PAGE Is Growing In England Britain Wonders What Will Come Biter The War Destruction Of Hitler Not Enough, Post's Correspondent Reports (In this week’s letter from England, Mr. Amps, editor of The Ilford Recorder, tells Post readers what Englishmen are thinking about the eventual armistice.) By BASIL E. H. AMPS Ilford, England EXCLUSIVE I this town the burden of the war is most pronounced be- cause it is an evacuation area. The departure of at least a third of the population (many of whom have since returned, but not all) meant a great loss to the trading community and also a heavy loss in rates and taxes to the Town Council. Those of us who are left will have to find the rates and tax- es those who departed failed to pay and obviously, as trade has decreased, those who are left have less to pay with. A large number of men who were earning upwards of five pounds a week found their jobs slide from under them at the out- break of war and all the lucky ones among them can get now is the three pounds a week payable to full-time air raid wardens and firemen. Some more have found $3 a week jobs in connection with Food Control. As most of them have homes on which they have heavy mortgages, three pounds a week does not go far, especially as many necessary articles have risen steep- ly in price. Iford’s position, however, is not typical of the whole country. I was in Reading, 40 miles west of Lon- don, the other week and found that so many people had gone out of London to live there that the town was enjoying an unprecedented prosperity boom with work for all. odd war. No School Since July One oddity which is giving local Idea Of European Union THE POST, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1939 FAITHFUL PAL REMEMBERED BY PILOT rrr HS Fresh food for four-footed passengers is one of the recent innovations little notice of the rest. on Pennsylvania-Central Airliners. Co-pilot Russell Wright (left) hands | a package of fresh dog food to Bob Gay for his guide dog, Spike. also one of the foremost economists in the land. In the absence of much war news I think it would be true to say that we are more concerned with specul- ation about the kind of peace we are going to get than with the war itself. That is not to say that the vast majority of people do not realise that the war has to be won first but it is probably symptomatic of the general confidence in the eventual outcome that so many people are looking ahead. It is al- most as if the end of the war was in sight already. There are some who believe it is. They are looking for a revolt of the military and indus- trial classes in Germany before very long. The public remain, at this writ- | | | parents great concern is the lack of schooling for the children who remain here. These children have not been to school since July and they are find- ing time hanging heavily on their hands. The local authority has now devise;l a Home Education Service. The children are gathered in small groups in houses of parents willing to accommodate them for an hour each day and the teachers go from house to house setting lessons for the children to do during the rest of the day. Even this sketchy ex- pedient is welcomed by harassed parents who don’t know what to do with their children. So much for what we may call the outward or visible signs of war. What of the average attitude to- wagds it? Well, practically everyone con- siders Hitler to be the villain of the piece but the average man is be- ginning to feel that the destruction of Hitlerism is not a sufficient end in itself and there is now discern- ible a rapidly spreading growth of idealism which I consider a most hopeful auguary for the future. What Will Peace Be? Men-in-the-street are talking, gropingly for the most part, about the kind of peace they would like to see and the kind of Europe they feel ought to develop. Though the! idea of a Federated Europe, some- what on the lines of the U. S. A, has not been actively promulgated for more than a few months (a society with that ewd in view began activities soon after your Clarence Street published his book “Union Now’) it is now being discussed in most of the National papers. Many of these have pleaded for a state- ment of the Government's aims and one, the News-Chronicle, across two pages last week a con- structive peace plan devised by its editor, Sir Walter Layton, who is printed | § ing, very puzzled about Russia but | the belief is now beginning to] | spread that Russia will not join in | for the very good reason that she | can do herself more good by re-; maining out to get what she can | while the going is good. trality Act was received warmly by all over here and the evident sym- | pathy of America is now appreci- | ated although you will still find | some stern critics who condemn | America for remaining out in order, | as they believe, to make money | out of the war. This feeling persists | mainly among the older generation | who still hold the opinion that | America remained out of the last war until the opportunity of making | money had gone. U. S. May Be Adjudicator You see, what a great many peo- ple here cannot begin to realize is that America is not a kind of off- shoot of Britain. They believe that because the same language is spoken in each country there is of The news concerning your Neu-| ’ | Member Federal Deposit Insurance Here’s Proof 36 Chrys. Sx $295 upe § ’34 Buick Sein $245 VV VV VV VV VV VV VY VY SPECIAL ! BABY GRAND PIANO Nationally Known 5335 Convenient Terms LIZDA idirctdtnnintddhade rh: athens i od 1 PIANO | STORE | 247 SOUTH MAIN STREET | WILKES-BARRE 1 Dial 3-2644 VIVO VOT VV VV CVV VY VO VOY OV eevee ve vY '34 Pont. Sed» $175 *37 Buick 2 $495 '37 Buick “$345 ’37 Pack. Sx $495 § "39 Dodge To $695 No Finance Charge On Any Car Priced Up To $100 Many Other To Choose From COMMUNITY Motors—Buick L. J. McCARTHY—Owner 588-598 Market St. Kingston, Phone 71134 Ao idole. necessity some compulsion on America to come and help us in our troubles. ‘They simply cannot real- ize that America is independent. It] is these people who condemn Amer- ica for staying out. My own view, as I said in my last letter, is that America simply must stay out of this war because, at the end of it, if British opinion remains as it is now, it will be a| condition of peace that the pro-| blems existing between the belliger- | ents shall be adjudicated upon by | neutrals—and America seems des- | tined for the job. It cannot be done by any European nation. I feel, TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN Those who need cash can now obtain loans quickly, conveniently and confiden- |f{' tially in an approved busi- ness-like way. A steady in- come and established credit make you eligible for First Nationals BUDGET-PLAN | LOANS Rates are only $6.00 per hundred per year . . . re- payable in twelve month- ly installments. IRST NATIONAL BAHK of WILKES-BARRE, PA. 59 Public Square ¥ | yo | | | | Corporation Jackson Moums B.Dana Rice Former School Director Buried At Trucksville GOODLEIGH’S SEQUIN EXCEEDS RECORD FOR PRODUCTION OF MILK Peterborough, N. H., Novem- ber 30—A new record, exceed- ing the average of the Guernsey breed for her age and class has just been completed by a four- year-old cow Goodleigh’s Se- quin of Dallas, tested and own- ed by Dorrance Reynolds. Her official record supervised by the Pennsylvania State Col- lege and announced by the American Guernsey Cattle Club is 10179.6 pounds of milk and 526.1 pounds of butter fat in Class CCC. sorrowing relatives and friends. Trucksville Cemetery. Pallbearers were George ‘Bunt Becky’ Monk Thanks Friends “Aunt Becky” Monk, who has bene seriously ill, has asked The Post to help her in thanking all the people who visited her or re- membered to send sympathetic The volume of cards, lowers and gifts which descended pon the beloved old lady during her sickness were proof of the es- seem in which she is held. Her ondition is much better now. Johnson. was 63. He messages. and Evelyn. Kirk McCarty Visits Old Friends In Town Genial Kirk McCarty, The funeral of A. Dana Rice, widely known Jackson Township Rev. Lynn H. Brown, pastor of Moosic Methodist Church and a for-|J mer pastor at Lehman, officiated. Interment was in the family plot in Rice, i Dennis Bonning, George Bond, Her-| bert Miers, L. U. Case and Thomas Mr. Rice, who died on Wednesday on his farm in Jackson Township, had served several terms as a school director in the township. Surviving are his widow, Emma, amd two daughters, Caroline old-time Former Resident | DiesInJersey W. A. Waters, 83, Lived At Huntsville Once William A. Waters, 83, brother of Mrs. Mary Gates and of the late James L. Waters of Dallas, died farmer, was held on Saturday from | November 22 at the home of his his home, amidst a large throng of | daughter, Mrs. Samuel White, | Eatontown, N. J. The funeral was held at Eatontown on Saturday, with interment at Woodbridge, N. Mr. Waters was born at Plymouth April 25, 1856, the eldest son of Daniel S. Waters and Sarah M. Segraves. He lived for many years at Huntsville. He is survived 'by his wife, the former Martha Cleveland of Hunts- Tunkhannock ‘Democrat’ Will Change Its Name B. M. Van Dyke, publisher of the 79-year-old Wyoming Democrat of Tunkhannock, has announced that the name of his newspaper will be changed soon. The publisher, who has decided upon the new name, has invited subscribers to guess what the newspaper will be called after the change. ville; a son, D. Vaughn Waters of Orange, N. J., a daughter, Mrs. Samuel White of Eatontown, N. J.; and three grandchildren, a sister, Mrs. Mary Gates of Dallas, and a brother, Andrew C. Waters of Wil- kes-Barre. * k ¥ Everything in a newspaper is news, particularly the want ads. ;00, that President Roosevelt, now 1e has got his Neutrality Act hrough, may quite likely take some step to bring the belligerents to the onference table and so shorten the ronflict. I feel that no one else can, Dallas resident and now a farmer in Lehman, was in Dallas on Thanks- giving Day, renewing old friend- ships. Mr. McCarty was once one of the most successful exhibitors at the Dallas fair and recalls that on the last year of that exposition he won lo that service for us. These, I1| nearly $400 in awards. should add, are not general opinions | rertain unconsidered trifles that, confuse Lehman with Dallas. ress. One thing you do learn in war is| to watch for the obscure paragraphs for the really vital news and so take office. [ best to keep it on.” : One of Mr. McCarty’s pet peeves ut purely my own formed from !is the tendency among strangers to A ppear from time to time in the|great many people, he finds, don’t know that Lehman has its own post “They're doing their best to put Lehman off the map,” says Mr. McCarty, “and I'm doing my MAIL COUPON FOR INFORMATION ! Ruggles Lumber Go. 1 I RAILROAD AND UNION STREETS, I KINGSTON, PA. 1 DIAL 7-2181. Please mail me complete information about your Time and Payment Plan on Building Costs which covers all cost of material and labor, | with no down payment or other added finance charges. 1 1 NAME ADDRESS I AM INTERESTED IN [ 1 REPAIRING [ 1 REMODELING NEW ROOFS—SIDING ROOMS—PORCHES [ 1 BUILDING It is unMerstood this coupon is for information only and does not obligate me in any way. RUGGLES LUMBER CO. INCORPORATED RAILROAD AND UNION STREETS, KINGSTON, PA.—DIAL 7-2181 A MESSAGE OF VITAL IMPORTANCE TO MILK PRODUCERS If you want a fair price for your milk, if you want to preserve the gains already made, if you want pro- ducers to have a strong voice in the fixing of price schedules, you cannot afford to stay away from the important meeting of dairymen from this section to be held by the NORTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIA MILK PRODUCERS’ ASSOCIATION in the CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ROOMS, opposite the City Hall, SCRANTON, on WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13. There will be capable speakers to explain the accomplish- ments and plans of the Milk Producers’ Association and matters of vital importance to all local dairymen will be discussed. Women will be welcome. This meeting is for YOUR benefit. Make every effort to attend, please. THE NORTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIA MILK PRODUCERS’ ASSOCIATION A Lifetime Chair. IDEAL XMAS GIFT KARPEN CHAIR Covered with Kidd Mohair. Solid Mahogany Frame. Special 40 °° Price AsO VY nav ww e 1 Th ks Pee groves Si . unt wo en” 4 giv { 17-JEWEL BULOVA NEW WESTFIELD BULOVA $4950 $1.00 A WEEK 15-JEWEL ELGIN 106-108-110 FURNITURE (0. § S. MAIN ST W.B. | i5 PUBLIC SQUARE 17-JEWEL LONGINES $40.00 75¢c A We BK { PAY AS LITTLE AS 50c WEEKLY