pet | -| | I} | COCR i ME ep DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA. FRID By : by ie Te 2h. 6 5 < AY, AUGUST 3, 1934. Ca PAGE THREE . ME goog Y= can take Jimmy Dykes’ word for it that all but about six of the current crop of Chi cago White Sox will display their baseball wares elsewhere during the 1935 campaign. Highly touted as a possible dark horse in this year’s pennant chase. the White Sox have done nothing except steal the title of league doormat away from the St. Louis Browns. Dykes states he wiil string along with his present infield which consists of himself at the hot corner, Appling and Hayes, short and second respectively, and that clouting giant, Zeke Bonura. ‘on the initial sack. A pretty fair gort of inner works, if anyone should ask you. | It is also rumored about that { Jimmy will place Al Simmons on § the auction block. All bids re ceived, however, must include a 1 goodly share of youthful baseball i talent. Under a new policy, heartily approved by Dykes, the Sox will try to develop their own talent. No more fancy prices for minor their transfer to big time. As a result, Jimmy will have to play a Davidg Harem role if he expects to have a team of proper caliber on the field next ApYil. ® ® e Tie New York Boxing Commis sion fathers, who pose as the foremost authorities on things fis- tic, have decreed that Vince Dundee, middleweight title holder, must meet Teddy Yarosz, of Mon- 1 aca, Pa., in defense of his crown, ! before Aug. 12. Otherwise, the title will be declared vacant. Since becoming champ by win- ning over Lou Brouillard, Dundee has fought only once. Yarosz beat Brouillard twice—so there's little wonder Dundee has shied clear of the meeting. & & ® ASOTHER nice little scrap on the bill of fight fare is that approved by the New York com- mission between Baby Arizmendi, league stars who flicker out after IN THE WORLD OF SPORTS wT x | Looks Like White Sox Are in for a Good Darning . . . New York Boxing i Commission Provides Two Good Scraps BY PHILIP MARTIN of Mexico and California, and Mike Belloise, Gotham feather- weight. The commission has declared Freddie Miller's featherweight throne vacant due to non-defense of title within its specified time, and will seat the winner of the. Arizmendi-Belloise brawl in the chair, This bout should see the de scendant of the Aztecs ruling the division. Arizmendi has been ~ ¢ ov Seyi ely: According to Jimmy Dykes, upper left, manager of the Chi- cago White Sox, his team is in for a good overhauling. Vince Dundee, lower left, will defend his middleweight title, and Baby Arizmendi, below, is fa- vored to cop the featherweight crown, in coming bouts. coming along fast the last couple of years, and his shifty stance and punch figure to be a bit too much for little Mike. srs ET = IRA D. COOKE Professional Land Surveyor ENGINEERING Penn’a Register Nec. 4104 SUCCESSOR TO CHAS. H. COOKE, Dec'd Phone, Dallas 126. A SEND YOUR NEWS ITEMS TO THE DALLAS POST Dallas, Pa. le a wir MAILBO) Show an actual profit on next When Teeth WOBBLE it may be too late for your dentist to save them as some of the tissue which holds teeth in their sockets wiil already have been destroyed. {Firm healthy gums that hug the teeth provide protection against infection and destruction of the underlying tooth supporting tissues. {|Get professional advice before trouble starts Co-operate with your Dentist in striving for clean Gum-Gripped Teeth year's reading! ... 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[J Needlecraft [J Successful Farming ....._1 Yr. 00 Woman's World ......_..1 Yr. Check 3 Magazines thas (X) Our Guarantee To You! This wonderful offer is available to old and new subscribers to this We guarantee the fulfillment magazine su offer is will be extended for full term gs bscriptions and .you have positive assurance that this ey exactly as represented. Renewals ’ Gentlemen: I enclose §.__. of all NAME. STREET ORR F. D.__ shown. * 2 Please clip list of Magazines after checking ¢ Publica- tions desired. Fill out coupon carefully. Please send me the four magazines checked with a year’s subscription to your newspaper. KNOWN 0 DENTISTS EVERYWHERE ~ Something Is "Happening In Dallas Few people who live in the rich suburban-rural territory which spreads to the Northwest of Wyoming Valley know intimately what has been happening during the last five years in the modest white building which houses The Dallas Post, Inc. Anyone who has visited The Post at one year intervals has noticed less vacant floor space each time, more noise of motors, a few more men working. More than that they cannot have left with- out sensing the spirit which was responsible for the physical chang- es they saw. It was this spirit which enabled The Post to step boldly into the fine commercial printing and magazine publishing and to build up a steadily-growing volume of business in those lines while other businesses were suffering from an economic depression. But The Post had, first of all, been a newspaper, and all the time it was expanding it was studying its nucleus and waiting im- patiently for the time when good business judgment would say “Now, go to it”. For, throughout the country, advertising lineage was going lower and lower and subscribers, unable to pay, were making the burden for newspapers almost back-breaking. Rather than to ex- ert pressure on subscribers who, The Post felt, were sincere and would gladly pay as economic conditions became better, The Post postponed the expensive things it had planned. . It is no longer necessary to postpone those plans. . Confident that general business conditions will boom this fall, that advertising (already stimulated) will increase, and that sub- scribers (already proving their loyalty) will overwhelm us with their payments, we have started a campaign which we hope will make The Dallas Post one of the outstanding weekly newspapers in the country. ! fo This effort to establish The Post firmly among the leading ru- ral weeklies will be based on two premises. The first is that certain traditions of the weekly newspaper are sacred. It was the weekly newspaper which moved westward with the frontier into remote settlements where metropolitan newspapers were unknown. It was the weekly newspaper which helped to build those isolated vil- lages into cities of any size. It is the weekly newspaper today which touches intimately millions of lives in countless villages and towns throughout the nation. This heritage is our first considera- tion. ‘The other principle we shall endeavor to keep in mind is that the reader of the country weekly today is a far different person than the reader of yesterday and that this difference is especially note- worthy in the section served by The Post. The radio, magazines, automobiles, metropolitan newspapers have ended the isolation of the country dweller. He is no longer content with a slip-shod job of editing and printing. He demands—and deserves to receive—his local newspaper to be as well-edited, as attractive typographically, and as alert and progressive as the city daily. The spirit and the ability of the men at The Post assure you of that kind of a newspaper. : The Dallas Post Inc. 7