A THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK Blow, bugles of battle, the marches of peace; ... East, west, north, and south let the long quarrel cease; “Sing a song of great joy that the lr began, - Sing the glory to God and of good-will to man! WHITTIER—Christmas Carmen. The celebration: of Christmas is so universal and yet so intimate that it can, and does, provide the inspiration for hundreds of newspaper editorials at this time of the year. It is the one time of the year A when newspapers devote their space whole-heartedly and THOUGHTFUL enthusiastically to the church and i significance. CHRISTMAS Since most of the editorials will be writtrn expressly for those who celebrate the holiday as a part of their reli- > 0% i oom; we should like to write this one for those people who, through accident of birth or the other iysterfons. factors which determine our religious beliefs, cannot believe as we do. Primarily, Christmas 1s a religious holiday, but as the anniversary of an historic date it has another significance, too, for though the Man from Nazar- eth came to found a new religion he came, too, to preach a social philosophy toward which all creeds, all/races have been moving slowly for 1900 years. Man may deny the divinity of Jesus Christ, but no thinking person can deny the fundamental logic nor the soulful philosophy which the Gallilean preacher advanced on the hillsides of Judea. Until the last star of the universe fades those doctrines must stand—for Christians and non-Christians—as Truth. oe If we were a Jew, a Mohammedan, a Buddhist or a Taoist this week we 1 should have a ‘Christmas of our own kind in which—without ritual, without presents, without tinselled-tree—we should celebrate simply and with thought- ful reflection the birthday anniversary of Jesus of Nazareth. ~~ Jesus of Nazareth—a man who numbered among his friends sinners, prostitutes and lowly persons, a man who, though tolerant himself, preached a doctrine so radical it alarmed Romans into killing Him, a man who refused a crown and disappointed a people who expected Him to found a kingdom with a _ sword, a Man who—divine or no—was so far ahead of his times that the ‘world still is struggling toward his ideal. 2 # Because voters in Luzerne Cs have long been conscious of a confusion and ineffectiveness about local WPA matters, the charges made by Edward N. Jones, Works Progress Administrator for Pennsylvania, i in : NOW, WHO GETS tion. THE BLAME? fx tizens might consider Mr. Jones's statement: “There is not Ya single administrative member of the relief staff in Luzerne County who does not owe his job either to Judge Fine, Ambrose. Langan, “Tug” Burns or Mor- gan Bird”. The presence of politics in the relief structure becomes more understand- able if, as Mr. Jones says, our local administration is being controlled by the shrewd, erstwhile fisuisnonts of The Great Pinchot. : $d % * © Appropos of iE country’s insistence upon tangling: itself up in foreign affairs, we might answer the question of one of our correspondents, who, after ; commenting on The Post’s peace campaign, asks “What WHAT must we do to stay out of wars.’ IS The question is one good enough to deserve a better NEUTRALITY? answer. When all is said and done, though, we suspect that this country gets into wars because its people love a fight. We find it very difficult to stay out of European squabbles. In the brief life-time of these United States there have been just two general European wars. This country became involved in both. In one we managed to get in- volved twice, and on both sides—probably a record. ~ Despite their fervent claims to neutrality, the people of this country’ are never really neutral in temper. Who stands for Italy here today? Perhaps the first thing to do in staying out of war is to remember that neutrality implies more than official statements 2 Washington. We are a bit bewildered over the current excitement concerning the country’ s participation in the Olympic games at Berlin next year . . . bewildered at the mystic connection between muscles “and human STATE rights. DEPARTMENT It is admitted, of course, that Hitler's policies are ATHLETICS un-American and that he has excluded Jews from Ger- many’s team. We deplore that. But after all, it is his coun- ty dod very little of our business. Its only a matter gf seventeen years since we were killing German Jews. These passionate crusades to inflict our opinions upon other peoples gen- erally get us inta trouble. It did in 1812 with Great Britain and in 1798 with France. There is always the possibility that we are not perfect in every phase of human rights. We should be the first to resent correction by another country. We may be wrong, but we cannot understand why this country’s team cannot go over there next year, win its usual victories, and come back home without volving the State departments of both countries in their races and 2 swimming matches. j THE BUSINESS WEEK This surve;r of business coauditions during the last seven days is com- piled by The Post from business figures furnished by the United States Department of Commerce. Country holiday buying entered its final period with a considerably larger ~ volume than last year . . . Some wholesale lines were already feeling the ef- fects of Spring ordejs . . . Holiday lines werejrunning low ad a result of heavy refill orders from retailers . . . leading department stores in New York showed a losd in business from last year due to the fact that there was abnormal buy- ing in anticipation of the sales tax which went into effect December 10, 1934 . Earlier than normal gift buying was reported in rural communities, attri- buted to the increased buying power of farmers . . . Citrus fruits were moving in heavy volume North from Florida . . . Residential building for the first eleven months was up 85 per cent . . . The Automobile Manufacturers’ Asso- ciation estimated automobile output for the year at 4,150,000 units, a gain of 45 per cent over 1934 . . . Steel industry activity relaxed slightly, but a steel executive predicted a decided increase in the first quarter of 1936 . . . Rail- roads are expanding . . . Pennsylvania Railroad ordered 10,000 new freight cars to cost $25,000,000 . . . In Cleveland industrial payrolls were running $9,000,000 a month more than last year, with 10,000 more men working . . . Actual housing shortages were reported in Wilmington and Cleveland . . Postal receipts and mail order sales were up . . . Montgomery Ward reported an all-time record in November . . . Sales of General Motors cars in Novem- ber were three times greater than last November and largest for a November in the history of the company . . . Private industry and WPA projects con- tinued to absorb increasing numbers of employables . . . The United States exported $221,237,929 of merchandise in October, Sompared with $206,413, 0683 in the same month last year. ESTABLISHED 1889 TheDallasPost TELEPHONE DALLAS 300 TO A LIBERAL, INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING AT THE DALLAS Post PLANT LEHMAN AVENUE, DALLAS, PA. By THE Darras Post, INC. HowARD RISLEY HowegLL REEs ‘TRUMAN STEWART General Manager Managing Editor Mechanical a The Dallas Post is on sale at the local news stands. price by mail $2.00 payable in advance. Single copies five cents’ ‘each. Entered as second-class matter at the Dallas Post Office. THE DALLAS POST is a youthful weekly rural-suburban news- paper, owned, edited and operated by young men interested in the de- velopment of the great rural-suburban region of Luzerne County and in the attainment of the highest ideals of journalism. THE POST is truly “more than a newspaper, it is a community institution.” Congress shall make no law ¥ * abridging the freedom of speech, or of Press.—From the first amendnient to the Constitution of the United States. Subscription, $2.00 Per Year Posabls in Advance), Subscribers who send us changes of address are requested to include both new and old addresses when they submit their notice of change. his Wilkes-Barre address last Saturday night merit reflec- 3 THE DALLAS POST PROGRAM THE DALLAS POST will lend its support and offers the use of its columns to all projects which will help this community and the great rural suburban territory which it serves to attain the Iollowing major improvements: ; 1. Construction of more sidewalks for the protection Sb pedestrians in Kingston township and Dallas. Bh RE 2. A free library located in’ the: Dallas region. 3. Better and adequate street lighting in Trucksville, Shavertown, Fernbrook and Dallas. 4. Sanitary sewage disposal system for Dallas. 5. Closer co-operation between Dallas borough and surrounding townships. / 6. Consolidated high schools and better co-operation between those that now exist. 7. Adequate water supply for fire protection. 5 8. The formation of a Back Mountain Club made up of business men and home owners interested in the development of a community con- sciousness in Dallas, Trucksville,.Shavertown and" Fernbrook. 9. A modern concrete highway leading from Dallas’ and connecting with the Sullivan Trail at Tunkhannock. : When the responsilility for the inefficiency 1 is laid, ci- (Editor's Note: To Lizette Woodworth Reese, whose poem, “Tears”, has comforted untold hundreds, death came this week to blow away the wisp of fog which “stood betwixt her and the sun’. Miss Reese would have been 80 next month. She died in Baltimore, where she had always lived. Here, in her memory, The Post reprints her poem, “Tears”, which H. L. Mencken called “one of the greatest sonnets ever written.) HEN I consider Life and its fews years— A wisp of fog betwixt us and the syn; A call to battle, and*the battle done Ere the last echo dies within our ears: ‘A rose choked in the grass; an hour of fears; The guests that past a darkening shore do beat, The burst of music down an unlistening street— I wonder at the idleness of tears. Ye old, old dead, and ye: of yesternight, * Chieftains, and bards, and keepers of the sheep, By every cup of sorrow that you had, Loose me trom tears, and make me see aright How each hath back what once he stayed to weep; Iiomer his sight, David his little lad! LizeTTE WOODWORTH REESE WEEKLY BOOST SANTA CLAUS who, having survived generations of doubt and suspicion, now comes again to prove that, as always, he is big enough to forgive. THEY'LL DISAPPEAR WHEN THE WATER RISES Post's unique experimental campaign in behalf of peace, is reflected in nation’s library shelves. tional “Paths of Glory”. Since then that story has been made into a pla; a not-very-successful one, to be sure—and has been translated into a number of other languages. If you believed us then, believe us now when we say that “Blood Relations”, a novel by Philip Gibbs, i is the equal of Cobb’s great work It is to be expected, we suppose, that the greatest war stories should con from abroad, from the countries which suffered most during the four and half years of horror and terror. The first, “All Quiet On The Western Fro came from a German. “Paths of Glory”, although written in this country, car from a man who had served with the” Canadian army and was about th French. Now Philip Gibbs, an Englishman, writes about the Evgih and the French in the years from 1913 to 1934. Gibbs’ book is considerably less gruesome than Remarque’s or Cobb's The Englishman has told the story of Count Paul von Arnsberg, a Germ Rhodes scholar who marries Aubrey Middleton, the very English sister of one of his schoolmates at Oxford. Paul has been raised In a Bavarian Cc (which Aubrey’s brother insists upon calling a “Slosh™) and his wife i by his Seating courtesy. In him are the traditions of Wotan and world. “Blood Relations” is by no means a love story, but there is somethi deeply inspiring in the survival of Paul’s and Aubrey’s love after their | P go at each other’s throats. Mostly, the story deals with Aubrey’s life with son, Franz Wilhelm, in the Schloss after Paul has gone as a Lieutenant sakes his characters and deals in deft, bioad strokes with the =o w are happening about him. We cannot remember having ever understood temperaments of the peoples in the war, the slow advances and retreats, | ade, the long wait for peace, the Wilsonian influence, and, finally, the Germ: sr which turned toward Adolph Hitler as much as we did when we laid Relations’ down. It is a novel, with all the entertainment and thrill and readability of novel; but, somehow, it also is a history. We recommend it sincerely. # # # : The theory that history is “lies agreed upon” is failing of fultillment in the controversies evoked by the frequent charge of writers that industry United States into the World War. One of he most recent of ‘these debat has been taking place in The New York Times letter-column for two months now. Or the side of industry are Thomas W. Lamont of the firm of J. P. Mos gan & Co., and Newton D. Baker, who, since he served in Wilsons Cabin when war was declared, certainly should deserve to be heard. On the other side are a host of less well-known persons. Their argument centers mostly about a letter Ambassador Walter Hines Page sent to President Wilson on March 5, 1917, saying “It is not improbable that the only way of maintaining our pr ent pre-eminent trade position and averting a panic is by declaring ‘war on Germany.” The argument, it seems to us, is still to be settled satisfactorily and you can follow it in The Times. It must be admitted, in all fairness, it seems that, regardless of the truth of the Hines message and its significance, Nicolson’s “Dwight Morrow”’, which started the controversy when it charged that Mr. Morrow had a part in de vilizing the world was a little harsh on the financiers, all of whom were not in. favor of war and who, despite their power, could not have held the. Am I people from getting into the war. As The Times says: “It is an open question which kind of book is likel. to prove more useful in the long run: the book warning ug against the \ men and propagandas that drag the United States into a World War, o book pointing out how fixed is the American habit of getting involved world wars. -* * * Of timely interest now (as this is written Mussolini still wants Et pia) George Seldes’ new book “Sawdust Caesar”, a fitting successor to his recen “Freedom of the Press”. oh lomats warned the publishers there : be serious consequences from such book. Now, four years after it was written, it has been published i in this try, with a new foreword in which Seldes speaks hollowly of “Ameticay dic tatorship.” For many years Mussolini was a Socialist. When Italy approached] it crisis he stood staunchly for neutrality. But within four days Mussolini, he had not changed from Socialism, had come out flatly for war. His rades turned from him, crying “Who paid?” Seldes has attempted to ans that question. “Sawdust Caesar” is as involved and as fiery as most of Sele books. It is worth reading. Creation” Frederick Lewis Allen tells the story of the rise of Ameriian Sorters try so it car be understood even by those of us who look upon anything complicated than Market Closing Tables with bewilderment. ; WELL, 1 SWAN It takes 333 human hairs, place side by side, to cover one inch. Ted Loveland, who won the right halfback position on The Post's all- star football team, was fullback on last year’s all-star team. Both years he was chosen unanimously. : America produces 43 per cent the world’s coal. aE ; Broadway, New York, is 15% miles £ ong. “Aa” is the name of ten rivers in Europe. In San Saba, Texas, High and Dry Streets cross. Jack rabbits do 35 miles an hour. There are hundreds of square miles of unexplored land in Utah. ho The buffalo was polygamous. ne Two million barrels of oil are taken every hour from the earth in the United States. No proper names in the Bibl besin with W. 4 Schubert wrote his song, “Ha c! Hark! The Lark!” on the back © menu card.