Your It On To Them After Through Reading It. Be Subscribers Soon. Neighbors ' Will Enjoy reading The Post, Too. Pass You Are They’ll Vol. 49 "THE DALLAS POST More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution THE POST, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1939 A Kind Word Does Us All Some Good. Mention The Post When You Patronize Our Advertisers. Better Still Tell Your Merchant You'd Like To See His Ads In The Post. No. 29 POST SCRIPTS THE BIRTH OF AN AMERICAN SEVEN MILES DOWNSTREAM from the sandy little island where our snug little cabin awaits our return there is a clearing, and if you look closely you will see all that is left of the log home Colonel John Frank- lin built, more than 150 years ago. We like to think that John Frank- lin kept his rendezvous with destiny at that lonely spot. We are sure it was there, beside the clear stream, underneath the stately hemlocks, that the bold Yankee dreamer ex- perienced the emotions and conceiv- ed the dreams that made him great. So often the circumstances which propel men into greatness are lost in the blinding glory of their achiev- ment. In the bright, white flame of noble works, the tiny, clean spark which was the beginning is forgot- ten. In the exact moment when Fate, reaching down from the clouds, touches a life gently and deflects it toward nobility, there is far greater beauty, far greater power, than in the actual hour of achievement. Historians have spread Colonel Franklin's contribution to the build- ing of a new nation across many glowing pages, but it pleases us to think that when Franklin, the ro- mantic failure, came to die he re- membered most fondly the days when he swung his axe and tilled his fields along Huntington Creek and dreamed of courage and justice. JUST WHAT HAPPENED to John Franklin down there remains a matter of conjecture, a blank space in the recorded history of his life. There were times, during the last month, when we thought we knew. In the forest there is, between sunset and darkness, the time of the great silence. The last yellow sun- beam fades and disappears. The birds go away. No leaf moves. Deep purple shadows steal over the east- ern sky ‘and kiss the tree-~tops. Men who are alone then, or who have no human company to break the spell, know true solitude. It is almost as if the world had stopped rolling on its axis and were resting; as if the mind were suspended in a tremendous vacuum. It is a time for brave, fine thoughts, a moment of exquisite beauty, and we have wondered if, experiencing, it night after night, John Franklin might have felt the spark of greatness being fanned within him. THE TIMBER ALONG Huntington Creek has thinned considerably in 150 years, but it was thick enough to suit us. Editorial desk work is poor training for clearing land. We hacked and perspired and wore callouses on our palms and at, the day’s end we looked with sink- ing heart ’upon the poor progress we had made. We sunk a spade into soil which had never been broken and we strained the muscles of our back laboring to break the matted roots. Then one day the rich, black soil was ready, smooth ‘and fine under the blazing sun, and we knelt and plunged our hand into it and felt the warm power of the earth. What we did was a small thing, scarcely more than a new kind of vacation. But what Franklin did was important. And when we stood back and surveyed the pitiful thing that had cost us so much back- breaking labor we had a picture of John Franklin, standing before his lonely cabin at sunset, shading his eyes and gazing out over the fields he had won from the wilderness. That triumph, too, must have con- tributed to his character, must have added fuel to the fire which was growing within him. WHEN JOHN FRANKLIN had fin- ished his cabin and cleared his fields he went back over the mountains and brought his wife to their new home. It was a brave, lovely world (Continued on Page 8) TRUCKSVILLE CHILD IS NEW MEMBER OF STAFF OF NANTICOKE TABLOID Faith Hope Charity Harding, precocious daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Harding of Trucks- ville, and whose strange predic- tions of coming events have ex- cited considerable | controversy during the last four years, has become a feature writer on the Nanticoke Daily Press. This week The Press, under a two column photograph of the local child, credits Miss Hard- ing with an ‘unusual power” which it calls “Occult Suasion.” Miss Harding's duties as a staff member, presumably, is to ad- vise readers of the Press on per- sonal matters. Mid-summer heat and two-month drought have no meaning for these beauties who skate at the Alpine Village at New York’s World Fair. artificial snow. frozen surface is They and replaced by BALLET ON ICE DEFIES SUMMER'S SIZZLING HEAT perform their gyrations amidst peaks capped with In between shows, the artificially slid back into a cooling chamber a dance floor. Like ’em? worth $4,562.50 in back wages and of John Barrymore. New Road Ready By Mid-October Big Machinery Speeds” Work Un"Coacrete Link The new $220,000 concrete link along Bowman's Creek on Route 92, which connects Dallas and Tunk- hannock, will be completed by mid- October according to estimates made this week by Banks Construction Co., which has construction well ahead of schedule. The 3%%-mile stretch, 42 feet wide, cuts through some of the loveliest scenic beauty in this section and strengthens local claims that Route 92 would, if completely concreted, be one of the most popular roads in Eastern Pennsylvania. Four miles of the concrete south of Tunkhannock to Evans’ Falls was completed earlier. The link now under construction will be graded and ready for concrete foundations within another month, barring un- favorable conditions. The project is unique among con- struction jobs of the kind because of the methods and machinery adopted for the work by Joseph Banks, presi- dent of the contracting company. Some of the huge machines are be- ing used for the first time in this part of the state and the operations themselves attract many curious visitors. Instead of the usual steam-shov- els, dump-trucks and similar equip- ment so familiar on construction work of the kind in this section, Contractor Banks has in operation four 80-horse power ‘caterpillar’ driven machines which not only excavate the rough ground, but smooth it, collect and dump the earth, rocks, tree-stumps and the like and carry these to the points required for filling. The new roadway will include a twenty-two foot wide strip of con- crete with ‘“black-top” berms of ten-foot widths on either side. Two new bridges, several giant culverts, deep ‘fills,’ one of them 1 an eighty-foot deep gully, and the | installation of two or three 36-inch pipes for drainage are all a part of - | the undertaking, as well the divert- | ling of two mountain streams and the actually changing at one point of the course of Bowman’s creek. ELAINE LATE FOR HER CUE BUT IT WAS WELL WORTH IT A flying trip to New York City almost deprived the Harvey's Lake summer theatre of Elaine Barrie’s services on Tuesday night but it was $500 a week to the estranged wife Miss Barrie, who is playing with the Lake company in “End of Sum- mer” this week, flew to New York Tuesday morning to testify at a hearing on her demands for back salary. She was dismissed from Barrymore's play, ‘My Dear Chil- dren,” after their spat in St. Louis. At curtain-raising Tuesday night, Miss Barrie had not returned and an understudy attempted the role of Paula. The play had barely begun, however, when Miss Barrie arrived breathlessly and took over her role. Yesterday the American Arbitra- tion Association decided to award to Miss Barrie $4,562.50 in back salary and $500 a week as long as “My Dear Children” runs, or until expira- tion of her run-of-the-play contract, which ends at the close of 1939. She must, however, have permis- sion of the play’s producers before accepting other theatrical employ- ment and must pay back any money she earns up to 500. “My Dear Children” has never reached New York, despite a long try-out in the provinces. It is play- ing in Chicago now and if critics are correct Miss Barrie’s $500 a week will not be forthcoming very long. A petite, graceful girl with large, expressive eyes, Miss Barrie is giv- | ing a creditable performance here. It is painfully obvious, however, that it takes something more than marrying one of them to make a Barrymore. Pickets Move Base To State Capitol A group of dismissed sewing pro- ject workers who picketed Gov. Arthur H. James home at Harvey's Lake last week moved their base of operations to Harrisburg this week. Twenty-five women went to the State capitol and camped on the steps, determined to stay there until they are assured a WPA sewing pro- ject. The Governor protested that he is not responsible, since the mat- ter has been referred to the secre- tary of public assistance. Mrs. Stookey Catches 29-inch Fish In Canada Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stookey of Parrish Street have returned from a two-week fishing trip to Black Lake, Ontario, Can.. Mrs. Stookey caught a fish weighing 43% pounds and measuring 29 inches long. The family returned with 75 pounds of fish. A chain of woods fires west of Evans Falls, just off the Dallas- Tunkhannock Highway, defied fire fighters this week and destroyed hundreds of acres of timber. Apparently started by huckleberry pickers, the blaze reached alarming proportions last Saturday and on Sunday a crew of men recruited in Dallas spent 21 sleepless hours battling the stubborn blaze. Throughout: the week the local | crew, which is led by Grover Jones, LITTLE SLEEP FOR CREWS BATTLING BLAZE NEAR HERE has continued to fight the fire. The mountainous nature of that section, the distance from the highway, the danger of snakes and the rocky sur- face have contributed to the rigours of the assignment for the fire fight- ers. The blaze is under control but may burn for some time yet because the fire has eaten into roots deep in the parched earth and smoulder- ing particles can be fanned into a flame unexpectedly. Sometimes It Gets Monotonous Youths’ Bad Luck Gives Police A Busy Evening When a policeman rescyes some- body from trouble once iy an _even- ing that’s duty, but when-He“has to play Good Samaritan to the same fellows three times in an hour that’s monotony. The other night Patrolman Fred Swanson and Harry Jones of the Harvey's ‘Lake: golice force were cruising about, keeping their eyes open for evil, when they spotted a car in a ditch at Warden Place. The two young men in the car ex- plained that they were stuck. Pa- trolmen Swanson and Jones turned to with a will and pulled the car out. Gratefully, the two y. m. drove away in a flurry of farewells. Pa- trolmen Swanson and Jones re- sumed their regular patrol. They were headed toward Sunset when | they spotted a car stalled on the road. It was, the patrolmen dis-! covered, the same two young men. Now they were out of gas. Still helpful, Swanson graciously | car and donated it to the youths and for the second time they drove away after thanking the policemen. It was half an hour or so later that Swanson and Jones, cruising along near Sunset, saw a car ablaze dangerously close to the Grotto. When they tried to move the flam- ing automobile they found it was in gear. They found, too, that. .it was the same automobile and the same two young men. One of them, it seems, had lit a match while the other was pouring in gasoline. While the two policemen strug- gled to move the car, flames licked against the fence and porch of The Grotto. Jack Nothoff, the proprie- tor, and his wife rushed out. One of the young men grabbed a can and ran for water, but only man- aged to fall head-first into two-and- one-half feet of some filthy liquid in a six-foot hole nearby. Swanson and Jones finally moved the car and extinguished the blaze. That time the weary patrolmen made sure the unfortunate young men were leaving the lake. The policemen stood and watched until the car disappeared along the road toward Dallas. Then they breathed a deep, relieved sigh. Summer Enrollment At College Exceeds 350 rolled in the summer session of College Misericordia, which has been in session since June. ‘This is the largest enrollment in the summer school history of the institution. A total of 52 courses are being offered by members of the regular faculty and by a number of visiting professors from other institutions of higher learning. A faculty of 25 The school will close August 1. Booster Association Will Meet Tuesday The I. O. O. F. Booster Associa- tion of the Fourth District of Lu- zerne County will meet with Toby's Creek Lodge, No. 1078, on Tuesday siphoned a gallon of fuel from his) More than 350 students are en- | is available for the summer work. : Space Testifies AtHearing On Milk Prices Dairymen Seek Higher Prices; Claim They Are Operating At A Loss A crowd of determined dairy- men who jammed a room in Lack awanna County Court’ House on Tuesday heard Cliff . Space of Dallas testify that milk prices paid to farmers now do not even meet the costs of production. Mr. Space was the first witness to appear before the State Milk Control Board, which called the hearing in response to a militant protest among farmers against a price reduction ordered last April. dnv-,afi He presented a long and detailed statement to support the contention of Attorney Harry W. Mumford, counsel for Northeastern Pennsyl- vania Milk Producers’ Association, that dairymen deserve a better price for their products. A director of the Milk Producers’ Association, Mr. Space, has been active in throughout the Dallas section. The growth of interest in the movement was evidenced by the crowd at Tues- day’s hearing. Only standing room was available in the court room when the hearing opened. Howard Eisaman, chairman of the Milk Control Board, presided. His associates were John M. McKee and J. J. Snyder. In reviewing the dairymen’s case, Attorney Mumford charged that farmers in Luzerne and Lacka- wanna Counties are the victims of an experiment to determine whether low price milk will increase the consumption of bottled milk. After Mr. Space testified, At- torney Mumford said he was pre- pared to call several hundred farmers to give cost figures similar to Mr. Space’s. He asked that the new base price of $2.05 per hun- dredweight be increased to $3 and that the four per cent butterfat re- quirement be reduced to 3.5 per cent. Speaking for a group of milk deal- ers, Attorney Leo White said that retailers have been forced to operate duction in price from 12 to 10 cents caused them a loss of about $200,- 000. Mrs. Frank Hontz Taken By Death Funeral To Be Held Today At Sweet Valley Mrs. Minnie Hontz, 52, wife of Frank Hontz, Sweet Valley, died at Nanticoke Hospital on Monday night. The funeral will be held at the home today (Friday) at 1:30 with services in First Christian Church, Sweet Valley, at 2. Interment will be in Sweet Val- ley Cemetery. Rev. Ira Button will officiate. Surviving Mrs. Hontz are her hus- band; daughter, Mrs. Mildred Kros- tag and Mrs. Ethel Kusma of Sweet Valley; Mrs. Cathleen Heinz of Trucksville and Geraldine at home; also two brothers, Rex and Reuben of New Jersey. Sometime It Might Not Be So Funny! It was a very good thing there was not a fire in Shavertown at 10:30 Wednesday morning. When The Post telephoned Shav- ertown Fire Co. at that time a re- | ceiver was down somewhere on the line and the operator was unable to ring the fire company. A few minutes later the alert young lady at the switchboard rem- edied the situation, cleared the line, and it was alright to have a fire. organizing dairymen | ‘ToBe on a close margin and that the re- | NOXEN AND TUNKHANNOCK AMONG TOWNS TO BALLOT ON LOCAL OPTION ISSUE Two boroughs and seven townships in Wyoming County will vote on Local Option this year. Noxen, where the question was defeated by a 10-vote ma- jority in 1935, will thrash out the question again in Septem- ber. Tunkhannock Borough also will vote on the issue. Other communities which have asked that the question be placed on the ballot are Meshoppen, Braintrim, Lemon, Meshoppen Township, North- moreland, Tunkhannock and Washington Township. In three Wyoming County communities the sale of beer and liquor already is barred. Local Option Is Or Ballot Lehman And Ross Drys Fight Liquor And Beer The voters of Lehman and Sweet Valley will decide in September if the sale of liquor and beer is to be permitted in the future in the two communities. Formal petitions have been filed asking that the local option ques- tion be placed on the ballots. Two other Luzerne County municipali- ties, Huntington Township and New Columbus Borough also will be among the 200 communities in Pennsylvania which will vote on the issue. It will be the second attempt of Lehman drys to banish intoxi- cants. In 1934 the township voted ‘on the question and defeated it, 200 to 198. Local option in Lehman would hit the night clubs near Sun- set, Harvey’s Lake, especially hard. That section of the Lake is within Lehman’s borders. The petitioners from Sweet Val- ley (Ross Township) carried 393 signatures, according to Rev. Ira Button, one of the leaders in the movement. There are about 751 voters in the township, he esti- mated. The petitions were spon- sored by the W. C. T. Us of the section, with the support of church congregations. The questions, as they will ap- pear on the ballots in Lehman and Ross Townships, follow: “We favor granting of malt and brew beverage retail dispensing li- censes for consumption on the premises when sold in— ——, “Do you favor granting of liquor licenses for sale of liquor in ¥ Spaces for “Yes” and “No” will | be provided back of this question. {On the other question voters will pull the lever for “Yes” or ‘No.” Townsend Club Is Organized In Dallas A Townsend Club was organized at a meeting in the Odd“Fellows’ Hall, Main Street, Dallas, on Tues- day night. Temporary officers se- lected are: William Elston, presi- dent; James Franklin, secretary- treasurer. A second meeting will be held next Tuesday night. ; Frankie XKuehn’s “Becky”, a hound doz of doubtless lineage, but an impor.ant member of the Kuehn household nonetheless, kept the Kuehns, "from grandsen to grand- mother, in a dither for a few days this week. It betan when wranapa Kuehn and Hajold Thompson drove out to A. C. Leven’s home at Kunkle to deliver ssme medicine. “Becky” rode along bu; somewhere along the way she disappeared and her absence threw a shadow over the Kuehn home. night, July 25. All Odd Fellows are invited. After supper a posse went out Kunkle-wzy looking for “Becky” but POSSE COMBS KUNKLE WILDS TO BRING "BECKY’ BACK without any luck. All next day the search continued, while Mrs. G. A. A.-Kuehn, who had charge of the base of operations for the quest, kept the wires humming with flash- es to police and others, About 7 Wednesday morning Julia Kunkle of Kunkle called with the good news. She had seen a dog which looked like “Becky.” The search took on new zest and this time there was victory. They found “Becky,” trembling behind a stone wall, and there is some question about who gave out the loudest yelp, Frankie or “Becky.” Governor Invites Civic Club Group To Conference On New Dallas Road Crew Begins Survey At Trucksville On New Route To Follow Abandoned Street Car Right-Of-Way Governor Arthur H. James has invited representatives of Mt. Green- justify discussion’ has been compiled. wood Kiwanis Club and Greater Dallas Rotary Club to confer with him soon at his Harvey's Lake summer home to discuss the possibility of con- structing a new highway between Trucksville and Dallas along the aban- doned right-of-way of Wilkes-Barre Railway Corp. Encouraged by the Governor's interest, a joint committee from the two service clubs is planning to meet with him as soon as enough data to As a result of a conference several days ago, between the Rotarians, Ki- wanians, representatives of the State Highway Department and of- ficials of the traction company, a crew from the Highway Department began a preliminary survey this week along the proposed route, Tentative plans are that the new highway would connect with the concrete at the Trucksville “Y’* and follow the present route as far as the Mt. Greenwood street car station, where it would continue along the traction company’s road- bed through Shavertown and Fern- brook, entering Dallas below the present main street. Besides deflecting traffic from the winding Shavertown road and the hilly Mt. Greenwood route, § too narrow for modern traffic, proposed highway would be an im= portant mid-way link in the long- anticipated short-cut from Wilkes- Barre to Tunkhannock and it is log- ical to assume that if the Dallas link were paved it would not be long until the other sections of the Tunkhannock road would be com pleted. At the conference of the Rotary- Kiwanis committee and the officials interested, John Jones of Wilkes- Barre Railway Corporation outlined the procedure which would have to be followed by the county commi, sions in acquiring the right-of-v of the street car company. John L. Herbert, district engineer of the State Highway Departmen: told the committee he could beg a survey to collect informati which can be used as a basis for cussion. - He could give no Aassur- ance how soon such a highway could be built, he said, but he indicated that the plan was a sound one. The proposal is not entirely new. A year or so ago the county com- missioners studied a plan to use the right-of-way, which was abandoned when construction of the by-pass cut the traction company’s lines at Luzerne. It was proposed then that the road be continued through Dal- - las, following the right-of-way as far as Ide’s Corner. Theoretically the traction com- pany did not abandon its right-of- way when it suspended operation of street cars several months ago and substituted buses. Except at Luzerne, where the new road is laid along the street car line, no tracks have been removed. Actual aban- donment of the right-of-way would mean that the property would re- vert to its original owners, except on such stretches as are owned out- right by the traction company. Tumbleweeds Appear At Kunkle July 28 2 The Texas Tumbleweeds will ap- pear in a floor show at a dance to be held at Kunkle Community Hall on Friday night, July 28. The affair will be sponsored by the auxiliary of Daddow-Isaacs Post, American Legion, of Dallas. Irem Caddies Triumph A team of caddies from Irem Country Club defeated the caddies of Fox Hill for the fourth consec- utive triumph on Monday. The Irem ladies already. have victories over Glenbrook, Wolf Hollow and Hollenback. W. C. T. U. Picnics Here Members of Wilkes-Barre W. C. T. U. held a basket lunch on Tues- day afternoon at the home of Dr. Sarah D. Wyckoff, Center Hill Road. FALL ELECTION CONTEST TO BEGIN MONDAY; LAST DAY TO FILE PETITIONS Officially, the Primary Elec- tion campaign will begin next Monday, the last day on which candidates for office can file their petitions at the Court House. Other important election dates: July 29, last day to with- draw; August 12, last regular registration day; August 14, last day to change party regis- tration; September 12, Primary Election day. The week-end will be a busy one for political leaders in this section as they labor to com- plete slates. ’ L