“The Dallas To or : ESTABLISHED 1889 Z | TELEPHONE DALLAS 300 RE A LIBERAL, INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER ' PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING AT THE DALLAS POST PLANT : LEHMAN AVENUE, DALLAS, PA, BY THE DALLAS POST INC, WARD RISLEY... vi teins min cede a .i.4 ‘Managing Editor [OWELL E. REESE lah aa Advertising Manager | RUSSELL WEAVER: 2. odin ita am alah ‘Mschanical Superintendent ! er SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVES—American Press Association, ‘225 West 65th Street, New York. The Dallas Post is on sale at local news stands. Subscription price by il $2.00 payable in advance. .Single copies five cents each. 3 Entered as second-class matter at the Dallas Post-office. Members American Press Association; Pennsylvania Newspaper Publish- ors “Association; Circulation Audit Bureau; Wilkes- Barre-Wyoming, Valley (Chamber of Commerce. ’ RE Published by * vs THE DALLAS POST, INC. THe DALLAS POST 1s a youthtul weekly rural-suburban newspaper, \ woskly grticios to THE POST and have an interest in its edttorial policies. THE POST is truly “more than a newspaper, it is a community institution.” | Congress shall make no law * * * abridging the freedom of speech, or of ost ~From the first amendment to the Constitution of the United States. Subscription, $2.00 Per Year (Payable in Advance) ; ) : % » being published in ihr is ‘the CU Record. When the depression struck, The Record faced a choice be- tween strictest economy and care- ful spending or improving its pro- duct and giving its readers more for their money. It chose the latter a ba writers, it became a fighting newspaper, onest, aggressive, liberal, fair! The success of its policy | is ‘attested by a circulation gain of more than 40,248 papers | a ily. | No intelligent observer can fail to be disgusted and dis- § heartened at the way unemployment ‘relief is being MIS- The stories of Weolthy beggars who drive with tin. eup- and-pencils in limousines to a street corner are paralleled by! the conduct of this Commonwealth. \ (borough road commissioner, Shavertown, Pa, Dear Sirs:— i 3 Shavertown is growing in spite of the depression. Several residences were completed last year, Three fine homes are being finished now; and four are in process of erection. Every Shavertown citizen should favor a re- tractive streets and public safety. Shavertown is a village of residence, no mines, no factories. We have three church organizations and two others just on border lines. It is asserted that a borough would necessitate many additional officers with increased taxa- tion. Dallas has been a borough more than fifty years and does not pay its burgess any salary. Its solicitors sal- ary is $100. The secretary is also the secretary of the Beard of health and prepares the tax duplicates for $150. The health officer gets at present ten dollars per month. A policeman gets $7.50 per month. This is necessitated largely because there is only one thor- oughfare through the borough. Shav- ertown paid last year to the Kingston township supervisors for attorney $37.- 50, for auditors$ 35.50, and $156.00 for other overhead. The supervisors ex- pefhise would not be charged to the He would be paid his wages and would be amen- dable to the borough council for his designated work. We are now paying eleven mills tax for roads and lights. Seven mills tax spent only in Shaver- town would give us better roads, more lights and more than pay all neces- sary borough expenses, i 'Shavertown Borrough Committee, League Entertains (Continued from Page 1.) Johnson, Mrs, ‘Husband, Mrs. Ocken- house, Mrs. Albert Stitzer, Mrs. Sam Woolbert, Mrs, Luther Major, Mrs. Fred Bronson and Mrs. William Perre- go. Thanks are extended to these wo- men for their assistance. At the speakers’ table were seated: Mr. and Mrs. W. BE. Geyer, Mrs. Her- {bert R. Williams, Ted Woolbert, Rev. Norman W. Clemens, Willard L. Garey, Elgie V. Prutzman, Howard Woolbert, Rev. D. M. Corkwell, Mrs. D. M. Cork- well, Pearl M. Averett. Other guests: Allen Ockenhouse, Clyde Brace, James Campbell, Marion Anthony, Ruth’ Hoffman, Edna Hunt. Hat in hand, the second wealthiest State in the Union | has continued to beg alms at Washington WHILE MAKING NO HONEST EFFORT TO HELP ITS POOR. The State of Pennsylvania. corrupt in politics’ and |; : ~ shamefully backward in its legislation, has too long been 3 ruled by a clique of venal politicians at the service of pri-| vate interests rather than public welfare. ~ Our ppliticians are competent enough for the routine tasks of handing out boodle to unscrupulous big business, and blocking social progress. But they have neither the jprains nor the humanity to handle the present crisis. If Mr. Grundy’s Pennsylvania Manufacturers’ Associa- tion, or General Atterbury’s Pennsylvania Railroad, or Mr. Mellon’s vast enterprises needed protection, the money would be found, action would be quick, legal quibbles would be brushed aside. But since the need is not that of the pewerful who pull to the ballot box, THE LEGISLATURE IS NOT INTERES- ‘TED. Politicians well fed at the public trough find it a little difficult, perhaps a trifle boring, to worry about mass star-, ‘vation and misery. ” Servants of plutocracy to an extent almost unparalled : in any other State of the Union, our political leaders haven't time to'worry about the needs of the common people, nor the intelligence to sense the dangerous consequences pos- gible. : One man in the Vare Organization, Senator Salus, hon- estly tried to do his bit for the jobless—but he quit in dis- - gust when the gang wouldn’t back him up. ; Pinchot and the Organization have been busy belabor- i ing each other with wordy bladders, like low comedians in a burlesque show. ' Both have been quick to mak» political capital out of the other’s shortcomings, but neith~d has proposed to raise more than $10,000,000 a year, although $75, 000,000 to $125,- 000,000 is needed. The Governor, exploiting a liberalism that grows more insincere every year, has talked eloquently of the people’s needs, but he still refuses to give the poor a nickel from the $104,000,000 highway fund that means political patronage for the rural lieutenants of the Pinchot-Grundy combine. The fact that the liberal, Pinchot, is allied politically with the arch-reactionary, Grundy, is evidence enough of how little may be expected from that quarter. - The Philadelphia Organization, anxious to avoid enact- ment of the Pinchot program (which would deprive them of tax collection patronage), is now striking a noble pose as ~ friend of the poor. * Auditor General Waters, never yet very excited about the plight of the unemployed, suddenly leaps into the lime- light with a demand that the $14,000,000 available from the Dorrance estate be appropriated immediately for relief. Since that $14,000,000 already figures in the Pinchot ‘budget for the biennium, this appropriation would give the Organization a splendid excuse to prune Pinchot followers from the State payroll. Whatever his motive, Waters’ idea is a good one. all means use that $14,000,000 for relief. Both sides are exploiting the relief issue for political advantage, BUT NEITHER HAS AN ADEQUATE PRO- GRAM FOR RELIEF. Neither has the courage to declare for a major diver- sion of funds from highway building, an outrageous lux- wry in times like these. i Neither will fight for an emergency income tax to raise funds | for, the jobless. By {Violette Williams, the strings, but merely that of the humble who go like sheep |Cortright, Willard Engler, day. Eleanor Pearson, Emma Lewis, ‘Eleanor Cortright, Al Camp, Dick Bos sworth, Janct E. Dow- ner, Marion Heale, Emma Hall, les Chapple, Charles Chapple, William Sugden, Mrs. William Sugden, Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Werner, Harold Werner, R. J. Harrison, Reuel Lasher, Raymond Chapple. Thomas FH. Bosworth, Rob- ert E. Woolbert,' Emma Ruth Shav er, Esther ‘Warden, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. " Ritts, Jr., Harriet Thomas, Dan Davis, |W. H. Stang, Stephen Johnson, Geor- ‘giana Weidner, Louise Roushey, Cath- lerine Gensel, Margaret Kocher, Ruth Corkwell, Mrs. Ellen Pritchard, Roland | Kocher, Byron Kocher, James Cork- well, Hilbert Stark, Gerry Swire, Keat Crawford, Lillian Scovell, Ruth Sco- ‘vell, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Hartwell, Ed- na V. Cease, Frances B. Fletcher, Mar- guerite Patton, Gene Griffith, Frances (Thomas, Dorothy Roberts, Mildred Hoyt, Myrtle Hoyt, Sam Brown, Alice Hill, James Hand. Howard Isaacs, Verna Miller, Jane Marjorie Fink, Marie Brace, Edythe 'C. Griffith; A. Lila Travis, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Whitby, Mrs. Eckley Kocher, Mrs. A. G. Eddinger, Mrs. John Miles, John Miles, Esther Still, Barbara Downer, | I ‘Helen Banta, Janet I. Evans, Margaret D. Keller, Ruth Davies, Margaret H. Llewellyn, Elsie Ritts, Jennie Stark, Herbert Wilson, Leila Patton, Elvie R. Schall, R. J. Schall. —Alderson- Several members from this end of the township attended the meeting of the Lake township P. T. A. on Mon- day evening. Carl Garinger, Mildred Kitchen, Louis Conden, Charlotte Getz- man and Naomi Higgins took part in the entertainment. Ruth Jackson, a student at Blooms- burg State Teacher's College spent the week-end with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. George: Searfoss and son and Mr. and Mrs. John Baer and family of Hunlocks Creek spent Sun- day with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sear- foss. / Mr. Grover Anderson entertained the Ladies’ Aid at her home on Thurs- day afternoon. Virginia Allen is spending a week with Miss Helen Reynolds of Trucks- ville, a, student at Bucknell University, at Bucknell. Esther Garinger and Mr. George Searfoss and son were the guests of Mrs. Edgar Nulton at Kunkle on Thur- Others present were Miss Irene Oney and Mrs. Frank O’dell of Trucks- ville, Mrs. Evertt Wilson and daugh- ter of Dallas, and the hostess. All were members of the class of 1927 at Laketon High School. . Glen Kitchen and Mr. and Mr. Al- fred Harvey of Scranton spent last week-end in Washington. D. ©, They were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mar- vin Kitchen. duction of taxes, public welfare, at- Jam- | \ MRS. THECDOSIA YOUNG , Mrs. Theodosia Y {home of her daughter, Mrs. A. C. Dev ens, at Kunkle«Vvesterday afternoon. She thad, beén confined to her bed for 20 months. She was born at Cragle Hill on June 18, 1860, and resided for some time at West Nanticoke. ¥or the past seven years she has resided with her daughter. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Stella Stare of Wilkes-Barre, and Mrs, A. C. Devens of Kunkle; also the fol- lowing brothers and sisters; Mason Cragle of Avondale, Sterling Cragle of Koonsville, Harvey (Cragle, Chester Cragle, Israel Cragle and Mrs. Ellen Rineer all of West Nanticoke. The funeral was held at the home on Tuesday afternoon, services being conducted by Rev. W. S. York of Al- derson. Pallbearers = were Charles ‘Herdman, M. C. Miers, George Lan- don, John Isaacs, Fred Honeywell, and Fred Kunkle. Interment was in Han- over Green cemetery. J —— i eee ‘GERALD SULLIVAN Gerald Sullivan, late of Schuyler avenue, Kingston and a twin brother of the late Rev. Joseph E. Sullivan, were held Monday morning at 9 o'clock from the home of his sister, Mrs. John M. Hayden, 347 Charles street, Luzerne with a solemn high mass of requiem at 9:30 o'clock in. St. Ignatiug ‘Church. Rt. Rev. Monsignor M. E. Lynott was celebrant of the mass, ‘Rev. M. J. Ma- her, .deacon, and Rev. W. J. Burke, sub-deacon. Seated in the sanctuary were Rev. George Forve, Rev. M. J. Fleming, Rev. J. J. O'Leary, and Rev. Father Carroll. The services were largely attended and there were many floral tributes. Interment was in St. Mary's ceme- tery at Hanover where Father Burke pronounced benediction. The honorary pall bearers were: P. J. Hayden, J. H, Anderson, Elmer Sawyer, James Jef- fers, James Gibbons, and Cornelius Boyle. The active pall bearers were: Philip Sheridan; Lloyd Van Camp, Michael Hayden, Patrick Hayden, Ray Osborne, and Walter Jones. BD en RUTH E. PARK The funeral’ “of Ruth E. Park, aged 12, daughtér of Mr. and Mrs. James day ‘afternoon in Nesbitt Memorial hospital of injuries received when she was struck down by an automobile near her home, interment in Idetown cemetery. Services were in charge of Rev. Lynn Brown of IL.ehman. Besides her parents the, child leaves one brother, Robert and a sister Flor- ence, By : Pall bearers were uncles of the deceased, Joseph Park, Jr., Thomas Park, Irwin Dymond, and Frank Dymond. Funeral arrangements jwere in charge of Ralph Brickel of Dallas. the following Local Dog Show (Continued from Page 1.) I. will adjudicate these classes. i Then too the patrons have not been forgotten, A door prize, a locally bred Boston Terrier, also a ton of coal, will be given away to the person holding the winning numbers, ‘This show will be supervised by that erstwhile showman George’ F. Foley of Phila. who is also a Director of the American Kennel Club. Myr. Foley has {mailed several thousand entry blanks to the showman of the East and Mid- dle West. It is reasonably expected that dogs from as far as Chicago as well as the eastern Metropolitan areas will be exhibited and paraded. The dogs will be fed and benched by the “Old Trusty” Dog Food Co., The “Grande Parade” of champions which will be held Thursday evening at 8:00 P. M. will be a headliner for the show. It is expected that cham- pions of International renown will strut the show ring at that time, The club officers are President, Harry Griffith, Cice President, H. H. Secretary, Mrs. Mary E. Griffith. Tinker, Treasurer, Joseph Langdon, The bench show committee members are: H. H. Tinker, Robert Miller, M. I. Mangan, R. M. Stapleton, Dr, F. E.| Davis and Joseph Gallagher. The judges will be as follows: Dr. Thomas Butler Snyder, Phoenix- EASTER SERVICES AT ST. THERESES Easter services at St. Therese’s church, Shavertown, started Thursday morning at nine with a mass and pro- cession of children. The blessed sac- rament was removed from the main altar and put the rest on the side al- tar where it will remain until Easter Morning when 1t will be returned to the main altar. Services were in charge of Rev. J. J. O'Leary and Father Carrol. Ser- vices will be held all day today with a mass at 8 tomorrow morning. Sun- day masses will be at 8:30 and 10:30. the hungry. them from Washington. fare. Pennsylvania MUST rai for relief. Pennsylvania CAN raise ment. Then it can levy an e year. fourflushers who milk them off in bad. Neither will tax politically powerful interests to feed Both would like to snatch funds“from the air, or beg The Organiation would like nothing better than to ap- propriate for relief by cutting into hospitals and social wel- se at least $50,000,000 a year $50,000,000 overnight by high- way fund diversions and transfer of the Dorrance tax pay- mergency income tax for next The eyes of the masses are finally open to the political in good times and cast them Park of Tdetown, who died last Thurs- [ ville, Pa.; Mr. M. R. Korshin, Media, All : Pa.; Dr. Charles J. McNulty, Atlantic Smoked City, N. J.; Mr. Joseph C. O'Hare, Washington, D. C.; Mr. Robert Vagt, Flushing, N. Y.; Mr. Rueben Clarke, Brooklyn, N. Y,; Mr. John H. Irwin, Haddonfield, N. J.; Mr. Leo “Levy, Hackensack, |[N. J.; Mr. Thomas M. Chocolate Gately, Hempstead. I. I., New York. Cocoanut Mr». Robert Vagt will judge Best in | Show. Black rr errr Walnut —Shavertown— bi The Brotherhood of the Lutheran church will attend a meeting of the Brotherhood of the Christian Church at Plymouth on Tuesday night. About a score of members are planning to make the trip. The Rev. G. E. Ruff. will be the guest speaker at the meet- ing. The William Geyer Sunday School class will conduct its second annual banquet in the church parlors on Mon-, day night. The Ladies’ Aid of the Lutheran church will serve a roast beef supper in the church basement on Tuesday night starting at 5:30. The public is invited to attend, proceeds will be add- ed to the building fund of the church. Mr. and Mrs. George Phillips and children of Nuangola, Mrs. Hannah Lewis and daughters Peg and Doris, lof Wilkes-Barre, were guests on Sun- day at the home of Mrs. Malkemes. Mr. and Mrs. Parry Coolbaugh and daughter Peg of Forty Fort, were guests over the past week end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Brace. Mr. and Mrs. George Bronson of Sweet Valley, were guests on Sunday Kathryne at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Wardon. Mr. and Mrs. ‘William Evans and children of Kingston, were guests on Sunday atthe home of Mr. and Mrs. ‘William Evans, Sr., of Lawn street. Kingston township schools will be closed Good Friday and Easter Mop. day. BL Kunkle News The Sunday School of the Kunkle Church will give an Faster program in connection with the regular ser- vice on Sunday morning. Miss Dorothy Elston visited Misses Elizabeth and Helen Girvan of Dallas: over Tuesday night. Lawrence Smith son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Smith was returned to the Children’s hospital in Philadelphia on Thursday for treatment for his frac- tured leg suffered last week in a fall from the porch of his home. i Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Sweezy and children of Trucksville called on: Mr. ‘nd Mrs. 3 »n Sunday. “The Silver Leaf Club will serve a Ham and Egg supper in connection with their bazaar and entertainment tonight (I'riday) at Kunkle Commu. nity hall. ZEASTER Every Food Need for this joyous festival awaits you at your convenient 4SCO Store at very reasonable prices. B Shop the “American” Way & Save gotaseat EGGS For boiling, poaching and sick-room use. / satel 18c ay Fresh EGGS Every Egg guaranteed to give satisfaction. doz 14¢ 4SCo Sliced Bacon Sliced thin, rindless—no waste. %-1b pkg 1zc EASTER HAMS! HAMS (whole or shank end) 12¢ Assorted Jelly Eggs Fruit and Nut Eggs" Quality Candies for EASTER oy Cream Eggs Cream Eggs Fruit and Nut Fggs Cocoanut Cream Eggs Your Choicé for Oc 1b 9e¢, 3 lbs 25¢ 1b 15¢ 1b 19¢ Lima Beans String Beans Tender Beets 9c Princess Jelly 2 ~ 19¢C Grape, Strawberry, Apple, Raspberry. Egg Dyes Mixed Vegetables An unusually low price for these items. Chick Chick or Magic Wand State Relief and Work Orders Redeemed at Our : Your Choice 2 for 15¢ 7c American Toilet TISSUE 2 19¢ | Save Seven Cents. pkg or CPAP %¢%e%e®e PPP PU II 1& Stores . . Carefully , . Cheerfully . . Promp C. W. Kunkle and family i x !