f If You Are Not A Subscriber To The Post Why Not Phone Dallas 300 And Order The Paper Deliv- ered To Your Home Every Week? It Costs Only $2.00 A Year. es More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution DALLAS POST Eack Week On its Editorial Page The Post Endeavors To Interpret The News As It Sees It. To Understand Local Trends, Read The Editorial Page Regularly. Vol. 48 J THE DALLAS POST. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1938 No. 49 Susquehanna Drops After Sudden Rise Alarms Observers Heavy Rains Wash Record Thanksgiving Snow Away CREST NEAR 14 FEET Warm rains which washed last week's record-breaking snow into the tributaries of the Susquehanna River sent that stream on a rampage this week and threatened for a while to test Wyoming Valley's new flood levees. U. S. Army Engineers, who watched the river level rise eight feet in three days, said, however, that the freshet had caused no damage and had not afforded a serious test of the huge dikes, which were well above the high- water mark. Some damage may have been dpne where currnts tore at fresh soil, ey said, but it would be re- placed easily. oo Any cause for alarm’ vanished when _Joh@ Mirmak, pier observer at Wilkes-Barre, gghounced on Wednes- day night thagthe river had apparent- 1y jreachedy ts crest, just short of 14 feet. Hedexpected a steady recession 4 p. m. 6.53 ft. 8.99: ft. 13.81 ft. 13.86 ft. Tuesday Wednesday ...13.74 ft. Thursday 13.75 ft. When Abram’s Creek, which cuts through the flats between Forty Fort and Wyoming, backed up on Wednes- day. Wyoming Avenue was covered by one and one-half feet of water and cars were permitted to pass at their own risk. A bridge below the airport blocked the flow of the creek and caused it to overflow its banks. Some of the low- er parts of Wyoming Valley Airport were flooded but not enough to stop planes from using the port, according to George Eckman, manager, By Wed- nesday the water had receded. Utility Proposes Peace Conference Wants To Meet Council To Discuss Water Situation A proposal that Dallas Borough councilmen confer with officials of Dallag Water Co. in an effort to solve the local water problem without legal action was received by council from the utility on Wednesday night. Council has instituted action through the Public Utility Commission against the water company, charging that its service is inadequate. Robert Craig of Harrisburg, general manager of the company, acknowledged Secretary Wil- liam Niemeyer’s letter reporting coun- cil’s step. He suggested that a con- ference might bring a satisfactory ad- justment and save legal expense, An amusing, and perhaps signifi- cant incident, arose when Clyde Lapp proposed half-seriously that Council- man Peter Clark be drafted as a can- didate fer County Commissioner next year, a suggestion which evoked a good bit of good-natured joshing and em- barrassed Mr. Clark, who is also Sixth District G. O. P. chairman. Former Tax Collector : Dies At Luzerne Home The funeral of Henry Nothoff, for- mer tax collector of Luzerne Borough and well known in West Side mining circles, will be held tomorrow (Satur- day) morning at 8:30 from his home, 759 Bennett, street, Luzerne, with a high mass of requiem aff Sagred Heart Church at 9 and intgrpdent in St. Mary's Cemetery, Hanover Township. Mr. Nothoff died Tuesday night of complications at his home. The body was removed to the funeral parlors of Charles Betz, Bennett street, Luzerne, after death. Surviving are his wife, Margaret, the following children, John of Har- vey’s Lake, Charles and Marion at home, Mrs. Joseph R. Harris and Mrs, J. R. Birkbeck, both of Luzerne, Mrs. J. J. Nash of Salem, Mass., Fred Noth- off of New York and Henry of Buffalo, and a sister, Mrs W. Arthur Lewis of Trucksville, and 11 grandchildren. Prof. W. A. Kuhn Dies At Wellsville Home Prof, Wesley A. Kuhn, a teacher dn the business school at Wyoming Sem- inary from 1883 to 1927, died on Mon- day. November 21, at his home at Wellsville. Since the death of his wife last March, Professor Kuhn had been living at the family homestead in Wellsville, near York, Roosevelt Invited To Help In Ending Newspaper Strike Citizens Committee Also Invites James To Intercede STILL DEADLOCKED An appeal to President Roosevelt and Governor-elect James to aid in ending Wilkes-Barre’s two-month-old newspaper strike was made this week by a citizens’ committee headed by Ben IL. Jenkins and including many of the large business firms of Wyoming Valley. The committee asked = President Roosevelt to instruct the National La- bor Relations Board to hold an elec- tion of Wilkes-Barre newspaper em- pldyes to settle the knotty “jurisdic- diction” problem which was respon- sible for the calling off of negotiations between publishers and striking Amer- ican Newspaper Guildsmen in October. The balloting would determine whether the guild, a C. I, O, affiliate, or whether the A. F, of L.’s Federation of Office Workers should bargain for employes of the three daily newspaper, non-mechanical gropps who are not employes in the editorial rooms. _~ Another messagef was sent 46 Gov- ernor-elect James, as his inter- cession. A possibilty of some response ‘to the committee’s appeal was seen in the arrival of Samuel G. Zack, counsel for the National Labor Relations Board, at Wilkes-Barre, on Wednes- day. The Sunday Independent manage- ment, which signed a contract with the Guild a week ago, will not be able to publish this Sunday because the In- ternational Typographical Union, which is megotiating for itself with all four publishers, has refused to deal separately with The Independent. Lehman Coach’Gets Wilkes-Barre Post Malcolm McCulloch Named | Physical Ed. Teacher By City Board Malcolm McCulloch, faculty member of Lehman Township High School, re- signed his post this week and took over his duties as physical education |# instructor schools. ; p. He was appointed to the $1,400 po- sition at a meeting} of the AV ilkes- Barre school board Monday” by a vote of 6 to 3, and his resignation was ac- cepted by the Lehman Township di- rectors the same night, A graduate of Stroudsburg State Teachers’ College in 1936, Mr. McCul- loch has: taught at Lehman High for the past two years and coached two successful football teams. He plays professional basketball with the Pitts- ton team of the NYP Basketball League, and is a brother of Charles McCulloch, assistant superintendent of buildings for the Wilkes-Barre school district. in Wilkes-Barre publi€ & ‘Widow Of Minister Dies At Age Of 68 The funeral of Mrs. Lulu S. Price, 68, Lake Township native and widow of Rev. John W. Price, Methodist minister, was held Monday afternoon from the Frederick Funeral Home, Forty Fort, in charge of Rev. George M. Bell, district superintendent. Mrs. Price died at General Hospital, James- town, N, Y., last Friday evening. Known and loved throughout the Harvdy’s Lake section, Mrs. Price was born in Lake Township, daughter of the late Joseph I. and Sarah A. Haw- ley Gordon, and first mets Rev. Mr. Price when he became pastor of the Maple Grove charge, f 3 She is survived locally.bya sister, Lorena G. Swartz of Harvey's Lake, one brother, Olin H. Gordon of Pike's Creek, and several nieces and nephews in this region a son, Earl W. Price of Kingston, and 4 grandchildren, HE LED REPUBLICANS ee Prominent Republicans from this section will assemble at Irem Temple Country Club next Tues- day night for a testimonial din- ner in honor of Peter D, Clark (above), who became chairman of the Sixth G, O. P. District last Spring and led his party’s forces here to a decisive victoyy in the General Election. Milk Price Raised One Cent A Quart State Commission Instructs Dairymen To Increase Selling Price The price on milk to consumers in this section has been increased one cent a quart by order of the Milk Con- trol Commission of Pennsylvania. Dairymen have received orders to charge for milk on the following schedule: Qts. Pts. 07 .08 Regular Milk Guernsey Milk Chocolate Milk .08~ Buttermilk 06 The new prices represent an in- crease of one cent on pints and quarts except on chiveolate milk, on which the price has been jumped two cents. A. S. Culbert’s Brother Succumbs In Scranton Robert J. Culbert, 64, a brother of A. S. Culbert of Dallas, died at the home of his daughter; Mrs. A. A. Bouton, 933 Penn Avenue, Scranton, last Sat- urdafy. A native of White Haven, Mr. Culbert had resided in Scranton for forty years. Two daughters, three grandchildren, two sisters and three brothers survive. The funeral was held on Tuesday. Lehman PTA To Meet Next Monday Night The regular meeting of Lehman Township Parent-Teacher Associa- tion will be held Monday night at 8 in the high school. In addition to the business session and the musical pro- gram, there will be a program of en- tertainment, which will include a play, “Thanksgiving Anyway’, which the Sophomore Class gave at Assembly before the Thanksgiving vacation. Miss Beatrice Miers, supervisor of nurses at General Hospital and a grad- uate of Lehman schools, will speak. Local Man’s Mother Buried At Tamaqua Mrs. C. B. Shindel, 71, of Allentown, mother of Vincent A, Shindel of Lake Street, was buried at Tamaqua Wed- nesday afternoon. She, died Sunday of complications followistg a brief illness at a private hospital in Northampton. She is well kngwn in this section, having visited here.a“mumber of times, and is survived by two other sons, Frank D. of Allentown and George F. Shindel of Lansford. Mr. and Mrs. Shindel traveled to Lansford Wednes- day for the funeral, Judge James Seeks ‘Inventory’ Before Outlining Program Confers With GOP Leaders At Plymouth And In : Philadelphia HAS A BUSY WEEK Building Program For Local Schools Snagged At Capital BEAUMONT AND JACKSON BUILDINGS AMONG PROJECTS TO BE CALLED OFF Abandonment Of State’s Thompson Plan Will Waste $1,000,000 Spent For Architect’s Service In 704 School Districts In Pennsylvania STATE AUTHORITY UNABLE TO RAISE ITS SHARE Although advices from Harrisburg indicated that $3,000,000 worth of contemplated school construction in Luzerne County under the Thompson Plan will have to be abandoned for lack of funds, hopes were held here Shuttling back and forth between i Plymouth and Philadelphia, Gover |; nor-elect Arthur H. James was busy this week preparing to assume charge of the billion-dollar business which is Pennsylvania. Matters which had accumulated during his 25-day vacation in Texas left him time for only a week-end re-union with his daughter, Dorothy, and son, Arthur, in the little white home on Church Street, Plymouth. Early in the week he left for Phila- delphia to confer with party leaders and to make an ‘“‘inventory” of the State government, By mid-week he had disposed of the most pressing questions and returned to Plymouth to confer with local Re- publican chieftains. After a series of meetings here on Wednesday, he re- turned to Philadelphia yesterday for conferences with some of the G. O. P. leaders from southeastern Pennsyl- vania. It was a busy week but the long va- cation had restored all of Judge James’ vim and he was obviously eag- er to tackle the immense problems confronting him. With all his meet- ings, he found time to study the “in- ventory” of the State's situation. “Unless we have this inventory,” he said, “we will not have sufficient in- formation to determine what our pol- icies will be. Until we conclude this inventory we will not announce our plans and purposes. “I want to know the financial set- up of Pennsylvania—its assets, antic- ipated income and what the liabilities will be at the close of the biennium. The next Administration will be both- ered with many problems the present Administration didn’t have to contend with when it started in 1935.” Former Resident this week that the program may be revived by the new State Administra ALL YOU NEED IS PHONE AND $24 TO TELL HITLER WHAT YOU THINK OF HIM Chancellor Adolf Hitler's phone number in Berlin 1s 116191, ac- cording to the 1939 edition of the British Who's Who, published this week. The phone rate from Dallas to Berlin, according to M. E. Kuchta, manager of Commonwealth Tele- phone Co., is: 4:30 to 7 p. m., $24 for three minutes, 20 cents Federal tax, and $8 for each additional minute. From 7 p. m. to 4:30 ,. m. the charge is $18 for three min- utes, 20 cents Federal tax and $6 for each additional minute. Profanity is orohibited. Death Snips Link To Historic Past Anna Elizabeth Kunkle, 79, Was Daughter Of Pioneer Death snipped a; treasured bond. with this section’s os past last Thursday when it /closed the eyes of Anna Elizabeth kle, 79, descend- ant of a Huguenot: refugee and a Hes- sian officer, daughter of Kunkle's sec- ond settler. A child of pioneering parents, she held within her memory a wealth of information about the early days of Dallas. She was a well-educated per- son, despite her isolated childhood on a farm and she possessed the ability to record the past with colorful touch- John Mainwaring, 77, former Dallas resident and ex-Register of Wills of Luzerne County, was buried in“ Leh- man Cemetery Tuesday morning fol- lowing services at the Honeywell-Da- vis Funeral Home, Bennett Street, Lu- zerne, conducted by Rev. H. L. Ren- ville of Luzerne M. E. Church. Mr. Mainwaring died Sunday morning at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Her- bert Shaver of Vine Street, Scranton, following a prolonged illness. Ziba S. Huey Ziba Smith Huey, 74, Kingston, died December 1 and was buried in Beau- mont Cemetery Sunday after services in Beaumont Church in charge of Rev. Rolland Crompton of West Pittston. The son of Mary Ann Van Horn and Christopher Huey, he was born at Evans Falls and was well known here. He went to Kingston 30 {years ago, making his home there. He was an uncle of George M. Huey, Kingston grocer. Mores Surviving are the widow, Helen Moyer Huey; three children, Milton C. Huey, Dallas; Mrs. Irwin Berlew, Kingston; Mrs. Walter Freeman, Lu- zerne; a sister, Mrs. John Cook of Vernon and 21 grandchildren. Pallbearers were four grandsons and two nephews of Mr. Huey. Flower carriers were six grand-daughters. Freedom Ended For Real - life Man Who Fled From County Prison 17 Years Ago Brought Back The classic tale of Jean Val Jean, the tragic figure in Victor Hugo's novel about a man who tried in vain to bury his past, had a real-life count- erpart in Luzerne County this week. After 17 years of freedom, Frank Rezwillis, who escaped from Luzerne County Prison in 1921 has . been brought back from New York to pay for a crime which had been forgotten by everyone but himself and the dis- trict attorney’s office. Rezwillis was one of five men who fled the prison on a cold January day. The break, according to Detective Richard Powell, was planned for two murderers who were in the prison: Powell received a tip on the antici- pated escape and blocked the attempt but later five other prisoners, among them Rezwillis, slipped away during an exercise period and escaped through a window whose bars had been sawed in the right wing. Two of the men were captured on the same night. The third gave him- self up. The fourth was captured a few months after the break. Rezwil- lis, alone, made his escape good and remained on fhe files of the district attorndy’s office as an “unclosed case.” He had gone to New York, resolved, he says, to lead a mormal life. He married and had a child, who is three years old now, His neighbors respect- ed him and even his wife, according to her story, knew nothing of his crim- Jean Val Jean Rezwillis Says He Lived New Life In Brooklyn Since Escape inal past. She calls him “a wonderful husband and a good provider.” For 17 years he lived his new life, until his past caught up with him: Last week County Detective Powell and Milet Butts, with: C, A: Connelly, arrested Rezwillis in his Brooklyn, N. Y. home and brought him back to Wilkes-Barre. Taken before Judge William A. Valentine, he entered a plea of guilty to the charge of jail-break- ing and was remanded to await sen- tence. In the meantime, detectives are checking carefully on Rezwillis’ record in New York, Dies At Scranton! es. Within the last year, The Post has published articles by her on the his- | tory of Kunkle and her poem, relating how her cousin, Joseph Hoover, res- cued the Union colors from the fall- ing hands of Jay Crippen during a Confederate assault at the Battle of Gettysburg. Both brought her enthu- siastic praise. She had been helpless for some years, but her courage never faded. Miss Kunkle’s great-grandfather was a Colonel in the Hessian Army which England hired in the Revolutionary War. He was captured at Trenton and, impressed by the promise of the New World, sent for his family and gettled here. On her mother’s side, Miss Kunkle was descended from a Huguenot who fled to America from France. : Her father, Wesley Kunkle, was the second man to build a home in Kun- kle and when the post office was es- tablished there in 1860 he was named postmaster and the village was named for him. His father, Philip Kunkle, had lived in Dallas and gave Wesley a large tract of land which included the property of Chris Eipper todafy. Miss Kunkle was borne May 6, 1859, in Kunkle but she spent most of her early life at the homestead of Philip Kunkle in Dallas. She attended Wyo- ming Seminary and the National School of Elocution and Oratory and took graduate work in English and Anglo-Saxon Literature at Vanderbilt University. She also spent a year abroad, studying at the Sorbonne and the College de France. She taught school at Dallas Township and later at Pittston. She is survived by a nephew, Berk- ley Reid of Long Island, and a num- ber of relatives in the Kunkle family, which is still prominent here. The funeral was held Saturday from the home of Mrs. Carrie Ellsworth in Forty Fort, where Miss Kunkle had lived. The body was removed to Maple Hill Cemetery and cremated, accord- ing to Miss Kunkle’s wishes. Rev. Louis E. Van Hoesen, Forty Fort re- tired Methodist minister, officiated. Undertaker Howard Woolbert of Shav- ertown had charge. CAGE CHALLENGE The Wilkes-Barre Ramblers chall- enge any third or fourth-class team. If accepted please write to I. McHale, 10 ‘D1IBg-SOM[IA ‘OnudAy ied 9%¢ call C. Barone, 3-9119, and ask for any Rambler, tion next, year. The abandonment’ of the plan, which was to have been financed by WPA grants and the Genera il State Authority, with™#6" expense to the districts effected, would kill $150, 000,000 worth of proposed buildings in the State and waste the estimated $1,000,000 which 704 school districts have spent for architectural drawings. Two local districts, Beaumont, where a new $100,000 consolidation high school was to have been built, and Jackson Township, which was to get a modern, consolidated elementary building costing about $50,000, would be effected by abandonment of the plan by the present Administration. Both districts had been promised new buildings under the Thompson Plan, their only expense to be for the archi- tect’s services. : Fairmount, Ross and Union Town- ships also were to have received new buildings under the Thompson Plan. Lehman Not Effected Lehman School district, which re- ceived authority form voters to float a $50,000 bond issue to put beside a $45,000 WPA appropriation for con- struction of a $100,000 high school, is not effected by the death of the Thompson Plan and is preparing to award contracts and begin construc~ tion soon." Col. A. S. Janeway, executive direc- tor of the State Authority, which was to raise 55 per cent of the cost of the program to give needy districts mod- ern buildings and equipment, said flatly that the program was “dead” and that the appropriations totaling $3,000,000, passed by the recent special session of the Legislature, would apse into the State Treasury unless the in- coming Republican Administration resurrects the construction agenda. PWA Holds No Hope Maj. G. Douglas Andrews, regional PWA director, charged that the State Authority had not co-operated prop erly. “I don’t see how it would be hu- manly possible for many of these pro- jects to go through now,” Major An- drews said. “The ‘State Authority has never shown us that it has the ability to finance its 55 per cent share of the cost. Practically all of our money has been allocated. There is very, very little left for this spending pro- gram.” A. P. Cope, Luzerne County super- intendent of schools, expressed deep regret this week at the threat to the proposed $3,000,000 worth of construc- tion in this county. “This plan is too good to die now,” he said. From reliable sources, The Post learned that all hope for revival of the Thompson Plan has not been aban- doned and a strong effort will be made after January 17 to secure the co-oper- ation of the new Republican Admini- stration in resurrecting the measure. The Federal Government is vitally in- terested in the need for improvements in smaller school districts and may look with favor upon a new effort to finance an ambitious construction pro- gram in 1939. Mrs. S. M. Evans Dies At West Pittston Home Many friends will be shocked at the death of Mrs. S. M. Evans of Luzerne Avenue, West Pittston, who died on Monday at the Pittston Hospital of peritonitis following an illness of seven weeks. Mrs. Evans is survived by her hus" band, a prominent druggist of hi Pittston, a sister, Mrs. W. S. Dickie . of Kingston and a brother, Walter Morgan of Kingston, Among the nieces and nephews who survive Mrs. Evans are Mrs, John Yaple, Dallas; Mrs. Kenneth Shaver, Robeling, N. J. Mrs. Stewart Walsh, Syracuse, and Kenneth Dickie of Kingston. Mrs. Evans was well known in this sec- tion, having been a prominent firgure in the Eastern Star and West Pittston Women’s Club. The funeral took place on Thursday with private services at the home and at the West Pittston M. E. Church, LAKE WOMEN'S CLUB The Lake Township Women’s Club will meet in the Kearney Building, Harvey's Lake, December 21 at 7:30. i