~ Editorially Speaking: For All The Lord's Blessings il uy by That grand old holiday—Thanksgiving—is going the way of other cherished ideals and traditions of the American people. Too, bad. We had grown to like Thanksgiving more - and more each year—from the first one we remember when our grandmother’s table looked so beautiful loaded with bright red home-made jellies, cranberry sauces, turkey and fruits—that table that stood in the bay window with a win- ter sun lighting blue and white milk glass piled high with raisin-centered sugar cookies, mince pies, buttermilk cheese, and odd pieces of china, like hadn’t seen since the Fourth of July. the Japanese celery boat, we What a day it was with its assorted smells of sage, damp bread and spices float- ing through the house on the warm air from the kitchen. Small cousins, sisters and brothers—constrained only by parental admonition—found it difficult to await the re- turn of uncles hunting over snow-dusted hills for rabbits and partridges or for the last load of relatives to remove their hats and fur-collared coats and hang them in the closet that smelled of guns, horses and rubber boots. Then greetings over, hunters, home, aprons off and grandmother putting a last loving touch to the table, we sat down to eat. Only old Sunday, the hound, scratching ‘were no stragglers. There at the door, complained and grandfather let him in wiggling from muzzle to stern in anticipation of the feast he'd have an hour later. Yes, we liked Thanksgiving. The days between that day and Christmas always seemed long enough to us—way too long. We might have seen some sense then to making them shorter—but longer, never; Thanksgiving to Christmas -—the beginning and end of a season. Not just two grand ~ holidays but a whole row of them filled with anticipation, secrecy, bustle, excitement and delicacies—or the prepara- tion of delicacies. You could always count on Thanksgiving. It was steady ‘and constant like home and old friends. You could depend on it a whole year ahead. It was fixed right there on the calendar—a late Thursday in November in the season of ~ full moons, frost, gunning, and occasional snow. There was never any doubt about Thank sgiving. Here was a holiday, unlike Easter, that didn’t wander all over the almanac and through all sorts of weather from slush and sleet to spring and daffodils. * clothes to wear. There was never any question what kind of You bundled in warm things snuggly up to the ears, or took the consequences without complaint. It ‘was the season of pine trees, wood smoke, light falling snows ~—and home. f Store, postoffice, school, ¢ ~ farmhouse, mansion and cabin ty and State all celebrated the ‘made provision for it. hurch, college, football classic, , hamlet and town, city, coun- occasion on the same date and There was no conflict, no confusion. Since the Pilgrim fathers established it, Thanksgiving had always been the same. Hadn Plymouth rocks, Indians, and 't we cut out turkeys, and Pilgrims enough in school to have that deeply implanted in our minds? That was before we’d been enlightened by modern histories that Lincoln once changed the date, or that Washington, Jefferson and ‘Adams were too lazy to run for a third term. That was before be- ing productive was sinful and and upset to be fruitful. Maybe we're old-fashioned, blood of economic royalists in our country had to be divided tainted with reaction and the our veins, but if there is any i taint, it got there in the last eight. years—not from that farmer grandfather grateful to the Pilgrims for Thanksgiv- ing and to God for bountiful harvests. He was proud of his little pigs grown to hogs, of his cellars piled high with apples. He tilled stony ground and piled rock on rock to make strong fences and good neighbors. That sturdy ' character was thankful for the opportunity to struggle, barter, trade and make a profit. He knew how to live within his income and «was thankful there was something left to save: A msi iho prepared for his own rainy days, he would have disowned a child who suggested that the “good life” or security came . without sacrifice or that he shouldn’t prepare for his own . old age. . Yes, maybe we're tainted with that kind of blood, but ~ we'll celebrate Thanksgiving on the old-fashioned day, thank- ful not to r. Roosevelt for plowed under’ crops, slaughtered pigs, WPA cracked stones, Old-Age security, confusion and discord, but to God, the Pilgrims and the grandfather, who knew when and what to be thankful for. FROM PILLAR TO POST It was only yesterday, it seems, before the world gathered momen- tum, that little girls collected dolls, skinny boys searched damp spots along the roads to collect yellow butterflies, and their fathers and a Pres- ident collected stamps. cobwebbed barns and dusty attics fo Only yesterday their mamas, too, poked through r antiques and old quilts made from patches grandma collected from striped shirts grandpa had collected. That was yesterday. What the collecting habit will be tomorrow, no one knows, but today a young man in Lehman aided by fast moving science, is collecting voices—frozen words to release at some future time like Bird’s Eye peas and Quick Freeze strawberries with all their trapped summer flavor. Carl Brandon drives a Lehman school bus and helps Ralph Hallock with his plumbing between runs. He is the young exponent of the frozen word. Carl conjured with the possibilities of frosting hot music and chilling torrid arguments for release when there’s a scarcity of the fresh product-just as the Bird's Eye people do. Maybe it was the political cam-~ paign that gave Carl his idea or then again it might have been the babble in the back of his school bus. At any rate he tried it out the other night at the Lehman Band con- cert with great success. Almost be- fore the last note echoed through the hall, Carl went out back of the school house and started defrosting band music on the still night air. The outfit Carl uses to promote his hobby is hardly more expensive than an amateur photographer's camera. With all shipping charges and directions thrown in, Carl says, his voice reproducing outfit cost him only $89.50. Mainly it is a scientific contrap- tion with amplifiers to pick up sound waves and convey them through wires, a steel arm and a jeweled cutting head to a metallic disc where they are trapped or “frozen”. The metallic disc revolves on a moving table in a box resembl- ing an old-fashioned phonograph. (Continued on Page 8) Photographed With Duke Joseph Elicker, { returned from Nassau, Bahamas} thi k, is showing interesting™pictures of the Islands. One of them shows Mr. Elicker on an inspection tour of a Nassau hospital with the Duke and Duchess of Windsor. The Elickers will open their home on Pioneer Avenue this week. Ig o'clock every evening. Tue Darras Post MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION Al, 2. 38. 4, 5. Vol. 50 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1940 No. 47 6. markings and numerals on all homes in _ Dallas, Shavertown and Trucksville. which will train men and women in national defense measures. Dallas Borough. x er highway between Dallas vey’s Lake before 1942, tion in the Dallas area. THE POST WANTS: Permanent - and legible street Emphasis locally on activities The installation of fire plugs in The construction of a new, short- and Har- Centralization of police protec- More sidewalks. Dallas Region Takes To James's Thanksgiving /_- Little Conflict Here Bs Schools And Churches Plan Bnnual Observance Yesterday was Thanksgiving Day for employes of First National Bank, rural mail carriers and isolated Fed- eral employes in the Back Mountain region. Everybody else, in keeping with Governor James's proclama- tion will observe next Thursday as the annual feast day—and Fed- eral employes, mail carriers and bankers can join in if they want another holiday. The schools, being State institutions, will be closed next Thursday as will all business places. There was little confusion in this area because of the conflict between President Roosevelt's November 21st Thanksgiving and Governor James's Pennsylvania Thanksgiving on No- vember 28th, although many pub- lic officials and politicians through- out the county took advantage of the dual holiday to give taxpayers a “little less for their money” by keeping their offices closed yester- day and announcing that they would “officially” celebrate Thanks- giving next Thursday. Postal Service Most postoffices found themselves caught in the middle, remaining open most of the day but without rural mail carrier service. Next Thursday most offices will be closed but rural mail will be delivered. Joseph Polacky, postmaster, re- ceived the following instructions from the United States Post Office Department: The President has designated Thursday, November 21, 1940, as a day of general Thanks- giving. That day will be ob- served by the Postal Service and compensatory time must be granted for all service perform- ed thereon. If November 21 is not observed locally, necessary service should be given the pub- lic on that day and compensa- tory time therefor should be granted so far as practicable on the day which is observed ex- cept on rural delivery routes. Compensatory time can be granted only for service per- formed on the day designated by the President's proclama- > tion. Service over rural deliv- ety routes should be suspended November 21. There is no pro- vision of law under which ru-: ral carriers may be allowed to perform service on November 21 and omit service on Novem- ber 28, because of that day be- ing observed locally or through- out the State as Thanksgiving Day. Church Services In many churches throughout the region there will be services of Thanksgiving next Thursday morn- ing with appropriate music. Football Classic On the sport card is the annual football classic between - Kingston Township High School and Lehman High School. The game will be played on Kingston Township grounds at 10 a. m. Bands of both schools will play before the game and during the halves. Free Draft Certification As a patriotic service Squire John Yaple of Dallas Township offers to certify all selective service ques- tionnaires without charge. Mr. Yaple’s office hours are from 6 to FERDINAND, NOW FRANKLIN II. IS DOING NICELY THANK YOU Little Ferdinand, pawn in the great game of politics when th owner of the 4-day old pullLcalt,| Charles Smith of Beaumont paid an election wager to Cashier W. B. Jeter of First National Bank, is do- ing nicely in his new home at Forty Fort this week. Christened with a new name, Franklin the 2nd, he has learned to drink calf meal mixed with milk from a bucket and from all indi- cations is faring well under a Democratic administration. When Cashier Jeter received his unique payment, and protested that he would just as soon call the bet off, he had no idea what to do with the little fellow. Necessity being the mother of invention, Mr. Jeter load- ed Ferdinand in the trunk of his car and took him home with him to Forty Fort. That wasn’t the most comfortable start in the world for a ocrat like Ferdinand, but when e Jeter family discovered him there in the back of the car Ferdin- and thought “the world wasn’t so bad after all”. It was a lucky thing for him that Mrs. Jeter owns a farm on the Forty Fort flats for after a little while out there in a cold garage, Ferdinand began to think about food and when he thought about food he thought about his FORCEFUL PREACHER x Rev. IL Toole, an evangelist of more than thirty years experience, who will conduct a series of special meetings at Trucksville Free Metho- dist Church starting Sunday even- ing at 7:30 and continuing every evening until December 8... Rev. H. D. Olver is pastor of the Trucksville Church. Grocery Stores Will Stay Closed Wednesdays Grocery stores of Dallas will con- tinue to observe Wednesday after- noon closing periods throughout the winter months with the exception of next Wednesday, the day before Thanksgiving. While some stores in other lines of business have decided to remain open Wednesday after- nocns during the winter, the grocery store owners and managers met this week and voted to continue Wednesday afternoon closings. Enters Air Service Valerow Hunt, clerk at Shaver- town postoffice, enlisted in the Army Air Service this week. Two Volunteers Accepted For Army Service Wyoming And Exeter Youths Will Go First Rinzo John Ducceschi, 20, 739 Kaufman street, Exeter and James Lewis Nichols, 30, Ninth street, Wyoming are the first of 12 to vol- unteer rather than wait to be draft- ed under the Selective Service Act in the district under jurisdiction of Local Board No. 1, which embraces Dallas, Kingston Township, Wyom- ing and Exeter. If they pass rigid physical examimations of the Board's examiner, Dr. G. L. Howell of Trucksville, they will report at the induction center, Wilkes-Barre on November 27. Ten other volunteers in the district must wait to be called in the order in which they volunteered. Draft Board No. 1. has been asked by the War Department to furnish two men |. . . by November 27 but the willingness of many volunteers will make it un- necessary for the board to draft any one. Nor is it likely, in the opinion of Board members, that any one will be drafted at the time of the second call. An informal program and send off will be held at Wyoming next Wednesday, the day when, the two young volunteers leave for the in- duction center. Burgess John Masel, Draft Board Members and friends will take part and an honor escort of State Police will accompany the young men to the induction center. Including college and absentee registrations a total of 3945 men are now enrolled with the board. Ques- tionaires have been mailed to two hundred men in the district. Of this number about one-half have been placed in class 1 having no depen- dents or occupational exemptions. Back Mountain League Refuses To Admit Shickshinny Schools Inability Of Lower End Team To Play Friday Nights Bars Welcome Entry Application of Shickshinny High School for admission to Back Moun- tain Basketball League was rejected by League principals and coaches at an organization meeting Tuesday night in Kingston Township High School. At the same time the League's 1941 schedule was cut from sixteen to eight games when a compromise 12-game schedule was deemed infeasible. ‘Rejection of the Shickshinny application, at first received with favor, came when it was learned that lower end school could not play on Tues- day and Friday nights because Coach Charles Blackburn had previously signed a contract to officiate at oth- er games on those nights. C. E, Mill- er, supervising principal, also said that it was unlikely Shickshinny could develop a girls’ team in time to participate in League games. Since the League has by-laws de- nying admission to new teams that cannot play on Tuesday and Friday nights and have no girls’ team it was considered advisable to reject the Shickshinny application. Inde- pendent games will, however, be played with the lower end school. In cutting the schedule to eight games both coaches and principals agreed that last year’s sixteen-game schedule was too heavy, but coaches thought eight not enough. A com- promise on 12 games was suggest- ed but was considered impractical because of conflicts and unbalanced home and away games. The prin- cipals chose eight in preference to the old schedule of sixteen and an eight-game schedule was adopted over the objection of some of the coaches. The. League season will open on January 10 and close on March 1. All games, excepting two, will be played on Friday nights. T. A. Williammee, supervising principal of Dallas Borough schools, was elected League president, and Thorwald Lewis, supervising princi- pal of Dallas Township schools, was made secretary-treasurer. Members of the League are Dallas Borough, Dallas Township, Kingston Township, Lehman Township and Lake Township. Attending the meeting were: Su- pervising principals, Walter Roberts, Lake Township; Austin Snyder, Leh- man Towhship; James Martin, Kingston Township; T. A. William- mee, Dallas Borough and Thorwald Lewis, Dallas Township. Coaches attending were: Mary Morgan, Howard Tinsley, Dallas Borough; Gerald Snyder, Antonio mother back there on Charlie, Smith’s farm. And when a calf wants his mother there is just one | thing to do—let the world know it. That is what Ferdinand did. So the Jeters took Ferdinand to the farm and the good farmer taught Ferdinand how to drink out of a bucket and there he is to- day growing up to be a big Demo- crat to cause plenty of trouble one of these days for the Republican Jeter family. Kozemchak, Dallas Township; Wil- liam Morgan, Eleanor Trethaway, Lehman; and Elwood Swingle, Kingston Township. Please Send Cony Early Because of the Thanksgiving holiday next week correspond- ents and advertisers are urged to forward their copy to The Post early in the week so that the staff can enjoy the tra- ditional holiday. > WOUNDED BEAR ESCAPES WHEN BOB HISLOP’S/GUN JAMS AFTER FIR =~ A rifle that jammed after his first shot had knocked down a bear on the opening day of the season at Mountain Springs, probably cheated Bob Hislop, proprietor of Dallas Inn, out of many good bear steak dinners. Bob’s companions, Reese Finn and Harold Blewitt, both got shots at the bear but apparent- ly without telling effect. The wounded animal escaped through the underbrush and al- though the hunters followed his bloody trail for about five miles they were unable to see him again. 5 Calves Stray Away From Bulford Farm, Four calves strayed away from where one of them was cornered on Clifford Space’s farm and captured. The other three, a bull and two heifers about six months old, es- caped and continued on their way over the hills toward Sterling Ma- chell’s farm. Any one coming across one, two or three hungry red and white calves is urged to get in touch with Mr. Bulford. His tele- phone number is Dallas 288-R-16. Welfare Drive Has Successful Climax This year’s quotas were exceeded by Dallas Borough and Lake Town- ship in the Community Welfare Drive which closed last night, and the quotas of all previous years were exceeded by the other four communities in the district under the direction of Mrs. C. Hayden Phillips. Success of the campaign and a generous and gracious re- sponse on the part of all who were solicited. was attributed to diligent workers: IN SERVICE -~ Sergeant Wayne Harvey son of Mrs. Frank Harvey of Cemetery Street, who is stationed at Chanute Field, Rentoul, Illinois, where he is taking a three months training course in aviation. Wisnewski Sends $50 Contribution To Fire Company Firemen's Efforts Win Reward As Membership Drive Gets Under Way A $50 check, given in apprecia- tion for its efficient work in fight- ing a stubborn blaze on the Wis- newski farm at DeMunds several weeks ago, will be presented to Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Company at its meeting tonight by James Besecker, secretary, who received the contri- bution early this week. The letter which accompanied the check is as follows: ‘Enclosed here- with find check for $50 in apprecia- tion of the wonderful work done by the firemen at the fire on the Wis- newski Farm on the Demunds Road. Thanking you again for your fine cooperation, we are yours truly, F. W. Baking Company, Frank Wis- newski.” : Sof. The fire to which Mr. Wisnewski farm and several large flocks of of the firemen the flames were pre- vented from spreading to larger and more valuable nearby buildings. “Pleased with ' Mr. Wisnewski’s generosity, Mr. Besecker said the gift is especially timely since the company is now in the midst of its annual solicitation and membership drive. Members of these commit- tees will report tonight, and from all indications they have met with an enthusiastic and unprecedented response throughout the community. men of the community and civic leaders met with Dr. F. B. Schooley, chairman of the building committee, in the offices of James R. Oliver’s garage to discuss proposals for land in Dallas Borough. Among the prop- erties offered for sale to the com- pany for building purposes are sev- eral attractive lots on Lake Street, another on Main Street, and two others in central and convenient locations. : Dr. Schooley reported that the community has been generous in its approval of the proposed build- ing and that tangible results will be forthcoming shortly. ; refers destroyed turkey pens on his turkeys. Largely through the efforts: Last night representative business’ Record Number Of Bears Shot In Mountains Lebanon Man Dies Of Heart Attack Huntin On North Mountain/ Scores of hunters from the Dallas region augmented by at least a thousand others from throughout Pennsylvania scoured the rugged timberland of the North and South mountain area for bears during the four-day big game hunting season which opened Monday and closed yesterday. The kill was larger than in years with 25 bears known to have been shot during the first two days. There were no reports of fatal acci- dents, but one man, Isaac Bach- man, 45, Lebanon steel worker, dropped dead from a heart attack while hunting on North Mountain about 10:30 Monday morning. There were numerous reports of game law violations. John Slapikas, of Wanamie killed a cub less than a year old in the Benton area and reported to Game Protector Edward Carpenter with a fine of $25 and had the carcass confiscated. Joseph Urenovitch of Freeland and Joseph Wansock of Berwick were fined $10 each for having loaded weapons in their automobiles during a check-up made by Game Protectors Mark Hagenbuch and Clarence L. Drumm. There were unconfirmed reports of poaching on the North Mountain Game Preserve and in two instances (Continued on Page 8) Dallas Region May Yet Furnish Rirport Site Army Engineers Seek Good Elevation And s- Absence Of Cross Winds Q Army Air Corps engineers seek- ing a location for a purely military jairport in the vicinity of Wilkes- Barre and Scranton are giving con- sideration to the Dallas area it was learned on reliable authority this { week. Factors which have eliminated Wilkes-Barre-Wyoming Valley and Scranton airports’ from considera- tion and may make the proposed Pittston location undesirable are be- lieved not to exist’ in the Dallas region. ; i The Army engineers are not con- cerned with commercial air traffic but are primarily interested in a lo- cation away from flood hazards, with high elevation and absence of undesirable cross winds. Presence of strategic highways of military importance in this rural area has given added impetus to the belief that army engineers will not make a final decision until available locations near Dallas are given a thorough survey. Establishment of a military air- port in Northeastern Pennsylvania is a part of the million dollar de- fense appropriation recently passed by Congress. While nothing of a political nature is supposed to in- fluence location of ‘the port, it is believed by many local citizens that the desirability of the Dallas area as a site for the:airport should be called to the attention of the prop- er authorities in the War Depart- ment in Washington. Such a move, they believe, would be a patriotic duty and offset some of the political pressure being exerted for the Pitts- ton location. A 367-pound bear, the first he had ever seen in the woods alive, was shot Tuesday morning at Cider Run on Stack Mountain above Dinstel’s, by Harry Rudolph of Conyngham. Rudolph, 23, was accompanied by Delmar Winterstein of Reynolds street, Kingston. When the hunters came across the bear, Rudolph let the big animal have a shot from his 32 Special Winchester. As the bear reared on his hind feet Rudolph let him have the coup de grace with three more. With the excitement of the kill behind them, the two young men faced the problem of getting 367- pounds of bear out of the woods with no roads and ‘several miles between them and their parked car. Rolling the carcass over and over through the underbrush and down hillsides they finally reached the Bowman's Creek Branch of the Lehigh Valley SIX BEARS SHOT FIRST DAY IN WOODS NEAR CIDER RUN Railroad. About that time or shor after a light vehicle came puttering around a curve on the tracks. It was a home made section car pro- pelled by a gasoline motor taken from an old washing machine and used by natives of that forested and roadless region for transporta- tion on the Lehigh Valley's right of way. With the help of the operator, the bear was loaded aboard and taken to Dinstel’s where it was transferred to the hunters’ automo- bile. Tuesday night when the bear was weighed on Harvey's Lake Butcher, Herman Garringer’s scales tipping the beam at exactly 367- pounds young Rudolph was one of the happiest men in Pennsylvania. Game wardens. reported six other bears shot in the vicinity of Cider Run on the opening day of the four day big game season.