PAGE SIX THE DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1936. Dallas. munity institution. tising rates on request. “Congress shall make no aw, speech or of Press’—The Constitution of the United States. The Dallas Post is a youthful, liberal, aggressive weekly, dedicated to the highest ideals of the journalistic tradition and concerned prim- arily with the development of the rich rural-suburban area about It strives constantly to be more than a newspaper, a com- Subscription, $2.00 per Year, payable in advance. Subscrib- ers who send us changes of address are requested to include both new and old addresses with the notice of change. .dbridging the freedom of Adver- Howarp W. RISLEY Howell BE REES J. odind : More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Che 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. weer. Managing General Manager | THE POST'S CIVIC 4, Sanitary sewage disposal systems 5. A centralized police force. between those that now exist. 8. Construction of more sidewalks. Editor 1. A modern concrete highway leading from Dallas and connect- | ing with the Sullivan Trail at Tunkhannock. | 2. A greater development of community consciousness among ! residents: of Dallas, Trucksville, Shavertown and Fernbrook. 3. A free library located in the Dallas Region. 6. A consolidated high school eventually, and better co-operation 7. Complete elimination of politics from local school affairs. PROGRAM for local towns. WASHINGTON PARADE RAY JOHNSON and WALTER PIERCE WASHINGTON, D. C.—Accord- ing to Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, the President on his present cruise te South America will have to forego at Jeast one of the hobbies he indulges in while in the White House. “The . President’s day usually comes to an end between 11:30 and midnight,” Mrs. Roosevelt said, “frequently he clips stamps. Sometimes I find him , sitting in bed surrounded with en- velopes which the State Department has sent him, cutting the stamps from them, He says it is conducive ) to sleep. It is a rare thing when he doesn’t say he slept very well.” In response to a question, she put the President’s philosophy in these words: “Each day must be lived. You must accept what comes. Do what you think is right or best. Decide what should be done — and cease worrying.” And her own as follows: “If 1 have a philosophy, it would resolve itself into an effort not to Rake anybody suffer unnecessar- The distinction of being the only swwoman chosen as 3 United States delegate to the Pan-American peace eonference, goes to Mrs. Elsie Mus- . ser, of Salt Lake City, Utah. A " graduate of Columbia, Mrs. Musser speaks several languages including . Spanish, fluently. A woman inter- . preter, however, is not our idea of a suitable go-between when in search of latin amusements. The 115,000 men and women of Washington's thronging bureaucra- cies are having one of the most pro- digious attacks of mass jitters this eity has seen in years. From desk to desk Federal employees are whis- pering about mergers and consoli- dations of various departments, causing spines to quiver with emo- tion and fear—of loosing their jobs. When an administration is re- turned to power under normal cir- cumstances, it is taken for granted that every one will stay on, except perhaps. a few obvious misfits, But here is an administration which has been re-elected with a budget to bal- ance. and by so great a majority, that it can practically dispense with the normal consideration of patronage. The real perils of the situation are of course, less numerous than the rumors. The alarm may be con- fined mostly to the emergency agen- cies which, according to precedents, should be due for a thorough Stridly Personal. — Lloyd’s 8% premium against the risk of a coro- nation postponement may point to the truth of unconfirmed but per- gistent rumors, that King Edward may, after all, marry Mrs. Simpson before coronation time — involving the risk of a popular rebuke and abdication in favor of the next heir in line, the Duke of York. While we have learned to dis- count ordinary rumors, long ex- perience has taught us to respect the opinion of the gambling ele- ment, especially when it is backed by real dollars and cents. A cor- svspondent in London writes that (sountry folk and even laborers in | the vicinity of Fort Belvedere, the | King’s eouniry seat, are offering even money that the King will marry Wallis Simpson within three months, Have You Looked? | "Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house Not a creature was stirring—not even a mouse; The stockings were hung by the chimney with cars, In hopes that St. Nicholas soon would be there. For several years hundreds of stockings that might have been empty have been filled on Christmas Eve because of the generosity of local people who have responded nobly to The Post’s call for toys to be distributed among needy children. We hope none of those stockings will hang limp this year. Only three weeks remain before Christ- mas and there must be many, many more toys if we are to remember all the families who need them. If you haven't looked through your attic for gity that might thrill some child’s otherwise sorrowful Christmas wont you do it, this week-end? Then telephone us at Dallas 300 and we'll make arrange- ments to call for your contribution. Let's make it our job to see that Santa Claus doesn’t forget any children in our section! How- ever you help, we'll remember your kindness. A Balanced Budget The first statement of the President as to future policies dealt with the problem of the Federal deficit. Mr. Roosevelt, in a brief announcement, said that ne believed it would soon be possible to balance’ the budget and that he intended to do so at the earliest possible time. Various commentators, some of them close to. the White House, anticipate that the budget will be balanced at the end of the 1937 fiscal year, which starts next July. It is doubtful if any act by the President and tne Congress would do more to restore confidence in our | government's financial structure, or to stimulate m- | dustry and investors. Once the budget is balanced— and kept balanced—we will at least know that the| Federal debt will grow no greater. And, with a bau-| anced budget, we can apply ourselves to the tre-' EDITORIALS mendous job of reducing the debt to a more normal level. That, obviously, cannot be done so long as | BROADWAY ment. The responsibility to cooperate in the compidte i restoration of employment and then to help stabilize government spends more than it receives and charge: | jobs for the future rests alike upon industry and upon the difference against the future. It has been Mr. Roosevelt's opinion that during = time of depression a country should spend far beyond its receipts and, once a reasonable amount of recov-| ery 1s achieved, reduce outgo and return to a business basis. s here when business improvement should make eme:- gency spending unnecessary. The President has apparently refused to listen tc those who wou'd have the government keep on spend- ing vast sums in excess of income until debt repudia- tion or insolvency arrived. It is to be hoped that it will be possible to balance the budget very soon. Nothing Can Stop America All indications point to 1937 as a year of still further progress in the rise of the nation out of the depression. Employment in manufacturing industries has risen steadily in the ‘past year and 1s likely to reach or surpass the 1929 levels in the near future— possibly in the coming month. General unemployment has fallen sharply and many economists believe that the census of the un- employed now being planned by the Department ot Commerce will show two things: First, that those who are without work and are seeking work number less than 5,000,000; Second, that there is already an actual shortage of skilled labor in many trades, in- dustries and communities. On this latter point no less an authority than Dr. Harold G. Moulton, head of the Brookings Institution, has already predicted that we shall have an actual shortage of labor within the next five years if industrial recovers to the 1929 limit. In other words, the emergency phases of recovery are past. The myth that we need such panaces as the 30-hour week, federal fixing of manufactuatg wages and hours’and other arbitrary proposals eman- ating largely: from professional labor leaders, has been exploded. The need of the moment is leadership—wise and constructive leadership in business as well as govern- Current conditions indicate that the time is | | government. | still holds. | Post-election Perspective : . J ; We cannot refrain from calling attention to the | refreshing spirit of co-operation which has spread | across this country since the election. | | The air is no longer filled with ‘cries about farmers | | being ruined by imports of babassu nuts. Workmen | | are no longer being told that they are about to entes | | some dreadful form of servitude with a numbered | | metal tag. And business men are no longer hearing | | that the United States Treasury is about to go bustea, [but instead are actually looking forward to making some money within the next year. If there is any reason for mentioning these things it is so we may think of them again seme day when our ears are being bombarded once more with the same charges. : Never Say Die! All hail to Wyoming Valley Motor Club for neve: giving up something it starts. The club, which has played a leading part in bringing about most of the modern construction mn the vicinity of Dallas, again remembers this section by including the by-pass, Route 115 at Hillside, and Route 92, between Dallas and’ Tunkhannock, on its 1937 Road Improvement Program. We should like to stress to those who have given up hope of every seeing these improvements cor- summated that it is not merely formality when trie | motor club lists them. By winning a place on the club’s program, the plans for those improvements are assured of constantly being brought to the aw tention of the State Highway Department and Lu- zerne County's representatives at Harrisburg. The motor club carries on, even when other civic organizations quit, and those improvements will be dropped from its list, we think. only when the pave- ment 1s laid and automobiles are travelling over it. 4/ERE'S A POSER FOR Emily H Post: on what side of the church shall the ushers seat Al Smith at the du Pont-Roosevelt wedding? * * * Commissioning Son James a Lieu- tenant Colonel of Marines has its esth- etic advantages, considering how often Son James appears in the Presidential photograph, but adding another Colo- nel Roosevelt to the list will only in- crease the confusion. Why not make RIVES MATTHEWS To Election Day, Armistice Day, | and Thanksgiving Day this year was| added another memorable date for November, the twentieth, on which the! U. S. Patent Office recognized the fig! leaf as man’s first invention. Gypsy | Rose Lee, Queen of Burlesque, should | head a lobby in Washington to have the strip tease named as woman's first invention. 2% One reason why the Soviets have him General Roosevelt at the next given the official okeh to Ambassador New Year’s Honors? . 5 © = negie gave the lady responsible for the by Mesdames Sidney Howard F. Whitney, Frederick Church, Joseph E. and Mrs. Marjorie Post Close Hutton Davies is because the Z. Mitchell, | The ancient truth that “nothing can stop America” | | | | WEEKLY BOOST Stephan Summerhill ...coach of Lehman High School football team, for having coached a team which, with smart football and good sportsmanship, became the Back Mountain cham- pions. John Bull may now come out of that head-bowed-in-shame attitude. The Duke of Norfolk, “the most eligi- ble bachelor of the empire, next to the King himself,” is going to do the Right Things, don’t you know. And isn’t it simply ripping that his finance is so perfectly named for her job? It takes the English to produce some one brave enough to answer to The Honorable Lavinia Strutt. rt * * * From Ireland we hear that Post- master Farley kissed the Blarney Stone to get eloquence. Doesn't Big Jim know that actions speak louder than words? Or is it true what they say about Farley’s wanting to be the next Governor of New York? If so, he’s got that old murphy vote sewed up. * * * They now say that a very definite sign will shortly appear in British heavens which will mean that it’s all over between the King and Mrs. Simp- son. Can it be that Santa Claus plans to stuff some royal legs into the Balti- more lady’s silk stockings? * * *% . That will be another blow to Wil- liam Randolph Hearst, who’s done so much for the working girl. If you *> * * think he’s done a lot to promote Mrs. Simpson editorially, look what he’s done for Marion Davies. 2 5 ® If John L. Lewis becomes our next President, you will hear a lot about Cecil Carnes and Robert Speller, au- thor and publisher of what amounts to a scoop, the first book to come off the presses about a man who now rates more newspaper lineage than Lind- bergh. * * » At a cocktail party. attended by sver two hundred people, Dale Car- shindig a copy of his latest book, “How To Make Friends and Influence People.” 1 vass dere, Charlie. * zs = A woman who likes to be known as the Countess Bronislava du Brissac 1s currently lecturing along Park and Fifth Avenues. Her topic is “Kings Who Loved.” Her listeners are not re- quired to sit on back stairs, nor hang out dumb-waiter shafts. They squat on gilt and brocades at three bucks an earful, with a cup of tea thrown in and dames like that. * * * The appearance of Life under the wings of Time and Fortune convinces me that while there is life there is still hope for a good pictorial weekly, and to those responsible for the Hearst sensationalism of a section called “Mrs. Roosevelt's Wild West” and for the inaccurate pot shots of their so- ciety lion hunter in France, I am prompted to inquire: “Is life really leica dat?” CRYING FOR ATTENTION ting | [Toe gl — Tl = — [ES [== [El eT Rl Sm (EE Ele: 77 =i Russians haven’t seen any top flight capitalists for a long time. I shouldn't be at all surprised to hear that Doris Duke Cromwell, or Countess Barbara Hutton Mdivani von Haugwitz have been picked to step into Miss Perkins’ pumps. 3 * * - On second thought, I suppose ‘pick- ing Joseph E. and Marjorie Post Close Hutton Davies for the Moscow job is the President's way of throwing these babes of economic royalism to the wolves of communism, just to lighten the sleigh. But now where’s he going to send the du Ponts, Alice Long- worth, Jim Reed, Bainbridge, et Al? MAIL BOX Dallas Post: I want to thank you for the prize subscription to The Post. Doubt if you have a reader who enjoys it more than I do. To read of the activities of so many former friends and ac- quaintances, is like a breath of air from home. Often wish there might be more Noxen news. Even more I thank you for the op- portunity given me, to voice my op- position to “alcohol,” the greatest en- emy of my own childhood. I regret deeply the result of your election. Some way I had always felt that Dallas would ever stand for all that was big and fine. My prayer is— that God may give the youth strength to overcome the temptation placed be- fore them by both those who voted to put the stamp of approval on liquor and those who failed to vote on the issue. They alike are responsible. Sincerely, Mary E. Bissell Sayre, Pennsylvania, | LIMITED y W. A. 8S. # NEW YORK. N. Y.—A certain} well known boxer writes that hef « always reads a certain Broadway column . . . before going into the ring . . . and then he imagines that his opponent is the man who writes | it . . . nothing personal! . _. ‘At the opening of Leslie Howard's Hamlet a Broadway tight at-! tempted to force his way in without a ducat .. . I can quite understand that he would not have done what he did . . . had he been in his right senses! ... Harry Richman’s “Lady Peace” has been entered in the Lindbergh Anniversary New York-to-Paris race to be run next May .. Harry insisting he'll never | . fly with anybody again, will pilot the big ship solo . .. Back stage at the Winter Garden where the Zieg- feld Follies (in the flesh) is current, a cutie of the chorus tells me she may sue a certain Woolworth heir | for misrepresentation . .. she prob- ably found him out . . . when she went to hock the stuff! ... At Holly- | wood where the nudes are apt to | turn your head . . . I watch an | absent-minded diner throw his | handkerchief on the table . .. and } blow his nose in his napkin... At the Paradise beauty spot I'm told C s8'wAY To. er (Brw.A.S sw SN Cd - customer, crushing a rubber five dollar check . .. The p. a. never re- turned to make the elastic promise good . . . what is more important to the management is the fact that they lost a good customer . . . If, the p. a. happens to read this ! he'll be delighted to know that he is again in the cashier’s good graces . and that he will cash another check for him—if it is good! . . . The burlesque theatres on 42nd Street are well patronized by dig- nified looking gents from Wall and Broad Streets ... an interlude for worldlings who have been listening | to the harsh click of tickers ... At the swanky Versailles night spot, | where I enter accompanied by a lens lad ... a ringsider begs the camera- man to snap his picture “I’m in the about a press agent, who 1s a steady & i Almanac de Gotha — hic — on th’ level I am — hic — how about it fellers?” . . . Gypsy Rose , who graduated from a strip tease act in burleycue ... to a featured spot, with Fanny Brice at the Winter Garden’. . . is booked to do a turn at the Beaux Arts Ball pageant .. . ritzy society affair . . . Asked } whether she would do her old act j for the lorgnetted assemblage . . . i the voluptuous artiste refused to answer . . . but our leading society gentlemen, are taking no chances ...and the rush for seats and binoc- ) ulars is on . . . At the Astor Cafe for 4 o'clock tea with Horace Elmo, the famous cartoonist . .. Thru the { haze that hangs over the room and } its occupants . . . I make out a face | that seems to swim toward me... a pretty face with a mop of blonde hair . . . it belongs to Sally Mack. ! the swing singer ... whom Broad- way-ites raved over, when she did | her stuff with Ray Nichol’s orches- Ya tra... The youngster is trying to { crash Broadway and get in the big money. “Moncy is not the answer to life” advises Elmo in a fatherly tone. “Maybe not” sallies back Sally “but it is a very useful reply to doc- | uments which commence with “Un- | less you remit.”!! — “Wise beyond { her years!” says I... as our winks meet... The Broadway Parade. A THOUGHT FOR THIS WEEK The nakedness of the indigent world may be clothed from the | trimmings of the vain. —Goldsmith