“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- munity institution. : 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 rates on request. B ; ong = B More Than A Newspaper—A Community Institution THE POST'S CIVIC PROG : 1. A modern concrete highway leading from Dallas and con- The Dallas Post necting with the Sullivan Trail at Tunkhannock. 2 2. A greater development of community consciousness among Established 1389 residents of Dallas, Trucksville, Shavertown, and Fernbrook. 3. Centralization of local fire protection. A Liberal, Independent Newspaper Published Every Friday 4. Sanitary sewage systems for local towns. Morning At The Dallas Post Plant, Lehman Avenue, 5. A centralized police force. f Dallas, Penna., By The Dallas Post, Inc. 6. A consolidated high school eventually, and better co-oper- ation between those that now exist. HOWARD W. RISLEY General Manager 5 OTP Dna © us an Ie] shod fn g HOWELL E. REES Managing Editor g : : 5 EDITORIALS How To Lower The Cost The fine plans for a modern sewage system in Dallas seem to have broken down, but the delay need not be too ~ discouraging. In fact, borough council’s tabling of the plan because of its expense may turn out to be a good thing in the end. ~The councilmen seem to feel that, the borough cannot ~ afford the estimated $200,000 expenditure. That is indeed ~ a considerable amount of money, even if the Federal gov- ernment kicks in with a gift of almost half. The council- men are justified in hesitating before they invest such an amount in a sewage system. A sewage system will cost money, plenty of money, but the longer we wait, the more it will cost. Eventually, such an expenditure must be made. It was with these thoughts in mind that The Post suggested, about six or seven years ago, that the municipalities about Dallas wake ~ up and anticipate the need and save themselves money by ~ constructing a joint system now. The Post is not entirely alone in that opinion. It is a part of the Rotary-Kiwanis plan for joint, centralized at- tack upon the problems of Back Mountain communities. The Sunday Independent voiced such an opinion last Sun- day when it advised that the sewage system, when it is constructed, be adequate to care for the needs of Dallas and neighboring municipalities. Dallas Borough has shown its good faith by making an effort: to learn something about modern sewage disposal methods and their cost. It is now up to some of the other neighboring municipalities to do their part. It would have been wrong for Dallas Borough to assume the task itself. Ee The present delay may give neighboring towns an op- portunity to become interested, and if, as a result, a joint system is constructed, the cost will be proportionately less to each taxpayer. Pennsylvania, industrial leader of the nation until three years ago, today has 10 per cent of the country’s un- employed. Unemployment in Pennsylvania is 25 per cent higher in proportion to the population than in the United States as a whole. Exploitation, 1938 Style ~The United Mine Workers of America tossed a bankroll of $120,000 into the unsuccessful fight to make Lieut.-Gov. ~ Thomas Kennedy the Democratic Party’s gubernatorial candidate in the last primary election. pd The fund was contributed between December 1, 1937, and May 31, 1938, according to a report at the No. 1 district ~ office of the union. Previous to December 1, 1937, the report listed contributions of $500,000 in the campaign to re-elect: President Roosevelt; and $247,000 to Labor’s Nonpartisan League. This brings the total expenditure for politics close to the million dollar mark. Every cent of this money came from the members of the U. M. W., most of whom have little enough for them- selves these days. Little wonder that John L. Lewis sel- dom visits the anthracite region any more. It must be difficult for the miners to decide whether Sixty-two new industrial concerns moved their plants into Wilmington, Del., during 1937. More than half went from Philadelphia because of high Pennsylvania taxes on industry. Parents As Police A number of persons have complained to The Post about mischievous youngsters who amuse themselves by breaking windows and otherwise damaging property. ' The limited police facilities in town make it impossible for officers to patrol some of the outlying sections and so children often carry on their wrecking boldly and in defiance | of complaining householders. The blame, it appears, rests not; so much with the chil- dren as with their parents, who have a definite responsi- bility in training children to an appreciation of the value of property. A serious effort by parents to instill .such re- | much easier. Adults get no enjoyment from scolding the neighbor’s children. Frequently, rather than strain neighborly rela- tions, injured plants and broken windows are forgotten. Such consideration places an even greater responsibility | upon the parents of the guilty youngsters, and calls for a similar spirit of neighborliness. Respect for the property and the opinions of other peo- ple should be implanted early in every child. The parent who has neglected that part of his boy's or girl's training is far more to blame than the child. 29 they shall be exploited by the operators or the labor leaders. {prince and prelate second. spect in their offspring would make the work of policemen | : M RIVES ATTHEWS Three people of whom I was very fond because of my interest in them and their careers died last week: two quietly, one violently. All three of thelr deaths, for various reasons, sad- dened me considerably. One, His Eminence, Patrick, Cardinal Hayes, I knew only by sight. The second, Don Alfonso de Bourbon y Batten- berg, Count of Covadonga, former Prince of Asturias and heir to the Spanish crown, I never met, but would have at a garden party plan- ned in his honor had he not been taken suddenly ill. The third, Mrs. S. Stanwood Mencken, I had the pleasure of meeting briefly at a large cocktail party given in New York over a year ago. —— If you've ever been to Ireland, or read James Farrell's “Studs Loni gan,” or had much to do with the Tammany Hall type of Irishman, then, as I do, you'll value the type of Irishman Patrick, Cardinal Hayes was, not only as a Prince of the Holy Roman Empire and ranking diplomat in this country representing the Vat- ican State, but also as priest and arch- bishop of a great church. and as an American and son of the same mean streets which gave New York, and the nation, the not so noble spec- tacles of Alfred Emmanuel Smith and Jimmy Walker, both discredited po- liticos. — Cardinal Hayes, on the two occa- sions I was privileged to see him at close range, possessed two qualities of outward appearance which are rarely found together. He had dignity, or presence, yet withall a kindly coun- tenance. His figure demanded the respect of adults and his face won the love and confidence of children. I saw two faint in his presence, so excited and thrilled were they by the ritual of confirmation, and I heard him speak to a church full of children and proud parents with a simplicity which lent an elegance to the father- ly advice he gave them. His accents were mellow and very Irish. There was no escaping the charm of the man, and that charm did not depend upon his dramatic robes of scarlet watered silk, nor his golden, episcopal crook, nor yet his ornate mitre. He was a man any one could love, Jew or Gentile, Ro- man Catholic, Protestant or agnostic, because he was a man first, and —_—— My interest in the late Count of Covadonga is based upon a coinci- dence known to some of my readers. My mother and father were married on the same day, in the same year, that the former King and Queen of Spain were. I was born on the same day, March 17, 1907, that poor bleed- er, Don Alfonso Pio Christino Edu- ardo Francisco Guillermo Carlos En- | rique Eugenio Fernando Antonino! Venancie de Bourbon y Battenberg, | was. . My father was congratulated by his father when the latter heard! of the coincidence through his con-! sul in St. Louis. If T were commissioned to cut an epitaph on his tombstone, I'd incise | the following: the poor guy never | had a chance. Born with two strikes | against him, haemophilia, the bleed- ing disease which is the heritage of so many of the male grandchildren of Queen Victoria’s daughters, the ormer Crown Prince of Spain had no normal family life and was called upon, almost at birth, to fill a posi- tion fraught with danger and bound to distort the attitude of any normal individual toward the realities of ex- istence. No wonder he made a mess of his two marriages, as his father did with his. No wonder that his death followed a joy ride with a cig- arette girl from a Miami hot spot. No wonder, with his inherited affliction, that the only worthwhile pursuit to which he was able to devote himself was the breeding of pigs and chick- ens. Perhaps from ‘them he hoped to learn the secrets of heredity, and how to overcome such bad features of them as the dread disease of hae- mophilia. No wonder that he once remarked, after renouncing his royal titles and rights to the now non-ex- istent Spanish crown: “I am happy to be a free man, but even as a private citizen I am still beset by snobs. There are thousands of them, and they just will not learn that I am no longer a Prince. In my heart I wish I was born a commoner.” —_— What poor Don Alfonso, great- grandson of Englands Victoria, never learned was that he was born a commoner, and died one, too, in the ancient chaloppy with defective brakes of a nightclub charmer. Prin- ces,’ he should have learned, are never born, they make themselves so. Cardinal Hayes died a Prince, a Prince among men, a Prince of Charity, a Prince of his Church. Poor Alfonso, never a prince, never had a chance. He was never any- thing at all save an object of pity, the joint victim of inherited disease and inherited station he never earned, he never had any right to possess. pe Mrs. S. Stanwood Mencken, as all the world knows, was noted chiefly for the elaborate and costly costume dresses she wore to all the better pub- licized charity balls in New York. Her appearance was always worth the price of admission. If people laughed at her, and some did find occasion to laugh at a woman who was in the habit of spending thou- sands on a dress which could only be worn for a night and often was so made it was impossible for her to sit down in it, there were many who were pleased by the exotic spectacle she always made of herself, and enough of those, who knew her well, knew too, that her antics possessed an element of tongue in cheek. Still others know of the great amount of quiet and thoughful charity work she did, and no one can deny that her prominence as the bespangled belle of many balls did not serve the interests of her husband, a lawyer who would not, ethically, advertise or seek publicity for himself. Mrs. Mencken's passing deprives New York’s most famous charity extra vaganzas of their gayest, craziest and | most colorful note. Her death marks the passing of an era: It is doubt ful whether any one will ever fill her bejewelled slippers again. Maybe no one will want to, and that will be too bad. Roads for Farmers “No one realizes better than I the importance of giving farmers not only a market for their products, but highways on which to haul them—roads for their trucks and their pleasure cars. I am opposed to the diversion of motor funds to other purposes. I want to see all this money used for the improve- ment and maintenance of both our large and our small road systems. I want the farming sections of our state to have better roads and more of them.” ALL IN A LIFETIME AN’ ABOUT THIS TIME O YEAR IN THE COUNTRY, ALL THE LEAVES “) ON THE TREES TURN, THEYRE EVERY COLOR O' THE RAINBOW... 0H..YOU AINT SEEN ONE.._WELL BRIGHT COLORS ON @ " THAT BILLBOARD. = LL, ee ne min : Vy li To | i) pj fl oom in als J i! THEY'RE LIKE ALL THEM |e li 0 {RL Lp . owner, There really are boys, and girls, too, who have never seen _, the beauties of autumn in the country. 7 reproduced by the Pennsylvania State Publicity Commission by permission of the McClure Newspaper Syndicate, the copyright The cartoon above is CITY Do you every really stop to think life? Do you ever pause a minute and marvel at the radio? I do—an I am amazed that the listening pub- lic has learned so much in so short a time via the air waves. For in- stance, how many people in this country would have known about Orson Welles if it hadn’t been for the radio? You might say, “Who in heaven's name is Orson Welles? If you don’t know about Mr. Welles, you will soon, because his program is listed for Sunday evenings at 8 from now on. Up until now he has been on the air at 9 p. m. on Mondays and those who have been following this up and coming young men have become such devotees, it is said he gets more fan mail than any other person on the radio—and up until now he has had no sponsor! —_—— Those of us who are interested in {the theatre and fortunate enough to get to New York now and then have watched Orson Welles do something which has never been done before in the theatre—that is, not in our time. He has built up a theatre group which has produced Shakespeare in modern clothes, and made such a suc- cess of it. The theatre where this group held forth was jammed to capacity last winter for weeks and weeks. The group of which Mr. Welles is the acting head is called the Mercury Theatre and to date they | produced three plays which have all {proved to be tremendous successes. In the early part of this summer Mr. Welles sold Columbia network the idea that he could do good plays on the air and make. the listening public sit up and beg for more. And that is exactly what has happened. | Every where this summer I have | heard people, who were never before |interested in drama, talking about the Mercury Theatre. On Tuesday mornings in the office, on the bus, on the street car, I have heard people asking each other if they had heard Orson Welles last night? Mr. Welles has sold the pub- lic on good drama. He has slowly, but surely, taught his public what is good in the realm of’ the theatre. There are no big names in the Theatre of the air. The plays are well selected — not things we have heard again and again. Mr. Welles dares to give his public plays they have never heard of. He dares to give them short stories by Sherwood SYMPHON fe A the homes By Edna Blez| about some of the good things in this | Anderson and Saki, and as I have said before they cry for more. Mr. Welles is teaching thousands of peo- ple something they never knew be- bringing something of the American people. Mr. Welles as you must have | heard by this time is quite young. | There have been many different stories told of his age but I feel sure |he is not quite thirty yet. His suc- | cess is not just a sudden ‘‘break”. He has been working for years to achieve his current success. I feel sure his success has come from sheer determ- ination and very hard work. His voice is his greatest asset. No- where on stage, screen, or radio have I heard such a perfect voice. Mr. Welles might be a splendid actor but to radio listeners he is first and last a voice—a voice so warm and rich and filled with such intensity we find ourselves following what that voice says with bated breath—no matter what the story might be. Mr. Welles thas something to give the listening public and I for one hope he gives us more and more! THE LOW DOWN from HICKORY GROVE Anybody who does not think the women know what they are doing, they are barking up the wrong tree. And just because you see one woman painting up like a Cherokee, it is no sign they are all Cherokees. What I got in mind about the women, it is this here organiza- tion they got down there in Suf- fern, N. Y. state—the Women’s rebellion. Any politician who thinks he has been fooling the women, and thinks the women do not know who is paying his nice salary, he is none too smart. He is like a pale boy coming in from be- hind the barn, and whistling, and with a notion his mother does not know he has been smokin’, Women, they just want de- cent Govt., and do not pay too much attention to windy politi- cians. They are used to wind around the home. But when they start house-cleaning, they do not just dust things here and there. They clean house. And boy, if I was in politics and the women got after me I would fold up my tent and take to the tall timber. Yours, with the low down, JO SERRA. 3 MD Apes te en