THE POST, FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 1940 a PAGE EIGHT . | cL I S SIFIED ADS By Irv Tirman | Blacksmith, 61, Dies THEM KIDS 15 AS QUIET AS ¥ PLISTEN TRIGIWE CAN'T Toad GOSH NAPPY! DOSE AN! LOOK VA! KIN, At Centermoreland HELP WANTED LAMBS, TRIG!/ DID SLIMY GET WAIT FER SLIMY. MUEH LONGER! § CROOKS MUST BE IN SEE EVERYTHIN, TOO! James E. Story, 61, life-long res- Opportunity for capable farm ma- chinery salesman who knows farm problems and how to promote sales to progressive farmers for work in the Dallas area. Previous experience preferred. Apply 103 N. Welles St., Kingston, or Phone Kingston 7-4979. ; 302 WANTED TO BUY Reasonably priced tractor and horse sulky plow. Box 45. 311 WANTED TO RENT Wanted to rent—farm with option of buying. Write Box W, Dallas Post. , 261 FOR SALE Beautiful Lake Carey lot. -115 feet lake frontage by 380 feet deep. Three small buildings, garage and cabin. Will sell cheap to settle es- tate. Howard W. Risley, Executor, Dallas. 19tf GRAIN BINDERS: $190 $140 1 International, like new 1 Massey-Harris, like new THRESHERS: 1 No. 1 Doylestown on skids $40 | 1 No. 3 Doylestown mounted $135 | FARM WAGON: | 1 Steel Wheel Wagon— | like new $35 BOTTLED GAS SERVICE—$9.75 | You can cook quick, cheap and | safe in a cool kitchen if you have | a stove, our gas will fit it. If you need one, see our line of Bengal | Ranges. LINOLEUM REMNANTS: | Regular 39¢c—Now 20c cq yd. Regular 55¢c—Now 29c sq. yd. | A BAD SITUATION—Can be avoided ! if you let us install a Westinghouse milk cooler for you now. You know | the quality. Prices are very attrac- | tive, 312 Barred Rocks and White Wyan- | dottes. 3% months old. Trucks- ville Mill. Phone Dallas 58-R-2. y 301 | Baby turkeys from 1 to 6 months old. Hilbert’s Hatchery, Beaumont. Phone 3422. 301 |in a while, but who wouldn't go to | aiche had permitted The Post to] POURIN' NN oe MINN a SW A A Ne i \ 2 RN 0 oT mn W TERCERA nN a zd ONY’ ‘FOU Postscripts (Continued from Page 1) ever capitalize it!) was running newspapers when we were still in short pants. Everything he writes has some 40 years of experience, with some of the biggest newspap- ers in the nation behind it. He gets us in trouble every once bat for a guy with a heart as big as his. Being praised by us can’t very well swell Mr. aiche’s head after the kudos he’s already won. Rather, it is The Post that is honored by his presence, and by such reflected glory -as came to javie aiche last Sunday, when Richard Vidmer de- voted his entire column in the Her- ald-Tribune to “The Pinch Hitter”, a poem which the generous Mr. publish first, more than two months | ago. | bite THERE'S A STRONG family feel- ing among the members of the Page | 6 coterie. Right now Fred M. Kiefer | and javie aiche are lost in admira- tion for each other. Unbeknownst to | the other, each has devoted part of | THOSE XCOPS ARE LIABLE. T'COME # | IN HERE ANY MINUTE? 4 START GETTIN’ TH' SMALL STUFF “TOGETHER IN .CASE WE HAFTA AT KINGSTON THEATRE “Four Sons”, playing at the Kingston Theatre tomorrow (August 3) only, has been hailed as one of the timely and great pictures of the year. Several of the featured players in the film are shown here and include: (I. to r.) Don Ameche, Eugene Leontovich, George Ernest, Robert Low- ery, Alan Curtis and Mary Beth Hughes. DE NEXT ROOM! IF YA PUT VER EAR AGAINST THIS CRACKED PART LV TH WALL V/KIN HEAR 1 EVERY WORD THEY'RE SAYIN! p~ Tl |— = as part of the program. | of national mission is itself incom-! prehensible. Herr Rauschning pro- | vides the key. It arises from the | deep belief of the Nazis, which | seemingly they share with some | Ew astrologers nearer home, | i that the British Empire is in the] midst of a great decline and fall, | |like that of Rome. “Scarcely any other opinion,” he writes, “is given currency by the National Socialists with such dili-, gence as their belief in the doom of the British Empire.” This is not something to come; the dissolution, | they believe, is in full process. The granting of full independence to the British Dominions in 1931 was not, in the Nazi view, the rec- ognition of the freedom of rising new peoples; it is to be explained rather as abdication, the unnerved dropping of a scepter by a ruler. The passionate pacifism of the English, resulting in what later proved a highly dangerous voluntary disarm- ament until 1937, was taken as an- | other unmistakable symptom that | as world rulers they are now de- | cadent. “France, too (Herr Rauschning | his stint this week to this mutual | admiration pact. Fred mentions us, | Pretty roughly on Page 6, and Mrs. too. Now we mention him. That's Blez is a columnist who can take the way it goes. | her part in any journalistic skirmish. As a result of his “Fantasia in Mainly, she is a symbol of our be; Chicago” Fred is leading the tliat that women foe So ota 2 formal poll of readers since last kitchen occasionally to : HR phous week, with a particularly strong | the world, znd Mrs, Blez's keen pers ’ i ception has brought her a sizable reports, as part of this Nazi mental picture) is a dying nation, both | physically and politically. . . . A na- tion with no purpose and therefore | of no importance . . . a nation of | petty bourgeois (she) would be] much too clear-headed to fail to| see the uselessness of a renewed: struggle with Germany.” | The King Is Dead World Revolution Germany's Vision Ex-Nazi Declares es —— Copyright 1939 Lincoln Newspaper Features, Inc. — To any ordinary person this sense | | those periods that come only at in- | Tp ul ( know mere scraps of histery. Herr Rauschning sums up the state of | mind’ this way: “National Socialist leaders in high places declare that this is one of tervals of centuries, a period of rev- | olutionary® change in the world, in | which amid the general insecurity, every resolute stroke has good pros- pects of success. It is a period of a modern type of buccaneer and fili- buster.” In other words, it is an era like | that of which the great Alexander | took advantage, like that decay of | Greece and the East which preceded Rome; like the weakness of the Spaniards, whose dominions Britain | ruthlessly raided. It is a period of break-up and readjustment. Ac- cordingly, the idea of the Nazi elite is to proceed audaciously and bru- tally with the break-up, and end by being the governing people of the world. (A Mr. Scherman will appear in The Post next week.) second article by AUNTIE LTCC ETT EEE COON HOUND FIELD TRIAL WILL BE HELD BY RED ROCK MT. COON ‘ident of following among the Republicans. | group of intelligent women as loyal and SPORTING CLUB The Westinghouse roaster, Al condition, with grille. $14. Phone 429-R-16. 301 Baby Chicks—N. H. and B. R. July hatches every Friday. Finest breeding. Penna. official blood-test. Price Tc delivered. Joseph Davis, Leraysville, Pa. 26tf Victrola and records. Mrs. Asa Shaver, 74 Main St., Trucksville. Phone 225-R-2. 311 First $5 bill takes a cabinet model Victrola in A-1 condition. Plenty of records. Phone Dallas 241-R-7. Finest quality crushed blue stone and screenings. Call Kingston 7-3177. North Mountain Crushed | Stone Company. 316! Wedding Announcements, Engraved | Stationery. Highest quality. See| our samples and save money. The | Dallas Post. 21tf Leases, No Trespassing Signs, For Sale Signs, Rent Signs and other display cards. Dallas Post, Dallas 300 Farms for sale or rent. Inquire Box Y, Dallas Post. 9tf For Sale—D & H Anthracite Coal— egg, stove, nut, $7.25; pea, $5.75 buckwheat, $5.15; rice, $4.40. De- livered. Bag coal. Edwards Coal Co., Main St., Dallas. Phone Dallas 457-R-3 or 121. 2tf Guaranteed rebuilt Ford V8 engines. 4000 mile guarantee. $7 month. Stull Brothers, Kingston, Pa. 19tf Large Jamesway Cafeteria Feeder. | $5. 5-gal. waterer with stand and | lamp, $5. Electric canopy Brooder, | $8. Arnold, Elizabeth St., Dallas. 311 | | "Large size stone-lined ice refrigera- | tor. Very cheap. Mrs. Wm. EF. | Cairl, Cemetery Street, Dallas, 311 1 | Make your fine old furniture new Any day now we expect javie aiche, | a | followers. a staunch and convincing Democrat, | to endanger the love feast with a| Mrs. Blez, who sends her weekly blast against Willkie. And if javie Piece all the way from Haddon aiche is reluctant to disagree with | Heights, N. J., ran across a copy of Fred Kiefer, Rives Matthews will dip | The Post about three years ago.| his pen in the vat of acid he keeps “Can you use a column?” she wrote. handy in his newspaper office down | “We can,” we answered, grateful for in Maryland, a veritable hotbed of | the attention, “but we mustn't, be- Democracy, and will put courage |C2use were poor. Okay, then, into the hearts of Dallas’s lonely and | she wrote back, ‘“T'll write it any- outnumbered New Dealers. way.” She got in the habit then, — | and she still squeezes time from her It probably isn’t polite to men- | free lance writing to give you “The tion Edith *Blez anywhere but first, | Sentimenss) Side’ each week. but conventions get kicked around | Bob Sutton, who provides a much- | needed religious note to the weekly | literary pot porridge, is carrying on ja tradition which his grandfather’ MISCELLANEOUS August Special—Duart Permanent | started when he contributed to the Wave. Regular $5.00, now $2.50. |0ld Post, years ago. Emmons Marguerite’'s Beauty Shop, Fern- | Blake is studying journalism with brook. Phone 397. 314 | Rives Matthews down in Maryland. iThe young people who write For prompt removal of dead, old, | “Books” are students at New York! disabled horses, cows, mules, | University. Their = instructor sends phone Carl Crockett, Muhlenburg | their reviews to us. 13-R-4. Phone charges paid. 24tf | Serie Wanted To Buy—Old horses. We WELL, THAT'S just part of the pay highest cash prices for old background of Page 6, on the inside live horses. Must not be diseased. | of the tent. We feel so grateful, per- Write or phone Ralph R. Balut, Dal- | sonally, to these people, we thought las, Pa. Phone 371-R-3 and re- | it was high time our readers were verse charges. 34tf [told about the lot of them. We] hope they'll stick together for a long | Elocution and Expression Class-|time, not just because they make es now forming. Call Dallas 434 | our paper better, but because there's | for appointment or details; also pri- | something fundamentally strong and | vate instructions. Mary Williams |fine and American about Page 6, Sowden, Terrace Drive, Shavertown. | thanks to them. ! 304 | (Continued from Page 1) million young men may yet again become justifable—so the Fuhra has declared.” The purpose is sum- med up in stark popular fashion in the lines of a song of the marching Hitler Youth: “Today we own Ger- many, Tommorw all the world.” The immediate temptation is to British were abdicating as! world rulers, the French were dy-| ing as a people; this is the funda- | mental belief explaining the sense] | of mission of the Nazi leaders. Pre- | sumably, in their political philoso- | phy, there had to be a world ruler. ! They are the elect for this now! empty throne. They are elect by! : schning are driven by a sense of mission. | . “The essence of the German mission | | today,” {world order” would involve, in the | ‘more reason of the fact that they | lintend to be. They are driven by! the proper amount of what they | call “dynamism.” “There is a right | to brutality,” they say, in those who are dedicated to the rule of the] world. | This fevered mental state—it will | be observed—rests on the sort of | hasty historical analogies which can | |often be found among those who | regard this as nonsense of excited boys: it is the one thing Herr Rau- warns most urgently against. The National Socialist lead- ers mean business. The chief reason for their internal success, he demon- strates, was this very notion among their political opponents that they did not mean business. Moreover, | they are past-masters in this busi- ss of revolution. COOL OFF AT THE GROTTO Jack Nothoff, Prop. Harvey's Lake What could impel the rine] laaders of eighty million people to | such an apparently fantastic adven- ture as ‘world revolution”? They Herr Rauschning says, “is | the consciousness of being the chos- | en people with a permanent and un- | | | { | | | i | | } | ® iversal task.” What is this task? | | “The new German will to world | ORCHESTRA AND | hegemony is the definite resolve to | ENTERTAINMENT i transform the world order under | Wed., Fri., and Sat. Nights German leadership.” ® | Precisely what ‘‘transforming the FINEST QUALITY FOOD AND BEER KOOLER KEG SYSTEM NO PIPES, NO COILS sense of attempted economic change, | is not certain; but forcible govern- | ment domination of the rest of the | world by Germany is crystal-clear! EE a a A a a a oa REUPHOLSTERING— | with its original wear and comfort | — Beautiful wide range of fabrics. | Low prices, guaranteed workman- | ship. Write or phone John Curtis, | 7-5636—210 Lathrop St., Kingston. 311 HERE IS OUR SPECIAL FOR TODAY Pometoy’s Daily Store Hours, 9:30 A. M. to 5 P. M. Dial 3-5101 for May Ann, Personal Shopper! 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BRUNGESS FARM Tunkhannock, Pa. — ALL WELCOME — BRING YOUR DOGS Entry Fee, 25¢ Free Admission 0. W. HOCH, Mgr.-Treas. L. CRAGLE, President C. MOORE, Secretary Centermoreland and a blacksmith by trade, died early Sat- urday morning at his home. He was laid to rest on Tuesday afternoon, with services at the home, where Rev. Harry Rundell of Noxen Tab- ernacle and Rev. Thomas Kline of Centermoreland Methodist Church officiated. Surviving are his wife, Mary, and two sons, William, at home, and Lloyd of Baltimore, Md.; two sis- ters, Mrs. D. S. Packard of San Ped- ro, California; Mrs. Elmer Schrader, Centermoreland, and a cousin, Mrs. May Luttinger of Albuquerque. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers