PA. FRIDAY, JUNE 28, 1935. : . SA i . No Ee en eS Sey oe : Betting On a Sure Thing. By GENE BYRNES | | ot £ a iS 3 s { \ i RE Fl — : ‘ fr BEE § : > as A IME, TLL HAVENT. You sie ; AWR : : I GIVE YoU TEN Gone YET HE POT vp CENTS IF You'LL 1 GUESS YO Ly aR . : 60 TO THE STORE DON'T WANT AE STORE NONE! JUL ger : FOR ME RIGHT / THAT DIME 1 FORGOT RME2 I CANT 1 ono CENTS ‘ i A AWRIGHT VERY BADLYS ALL ABOUT FS ia To Go St 50 JO NE : / Mom! : 'T Mom! x Ve AN BACK IN 1 E MINITS! q & i 1 : dl ° 2 : x : . P % | i or 1 T o . n ; : tate Tried To : oSrsqam Is New Momentum Fete To Feature a SY is Sewionally Pimeny oy ° 5 (Continued tron Page 1.) ’ \ - ” ; 1. chairs, Miss Lena Baldwin: flow- 3 J Sy Raise Mone B For B ildin C 1 f 1 C Several local ‘women are heading |ers, Mrs. Harry ‘Miller, Mrs Andre a SR \ 3 u 2 oioriu ustoms .,.oiiees: Mrs. Frederick Hillman, | Sordoni and Mrs. Edwin _ — 5 N 70) RY See i x 1B . 2 Nes ’ . >” " shortz; = |yoice said “This is Mrs, Georgia John- ; : lis general chairman of arrangements | Miss Gertrude Ash. ; 2 y n e¥ son. You wanted someone else, didn’t rogram Ere W i i and is being sisted by ving | i Fo 2g { : you?’ The reporter will never forget edding, Dances, Palmists ny ams B LA Sheng MISS Suhane Westfield» pupil of : ith orte > 2 . 5 : : : Ic se cads and their commit- an illustrator for: hi any 3 Sie Tre old So nr 2 i : { bible * Gb 1a | § and for his marionette Records Show Two Similar Nor will 42 Hn Sat 1 es a Conlon Fires Interest In At Historical Society |tees: Secretary, Mrs. T. A. Wright, | productions, will conduct a number of a J Att m 2 get what happened next. | ~~ : . jJr.; tickets, Mrs. Samuel Hirshowitz, variety acts at her P ! 4 y A e pts Were Made . First, Mrs. Johnson laughed. Then she FHA For Business Men Party land Mrs. Stanley Rinehimer; publi- | | y Poise her Buppet show ‘on EE x Later offered to lend her automobile ' and > ™ city, Miss Carolyn Hourigan and Mrs |Saturasy. b hs go ‘chauffeur to the reporter to drive him nd Rotary 2 ¥ : John Ferenbach; candy = Mro « p.| Women of the Sacred Heart Slovak ; Han 3 bi > to the flower show. He was too dazed Utusual ‘and interesting entertain- Elliot; toneesdtins Ars Tous Frank Church, of Plains ill t X t 3 i oh Larrisburg, June” 26—During the |to thank her then. He doe 0 ment will be featured at the Wyoming | crs. Li EI Tens Su ns Site parvy } OE Ts oT The 15 Ben ot Te WH Ss now. MODEL HOME RUMORED Historical and’ Geological Society gar. [nie amlephant Tres, Dents Hale {the folk dances and the wedding pro- ! General Assembly, members of the x : E den party on Saturday afternoon at |, oS PIG AALS JL AWEETIEe ox cession. There will 1} o iti ; « ral > 3 y x - art) Sa YE € i ire Say PR - I $ . 3 be no repetition : House defeated a bill providing: for a Little Things We've Just Learned (Continued from Page 1.) the Albert Lewis estate at Béar Creek. lin: Souvenir napkins, Mrs. . William Lia costumes, and all those t L : | series of State lotteries to provide About Some Big Men: F. D. R. was a 1 fir 3 n 3 ) A Slovak wedding procession, folic | Mcintyre; Girl Scouts, Mrs. A. T. Mc- i He 2 1080 0 he used a funds for Ohl axe porsions. Decal. of [MINOT national political figure before elie aus in 105 history of the |qances in authentic national costumes Clintock; entertainment, Mrs. Peter |are authentic in every detail, several he bill was caused primarily because (ie was thirty , . . The first time he c 5 = BS Sy he Biear a puppet show, palmists, silhouette |Jurchak; Cigarettes, Mrs. of them being nearly 100 years old ’ mbers of the House opposed haying [Fan for the State Legislature he car- A e for years in several artists, a band concert, and refresh- |Slattery and Miss Jean Slattery: tents |and others of a more modern period. Bite State. enter the oer sai biis [Tied the disteiet for his party for the |OHIST countries but is new here, es : : field, i ; CTE first time in fifty years . .. Mussolini y FHrIEn this part of the act a fam- =z \ HE : : "| was once a composer of music in Lon- ily can build a -new home, or buy one RETR RE, 2 ven i the in been enacted, it dot... When he Was 11 Hitler swore already built, borrowing up to eighty would no mark e first occasion au- h o 3 t | ber cent of the fair value of that pro- 3 thority was given “Pennsylvania to en- | © would never: become 2. Fovernmeny erty, including the la ' ; age in the lottery business. The. ini. official , . he rarely smiles, except at perty, inc 1 ing the land. The money Ji htiante, aooording to Socretory |children: who give him flowers . . . 3 borrowed, asun Title One, from the : ol er a rs Gandhi's voice sounds like a bat- Eh or loan aasociption, is guaran- 5 % twas Just 200 ire aso ’ ©" squeak . .. Henry Ford insists on hav- cod or the Federal government, and § ! : Under provisions of his will, dated ing everything his own way . . . it a %e Teoma ao Installpents Which ; ‘ ; 12, villizen Porm ait a usually is the right way . . . At 26 foam e in St on the principal, insur- > ; tees. to all his lands in America |TTOtSky had made an imperishable oe Bi axes over a twenty-year ; nd gave them authority to sell and record as President of the Petroerad pe ” * * dispore ofias uch, of the Jand as noe- fooviet =: Most of all, George Bernard | The purpose of the plan is to loosen ¢ essary to Tacet Tus debit Shaw hates what he calls “Larve.| credit in the country and to stimulate. E ee Nesdod Wi . Goodness, Terewth, and Bewty” . . . the heavy industries which are the 4 Y Pole cone iy Oey rneol Einstein’s Theory of Relativity was foundation of all industrial prosperity. Ais ag in 19h dorial Dy published first in 1905 . . . he can un- Dallas and the towns about it are ~ hod to b tua rd Si hom orl derstand that but he can’t understand particdlarly well-suited to the plan be- xX \ ” eon raron pe of aS ar > why newspapermen ask him whether cause there are hundreds of lots in ‘ 3 : 0000 nctes a To a throuch 2 lott 2 he takes his coffee before or after his |this section owned by families who are . ‘ ’ us 2 a ig : ae > ei bath or what he thinks of the future anxious to build homes. Unfavorable 3 Hig De bie i ae of the safety razor ... he also impro- economic conditions during the last rtment Sntormal pd indi he. vises on the piano ... his religious be- |five or six years have prevented them . Dare Tok provided: for Oe A ; lief is mysterious . he says # My from accumulating enough money to : 7750 ee oi 5 ina: dans agqconcept of God Is an emotional oon. learry oul. their plans. The FHA will : ners ore 10 be Sermitind to Tati viction of a Supers a ary give them their first oportunity and, 2 y 6 i Yeoh] thi chase lands designated in their win- fortes in RA kon y hin addition, assure them of a safe and nings at the rate of 15 pounds 10 shil- “general field theory” President |economical plan, ; 3 ! / lings per hundred acres which at that time amounted to about $41.33. The rst prize was fixed at 3000 acres and 1292 other prizes were scheduled scal- ing from the privilege of buying from twenty-five acres to 1500 acres. The holder of the first ticket drawn was to receive 200 acres while the holder of 800 acres. g However, the property commission- ers failed to dispose of a sufficient number of tickets to warrant draw- ings. Quite naturally ticket purchasers were not satisfied to suffer losses. Objections to the plan were raised and agreements were reached whereby holders of tickets were allowed to present them in partial payment for parcels of ground. Thus the paste- ‘boards, Secretary Logue showed, be- came the foundations of titles to many lands in Pennsylvania. ’ Records in the Department of Inter- nal Affairs disclose that warrants is- sued under the plan were “granted on ‘a lottery ticket.” : : 3 : Two More X mental records show other lotteries were conducted. in Pennsylvania. In the lottery of 1769-there were 3853 ap- x plicants and that number of tickets ~ were placed in the lottery wheel. Per- ~ sons holding winning tickets were per- itted to purchase not more than 1000 ‘acres on each ticket at a price of 5 pounds sterling per hundred acres, the equivalent of $22.22. The Common- wealth needed monies in 1784 and in ~ the last number called was to receive | x In 1769 and again in 1785 depart- |De Valera of Irish Free State was born in New York . .. Once before, in 1918, Ramsey MacDonald admitted “My public career is over” . . . within two vears he was Prime Minister . . Paderewski’s biography billiards. First Concrete \ The first or oldest known concrete pavement on the Pennsylvania State Highway System was constructed in 1915 and 1916 on the present William Penn Highway, U. S. No. 22, between Easton and Allentown. A concrete road in Ohio antedates this one by several years. “Northumberland lottery” was au- |thorized. There were 567 tickets sold |and™ winners on that occasion were | permitt8d to purchase not more than 11000 acres on each ticket at the rate (of 30 pounds per hundred acres, a lsum equal to about $80. | Gambling in one form or another, it has been pointed out, has prevailed in) the world for centuries and records on file in the department's land bureau show that the lottery system was con- necessary funds.in the early days of the Commonwealth’s existence. ~ | YOU'RE LOOKING AT THE ~~ | WORLD THROUGH ROSE- it COLORED GLASSES... YOU USE... ATLANTIC WHITE FLASH PLUS * MEANS MOTORING PLEASURE ATLANTIC WHITE FLASH PLUS! : the Back Mountain area. could almost man and Dattner be written by listening to his music [number of lots awaiting coastruction . . When his Holiness Pope Pius XT ang on Parrish Heights a similar num- |. was Dr. Ratti he used to like to PIV |... are gwned by persons who would | December of that year the so-called sidered just another means of raising | There are, for example, about 400 lots sold on-+Goss Manor, admittedly one of the most beautiful sections of The Freed- Plot has a great build if they saw their way clear ,fi- nancially, — Serum Check In anticipation of the Fourth of July casualties, the State Department of Health is checking the amount of anti- tetanus, or lock-jaw, serum on hand in the various distributing centers of {the State. OES THE PRICE OF SHAVING COMFORT NOW! LOTT ITC) FART ZT CTT 10 for 25¢ 25 for 59¢ 55 et VHAVING comfort hit an ail- ) tinie low in price with the announcement of Probak Junior —the remarkable new double- edge.razor blade. Thiak of it! You get 25 keen, smooth-shav- ing blades, uniform in quality, for only 59¢. You'll wonder how such fine blades caa be sold for so little money. Probak Junior is the produce of unequalled manufacturicg methods and matchless skill. This blade is automatically tempered, ground, honed and stropped—gives you wonderful shaving satisfaction, TryProbak Junior and see for yourself. Get them today from your dealer. | Probak Junior fits all Gillette ; and Probak razors MADE m usa, T, M. REG. U.S. PAT. OFF, OTHER PATENTS PENDING ness. ask your bank, any con- traetor, or any loan as- sociation for details, or fill in the eoupon below and send it to The Post. TED WE ARE CO-OPERATING cree comm OU CAN HELP YOURSELF and at the same time very material- ly help the other fellow—the men of this section who are now un- employed—and you can extend this helping hand without serious- ly obligating yourself and at NO ADDITIONAL EXPENSE. - The Federal Government has made it possible for you to build a home or improve your present home under a new financing plan which is as econ- omical as paying rent. Millions of dollars worth of construction are al- ready under way. As a result, people of moderate means who have dreamed of owning their own homes soon will have them and thousands and thousands of men are finding jobs that will revive and stabilize busi- - af There are hundreds of homes here that need improvement. Many new homes will be built in the next year. If you do not understand the provi-- sions of the Better Housing Program after reading the story on Page 1 HENEEDEDENSE NV IEF PEED DES ® HE EE EGSEDE NINN NH NEK THE DALLAS POST HOME BUREAU, DALLAS, PA. I am interested in (building a home in your terri- tory) (Improving my home). Please send me infor- mation. It is agreed that this places mé under no obligation. :
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers