PAGE TWO | v pe : a BROADWAY AND MAIN STREET YOU KNOW ME Gold Tipped Ciggies Put End Al Himself . ——— = To a Romance; Start a Career || wa. oe nin cuision By BILLY ROSE Yesterday, at one of those cocktail parties where only pedigreed olives are used in the Martinis, I met a movie actress who used to a square-cut that looked like the s boat. “Glad you're doing so well,” dance in one of my chorus lines back in the ’30’s. She was sporting earchlight on the old Albany night I said. “You've really gone places since the days when you made a fast forty a week.” “Have I changed much?’ she asked, lighting a gold-tipped. cigarette. “Well, for one thing,” I said, ‘you never used to smoke buck-a-pack ciggies.” “You mean . these Sobranies?”’ said the actress. ‘Matter of fact, I started smoking them while I was working at your club. One of your customers intr o- duced me to them.” “Boy friend?” “Yes, if a- man in his 50’s can be called a boy. Re- member Big Joel?” “The oil fella?” “That’s the one,” said: the s-t-a-r. “Know something? I'probably would be Billy Rose married to him today if not for these Sobranies.”” : “Tell me about it,” I prodded. “WELL, IT’S not much of a story,” said the actress. “One night Big Joel threw a party at the Cen- tral Park Casino for a bunch of his pals—Jimmy Walker, Billy Seeman, Jules Glaenzer and that crowd. And it was quite a shindig—guinea hen under glass, buckets of champagne and gold-tipped Sobranies on every table. I was one of the girls invited —but what I didn’t know until later was that Joel intended to surprise me and announce our engagement that night.” “Were you stuck on the big lug?” “Not particularly,” said the star, “but be was a nice enough fella and bad he made the an- nouncement 1 don't doubt but that 1 would have gone along with it.” “What stopped him?” “It was one of those things,” said the actress. ‘A little after mid- night, when I came back to my table after a dance, I found my pocketbook was missing. I started to look for it, but Big Joel told me to relax and handed me a hundred bucks. I thanked him but kept right on looking, and when he asked me why I was so worried about the pocketbook I told him there was three hundred dollars in it. * ® LJ “] HAD HARDLY gotten the words out of my mouth when the woman who worked in the ladies’ room came up and handed me my purse—said she had found it under the make-up table. “Big Joel looked at me and grinned kind of funny. ‘It ain’t that I don’t trust you, honey,” he said, ‘but a man wants to be awfully sure about the lady he’s going to make his wife. Forgive me, but—would you mind opening that bag and showing me the three hundred? “Naturally I did no such thing. 1 picked up my bag, gave him one of those ‘how-dare-you’ looks and walked straight out of the room.” “In other words,” I small-joked, “Big Joel caught you with your purse down.” “Nothing of the sort,” said the movie star. “Matter of fact, I bad been paid off that afternoon for a series of modeling jobs and bad closer to four hundred than three in my bag” “Then why didn’t you open it?"’ “How could I?” said the actress. “He'd have seen the ten packs of Sobranie Gold-Tips I had swiped off i the tables.” CREEL LIMITS Regulations governing fishing in | Pennsylvahia during 1951 remain the same as during the 1950. An Act of the Pennsylvania Legisla- ture (1949) prohibits fishing of all kinds in any waters of the state from midnight, March 14th to April * 15th except in rivers, lakes and ponds not stocked with trout. “Any person violating any of the regulations shall upon convic- tion be sentenced to pay a fine of $20.00 and in addition may be fined $10.00 for each fish caught, in possession. The daily - creel as published in the Fishing Regulations establishes the number of fish which may be legally caught in any single day. The possession limit at any time is fixed at one day's creel limit, that would mean six bass which is the daily creel limit would by the same token be the possession limit and would include the bass one may have caught earlier and have in refrigeration. If a fisherman caught three bass today and kept them in his refrigerator and then the next day caught six more, he will’ be in violation of the law by Phaving lee more bass than the legal possession limit allows him at any one time. If the fish were trout the number would be ten and so on. The possession limit does not prevent the from having ten trout, six bass, etc., but does fix the limit at twenty-five of the combined species at any time. A pamphlet of the fish laws reflecting these regula- tions will accompany each license issued in 1951. ~ TURKEY FEEDING— SPORTSMEN’S PROJECT There have been many. hearten- ing reports that sportsmen have fed wild turkeys this winter in areas where these birds need -ear corn as supplemental food. In re- cent weeks, deep snow and crust have prevented their reaching natural sustenance. Some hardy outdoorsmen have ‘packed in” on snowshoes or skids; others used toboggans, jeeps and even tractors to reach turkey flocks. Game Protectors welcome this assistance in the tremendous task of feeding the wide-spread turkey however fisherman LOOK For The Name REALTOR when buying or selling real estate. The principal interest of a realtor is to see that the transaction, large or small, is com- pleted in an intelligent, ethical manner. Your loeal realtor D. T. SCOTT JR. Dallas 224-R-13 D. T. SCOTT and Sons REALTORS 10 East Jackson Street Wilkes-Barre, Pa. flock. They say that hunters who observed wild turkeys while seek- ing big game will perform a real service by reporting their location (Continued on Page Eight) The Kingston National Bank At Kingston Corners FOUNDED 1896 (Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation) THE POST, FRIDAY, JANUARY 12.1051 Last Sunday it snowed and snow- ed and snowed and the Russians may thank Mrs. Warren Dennis | for that. It seems that July 25 is St. Jacob’s Day and Mrs. Den- | nis says that she read in an ar- ticle in the New York Times on prophesies for 1950 which said that for every cloud in the sky on St. Jacob’s Day there would be a snowfall the following. winter. So she marked the calendar for that day. Her husband scoffed at it, which husbands are apt to do. Her friends called on her during! the spring and early summer of | last year and noting the large! mark ’ circling July 25th asked | why, and were told about the St. Jacob’s Day prophesy. They left shaking their heads, and one or two murmured, ‘poor Warren,” but lo! on July 25 Mrs. Warren Dennis: looked into the sky and there was not one bit of blue, the whole heavens were one big cloud and if we haven’t had just one big snow storm this winter we'd like to know what you call it. We never heard of St. Jacob. Of course, we knew of Jacob in Genesis, one of the Hebrew patri- archs. He it was who saw the angels ascending and descending a. ladder from earth to heaven; he was the one about which we had a fight with some kid outside of Sunday School one day because we claimed that ladders were not invented in Jacob’s time. But this Jacob couldn’t be a saint, first, because of his record and second, if we remember our Bible, all the saints were in the new testament—so who is this St. Jacob that brought us all the snow this winter ? We looked him up. All we could find in the libraries at Dallas and Wilkes-Barre was that he governed the church of Toul for a few years in the 8th century. There was nothing in our text books connected with him about snow or the twenty-fifth of July. Probably the New York Times writer gathered his information from the libraries of Washington or New York. At any rate, we are glad to know that if there are clouds in the sky on that day just as many snow storms will occur the following winter. Before this the only way we had of forcasting winter weather was in the last eight weeks by the ground hog’s shadow on February 2nd. This information was too late for us. You see, we want to spend our winters in Florida or California, after we retire in five more years, and there was always an argument in our house whether to leave the lake before or after Christmas. We finally agreed to decide by the severity of the win- ter. If we waited until February 2nd to find out, we might as well stay at the lake all winter. Along comes Mrs, Dennis, and now we can predict the winter in July. Our hats are off to St. Jacob. Many persons at the lake can predict the weather, not as well as St. Jacob, but good enough for us. When we lived in New York City we could tell a day or two in advance. An east wind, meant rain within twenty-four hours, but up here the wind may come from the east for days and no rain. We learned to interpret other signs, but they mean nothing here, so we depend on old timers to tell us, Harry Allen, the elder, knows when it is going to rain in a day or two. Squire Davis and the Jacksons are others. Some of the farmers can tell long before the buds appear whether we will have a large fruit crop. Now, if we contemplate taking a holiday trip in 1951 we are going to ask Mrs. Dennis what the saints say. Well, let's hope next July 25 will be without a cloud in the sky—if it is, does anyone know where 'we can sell a nice set of tire chains ?—only used one winter. Shavertown Lumber Co. Employees Are Dined The employees and staff of Shav- ertown Lumber Company were guests at a dinner party given by the proprietors, Ralph Garrahan and George Ruckno at Irem Tem- ple Country Club on Thursday night. Cards and games were enjoyed. Group singing ended the evening's entertainment. Ruth Earl accom- panied the singing, and Mrs. Stephen Johnson conducted the games. ; Mrs. Ralph Garrahan and Mrs. George Ruckno each received a vase of yellow rosebuds from the employes. . Guests were: Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Garrahan, Dallas; Mr. and Mrs. George Ruckno, Forty Fort; Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Casterline, Mr. and Mrs, Malcolm Kitchen, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Earl, Mr. and Mrs. Allan Kittle, Mr. and Mrs. James R. Bertram, Atlee Kocher, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Randall, Mr. and Mrs, Robert Price, Mr. and Mrs. John Southwell, John Southwell, Jr. Shavertown; Mr, and Mrs. Donald Casterline, Mr. and Mrs. Merton Rifenbery, Tunkhannock. THE DALLAS POST “More than a newspaper, a community institution” ESTABLISHED 1889 Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers’ Association ° A non-partisan liberal progressive newspaper pub- lished every Friday morning at the Dallas Post plant Lehman Avenue, Dallas Pennsylvania. x Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa., under the Act of March 3, 1870. Subscrip- tion rates: $2.50 a year; $1.50 six months. No subscriptions accepted for less than six months. Out-of state subscriptions: $3.00 a year; $2.00 six months or less. ack issues, more than one week old, 16¢c. Single copies, at a rate’ of 6c each, can be obtained every Tri- day morning at the following mnews- stands: Dallas—Tally-Ho Grille, Bow- man’s Restaurant; Shavertown, Evans’ Drug Store; Trucksville— Gregory's Store; Shaver's' Store; Idetown—Oaves Store; Huntsvilie— Barnes Store; Alderson—Deater's Store; Fernbrook—Reese’s Store. When requesting a change of ad- dress subscribers are asked to give their old as well as new address. Allow two week for changes of ad- dress or new subscription to be placed on mailing list. We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manuscripts, hotographs and editorial matter wun- ess self-addressed, stamped envelope ts enclosed, and in no case will this material be held for more than 30 days. National display advertising rates 68c per column inch. Local display advertising rates 066c per column inch; specified position 60c per inch. Advertising copy received on Thurs- day will be charged at 60c per column inch. Classified rates Sc per word. Mini- mum eharge 50c. All charged ads 10c additional. \ Unless paid for at advertising rates, we ean give no assurance at an- nouncements of plays, parties, ram- mage sales or any affairs for raising money will appear. in a specific issue. Preferences will in all instances be given to editorial matter which has not previously appeared in publication. Editor and Publisher HOWARD W. RISLEY Associate Editor MYRA ZEISER RISLEY Contributing Editor MRS. T. M. B. HICKS Sports Editor WILLIAM HART ONLY YESTERDAY From The Post of tem and twenty years ago this week. Ten Years Ago in the Dallas Post From the Issue of January 10, 1941 Dallas Postoffice, serving a rap- idly growing community, may be eligible for second ' class rating, thus placing all clerks under civil service and paving the way for door-to-door delivery in the vil- lage. Postmaster Polacky states that the Dallas Postoffice has just handled the biggest year’s volume of mail in its history. Cement was poured this week for the bridge over the Trucks- ville-Dallas section of 6 the new highway at Overbrook avenue. A $35,000 WPA street drainage project for Dallas was approved by the Borough Council Monday night. Work which will include stone curbs and box culverts on Spring, Norton, Lehman, Center Hill and Franklin streets will start at once, Many contributions have been made to the fund for new uniforms for Dallas Borough High ‘School Band. Plans for Dallas-Harveys Lake three-lane highway have been drawn and are ready to go to the bidders. Construction, scheduled for this summer, may be postponed if threats of war make eonstruc- tion of defense highways impera- tive. Fred Kiefer outens with a short- short about Flasher the Ferret. Fred Welsh has the most elab- orate and best organized ‘putz’ in the Back Mountain. For fifteen years he has been collecting mini- atures for the Christmas tree dis- play, enough to fill two rooms. He will let the tree stand until Feb- ruary 1, to give everybody a chance to see it. Harvey's Lake Mrs. Joseph Rauch will enter- tain the members of the Executive Board of the Harveys Lake Women’s Club on Tuesday evening, January 16 at ‘8 o’clock. ! William Cromley and sons returned to Newark, N. J. spending ten days with Mrs. Shultz. have after Kate Elijah Cromley is visiting rela- tives in Danville. } Mrs. Stanley Kapson has re- turned to her mother’s home from Nesbitt Hospital, with her infant son David George, who was born January 1. Mother and baby are doing nicely. Bradley Rauch is ill at his home with bronchitis. : In Memoriam In loving memory of Thomas Kingston who tragically departed this life December 23, 1947. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thom- as Kingston and his sisters. = = — a QUESTIONS DESERVE ANSWER Howard W. Risley The Dallas Post Dear Mr. Risley: In reference to your editorial in the December 29th issue of The Dallas Post, you will find in the December 30th issue of the Wilkes Barre Record an item on Scran- ton Housing Authority for 1% million State Housing Project, cost of the site to be $75,000. The New Dealers passed legis- lation whereby ‘Authorities’ can be set’ up. I understand that these Author- ities do not need the approval of home owners or the taxpaying public. You have asked some pertinent questions relative to the Luzerne County Housing Authority and these questions should be an- swered for the benefit of the Tax- paying public. Yours sincerely, C. H, Matthews Dallas, Pa., R. F. D. 1 January 2, 1951 SUGGESTIONS FOR JOINTURE Dallas, Pa., January 9, 1951 To The Editor The Dallas Post The controversy between Kings- ton. Township School Board and the Housing Authority, in which I am on the side of the School Board, brings to mind the import- ant. question of school finances. At every investigation in the past it has been found that Dallas Borough was in a more favorable financial position per pupil than any of the surrounding districts, expecting Lake Township and this is probably still the case notwith- standing the wails of woe from the school directors and rumors being circulated. This is due to the circumstances of no transpor- tation expense, and relatively high valuation of property for which we are paying in taxes, If the school directors are going to effect a jointure in spite of these conditions I offer the follow- ing conditions which I believe are fair and I think the people of Dal- las should insist that they be in- cluded in the contract. { To begin with, unless the law has been changed in the last few years, there is no such thing as a joint school district in Pennsyl- vania. I assume they mean “Joint School” which I will use for re- ference purposes. It would be op- erated by what I will call a “Joint School Board.” Jurisdiction of Districts and The Joint School Board The participating districts shall retain their identity and the re- spective school boards shall per- form all functions which may prop- erly be performed by such boards excepting the actual operation of the schools. The districts shall enumerate and transport pupils, levy and collect taxes, prepare budgets, repair buildings, pay debts, and all other functions not herein assigned to the joint school board. The relation of the Joint Board to the District Boards shall be the same as an outside party. The Joint Board shall keep records and accounts the same as a district board. The income of the Joint Board shall be tuition from the participat- ing districts as computed by law. To provide funds for the operation the first year each district shall make advance payments to the Joint Board based on its own ex- penses the preceding year as follows: (a) July 1 and monthly there- after salaries of all employes on a twelve month basis excepting teachers with contracts starting payments September 1; (b) September 1 and monthly thereafter one-sixth, of the total expenses the preceding year for teachers’ salaries. After six months actual requirements to be estima- ted and pro-rated between the dis- tricts in the proportion of pupils enrolled. (c) September 1 and monthly thereafter prior expenses for the corresponding month for light, heat, gas, electricity, and tele- phone. Fuel in bins to be inven- toried and the value credited against this payment. (d) October 1 lump sum pay- ment equal to prior years actual expense for textbooks, instructions supplies janitor supplies, and any other items commonly chargeable to operating expsénes. (e) March 1 sufficient funds to cover the expenses of the Joint Board to June 30. At the end of the year refund to be made if either district has paid more than its tuition would require. Note: I do not believe any re- sponsibile school official or anyone with school board experience will say that this school will save money. I am of the opinion it will cost far more than at present. In general the district boards shall expend funds commonly chargeable as follows: Actounts A, General control; E, Maintenance; F, Fixed Charges; G, Debt Service; H, Capital Outlay; B-12, Tuition. y The Joint Board shall expend funds chargeable to B Instruction; D. Operation of Plant. Expenses under Account C, Auxiliary Agen- (Continued on Page Six) i S To 12-year-old Tay MacArthur, Who owns a beautiful German Shepherd: Barnyard Notes NO ROOM IN HEAVEN FOR DOGS (An answer to a letter asking for information) I am sorry your Sunday School teacher told you “there is no room in heaven for dogs.” I can understand that this statement has bothered you considerably. : % ; Heaven is a big place because heaven is God and God stretches from the sun to the moon, to the stars, and back to earth. ’ Heaven must be a big place to hold all the good people who have died in the many years since the world began. As‘ angels have wings, heaven must give them plenty of space in which to spread these wings and fly from one shining cloud to another. : 3 The millions and millions of folks who have owned dogs and gone on to their heavenly home, surely would feel lonely without their dogs. And as there is no lonliness in heaven, God has made provision for man’s best friend to dwell therein. We are certain of this, for it was God who named the dog by spelling His own name backward. ? . Yes heaven is a big place, with lots of shady spots, long lanes banked with flowers, fountains bubbling up out of the earth, good little rabbits munching on golden carrots, and by their side good dogs, big and little, dozing in pure sunshine of celestial spaces. It would be surprisingly strange, were there no dogs in heaven, y i. for I believe that Christ had a little dog which followed Him back E wp and forth from Nazareth to Judea, through the streets of Jerusalem, and cuddled trustingly in, the boat when He crossed the stormy Sea of Galilee. : 3 : It seems to me I can see, on that tragic afternoon on Calvary, as Christ cried out “Why hast Thou Forsaken Me?” a little dog whining vainly at the foot of the cross to lick His bleeding hands. I believe that today this same little dog can be no other place than = in heaven with Christ his master, lying contentedly at the foot of the throne of God. : ; I am sorry indeed that someone gave you the misinformation that “there is no room in heaven for dogs.”—Will Judy, Editor of Dog World Magazine. THE CALF-PATH By Sam Walter Foss One day through the primeval wood A calf walked home as good calves should; But made a trail all bent askew, A crooked trail as all calves do. Since then three hundred years have fled And I infer the calf is dead. ) ~ » But still he left behind his trail, And thereby hangs my moral tale. . The trail was taken up next day By a lone dog that passed that way; An then a wise bell-wether sheep Pursued the trail o'er vale and steep, And drew the flock behind him, too, As good bell-wethers always do. And from that day, o’er hill and glade, Through those old woods a path was made. And many men wound in and out, c | And dodged and turned and bent about, : i And uttered words of righteous wrath Because 'twas such a crooked path; But still they followed—do not laugh— The first migrations of that calf, And through ‘this winding wood-way stalked ™* Because he wobbled when he walked. This forest path became a lane, That bent and turned and turned again; This crooked lane became a road, Where many a poor horse with his load jos Toiled on beneath the burning sun, And travelled some three miles in one. And thus a century and a half They trod the footsteps of that calf. The years passed on in swiftness fleet, : The road became a village street; ; aN And this, before men were aware, A city’s crowded thoroughfare. * TRE And soon the central street was this ) Of a renowned metroplis; And men two centuries and a half J Trod in the footsteps of that calf. : #50 = Each day a hundred thousand rout Followed this zigzag calf about ¢ i And o'er his crooked journey went The traffic of a continent. A hundred thousand men were led By one calf near three centuries dead. : 3 They followed still his crooked way. ? < And lost one hundred years a day, ’ . : s Se For thus such reverence is lent ! To well-established precedent. A moral lesson this might teach Were I ordained and called to preach; For men are prone to go it blind A X HY Fos, Along the calf-paths of the mind, dn And work away from sun to sun VL: To do what other men have done. Rit They follow in the beaten track, : g And out and in, and forth and back, : ‘ And still their devious course pursue, 37 ; I To keep the path that others do. i mbps if 3 They keep the path a sacred groove, : Along which all their lives they move; But how the wise old wood-gods laugh, 2 ; : Yo Who saw the first primeval calf. f Ah, many things this tale might teach— But I am not ordained to preach. AHORA Call y ‘GAY For INSURANCE ® Farm Bureau Mutual Auto Ins. Co. @® Farm Bureau Mutual Fire Ins. Co. ® Farm Bureau Life Ins. Co. CENTERMORELAND 62-R-12 or 62-R/3 ~ ARTHUR GAY ® ERNEST GAY 2 Home Office: Columbus, Ohio Chan SA as « 1 a TREE TTT CLR OGHA RCC RRC ERY I 3 ou \ . dae a - A : 3 hp I a OR Te