B. Closer co-operation between Dallas borough and surrounding town-
ships. i 3
6. Consolidated high schools and better co-operation between those that
now exist.
8. The formation of a Back Mountain Club made up of business men and
home owners interested in the develonment of a community consciousness in
Dallas, Trucksville, Shavertown and Fernbrook.
~ 9. A modern concrete highway leading from Dallas and connecting the
Sullivan Trail at Tunkhannock.
10. The elimination of petty politics from all School Boards in the region
covered by THE DALLAS POST.
11. Adequate water supply for fire protection.
12. And all other projects which help to make the Back Mountain section
“And may God in His infinite goodness have mercy on
your soul.” With these as his final words Judge William S.
McLean imposed the death sentence on
MAY GOD Joseph Hudock, aged 24, late Wednesday
"HAVE aiternoon for the brutal slaying of Steven
Yurish of Butler township.
MERCY
bi Mk So brutal and cowardly was the crime.
so cold blooded was the later burning of the victim’s body,
that hardly a person in Luzerne county but feels that if
there is a justification for capital punishment, here is jus-
fren Commenting on the sentence the Wilkes-Barre Record
said, “the death sentence was a victory for District Attor-
ney Thomas M. Lewis and his staff, which successfully
warded off the defense of intoxication and produced suf-
ficient evidence for the three judges to arrive at their ver-
dict in little more than an hour.”
. Such comment following court trials leads us to won-
der whether as a people we are looking for victory in our
court proceedings or justice. If we are sincere in our con-
viction that justice is the thing we seek, then there is no
need to say that this attorney was “victorious” and that
one was “defeated.” The courts are not legalistic athletic
fields. We are not interested in the prowess of the op-
posing council. We are only interested in justice. Too of-
ten we have seen juries swayed by the ability of opposing
council. Too often we have felt that clever lawyers have
produced a miscarriage of justice rather than justice. We
are glad that District Attorney Thomas M. Lewis and his
staff presented their case in such a manner that justice
was done. We are not at all concerned nor prone to call
Tg a art ue MR YW EY I ETE
it a “victory.”
pir} bu
re cos
% Evelyn Sanford, seventeen, a farmer's daughter of
Freesoil, Michigan, a few weeks ago was shamefuily treat-
ed, then choked to death by Francis Nash.
thirty-one, who buried her in the cellar of
20TH
CENTURY an abandoned house near-by. Nash con-
JUSTICE fessed to the crime. In twenty-four hours
after the girl’s body was found in the cel-
lar, Circuit Judge Cutler had pronounced on him a sen-
tence of Life Imprisonment in solitary confinement at
hard labor. This was the extreme penalty, as Capital
Punishment is not legal in Michigan. ;
Compare this to the long drawn out proceedings of
the California Hickman murder case, with all the degrad-
ing publicity in newspapers not long ago.
Dr. Benjamin Rush of the University of Pennsylvania
in 1792 and one of the earliest members of the Pennsyl-
vania Prison Society, had this to say:—“The death of a
malefactor is not so efficacious a method .of deterring
from wickedness, as the example continually remaining of
a man who is deprived of his liberty, that might repair,
during a life of labor, the injury he has done to the Com-
munity. . . . Let the murderer live, but let it be to suffer
the reproaches of a guilty conscience.”
Will Durant said regarding Capital Punishment: —
“Once a hundred crimes were punished with death; then
fifty; then twenty; now one. Let us make the record
clean. Let us complete this moral evolution, and climb
another step to civilization. Let us rid our souls of this
Is
|
Advertising Manager |
: Mechanical Superintendent 5 2 "
SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVES—American Press Association, 225 West | Mickey Cochrane, great catcher of :
p_.
SiX;
THE DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA., FRIDAY,
SPORT SLANTS
SS
Who will be the world series goat,
this year? According to traditions of
the game there must be a goat as well
hero.
ow ~
| the Athletics, was the goat last year
and Pepper Martin the Hero.
A bad throw is a bad throw any
any circumstances, a strikeout is the
| same always.
The thing is to avoid making the
bad throw or the muff or the strike-
out at a deciding moment.
An error
and two outs is fatal, with nobody on,
it may not be. When the eadoff man
strikes out the first time he comes up,
nobody thinks anything of it, but et
him fan with three on the paths and
two out in the last inning. .
Somebody is likely to do something
at the right time, and somebody else
may do the wrong thing at the wrong
They will be the hero and the
zoat respectively.
time.
Cincinnatti ‘had the first salaried
team in 1868.
Baseball, such as it was, was first
played under that name in 1840.
The present design of home run
plate was introduced in 1900.
New York's Knickerbockers of 1851
were the first to wear
with short pants was introduced by
Reds in 1868.
Connie Mack is the
American League manager, who has
in that organization from the
This is his thirty-third consec-
the Cincinnatti
been
start.
The balk rule was framed in 1899.
John Tyng, then a student at Har-
vard, is credited with having been the
first player to use a catcher’s mask,
That was in 1876.
When the Giants and the Athletics
met in the second game of the 1911
world series at the Polo Grounds, 38,-
:81 attended. That was the largest
ttendance ‘baseball had up to that
Think of how it has been sur-
rassed since then.
time.
—
In 1848 the rule requiring a first
baseman to catch an assist in order
‘o make a putout at first was put in-
o practice. Prior to that the man go-
ng down to first was out if he could
be hit by a thrown ball
Four balls did not atways entitle the
batter to first base. Until 1880 it re-
quired nine balls for a walk; in 1880
it was changed to eight, in 1881, 82
and 83 it was seven; in 1884 and 85,
in 1866 it returned to seven; in
1887 and 1888 it was reduced to five;
from 1889 until the present time it
aas stood ‘as four.
Chicago and Boston are the only
National League cities which have
been in that organization continously
irom the beginning in 1876.
_. -Alderson-_,
Frimemg,
Mr. and Mrs. Ned Jones, Mrs. Cora
Nulton and Miss Irma Keller of Beau-
mont spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob Harris.
Mr. and Mrs, Harvey Kitchen and
Mr. and Mrs. W, S. Kitchen of Ide-
town spent Wednesday night last,
with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Clark at Bear
Creak. Mr. Clarke will undergo an
operation in Philadelphia, this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Garinger and
Lloyd Garinger made a business trip
to Bloomsburg on Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Amos Kitchen and
family spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs, Arthur Kitchen at Mountain
Springs.
The meeting. of the Dailas Chap-
ter of the W. C. T. U. was held in
the Alderson M. E. Church on Tues-
Refreshments
day afternoon.
served after the business meeting and
program,
Mr. and Mrs. George Searfoss and
infant son and Mrs. Frank Searfoss
spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Will
Weir at Avoca.
Robert Kitchen, of Milton, is spend-
ing a week with friends and relatives
here. :
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hutchinson
and daughter, Charlotte of Gilford, N.
Y., spent the week end with Rev. and
Mrs. W. S. York and family.
Mark Kunkle of Lakewood, New
Jersey, spent the week end with her
parents.
Several parents from this end of the
township attended the P. T. A. meet-
ing at Dallas Township school on
were
Monday evening.
time, a muff is the same thing under |
with three men on base ,
baseball uni- |
forms, but the present day uniform, |
only present
ative season as pilot of the Athletics, |
| i
AMERICA REDISCOVERED -
—Shavertown—
Bite Rally Week
Extensive preparations
are being
made by the teachers and members of
M. E. church school for Rally week to
be held the last week in September.
One night will be devoted 10 the
Each night in the week will be devo-
ted to different sections of the school
young people's department. This wil
be in the form of a banquet. Com-
mittees appointed last week for this,
event are as follows: Toastmistress,
Frances Fletcher; reception commit-
lee ,superintendent of 1lne
peoples div'ision, Pearl M.
chairman, and all the teachers of Cuis
division; invitation committee, Mrs.
T'aul Eckhart’'s class; decorating com-
young
Averetu
mittee, Eugene Piatt’s class; publicity
and poster committee, Mrs. Corkwell s
class; pianist, Edna Hunt; program
' committee, Marguerite Patton, chair-
man, Jane Courtright, Emma Ruth
‘Shaver, Ruth Hoffman, Harry Ritts,
Glenn Smith, John Chappel, Thomas
Bosworth; refreshment committee,
Jennie Stark, chairman, Alice Hill,
Margaret Belford, Clyde Brace, Har-
riet Thomas, Edward Holcomb, Lew-
lis Button; kitchen committee, Clar-
‘ence Eckhart, chairman, Roland Ko-
'cher, Frances Thomas, Marian An-
‘thony, Edna Cease, Hilbert Stark,’
Ruth McKesl, =~ Imm
I Schooi Board To Meet
| Kingston Township school board
iwill hold a special meeting tonight at
the Trucksville school house for the
purpose of opening bids and awarding
of contracts for the furnishing of wiu-
dow shades for the new high school,
and for the laying of a macadam road
and parking section about the new
"high ‘school.
| Firemen To Meetn
Shavertown volunteer fire compan
'will hold a regular meeting at the
[Van Campen store room on Monday
night at 8 o'clock. All members hav-
|ing money or tickets from the bazaar
‘and field day held two weeks ago are
lurged to make complete returns at
{this meeting. At the meeting
[two weeks ago, profits on the field day
| with several solicitors to make reports
were in the neighborhood of $400. As
and bills paid, the firemen will give
a report.
High School Loses
Kingston township high school foot
victims. ‘for
Coughlin high ‘school last Saturday
going down to defeat by the score of
54 to 0.
Tomorrow, the township team will
‘play Meyer’s high school on the Carey
avenue school field.
Locals Lose
Orange defeated Shavertown 5 to 1
last Saturday in the first of a three
Tomorrow they will
house = dia-
ball team proved easy
games series.
play here on the school
mond.
held
soon as complete returns are made:
Off To School
During
an unusaually large exodus of young
people who left to enter schools of
higher education. Those who left are.
Mrs, ZR.
Howell who entered the junior year
Clifford Howell, son of
at Bucknell, William Pierce, Jr., whe
entered the junior class at Cornell,
Ruth Howell, entered her
ear at Wheaton; Emma Lewis,
phomore at Drexell InSfitute; Charles
Perkins, who has been a junior in-
‘terne at the Nesbitt West Side hos-
pital, returned to University of Penn-
sylvania whehe he will study for one
vear; He.en Reynolds will enter Buck-
nell; John Carle, entered New York
University; Robert Robbins, Almon
‘Woolbert, Donald Nelson, Robert Ohl-
man and Glenn Billings entered Penn
State; Paul Bertram will be a sen or
at the same institution; Elenore Staub,
entered Misoricordia College this
Walter Steelman will take a
course in undertaking at the Philadel-
undertakers school. Ruth Ben-
nett and Edna Billings entered the fall
class of nurses’ training school at the
Nesbitt West Side Hispital; Howard
Hallock #nd Viola Daughton left for
Mansfield Teachers’ College; Adelaide
Layou entered Stroudsburg Teachers’
College; Kenneth Appleton will leave
today for lthica Conservatory of music
at Ithica, New York. where he will
take a course in instrumental music;
Darwin Huster has entered his senior
week;
phiai
year at New York Military Academy, |
having been awarded a scholarship to
tat institution following the comple-
tion of his studies last year; Elwood
ers’ College as a sophmore; Esther
Still has entered Wilkes-Barre Busi-
ness College.
: Brief Mention
| Mae Dilley of Forty Fort was the
guest for a few days this week at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. John DeWitt.
The condition of Mrs. Armanda
Thomas, whi has been ill at the home
of her daughter, Mrs. Alonzo Prutz-
man of Ferguson was unchanged at
this writing.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Edwards and
family are occupying the newly built
home. of Harry Goeringer on East
Franklin street.
! Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bennallack
‘have moved from Kingston to their
[new home on Poplar street, Fern-
| brook.
Class To Meet
The pastor's confirmation class of
!St. Paul’s Lutheran church will meet
for the first time on Friday, Septem-
ber 26 at 4 p. m. Any person 13 years
of age or older is invited to attend
and prepare for membership in the
Lutheran church. : :
Attends Conference
Rev. G. E. Ruff, pastor of St. Paul's
Lutheran church attended the confer-
ence of Lutheran ministers held at
Mauch Chunk on 6 Tuesday of this
week, i
the past week there has been
sophomore
|
S0- |
and- their friends thirty-eight in num-
Swingle entered Stroudsburg Teach-s
Church Supper
At a meeting of the Women's Aux-
‘held
plans were
iliary of the Lutheran church
last Wednesday evening,
completed for a roast beef supper to
be served at the church basement on
the evening of October 6. Proceeds
will go toward the building fund of
the church. The public is invited to
attend. :
Visit Bakery
Members of the Women’s Auxiliary
ber visited the bakery of the Blue
Ribbon Cake Company at Kingston
last Thursday afternoon. The trip
was made in a traction company bus,
the entire plant was inspected and a
tastey luncheon was served. Thase
who made the trip were: Mrs. William
Dieroldf, Mrs. Fred Malkemes, Ruth
‘Casterline, Mrs. Sam Woolbert, Mrs.
Hayden Williams, Mary Jean Lay-
cock, Margeret C. Laycock, Rebecca
Piatt, Alice Hand, Elsie Sander, Pearl
Hosey, Mrs. Henry F. Adolph, Mrs.
Christine Malkemes, Mrs. H. F. Goer~
inger, Mrs. A. M. Odell, Mrs. Neines,
Mrs. K. G. Laycock, Mrs. Suttles, Mrs.
George Dierolf, Mrs. Charles Grey,
Mrs. David W. Spry, Mrs. K. Lemke,
bein. Mrs. A. Stock, Mrs. J. A. Eck,
James Harfman, Mrs. Thomas Hontz,
Mrs. Charles Dressel, Mrs. Lewis
Stritzinger, Mrs. Walter Gerlach, Mrs.
Louise Malkemes, Betty Palmer, Hel-
en Gallagher, Mrs, R. Shoemaker, Mrs.
A. M| Shaw,
taal
Pr
1
'
| —Huntsville- 4
B. Frank Bulford of Huntsville sub-
mitted to an operation at Nesbitt
Memorial hospital, Tuesday and is a
patient at that institution.
—School Notes—
| The eighth grade of the Dallas
Township schools, under the supervi-
sion of Miss Nan Bryant organized
‘their class, Friday, September 9, 1932,
The following class officers were el-
ected: Keats Poad, president; Helen
Weer, vice-president; Anna Matukitis,
gecretary; Fred Stevens, treasurer.
The publicity committee: Eleanor
Kunkle and Ronald Thompson.
Class colors selected were pink and
green. Class flower, pink rose.
| Meetings are to be held every Friday
'during the home room period at which
“time business will be discussed to ad-
.
vance the class spirit.
{
| The regular weekly business meet-
| ing of the Dallas Township eighth
‘grade was held Friday, September 16.
The meeting was called to order by
the president, Kats Poad.
| “The class decided : to have their first
outing as § corn and weiner roast at
24,
| All students of the eighth grade are
| requested to be at the Marsh at 2:00.
P. M.
A good time is promised to all.
| Perrins Marsh, Saturday, September
a
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