. fair grounds. . front, watching the rhythmic spasms "PHONE 300 FOR WAYS TO INCREASE YOUR BUSINESS “J he TIaTT=< Pos More Than A Newspaper. A Community Institution HARVEST TIME— A TIME TO ADVERTISE IN THE POST “NOL. 47 POST SCRIPTS FAIR INDIANS FIFE LIFE WAR The pleasant weather last Saturday afternoon attracted us to the Blooms- Burg Fair where, besides seeing a number of Dallas folk, we ran up a- gainst a bunch of Indians who were selling hand-made trinkets, which ap- parently had been shipped from the reservation to be stamped and wrap- ped by a famous Chicago novelty firm. Saturday, you may remember, wasn’t a particularly promising day. After a week of glorious weather, the last day of the fair brought overcast skies. Then, about noon, the sun burst forth and people began jamming into the It was perfect weather, and the Indians were doing swell busi- ness. They wouid sell their trinkets while the crowd was good and when it began to thin they would begin to thump their tom-toms and dance what they announced was the “Snake Dance”, and another crowd would gather. We were standing well up of the Red Men, when we heard the gentleman next to us snort. What's wrong?’ we asked. “Some one ought to stop them,” he said, snorting more vociferously. It looked harmless to us. “Why?” we asked. “Well,” said the stranger, casting his eyes over the crowd, “I happen to know about that dance. That one they're doing is supposed to be a sure prayer for rain.” Or - About the most interesting thing in The Post these days is the weekiy in- stallment of William Penn Ryman’s History of Dallas on page 6. A great many people speak to us about things they've read in it. This week Mr. Ry- man describes some of the old Fourth of July shindigs and pays tribute to John Hazletine, whose selections on the fife were a traditiona: feature of those celebrations. Shortly after we read the proof we were talking to Ralph Hazletine and we thought he’d be interested. BR We mentioned that this week’s installment mentioned a John Hazletine. “He must have been a relative of yours, wasn’t he,” we asked. Ralph smiied. “He was my great-grandfather,” he said. We asked him if he had read Mr. Ryman’s account of Mr. Hazle- tine’s mastery of the fife. Of course Ralph had and, what’s more, he owns the very fife with which his great- grandfather thrilled the Indepenaence Day picnics here 100 years ago. Mr. Hazletine, incidentally, com- mands our profoundest respect for his amazing knowledge of the history of this section, We have sat dumbly while old timers drew old tates from their memories but we have never met anyone as young as Mr. Hazletine who could match him for authorita- tive information about the early days here. He is a member, of course, of one oldest and best respected families of this section. His great-grandfather, John Hazletine, was the youngest of thirteen children. It wag the oldest of the thirteen, Amos, who taught hin to play the fife, and John's swift fin- gers and gay tunes enlivened more than one party hereabouts a century ago as a result of his brother's 'ies- sons. Today Ralph treasures three old files from those days. One of the instruments is at least 150 years old, Mr. Hezletine estimates. = Until this week we never knew that Dallas aimost had a tuberculosis sani- tarium once. In 1897 the Luzerne County Medical Society indorsed a plan to construct a sanatarium here. Dr. Johnson, the scholarly editor of the Wilkes-Barre Record, was one Of the leaders of the movement. The plan didn’t fade permanently until about 1921, when the county decided to use the White Haven sanitarium. tive With a tardiness that is somewhat disiilusioning, “Life”, which makes BERT HILL ELECTED DIRECTOR IN PLACE OF LATE ASA LEWIS Herbert Hil, Shavertowsi flor- - ist, was/ elected a dirgefor of the Dutch / Mountain ay Products Co. Inc, this wel to fill the va- cancy “left y the death of Asa E. Lewis, Mr. Hill will serve with the group of loca! men who are dev- loping valuable clay deposits near Lopez, on the old Daddow farm, The company announced this week that the Blaw-Knox Co. of Pittsburgh is preparing to: erect the building which will house the machinery at the ciay deposits and other preparations for production are being rushed by Bert Wiolliv- er, plant superintendent. D.T. H.S. In First - Home Game Today Sem Jayvees Play Borough; Ashley At Trucksville; Lehman Away Three of this section’s high school football teams wiil be playing home this week-end, the best gridiron fare the local fans have had this year. Topping the week-end schedule in interest wil be the Dallas Township- Factoryvilie contest on the township field this afternoon. Coach Doll's e- leven, which won only one game last year, has been creating somewhat of a sensation as a result of a scoreless tie with Exeter and a near-upset with West Pittston, both teams in an ad- mittedly higher ciass than the local circuit. All eyes will be on Mahler, speedy township halfback, who is given credit for a bit of Dallas Township's show- ing against Wiest Pittston last Sat- urday. West Pittston won, 25 to 20, but Mahler's brilliant play late in the game almost changed the outcome. Ripping through the line for gains ranging from twelve to forty yards, Mahler carried the ball across twice then Broke away for a thirty-yard gain which put the ball on West Pitt- ston’s three-yard line so Knecht, the township ¢uarterback, could take it over on thé néxt piay. In the last ‘ninute of play Mahler intercepted a pass and was through half the Wiest Pittston team before he wag downed and the final whistle blew. Borough Plays Sem Dallas Borough, which made a bad start last week, bowing to Factory- vile, 20° to 0, will play its first home game thig afternoon (Friday) when it entertains the Wyoming ‘Seminary Junior Varsity on McVeigh Field. Coach Tinsley of Dallas felt the big (Continued on Page 8) NYA Aid Locally Cut $318 For °37 Four Schools To Get Less For Worthy Pupils Who Need Help A slash in NYA appropriations will make itself felt in four loca school districts, where young people who have been receiving government aid will have to get along on $318.90 less for 1937-’38. One of the least-known of the Fed- eral heip plans the National Youth Administration makes it possible for worthy pupils to continue school by paying them for part-time jobs, usu- ally about the school. Last year worthy young people of Dallas Borough, Dallas Township, Kingston Township and Lake Town- ship received more than $2,000. This year, as the result of a 75 per cent. slash in the State and a 16 per cent. slash in the county, the four schools will received only $1,736.70. The appropriations for compared with last, follow: this year, Friday of each week bright for us, (Continued on Page 8) '36-"37 '37-’38 Dallas Borough $ 280.00 $235.20 Dallas Township 391.60 328.94 Kingston Township 1,168.00 981.12 Lake Township 216.00 191.44 MOTORMAN RECALLS OLD NAMES ALONG DALLAS TROLLEY E By RAMBLER Riding down on the trolley to Wilkes Barre, the other day, we got to alk- ing with the motorman, J. B. Rood. Mr. Rood has been on the Harvey's Lake line for seventeen years. We thought he ought to know everybody in this region then. He said no, but he knew where they ali lived. Baffled we were quiet for a while, occupying ourselves by shifting from one side of the car to the other as the doors opened behind our back to let passengers on and off. Evidently feeling our discomfort, Mr. Rood relented enough to point out Toby's Creek and explain that it used to be called Bloody Run along some of eS NEnEE slaughter houses on its banks. That used to be the name of Shavertown, too, he said, According to Mr. Rood Shavertown was Toby's Creek, Luzerne was Mill Hollow and Sweet Valley was Pleas- ant Hill at some time during their histories , But the quick change artist among locatities was the present Oakdale which wag successively Pritchard's Corners, Wagner's Corners, and final- ly Oakdale. It seems that every time a new postmaster was appointed he changed the name. Wie “wondered if Mr. Rood knew the reagon why the other towns had their names changed, but he said no, may- because of the fourteen)be they just got tired of the old ones. | middle 1920's. THE DALLAS POST, Ku Klux Klan Eager To Regain Its Lost Power Spotlighted By Black Affair, Klan Drives For New Members j Lor TEN YEARS DORMANT Fiery crosses may blaze again on the hills above Dallas-if the Ku Klux Klan, which has been spotlighted by Klansman Hugo Black's appointment to the Supreme Court, succeeds in its efforts to regain its onetime power here. Far from being dead, the Klan to- day numbers many local men as its members. Reliable sources informed The Post this week that the Ku Klux Klan is gaining new strength in this section. The Klan which is rising from the ashes today, however, is a different one from the one which claimed so many local' men as members in the It is as strong as ever for what is called “100 per cent Am- ericanism” but its leaders are emph- atic in forbidding any vioience. It retains its religious and racial pre- Jjudices, but it intends to concentrate this time on a holy war against Com- munism and Fascism. Leaders in the revival, many of whom were big shots in the hooded order ten years ago, are charting their course carefully, in the hope that by avoiding the pitfalis which brought about disintegration of the Klan here in 1927 ‘they can win public support for the secret society. Once Powerful Here The Ku Klux Klan had tremendous power in the rural sections surround- ing Dallas a decade ago. Many prom- inent men were affiliated with the weird conclave. At first the scattered members heid their membership a dark secret, but as its power grew and it gained more and more members the Klan shed some of its secrecy. Occasionally Klansmen saluted each other boldly in public. In Forty Fort a whole army of white-hooded Klans- men paraded in broad day:.ight. At the height of its membership the Klan ever invited, the public to some of its ceremonies. Such public demonstrations were generally conducted in igolated sec- tions. Accommodating Klansmen stop- ped cars, made a brief examination of the occupants and directed them to a parking place from which they could watch the ceremony, the climax of which usuaily was th burning of a huge ¢ross which had been wrapped in gasoline-soaked burlap bags. The, only restriction was that visitors should not turn their headlights on the hooded men and women who were taking part in the ritual. i At one time the Klan was a domin- ant factor in local elections and there (Continued on Page 8) Patience Tried By Luzerne Pave Letter - Writer Describes Traffic Tangle This Week Voicing the sentiments of hundreds of 'motorists who pray for a by-pass, a Dallas woman who experienced Lu- zerne traffic at its worst on/Tuesgdy night has sent the toilowing~”com- munication to The Post. Editor: ,"Is there no redress? “We have had statements by impor- tant people, key men in the county. Wee have had thousands of words written on the subject of the Luzerne by-pass. “I wish it were possible to think that these few. sentences might be fanning a flame already kindled by the foregone pronouncements, “But it seems to the long-suffering public that forms the continuous stream of traffic through Luzerne that the project promised his community has gone as dead as the proverbial door nail . “Any one coming through Main street, Luzerne, on Tuesday evening of this week must have been impres- sed by a particularly bad condition. ,'Cars iined both sides of the street. A. truck was parked inside the right- hand line, and just there the .pave next to the car tracks ig broken, mak- ing a small but effective rut into which one car after another was forc- ed to settle. The road was slippery from rain and the cars forced to skid out of the rut past the aforesaid truck. “It was frightening in the extreme FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1937 St. Paul's Church of where special services will be held Sunday to dedica- te a new Hammond elec- Rev. Herbert E. Frankfort is pastor. Lutheran Shavertown, tric organ. ST. PAUL'S DEDICATES ORGAN ON SUNDAY ~~ ~ te a ee hn pr borer — -~ SECOND CENTURY OF LIFE IS UNDER WAY FOR HANNAH LOOMIS Mrs. Hannah = Tunk- hannock is well started on the second century of her tiife today. Yesterday she celebrated her 101st birthday anniversary at her home in Tunkhannock. Hundreds of greeting cards flooded her home at 56 Putnam street and scores of friends came to pay their personal tributes. Mrs. Loomis was born in Ly- nianville, Susquehanna county. A freak’ storm on the night of her birth, October 7, 1836, blanketed the earth under three feet of snow. She can remember wolves howling around her father’s home. She can remember, too, when the trip from Lymanville to Wilkes- Barre was a week's journey. She lives with her daughter, Mrs. Virginia L. Leighton, who is in her seventies. Gibsons Arrive Safely In Japan Left Here In August After Spending Summer With Washburns Mr, and Mrs. Frank Murray Gib- son and their two children, who left here in August bouna for Japan, have arrived safely in their home in Tokio. Mr, and Mrs. Gibson spent the sum- ‘ner here with Mrs. Gibson’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Wiashburn of Ide- town. Mr. Gibson is a veteran repre- sentative of the Bethlehem Steel Co. in the Orient. The Washburns have received no di- rect word from the Gibsons since they sailed from Honolulu but Mr. Gibson cabied his home office upon arrival and the news was relayed to the Washburns, who are anxiously await- ing further reports of the conditions the Gibsons found in the Orient. As far as can be learned Mr. and | Mrs. Gibson have made no cnauges iu their plans, which were for them to make their home in Tokio, where they had lived for several years before re- turning to this country for a holiday. Mr, Gibson also had plans to visit Shanghai this month and presumably wilt carry out those plans unless deve- lopments prevent. Shortly before they left, Mr. Mrs. Gibson graciously told a Post re- porter about their experiences in the Orient. They knew personally many of the figures whose names have been important in news of the Sino-Jap- anese conflict. Fall Partially Paralyzes Baby Nine-Month-Old Child Falls From Bed; Condition Serious Partialty paralyzed As the result of a fall from a bed on Sunday after- noon, Ralph Fitch, nine-nonths-old son of Mr .and Mrs. Ralph Fitch of Parrish street, Dallas, was still in a serious condition yesterday. to see cars preceding ours accomplish this perilous feat, but much more so for collision had resulted? Isn't it time the motorist begins to demand dammn- ages for the impassable condition of roads which hig taxes are supposed to keep in repair? Could we sue the County, the town or the State? “Is there any redress?” The baby was taken to Genera: Hos- pita on Sunday and has been under us to experience it ourselves. atfobservaiion all week. At first it was whose door would the fault lay if a!reported the child had infantile para- lysis, but doctors reported different. They also expressed opinion that ne baby’s spine had not been broken but [It is still suffering from partial para- | lysis. | i bed and struck on the back of its neck. and | The child feil while playing on the To Dedicate New Organ On Sunday Prof. E. H. Bénnett To Play Recital At Evening Program The congregation of St. Paul's Lu- theran church of Shavertown will de- dicate its new Hammond electric or- gan at a special service on Sunday morning at 11. Rev. Herbert E. Frankfort, pastor, will preach the dedicatory ser.non, us- ing as his theme “Music, A Universal Language”. In the evening Prof. E. H. Bennett, organist and choir director of Kings- ton M. E. church, wil: play a program designed to show the versatility of the instrument. Mrs. Benjamin Rhorer, soloist at. Emmanuel Lutheran church, Lancaster, will sing several solos. Prof. Bennett's program follows: “Elegy”, Lemaigre; “Pilg v's" Chuvns” by Wagner, “Reverie”, C/ Jacob-Bond Eddy; “Jubilate Deo”, Silver; Impro- visation, D flat, E. H. Bennett; “To a Wild Rose”, MacDowell; “Pomp and Circumstance”, Elgar; “O Thou Su- blime Evening Star”, Wagner; “Marche Solennelie”, Lemaigre. Weighs Only 300 Pounds The Hammond organ is a recent development, having been presented formally to the musical world in Aprils, 1935, at Rockefelier Center. The res- ponse to its performance was im- mediate and since then thousands of instruments have been placed in pub- lic auditoriums, schools and churches. The tones are generated electrically and the range equals that of any pipe organ. It has no pipes or reeds, no air ‘pressure system or vibrating parts. The console is smalier than that of the conventional upright piano. It weighs barely 300 pounds. The program Professor Bennett has friends of the St. Paul's congregation an opportunity to hear the unusual in- strument at its best. Vespers will be. entirely musical in selected will give members and character at St. Paul’s on ‘Sunday and the offering will be taken for the music fund. Request County To Pay Borough Council To Get Rent For Polling Place In Future | The Dallas Borough building on Rice street will not be available as a polling place next month uniess the county pays for it, as it does for other polling quarters, borough council de- cided on Wednesday night. William Niemeyer, secretary, was authorized to inform the County Com- missioners that in the future rent will be asked when the borough building is used as a potling place. No. 41 Mundy Promises Road Contract By Year’s End Says By-Pass Construction May Not Start Before Spring FUTURE PLANNING formed directors/6f WyomingValley Motor Club this“Week that the ey tract for the long-awaited Luzerne by-pass will be awarded before the end of this year, but construction probably will not start before Spring. Senator Mundy, chairman of the club’s road committee, assured Nor- man Johnstone, secretary, that the contemplated highway improvements zerne County. Negotiations between the State Highway Department and Wilkes- Barre Railway Corp, are understood to be the chief cause for delay now. the by-pass would be started yet this year. : See Super-Highway needed Luzerne by-pass is well on its way toward construction next year, the groups which have crusaded for the improvement for the last ten vears are aiready considering future Wiith the Luzerne problem solved, the worst link in the Dallas-Wilkes- Barre highway will be between Trucksvil.e and Dallas, where motor- ists have the choice of following the hilly route over Mt. Greenwood or the winding road through Shavertown, both too narrow for the volume of traffic they must carry in the summer. If the by-pass is laid over part of the right-of-way of the Wilkes-Barre Railway Corp. the traction company wili abandon its street car service and substitute busses. This will leave the right-of-way available for highway @ construction and Wyoming Valley Motor Club/ already has dis- cussed with officiais the advisability of of -way between Trucksville and Dal- las for a new highway. By that plan the new road would begin at the end of the present con- following the traction company’s right of way through Shavertown and Fern- brook and come into Dalias Toby's Creeb, below Main street. The new highway would cut across Main street to join Lake street at its junc- tion with Machell avenue, i In some distant day that super- leaving the present road out of Dallas and cutting across the’ fields to join the present road at the Robinson Farm, a route which would shorten the distance between Dallas and Har-. vey’'s Lake considerably. PTA To Enlarge Scope Of Work Borough Unit Establishes Card System For Members As a part of its drive to enlarge the scope of its work, Dallas Borough Parent-Teacher Association plans to sponsor a number of interesting iec- tures and entertainments this winter and is seeking new members. ced by a casual system of dues which were fixed at ten cents a month. In the next week a new plan will be put into effect whereby members will pay fifty cents dues for the year and re-. ceive signed by the treasurer. TE The next meeting of the Parent- Teacher Association will be held in the high schooi on Monday night Oc- tober 18. Officials have extended a warm invitation to all persons who are interested in the schools, , regardless of whether they are parents or teach- ers. ! ‘Officers of the local PTA are Mrs. Reese Finn, president; H. L. Tenny- son, vice-president; Mrs, Lewis Le- - Some ruture coach of Dallas Bor- ough High School's football team will inherit a snappy bunch of football candidates if all the youngsters who are after Post footballs make the grade, Tops among the juvenille subscrip- tion salesmen who enlisted this week is Dick Phillips, who has already earned a football and is well on the way toward a motion picture camera. ‘Among the other local youngsters who tare after some of the 350 gifts which |are available are Henry Lee, Dana i Lee, Donala Atkinson, Thomas Atkin . Ne 3 aR JUVENILE SALESMEN LIKE 350 : FREE GIFTS OFFERED BY POST son, Donald Still, Peynton Lee, Harold Weyenrmeyer and Patrick Spurgeon. Most of them are working for foot- balls. The Post is anxious to hear from some energetic young go-getters in the towns about Dallas. They should be ten years of age or older. A catalogue of all the exciting free gifts can be seen at The Post. The boys have been planning to use the street car right- State Senator Leo-CT™ “Mindy in. in Luzerne are foremost among the = road projects he is seeking for Lu- Earlier in the year Dr. Mundy said With fair assurance that the much highway developments in this section. future crete near the Mt, Greenwood station 3 along highway ‘may be further improved by In the past the PTA has been finan- a printed etl ‘card, ¢ Grand, second vice-president; Mrs. Richard Templin, secretary; Arthur Dungey, treasurer. instructed to be as polite and courte- ous as possible in soliciting subscrip- tions. ! ; Any disobedience of that rule shoud be reported promptly to The Post. A Se