THE DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1937. i OUR PUZZLE CORNER Fi IND TEN Ww 0BIECTS, SC > AN YOU GET AT LEAST 70 WORDS OUT OF THE WOR. ‘BLACKBOAR ANNOUNCER BT. T/L ANIYIRLYMFP/C GAME DRAW ALINE FROM 70 46 Copyright uid Lincoln Newspaper Features, ime ITS TRUE! | By Wiley Padan 97 : or BI J g Np Fi, SORE N22 SAYS," WHEN | RETIRE, I'M GOING INTO THE MENAGERIE BLISINESS AND RAISE LIONS HE PLAYS IN * IT’S IN The ALR. * WIRE A GALAXY. oF LAUGH-GETFERS ON A HILARIOUS STRATOSPHERE- EXPEDITION | 2 UNA MERKELS COLLECTION OF HANDKERGHIEFS NUMBERS INTO THE HUNDREDS-- MAND ONE OF HER NEWEST HAS A- pases, - MAP OF HOLLY~ hy \VGDD ON IT ! ~ GIRL VHO LATER \ BECAME HIS WIFE — MARY LIVINGSTONE = A WHEN SHE WAS 12 YEARS OLD ! Pls. ; Nps LEO He Every roi warvey stevens | Boece M Lion. HAG PORTRAYED ON THE | CHAS.F.RIESNER VINDr ; SCREEN TO DATE, HAS MIRRORED § STARTED HIS CAREER ASA || RANT MITCHELL'S SOME POSITION HE HAS HAD IN | ppOFESSIONAL BOXER! || GREAT- UNCLE VAS REAL LIFE « IN "IT'S IN es The AIR." HE PLAYS THE MANAGER CP A FASHIONABLE PID DESERT HOTEL » HE HELD A SIMILAR POSITION SOME 2) YEARS AGO WHILE WORKING HS VAY THRU COLLEGE ! . “IT’S TRUE! that Charles F. Riesner, director of ‘It’s in the Air’, has celebrated the 25th anniversary of his first job as screen director,” says artist Wiley Padan! “Just a quarter-century ago, Riesner, a vaudeville actor, picked up a megaphone to direct a one-reeler for the Harry Revier company, operating a small studio at Salt Lake City. There w = two directors at the studio, Riesner and the late Willard I~.” By H. T. Elmo » o- | WORN By THE } NATVES OF INDIA INDICATE THER (AST, AND 2 PNK nn Z oe ha i ny Borns we 12® CENTURY - IN DENMARK, THE POORER CLASSES WERE NOT PERMITTED TO WEAK . GARMENTS OR APPAREL SINCE IT WAS (ONSIDERED A ROYAL COLOR N MEANT ONY FOR ROYALTY AND THE NOBILITY \: 4 thu i J li fl PK GHOSE, oF caLcurta, SWAM CONTIOVOUSWY FOR 72 HOURS, '8 MINUTES M1433 TTT NG THE RE ve WERE SO FRO TIDIOVS REGARDING THEIR DRESS THAT TREY EVEN POLISHED THEIR SHOES WITH THE FROTH OF CHAMPAGNE DASH DIXON PASH STRUGGLES WILDLY WITH THE ENORMOUS BAT / SUDDENLY HE IS THROWN TO THE Eg NT (fle. % NTS, JUMPS I - ; |g GRABS DOT'S HAND AND THE TUNNEL BEFORE | B-BUT : TWO RACE ‘TO THE FAR SIDE | | THEY DISCOVER = MY J AS THE BAT IS ABOUT TO CRUSH DASH~- A WEIRD NOISE FRIGHTENS THE PAT AS THE B iT MEN COME. TO RESCUE =. ®X 1 fa CD Gh » rl --THE ELEVATOR COMES TO A HALT AT THE TOP OF THE MOUNTAIN, AND THEY EMERGE INTO AN AIRPLANE HANGAR---- RILEY, VIOLA, AG E BUCK, AND THE SECRET ENT ENTER AN ELEVATOR, THEY SWIFTLY RISE TO THE MOUNTAIN TOP-—- THEY ARE SPIED BESIDE THE INSTANTLY FIRED uPON/ eee lees — AND IN TWELVE MINUTES THE MOUNTAIN WILL BE BLOWN up Capyrieht 1637, Lineols Newspaper Featores. [ecg oer _— LITTLE BUDDY 4 7 7 77 1 GOTTA THINK UP Some EXCUSE SO I CAM GET THE DAY OFF TODAY AND SEE THE BIG BALL GAME" GAME |. « . HE LEFT FOR YOUR FUNERAL ONY A MINUTE AGO! EXCERPTS FROM THE HISTORY OF DALLAS By WILLIAM PENN RYMAN (Willigm Penn Ryan wrote this history of Dallas first as a paper for Wyoming Historical and Geological Society in 1885. It filled such a long-felt need for a permanent record of the development of this section that he was asked to enlarge it. He set upon that task and had finished it except for a final chapter on the Civil War when, on July 31, 1889, he died.— Editor. Up to the present time, focal historians have found so much of interest connected with the set- tlement and growth of Wyoming Valley that they have neglected to note many important events in the rise and progress of the country surrounding. There is, no doubt, a vast deal of interesting historic material connected with every township in the present county of Luzerne, which, years ago, could and should have been recorded and given permanent place in its annals, but which, from long neglect is now either lost forever, or so poorly and inaccurately handed down to us to be comparatively valueless. In some parts of the country the work of collecting this material has been too long de- layed to make it possible now to get anything like an accurate account of men and events from the date of the first settlement. The men who know of their own knowledge, who lived and had ex- perience in the earliest days, are gone, leaving us only the children or grandchildren to relate what was told them by the ancestors. This kind of hear- say and tradition lets in an element of uncertainty which should not exist in any historic record. With this view and purpose of writing down what I can learn, at this late day, concerning the “over the mountain” or hill country West of Wyo- ming Valley, and especially of the present town- ship and borough of Dallas, I began in the year 1885 to make some effort to collect these materials and data from every source known to me, from examination of records, from conversation and cor- respondence with those whose memory runs farthest back and is clearest, from monuments, maps, deeds, etc., and have, in the following pages, recorded as best I can the result. I have endeavored to collect abundant proofs and the best evidence to be had before putting down any statement herein as fact. For the reasons given above I have not been able to entirely exclude hearsay or tradition; but whenever relied upon it has been fortified by the testimony of more than one witness on the same point. The township of Dallas originally embraced all the territory of Luzerne County northwest of the present boundary lines of Kingston, Plymouth and Jackson Townships, extending to the present Sull- ivan, then Lycoming, county line It included all of the township of Monroe and parts of Forkston, North Branch, Northmoreland and Eaton Twn- ships, in present Wyoming County. All of Lake and Lehman townships and part of Ross, Union and Franklin townships in present Luzerne County. Dallas Township originally joined to Kingston Township, as it now does, on the line of the South- easterly side of certified Bedford Township. The northern portion of present Dallas Township is drained by Leonard’s Creek, which passes through the village of Kunkle to Bowman's Creek, and with that into the Susquehanna River near Tunkhan- nock. The southern and larger portion of present Dallas Township, including nearly, if not quite all, of certified Bedford, is drained by Toby's Creek, which passes, by an easy grade, through a cut or gap in the mountains to Wyoming Valley at a point near the center of greatest population and activity. This is noted as important because the first immigrations to a country always follow the streams. This opening through the mountains made the country about the head waters of Toby's Creek very accessible to those living near its outlet. As soon as the settlements in the valley increased so that neighbors lived near enough to see each other, there were some restless souls who felt crowded and began to seek homes farther back into the woods. The soil ia the valley was sandy and not very rich. The trees that grew upon it were scrubby and small, while the higher lands about Dallas the soil seemed stronger and was covered with a heavy forest of very large trees. Some who first settled in the valley reasoned from this that the soil about Dallas, which could raise such, very large trees, must be richer and better for farming purposes than the soil of the valley, and they sold their farms in the valley and moved back. Of course the anthracite coal of the valley was not known of or considered then. The difficulties of settling Dallas Township were very great. It was comparatively an easy thing to cut a path or road along the banks of Toby's Creek and find a way to its source, but to settle there alone, many miles from any clearing, and meet the wolves, bears and other wild animals, which were terrible realities in those early days, saying nothing of the still pending dread of the prowling Indians, was a very serious undertaking. When a young boy I heard Mr. Charles Harris, then an old man, tell some of his early recollections, which ran back to about the time of the battle and massacres of Wyoming. He told us of the Indians who once came into the house where he and his mother were alone, and demanded food. There being nothing better they roasted a pumpkin before the fire and scraped it off and ate as fast as it be- came soft with cooking. He also told us about his father’s first settling on the westerly side of Kings- ton Mountain at what is still known as the “Harris Settlement” about two miles north of Trucksville. | He said that his father worked all the first day fell- ing trees and building a cabin. Night came on be- fore the cabin could be enclosed. With the dark- ness came a pack of wolves and, to protect his fam- ily, Mr. Harris built a fire and sat up all night to keep it burning. The wolves were dazed and would . not come near a fire, and when daylight came they disappeared. To pass one night under such circumstances re- quired bravery, but to stay, build a house, clear a farm and raise a family with such terrors constantly menacing exhibited a courage that commands our highest esteem. (Continued next week) Cm