Editorially Speaking: The Faith That Is America (Because of the great importance of the subject matter of the following article to the present and future welfare of every American, we have invited Myr. Willkie to be guest editor this week. His article appeared first in the North American Review, was con- densed later in The Reader's Digest and is published here with the permission of those magazines.) By WENDELL L. WILLKIE Author, Industrialist, and President, Commonwealth And Southern Corp. For centuries my ancestors lived in Central Europe. Some of them were peasants, some artisans, others were landed proprietors; but all of them through those centuries had been restricted in their opportunities to the group in which they were born, and no one of them had ever known the true meaning of liberty. Those who did not observe the restrictions under which they were forced to live got into trouble: one had to flee his native land because he adopted the religion of his choice; another was ostracized because he believed in the principles of the French Revolution; and still another was jailed for expressing his own opinions. In 1848, my father and my grandparents came to America to escape this repression of individual liberties. They were led to these shores, as were millions before and after them, by a special reputation that the United States has had among nations. This reputation is founded upon one simple fact: in the United States the plain man has always had a chance. : My father and mother were the first generation in their families to grow up in America. My father was also a lawyer. yer. My mother became a law- Of course, in Europe my mother would have found it impossible to practice a profes- sion; and my father would have found it difficult to get out of the groove worn by his ancestors. Furthermore, it would have been utterly impossible for them to have given their gix children the education which we received in America. We went to high school and college. And with the schooling finished, there were no doors closed to their children just because they came from a plain family in a small town. No class distinction, no law inter- fered with their effort to earn a living in the occupation of their choice, or to express their opinions as they passed. In all the long history of their family, these six children were the first to know from the time they were born, the blessings of freedom. I don’t want them to be thé last. This family record is the record of any number of Amer- ican families. tical demonstration. For us the value of freedom has had a prac- Freedom means, for example, that if you run a store, you can sell your products to anybody with- out a government official télling you what the prices must be; if you are a professor in a university, you don’t have to alter science or delete history as a bureaucrat prescribes. If you own a newspaper you don’t limit your editorial opinions to what an official censor approves. If you are a laborer, you can leave you job when you feel like it for any other job you prefer; you and your fellow workers can bargain collectively concerning the conditions of your work. If you think taxes are too high, you can vote against those officials you think responsible. inherent American right to criticize anybody, anywhere, at any time. These are practical applica- tions of this thing called free- dom. In this country we take them for granted — perhaps too much for granted. But in more than half the world free- dom does not exist. The pres- ent conflict in Europe is peri- lous to this freedom because in a modern war people destroy the very things they say they are fighting for. It is because we wish to preserve our free democratic system that we must remain at peace. But we cannot remain care- lessly at peace. If the price of democracy in ordinary times is eternal vigilance, in a war period that vigilance must be doubled. Beware Of “Emergencies” We must be careful that, under the guise of “emergency,” the pow- ers of government are not so ex- tended as to impair the vitality of free enterprise and choke off free expression of thought. Already we hear of the need for the government to control prices, to license Ameri- can business, to regiment American employes and employers, to censor the radio. In a critical time there is always a temptation to surrender the responsibilities of a free citizen, to say to the government: “During this emergency, you take charge. You tell us what to do, what to think.” If we should yield to this tempta- tion, the end of our free democratic system might come as readily in peace as in war. Once these re- sponsibilities of citizenship are giv- en up, they are not readily return- ed, Government, in its practical working, consists only of aggrega- tions of men; and men, having test- ed power, do not easily surrender power. We must not be misled be- cause suggested restrictions are for humanitarian purposes, for, as ex- Justice Louis D. Brandeis recently said: “Experience should teach us to be more on our guard to protect our liberties when the government's purposes are beneficent . . . The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without un- derstanding.” The war has not changed the grave domestic questions confront- ing America; it has just temporarily diverted our minds from them. For 10 years we have been haunted by our unemployment problem. Yet its solution has been in our hands for some time. During the depres- sion decade, American industry ac- cumulated an enormous deficiency in plants and modern machinery. To remedy this, industry will need even more than the present number of unemployed. Industry will also need a great deal of additional cap- ital, and there should be no diffi- culty in getting this, as soon as the (Continued on Page 6) And there is no limitation upon your POST SCRIPTS, Its once-proud brown stone front smudged by soft coal smoke, its windows streaked and lonely, its plate glass stuck with ugly “For Rent” signs, the old bank building at Kingston where “King Dan” Ed- wards ruled his industrial empire has been sold for $200 . . . and its destruction puts a period at the end | of an American story. The enterprising Mr. Edwards made his exit from this world about seven years before we entered the province lately ruled by him, but we grew up surrounded by so many monuments to his enterprise ‘that he, instead of Rockefeller or Car- negie or any of the early Mellons, has always been our favorite post- Civil War industrial baron, Mr. Edwards was an up-and-com- ing Welshman who migrated to this country just before the Civil War, determined to learn for himself about the opportunities supposedly awaiting ambitious young men in the new country. Two years after he set foot on the Battery, he was superintendent of the iron works at Danville. The company sent him to Kingston and before long he was running Kingston Coal Company and laying the foundations for his own feudal system. —_—— Although his reign was subject to the greater law of his country, many of those laws were made by Mr. Edwards and his associates and (Continued on Page 8) Tue Dairas Post MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION Vol. 50 FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 1940 CIVIC PROGRAM FOR 1940 1. More community spirit in the Dallas area. 2. A concrete highway from Dallas to Tunkhannock. 8. Centralization of police and fire protection. 4, Better fire protection and lower insurance rates. No. 2 5. More sidewalks. TRUCKSVILLE WOMAN AND HER SISTER DIE WITHIN TWO HOURS; SAME CAUSE Mrs. Frank Mazur, 33, Main Road, Trucksville, died on Mon- day afternoon in Genera] Hos- pital at 3:30, two hours after her sister, Mrs, John Walsh, Edwardsville, had died at Homeopathic Hospital. Periton- itis was the cause of both deaths. Mrs. Mazur was admitted to General Hospital on December 2%. Her sister went to Home- opathic Hospital last week. Both were listed as surgical cases. Mrs. Mazur is survived by her husband, her father and seven brothers and sisters, all of Larksville. Ronald Doll Succeeds Girton Wins Promotion For His Fine Work On Faculty The vacancy caused last week by the death of Maurice J. Girton, sup- ervising principal of Dallas Town- ship schools, was filled on Monday night when the township board of directors promoted Ronald Doll, a member of the faculty, to the prin- cipal’s office. Mr. Doll, who is the son of Mr. and Mrs. H. Stanley Doll of Dallas, has been teaching at the township high school for nearly four years. He was educated at Dallas Borough schools, Wyoming Seminary and Columbia University. He received his M. A. from Columbia in 1936. At the same meeting the directors authorized a WPA project to grade a tract next to the high school and develop it as a parking lot. Charter Returned Under Conditions Branch 28 Must Respect | | be revoked again Geographical Boundary Herbert Lahr, chairman of Branch 1 28, American Progressive League, { which has been involved in a three- month controversy with Branch 22, Kingston Township, over territorial rights, appeared before the State Executive Committee at Wilkes- | surance that his branch’s charter will be restored if it confines its activities to Carverton and Franklin Township. Robert A. Smalley, executive sec- retary of the League, made it plain this week, however, in commenting on the action, that the charter will if Mr. Lahr’s branch tries to meet within the ter- ritory of the Kingston Township branch. Frantz And Machell Re-elected For 6th Time Following the annual stockhold- ers’ meeting on Tuesday, the direc- tors of First National Bank, Dallas, elected officers. C. A, Frantz, Dallas grocer, was re-elected president and Sterling Machell was re-elected vice- president. Both Mr. Frantz and Mr. Machell have been serving continu- ously since their election to their re- spective offices in 1933. Other officers: W. R. Neely, vice-president; W. B. Jeter, secre- tary and cashier; Frederick J. Eck, assistant cashier; R. L. Brickel, A. C. Devens, C. A, Frantz, H. H. Hill, W. B. Jeter, Sterling Machell, W. R. Nedly and Clifford Space, directors. Rutherford A Candidate Congressman Albert G. Ruther- ford has announced his candidacy for reelection from the 15th Con- gressional District, which includes Wyoming County. OLD-TIME SWAPPING INSTINCT IS DUE FOR A REVIVAL HERE The old-fashioned swapping in- stinct is about to be revived in Dallas, Shavertown and Luzerne. This section’s first ‘‘Swap-for- cash” game will be started in Dal- las this week, when four business places will inaugurate one of the most unusual profit-sharing cam- paigns ever developed. Customers at Kuehn’s drug store, Gregory's haberdashery and bar- ber shop, Add Woolbert’s Auto Ser- vice and Richards’ Economy market will receive “change tickets’, which, when saved until a sufficient num- ber is collected, will be exchanged, for- “letter cards”. Each of these cards will bear a printed number and when enough letters have been accumulated to spell any number from one to twenty-seven the hold- er will be entitled to collect that amount in cash. Twenty-seven dollars will be the highest amount that will be paid by the “cashier”, who will be. at Kuehn’s drug store. The campaign is not limited as to time and will continue as long as public response warrants. The fun will come when holders of letter cards, lacking but one letter to finish the spelling of a number, begin swapping unwanted letter cards in an effort to pro- cure their needed letter. The cam- paigns which will be started later in Luzerne and Shavertown will be conducted by separate groups of merchants and the tickets and cards will not be interchangeable. | Barre last Saturday and received as-; Correspondent HasFirst Sight 01 German Plane Tells Post Readers Of England's Christmas; Novelty Of War Dulled (By an exchange arrange- ment, The Post receivesgletters regularly from Mr. Amps, deal- ing with domestic details of the War, Articles prepared by The Post appear regularly in Mr. Amps’ newspaper.) By BASIL E. H. AMPS EXCLUSIVE Ilford, England (By Mail) — First, although this piece will not appear until after the New Year, I want to wish the readers of The Post a Happy New Year. * Our English holidays did not vary so much as you might think from the usual Christ- mas. A few of the things that are usually plentiful were not quite so much in evidence, per- haps, because of the diversion to the Forces, sd the fact that a number of typically Christmas things have come in the past from Germany or those coun- tries now under German sway, but in general a casual visitor would notice little to distinguish this Christmas from any other. Except for the effect of the black- about, it was much the same as ever. The main shopping streets were crowded during the hours of daylight and the traders were to be so much better than they had anticipated. At the opening of the war, we dared not think of Christ- mas. It was almost too much to hope that there would be any but essential workers left in our town, but the continued absence of raids has had tlie effec 4% bringing back many thousands of those who left the town in the first week of hosti- lities and, though there are still something like 6,000 children living in scattered villages in Suffolk and at least 4,000 homes are vacated, there are enough of us to keep the shops busy. A Childless Christmas The most tragic aspect of this Christmas, apart from the losses that have been suffered as a result of the war on sea and in the ai, was to be found in the absence of so thankful that Christmas turned out! Doctor Who Has Brought 3,000 Babies i RESINS SEVENTH TERM out and the number of uniforms C. A. Frantz who was re-elected pres- ident of the First National Bank i of Dallas at its annual meeting on Tuesday. Mr. Frantz was first named president in 1933 and has been re-elected each year since. Chills Promised InPTA Thriller Well-Known Local Cast In Mystery Next Week A cast of well-known local per- (sons, under professional direction, will appear in “Mystery at Mid- night”, a three-act comedy which will be presented in Dallas Borough High School, Thursday and Friday, January 18 and 19, at 8 under auspices of the Dallas Borough Par- ent-Teacher Association. The cast of charactewa includes A] many of the children from their homes. Well over half a million had Christmas in strange surround- ings. Everything possible was done! for them, and most of them were | happy enough. I know several par- ents who have their children away from them and they didn’t look for- ward to the holidays at all. They were able ‘to visit the children af- ter Christmas, but the preparations | this year consisted mostly of shop- ping and mailing parcels. As a matter of fact, if it were not for the gas-masks on every shoulder and the sandbagged air- raid shelters and the uniforms we | should scarcely be aware of war at all. This, of course, is partly due to the fact that we have now got quite used to our environment, which, four months, ago, would have seemed like a nightmare. It is amazing how natural everything that happens seems to be. About three weeks ago, on a Monday morning, I was going down the stairs leading from our office to the street. I heard three dull thuds as I went down but thought nothing of them as we are on a heavily-trafficked street. Plane Dodges Anti-Aircraft When I got out I saw someone looking up into the sky, and looked up casually as well to see five puffs of white smoke hanging round an aeroplane that was flying at a tre- mendous height. I watched the plane out of sight and saw several other shell-bursts near it. It was the first sight I had ever had of active warfare, but it seemed a matter of little moment and after- wards, as I thought about it, I was shocked to discover how natural it seemed to be that aeroplanes should have death hurled at them in that way. And yet, at the same time, it seemed ridiculous that that little silver speck up there should have come in enmity over the North Sea to carry out some work, what- ever it was, designed to harm the people beneath. My other contacts with the war are second hand, except in-so-far as they are concerned with the Home Defence services. The other even- ing I went to interview the wife of one of the men who was a prison- er on the Graf Spee and was landed at Montevideo. This man was Chief Ralph Rood as Judge Rollins; Deoi- ty Niemeyer as Sally Grant; Jerry Sullivan, Prof. Rockbottom; Mrs. Nelson Shaver, Elvira Nosegay; Clarence LaBar, Tom Foster; Joseph Jewell, Ralph Norris; Mrs. G. K. Swartz, Bonnie Baker; Evan Brace, Detective Briggs; Clyde Veitch, Jack Murphy; Mrs. Laverne Race, Mrs. Halloway; Velma Herring, Sara; El- wood McCarty, stranger. There will also be three choruses, which will appear in the musical numbers, singing and dancing. Mrs. Frank Ferry, president of the Parent-Teacher Association, has an- nounced that a prize of $2 will be awarded to the high school boy or girl who turns in the most money from the sale of tickets. Dallas Learns To Liked Wednesday Closing The custom of closing stores on Wednesday afternoon, inaugurated in Dallas this summer, has met with favor among most people, a response which has led merchants to agree to continue the practice indefinitely. Dallas Firemen Meet Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Company of Dallas will have a regular meet- ing tonight at the hose house on Mill Street. A committee appointed to discuss some plan for a benefit show will make its report. Into World Is Honored By Legion Award For Distinguished Service To Community Given To Dr. H. A. Brown By Daddow-Isaacs Post The Distinguished Service Certificate of the State Depart- ment of the American Legion, the highest honor conferred upon non-Legionnaires, was awarded to Dr. Harry A. Brown of Leh- man last night at a ceremony conducted in Lehman Methodist | Church by Daddow-Isaacs Post, No. 672, American Legion. Dr. Brown was chosen for the award because, during 34 years of practice in Lehman, he has quietly personified the highest ideals of his profes- sion. Most of his countless kind deeds and sympathetic gestures have been cloaked in his own modesty, but the files of the committee which nom- inated him above other candi- dates for the award are filled with evidences of his human- ity and generosity. The certificate was presented to Dr. Brown by Senator Robert M. Miller of Kingston, a member of Black Diamond Post, No. 395, Amer- ican Legion. Commander John H. Thomas of Daddow-Isaacs Post pre- sided. The speakers, all of whom paid tribute to the unique character of the country doctor, were District Commander Fred Bachman, Hazle- ton; Michael] Markowitz, past com- mander of Swoyersville Post, and Rev. C. Duane Butler, pastor of Lehman Methodist Church. Mrs. James R. Oliver of Dallas sang several lovely selections, ac- companied by Mrs. William Baker, and the orchestra from the Dallas Methodist Church played. Has Practiced 35 Years Dr. Brown, a native of Lehman, began to practice in the Green Ridge section of Scranton, upon his grad- uation from the Medico-Chirurgical College of Philadelphia. later he came back to Lehman and since then he has served his neigh- bors, often travelling a considerable distance, sometimes in dangerous weather, to answer a call. He has been the physician at more than 3,000 births. * Aside from giving new life to the tradition of the country practition- er, Dr. Brown has achieved an en- viable reputation among his fellow physicians. He is a member of the staff of the Nesbitt Memorial Hos- pital and the retiring president of the Staff Association. He is also a director of the First National Bank of Kingston. The unique certificate he received last night is owned by but a few people. The award is made only af- ter careful study, and must be ap- proved by the State Department. No more than one certificate can be | awarded by anv post in one year, but many posts never find a civic figure worthy of the honor, and so the awards are unusual. Last night’s was the first Daddow-Isaacs Post has made. Senator A. J. Sordoni of Harvey’s Lake and Miss Margaret Elliott of the American Red Cross are two of the few who have re- ceived Certificates from other Lu- zerne County posts. Dr. Brown was nominated for the award by a committee which had as members Arthur H. Brown, Paul B. Shaver and Paul Winter. Kehrli Warns Dog-owners Of License Deadline A warning to people in this sec- tion to secure licenses for their dogs or face prosecution was issued this week by Fred Kehrli, Jr., of Factoryville, State dog law investi- gator, making his first trip of the year here. Any person who has a dog over six months old must secure a 1940 license. Licenses are on sale at the County Treasurer's office. Last year 21,190 licenses were sold in Luzerne County, an increase of about 2,000 over the preceding year. Any farmers whose livestock or poultry is killed by dogs can secure adjustment by writing Mr. Kehrli at Factoryville. Score another “scoop” for The Post’s “good neighbor” policy. As a gesture of appreciation, The Post today is offering to its sub- scribers an almost incredible bar- gain in culture—a five-volume “His- tory of the World”, a credit to any library shelf, for 98c. It sounds crazy, but it's true! The books, bound in blue and stamped with red and gilt, contain more than 1,700 pages, cover 3,000 years of history, contain informa- tion on more than 1,100 subjects, are indexed and profusely illus- trated and have been revised to 1937. For at least a month, The Post will publish each week one “Good (Continued on Page 8) Will Coupon”. To get a set of these SCOOP! POST OFFERS READERS | ‘GOOD WILL BARGAIN’ ON BOOKS books at the 98c price, it will be! necessary for the clip three from any three issues of The Post, These coupons, with 98¢c (or $1.98 if the DeLuxe Edition is ordered) will bring the set by mail. That's all there is . . . nothing to sell, nothing to write, no contest of any kind, nothing except the three cou- pons and the 98c. subscriber to Since the offer will last only un- | til the supply of books is exhausted, it is advisable to mail immediately the reservation order which appears in the advertisement on Page 3. It entails no obligation and will assure you that a set is being saved for you. A year] “Good Will Coupons” : Women Will Aid In Job Drive In This Section Mrs. Kuehn Is Chairman; County Leader To Speak Here On Monday Night A group of women’s organ- ization from the Dallas area enlisted in Governor Arthur H. James’ Mobilization Crusade this week, determined to help in halting the vicious down- ward unemployment cycle in Pennsylvania. Mrs. G. A. A. Kuehn of Dallas was selected to head the women’s division in this section. An organization meeting was held on Tuesday afternoon in the offices of the State Em- | ployment Service in Wilkes- | Barre, when key members of {the local committee received { instructions and the signal to “begin hiring”. These women will serve as liaison officers between unemployed and potential em- ployers in this section. Mrs. Kuehn has announced the following representatives from wo- men’s organizations who will co- operate in the Mobilization Cam- paign: Mrs. Edna Whitesell, Dallas | Junior Women’s Club; Mrs. Alex Groblewski, Nesbitt Memorial Hos- pital Auxiliary; Mrs. H. J. Disque, American Legion Auxiliary; Mrs. Frank Ferry, Dallas Borough Par- ent-Teacher Association; Mrs Earl Weidner, W. C. T. U.; Mrs. Ada Lewis, Order of Eastern Star; Mrs. Charles Stookey, Daughters of America; Mrs. Richard Templin, Dr. | Henry M. Laing Fire Co. Auxiliary; Mrs. Alice Fiske, Jesse A. Brickel Sunday school class; Mrs. Wesley Himmler, Ladies’ Aid Society. County Leader To Speak The opening gun in the women’s campaign will be fired at Dallas Borough High School on Monday night when Mrs. Charles S. Wil= liams, chairman of the women’s division for Luzerne County, will ; address local volunteers and mem- ! bers of the Dallas Borough Parent- | Teacher Association. Mrs. Williams will answer ‘questions following her talk. Already groups in other parts of | the county have attacked the pro- | blem of finding jobs for some of | the county’s 24,000 unemployed. | Governor James launched the Job Mobilization Campaign when it be- came apparent that the tremendous i burden of relief—which cost the | State $122 000,000 last year—was | crippling mdsetiy. IIo gupge i that industry increase its pay rolls, | so its tax rolls could be decreased. The volunteers in the Mobiliza- | tion Campaign will contact prospec- | tive employers, searching for jobs. | When openings are discovered, the State Employment Service will re- commend applicants from its rolls. i | | Dallas Council To Study | Tentative Budget Monday The council of Dallas Borough will meet on Monday night to receive a report from the finance committee, | of which Joseph MacVeigh is chair- {man. The committee met last Sat- ,urday afternoon and compiled a | tentatiye budget, which will be pre- sented’ on Monday night for coun- | cil’s approval. | (CUT THIS OUT) History Or Tue WORLD Good Will Coupon | For a limited time, The || Post will send to any sub- scriber who ‘mails or brings three of these cou- ll pons and 98¢c to The Post a five-volume “History of the World”, as illus- trated in an advertise- ment tn this issue. If you wish to have a set reserv- ed in your name send in {|| the Reservation Order ill from the advertisement. No obligation, of course, but it will assure you that a set is being saved for you. Do mot send this coupon in until you have two others. This offer is made only to paid-up subscribers. Name... ci cot Address City meressecccssccncsccssnessaen ~—