“GIMME A MATCH | By FRED M. KIEFER — This is a story of a broomstick. The Doctor had met and been entertained by a famous big-game hunter who, in displaying his outdoor equipment, came across a home- made gun rest. : : ! When first I saw the thing it was while packing our duffle at my companion’s home preparatory to expressing our stuff to Alberta. Pri- marily it appeared to be nothing more than a handle from any ordinary broom but upon closer inspection I saw that it was, albeit, a true broom- stick, evenly split up the center and loosely bolted about eight inches from the top. ally asked. ~ hibited, in pantomime, how a gun - opened up. | “T ain’t goin’ 3,000 miles, spend It does no earthly good to open an train riding and three additional ing. carefully stood the “crutch” against " hunting.” 7,500 feet and so placed ourselves sin spread out below us, had to take one of three courses when the In- “What's this business?” I natur- “That's my sighting rest,” the Doctor explained, and proudly ex- should be lain across the vertex of the upper V when the thing was $1000 an’ have a grizzly step up in front of me when I'm all out of wind an’ shakin’ and miss him. Yo’ damn right I aint’! I open this, set ’er on the ground, put my rifle through here and pop that bar!” He demonstrated accordingly. As I remember I made no reply. argument of any kind with the Doc- tor. What he lacks in factual evi- dence he more than overcomes with vocal ponderosity. In easy lan- guage, he shouts you down. So I let it go and forgot about it entirely until, after several days of days in the saddle, we found our- selves sufficiently deep into the mountains to do some heavy hunt- —O0— NEEDLESS TO SAY, no matter how heavily burdened by necessi- ties, the broomstick ever accom- panied the Doctor. Rifle slung over shoulder, binoculars, cartridge case and moving picture camera dang- ling at belt he moved off in the morning. Returning by starlight in heavy, sweat-soaked woolens he the tent wall before removing his high and weighty boots. ' Occasionally I wondered would he ever become discouraged? The puzzle held the added incentive that the Doctor had already killed a mule deer, a bull caribou and a bull moose and, to the best of my knowledge, without resorting to the use of the broomstick. It must be, I finally muttered to myself, “specifically for grizzly bear Came the day of the goat con- fusion. A We had, with our guides, climb- ed to an estimated elevation of that the mountaineers, visible on the steep northern slope of the ba- dians moved them. One, low and to our facing left, led to the valley we had crossed that morning and the chances of the animals going that way were highly improbable. Two, also to our left, was a passage about 60 feet wide and not over 70 yards from our perch though some- what below us. There was a deep, wide gorge to our right, where the best range afforded would exceed 200 yards. —— AFTER THE GUIDES had moved to the rear of the goats by travel- ling unseen behind the northern rim and had startled them by roll- ing rocks, the white climbers split up into several groups and one of these, consisting of eight animals, approached quickly, surely and un- swervingly to the pass on our im- ediate left, thereby offering the easiest shooting available. The Doctor fired, killing the large Billy leading the group, while the second in line fell to my shot. The broomstick somewhere about ‘#the Doctor’s person, or not far out of reach, was definitely not brought into action in this instance. Now entered confusion. One guide standing on the emi- nence behind us shouted, “Shut! Shut agin’, Doctor!” As the hunter raised his gun to sight one of the remaining and un- decided goats the voice of the oth- er Indian, somewhere out of view below the ledge, rang out, ‘Bigger one down here—bigger one down|. ~ I~ THE LOW DOWN FROM HICKORY GROVE Susie and I are getting ready to build a house. Two people in a big house rattle around like in a barn, so we decided om one that is kinda small— along simple lines. But our idea of simple archi- tecture got us into diffi- culty. You can’t find a simple design—you only find them chrome plated and wory trimmed. But we wanted some- thing with less glare—so we had to skirmish. And also we had to scare up more coin. And that 1s what I want to tell you about. Down on the rolling Po- tomac they been saying that a banker is mot such a hot citizen, but I drop- ped in at our bank any- way. And I sidled ower and I says to the feller there, I am building a house and meed 12 hun- dred dollars. And Mr. Paxton—he is the banker —he says, Come right in, and couldn't you use, he says 24 hundred versus 12 hundred? It almost floor- ed me. And also, he says, do you know anybody else, wanting money? This talk about bankers being hard citizens is ba- loney—and mot so. Any- way it is not so with Joe Paxton, here at our bank. Yours with the low down, JO SERRA. a THE SAFETY VALVE This column is open to everyone. Letters should be plainly written and signed. One Way To Save Editor: : Everybody is anxious to save tax- es, yet nobody does anything about it. I notice a lot of school boards in this area are now paying their treasurers 2% of all expenditures for keeping their check book bal- ances in order. Now there is a tough job for you. For years Dallas National Bank has done this work for nothing. Now school directors have got the brilliant idea that it’s worth $700 to do a job the bank did for nothing. They call it “spreading the gravy around”. This year John Doe has the job; next year Richard Doe will have it and so on until each one of the directors will have had a chance to lick his chops on some of the gravy Direc- tors know that theirs are non-pay- ing jobs. If the jobs take too much of their time—let them quit. Don’t misunderstand me. This procedure is legal. My point is that here is a way to save money for the schools if the directors really want to save for the schools and not for themselves. Taxpayer SECOND T et PR HAS 40 & € \_ ¢ Ee 2 ¢ ~- N\A Re it \N7 Ce. Ooseve {ose { Lyi ops < \ <¥( U == A he SOR RAC 3 TARE Tor By EDITH BLEZ — (Occasionally, Mrs. Blez, no grandmother, writes letters to her non-existent grandchildren, that they may, years from now, : know what really was happening in 1940.) August 17, 1940. My Dear Grandchildren: The war is still very much in evidence and it is this week that Hitler promised to take over England, but so far England has been holding her own against terrific air raids. For days German planes have been bomb- ing the British Isles and to date there has been no real attempt really to invade the shores of Hitler's worst enemy. All we know is what we read in our newspapers and we have become quite skeptical about war dis- [THE SENTIMENTAL SIDE| HOUGHTS patches. reached London! I really do not take much stock in the newspapers or the voices we ! hear so constantly over the radio. All the news is highly censored and the more I listen the more I am convinced that we know nothing whatsoever about the real condi- tions abroad. We do know that Hitler is aiming to destroy the Eng- lish Empire. He has taken over most of the small countries sur- rounding Germany -and France is now completely Nazi, which is still difficult to believe. Paris was not bombed because it was declared an open city and the Germans were permitted to march in and take it over. The general opinion here is that France was sold out to Ger- many by her own people but the truth will not be known in my time I feel sure. Perhaps you will be able to see the entire situation more clearly than those of us who are so close to it. Right now in this country we are {in the midst of a great political campaign. Roosevelt has declared | himself a candidate for a third term | and Wendell Willkie is the .Repub- lican nominee. Yesterday, Willkie by javie aiche It was a nice flight out to El- wood, Indiana, in Tommy Richard- son’s Taylor Cub plane, and your correspondent is duly grateful to Cy Slapnicka of the Cleveland In- dians for. having arranged standing room forninst the platform. If our knees had buckled under the weight of the speeches we should have sat down plump on the base drum of the Elwood High School Boys’ Band. The parachute drop was something new and exciting, but next time we go to an acceptance ceremony we shall go the night before and take along a sleeping-bag. We are that much assured that Uncle Sam isn’t going to do as he should do. He isn’t going to take the old men first, so we are in no need of para- chute practice. And the speeches were, indeed, soporific. This far away from last Saturday it is difficult to remember that the objective of the flight was conver- sion to the wisdom of Willkie. That is because we were subjected in- stead to a conviction that George Gwilliam isn’t the only man in pub- lic life who murders the King’s English. There really was no need that Senator Jim Davis was import- ed from Pennsylvania to commit that kind of butchery in his pud- dler’s way. Joe Martin did a fine job of it, and so did the presidential candidate. For a time it seemed that we understood how he came to be christened Lewis Wendell Willkie and then turned up as Wen- dell Lewis Willkie. He distorted many of his sentences that way— and all of his platitudes. Chairman Joe Martin told us how we were going to ‘‘perpetcherate” something or other, but Mr. Willkie said “simmer” for similar, “enemy” for enmity, ‘“disengration” for disin- tegration, “peaches” for teaches and insisted on throwing in the super- numerary indefinite article by prom- ising that he is going to change matters so that we shall no longer live in “that kind of ‘A’ America.” Imagine him, then, daring to offer debate from the same platform with the mellifluous Franklin Roosevelt, with him whose voice and purity of diction impinge on the senses with the soft approach of frankincense and the downy caress of myrrh! In a detached kind of way your correspondent is glad of having heard Willkie, but far more glad that he isn’t the fatuous gentleman who thought our left ear was a mi- crophone and bellowed into it his Republican loyalty with a mouth = FREEDOM The columnists and con- tributors on this page are allowed great latitude in expressing their own opin- ons, even when their opinions are at variance with those of The Post a a as big as Joe Brown's and a tonal quality as profound as the patience of our friend Sam Jones, who for eight years has been awaiting ap- pointment under a Republican ad- ministration. Three times the annointed hero recently borrowed from the Demo- cratic party pronounced as ‘‘sacri- fiss’ the willingness of his newly found partisans to get back on the payroll. We liked that. But what's this office he’s running for? Our notebook shows that once at the beginning, once in the middle and once near the close of his perora- tion his aspirations were for what he called elevation to the honored place of ‘‘Prezzident of the United States.” He said, too, that some- thing ought to be done about preser- vation of the ‘British feet” in the Atlantic. We didn’t know our over- seas cousins had started to wade out yet. Scanning our notebook, which we had fondly hoped would finally read us back into the Republican Party, there is discoverable little of argu- ment vouchsafed from the Hoosier apostle of bad enunciation and worse rhetoric. He is for conscrip- tion—vaguely. We're for it strong, but we want it backwards, begin- ing at 65 years. The war needs brains, and old men can drive tanks as well as half-baked boys. Willkie is for aid to England, but that aid must not involve us in war. Hell's bells, how can you take part in a fight without expecting a poke in the nose? And he capped that absurdity by denouncing Roosevelt's policy as a meddling with “inflam- matory’ consequences. No wonder, then, that when he tried to quote a current aphorism about toil and sweat and blood and tears he got so mixed up as to say we'll take the tears and sweat but omit the blood and tears. Sure, he meant we'd take the toil, but he didn’t say it. And what about condemning F. | . . . - { accepted the nomination in his own home town surrounded by the usual D. R. for holding out hope to E g Pp urope shouting and circus-like procedure when we can’t back it up with! deeds? Isn't England living on | which always accompanies affairs of hope? Winston Churchill said it is, | this sort in this country. I didn’t ’ {listen to the speech, in fact, I and if he isn’t the hope of England, who is? How do you fit that nega- tion into Mr. Willkie’s following statement that “we are facing a ter- rible and brutal fact” and his other haven't gotten around to reading it i because all candidates for office | seem to say more or less the same thing. The only thing he did say declaration: that Americans “don’t | Which interested me was his chal- |lenge to Roosevelt to enter into a kid themselves” when they are! * : “spectators to a great trage dy?" Series of debates before America We noticed that the crowd, whose |goes to the polls in November. applause had cyclonic beginnings, | Sounds like the Lincoln-Douglas piped down when Wendell joined | debates, doesn’t it? his ideals to Teddy Roosevelt! I wouldnt be at all surprised if Woodrow Wilson and the senior | Roosevelt accepted that challenge. Lafollette. They're all dead ones. | Willkie, in fact, any man, is labor- Nor was exaltation impelled by his ing under a handicap who must promise of a peace in which the | compete with Roosevelt in debate. housewife would have to learn to Roosevelt, no matter what one's plan more carefully and every man | politics, is acknowledged to be a must needs lay himself open to the | Silver-tonguer orator and I think “sacrifiss” of increased taxation, | Willkie is making a great mistake Pennsylvania's deputation, noting ! Whenihe Challenges our NunhrOns the absence of Governor James, was | radio orator to a series of debates. acutely conscious of the presidential Dds Snow how muchiyou mew candidate’s repeated reference to a about the Lincoln-Douglas debates. | Douglas was a great orator, but Republican Party th. D Ye inat henceforward | tinosin possessed a homeliness of is unalterably opposed to the “I! s : poss” doctrine. The breaker-boy | 2XPression which appealed more to must have had advance copy on the | the people thar great oratory but acceptance. It’s no wonder he stored] doubt very mech Villsie Tas ed away. How did Jim Davis an gq, that or even a substitute to offer. the other boys have the courage tol Tooke like. 2 ‘big business “han be there to listen-in on that rebuke p70 me fond because of conditions to the Keystone blunder of the | 2Proad the voting public is going Philadelphia convention ? SITLL . Your correspondent sums matters | Of ‘course Willkie will ay, very up after this fashion: Willkie is a | pard to tell the people that Roose. Liberal in the party of Joe Grundy | velt is trying to get us into the war and "Joe Pew. He's for more produc. | 274 that Roosevelt "is running the |country into ruin and a million tion in a nation hogfat with ma- | hi hich hi : chine-power and surplus. He would other things whic is campaign | managers will insist on his saying. if his challenge is met, lure Presi- 2 : 3 ¥ dent Roosevelt from Washington | 18 will promise this and promise and take him on a stump tour of | that but I doubt if any of you will America at a time when hell is| hear very much about Wendell popping at the very threshold of | Willkie and perhaps, when you read this letter you will wonder why government. He would substitute! politics for preparedness while YoU grandimotheridevetod. so much World Democracy trembles on the | space to a man you never heard of. Sv to try to be satisfied with Roosevelt. | For instance, one morning this week the German dispatches insisted that London had been bombed and great damage done. English dispatches on the same day said that no bomb whatsoever had The RICOCHETS — By Rives Matthews — A SURVEY of Harvard graduates just completed shows that members of the Class of 1915 averaged 2.3 children. * - THE N. Y. TIMES holds this is encouraging because ‘we have been hearing so much about the high reproductive rate of the incompe- tent and the feeble minded.” * ¥ % WE HOLD the Times is too san- guine. First of all, we hardly be- lieve a Harvard degree, or for that matter, any other collegiate de- gree these days, can be fairly used as a measure of ability and as a yardstick to the elite from an eu- genic point of view. * ¥ ¥ RIGHT NOW some of us are be- ginning to see some of the evils for which the colleges are in part re- sponsible. . From what we can gather, American youths consider themselves the Number One Prob- lem before the country. Maybe so! * Fk BUT IT’S WRONG for a Problem Child to know he’s a Problem Child. Every child is a problem to its parents, but when he knows it, then he pretty generally becomes a prob- lem his parents will never solve, and he'll never solve it himself. He'll either become a genius, and make laws to suit himself or a mis- fit and one of society's failures. * * * ¥ ¥ ON ONE HAND we have U. S. youth clamoring for sympathy and better prospects than those with which they are presently faced. And on the other, we have many of these same young men loudly pro- testing against any sort of national conscription, although twelve or eighteen months of Army discipline and training probably wouldn’t hurt many of them, and might teach a few the value of discipline, the value of a well ordered and well regulated life. / * IN SHORT today’s crop of youths wants the country for which they don’t want to fight, or which they don’t wish to defend, to hand them * k | jobs, better pay, more security and more of a say-so in the conduct of national affairs. * tk * FROM A READING of history, it would seem it has been ever thus, at least as far as what youth wants. But never before, it seems to us, have youths "been so unwilling to give anything in return: to their faculties, to their employers or po- tential employers, to the commun- ity, to their nation. edge of chaos. Well, the crowd kept yelling “We want Willkie,” but what we sub- consciously heard from a quarter million Grand Old Partisan throats was a paraphrase. ‘“We want milk- ing” is what they really meant. And they'd like to go honeying too. So, it was most appropriate when the Elwood High School Band broke into the din with the musical trans- cription of what, in the final pur- view, you had to tell yourself. What the band played was: “Hail, hail, the gang's all here.” And HOW they were there! ‘and here!” The Doctor quickly switched his zbout 1,000 feet Wigher on a con- tinuation of our mountain. tactics and rushed towards the lat- ter voice but the first guide again bellowed, “Shut, Shut!” and Doc swung about to continue what he had originally planned. ~ Then a gorgeous crescendo of blistering = swearing, - intermingled with the wail, ‘Bigger one here!”, settled things as far as the Doctor was concerned. Without further ado he left, unmolested, the re- maining animals that were. a sure thing and plunged down the shale slide on a pure gamble for the ‘big- ger ones.” I distinctly recall seeing the broomstick not far away on the ledge at this time. i IT MAY BE of interest to note that my enjoyment of this sky-high waltz was one of the most hilari- ous (while sober) moments of my entire career. Of course the “bigger ones” were not there when the Doctor arrived beneath the overhang nor, of course, were our first batch of goats when he had pantingly returned to my side. However, five minutes had not passed until we saw the game Since I had killed my first goat the evening before I had now reach- ed my legal limit but the Doctor, not to be outdone and I must say, undiscouraged, took up his broom- stick and rifle, followed his guide and soon passed from sight on the trail of the lofty targets. ‘After dark, when my Indian and myself had been in camp for hours, the two men dragged in with the second goat and a wondrous tale of long-distance shooting. Being tired we zipped into our sleeping bags and so it was not un- til after breakfast the following morning, while preparing for the trip to the base camp, that I be- came aware of the absence of the broomstick. In exceedingly polite tones and in my softest manner I timidly men- tioned the fact. “Say, Doc,” I asked, “Where the hell is that crutch you've been lug- ging around since we left New York ?” The Doctor rose to his full and dignified six feet and cast upon me a glance of mingled scorn and dis- once more, united now, and this time contentedly grazing rock moss gust. - Growled he: ‘“Hoddam, son, THE OLD SCRAPBOOK ——By "Bob" Sutton — Are you easily disturbed? Or are you the type who can sit snug- ly through any ordeal, any experi- ence, and take it al with common- place attitudes? You know, this business of being disturbed is an art. The Apostle Paul said, “To be zealously disturbed in a good thing is good. ¢ tis Sir Thomas Moore and his wife lived in London. It happened that he must leave, and go without his beloved companion. While away, he received a telegram that she had contracted smallpox and did not wish him to see her. She only ask- ed him to come and say goodbye in a dark room without seeing her face, once so beautiful. While on the train, he composed the following world-famous lines: Believe me, if all those endearing “More than a newspaper, a community institution” THE DALLAS POST ESTABLISHED 1889 A non-partisan liberal progressive newspaper pub- lished every Friday morning at its plant on Lehman Ave- nue, Dallas, Penna., by the Dallas Post, Inc. Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa., under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subscriptions, $2 a year, payable in advance. Howard W. Risley... Howell E. Rees..............._. Editor Which I gaze on so fondly today Were to change by tomorrow and flee from my arms Like fairy gifts fading away; Thou woulds’t still be adored, as this moment thou art, el less refrigerator space And around the dear ruins each wish of my heart Will entwine itself verdantly still. BEE Ei NI Eee [AS ENE C18 Teds le] is quite"so welcome as a glagssiof Steg- aier's Gold Medal Beersery - ; Try'some tonight. it, Example is always better than precept. The greatest fault is to be con- scious of none. What loneliness is lonelier than distrust ? me (eet soul said Music washes away from the the dust of everyday life. So d'with food. {HD el td] $ S S ™> S S £ = Auerbach. Did you ever try mu- sic to rest your tired body and weary mind? It's better than med- icine. In fact, many people are be- ing healed of serious illnesses by use of music. Well, well; radios in- stead of radium; music instead of morphine; songs instead of stitches. It’s a great world. —— Oh, it’s easy to smile and be happy When life’s like a beautiful rose; But the man worth while is the man who can smile f While coiling Harvey's L a garden hose. in ake Bottl CALL HARVEY’S LAKE 3092 Seay ing Works A BEVERAGE OF MODERATION Remember: Live with the wolves, 1 trun it a fur piece!” young charms Let the loveliness fade as it will; LINERS OMPANY . ... WILKES-BARRE, PENNSYLVANIA and you will soon learn to howl.