“Congress shall drake ho 1AE abridging the freedom of speech or of Press” — The Constitution. The Dallas Post is a youthful, liberal, aggressive weekly, dedicated to the highest ideals of the journalistic tradition and 1 i i i f the rich rural- concerned primarily with the development 0 suburban area about Dallas. It strives constantly to be more than a newspaper, a community institution. Subscription, $2.00 per year, payable in advance. Sub- -ribers who send us changes of address are requested to ok addresses with the motice of include both mew and old change. Advertising rates on request. ® More Than T No Time For SLACKERS It is difficult to understand the lethargy of the average .v farmer. He admits his dissatisfaction with the price he sives for his milk; he is, most of the time, completely be- ered by the complex price schedules by which he is paid, | he complains that he cannot show a profit but he scarcely fts a finger to help the handful of leaders who are trying to nt his case to the public. Since last spring the dairyman in this section has had a tting organization which has, with limited finances and agre co-operation, done an amazing job of winning conces- s from the State Milk Control Board. For the first time, producers here have a good opportunity to unite solidly d conscientious leaders who are ready to lead the attack ‘a long-standing problem. These leaders (Clift Space of allas is one of them) have already spent more time and money : they can afford in pushing the dairymen’s cause. They de- re a better support from the men for whom they have been ing. One way a dairyman could prove that he is willing to carry share of the battle would be for him to turn up at the meet- g to be held by the Milk Producers’ Association at Scranton xt Wednesday. What he will learn there will be well worth 5s rip. » CHEERFUL NEWS Well, it looks as if a merry Christmas indeed is in store for and wholesale merchants, and their customers, too. There's a handsome bulge in consumer pocketbooks result- from the sharp upward course business has followed of late. ‘least 1,600,000 persons have gone back to work in non- ultural industries since May. Though normally industry sins to slack off seasonally around November, it didn’t hap- ) this year. In fact, employment gained slightly during the nth. Also, for 11,000,000 or so investors in stocks of Amer- n corporations, better business means bigger dividends; ably more in 1939 than last year. And this is the week 1 Christmas Clubs begin to lay on the line the $350,000,000 ed by some 7,000,000 depositors during 1939. ina ‘These ‘are some of the factors which indicate that retail ; of holiday merchandise will be the best in 10 years. : No Last FRONTIER Our last frontier is gone,” sigh the historians who read history of America as the pushing forward of the frontier e Atlantic to the Pacific. That offered to ambition and rprise a field of unlimited opportunity. And now that we achieved the conquest of the continent, what are we to Are we to lament with Alexander that there are no more ‘to conquer? The westward march of our frontier meant w lands to make fruitful, to plant with wheat and corn or to rive out the buffalo and replace them with domestic cattle. I he historians are right—that frontier is no more. Yet there are other frontiers which are beyond their cal- culation. These frontiers are not geographical. They are not mea they are the frontiers of knowledge and of vention. The frontiers of the new sciences which year after and high ation into actualities. Our old frontier had a definite measured in miles; ear are being advanced from the realm of pure theory "That limit was reached. But the frontiers of the mind of ‘man have no limits and no measure. Qur great-grandfathers saw steam revolutionize the world. in our day have seen the marvels of the automobile and : Have our people come to their Pacific when we say surely that progress is stopped? Not at all. Our genius airplane. invention means new frontiers for us to push forward, great, , and as yet undreamed of worlds to conquer. We are not static people. . We never have been content to sit down and atisfied that all has been done that man can do. The great ing in our history has been our inability to stay put. We have always been pushing forward to new and larger fields of en- savor. There is and can be for Americans no last frontier. A SIGNIFICANT AWARD ~The Nobel Prize situation this year attracted an unusual amount of attention because there was no peace prize awarded. That, of course, was only natural, since war was blazing all around the prize-giving country. Interest in the peace prize story, however, unfortunately listracted attention from the other prizes. One of these point- ed a very interesting moral. The award in question went to Professor Gerhard Domagk or his discovery of a cure for pneumonia, meningitis, and a umber of other of man’s most “difficult” diseases. And there was one particularly interesting fact about the situation which was more or less lost in the shuffle. It was the fact that the ward was made to a man who conducted his researches, not ith the aid of some university or hospital, but with the aid ‘industry. 5 javie aiche SECOND THOUGHTS Headaches have been trans- lated almost completely out of their meaning of physical pain. If you accept Alexander Wool- cott’s dictum that the only cure for a hangover is suffering, or if you prefer Westbrook Peg- ler’'s more tragic pronounce- ment that the only cure is death, that’s the end of the physical side of the problem. Your radio will offer other pal- liatives, but don’t believe it. Your correspondent knows a gentleman who recently sub- scribed to belief in the remedial administration of so mild a thing as aspirin, then spent all of a night in subconscious wandering through mazes of dreams in technicolor. But pity for him is secondary to sympathy for the man or group of men who must undergo the ordeal of budget-balancing in Luzerne County. There's a headache for you. For instance: Looking in up- on John A. MacGuffie the oth- er day was an experience that might be best depicted by one skilled in photomontage. Every time the president of the Lu- zerne County Commissioners lifted a paper from the file on his desk he was met by a new poser, a new problem, a head- ache whose cure is readily available in only that which MacGuffie like to avoid, a tax rise. In your county set-up you have the spenders and the sav- ers. What's to be done when in the last month of a budget year your judges decide to add $500 to the pay of each court attendant? And what about the related certainty that for the next budget there will be demand that clerks assigned to the courts be placed on at least 'a pay par with the uniformed group whose most severe men- tal labor is in waking up to a ten o’clock roll call? Your courts can upset a bud- get, if the judges are so in- clined. They've already done so. A job created by the Bench, or many jobs so created, need only the magic words “by order of court,” with a jurist signa- tory thereto, and the effect is the same as that produced in | medieval times by a command from the throne. On MacGuffie’s desk lay a bill for $2,400. It is more than two years old and it represents a contract entered between a publishing house and the late William Swan MacLean, when he served as president judge. There can be no question that the judges should have each a set of Vail’s Law Digest; but, what about the further fact that the price per set is $400? The county commissioners must ask bids on every expen- diture of $300 or more. The Legislature of 1939 re- jected proposals that the coun- ty business heads be given a salary of $7,500. Imagine! Corporations dealing in a busi- ness with resources of four | hundred million dollars would pay a secretary that much. The man at the head of a sales or- ganization producing a profit of more than a quarter million dollars a year would get ten taxes for an equal result in only one department of your county structure, a department operated at an overhead cost lof $17,000. WINTER His breath like silver arrows pierced the air, The naked earth crouched shuddering at his feet, His finger on all flowing waters sweet . Forbidding law—motion nor sound was there; Nature was frozen dead,—and still and slow, ‘A winding sheet fell o’er her body fair, Flaky and soft, from his wide wings of snow. FraNCES ANNE KEMBLE. Yet, in the Dallas district, i the Sixth district, only a few more than seventy per cent | of the enfranchised citizens | thought enough about county | economy to go to the polls and | vote. * Well, life is funny or tragic, according to the way you live it. What amused this scrivener | most one night this week was | to listen to a conversation in ! the home of a very fortunate | citizen. A dreamy-eyed young * * lady, a) college graduate, was Howarp W. RisLEY HoweLrw E. Regs times the pay accorded from Hla A Neswpaper — A Community Institution THE DALLAS POST EstaBrisaEp 1889 A Liberal, Independent N ewspaper Published Every Friday Morning At The Dallas Post Plant, Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Penna, By The Dallas Post, Inc. Entered as second class matter at the Post Office at Dallas, Pa., under Act of March 3, 1879. General Manager Managing Editor Mechanical Superintendent 2, affairs. THE POST’S CIVIC PROGRAM 1. A modern concrete highway leading from Dallas and connecting with the Sullivan Trail at Tunkhannock. A greater development of community consciousness among residents of Dallas, Trucksville, Shavertown, and Fernbrook. 3. Centralization of local fire, and police protection. 4. Sanitary sewage systems for local towns. 5S. A consolidated high school eventually, and better cos 5 operation between those that now exist. 6. Complete elimination of 7. Construction of more sidewalks. politics from local school T THINGS FIRST a; 2 = = Dll < N Uh eoNERWNCY £2 = —y Edith Blez THE SENTIMENTAL SIDE Somewhere several years ago, in a biography written by a young English poet, I came across a line or two which have stuck in my mind ever since. I can’t remember the exact words but I do remember that the writer expressed the long- ing to be able to go back some- where in the recesses of his mind, and walk up a very fa- miliar garden path, open the door of his boyhood home, and find upon opening it some of the pleasant things he used to do when he was growing up. * * * I wonder if many of us do not feel the same way. When we begin getting to the age where life seems to be nothing but work and the business of earning a living, wouldn’t we like to recapture some of the excitement, and some of the realness and sweetness of the things we never suspected were important when we were doing them. It is strange, too, what things we do remember when we think back. We never seem to remember the unpleasant things, we never seem to re- member the big things, but it is the small unimportant hap- penings which pop up so unex- pectedly. Sometimes it almost seems that they have been waiting patiently, somewhere in the dim background, to be lived again. * * * I wonder if any of you re- member some of the things I remember? Can you think back to the grand feeling of waking up on Saturday morn- ing and knowing it was a day to play and not a day to go to school and sit quietly for four or five hours. Saturdays were much better than any other day of the week. They even began differently. There was a strange excitement in the air. There was nothing to do but play unless, of course, someone in the house had other ideas. But even a few chores around the house didn’t seem to make any real difference. Saturday silent in the din of exchanged opinions on war. Others dis- counted Hitler, Stalin; a cou- ple preached the merits of So- cialism, but always there was war as the keynote. And on the way home, the dreamy-eyed young lady turn- ed to her escort and said: “What war was it they were talking about? I didn’t know there was any fighting going on.” was a gala day, a day which was always too short, a day filled with a sweet freedom which never seemed to come on any other day of the week. * * * I like to remember the first spring evenings along in the last part of April and the first of May when the days were growing longer and we were al- lowed to stay out a little long- er in the evening. We tried to rush through supper and we couldn’t understand why the big folks lingered so long. The gang gathered to play hide and seek or hop-scotch or some- times it was jumping rope and jacks. Games always seemed so much better on the first spring evenings. We were not weighed down with heavy coats and the new warmth in the air brought visions of sum- mer and swimming and pic- nics. We always hated to hear the door open and hear some one say. ‘Come on children, you have been playing long enough. It’s time for bed.” * * * Then there were the days be- fore Christmas. Those days when Santa Claus was a reality and we spent long hard hours trying to cut a long list of things we wanted but knew we couldn’t get. It was a lot of trouble to make the list short enough. Then we be- gan counting the days, the minutes, then the seconds. Each night when we crawled into bed it seemed cruel to have to wait another day. Sometimes it snowed and when the storekeeper began stack- ing tall, fragrant trees outside the store windows it was al- most too much. We felt sure we couldn’t wait another min- ute. There were always strange packages coming to the house. Then the final night arrived and we couldn’t get to bed fast enough. We closed our eyes but sleep refused to come. Somewhere outside we could hear people singing and downstairs there was a lot of moving around and whisper- ing. Then somehow we fell asleep and in the first light of dawn, long before anyone else was awake, we crept down- stairs to catch a glimpse of the tree as it gleamed in the dark. We took one good look and ran back to bed again. We had gotten what we wanted and now the bed was warm and we crawled under the covers sat- isfied to sleep until the rest of the household decided to wake up. he THE LOW DOWN FROM HICKORY GROVE Doing something for the farmer is mow the popular slogan. A better name for it would be “Do- ing the farmer.” Uplifts go in waves, but the finish is always the same — somebody gets elected to something. I know a farmer ower there back of Harvey's Lake and brother, he has ideas on the Govt. doing something for the farmer. He is a regular guy. Jo, he says, do you know what I'm going to do? And I says, mo. Well, he says, maybe they will put me in jail, but I don’t give a hoot; I'm fed up on super- vision, I'm going ahead and just farm. You gotta have a slide rule and a cal- culus, and even then you can’t tell what they want you to do or vice versa. Everything is uplift and supervision. Showing a boy how to roll a hoop, that is the play ground Supervising Commission- er’'s job. Boy, we are a hot bunch. Yours, with the low down, JO SERRA. The Mail Bag I was slightly amused and more than slightly annoyed the other evening when driving on a back street in Dallas to find the street almost blocked by the car of a councilman who lived directly opposite the town’s Burgess. I suppose parking his car on the wrong side of the street is the privi- lege of a town father but as a taxpayer I'd like some privi- leges for my money. These men put down laws for us to go by. It would seem to me that in this town, park- ing on two sides of the street could be eliminated to one side. If the law says two sides, two sides it must be but when a councilman has two neighbors who park their car correctly it would be to his credit and to the advancement of the town if he, also, would park his car behind or in front of theirs and free the road for the mo- torist coming up the hill, at least face it the correct way. I hope that in the near fu- ture, when I again travel the road that I've paid for, I find it slightly more accessible. —~CriTIC. ToMORROW He was going to be all that he wanted to be— Tomorrow. No one should be kinder or braver than he— Tomorrow. A friend who was troubled and weary, ‘he knew—who’d be glad of a lift—and who needed it, too—on him, he would call and see what he could do— Tomorrow. Each morning he stacked up the letters he’d write— Tomorrow. And thoughts of the folks he would fill with delight— Tomorrow. It was too bad, indeed, he was busy today, and hadn’t the minute to stop on his way. “More time I will have to give others,” he'd say— Tomorrow. The greatest of workers, this man would have been— ! Tomorrow. The world would have known him had he ever seen— Tomorrow. But, in fact, he passed on, and he faded from view, and all that he left here when liv- ing was through, was a moun- tain of things he intended to do— Tomorrow. ‘Fred M. Kiefer There is a new indus y growing up these days. It | reaching robust proportions, plaything. I am speaking of model rail- roading, and please don’t con- fuse the toy train idea wi scale modeling. For not only are the modelers grown men in many cases, but when going in for this hobby thoroughly, they either are when they sta or they sooner or later become master mechanics. hl Building miniatures to scale involves draughtsmenship, electrical and mechanical en- gineering, carpentry and land- scape architecture. Over 100,- 000 American men and boys are enthusiastically reprodu- cing exact scale models in the standard O, OO, and HO gauges of the giant locomo- tives on the high rails of to- day. They build their own gen- uine steel rail tracks and switches, towers, signals, cross gates and semaphores and op- erate them by remote electric control. They construct their own rolling stock, miniature factories, breakers, cities, vil- fields and their tiny trees an shrubs with every item to th perfection of the scale they are working in. Ely * 0% * | With it all they have adopt- red the vernacular of the rail- road, which is, strictly speak- ing, a foreign tongue to most of us. deavored to present an example of a highly improbable con- versation (but using the natur- al terms) between a railroad find errors—most of you will probably agree that it doesn’t even make sense. 2 * * * EN “Good morning, says the Main Pin, “you're looking better. Feel like tell- run?” tell you up to the time of the meet. We weeded the garden the main iron, so we beat er on the back down the alley and carried the mail. I ain’t the sure was crackin’ the black dia- monds when of a sudden the hoghead lets out a yell and wings ‘er. The calliope shud- ders as the pig wipes the clock an’ I hear tell even the monk- teeth an’ one of ’em -hit the grit. Maybe the switch hog brownied or the snake bent the wrong rail. I don’t know for when we made the big hole he was blowin’ smoke to a dead- head and all of a sudden the Zulus in the varnish began bouncing around. Anyhow the scissors bill on the red ball says as how the bakehead told him their hogger was wipin’ jerk soup outa his eyes and don’t see no red eye, if there is one, and besides he didn’t get no washout. Then the tea kettle blew and me, when I come to, I'm covered with lump oil and that’s all, Mr. Goodtie, I know about the damn cornfield.” FREEDOM The columnists and con- tributors on this page are allowed great latitude in expressing their own opin- ions, even when their opinions are at variance with those of The Post. 2 and it had its beginning as a lages, mountains, rivers, wheat official and the fireman of a wrecked train. Railroaders may best ash-cat on the line but I GIMMER 5 Following, I have en- Casey,” ing what happened on the 4: “Well, Mr. Goodtie, I can on time. The Big O got a flim- sy and we got the high ball for ¥ eys in the crumb box lost some sure an’ the baby lifter says