s J w HAVE YOU PAID YOUR SUBSCRIPTION LATELY? WHY NOT CHECK UP? he Dallas Post More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution JO SERRA’S COMMENT ON THE NATIONAL SCENE— A WEEKLY FEATURE! VOL. 47 THE DALLAS POST, FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1937 28 POST SCRIPTS JIMMY CONGO ACTOR DIAMONDS CHICKENS _ We thought we had met a man nam- ed Dmitris Propotopolous this week, but his name turned out to be Pro- topapas. It would have been swell to ve been able to say casually to all our friends, “Have I told you about my friend, Dmitris Propotopolous?”’ We can see the envious look in their eyes, these people who wouldn't know any- one named Dmitris Propotopolous. Of course calling him our friend might, have been a little inaccurate but “my friend, Dmitris Propotopo- lous” is the kind of a verbal bomb- sell that enlivens dull conversation, and we frequently get so bogged down we need some bright, casual remark like that to get things going again. We met him the other evening, where doesn’t matter. His American- ized friends call him simply “Jimmy Pappas” but not us, for “Jimmy Pap- pas” doesn’t go at all with the kind of an interesting career our Mr, Pro- topapas has hung up. A huge man with a tiny, graceful mustache, he might very easily play ex- tra roles as a Grand Duke in the mov- jes. He was born in Sparta, and, siz- ing him up, you can ve§y easily be- lieve all the tales that are told of the hardy warriors ‘and athletes who came from that Grecian province.. : — ‘When he was nineteen years old he heard stories of shrewd traders who went into the interior of Africa with a bag of salt and came out laden with fortunes in ivory. So Dmitris enlist- ed two partners and set off into the Congo, determined to parlay a load of baubles and trinkets into a tremen- dous fortune. They! had been on the way a week or more when one of the partners, frankly admitting that he was afraid, took his share of the mules and na- tives and turned back. Dmitris and his remaining partner pushed on. One night, deep in the jungle and not far from their destination, Dmi- tris’ friend, who had been growing restless, said he felt ill, and ventured to wonder if they should go on. “Look,” said Dmitris, if youre get- ting scared, too, tell me mow, so we can both turn back, because I cannot go on alone, and if this thing is to fail, it may as well fail right here”. His partner resented Dmitris’ inti- mation, and became more silent than ever, They plodded on next morning, the partner growing steadily sicker, but keeping his silence lest Dmitris be- lieve him afraid. Sometime during the night, the partner died, and next morn- ing Dmitris was alone as leader of the safari. Off the trail a day and a half march was a missionary outpost, the natives told Dmitris. Determined to give his © friend a Christian burial, the nineteen- year-old youth headed the safari to- ward that spot. At mid-day, when the equatorial sun was stabbing its burn- ing rays even through the thick jun- gle growth, Dimitris knew he, too, was ill. He felt a chill beginning at his toes and spreading icily to his head— and then he felt nothing, for he col- lapsed. He regained. consciousness seven days later, on a cot in the missionaries hut. He had missed his friend's fun- eral. He had barely escaped his own. His illness, the missionaries told him, had been caused by a bite of the dread tsetse fly__whose victims seldom es- cape. Dmitris—alone of the three who had started, for the first man to turn back was never heard of __ retraced his steps to the coast, minus his fortune, but ready to start the second chapter in his colorful career. el) re The tale above came not from Mr. Portopapas, for he seems not to like to talk about himself, but from ‘the friend who introduced us. Mr, Proto- papas talks ‘mostly of other people and things he has known during his rest- less wandering about the globe. Mr. Protopapas, who once owned a rug factory in Greece, is now an ex- pert on Persian rugs. many other things. Once he had a (Continued on Page 8) He has beenj Disputed Levy Carried Board | Safely Through Dallas School Di Fiscal Year (See Editorial, Page 2) . An examination of the finances of Dallas Borough School District at the end of its fiscal year shows that the much-disputed 1936-37 budget, which was the storm center for a series of legal disputes a fyear ago, carried the district safely through the year and leaves it with a balance of $150.36 in the general fund and $154.80 in the sinking fund. The balance is significant in view of the controversyover the millage a year ago, when a group of taxpayers petitioned the court to reduce the board's levy from 30 rmills to 27. A compromise was effected and the court fixed the millage at 29 a year ago this month. That millage saw the district through the par without financial strain, thanks to an unexpected ap- propriation from the state, and leaves the board in sound financial condition as the new year starts. A study of the financial report in- dicates that the 27 mill levy requested by the petitioners would have been in- adequate and would have necessitated severe cuts somewhere. The amount budgeted was $36,732, but since this included payment of loans which were immediately replac- ed by new loans, the actual expense of running the district was a little more than $P8,000. The district received $309.28 more in delinquent taxes than it had estimated and a $696.20 appropriation from the state that had not been counted on. These excess receipts were nearly balanced gy deficits on property taxes, tuition and interest accounts. The directors cut under estimated expenditures in several accounts, their biggest saving being in plant mainten- ance, where they spent only $566.85 of the estimated $929. All in all, the financial report of Secretaamy Daniel A. Whaters indicated a very sound financial condition for tht local school distrecti. Carverton Woman Dies dn Hospital Suffered Ho Auto Injuries Cras Sturday Injured in an automobile accident in Wyoming last Saturday night, Mrs. Herman Sands, 50, Carverton Road, died early Sunday morning in Nes- bitt Memorial Hospital, Kingston. Mrs. Sands had parked her car on the right side of Wyoming Avenue, near Third Street, and was crossing to a store where she intended to buy a, birthday gift for her husband. She wag struck bp! a car driven by Victor Zdonowicz, 49 East Fourth Street, Wyoming. Mrs. Sands fell to the pave- ment and was rushed to the hospital, where examination showed she had suffered a fractured skull, fractured ribs and internal injuries. The driver of the car was released under bail on an involuntary man- slaughter charge. The funeral was held at the home at Carverton on Wiednesday afternoin at 3:30. Rev. Eugene Heim of Trinity Episcopal Church, and Rev. Charles Gilbert of Carverton M. E. Church, of- ficiated. Interment was in Carverton cemetery. Roe Is Official In Swimming Unit Irving Roe of Dallas elected vice-president of the V#woming Valley was Swimming Association at a meeting this week. The association is spon- soring a series of meets, the first of which was held last Sunday at Har- veys' Lake. NEXT CHANCE TO REGISTER ON JULY 15; MAY FIX OTHER DAYS The next date for permanent regis- tration in Dallas and vicinity will be July 15, next Thursday} but it is like- ly that additional days for registration will have to be fixed as a result of confusion shown so far. Less than 10 per cent of the voters registered on the first day. Only those who are registered under the new ar- rangement will be permitted to vote thig Fall. ; Persons not yet registered will not be allowed to sign petitions of candi- | dates, according to an. unofficial opin- Cornmissioners’ offices. jon from the Bureau of Elections this week, The primary election will be Tues- day, September 14, and the general election will be on Tuesday, Noven- ber 2. Candidates for office must file their petitions for the primaries by Monday, July 26, and will have until July 31 to withdraw. Wednesday, September 1, will be the last. day for borough and township residents to register at the County | THEY GO DOWN TO THE SEA IN SHIPS ROM hundreds of little fishing villages along the east and the west coasts of Canada, fishermen daily go down to the sea in ships. These fishermen are as picturesque as the villages they live in. remained utterly unspoiled by the advance of a rather hectic civilization and they are just beginning to be discovered by tourists, especially hotographs, Canadian Nation Both have by those who visit Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and the \ ispe Peninsula. In the upper left hand corner of the layout, a swordfish fisherman is just launching his harpoon in the famous waters off Cape Breton Island; upper right, a Nova Scotia tuna is being hoisted on to a wharf near Chester while the lower group shows two rugged Atlantic fishermen and one of the typical fish- ing villages that dot the shore of the Gaspe Peninsula. FIREWORKS BANNED IN BOROUGH AS RESULT QF THOUGHTLESS USE Council Adopts. Ordinances Prohibiting#Sale And Se y COMPLAINTS MADE As a result of numerous complaints concerning careless use of fireworks over the holiday week-end Dallas Bor- ough Council moved promptly on Wed- nesday night to ban the sale and the shooting of fireworks in the borough in the future. Thoughtless celebrators were re- ported to have set off their fireworks near the home of several residents of town who are seriously ill, and to have ignored requests to move else- where. In one case firecrackers were said to have been thrown on the roof of a home where a woman was ill. al- though there were no serious injuries, several children suffered, burns cele- brating. ; . Warden Kunkle was. the only coun- cilman to oppose the “measure. He a- greed that some control was neces- sary, but he argued that the shooting of fireworks has become an establish- ed American patriotic custom and one which most people enjoy. He sug- gested that council investigate some plan to control the use of fireworks to satisfy those who are annoyed and those who will be disappointed. A number of communities in the county already have ordinances pro- hibiting the sale and use of fireworks. In some cases, when children are de- prived of the thrill of celebrating in a noisy manner, the community stages a public demonstration of fireworks on the evening of the Fourth. At the same meeting of council a drive to force property owners to cut weeds on vacant lots by August 1 was started. If thgy neglect to obey the ordinance, the weeds will be cut by the borough and the bill sent to the property owners. Two-Family Rally Attracts Throng Frears And Parrishes Renew Acquaintances At * Reunion The, thirty-first annual the Frear and Parrish families was held at Montross Grove, Perrin's Marsh, on Wednesday, June 30. reunion of The officers retained for the follow- ing year are: Nelson Parrish, presi- dent; Dorothy Johnson, secretary- treasurer; and Florence Frear, histor- ian. Mrs. Cora Frear Hawkins of Wiash- ington, D. C., daughter of the late Dr. E. D. Frear of Sioux City, Ia., gave an interesting folk.. She requested re- cords to help complete the famiy, his- tory she is making. Sylvia Lyons, granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lyons, gave several readings, The following attended: Noxen: Mr. and Mrs. Karl Meeker, Karla, Faye Meeker, Mrs. Elsie Dennis, Norms and Harold Dennis, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Meeker, Lorraine Meeker, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Saxe, Karl Saxe Keiper, Ernest Weber. Beaumont: Xr. and Mrs. Earl John- son, Warren and Jack Johnson, Callie Parrish, Cora Frear, Mrs. William Belles, Ralph Richards, and Florence Frear. ; ‘White Haven: Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Altimus, Mrs. Oscar Sipler, Lillian, Edith and Madelyn Sipler, William Trimmer. (Continued on Page 8) Building permits for new houses were granted to Nicholas Cave and W. T. Sheehan, both of Huntsville Street. Repairing permits were grant- ed to Conrad F. Miller and to H. A. Smith. I'm up a tree, half the time. there helpin’ around. cribs. even more comical. LOW DOWN FROM HICKORY RIDGE goin’ on is goin’ on backwards from what I got used to when my mother and father was down there on the farm and us boys we was We was happy as larks, I know that, even though once in a while we did work a speck and get up a sweat and look as black as the ground, so you wouldn't know us by night, after runnin’ a har- row all day. And we tried to raise all the corn we could every year, and some years we raised lots, and some years not so much. : But now, things are so kinda left handed like ¢! at a farmer don’t know what to do, ‘cause one year Uncle Sam tells hii. to slow down, and then the weather turns dry, and he has no crop. And this year it is just the opposite, and they are broadcastin’ to fill up the corn Just like women wearin’ men’s pants—they sure look comical, and with these swivel chair boys down there in Washington tellin a regular farmer how much, and how, and where to plow, they a: Yours with the low down, JO SERRA Seems like just about everything { Reckless Drivers Scored In Trial — Prominent Folk In Unusual Drama At M. E. Church Tonight “Death at the Wheel”, a tense drama of the highwawpt, described as ‘“‘a cure for reckless driving”, will be presented by a cast of local people. at Dallas M. E. Church tonight at 8 in the interest of civic righteousness. better govern- ment and highway safety. > Attorney! B. B. Lewis will :¢ the judge, Rev. Francis 1. Freeman wili be the district attorney and Rev. E. N. Bergerstock of the Anti-saloon League will be the defense attorney. Others in the cast will be Walter Rau as Frank Jackson, the defendant; Joseph Jewell as the policeman; John | Durbin as Doctor Stover; Helen Him- mler, Mrs. Thomas Him, Eugene Fiske, Machel Hildebrand, Leonard O'Kane, Ruth Kintz and Barbara Clark. The jurors will be Thomas Him, foreman; A. H. Culbert, Mrs. LaVerne Race, Mrs. M. Baker, James Oliver, Zel Garinger, William Baker, John Frantz, Mrs. E. Weidner, Miss Eleanor Machell, Mrs. H. Scott, and Mrs. David Blocksage. Members of the cast are asked to re- port for a rehearsal at 6 p. m. Fix Grade School Value At,/$10,000 § d / Borough School fous en ‘Over Year’s Records To Auditors A committee of school directors fixed the valuation of the grade school building at $10,000 at a meeting of Dallas Borough School Board on Wed- nesday night. The committee was assigned to set the value when the auditors listed the building at a valuation lower than that set by W. C. Shepherd, who ap- praised it last year. Directors Ro- berts, Lapp and Davies were members of the committee, At the same meeting the board turned over its record for the last year to the auditors. Bonds for the secretary and treasurer were ordered. Bids for janitor and school supplies and building repairs were opened and referred to a committee having as its members J. E. Roberts, Stanley Davies and H. L. Tennyson, supervising prin- Directors Give Martin Contract Kingston Township Board Obeys Co S Ruling On | Tdst Case START PLAYGROUND Following instructions of the court, Kingston Township School Board on Wednesday night awarded a pears contract to James A. Martin, super- vising principal. Upon advice of attorneys the direct- ors decided not to appeal from the de- cision of Judge William S. McLean, who ruled that the township board had violated the new Mundy Teacher Tenure Bill when it refused to re- appoint Mr. Martin. In renewing Mr. Martin’s contract, the directors voted to increase his sal- ary $300, making it $2,500 yearly. Earl Newhart, president, voted a- gainst the motion to award the conm- tract and to increase the salary. Di- rectors Bennett, Prater and Appleton voted affirmatively? The awarding of the of the Tenure Bill, which provides only upon proper charges. Although Kingston Township board presented arguments in its case it did not, at any time, bring charges against Mr. Martin. (Continued on Page 8° Township Board Awards Contract Cobleighs Get Order For Coal For Dallas Township Cobleigh Bros. of Shavertown re- ceived a contract to supply coal to the Dallas Township School Board at its meeting on Tuesday night. Kenneth Cobleigh’s bid was 20 tons of chest- nut size at $6.25 a ton and 150 tons of buckwheat at $3.90 a ton. The board also purchased twenty typewriters of various makes at a total cost of $1,200. Successful bid- ders were E. I. Ofgant, A. C. Dampf, J. M. Hart and M. R. Welch. Bids on typewriter tables and chairs were referred to a committee, !Noxen Men Visit Soaring Contests See Ace Soarers Topping Air Currents For Long Flights 77 W. Fassett Crosby and Robert Tur- rel of Noxen spent an interesting af- ternoon last Sunday at Elmira, N. Y., watching famous glider pilots of the world competing in the National Soar- ing Contest winch is being held at the New York state citys for two weeks. Mr. Crosby, who was associated with the hiladelphia Air Transport Co. at Norristown and piloted his own plane Lor some years, was especially inter- ested in the ability of the gliders to stay for hours in the air by takiag ad- vantage of air currents. Gliding, he says, demands a thorough knowledge of meteorglogical phenomena und the soaring meet attracts a number of scientists who study the performance of the light gliders. There was only! a light breeze on Sunday so some of the heavier gliders were being towed aloft by planes, Mr. Crosby reports. Once up, some of them could ride one currtnt after ano- ther for hours. The gliders take off from the heights above the Elmira airport. The pilots maneuver them with the aid of pedals and a stick and have instruments which record the flight. Mr. Crosby and Mrs. Turrell were especially impressed by the flights of Lieut. Bronius Oskinis of Lithuania, whose” soaring plane, brought to this country, crashed in a forced landing cipal, for a report at the next meet- ing. on Tuesday. PER CAPITA COST FOR PUPILS HERE BELOW 300-CITY AVERAGE The cost of educafing a pupil«h D las Borough schools is $36,726“ per year less than the avfrag st computed recently following™a survey of 300 school districts throughout the nation. Recently “Public Education”, the monthly bulletin of Pennsylvania De- partment of Public Instruction, report- ed that the average per capita expense per year for one pupil's education in 300 cities was $96.18. A study of the new budget of Dallas Borough school district indicates that the figure for the borough is $59.42. This brings the. cost of educating one pupil in the local school district to thirty-three cents a day, as com- pared to fifty-three cents per day in the 300 cities in the survey. ? In Dallas Borough, the cost of in- struction, operation, maintenance, ad- ministration and services far one year totals $23,769. This includes $600 for tax collection and $500 for the retire- ‘nent board not listed in the figures given in the survey which would re- duce the borough’s figures even more, And $300 Raise Ts see A contract brought to an end the board's test that directors may discharge teachers or & a