~~ > Zo “largely within the President’s own party, but the high-geared Democratic con- PAGE TWO THE DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA, FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1934 r The Dallas Post, ESTABLISHED 1889 TELEPHONE DALLAS 300 A LIBERAL, INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING AT THE DALLAS POST PLANT - LEHMAN AVENUE, DALLAS, PA, BY THE DALLAS POST INC. HOWARD RISLEY HOWELL REES General Manager Seb etale aie wate eT LAB EE ee ais Managing Editor Mechanical Superintendent The Dallas Post is on sale at the local news stands. Subscription price by mail $2.00 payable in advance. Single copies five cents each. Entered as second-class matter at the Dallas Post-office. Members American Press Association; Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association; Circulation Audit Bureau: Wilkes-Barre-Wyoming Valley Cham- ber of Commerce. THE DALLAS 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 attaintment 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 community 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) WE DO OUR PART THE DALLAS POST PROGRAM THE DALLAS POST will lend its support and offers the use of its columns to all projects which will help this community and the great rural- suburban territory which it serves to attain the following major improve- ments: . 1. Construction of more sidewalks for the protection of pedestrians in Kingston township and Dallas. 2. A free library located in the Dallas region. 3. Better and adequate street lighting in Fernbrook and Dallas. 4. Sanitary sewage disposal system for Dallas. 5. Closer co-operation between Dallas borough and surrounding townships. 6. Consolidated high schools and better co-operation between those that now exist. 7. Adequate waten supply for fire protection. 8. The formation of a Back Mountain Club made up of business men and home owners interested in the development 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. Trucksville. Shavertown, ECONOMIC HIGHLIGHTS Every President, according to tradition, is entitled to one honeymoon with Congress—a session in which his pet legislative proposals will be okeyed by the representatives of -the people without strenuous opposition. Mr. Roosevelt's honeymoon made those of his immediate predecessors look like a meeting between the parrot and the monkey. The first Congress to sit under his Administration gave him every extraordinary power he asked for. It surrendered rights and prerogatives it had prized for generations. There was no organized opposition. When occasional individual voices appeared in criti- cism, they were snowed under. ? Most Presidents encounter trouble with their second Congress. And in! Mr. Roosevelt's case, it is true that the sailing wasn’t as easy as it had been. But the honeymoon continued. A certain amount of opposition appeared, gressional machine made short shift of it. The powers of the Chief Executive, broadened to an amazing degree through acts of the preceding Congress, were broadened still more during the one that recently came to a sudden and drama- tic end. : Most remarbable bill passed during the session was the Reciprocal Tariff Act. Under it, the President is empowered to bargain with foreign powers and raise and lower our tariffs on almost all products to the extent of 50 per cent. Mr. Hoover asked for a similar bill. The Silver Purchase Act gives the President further unprecedented powers over our money. He is permitted, at his discretion, to purchase 100,000,000 ounces of fine silver in the world market and issue currency against it. The Stock Exchange is another Administration bill of the first importance. It stringently regulates all exchange activities and makes illegal a number of common practices such as wash-selling, low margins and dissemination of tips. Mr. Roosevelt is thus made virtual dictator of the nation’s security markets. In brief, every bill the Administration deemed essential, passed. Mr. Roosevelt goes into the middle of his second vear as Chief Executive with every | weapon for fighting depression he wanted. The Congress has been subjugated; | it has lost vast amounts of both prestige and importance. There was never a period in our history when a President was so powerful, and when the legislative | branch of the nation was so weak. | Talk is now centering on the next Congress. Mr. Roosevelt will again | ask for much—but unless the signs fail, he will have a harder time getting it. | | —Kunkle— The Kunkle reunion was held in the {Kunkle Community Hall on Saturday {June 30, with an attendance of 107. | Following a basket lunch served on ilong tables in the Hall a short pro- [gram was given. Piano Duet, Dorothy | Elston aad Roannah Shoemaker; tap |dance, Estella Elston; vocal solo, Mar- join Elston; History of Kunkle and the {Kunkle family, by Miss Anna Kunkle. iThe following deaths occurred during |the year. Marvin E. Mann, of Trucks- iville, son of Mrs. Jane Mann, on March {7, 1934. James Hartman of Scranton {husband of Laura Kunkle Hartman on [June 22, 1934. Births to Mr. and Mrs. | Stanley Moore, a son. To Mr, and {Mrs. Palmer Updyke, a daughter, Ju- ilia Alberta. To Mr. and Mrs. John Richards, a daughter, Virginia Almira. The following resolution was present- led by the Resolutions Committee and ladopted: | Whereas—God in his infinite wisdom has called to their final rest, Mar- vin E. Mann, son of Mrs. Jane Mann, and - James Hartman, husband of Laura Kunkle-Hartman. {Be it resolved that we the members of |{the twenty-first annual Reunion, as- {sembled in the Community House at Kunkle extend to the sorrowing fam- ilies our heartfelt sympathy and that a copy of these resolutions he record- led on the minutes of this meeting and | that i a copy be forwarded to the forwarded to the bereaved family. Mrs. Harry Sweezy, Mrs. Jos. Shoemaker, John Isaacs, Committee. Officers elected for the ensuing year were: President, W, S. Kunkle; vice- president, Mrs. Harry Sweezy; treas- urer, Mrs. John Isaacs; secretary, Mrs. Fred Kunkle. Gifts were presented to the oldest person present, Mrs. Roa- nnah Landon, and the first pair of |twins, Carl Wayne and Carolyn Jane | Perrin. The person coming the longest dis- tance was Miss Betty Boteler of Wau- kesha, Wisconsin. Prizes were award- ed a number of children in the athletic contests. The youngest persons present were {Julia Alberta TUpdyke and Herbert {Harry Wertman. Those present: Waukesha, Wis. Betty Boteler; | Philadelphia, Walter Ellsworth; Bing- hamton, N. Y. William Richards; Trucksville, Mrs, Carrie -Ellsworth, |{Mr. and Mrs. Francis McCarty, Mrs. | Wallace Perrin, Wallace, Jr.,, Laura Jean Cary, Carl Wayne and Carolyn Jane Perrin; Central, Pa., Miss Anna | Kunkle; Dallas, Mrs. Elizabeth Kunkle, |Mr. and Mrs. Wardan Kunkle, David | Kunkle, Miss Mary Still: Scranton, i Mrs, James Hartman; Mt. Zion, Mrs. Carl Cyphers, Catherine Cyphers, Mrs. | Elizabeth Lord; Shavertown, Mr. and {Mrs. Sherman Wardan, Elizabeth War- dan, Kay Wardan, Mrs, Althia Crane; Beaumont, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Richards, Hebert, ‘Thelma, and Ralph Richards, Mrs. Cragg Herdman, Jane and Re- becca Herdman, Mrs. Jane Mann; Kunkle, Mrs. Roannah Landon, Mrs, Jos. Shoemaker, Roannah Shoemaker, Mr. and Mrs. George Landon, Althia Landon, Mr. and Mrs. John Isaacs, Dorothy Elston, Mrs. Keler Richards, Marian Ann Schoonover, Mr .and Mrs. M. C. Miers, James Miers, Mrs, Ralph Elston, Gomer, Marvin, Estella, Wayne and Gene Elston, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sweezy, Frances Sweezy, Mrs. Russell Miers, Felice, Calvin and Jerry Miers, Mr. and Mrs, W. S. Kunkle, Philip Kunkle, Mrs. Ralph Ashburner; Ro- bert and Nelson Ashburner, Mrs. M. K. Elston, Mrs. Julia Kunkle, Mrs. Palmer Updyke, Jane, Josephine, Kiler and Julia Updyke, Mrs. Olin Kunkle, Eleanor and Charles D. Kunkle, Mar- garet Kunkle, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kun- kle, Mrs. Forrest Kunkle, Alan Kunkle, Esther, Doris, Ruth and Louise Kun- kle, Mrs. Ralph Hess, Doris and Janet Hess, Mrs. Albert Kunkle, Martha, Carl Ida, Loren and Joan Kunkle; Visitors, Mrs. A. C, Devens, Mrs .Charles Wert- jman, Austin and Herbert: Wertman, Mrs. Harold , Smith, Laurence, Donald and Forrest Smith, Mrs. Alice Robin- son, of Mehoopany. Miss Betty Boteler of Waukesha, Wisconsin, who is visiting her aunt week-end with Dorothy Elston. week-end wiht Dorothy Elston. Mr, and Mrs. Harold Titus and son Duane, Mr, and Mrs. Stephen Moss of when There's a Boy in th oD Family. By PERCY CROSBY. _ Copyright, » | _ VIA Willie's plan was to play a tune while Grand-pa’s birthday cake with sixty-nine candles was on the table. He put on Siefried’s Funeral March. nn aS SE AN Ra Sy = LL — Sa SOO = —— ERIN SoA <= Sy NNR NNR oS NS Ng aS nS ~ ay \ NN SS STN Ne ox OS Samm ay erpimonsTrTR RL ~= SAN AS RS a eR \\ ASS SNA a ——— ——— TAA Sov RES D5 bt -Laketon- Bathing at Sandy Beach is in full ing his many customers with the nec- essary card board and a cheerful wel- come. W. H. Perrego is preparing to plot and sell building lots and talks of rent- ing camping sites on his estate here known as Perrego Heights, D. A. Mayer rents auto parking space on his water front. Services every Sunday morning at the Laketon Lutheran Church. Our water company is installing a new and larger pump to insure its pat- rons a good supply of water. The arti- san well which supplies the reservoir is two hundred and ninety seven feet deep and has stood the drought of the past 21 years with the pump running twenty-four hours a day. The patrons should be thankful for such a supply of the very best of water. Andrew Mirold of Chestnut St, North Wilkes-Barre is occupying his cottage on Maple Street, A camping party is occupying the Yencha lot on Ridge Avenue and Jo- seph Wallace of Allentown, and Laing Carl and Dean Bachelor spent the 4th with Mrs. Hannah Nash, Noxen Road. Miss Marie, the palmist, {here for the past twenty years, swing with Martin Fahey accommodat- ( is at the | |lake again after spending every season | She | jseems very popular among her many | { patrons. { Mr. and Mrs. A. J. McHose, parents lof Professor Calvin McHose, supervis- | There will be considerable opposition to his proposal for social insurance, |Lovalville spent Sunday with Mrs. {ine principal of Dallas Schools, spent | which will be one of the principal planks in his porgram for next year. He will | also ask for more regulatory legislation concerning natural resources, princip- ally water power, and that will likewise be a live subject for hot congressional | debate. 1 The November elections will probablv be the determining factor. If this party sweeps the country once more, his influence on Senators and Represen- tatives will be as potent as ever—no Congressman likes to throw away votes. If the Republicans make substantial gains such as taking 70 or 80 House seats now held by Democrats, the picture will undergo decisive change. Most political commentators, writing for papers representing’ both major parties, are of the opinion that Republicans are likely to regain much of the ground they lost in 1932. It is usual for the party in power to experience more diffi- culty in the off-year elections than in the years in which a president is running. WHEN “FARM RELIEF” SUCCEEDS There is a growing feeling on the part of those in a position to know the facts that government farm relief measures have made their most conspicuous successes when they have sought to help the farmer help himself—and have come nearest to failure when they have simply tried to change a condition through legislative, judicial or executive fiat, It’s an old axiom that doing a thing for a person isn’t nearly so worth- while as showing him how to do it on his own hook, and that is as true of agri- culture as anything else. When official agencies have worked to build and strengthen the farmer-owned co-operatives, which represent concentrated in- dividual effort, they have produced excellent results. 3 The co-operatives have the great virtue of permanence. They are not subject to change as is an administration or a political party. They are im- mune to political considerations—they don’t depend on votes for their exis- tence. They can determine upon a policy, and pursue it one year, five years, or twenty years if it is advisable. The soundly managed cooperatives, consequently, are getting somewhere. They are winning out along a dozen fronts—winning in their fight for stabler markets, better prices, and a fairer break for the farm producer. They emin- ently deserve the great measure of agicultual, public and official support they have been given by those who understand their motives and their methods. : The number of farm homes in Pennsylvania having water piped at least into the kitchen, increased from 29,000 in 1925 to 67,000 on January 1, 1934, according to estimates made by the State Department of Agriculture, This means, the Department pointed out, that in more than one out of every three farm dwellings the drudgery of carrying water by the bucketful from a nearby well or cistern has been eliminated. It also means that water is still being carried into more than 100,000 Pennsylvania farm homes. The percentage of farm homes into which water has been piped, is great- Frank Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Archie Corby and daughters Dorothy and Janet of West Pittston were callers at the C. W. Kun- kle home Sunday evening, Mrs. Elizabeth Kunkle, Mr. and Mrs. Wardan Kunkle and son David of Dal- las were callers atthe home of Mr. and Mrs. M, C. Miers on Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. D. P. Honeywell of Dallas called on Mr and Mrs, Charles Herdman on Sunday evening. Mr, and Mrs. James Waltman : of Pottsville, Mrs. Mary Hepler of Ha- gen, Mr. and Mrs, Victor Rydd were callers at the C. W. Kunkle home Sun- day evening, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Kunkle and their guest Mrs, Matie Fish ‘of Halstead spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs, W. O. Washburn of West Dallas. A birthday surprise party was held for Henry Shupp at his home on Fri- day evening. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. John Denman, Alberta Denman, Mr. and Mrs. Ed, MacDou- gal, Mr, and Mrs. Lambert Traver of Beaumont; Mrs, John Whipple, and Mrs. Sarraci of Dallas; Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Ide of Shrineview, Mr. and Mrs, Ralph Ashburner and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Shupp. smn rites “WILDFLOWERS” I gazed upon a field so green Beautiful wild flowers were every- where to be seen. Yellow, brown and white, "Twas such a pretty sight. There was the buttercup slender and tall, The brown eyed susan towered above them all. And the daisy so snowy white, I thought wildflowers, but what a lovely sight. When a person stops to think, We give these flowers neither food nor drink, We never give them any care, We did not even place them there. Does that not convince the most doubtful mind? That God to us has been most kind. Everyone can enjoy these flowers God placed them there, they're really the southeastern counties. est In ours, =—Mrs, John A, Girvan. a week-end at Sandy Beach recently, Professor Charles McHose, head of Wyomissing polytechnic institute en- joyed the week end at Sandy Beach. R. Wellington Case and Andrew Helvig of Hazleton have rented a cab- in at Sandy Beach for- the month of July. ~Jackson- The annual Cease re-union was held at the home of W. D. Cease on Sun- ray, July 1st. Sixty persons sat down to dinner, Theodore Laskowski is attending the summer session at Bloomsburg State Teachers’ College, Jessie Ashton is home after spending several days at Nanticoke . Mr, and Mrs. Walter Reakes and family Mr. and Mrs. ‘Sam Reakes, and famil yand Mr, and Mrs. Devens and family spent Sunday at Noxen. Mrs. Herbert Meyers will entertain the Ladies’ Aid Society for July. Mr. and Mrs. B.-G. Laskowski, Ber- nard Laskowski, and Miss Sophie Mad- dy spent the week-end at Hershey Park, near Harrisburg. The following were among those who were recent visitors at New York City. Mr. and Mrs. George Bond, Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Meyers and Miss Olive Las- kowski. es Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Beyer spent several days of last week at Clark’s Summit. Mr. and Mrs. Irving Ashton and family spent Sunday at Benton. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Splitt and family spent Thursday evening of last week with Mr .and” Mrs. Neual Kester at Trucksville. Miss Lottie Zekoske ‘was a recent visitor at the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. G. Laskowski. Emiley Linsinbigler is spending some time at Allentown, Mrs. Sarah Ashton recently enter- tained Mr. and Mrs. Marvel Ashton of Detroit, Mich, 1 the department of Engineering at the | | The firemen will use the money re- jceived at the carnival to pay off ob- [ligations of the volunteer fire company Paul and to improve fire-fighting equip~ ment of the borough and township. Firemen’s Carnival (Continued from Page 1) James Besecker, concessions; Shaver, lights. Ne (LE AV IAT ATION bya USNR, SKIING, BOOKS, LITTLE AMERICA, ANTARCTI- CA, July 8 (via Mackay Radio) —Big doings down here this week in Dogtown! You know that is what we call the tunnels under the snow where we keep the dogs. Last week we had 119 dogs. Now we have 128. Another batch of puppies arrived a couple of days ago. Only four this time. A few weeks ago we found seven canine newcomers in Log balls of fur, fat and mischievous, always getting ander foot mm the dark tunneis. My muscles are aching and 0 18 every joint nm my Dody. Heason? skis; Conn.; Stuart D. Paine, of Durham, N. H.; Cari Petersen, of Merrick, Long Island, N. Y.; and Quinn A. ot shelves today, and Finn Honne, of Pittsburgh; and Albert M. Hilif- sen, of Tromsoce, Norway. These last two are experts and some of the things they can do on ekiis are wonderiul. We've all got to become proficient by October, under the in- struction of Ronne and Eilifsen, in order to take to the trafls—it the seat of my breeches holds out. We are doing a lot of reading _ town and they are now ively little 32 RADIO AND DOGS! Moving our radio equipment across the ice to Little America. Fourth trom left is Charles V. J. Murphy, our radio and news writer. now in the evenings. We have seve eral hundred books with us. Most of the men prefer romantic fiction, detective stories and autoblogra- phies. Three times 8a week we have movil picture shows with sound movies from Paramount, Ware ner Brothers, United Artists and Universal. Every afternoon Wo pick up madio programs from the W2XAF and WMY. Radio communi. cation here is very good because of the absence of electric trains, steel Duildings, thunderstorms and othes interferences. Mackay Radio, working with Postal Telegraph, de- livers messages from our families at hone, rly, three times & day. This {s certainly a boon. Yes, things are going along very smooth ly with us curing this period of darkness before the terrific labors which will begin when our spring- time arrives in October. Hy the way, did you bear my ra- aio talk Wednesday night of last week? i tried to make it of interest to every member of our club throughout the United States and was delighted with this opportunity to speak to them. The club is still growing and the membership is still open to all people interested in aviation and adventurs, ours in pan ticular, entirely without charge or obligation. To join and get a big map of the South Polar region sim- ply send a self-addressed stamped envelope to Arthur Abele, Jr. Pres- ident, Little America Aviation and Exploration Club, Hotel Lexington, 48th Street and Lexington Avenue, New York. Be sure and write your name and complete address plainly because we have received a number of the club membership cards and maps back due to insufficient ad- dress. If you haven't received yours yet this may be the reason so write us again. United States, mostly over stations ATE TNE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers