fers And Main Street Had Own Line In1870 The Late Charles Cooke Left Valuable Notes On ‘Historic Old Photo “That’’, reminisced the late harles H. Cooke, looking at a| yellowed photograph of a dus- y, curved village street, “was the year we had the fight over the sidewalks.” “There was the pro-sidewalk faction and the anti-sidewalk action. I ran for Constable ith the support of the side- walk faction and I was defeat- ed, but we got the sidewalks, by gum. “We made ’em out of hem- ock planks, 12 inches wide, one foot apart, excepting at the ain Street bridge. We had a four foot sidewalk there, laid with inch boards crosswise. Certainly a big improvement, ’specially uring the spring thaw.” He gazed longingly at the old photograph and nodded his head, remembering. “You ought to write that stuff Jown, before you forget it,” some- one told Mr. Cooke. at was in 1925, and what with world busy thinking about Cal- Coolidge and the Frenchmen yoneting Riffs in Morocco and President Von Hindenburg defeating German Socialists and a new ardner automobile selling for ,395 Mr. Cooke hadn't a lot of time to write a history, but one day ie sat down and filled sheet after sheet with stories he remembered time he looked at the old pic- A few years later he died. is week the picture and Mr. Cooke’s colorful recollections came light again—a lively contribution y the history of an American town. ~ Built First Telephone As a village historian, Mr. Cooke well-qualified. He surveyed ny of the original property lines Dallas and its vicinity and his maps are still referred to occasional- v to settle disputes. He was a man of varied interests and—a fact that isn’t generally known—built Dallas’s st telephone line. The line connected Smith and arrahan’s store with its neighbor to the left in the accompanying photograph. Thomas Garrahan and Mr. Cooke built the line after they d read an article in a New York newspaper. The “telephone” con- sisted of two tin cans and a hog’s ladder, which the inventors ob- tained from Jacob Rice when he yutchered. A twine string was stretched across the creek, from une store to the other, ‘and messages - were sent by tapping on the tin ‘cans with the end of a pencil. Mr. Cooke’s paper discussing the usiness men whose establishments were pictured on the old photograph of Main Street in 1870 is sprinkled with anecdotes. Mr. Starmer, the town’s only undertaker, made his wn coffins and used William Ran- dall’s spring wagon as a hearse. ‘William Frantz, Mr. Starmer’s reighbor, was killed one day when the breech pin of a gun blew out and imbedded itself in his forehead. "he most pretentious home in town was Captain Rice’s, until William J. oneywell outclassed him with a more impressive-looking domicile. One of the carpenters on the Honey- well home was a popular young fel- low known as “The Dutchman from Bethlehem” but whose right name was Bernard W. Brickel. One of the agons in the picture was that of eorge Spencer, a township super- r, who once reported in disgust at he had spent a whole year ooking in vain for a stranger whose e appeared on the tax list only as I. O. O. F. and, in the opinion Mr. Spencer, should be exoner- because he certainly didn’t live "township. h Century Speedsters One of Main Street's most prom- erchants — and a fertile tories—was Theodore Ry- IMMLER THEATRE DALLAS, PA. MATINEE EVERY SATURDAY AT 2 THIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY “Northwest Passage” with Spencer Tracy "Serial MONDAY AND TUESDAY “Strange Cargo” th Clark Gable and Joan Crawford Comedy—Travel Talk WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY “Man From Dakota with Wallace Beery ~ Comedy—Pete Smith Special Fox News NEXT FRIDAY AND SATURDAY “South of the Border” : with Gene Autry < ~~ Cartoon—Comedy—Serial Mr. Cooke remembered these pl Main Street, in order, were the est wall); William Frantz’s store, Smith hall, Lyman Harris’ harness shop, dence of James Garrahan; Ryman and Sons’ store. MAIN STREET TRAFFIC JEM: CIRCA 1870 laces well. Along the left side of ablishment of Lewis Starm, wheel- wright, cabinet maker and undertaker (note roughbox leaning against and Garrahan’s store and the resi- Right side: I. 0. O. F. the blacksmith shop, later moved across the street and occupied by Mame Fleming’s candy store; the 70-foot flagpole, Capt. Jacob Rice’s home and William J. Honeywell’s home. Mr. Cooke even remembered that the wagon (center) belonged to William Randall and the team was the property of George Spencer. man, who was in business with his brother, John. Theodore used to drive his buckboard wagon to Wilkes-Barre every Monday, Wed- nesday and Saturday to take orders for lumber and his little bay mare was known widely for its speed, a reputation which aggravated Harper Evans, who owned a buck- board which looked like Ryman’s and a horse very much like the little bay mare. There was keen rivalry between Ryman and Evans, who frequently raced over nearby roads, until Evans purchased a horse known as Ryman’s Mary, an obviously superior equine. After that, when a cloud of dust rolled along Main Street, informed people remarked, ‘There goes Harper and Mary Ryman’. Mr. Evans was postmaster at Evans’ Falls. Once a Federal in- spector scolded him because a reg- istered letter had been lost some- where in his office. This provoked Evans and he sent down to Brong’s store, obtained a box, packed up the odds and ends which were his “post office” and expressed the box to the First Assistant Postmaster at Wash- ington, together with Evans’ resig- nation. Paid In ‘Dallas Cash’ Mr. Cooke was a clerk af. Ryman’s at one time and oie of his duties was to take account of the lumber hauled from the Ryman’s Kunkle mill. The custom was to pay the teamsters in goods, a practice which resulted in the habit of referring to cut hemlock lumber as ‘Dallas cash”. Mr. Cooke recalls with spe- cial fondness an old-timer by the name of Adam Hoover who, when asked how much lumber he had on his wagon, would reply “Oh, just enough to ride on, 850 feet—just| enough to ride on.” The teamsters’ orders were Pretty} much alike. Generally, they left the list on their first trip and picked up the goods on their last trip. The order usually went like this: “Now, Charley, put me up a sack of flour, 10 pounds of pork, 5 pounds of! sugar, a half pint of ack-ke-hol, {half an ounce of camphor gum, don’t put the gum in the bottle, I'll do that when I get home, 3 turn- pike tickets and a dinner ticket.” The turnpike ticket took them over the road to White Mills in Luzerne. The dinner ticket, worth 15¢, bought | their meal. i Politics was a headache in 1870, too. Mr. Cooke relates a story| about the night someone cut the | rope on the 70-foot flagpole which) VV VV Vv VV VV UV UY VY YU UY AD Abobo odd ddd ddsiod dod doieindd HILLSIDE FARMS, Inc. ROUTE 115 TRUCKSVILLE, PA. Arexanper VEITCH, Manager — and — i ORCHARD FARM DALLAS, PA. . | James Rircuie, Manager | Cattle—Registered Holstein Friesian Jersey Milking Shorthorns Heifers and Bull Calves Dorset Sheep—Registered | Flock of about 100 Chickens—Large Flock | White Leghorns Rhode Island Reds Berkshire Hogs— Different Ages Rabbits—Chinchilla SOME OF ALL FOR SALE Inspection Invited VV CCV VV POV CIO OO | oon ctrl iege ictus. niin stood near the intersection of Main and Huntsville Streets, a proud civic possession, the gift of local Repub- licans. A man named Badman, who worked for Captain Rice, volunteer- ed to climb the pole and replace the rope in the pulley. After descend- r Tin Cans ore Town's Tirst Phones TOWN’S POPULATION IN 1870 WAS 123, COUNTING THE $1 LICENSED DOGS Dallas Township, which in- cluded the present borough when the picture to the left was taken, had a population of 92 taxables and 31 dogs in 1870, according to old records. The assessed valuation of the township then, nine years be- fore the division which was to bring the borough into exist- ence, was $38,118. Today the assessed valuation in Dallas Borough alone is about $750,- 000. By the following year the human population had shrunk to 80 taxables but the dog pop- ulation had jumped to 34. Town expenses were financed by three sources: Borough tax, $152.47; road tax, $190.67, and dog tax, at 50c per canine, $15.50. Disabled War Veterans Honor Father O'Leary A membership class in honor of Rev. John J. O'Leary, pastor emeritus of St. Therese’s Church, Shavertown, World War chaplain, was admitted by Wyoming Valley Chapter, Disabled American Veter- ans, on Monday night. Rev. Father O'Leary, who was severely wounded during the World War, was unable to attend. ing, he took a long sigh, looked sad- ly at his skinned shins and said “It was a damned mean man who cut this rope—and a mighty Badman who put it back”, a pun which, in Mr. Cooke's seasoned judgment, earned Badman a niche in village history. ChicagoJurist Delivers Lecture Explains Principles Of Mary Baker Eddy “Mortal Man without vision, without hope, without incentive gradually degrades and becomes an object of pity,” said Judge Samuel W. Green of Chicago in his address on “Christian Science: The Religion of Progress” at Irem Temple, Wilkes- Barre, on Monday night. “The Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, Mary Baker Ed- dy, has given to the world a new hope, a brighter vision, founded upon spiritual understanding and progress, rather than upon material belief and limitation,” Judge Green claimed. “In following the Scriptural meth- od of healing,” he said, “she saw that the Bible requires spiritual in- terpretation to be properly helpful and healing. This new or spiritual interpretation, she saw, must be consistent with a proper interpreta- of God, and man in God’s image and likeness. The generally-accepted view of God as being the creator of both good and evil, or as being aware of both good and evil as equal realities, Mrs. Eddy perceived as being contrary to the nature of God and the teachings of the Bible.” “Humanity has apparently labor- ed through the centuries under the delusion that man fell from his high estate as God’s child or likeness, and that this fall was so real that his salvation ultimately depends upon some miraculous or supernat- ural intervention of Deity in his be- half. : “Christian Science teaches that man has never fallen, but that a mist, or error, has seemed to shut SALUTES LEHMAN | SI 2 Phil Cook . who saluted Lehman during his early “Morning Almanac” over Station WABC on Wednes- day morning. It was the sec- ond time Cook had given na- tional publicity to this section. Last June he honored Dallas on his program. from view the real man—God’s child—and has provided an unreal or false concept of man that is ma- terial, and that lives and moves and has his being not in God, but in matter. This false view of man is responsible for all discord, sin, di- sease, poverty, hate and death.” Beaumont High To Graduate 19 Commencement To Be Held Tuesday, June 4 Nineteen Seniors will receive di- plomas from Monroe Township high school, Beaumont, at the annual commencement exercises on Tues- day, June 4, W. M. A, Austin, su- pervising principal, announced yes- terday. Class Night will be on Wednesday, May 29; the Baccalaureate sermon will be preached on Sunday, June 2, and the annual alumni dinner will be held after commencement on June 4. W. H. Hadsell is faculty adviser for Class Night, Miss Louise Ohlman will have charge of the Baccalaureate and Robert Bellas is arranging the Commencement pro- gram. Humphrey Owen Delegate At Episcopal Meeting E. Humphrey Owen of Dallas rep- resented the Prince of Peace Episco- pal Church of Dallas at the diocesan convention of the Episcopal Church at Hazleton on Tuesday and Wed- nesday. hopes to build a church soon, meets on the second Sunday of every month at 3 p. m. in the home of Mrs. F. H. Renard on Main Street, Dallas. Rev. Ralph A. Weatherly, pastor of Grace Church, Kingston, is the missionary. VV CVV Vv “SMILING SERVICE ALWAYS” OLIVER’S GARAGE Packard and Hudson Cars White and Indiana Trucks DALLAS, PENNA. lid bids ddd olin in Bo didn — Tree pt 50 Electric Ranges 50 Electric Refrigerators 250 Electric Irons : b- be given a All to Watch solutely free. for announcem™® s00n. Fora FULL SIZE Westinghouse RANGE? OT a three burner range . . . not a “cheaply made” range cut down in size, but, a full size, four burner Westinghouse electric range at the surprisingly low price of only $99.75 (cash) installed in your home . . . the lowest price ever for a range of this size and quality. A real bargain! One that’s built up to the high Westinghouse standards of workmanship, material and efficiency . . . not down to this exceptionally low price. Four burners . . . including an economical deep- well cooker. Famous five-speed COROX units, double-locked in place for extra heavy duty. Full size oven with True-Temp control. Fully insulated to eliminate wasted heat, making it more economi- cal. Nothing has been sacrificed . . . nothing taken out . . . nothing “cheap” substituted. The only thing “cheap” about this range is its price tag... only $99.75 (cash). No additional charge for in- stallation. Ready to use . . . ready to give your family more healthtully delicious meals . . . ready to give you care-free, economical cooking service. Stop at one of our showrooms and examine it thoroughly! Buy yours NOW at this lower-than- ever price. Start today to enjoy modern electric cookery. A small down payment installs one in your home . . . then pay the balance in low, con- venient monthly amounts. ———— rm "=" Luzerne COUNTY GAS 3 ECONOMY co y;s4 Cooks oq Heats 309; 0 22% less ¢ before | Now than ever to ke, ~ easier €p clean, Convenjent Speeds The Prince of Peace parish, which Sree ey