THE DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA.. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1935. . Letters To The Editor - Comment - A THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK Now the New Year reviving old Desires, The thoughtful Soul to Solitude. retires. ‘ OMAR KHAYYAM—Rubayait / There need be little sighing this week for 1935. The world will be well rid of it. It offered the idealists exceptionally little to substantiate their theory 4 that the world is growing better. War and violence and - HAPPY selfishness are the dominant notes in the chronology of NEW the year. We are fortunate to have it behind us. : YEAR Although the year’s great disillusionments were in the : : international field, the record here at home was not one to justify boasting. The same courageous group of leaders launched a new list of civic programs and the same disinterest and lack of support cut them short / of accomplishment. : : - One thing is certain. Nineteen thirty five will give the world a stimulating ‘new lot of problems. And problems always develop new leaders. And, if the problems themselves are not sufficiently stimulating, there will be, for men and women with brains, the assurance that great fortunes will be made as America continues its slow, laborsome climb out of the depression. All in all, 1936 will offer the right persons unprecedented opportunities for fame and fortune, As Elbert Hubbard said “Opportunity not only knocks at your door but is playing an anvil chorus on every man’s door, and then lays for the owner around the corner with a club.” "The world is ready for men who can do things. * * “* This editorial is in the nature of an Open Letter To The Public—in which this newspaper expresses its appreciation for recent values received. : : : First, The Post desires to acknowledge publicly its FOR sincere appreciation to everyone who helped this week in THESE collecting toys for the children or needy families in this "THINGS . . . sectioh. ; Fi The increased response this year indicates that the Christmas toy giving custom, as inaugurated by The Post last year, may grow into a thing much bigger than we anticipated. More new toys were contribut- ed, a number of people sent money, despite The Post’s announcement that only toys would be accepted, and everyone showed a splendid spirit of willing- ' ness to help. ; The list of donors is too long to reprint, and the people who helped prob- ~ ably would not want their names made public. We hope that they appreciate that we are grateful to them, all of them. Secondly, The Post desires to thank those who have made the crusade | against war, which ends with this issue, a success. Nothing The Post has ever attempted has attracted such wide-spread interest. How much has been accomplished in convincing the people of this sec- tion of the futility of war must remain problematical, but if the letters and comments are an accurate guage of general sentiment it is true that there never has been such a definite and vigorous sentiment against war. The campaign itself ends this week, bit it i§ already certain that the readers of The Post will not permit us to drop the matter abruptly. Already plans for a continuation of the movement are being discussed and those peo- ple who have supported the campaign can be assured that it has fired a flame which shall not soon die. For these things, and for the many new friendships that have been made during the last few months, The Post is extremely grateful. * * * In a few weeks Congress will be at it again. The general hope is that the session will be short and snappy but the same old signs preceding a hectic, busy meeting are present. President Roosevelt has said he would like to limit legislation to two or three major bills in addition to the annual measures appropriating funds to pay government expenses. One will be a neutrality bill replacing the pres- ent temporary act. Ship subsidy legislation appears headed for a top place on CONGRESS GETS READY the list. And there will, of course be oratory and action on relief expenditures. Many who serve in Congress would like a short session, according to leg- islators from this region with whom we have talked lately. Early next summer all of the 435 house members and a third of the 96 senators have to start active campaigns for election. The President will be doing the same thing. All want Congress out of the way by the time the Republicans and Democrats hold their quadrennial conventions in mid-summer. Industry, too, wants a short session because of improvement since the de- mise of NRA and its arbitrary regulation. Business is always hesitant to act when Congress is meeting because of doubt as to what Congress might do. Despite this, the session ‘may be a long one. Among scores of other po- tential trouble makers are the bonus, dollar stabilization, the Frazier-lemke $4,000,000,000 farm mortgage refinance bill, the Walsh government-contract plan, and measures applying NRA limitations to other industries if the Guffey Coal Act lives through the courts. = * * We are afraid there is very little Colonel and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh —or anyone else, for that matter— can do about killing the intense curiosity the public has about the private life of the aviator and his family. i That is unfortunate, but it is undeniably true. It is too late for the Lindbergh’s ever to hope to enjoy the humble and undisturbed station which most of find monot- LINDBERGH THE INSTITUTION onous. You cannot blame that upon Colonel Lindbergh, the police, the govern- ment or the newspapers. It is just a thing that has happened to a man who stumbled into greatness and accepted it so gracefully that—to the public—he ceased to be a man and became an institution. Wherever he goes, whatever he does, until the generation which idolizes him perishes, Colonel Lindbergh will have the eys of the world upon him. Thus the world punishes those it admires most. \ The New Meal is so cramped for space that Secretary Ickes of the In- terior has suggested the government find additional office quarters in Baltimore, about 40 miles from Washington. The government already rents 2,500,000 square feet in 103 buildings, in- cluding hotels, some old mansions and apartment houses, Besides, it has 12,- 000,000 square feet in 101 government-owned buildings. Ickes’ worry now is room for the new Social Security Board. It is calculat- ed that by the end of 1937 this new agency's staff will dwarf all old-line gov- ernment agencies save the army and navy. WEEKLY BOOST DANIEL C. ROBERTS of Brooklyn, N. Y., and Harvey's Lake, who, during the past year has made sizable donations to Harvey's Lake Fire Co., the Franklin Club, I» Bucknell University and, only this week, Wyoming Seminary, thus estab- } adishing a record for generosity never equalled here. flay ois The DallasPost ESTABLISHED 1889 A LIBERAL, INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING AT THE DALLAS Post PLANT LEHMAN AVENUE, DALLAS, PA. By THE DALLAS Post, INC. HowArp RISLEY HowEeLL REES TRUMAN STEWART General Manager Managing Editor Mechanical Superintendent The Dallas Post is on sale at the local news stands. Subscription price by mail $2.00 payable in advance. Single copies five cents each. Entered as second-class matter at the Dallas Post Office. TELEPHONE DALLAS 300 ‘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.” 3 Congress shall make no law ¥ * abridging the freedom of speech, ‘or of Press.—From the first amendment to the Constitution of the United States. ‘ 3 Subscription, $2.00 Per Year (Payable 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. 5 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 following major improvements: 1. Construction of more sidewalks for the protection of pedestrians in Kingston township and Dallas. 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 townships. t Dallas borough and surrounding 6. Consolidated high schools and better co-operation between those that now exist. ¥ x 7. Adequate water supply for fire protection. . 8. The formation of a Back Mountain Club made up of business men and home owners interested in the sciousness in Dallas, Trucksville, Shavertown and Fernbrook. development of a community con- i 9. A modern concrete highway leading from Dallas and connecting with the Sullivan Trail at Tunkhannock. THE MAIL BAG In this depratment, The Post presents letters from its readers on cur- rent problems—suggestions, criticisms, bouquets. The Post need not indorse any sentiment or criticisms expressed here, neither can it vouch for the ad: curacy of any statements made. It recognizes only that in this country people have, within reason, the right to express themselves. Your Turn Next, Jim Dear Editor: It is a poor year indeed when the hunting season does not provoke a few tall hunting stories for the Dallas boys to amuse themselves throughout the winter and this year is no exception. This one has its inception on the hunting trip enjoyed by some mem- bers of the Blue Ribbon Club, on the Barkley Mountain, To be sure there must be a “goat” for the story and this tale has one in the person of J. F. Besecker, popular local automobile man. Jim, we all know is an ardent Blue Ribboner and a faithful attendant at the weekly meetings. But he is an equally ardent hunter and it was with an all-conquering air that Jim went out for his “antlerless” deer on the first day of hunting season. His enthusiasm carried him through a hard morning’s hunt, and his spirit undimmed by the lack of a conquest over a deer, Jim proceeded to show his fellow hunters just how a kill should be accomplished. Professor Jim gave the boys a very forceful and an equal- ly thrilling lesson during the noon hour. Time after time with his trusty gun unerring he put hole after hole in a“ tin can, and broke all the glass in the vicinity during this period of in- struction. Along in the afternoon the professor: Pop's Primer was trudging along the path of all great hunters when he was startled by the sudden’ appearance of four of the long sought antlerless friends. Now we all know that it is a very special pri- vilege of professors to be absent mind- ed at times and this was the occasion for Professor Besecker to exercise his. (Voice) “Bob”—"“Bob”, the profes- sor called—"Here they come’ “Shoot! Shoot!” Bob of course shot one of the deer, but the professor's gun remained strangely silent. Professor Jim got his deer by proxy of his voice, instead of his gun. * Notwithstand, they began almost immediately to berate and belittle Bob for shooting a “Jackrabbit”’—since the deer was a small one. Jim completely olecked the fact that he urged the ill. Yet later in the day Professor Be- secker was seen to emerge from the woods and under one arm was an even smaller “jackrabbit”. No! dear read- er, the professor did not kill this one either. The professor remembered his Sun- day School lesson from the preceding Sunday, and from somewhere out of the deep recesses of his mind Professor Besecker remembered that great doc- trine of all True - Christians, “Thou Shalt Not Kill.” R. H. By Bob Dunn WHAT 1S THE LADY DOING, PAPA 2 SHE IS CHIPPING EMPTY LIQUOR an A NEW LAW, SON -{T PROTECTS THE PLBLIC FROM POISONOUS LIQUOR AND HELPS UNCLE SAM COLLECT THE MILLIONS OF TAXES WHICH THE BOOT- LEGGERS HAD BEEN STEALING - BOOTLEGGERS CANT USE BROKEN BOTTLES SO EVGRYPODY'S HAPPY EXCEPT THE BOOTLEGGER Cost of government, taxation, and economy loom as major, if not the most important issues on the 1936 political horizon, according to the weighted ion of Washington observers. In two successive speeches President Roo: ha referred to efforts to cut expenditures. Many political students ha interested. But this is belied by the fact that in the face of repeated de ‘by the business community that the cost of government be reduced endangering public credit, the administration has been forced to admi duction must come. 39 x x His Robert L. Lund, of St. Louis, president of the National Association Manufacturers, pointed out in addressing the organization’s conventio week, that acceptance of this principle, scoffed at by New Dealer } years, has been forced by public opinion, and that if public opinion has pelled such a shift it can go further and make economy a dominant qu of 1936. : Hs i Xo Kd } Ed i PR While this subject was being discussed widely in Washington, the Trea: announced that the government debt for the first time in history | above the $30,000,000,000 mark. The nse in the public debt since be Civil War is shown in a table compiled by the Associated Press: June 30, 1861 June 30, June 30, : June 30, a BERR ,225,145,568 June: 30, 19194. 0, .5 pon dL Ri sal RR 25,482,034,419 June 30, 16,185,308,299 June 30, : June 30, June 30, 1934 June 30, 1935 Nov. 27, 1935 This 1s exclusive of the state and local government indebtedness, whi when added to federal red figures, lifts the general indebtedness to above $50, 000,000,000. : * An unrevealed drama of the fight between the public utilities, theit st x holders, and the Administration was described recently by Arthur K Washington correspondent of the New York Times in telling the facts 1 din up to the present deadlock and court fight. i + “There was an occasion during the early stages of the Congressional batt when the utilities executives held out on olive-branch to the very Presid Ne That was when, as is not generally known, their representatives plac desk an itemized list of $3,000,000,000 in industrial projects which industry ‘was ready to begin expending if the proposed act would gulation. “Three billions, financed in the then slowly convalescing capital and spent in the still lagging heavy industries market, was a high stak covery. No man in the country wanted more to see this golden tide than the President.” * *® In its leading editorial of recent issue the Yale Alumni Wee sharp attention to the growing tendency of educators to divide their tween teaching and fostering public movements of one kind or anoth times drawing their institutions into unfavorable publicity. ied “A faculty member who persists in thrusting himself, as an agitato a political or labor quarrel may find that he is no longer of use to versity,” the alumni paper warned. 0 Pointing out that Yale had been more free from such altercatio might be expected in these disorderly days,” the paper added: “There been on occasion, however, a type of personal adventure into the field controversy, in which, for one, we have often felt we might have | not be the losers. We refer to the sort of episode which publicly teacher of the university in a quarrel, where the teacher may find t brought the university into the limelight with himself. : “In such a case it is not the individual’s opinions as a scholar that : sues; it is his public appearance, in action, as an agitator. It is this case that merits official rebuke, and which, if persisted in, makes the of no longer of use to his university. The element of responsibility to a tution here comes in, overlying, we should say, his rights to free action individual citizen.” : In this outline of principles for teachers the Yale Weekly su; intent of limiting the rights of any citizen. A member of the facu same privileges as any other citizen to exercise his sufferage a mind upon public questions. But more and more often we find the profes occupying the forefront in agitation for one cause or another. The [ freedom with their neighbors, but this hardly entitles them to use their po tion as public servants to crusade up and down the land with impractical id applied to practical problems. I He ® * * “The dangers which lurk behind the Social Security Act do its birth,” writes Abraham Epstein, executive director of the American ciation for Social Security, in the December issue of Harpers Magaz plan contemplates the building up of the most gigantic reserve, estimate reach over fifty billion dollars by 1980—more than four times the valu all thel gold reserves of the world’s central banks and governments. The freez ing of so much sorely needed purchasing power cannot but hamper recovery The problem of investing such huge sums will prove insuperable. Ne ic guarantee that such fantastic governmental credits will ever be made good. is utopian to pledge today the America of fifty years hence. Large reserves a always in danger of being usurped by politicians for other purposes, as ex v . “pr . . A RAT perienced with other funds amply testifies. Should even a partial inflation wipe out some of these funds, no one can calculate the menace it will create. “It is a confession of complete ignorance of the principles of social ins ance for liberals to argue that with all its faults, the Act, nevertheless “maki a beginning.” A beginning toward what? Only incapacity to see the long rang interests of labor prompts William Green to gloat over the fact that the Ac places the responsibility for unemployment insurance upon employers. on payrolls is ‘not a tax on the owners of industry but on the workers a sumers. The Act does not levy a cent on the owners of industry, as M thinks it does. And it is palpable nonsense or worse for Miss Perkins to ar great hopes that this Act will give protection to the working masses . . . Act merely sets up a system of compulsory payments by poor : erished Peter. The law actually decreases the purchasing power of by depriving them of immediate purchases, by relieving the well-to-c share of the social burden, and by making the workers pay the vask administration. It is especially cruel and reprehensible to s: employed workers new and burdensome direct and indirect of continued unemployment amidst rising prices, mounting St sales taxes, which fall largely upon the poor, and a steadily scale, considerably induced by low PWA wages.” Ran