The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, October 27, 1939, Image 3

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THE POST, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1939
PAGE THREE
Sees Stronger Polish Nation
Arising From European Struggle
100-Year-Old Forecast Says Warsaw's Fall
To Herald Era Of Peace For Whole World
By ERIC
P. KELLY
Professor Kelly, author of “The Trumpeter of Krakow” and
a former member of the Krakow University faculty, was recently
named to the Commission for Polish Relief formed in this country.
The collapse of Polish defense
in the face of German armies came
as a great surprise to those of us who had followed Polish matters since
1918. Although Herr Hitler himself
estimates his casualties at somewhere !
around 45,000 in the month of fighting, it had seemed at an earlier period
that a sharper defense might have been put up on the Vistula forts,
chiefly around Modlin with its long communicating lines.
Hitler’s quick victory seem to be
Campus
Brewvities
High schools in the Dallas area
are well represented at College
Misericordia this year. Alberta
Howell, Hazel Baer, Ethel Maltman
of Dallas Borough and Claudia
Jones, Althea Dymond and Alice
Hand of Kingston Township are
members of the senior class. Mar-
garet Glahn and Flora Jean Stock
of Kingston Township and Jeanne
Williams of Lake Township are
juniors. Mary Sesson of Noxen,
Mary Garrity of Lake Township,
Cynthia Poad of Dallas Township, | outside. The word “corridor” from |
Charlotte Martin and Mary Helen | the German propaganda office was | Da
Beline of Kinston Township and
Charlot Harkins of Dallas Borough
are numbered among the sopho- ty groups, much less serious than |
more students. Ethel Walto of Leh- |
man, Myrtis Disque and Doris Mc- were magnified by Berlin and Mos- |
Staub
Kingston
Carthy of Dallas, Dorothy
and Joan Conway of
Township are freshmen.
A number of Misericordia
graduates—are teaching in local
high schools. - Eleanor Staub,
Hilda Staub, Emily Lewis and
Mary Jean Laycock are regular
members of the Kingston
Township faculty and Miss
Martha Russ is a substitute.
Elizabeth Morgan is teaching
at Dallas Borough. Florence
Haush is on the Lake Town-
ship faculty.
Among the visitors at College
Misericordia recently were the
following persons: Monsignor Dan-
iel M. O’Brien of Charleston Dio-
cese, South Carolina, principal of
the Bishop England High School of
Charleston; Mrs. Enos A, Costa of
Boston, Mass., who visited her
daughter, Miss Isabelle Costa, phy-
sical education instructor; Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond McCandless of Beth-
lehem, parents of Miss Catherine
McCandless of the Department of
History, and Rosemary McCandless.
Jane LeGrand of Dallas and
Ann Sweeney of Freeland have
won the Horace Contest at
College Misericordia, according
to an announcement made at
the first meeting of the Aca-
demia, Latin Club. Entrants
were required to translate the
Horace Odes into English meter.
to an Odes into English meter.
The winners were honored at
a tea in the college cafeteria
yesterday. Miss Margaret Mary
Walsh is president of Acad-
emia.
The college Book Club is pre-
paring to observe Book Week, Nov-
ember 11-18, appropriately. Of-
ficers of the club are Miss Miriam
Farrell, New Jersey, president; Miss
Ruth Wilhelm, Pittsburgh, vice-
president, and Miss Mary Me-
Groarty, Swoyerville, secretary-
treasurer.
The Home Economics Club
has elected the following offic-
ers Virgina Flanigan, New
Philadelphia, president; Auolia
Gebler, Wilkes-Barre, vice-
president; Peggy Sullivan, Lu-
zerne, secretary; Estelle Levin-
son, Larksville, publicity mana-
ger.
About 200 delegates from all
parts of Pennsylvania attended the
13th biennial convention of Penn-
sylvania Chapter, International Fed-
eration of Catholic Alumnae at Col-
lege Misericordia last Saturday.
Sixty-three colleges and academies
were represented. The convention
elected Miss Mary E. Shovlin of
Plymouth govrnor of the chapter.
iT SRR RR FR SES
OVERBROOK
CIDER PRESS
(Fernbrook-Huntsville Road)
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OPEN DAILY
GIDER FOR SALE
Call Dallas 467-R-16
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J. ARCANGELI, Prop.
130 MAIN ST., LUZERNE, PA.
Reasons for
known in London, and the delayed
mobilization of the Polish army
which could have assembled 6,-
000,000 men and barely got 1,000,-
000 together may have been in line
with the ‘‘appeasement’ policy pur-
sued by all the Allies.
"Yet Poland is taking the blame
herself, and wants no pity from
anyone. If the money spent in Po-
land in the past 20 years on schools,
improvements, art museums, and
general betterment had all been
turned into the building of vast
Maginot lines, the results might
have been different. As it was the
cost of maintaining a large army in
that period went into enormous fi-
gures.
In the pre-War propaganda bat-
tles Poland suffered immensely,
i with an almost constant barrage
lof words against her in countries
fixed on her territory of Pomer-
ania and troubles among minori-
the
Ku Klux Klan
cow into major incidents. William | I- Bagger, D. D., president of Pitts- | bazaar
J. Rose, a former Dartmouth pro-
fessor now director of the School
of Slavonic Studies of the Univer-
sity of London, states in his recent
book Poland that in the area which
was Poland, the actual Polish pop-
ulation was seven-tenths of the
ing been Polish for more than 500
years.
Such a situation as this has come
on Poland before. And in its history
against Tartars, Turks and Russians
in their attempts to conquer West-
ern Euyope. The Polish poet Mickie-
wicz stated in a poem written about
Warsaw, peace would come in the
whole world. The first great siege
of Warsaw was by the Swedes, the
second by the Russians in 1920. The
present siege was the third. Well,
we can only hope. But to me there
is no question that Poland will arise
again, profiting by the mistakes of
the past 20 years, and will rebuild
its nation in a form to attain per-
manency.
Phosphate Will Be
Delivered At Noxen
Phosphate for pasture improve-
ment ordered by farmers under the
| 1939 Agricultural Conservation Pro-
| gram will be delivered at Noxen
soon. Those farmers who cannot
| be reached by telephone can com-
| municate with Claude Crispell of
Noxen.
Iron Fireman is not a pop-on,
pop-off source of heat like an oil or
gas burner. In between operations
of the Iron Fireman, the fire in the
retort is automatically banked, and
it continues to give off a gentle flow
of heat. The banked fuel bed acts
as a balance wheel, preventing vio-
lent fluctuations in temperatures.
FARMER
| AND
| MODERN
DANCES
Every Friday Night
HANSOR’S
DINING ROOM
PICNIC GROUNDS
Harvey’s Lake, Pa.
Briggs-Stratton Motors
RUDOLPHS’
ELECTRIC SERVICE
33-35 EAST JACKSON ST.
WILKES-BARRE, PA,
arena ly mi
— PHONE 2-5868 —
in America, |
whole, most of that territory hav- |
Poland has acted as a buffer state ||
1840 that after the third siege of ||
FEWER PEOPLE PAY $2 ;
PER CAPITA TAX THAN /
PAID $5 TAX INA938
~~.
Last Spring the | frusting
school directors of Dallas Bor-
ough, casting about for some
way to satisfy the cry for lower
taxes, slashed the long-stand-
ing per capita tax from $5 to
2.
It was assumed that, with a
$3 reduction, more people
would pay their per capita tax.
But on October 1, when the
school district studied the pay-
ments to that date, it was dis-
covered that fewer people had
paid the $2 tax this year than
had paid the $5 tax last year.
Seeking an explanation, the
directors could only guess that
the penalty on $2 paid late is
so much less than the penalty
on $5 past due that taxpayers
had decided to take their time
in paying.
More Than 3,000
Years Of War
In all the 3,521 years of recorded
history, only 368 were years of
peace, according to the World Cal-
endar Association. These figures
were compiled recently by an army
| reserve officer.
Lutherans To Observe
Reformation Sunday
y service sponsored by the Lu-
| theran Churches of Wyoming Valley
vill be held at Irem Temple in
Wilkes-Barre on Sunday afternoon,
October 29, at 3. The Rev. Henry
burgh Synod, will be the speaker.
i5 INCH
Bria
Heavy le
cleated
Amazing
this low
The second annual Reformation |
soles. Reinforced sides
and back.
Reformation Theme
Oi Albright's Sermon
“Why am I a Lutheran?” will be
the subject of Rev. John Albright,
pastor of St. Luke's Lutheran
Church, Noxen, on Sunday morning
at 11. The theme of the sermon
will be suggested by Reformation
Day. Sunday school will be at 10.
In‘ the evening Rev. Mr. Albright
will preach on “Shall We Abandon
Missions ?”’.
Firemen Receive
Funds From State
Luzerne's Share $689;
Dallas Will Get $190
Auditor General Warren R.
Roberts yesterday approved the
payment of $42,214.46 from the
Foreign Fire Insurance Fund to
municipalities in Luzerne County.
The entire amount is to be paid
to the firemen’s relief asociations
and pension funds in each locality.
The sums to be received by local
communities are: Courtdale, $52.73;
Dallas, $190.12; Luzerne, $689.67;
Swoyerville, $435.63; Dallas Town-
ship, $146.87; Lake Township,
$184.71; Lehman Township, $131.82.
The fund represents the annual
tax of two per cent paid by foreign
fire insurance companies doing bus-
iness in Pennsylvania upon pre-
miums paid in each municipality.
The law requires that this money
be paid to the treasurer of the re-
lief association in each municipal-
ity.
Chicken Supper
The annual chicken supper and
of Huntsville Methodist
| Church will be held at the church
An attendance of 1,000 is expected. on November 8.
ather insoles,
crepe outer-
Full lined.
quality at
price...
sole.
s [6-Inch
e Leather Top
e Rubber
Bottom
16-in. Elkskin Leather
Hi-Top. Leather mid-
Cleated-crepe
outsole. Save one dol-
lar and buy them here.
Moon's Eclipse
Visible Tonight
Midnight Black-Out
The Last Until-}942
The celestial time table will pro-
vide local people tonight with their
first eclipse of the moon this year.
The eclipse will begin at 11:54
p. m. when the moon, high in the
Southern sky, will begin to move
into the earth’s shadow.
The shadow on the moon will
reach 98 per cent coverage when
the satellite appears orange or red
with a slender tracing of white
showing at the lower left edge. The
moon will begin to emerge from the
shadow at 1:36 a. m. It will be clear
at 3:18 a. m.
This section was out of luck when
there was a partial eclipse of the
sun last April 19. It was cloudy
here.
Two other eclipses were paraded
before the world’s telescopes this
year: A total eclipse of the moon
on May 3, visible only on the other
side of the earth, and a total eclipse
of the sun visible from near the
South Pole October 12.
Tonight's moon eclipse will be
visible from one end to the other of
the Americas. This section won't
have another chance to see it until
August 25, 1942,
MASONIS CAFE
231 Bennett St., Luzerne
Orchestra Every Wednesday Night
Farmer Dance Every Friday Night
ELMER RHONE ARD HIS
JOLLY MOUNTAINEERS
ORCHESTRA AND FLOOR SHOW
EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT
Farmers ToName
Committeemen
Conservation Meetings
Scheduled For Nov.
At a series of community meet-
ings to be held throughout the
county, farmers will elect commit-
teemen for the 1940 Agricultural
Conservation Program.
At the same time delegates will
be elected to select the County
Agricultural Conservation Commit-
tee for 1940 and discuss the main
points of next year’s program.
The schedule of meetings in the
Dallas section and the chairmen fol-
low:
Lake, Lehman, Jackson, at Leh-
man M. E. Church, November 8,
7:30, H. P. Riley, chairman; Dallas
Township and Borough, Kunkle
Grange Hall, November 9, 7:30, Mel-
vin Mosier, chairman; Franklin, Ex-
eter and Kingston Township, Car- -
verton Grange Hall, November 10,
7:30, Grover Stock, chairman.
Services At The Lake
Communion will be administered
at Laketon Lutheran Church on
Sunday. Rev. John Albright, pastor,
will preach on “Why am I a Lu-
theran?” at the morning service at
9. Sunday school will be at 10.
FRENCH and MORRIS
— Registered —
Civil Engineers
DALLAS, PENNA.
Land Surveys
Successors to Charles Cooke & Sons
KINGSTON, PA.
DIAL 7-2181.
NAME
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0ST
Now in Progress..... —
ON STORE'S
GREAT
OCTOBER SALE
Continues till Oct. 31
This is the Great Fall Event you have
been waiting for. Every one of our Forty-
Five departments is offering specially re-
duced prices on new Fall merchandise for
your Home, for Yourself and every member
of your Family. Whether your needs are
for smart and sturdy Housewares or the
latest styles in Clothing, here is your op-
portunity to enjoy values that are not only
outstanding but are backed by the name of
Fowler, Dick and Walker.
Make Your Plans Now . .
Attend Early .
FOWLER, DICK ..« WALKER