munity institution. rates on request. “Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of ~ speech or of Press” — The Constitution of the United States. ¥ The Dallas Post is a youthful, liberal, aggressive weekly, dedica-: ted to the highest ideals of the journalistic tradition and concerned £ primarily with the development of the rich rural-suburban area about ~ Dallas. 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. Advertising ) 2 En RE z SE ef 5 Ee } i i Than A Newspaper—A Community Institution The Dallas Post Established 1889 A Liberal, Independent Newspaper Published Every Fridey Morning At The Dallas Post Plant, Lehman Avenue, ' i Dallas, Penna., By The Dallas Post, Inc. Lik seeerenManaging Editor More HOWARD W. RISLEY.. 5 HOWELL BE. REES............ writs ...General Manager THE POST'S CIVIC PROGRAM : 1. A modern concrete highway leading from Dallas and con- necting with the Sullivan Trail at Tunkhannock. i 2. A greater development of community consciousness among residents of Dallas, Trucksville, Shavertown, and Fernbrook. 3. Centralization of local fire protection. 4. Sanitary sewage systems for local towns. ol 5. A centralized police force. Hh 6. A consolidated high school eventually, and better co-oper- ; : ation between those that now exist, 7. Complete elimination of politics from local school affairs. fa 8. Construction of more sidewalks. i) 1 inst the bombing of open cities in ring the World War, enemy omen and children were killed by tion, malnutrition and disease, uced by effective blockades. At nt they are being slaughtered by bs. I fail to see the difference. anything, the second method is nore merciful, for it kills quickly. is war. An enemy must be at- cked, demoralized, weakened and nihilated. The term enemy em- not only those who fight in es, but also those, including wo- lines. > NL. AT, bunking many tall tales about ani- Is, speaks of the “impossibility” a snake sucking milk from a cow. ‘am pretty much of a cynic and I suppose I should hesitate to credit ch a thing had I not witnessed it. : Many years ago one of my tasks was to go to the pasture for our cow g One y I noticed a snake fastened to her r; I could scarcely believe my ‘eyes, so I went close enough to make ure there was no doubt and at the amie time ready to make a quick get way, as I was dreadfully afraid of I ran all the way home to tell fa er, but he was not at all excited. ‘He merely asked me to go back for the cotv, and said if the snake was taking its supper to get a stick tap it and that it would loose and run away and not harm me. I went ack, but the cow met me part way, ree of the snake. s 5 i A. RG. ® \ THE LOW DOWN Le from HICKORY GROVE Cur latest slogan—lending and spending—sounds great. But from the little I savvy about it, I .do not know any place where you can go broke quicker, than by lending—except it is spend- ing. © Our old ideas of saving 10 cents for a rainy day, is now next to illegal. And for our old ‘age, we are to lean on Social Security. Slogans are our dish. Maybe you have an off-spring or 2 around the house, and they do some goofy things and get in- to jams and one thing and an- other, and you almost think they the hopeless, sometimes. But they are amateurs when it comes to comparin’ ‘em to what is go- ing on under the big tent at Wash. Things that most people want done down there, they will not do it. And things you do not want ‘em to do—it is vice versa. And if you have ever been on a farm, I do not need to explain to you about a mule. History used to be a sort of dry subject, but boy, present day doings when they get into the book, they will make Walt Disney hustle. Yours, with the low down, JO SERRA. and China is unwarranted. | n and children who help behind 5 -WEeLcoME To THE ScHOOL The Post is happy to invite the women of this section to another free moving picture cooking school. \ At least 1,000 women enjoyed our first school last year. We have - never promoted any community affair which resulted in as many compli ments. We expect to see again all those women who asked us to conduct another school and we hope, too, to meet many new visitors who have heard of the pleasant success of last year’s event. : We think such a school as this is of vital importance in a community. Managing a home is a difficult and responsible job—perhaps the biggest of all jobs. ' It is right, then, that housewives who strive to do their jobs better should have an opportunity to inspect the methods and machinery which have been devised especially for them. Men keep abreast of developments in their fields. Women can profit by the same procedure. Our cooking school, with its full-length moving picture, is as pleasant as a school can be, and we are sure those women who set aside one after- noon next week for the school will have an enjoyable as well as a profitable time. DiAL "PHONES AT NOXEN The installation of dial phones phone Co. is another evidence of the at Noxen by Commonwealth Tele- progressiveness of the local utility. The company’s eagerness to please its subscribers and its energy in maintaining a high standard of service explains the pleasant relations it ‘enjoys with its customers. This latest improvement will benefit Dallas business men, as well as Noxen' subscribers, for the toll charge will be abandoned some time next month between Noxen and Dallas. ~ We thank the company and its local manager, Michael Kuchta, for their forward-looking, thoughtful policies. ( A THANKLESS JoB We have a very deep respect for any member of a school board because we have learned that his exacting job is one of the most thankless in the world. Only a man or woman who has a real desire to be of service to his or her community would accept the position. ; The communities about Dallas are exceptionally fortunate in having directors who are probably better than the rule. No breath of scandal, ON BOARD S. S. HARPOON: Exactly seven sailing days after leav- ing Philadelphia, we nosed in behind Cristobal’s breakwater and dropped anchor for the night. It was a strange feeling to feel calm water beneath us and no vibrations from our power plant. Around us flashed a ring of lights and like a huge ruby, set in prongs of diamonds, one advertising sign blinked off and on all night long. . Whether it hawked a well known brand of cigarettes or a night club, we never learned, because we had ar- rived too late to go ashore. —_— We were up at'dawn the next morning so as not to miss one minute of a procedure which, since 1920, has been saving ships the long dangerous and expensive journey around South America. As the sun slowly shooed away the veils of mist which clung reluctantly over ships at anchor and for a time completely hid Panama's strange, pyramid-like mountains, there was gradually unfolded before our eyes a scene so mysterious and beau- tiful and so unlike anything I had ever seen before that for a compari son-I was forced to search my mem- ory of fantasies for one, and came up, finally, with a vague feeling that I had seen all this before in some novel by Ryder Haggard. Does any- one ever read him today? nn Then came trim launches from shore, carrying Canal Zone doctors to look for pestiferous passengers. Finding none on our ship, our yellow flag went down, and then another launch, carrying a Canal pilot with a crew of smart dark boys from Jamaica, to handle the ropes, came aboard. Along with a small feeder ship of the French Line, the Trois Isles, we entered the first lock. : i It took us about four hours to make the forty-four mile transit. Each Jock, three up on the Atlantic side, and four down on the Pacific, took ten minutes. After passing through an amazing beautiful lake, dotted with jungle covered islands, the Canal becomes a narrow ditch shortly after passing Barro Colorado Island, where there is a government station devoted to the study of trop- ical diseases. It is a rzminder to all of those who pass that without doc- tors, engineers would never have been able to make the miracle of Panama possible. 3 iO Once in the ditch, its walls rise higher and higher, and then the Canal ! government EDITORIALS i no intimation of skulduggery, no hint of the nauseous tactics employed by a few boards in nearby sections blackens the record of the directors of Dallas borough or the township, Kingston, Lehman, Lake, Monroe, Noxen or Jackson Townships. Occasionally our directors make the newspapers with their political squabbles but these are little more than evidences of a healthy American democracy, which permits every man to have his opinion and fight for it. Such tempests in teapots are unfortunate, but they are human, and they blow over usually as suddenly as they come up. i Most of the time the school board member has little to relieve the dull monotony of the regular meeting. At first he may! find some enjoyment . in the novelty of running a school district but his enthusiasm is soon checked by the realization that the common sense principles he uses freely in his own successful business are restricted by volumes of laws which have been accumulating since the first public school, was established. He discovers that the solicitor is about the most valuable man in the school organization, or should be. Everything must be done a certain’ way. Certain amounts cannot be spent without soliciting bids first. Every penny must be budgeted and once appropriated to a certain account must not be spent for any other account until a certain time has passed. Complicated regulations must be observed if the district'is to receive the customary aid from the state. School needs must be confined to the income from taxes and if they exceed, and an %icrease in millage is necessary, woe be unto the harrassed school director. Bills must be paid, audits must be made, ap- peals must be made to the State or to the County Superintendent to approve this or that, complaints from irate and impatient citizens must be satisfied. And, almost every minute, the school director must guard against violating innocently any one of the hundreds of regulations which he must know and obey if he is to escape ouster proceedings brought by. some political opponent who is waiting carefully for the one slip. For all this the school director receives not one cent of salary. Because he realizes that the restrictions placed upon him are a necessary protection for the public, he accepts them and obeys them. An honest mistake can subject him to public embarrassment and perhaps to court proceedings which mar his record permanently. \ s \ So we have a very deep respect for any man: or woman who consents to be a school director. Someone has to do the job, and our hat is off to the men and women we see doing it so well. RIVES MATTHEWS twists like a snake between the verte- brae of Panama's spine-like mountain range. Culebra, of course, is the most thrilling part of the Canal. There, one can only gasp and wonder, and pay tribute to the thousands of men who hacked a mountain in two. —C— There the Canal is at its narrow- est, and yet, as we were going through, we passed a handsome Ger- man ship, the Ulm of Bremen, mak- ing her maiden voyage. Then came the single Pedro Miguel lock, and the three known as Miraflores, and we were in the channel leading out to the Pacific, with Panama City on our port side, on our starboard, those queer looking islands, jungle green, which rise suddenly out of Panama Bay, and beyond the weird steaming mountains of Panama. Our first sight of this ocean convinced us that the Pacific was well named. For seven days hardly anything that could be called a wave has been seen to shake our convictions, ys Random notes on the Canal: Pub- lic drinking fountains at the locks are like twin branched candlesticks. One branch supports a bowl of glossy black porcelain, the other white. Ca- nal Zone workers drink according to the laws of Jim Crow. TOO MUCH OF IT ALREADY! Sa 7 J ) NY “2 SN ly aa 3 -— THIS LL It cost the owners of the Harpoon a little over four thousand dollars to send her through the Canal. Canal toll charges are based on tonnage. We were told not many ships pass through the Canal these days, that the mer- chants of Cristobal and Panama City are suffering a consequent depression. The day we went through, two ships went ahead of us, and two followed us. We passed three going westbound, one of them a freighter from Cardiff owning up to the odd name of Nail- sea Meadow. (In case you think I'm off my compass, look at your map. You'll find the Pacific side of the Canal is seventeen miles east of the Atlantic Side. Thus ships bound for the Atlantic are said to pass through the Canal westbound.) —O At all locks, U. S. soldiers do sen- try duty. They stand at parade rest, rifles at their sides. On a balcony of a pumping house, I saw three sol- diers behind a Browning machine gun. They tell me they've been waiting for trouble only for the last three years. Before that, no soldiers. | Fee 1 J The Harpoon’s master is Captain John V. McKown. Born in Boothbay Harbor, Maine, he was captain of his first ship, a sailing vessel, at the age of twenty-one. When he married, he took his wife along with him. They spent their honeymoon on a voyage to the west coast of Africa. The first seven years of their son’s life was spent on sailing ships. Now in his thirties, the younger McKown has a job on land, as an electric weld- er. At one time, his grandfather, father and four uncles all captained vessels of their own. —— Both the Harpoon’s captain and chief engineer have canaries on board, The captain’s bird is called Jerry, the chief’s Tom. Miles from shores, their songs are always wistful reminders of land to seabitten sailors. No matter how much they may profess to love the sea, the officers: on board this ship like to think about the pleasures of land, and the song of a canary at sea brings them back sharply enough. And all of them have photographs of their loved ones in their quarters. The surest way to loosen their tongues is to ask them about their wives, chil dren or grandchildren. Even though I have never subscribed to the intrin- sic truth of that old saw: Absence makes the heart grow fonder, it would seem to be so at sea. cary. | SYMPHONY By Edna Blez Do you listen to “One Man’s Fam- ily” on the radio each week? I have heard diverse opinions about this popular program. Some think it is too good to be true and others swear by it and make it a point never to miss its homely philosophy. The Barber family has become very real hi to its radio fans. As a matter of LE fact I recall an acquaintenance of sa mine saying that she was quite pro- voked when Anne and Clifford were married because her own youngster insisted on talking all during the cer- emony. She tried in vain to silence ja her four-year-old but with no suc- hi cess. The youngster insisted it was - “only people on the radio”, but her AREA mother insisted they were very dear Ht friends and she wanted to hear them get married. So you see just voices ' over the air wave can be quite real. —_0— I think we particularly enjoy “One Man’s Family” because many of us ; have never been privileged to enjoy FEE such family life. It is something we Hai all hope for but seem to have missed dau in the general scheme of things. There is nothing in life to compare with 4 family life such as the Barbers enjoy A congenial clan held together by mutual love and profound respect. They love each other but never in- fringe on each other's rights. in. There aren’t many families like the Barbers. The mother and father are splendid parents. They have lived happily and have taught their chil: fy dren the art of enjoying their lives de to the fullest. They have level heads mS and understanding hearts. Most par- ents are too busy with their own ' problems to take a vital interest in their children as they grow into men and women. I know they take care | of the children’s physical well-being a but how many parents do you know E18 who are really good friends to their children? — A I have always felt the Roosevelt family is a fine, happy clan. You ‘might not agree with them politically but they certainly seem to have fine times together. Many times I have y thought how fortunate they really are. Not because they are wealthy and seem to have more than the us- ual share of worldly goods but be- cause they seem to be such a fine alah 7 family, interested in each other and = at their best when they are all to- gether. They seem to possess the ability to enjoy life and at the same) time be good friends. : —— \ “One Man's Family” is only make- believe but it has been going ‘on for seven years and those who listen are as vitally interested today as they were in the very beginning. The Barbers typify what this country really needs: a few real homes peo- pled by families who really love each other and pull together, not away from each other 343 MOTORISTS FILE | ABILITY-TO-PAY PROOF A. total of 343 persons filed N proof of financial responsibility in order to regain their automobile {4 driving licenses during the month of March, Secretary of Revenue J. Griffith Boardman said today. An additional 493 persons re- newed their proof of ability to re- spond to damages in order to re tain their licenses. During the same period the proof of 165 per- sons was cancelled and that of 212 persons was relieved. Proof of financial responsibil- ity in the form of cash, a bond or insurance is required of all persons whose licenses have been suspend- ed or revoked or who have unsat- isfied judgments or bad accident records.