Dallas. munity institution. tising rates on request. “Congress shall make no law. 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. Adver- . .abridging the freedom of Howarp W. RisLEY HoweLL E. REEs More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution The Dallas Post Established 1889 A LIBERAL, INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED EVERY FriDAY MORNING AT THE DALLAS PosT PLANT, LEHMAN AVENUE, DALLAS, PA., By THE DaLras Post, INC. General Manager Managing Editor THE POST'S CIVIC 4. Sanitary sewage disposal systems 5. A centralized police force. between those that now exist 8. Construction of more sidevralks. 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. Centralization of local police protection. 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 By RAY JOHNSON and WALTER PIERCE D. C.—When the fathers of New : that President ‘Roosevelt was planning a stop- ver in their city, on the way to is fishing trip, a far-away look crept into their eyes—the same kid that comes into the eyes of a composer or poet when he feels portents of a masterpiece eady to be born. The great fish game may be aiting for him in the Gulf, but in New Orleans the Michael An- : os of cooking were thumbing their recipes in hopeful anticipa- "tion. And why not? Whenever Presidents of the United States have visited the Crescent City in the past, theykicked dietarydiscre- tion out of the window and ate and LJ 1 drank (and not what came out of ‘the well, either) those delectable ‘tid-bits only New Orleans knows ‘how to prepare, or mix. And did the : Eenilomen enjoy doing it? Just Te isten. When William Howard Taft was President-elect in 1907, he was guest of honor at a dinner given at the old ‘Grunewald Hotel. The chef, having studied the famous Taft contour, produced an eigh- teen-course dinner that is still months later he came back for more—partaking of several twen- ty and more course dinners (wine and Sazarac included). ~~ When Calvin Coolidge was Pres. ident, there came a steady stream of stories on the personal culinary . }ikings of the Vermont Yankee in . ‘the White House. They were pic- ~ tured as running solely to pan- ‘cakes, sausages and other homely ~ foods. But when Mr. Coolidge stop- ng in New Orleans shortly after his second term expired, Jules . Restaurant, supervised the first ‘Coolidge dinner there, and this is ~ what the ex-President tucked away: ; iy One Sazarac Cocktail—bayou oysters a la Rockefeller — a fine ~ Chablis (vintage 1921)—Pompano ~~ Pommes Souffle — Bordeaux (vintage 1916)—Eggs a la Cool- ~ idge, filled with pate de fois gras— snails Bordelaise — Partridge — Chateau Campdeville (vintage 1916) — hearts of artichokes — cheese souffle — Veuve Cliquot (vintage 1911)—and a cup of cof- fee! After packing away these few ~~ “tid-bits” Mr. Coolidge auto- 0 groped the menu with a steady and! the noble experiment. New Orleans chefs would have created new and even more won- derful dishes for F. D. R. had he cMosen to spend more than three hours in their city. The President . is hailed there as the savior of fine cooking, for his Administration’s repeal of the Eighteenth Amend- ment. ; : French chefs claim that great cooking died during prohibition, (but apparently not in New Or- leans). Repeal brought. it back in _style—for-fine-wines and fine food: go hand in hand (we're merely quoting the chefs). : Did the President miss a bet? We'll say he did! ~ Alciatore of the famous Antoine’s- THE CAUSES OF TEACHERS Any school district which chooses to tangle horns with the new Teacher Tenure Bill may expect a good fight on its hands. First, it will have the opposition of the teachers who are benefitted by the bill and who, having gained their political independence, will preserve it vigorously. There will be, too, the public, which grew tired long ago of the petty “horse-trading” which char- acterizes the activities of many school boards, and has, in the past, kept teachers in suspense every time their contracts expired, lest they fall prey to some director’s political whim. And, most important of all, there will be the Earle Administration, which will fight to the ditch in behalf of a bill which was the climax of its pre- sent legislative session and which will stand pro- bably as one of the most constructive pieces of leg- |islation produced during the present Governor's term. It seems scarcely possible that the directors of Kingston Township School Board can expect to justify legally their move to dismiss Supervising Principal James Martin. As this is written no for- mal charges have been brought against Mir. Martin and the only explanation for his dismissal has been a rather vague excuse concerning economy. This section has had a liberal education in petty school politics and so it is understandable why the motives of the Kingston Township board should be questioned. The “economy” explanation does not hold water. It is ridiculous to suppose that the township school district can be conducted without a supervising principal. If there are definite charges against Mir. Martin now is the time to make them, and in the way provided by the Tenure Law. If our sources of information are correct—and we have no reason to doubt them yet—we must believe that the situation in Kingston Township is the result of one man’s ambitions to run the dis trict, plus as smooth a bit of political swapping as we have seen in some time. Mr Martin's record and qualifications speak for themselves but this is a matter bigger than Mr. Martin or the Kingston Township School Board. For five years school directors, sometimes obvi ously unfitted for their jobs, have had the power to fire and hire teachers without any regard to EDITORIALS qualifications, fairness, experience or public opin- ion. Now the worm has turned. As long as teachers are qualified, competent, trained and moral they have the right to vote for whom they please, buy where they please, say what they please and other- wise enjoy the independence usually granted to citizens. Mr Martin merely happens to be the man who can establish once and for all that politics has no place in school affairs, and that a new day has awned for teachers and for the public school sys- tem. ii He can do that because he is in a strong position. He has a splendid record. He has public opinion with him. He is fighting a popular cause. Unless we are very wrong, he is fighting a cause that is assured of success. To Mr. Martin we say, go to it! ECONOMIC HIGHLIGHTS Taxes may not be raised this year—but it will. be almost a miracle if they are not. The unfav- orable relation of Federal income to Federal out- go is continuing, the Federal debt is rising, and the budget is about as far .out of balance as ever. Thus the high hopes that were held for a bal anced or nearly balanced budget, a few months ago, will not be fulfilled this fiscal year. Reason: Treasury forecasts of revenue proved to be ex- cessively optimistic. - The income tax fell well be- low expectations as a money producer. And the new corporation surplus tax was almost a com- plete dud—actual ‘revenue from it was nowhere near predictions. : The President has ordered all department and bureau heads to appraise their activities, cut costs as far as possible. It is believed that substantial savings will result from this. But the Federal gov- ernment is still spending money for relief purposes at depression levels — witness the President's re- quest for a congressional appropriation of $1,500, 000,000 for this pdrpose. While the Administra tion is being advised by some of its principal fig- ures, such as Federal Reserve Board Chairman Eccles, to retrench, it is being subjected to con- stant pressure from states and municipalities for more relief money. So far, this latter pressure has been the most effective by far. If new taxes come, as a result of this continued . That is a very large subject, to which no guaran- budgetary distortion, what form will they take? teed answer can be given. But the trend of Con- gressional and Administration thinking along this line can be indicated with fair accuracy, there be- ing many past precedents available. It is inevitable that one group will throw its weight behind a proposal to levy higher taxes on corporations and on upper-bracket individual in- comes. It is very possible that this group will have its way to an extent—however, it is exceed- ingly doubtful if any attempt will be made to make up all the deficit by this means. The effect on industry would be too destructive—and, as all students know, expansion of industry is essential to New Deal aims and measures, and “incidental ly” to provide jobs at good wages. Another group ‘will advocate ‘new taxes” of one kind or another. But new taxes are always a gamble so far as revenue is involved; further- more, there are few things left to tax that are not | heavily taxed already. So the chance of balanc- ing the budget with “new taxes” may confidently be. regarded as exceedingly remote. A third group will advocate broadening of the tax base—i. e., reaching persons in the lower in- come groups who are not now touched by direct Federal taxation. The bulk of the nation’s work- ers, for example, earn well under $2,500 a year, which is the Federal exemption for a “head of a family.” Here is a vast, untapped field for income tax exploitation. However, the political repercus- sions that would follow any major inroads into this field are potentially terrific — few Congress men would like to vote “Aye” on a proposal that would hit their constituents so hard. Consequent- ly, broadening of the tax base will be accomplish- ed slowly, timidly, carefully, if at all. Upshot: It is a reasonable guess to say that, if tax increases come, they will consist of a, mixed program which will broaden ‘the tax base slightly, somewhat increase taxes on industry and higher- bracket incomes and, perhaps, install, in effect, some new taxes. hi It is, of course, possible to defer new taxes for some time to come, even though the deficits con- tinue, by further increasing the national debt. But the accepted economists, even those within the Ad- ministration, are opposing this because they fear the inflationary effects that must inevitably result. Of late there's been a tendency a- mong our radio spielers to point a finger of shame across the water, and to accuse Brittania of being niggard- ly by not keeping her former star salesman on her payroll. = 5 » Apparently the radio newscasters believe Uncle Sammy's nephews and nieces think England played a dirty RIVES MATT HEWS Poor Eid they say, and how stancy and stability as is possible in this unconstant and unstable world. And so I think the radio spielers are yodelling up the wrong canyon when they try to enlist a little sympathy for Edward and Wally on this side of the water. RE mean of England to cut him off with- out a shilling! Poor Edward, indeed. I happen to know he wont go hun- on the former Edward VIII by deny- gry as long as he still gets his rent And all that happened during 4 THOUGHT FOR i THE WEEK ing him, as Duke of Windsor, a nice fat slice of British taxpayers’ money. Or perhaps they think we Americans feel that Edward's passion for Mis. Simpson was not a good and suffi- cient reason for firing him out as chairman of the board of a firm that, might well be called the British Com- monwealth of Nations. #* * * Possibly they think a nation fed on the pap that comes from Hollywood is thrilled by the Graustark drama- tics Edward and Wally have been giving us during the last six months. If they do, then they underestimate the intelligence of the average Ameri- can radio audience. For not all the arts of Hollywood can disguise the fact that Edward has bags beneath his eyes, and that his forty-odd in- amorata will soon need .to have her face lifted and her hair touched up, ‘if she is to maintain any resemblance to the carefully posed photographs our newspepers are occasionally per- mitted to publish. a“ * * * Not even Hollywood script artists could do much to pretty up the facts of Wally's, or, for that matter, Ed- ward's, past. Since Will Hays’ white- ‘wings cleaned up the movies, it has been difficult for film dramatists to write scenarios for any of the Broad- way stage ladies who derive their eme from playing roles depicting lad- g of what has been loosely defined “easy virtue”, a slack phrase de- bned to cover a multitude of sins, hd often a multitude of men. Divorce, and I think rightly so, is still not generally regarded as a good reference. To most of us, I believe it still implies failure on the part of those involved in facing the problems of life. It may mean a failure to make the best of things, or it may simply mean a failure at the very start by failing to pick the right partner. * » = As failures, divorced people de- serve our pity, but when, as some of our playboys and heiresses do, they shuttle back and forth to Reno, then they are merely using our marriage license clerks and divorce judges as official gentlemen of the bed cham- ber, whose sole function is to see that the line forms as decorously as pos sible on the right. Divorce among the rich thus becomes legalized adul- tery. At fashionable Fifth Avenue weddings it is not uncommon to see listed as among those present eight or more parents of the young couple mouthing their nuptial vows, and there's a crying need for a sort of Who's Whose if you want to know your way around Newport and Palm Beach. « & = These people may be the backbone of the tabloids and scandal sheets, but, my friends, they're not the back- bone of this nation by a long shot. And for this we should be thankful. Just imagine, if you can, what this country would be like if every Tom, Dick and Harry, every Mary, Sarah and Jane could go to Reno as easily as our so-called upper classes can, I guess we'd have to pass a law make ing cars the legal and inalienable pos: session of husbands, and trailers of women. Then divorce would be just a simple matter of uncoupling car from trailer, and leaving the tempor- ary widow in the grass on some through highway. * * * We'd become a migratory, shiftless, homeless people, not the safe, steady, responsible, homeloving, childbearing burghers we are now, more or less fixed in one place for the conveni- ence of bill and tap collectors. Just think of it, if you can, and then say whether Hollywood wasn’t on the side of the angels when the order went through that gay divorcees couldn’t be used in scenarios unless in the end they had a twinge of hearts and flowers and returned to their first and only loves, skillets, and elec- tric hearthstones! x Xx Xx Aside from the fact that the belat- ed romance of Edward and Wally seems almost as silly, and quite as pa- thetic, as the occasional marriages which take place among residents of Old Folks’ Homes, it is contrary to public policy in this, and in most other, lands. Are we to hold up to our young daughters the life story of Wallis Simpson as an example? Are we to inculcate in them an ad- miration of those who play always for the main chance, who use friends and husbands merely as stepping stones to greater wealth and fame? x % 8 Or are we to reassert some of out grandfathers’ beliefs, and profess a still firm faith in the not-so-easy vir- tues? I think most of us still believe in and fervently desire as much con- ‘job of a King of England, the greater money on a dwelling he owns on the busiest corner in the world—Fifth Avenue and Forty-Second Street, Manhattan. Or he could go into vaudeville, or hire out as a dinner guest for years along Park Avenue, the way some of his cousins do. There are plenty of jobs he could fill, so let’s not worry any more about “Poor Edward.” * xk And why is it mean of England to say nix to appeals for an allowance for Edward? After all, part of the part it would seem, today, is in the field of genetics, or, in the politer language of court circles, it is his job to provide an heir and otherwise sup- plement his marital efforts with a batch of young substitutes wha will compete with Shirley Temple's smile. * * * - This most important function of an English king, Edward long refus- ed to consider, and thus failed in his job, no matter how good a travel ling salesman he made. When, last Fall, he finally announced a ' defi- nite royal interest in biology, the Baldwins and biologists of England had only to give Mrs. Simpson one ook. ®e & oo Their off-thexecord answer was: Professor Pitkin may be right. Life may begin at forty. But we British have a sure thng. Besides, we don't want an Amerf;an woman, twice di- vorced. Why, what's to keep her, judging by pasi performances,. from making goo-goo 2yes at Hitler? After BROADWAY LIMITED W. A. 8 ; New. York, N. Y.—Spring in all its glory has finally .come to the old town . . . sunshine, Spring fever and all... . ideal weather for day dreaming . . . as I sit in my little coop gazing out upon drab and fader! Broadway facades, my thoughts turn back to a little old French steamer . . . the late “S.S. Asji” . . . gone to a well deserved res’ in Davy Jones’ locker . . . We were sailing down the Atlantic— Buach, Fifi and I ... : Cape Verdi . +» . Funchal . . . Gibraltar . . .. yy how black the blue Mediterranean is—around the Bay of Lyons . .. Nice . .-. Monte Carlo . . . Athens ',.. Alexandria . .. the Holy Land ... No, the Black Sea wasn’t black at all! . .. It’s so hard to keep awake on a nice sunny spring day . .. Yes, the cow jumped over the moon! . . . Enough of that! . . . This after all is a column about Broadway, and the day is getting. on . .. deadline soon . .. Irrele- vantly, before I return to this-and- that note about who’s who and what’s what, I wish to express the hope that if I (or you) ever cir- cumnavigate this little old sphere again . . . I (or you) will stop for a week in Istanbul. . . and, at least a year... two or three... in Nice and Monte Carlo . . . and finally, that it will take sixteen sergeant de Ville to pull me away from my table in front of Le Dome ... Now let’s see... Elmo in the next cubby hole is whistling “Did you ever see a dream walking” . . . the fellow must be a clairvoyant . . . Well, 1 here goes: Burlesque... . called by’ the theatrical profession “louse opera” . .. is on the decline . . . and all because the strip-tease was carried beyond decent limits . . . The corrosive influence of the bur- leycue has been so insidious . . . that even yellow sheets treat the tease subject casually . . . When Miss Eve Hershfield, whose brother is tops in the journalistic world, went to London for the Cor- . onation, her first letters were filled | with the descriptions of the pa-! geant, the people and scenes en | route ... Harry, a busy man, read | about four of these voluminous epistles and sent off this rather | tart cable .. . “Never mind the de- | scriptions. I get them in the pa-| pers. Just say how you are and | what you want.” . . . He got his | reply within the hour. “Feeling | fine. Cable five hundred.” . . .! Heloise Martin, the Drake College co-ed of transparent shower fame, : is pulling them in at the Holly-: wood . and got her hame ini lights on the cancpy .. . Kay Fran-! cis was introduced to absinthe for! the first time at a swanky East! Side night spot . . . she liked the: taste as well as the glow that fol. lowed . . . Yet innocently thought it was a non-intoxicating swallow . . « It was only after several re- quests for the slow green libatjon: at tea parties that her suspicions: were aroused , . . raised eyebrows | caused her to drop the.stuff like | proverbial hot-cake . . . Dead- | a now . Copy boy! O.K. hore] 3. +. Yes, spring fever is bereft + « » Ths Proadway Parade Asm A AAG rss He who hesitates is bossed. PE { i Love the quest; marriage the conquest; divorce the inquest. BR a A lot of auto wrecks result from the driver hugging the wrong curve. re lf freemen It used to be Father who gave the bride away. Now it's Walter Winchell. EE en HRP emis The Lord Chief Justice of England reecntly said that the greater part of his judicial time was spent investigating col lisions between propelled vehicles, each on A its own side of the road, each sounding all, he's hard to et too. ite horn, and each stationary. >