Editorially Speaking: EN M-DAY FOR DALLAS THE POST WANTS: 1. The election of Wendell L. Will- kie as President of the United States. 2. Emphasis locally on activities The new kind of war in Europe has a special lesson for every man and woman, every boy and girl in Dallas. War, as it is fought in 1940, is not exclusively a con- flict of armies. It is not confined to a “front”. It hurtles seemingly impregnable fortresses and broad seas and makes whole nations a battlefield. There are no “non-combatants” in this kind of war, and being a “civilian” is no protection. joke about that. In England there is a “The safest place to be is in the army,” bomb-battered Londoners wisecrack. This is the kind of a war in which the morale and train- ing of every citizen counts heavily. We must not overlook that important lesson while we are strengthening our own defenses against the likelihood of attack. As individuals, we must not be lulled by the false premise that we can let Washington take care of every- thing. A strong army, navy and air force is not enough in a modern war. Each community, each man and wo- man must be ready. It is highly improbable that Dallas would ever be bomb- ed, but it is inevitable that if this country goes to war its chances for victory will be greater if Dallas and communities like it throughout the nation are prepared for the emergency and ready to contribute to the total strength. The Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Company already has a committee studying a plan to provide preliminary military training for young men, who will be given an opportunity to drill, to practice markmanship and to hear lectures on mil- . itary tactics and strategy. But there are a score of other things this community, as a compact unit, might be doing. There is a need to instruct citizens in the purposes and kinds of propaganda governments use today to con- fuse the enemy and create confusion and destroy mo- rale. If war comes, the people of Dallas should be fore- warned against such tactics and able to recognize de- structive propaganda. There is work to be done in the fields of war charities. Most of them are worth-while, but some are rackets, mas- querading agents for foreign powers. A local defense com- mittee could catalogue such organizations and warn against those which are reputable. The same committee could make preparations against the day when the community may be called upon to provide bandages, sweaters, socks, etc., for soldiers. fore the emergency arrives. Valuable time will be saved if plans are made be- We have all read of the urgent calls to the civilians of belligerent countries for scrap metal, worn-out auto tires, old aluminum and other war materials which can be salvaged from domestic channels. It would be good for Dallas folk to think of the day when we may receive such calls, and to have on paper a plan for quick response to such an appeal. Some of these items are likely to be needed badly, and if millions of families have some available for salvage, America’s reserves will be great- ly increased. The growing army and navy will need more reading matter for the new soldiers and it might be wise to do some- thing about collecting magazines and books to fill the de- mand. Dallas can do that, too. Communities all over the country are organizing for home defense work. As a nation, we all insist that the government be prepared for the emergency. It is fitting CNY too, that Dallas organize now in anticipation of its own Ivi- Day. A committee and sub-committee could be appointed to study the possibilities of such a plan, submitting it later to the community at a mass meeting. Why waste any more time, when time plays such a vital part in the kind of war we face? Dallas’s contribution to national defense cannot be a big one, but if each community puts democracy into action and contributes its small quota of strength, the strength of the whole nation will be so great any foreign power will hesi- tate before it challenges us. POST SCRIPTS WE HAVE BEEN waiting to hear from Sir Oliver Lodge. Sir Oliver died a few months back. He was a spiritualist. The reason we thought he might get in touch with us was that we had an interesting interview once with his eminent predecessor, Sir * Arthur Conan Doyle, shortly after Sir Arthur concluded his ten- ure of existence on this earth. We put it that way in respect to the considerate medium who assured us it was the voice of Sir Arthur we heard. We couldn’t prove that it wasn’t. We had been interviewing the living for some time before we ven- tured into the realm of departed spirits. Interviews weren't our long suit, but it seemed that whenever someo®e was needed for one we would be the only reporter in the news room. So we interviewed beauty contest winners, a deaf and dumb hobo, an escaped lunatic, jazz band leaders, Senators and Con- gressmen, literary lions and sundry other newsworthy citizens. Except (Continued on Page 8) He Also Attended FairEvery Year Arkansas Man Matches Record Of Mrs. Yaple In Fayetteville, Arkansas, Harry Welch glanced over The Post last week, spied a story about. Mrs. Amanda Yaple, who never missed a Dallas fair. Then Mr. Welch sat down and penned this letter to the editor: “I see by the paper of September 20 that Mrs. Yaple was at every fair during the life of the Associa- tion. “I, too, was at the fair every year until I moved away in 1903. I was secretary of the exhibition building for two years and I had Will Frank- lin for my assistant and Will Norton was general secretary. I remember we all got arrested one year because a man was playing a shell game and lost his money, but nothing ever came of it. “I do not know very many people in Dallas any more, but I would like to drop in and see the changes that have taken place there. I think I could find the Dallas Post and where W. A. Cook lived, for I have spent many evenings in their home.” Mr. Welch lives now at 404 East Lafayette Street, Fayetteville, Ark. HARDINGS WILL SHARE CHILD; PLAN TO START “The whole thing was a misunder- standing and it was a pity for Faith that it received so much publicity,” was Mrs. Harry Harding's comment this week on the collapse of a threatened quarrel between Mrs. Harding and her husband over the custody of their five-year-old daugh- ter, Faith Hope Charity, ‘The Little Prophet.” Several weeks ago Mr. Harding asked the court to give him cus- tody of the child, who has been in Tryon, North Carolina, where pat- rons who believe she can foretell the LECTURE TOUR future had established a colony to perpetuate her teachings. The hear- ing on the writ of habeas corpus was to have been held on Monday morn- ing, but the amicable settlement of the dispute made the court’s inter- vention unnecessary. In announcing the reconciliation, Mrs. Harding said she and Faith and | Mr. Harding would leave soon on a lecture tour which would begin in Wilkes-Barre, include one ap- pearance in New York and continue through the South. She said they would leave Trucksville within a few weeks. HE Darras Post ' MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION 3. 4. 5. Vol. 50 It's Mrs. Kiefer's Story This Time; She's Expert Now Her Trophies Qualify Her As Authority Among Hunters Of Big Game Every time Fred M. Kiefer of Shrine View comes back home from some exciting ex- pedition with another load of hunting trophies he has to sub- mit impatiently to a barrage of questions. Fred’s adven- tures make swell newspaper copy. But now there’s a new au- thority on big game hunting in the Kiefer family. It’s Edna, Fred’s wife, and as glamorous a figure as ever slammed a slug into the shoulder of a rampaging silver-tipped griz- zly. Mr. and Mrs, Kiefer have returned from a month’s trip into the virgin Wapiti River watershed in British Columbia, Canada, bringing with them the pelts of 11 big game ani- mals and a fund of amusing experi- ences. Mr. Kiefer accounted for his usual number of crack shots, but the story is Mrs. Kiefer’s this time. It’s the story of a pretty, gracious young mother who decided to ac- company her sportsman husband on one of the gruelling trips he calls a vacation and how she stole the show by bagging a grandfather mountain goat, a 450-pound grizzly, a moose which had a rack of 53% inches wide and an assortment of other game—big and little—too numerous to mention. Traveled By Pact Train The Kiefers left Dallas on August 23 and reached the Beaver Lodge, “Wapiti” Brown, their outfitter, on August 30. They changed quickly into woods clothes and were off within 2 few hours by truck for a 40-mile trip which took seven and one-half hours over the Monkman highway, a rutted trail which Can- ada started to the Western Coast and abandoned when war started. The truck ride saved days of sad- dle-pounding for it enabled them to catch up with the pack train which had started two days before. On Sunday morning they clambered aboard their mounts and headed through the foothills into the ascending mountains. The party in- cluded Mr. and Mrs. Kiefer, a cow- girl as company for Mrs. Kiefer, a cook, a wrangler, two Cree Indian guides and Mr. Brown, the outfitter. Also in the party were the eight and the two colts who went along because they hadn’t been weaned yet. During the next three weeks the magnificent country, where no white woman had ever been. They main- tained one camp for four days, in- cluding one day when they were fogbound and confined to camp, but mostly they broke camp at dawn. From sunrise to sunset they rode the rims, peering down into the basins for game, or stalking quarry, sometimes for a kill but more often for pictures to include in the 650-feet of natural color film they brought back. Mrs. Kiefer shot two -moose, one a freak with 11 points on one side and three spikes on the other. Her other moose, a handsome specimen with an antler spread of 53% inch- es, had 21 points, coated with ‘‘vel- vet” which hung in strips where the animal had rubbed its rack against tree bark. Mrs. Kiefer also got the biggest mountain goat, a billy seven feet, 10% inches long from tip of nose to root of tail, which evoked high admiration from J. M. Koval of Kingston, who is pre- paring the pelts. Wanted Photo, Got Caribou Mr. Kiefer’'s caribou was in the nature of an accident. He photo- graphed the animal as it stood on a rim, silhouetted against the sun- set. Then he pulled his rifle out of its scabbard and aimed, rather hap- hazardly, at the caribou, 250 yards away. The caribou dropped with the first shot and almost before he realized it Mr. Kiefer had another trophy. On the second day out, riding through a driving rain, the party spied three wolves slinking through an arroyo. Both Mr. and Mrs. Kief- er bagged one apiece and the pelts, as black as sin, will make two more rugs for the Kiefer’s cozy third- floor library. Twice the party saw grizzlies, but they were not able to close in for a shot. The vacation was almost | over, and both Mr. and Mrs. Kiefer {were beginning to believe that they {would have to come home without | (Continued on Page 8) saddle horses, the 10 pack animals: {§ Kiefers ranged through lonely, wild, 28 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1940 an air raid over London. the wrecked buildings. 6. No. 40 | LONDON'S GRIM MONUMENTS TO GOD OF MODERN WAR Gutted and reduced almost to rubbie, these buildings were hit by German incendiary bombs during Air raid precaution workers are shown extinguishing the last of the fire in ‘We Will Be Ready security in its intense devotion awakened at last to its peril in REPORTS ON DEFENSE EY Congressman Flannery . who analyzed U. S. national defense for Kiwanians and Rotari- ans at their joint meeting at the country club Wednesday night. Dive Bombing On Show's Program Thrills Galore Planned For Valley's Air Meet A two-mile vertical bomb dive by Capt. Jesse Bristow of Fort Worth, Tex., in his 1,000 horsepower Boe- ing Navy “Hell Diver” will be one of the events at the third annual aviation meet at Wyoming Valley airport Saturday and Sunday. Captain Bristow’s fastest speed in “dive bombing” is 480 miles an hour, just 20 miles an hour under the German Stukas. Spectators also will see a sen- sational ‘pic-aback” plane in aero- batics. Two planes of equal horse- power and weight will be mounted together, one above the other. They will take off, execute maneuvers at tree top altitudes, then separate and pull up into loops. Capt. Bob St. Jock of Auburn, Me., will send his special Comet pursuit plane into a series of per- fectly-timed scientific aerobatics, shaving the ground at 200 miles an hour. Clem Honkamp of Cincinnati will be at the meet with his 1910 Curtis pusher plane, the oldest craft still flying in this country. And Jack Huber of Miami will pitch headlong into thin air at 20,- 000 feet in an attempt to shatter the present world s record for a de- layed opening parachute jumping record, now held by a Russian parachutist. The program will be described over a public address system by Bill Sweet of Columbia, who has an- nounced every major air show in this country. Novice acrobatic events will start each day at 12 and pro- fessional events will begin at 3. For Armageddon, If Crisis Comes, ‘Flannery Declares Kiwanians And Rotarians Hear Up-To-The Minute Report On National Defense From Congressman The United States of America, which sacrificed its own to the cause of world peace, has a world of enemies and is mar- shaling its gigantic resources against the day of Armageddon, Congressman J. Harold Flannery told a joint meeting of Mt. where they met 78-year-old Frank |~ Greenwood Kiwanis Club and Dallas Rotary Club at Irem Country Club on Wednesday night: “Democracy in the world, free institutions, these things which made America great, the things in which we believe, are in serious jeopardy,” mitted. “They survive tonight | only here in our country. Whether Fascist and Nazi ideologies will clash with Communist doctrines, no one can say. As long as they are united by common, materialistic interests, I don’t think they will. “We believe in government for the people. They believe people are made to serve the government. The conflict is direct. There is no com- | promise. There is no middle ‘ground, We are content to enjoy our own beliefs in our own hemi- sphere. We crave no man’s land. It would appear that they are not con- tent to enjoy their doctrines with- | out violating ours.” “Whether or not this is the death of our civilization God only knows, but we do know that tonight our civilization is in jeopardy. We are arming for Armageddon in America, and if Armageddon should come, then we shall, God willing, be pre- pared. I feel that if the crisis comes there will be not a man who breathes in this broad nation who will not be ready to defend our in- | stitutions, convinced of the justice of his cause. And that cause must triumph!” Admits Gravity Of Situation Flying here from Washington, D. C., Congressman Flannery brought an intimate and up-to-the-minute picture of the gravity of the world situation. He was able to match it, though, with an inspiring story of how the nation, united and as in- dividuals, is responding to the chal- lenge. He declined to prophesy, but he sounded an encouraging note for Great Britain. “It is difficult to see England winning in the affirmative sense,” he warned. “To do that she would have to land forces on the continent, and that seems almost impossible now. But there is the possibility of disorder among her enemies, disagreement and the pun- ishment of blackade. England can stalemate the war, and the ap- pearances are tonight that she will stalemate it.” The new pact among Italy, Japan and Germany surprised no informed observers, the Congressman said. “It merely put into writing a condi- tion which has existed for three years,” he said. “It is a formidable situation, which now can be defi- nitely recognized.” Of Anglo-U. S. friendship the Rep- resentative said: “The United States, as a nation, has but one friend in the world today, and that friend is sorely beset and can give us no help. England "is the only government which has any cordiality toward us today. God knows Great Britain has her hands full.” { shoppen, (Continued on Page 8) Penitent Driver Taunted By Crepe Admits Part In Crash Which Costs Girl's Life Tormented by the sight of a crepe hanging on the door of the home of a 13-year-old Alderson girl his car had killed the day before, penitent Wilbur Lynn, 27, Sweet Valley, sur- rendered to police Saturday. As he was surrendering, though, Chief of Police Ira C. Stevenson, who had worked nearly all might on the case, had followed the faint trail to Lynn’s home, only to learn that the man had already gone to the police. The girl, Grace E. “Betty” Mar- he ad (tin, an eighth grade pupil at Lake Township, was fatally injured Fri- day evening when she stepped from a school bus in which she and her classmates had returned from the Bloomsburg Fair. Betty was killed directly in front of the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. David J. Martin, on Route 29 to Loyalville. R. Williams, the bus driver, had just pulled away when the pupils in the vehicle heard the impact. A witness, J. B. Quick of Me- saw the accident and watched the death car speed away after the girl’s broken body had been hurled high into the air. Lynn, a workman on the new boulevard, said he was on his way home when his car hit the girl. Panic seized him and he drove on. On the following morning when he passed the home on his way to work he saw the crepe on the door and returned to Sweet Valley, burdened with remorse. He told a neighbor, Alfred Bronson, who advised Lynn to go to the State police barracks at Wyoming to give himself up. He was arraigned before a justice of the peace and committed to jail on charges of involuntary man- slaughter and attempting to escape after an accident. Later he was re- leased in bail to await trial. Middle District GOP Has Enthusiastic Rally The Republican Club of the Mid- dle District of Dallas Township had an enthusiastic meeting on Wed- nesday night and heard several elo- quent pleas in behalf of Wendell L. Willkie, GOP Presidential nominee. Floyd Chamberlain, who presided, was one of the speakers. Attorney Peter P. Jurchak also addressed the group. which will train men and women in national defense measures. Dallas Borough. er highway between Dallas and Har- vey’s Lake before 1942. tion in the Dallas area. The installation of fire plugs in The construction of a new, short- Centralization of police protec- More sidewalks. Councilmen Order Welsh To Enforce Building Code Inspector Told To Warn Permit Applicants Of Fire-Proofing Clause Determined to protect the town’s appearance and minim- ize fire hazards, Dallas Bor- ough council on Tuesday night ordered Building Inspector Fred Welsh to enforce sternly the existing code which gov- erns construction, alteration and moving of buildings. The action followed a warn- ing from Mr. Welsh that at least three structures are to be moved to new locations from the route of the new boul- evard and that no one had yet applied for permits, as requir- ed by the building code. In two cases, where the buildings are to be moved a considerable dis- tance, the code would require that they be fire-proofed in order to com- ply with the town’s ordinance. Mr. Welsh was instructed to noti- fy the contractor who will move the I. O. O. F. building on Main Street that he must secure a permit— which costs $1—before the building can be moved. The councilmen felt no other section of the ordinance would be violated in this case, be- cause the building is not to be mov- ed to a new location, but is merely to be set back, off the path of the new highway. In two other cases, however, owners had apparently overlooked the long-established restrictions ap- plying in Dallas Borough. Buildings Must Be Fire-Proof James R. Oliver has purchased the old red street car station, it was reported, and is planning to move it to a site on Lake Street, on his used car lot. A clause in the build- ing code prohibits. the erection of any building in the central part of town unless it is fire-proof, and bars the moving of any building to a new site until it has been fire-proofed. A. C. Devens has bought a barn on Mill Street, formerly the prop- erty of Wilkes-Barre Railway Corp., too, and intends to move it to a site adjoining his warehouse across the Lehigh Valley Railroad tracks. The same clause in the buiding code conflicts with his plans, unless the building is fire-proofed on its new site. ~ After discussing the problem, the councilmen concluded they had no choice but to uphold the law and ordered Mr. Welsh to confer immed- iately with the property owners in- volved to inform them of the re- strictions effecting their plans. At the same meeting the council- men blocked a loop-hole in the new ordinance restricting the erection of billboards in the borough limits. As submitted by Attorney Arthur Turner, the ordinance provided that council could grant $5 permits for the erection of billboards. This was revised to eliminate cquncil’s jurisdiction and ban billboards en- tirely. As if reads now, the ordi- nance makes it unlawful to erect a billboard or sign in the borough and fixed a fine of not less than $10 and not more than $25 for each offense. Building Permits Numerous Applications for building permits reflected a mild boom in town. Lewis W. Roushey will build a $6,- 500 dwelling for Mrs. Susan Orr on Main Street, next to the Parks home. Albert Parrish was given a permit for a new dwelling at Par- rish and Moffat Streets. Alfred Rae will build ‘a garage on Huntsville Road. Earl Thomas was given a permit for a new roof on his home and Clark Hildebrant will put a (Continued on Page 8) GREATEST BARGAIN TICKET FAIR OF THE WORLD'S ON 9 Dy SUN. OCT. 6, ONLY PRESENT THIS COUPON AND 50¢ AT ANY WORLD'S FAIR ENTRANCE GATE ON OCTOBER & FOR AD- MISSION TICKET TO THE FAIR AND FIVE AMUSEMENTS (Good up to & P.M.) THE DALLAS POST THIS COUPON MAKES POSSIBLE YOUR PROCURING $1.50 VALUE FOR 50c