the Philadelphia Bulletin. yp with some interesting revela- Philadelphia Writer Looks At Anthracite Area And Makes Some Interesting Observations By JOHN C. CALPIN It is often good te read what others think of us, whether it | | tions. One of his recent articles is reprinted here with the kind permission of the Bulletin— ~ stimulates our pride or stirs us Editor to do something about our- selves and get dewn to business. Such is the article written some weeks ago by John C. Calpin for Every Friday night, the roads leading to Scranton, Wilkes-Barre, | Hazleton, Pottsville and their sub- | Here Mr. Calpin leoks at the | semble a busy anthill. area we call home and comes Cars are coming, bumper to bump- ‘Best dressed... in Edwards shoes! Consistent winner among the best dressed fellas and gals, tots to teens... dwards, famed for Quality, Fit PLUS Fashion for over 60 years. See our complete selection of budget-wise fdwards today! Princess Fe Lo vi Priced or 9.95 - HUMPHR YS CHILDRENS’ BOOTERY i Back Mt. Shopping enter Shavertown OPEN EVERY NITE TIL 9 | Northeast Extension of the Turn- pike, back from a weekly migration. Joe and Mike and Steve, hus- bands, fathers and sons, are return- ing home for the weekend, many of them from hundreds of miles away. Then, on Sunday night, late, or early Monday morning, the migra- |urbs in the anthracite | region re- | tion goes the other way—to Phila- | delphia, Bridgeport, Conn., Wilming- ton, Del., or Binghamton, to name only a few of the places where er, over - Routes 611, 6,122 and the former miners seek work. For five days, they have to leave their Marys, Julies and Katies be- hind, tending the children, and often working in garment factories, as well. But the money these ‘migrants’ make in their distant jobs helps keep the anthracite region, one of the five worst depressed areas in Pennsyl- vania and the country, afloat. Also, these migrants, along with their brothers or neighbors who make shorter trips daily—50 to 100 miles round-trip—to get to their jobs, are among the staunchest boosters of plans to bring new. in- dustries to the coal region. Too long a reliance on anthracite once the prime industry in five Pennsylvania - counties, has turned their area into one with surplus labor. g Many Young Have Left Many of the best of the region's men and women in the 25-to-45 age bracket have left the region, some never to return. Others like Joe and Mike and Steve réturn for short weekends. They: hate the rooming houses in which they live away, and the double costs. But they endure vit. The glut of anthracite has changed the way of life for upwards of a million people in the coal regions. EASTER — SPECIAL Limited Number Girl’s and ‘Suits Spring Coats Regularly $10.98 to $19.98 SAVE V5 Broken Sizes » Open every nite to 9 P.M. BREE g HUMPHREY'S. Children’s Apparel BACK. MT. SHOPPING CENTER SHAVERTOWN GAVY’S SU MAIN HIGHWAY KET Call OR 4-7161 for Free Delivery THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1961 The change has helped to keep the region a going concern, despite its problems. These people are diverse, but united in a common loyalty to their counties and area, which include Lackawanna, Luzerne, Carbon, Schuylkill and Northumberland counties in the heart of the district. The exodus began in earnest in the mid-30’s. Particularly, young people left. Girls with high school educa- tions turned to the nursing and teaching professions, and left the area, never to return. Half the nurses today in Philadel- phia seem to speak with that ‘coal region” inflection, an up-and-down cadence and the elision of certain consonants. And the boys in Pottsville were pretty upset last June when Ray Bakey, head of the Pennsylvania Employment Service office, got jobs in the Library of Congress for 85 the area high schools. Most of the people past 30 years of age have felt they had to stay, because of homes, families, advanc- ing years, or even work habits which kept them from industrial skilled jobs in the cities. , Nearly every family has an-auto- mobile. They are needed to take the 5,000 or more Jack Brennans and Bill Joneses and Frankie Sicil- ianos 40 or 50 or 60 miles to work every day, in Allentown, Bethlehem, Reading, Pottstown, Harrisburg or any place that hires the mechanical talents so many of these people have. During World War II, when the region supplied so many boys to the services, the others flocked to the shipyards, the tank and automobile and aircraft factories. Many broke the pattern of daily or weekly com- muting, marrying city girls and establishing new lives and families. Still ‘Coal Crackers’ No matter how long they stay away, though, they are united in a | common loyalty to their counties | and their region. It is an honor to | them, at home or away from it, to be known as “coal crackers”. But they have a wry joke they tell to each other. They say the ‘coal region is a good place to be from” with the emphasis on the “from”. The wry joke conceals a real love for the region, and a sense of soli- darity which has helped to carry the anthracite country through a long stretch of bad years. This feeling grows out of the history of the region. The natives are an amalgam of half the countries off middle Europe, and of the English, Trish and ‘Welsh who came before them. English and Germans were the | firsts settlers, and they are now the | merchants and farmers for the area. | Welshmen came over to drive the | shafts for the new mines in the mid- | 1800's. Irish immigrants came next, leav- ling their famine-ridden country in TRUCKSVILLE SWIFT PREMIU BLADE CUT \ - CHUCK ROAST 39: ~ CARROTS 2 Tor 2 3c © CHICKEN ® TURKEY © BEEF PIES ORANGE 5 rom PICTSWEET FOR 1 , " 6 0z. LIBBYS FROZEN JUICE SL. Remember Our New Year’s Resolution . . .. “WE WILL NOT i E UAncRsoLY ON ON QUALITY. GAVY'S TRUCKSVILLE OR 4-1161 - | tating to the mines. girls in the graduating classes of 3 RE ES EE AN 2 the middle of the last century, grevi- Next came the Poles, the Lithuanians the Hungar- ians and the Italians in successive waves of immigration. Jewish mer- chants went to the area and were assimilated into the whole. It was never a haven for Negroes and only a handful are there. At first the nationality groups kept to themselves, while they learned the customs of the new country they had chosen. Because they were all poor, they huddled together in the “patches,” the clumps of houses which fringe every larger community. Many had to live in the “com- pany’ stores and had little at week’s end to put by with the customary thrift they had brought from their peasant forebears. Communities United Schools, religions and the common ground of work in the mines threw them together. The fact that the great percentage of the young immigrants were un- married and that there were at least 11 men for every nine or ten young women promoted romance. Inter- marriage between national groups followed. Some strains stayed to them- selves,, but many other natives have Irish-Welsh, Irish- Polish, German- Polish, Polish-Lithuanian, Italian- Irish combinations of parents. Social caste or strata is almost unknown. Meany had big families.- With many mouths to feed, two things occurred. The boys went to work early, and the girls and women, when freed of housework, were also available for jobs. It wasn't new. The people, from Europe brought with them the idea that there was nothing wrong about both fathers and mothers working if it was necessary. They had done it in the “old country.” ’With this background, it was nor- mal, when hard times arrived, for the wife to become the breadwinner, if need be. For the textile and silk throwing industries, looking ' for cheap, ‘abundant female labor, had put small mills into almost every community. It was the accepted thing for boys, nine and ten years of age, to be “picking slate” by hand in the] breakers which crushed and graded’ the coal. At 11, a boy could be tend- ing the mule teams which hauled the coal cars deep in the mines. Some boys got into the mines aty that age and stayed there until “miners’ ‘asthma’ or rheumatism or injury claimed them when they were 50 or 60. They went to work early in the morning with their lunch pail and tea bottles clanking on shoulders, with headgear marked with their | badge of office, the miners’ cap. Once they were lighted with candles, then by carbide gas and then by! electricity. Mid-afternoon, having mined their six tons,” they would trudge home, stopping off at favorite pubs for a’ couple of beers to cut the dust from their throats, before and during pro- hibition. This wasithe life they knew when | “That’s be- cause it’s one of the top- notch weeklies in the entire QD - country!” weekly ments | officials | second largest garment center in the United States. "much success, to convince the men ‘that garment making and cutting is ‘not a woman's job alone. disaster struck their region. \ Membership in GREATER WEEKLIES is by invitation only . proud to have received this invitation to the ranks of America’s finest We thank you for your readership of The Dallas Post . are able to publish a better newspaper. When Disaster Hit there was underemploy~- ment. The work became seasonal, then sporadic. Fifty days of work a year was pretty good. Even the mine operators didn’t know when they would get orders which kept the mines open. Colliery whistles would sound in some localities, at a fixed time, to summon the miners to work the next day. ‘Natalie works tomor- row” or “Sayre is working” the word would pass. The newspapers p and radio do the Paul Revere for |Pay it. whole counties or areas, in these | Relief payments and unemploy- times. { ment compensation keep many fam- Soon the women had to work ilies going. Last year, $11,575,000 in harder, in the small factories which | unemployment compensation went themselves were not too stable, and | to the region. A grand total of working on financial shoestrings. $90,088,000 has been paid out since Synthetics took the place of silk, |1950, while an average of 12:5 per and textiles sought even cheaper | cent of the workers have been unem- labor in the South. Another in- | | ployed over those years. dustry, tobacco and cigars, had a| An average of 10,000 people in brief run, died out and returned | Lackawanna County alone are now recently, to be a mainstay in some currently on relief, or 4.2 per cent places. | of the populace. They have received As late as 1920, there were 150,- | $44,054,448 since 1950. 000 miners turning out 89,000, 000 | But the money earned by those tons of anthracite, and supplying who are working, many railroad men with work, as | bring it home weekends, well. trained to handle it. Where other workers have Social Security, and the railroad men have their national pension, to which they pay, the miners had the pension fund of the United Mine Workers. But hard times have forced the UMW to cut the anthracite pension in half, from $100 to $50, as declin- ing production cut the income from the 70 cents premium paid on each ton mined in the big collieries. The independents and ‘bootleggers don't First, or those who send it home to Pop and Mom, Last week, there were fewer than | and maybe even a little from the | 10,000 men in the mines and strip- | relief check, is being cheerfully pings. added to big sums, to get new in- In. Schuylkill County, unemploy- i dustry for the region. ment is a terrible 18.5 per cent of the | Nr Ne working force. Scranton and Lack- | Subscribe To The Post awanna County have more than 12 | per cent unempleyed, while Wilkes- | some of the idle men could not be and those who | tr DALLAS PENNSYLVANIA Tommy Andrew Shows Rabbits Takes Many Prizes At Maryland Show - Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Andrew, Shavertown, exhibited their rabbits at the Baltimore County Rabbit and Cavy Breeders Spring Show, Sunday, in Hebbville, Maryland. Mr. Andrew is the Art teacher in Plymouth Public Schools and con- ducts the T-Bar-A Rabbitry as a hobby. He is a licensed judge and a director in the American Rabbit Breeders Association with head- quarters in Pittsburgh. two third place ribbons, one fourth and two fifths with nine of his | pedigree American Standard Chin- | chilla Rabits. He exhibits at all the major shows along the eastern sea- board and is well known throughout the East as an authority on rabbits. This coming Thursday he will lecture and present a' display of the many novelties they make at T-BAR-A to | the Lions Club of Wilkes- Barre, at Carousel Restaurant. Did You Read Trading Post Barre-Hazleton-Luzerne County | have only 86 per cent of its available | people at work. Only ten per cent of the jobless are women who want to work, which shows the extent to which | unemployment has bitten into the | family lives. | By nature, these people dislike federal doles, but need compels them to take the surplus foods which the government is distributing in dis-' tressed. areas. Most of them are good trencher- men, who used to eat heavily of beef in every form, sausage and other hearty foods. Many in the small communities have had their own cows, which roamed the moun- tainsides until mine cave-ins, strip- pings and motor cars made it too | dangerous. Now older men can’t get work in the mines, and younger men run the big shovels which do the strip mining. 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Our selection points up the fact that The Dallas Post meets the require- It means that you, our readers, are getting more local news, pictures, features and adver- tising than the average weekly paper offers. lation is carefully checked by the Audit Bureau of Circulation, for the pro- tection of our advertisers, it helped tremendously in our selection as a member of Greater Weeklies. equal to those demanded by metropolitan papers. “More than a Newspaper — A Community Institution” — NOW 4 GREATER WEEKLY NEWSPAPER — Yes . oo 7 THE DALLAS HAS BEEN SELECTED A Greater Weeklies Newspaper . « We are Since The Dallas Post circu- OST At the recent show he garnered gj . . through you we Keep up with your community-Read The Dallas Post rea 0/ ro di be