fat Warms The Nation,” which, in my smithy had first shaped his metal better fire, at less expense, than GIMME A MATCH By FRED M. KIEFER 2 Obadiah Gore found that he could create a forced draft-heat in his forge in a very satisfactory manner by pumping his bellows over that hard, black substance he came eventually to know as anthracite coal. Obadiah, we may correctly assume, found no great difficulty in supplying his small forge with the mineral. All he had replenish his needs, was to swing his to the nearest of the numerous spots on the surface of the hill. A little smith was ready again to attend to his horseshoeing or gun-barrel straight- ening or even to hammering out a skillet for wife Gore. / to do, when it: became necessary to bag, or basket, over his arm and hie where the coal was visible to the eye digging, or picking, and the black- Obadiah Gore was fortunate in his choice of settlement, at least where it concerned his business, for he had erected his shop in the Wyoming Valley, which, as time went on and a great industry developed, became the center and the greatest in de- posits and area of the three large Pennsylvania hard coal districts. A ~ modern chamber of commerce now refers to the city that has grown over and around the spot where ~ Obadiah’s bellows once blew as, “The Heart of the Valley That opinion, is a pretty piece of speech, to say the least. Approximately 40 years after the by the new method of heating, a se- date and enlightened gentleman wrote on the fly-leaf of one of his law books, “Feb. 11, 1808 made the experiment of burning the common stone coal of the valley in a grate, in a common fireplace in my house, and found it will answer the pur- pose of fuel, making a clearer and | burning wood in the common way.” Jesse Fell. , Judge Fell could not have con- fined his discovery to the fly-leaf alone for news of his action spread throughout the valley and soon the judge probably wished he had not fooled around with the “common stone coal” at all since his home be- came overrun with curious neigh- ‘bors, But on the other hand, the judge was mightily pleased with himself. Not only that the success of his experiment had increased his already high standing in the com- munity but that, since he kept a tavern, a pleasant increase in busi- ness resulted from the flocking na- tives. Before, however, advancing upon the assumption that Judge Fell was one of the immortal “firsts” it is no more than fair to record that in the archives of the Wyoming Historical and Geological Society at Wilkes- Barre there rests a letter from Oliv- er Evans. Oliver Evans dated his letter, Philadelphia, Feb. 15, 1903 ‘and we have no reason to believe that was not the day upon which it was written. One can’t be picking FOOTNOTES By EMMONS BLAKE I saw in The Post some weeks ago stories concerning records of coun- ty fair attendance. I can claim a record almost as good as Mrs. Yaple’s or Mr. Welsh’s. The San Diego County Fair was organized about five years ago. Now, a perfect attendance record of five fairs isn’t much and in fact I missed last year’s fair as I was back East. But I have attended four out of the five, and last week was the first time I used the gate. Bill and I have always made it a point to gain admission to the grounds by unconventional methods; both as a hobby and for financial reasons. We have found this to be true; no matter how much money a person takes to the fair he will come home broke. So, we are not averse to saving admission fees for more urgent uses. The fair grounds are cleverly laid out. The three sides are well pro- tected, one by water, another by a high fence topped with barbed wire; the third and most dangerous side is protected by a' gate. We have employed devious ways of getting in. The first year we waded across the water barrier at low tide (the fair grounds are built at the Del Mar race track; practically on the beach). This was not such fun because the bottom was continually taking on all the better known qualities of quick- sand. The next year we decided to do a better job of it. We found a ditch used to drain the race track, that was deep enough to hide in; being very careful to keep our backs low, we crawled about 200 yards right to where we could make a run for the crowds and safety. After we found ourselves in the grounds and undetected, even though our pants were ruined from crawling, we learned that that day was flaws where the cloth is perfect. Well, anyway, Oliver wrote to Jacob information which, in all probabil- ity, deeds to him the right of claim to the burning of anthracite coal in an open grate on its initial trial. In the same year that Evans was coming in under the wire before our judge, operators at Summit Hill in Carbon County were shipping an- thracite down the Lehigh River to Philadelphia. The Susquehanna wait- ed four years longer to become a conveyor of the important product, and in 1807 arks (as they were called) carrying 55 tons left Plym- outh and arrived at Columbia. The Susquehanna, being navigable only | at times of high water, never be- | came a large factor in shipping coal. Today, this once beautiful river, is, between Pittston and Sunbury, a sewage system for mine pumpings and its waters blend between a dirty, slate grey color and a brown- ish-purple horror. Obijah Smith (don’t confuse with Obidiah Gore) and company of Plymouth, who had made the barge shipments to Columbia, were per- sistent men. Failing to sell a single hunk of coal to the skeptical Co- lumbians, they left the black rocks in a pile where they had unloaded them and returned to Plymouth. Ac- companying their next venture of two loaded arks was a grate and upon arrival once more at the down river destination they proceeded to set up the grate and give a practi- cal demonstration of how fine their coal would burn. It is pleasant to know that the good people of Columbia liked the little-known substance and pur- chased the whole of it, thus starting anthracite on its dubious—still dub- . ious—journey. THE BOOK SHELF “How To Be A Naval Officer.” By Rear Admiral Yates Stirling, Jr. Robert McBride & Com- pany, N. Y. $1.75. 194 pages. Our navy has grown with neces- sity always the mother of invention. When new weapons were discover- ed, new defenses were quickly evolved. The iron clad “Merrimac” was answered by the revolving tur- ret of the “Monitor.” The threat of the airplaine and submarine will be answered by offsetting devices of the navy. And today, the demand for leadership in our rapidly ex- panding navy is answered by the special ensign training course. Cist wherein he puts. forth certain, “School Day”. Every school kid was admitted free. In 1938 we found a worn spot in | the fence and used it to advantage. Just as we got through and stood on the other side we noticed tw. guards coming toward us. We] hastily turned toward the fence and yelled “get back there you kids, we see you,” and hurled rocks at imag- inary offenders. This ruse worked and the guards turned back satis- fied that we were on their side—as we were. Last Friday when we went I thought we had the best chance ever. A good friend of Bill's had lent him an exhibitor’s sticker. We headed confidently for the gate. Bill started to drive through but the gateman stopped us with “Who's your friend there?” I thought we were sunk, but Bill turned haughtily and said, “Sir, since when can’t a man bring in his own stableman to care for his stock ?”’ After we were in Bill laughed at my indignation. “Boy,” he said, “it’s a good thing your shirt was dirty.” Of course the best way to become a naval officer is still to graduate] from Annapolis Naval Academy. But there are other ways to attain the much coveted commission in our sea forces. The special intensive training course is offered to young men with a minimum of two years of college and certain physical and mental qualifications. Other ways are to rise from the Naval Officers Reserves after having graduated from a college R. O. T. C. course, or after having graduated from Pen- sacola Air School. In addition, the author explains that a Coast Guard and Marine Corps commission, may also be obtained with certain spe- cial preparations. Whether or not you want to be- come a naval officer, however, should have nothing to do with your interest in the vivid little volume. The most important quality of the book is that any timely question you might entertain about the navy is concisely and adequately answer- ed. This might seem like a rather cold blooded subject for any kind of; warmth of style. Yet strangely the author achieves just that quality. His outline of the traditions of the navy touches off a quick spark of patriotism. His discussion of the efficiency of the United States Navy shows a glow of professional pride. The Admiral treats of the Coast Guard and Marines in tribute as sincere and kind as taps at evening. The book is profusely illustrated with splendid photographs and con- tains two scholarly appendices on the most practical steps in becoming THE POST, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1940 MY! HOW HE'S GROWN! SECOND THOUGHTS by javie aiche Much as I dislike the place of my abode, I submit as fortunate one provision of the builders. Double doors open from the rear bedroom to the roof of the back porch. What if there is another door, a summer door? It is of copper mesh design, and for a ghost to get through re- quires only trifling disintegration. Friction involved in the process merely sets up magnetic forces that make re-assembly automatic. A tree of what the naturalist would call unbrageous growth rises off-side the garage. Its branches deliquesce comfortably athwart the porch roof, and the leaves are of the clinging variety, so that even this late in the year there is the ap- proximation of spooky shadiness when the moon in the wane slants its rays toward our domicile. Add a broad-paned window just above the porch eaves and just be- side the bed wherein your corres- pondent takes what an insomniac calls rest, and you have the picture. It was no trick at all to know the time was a minute past midnight. The illuminated face of the three- dollar watch was hanging from the pipe-holder on the handy smoking- | stand, first to engage the sight when what seemed less sound than sug- gestion of it accentuated the silence of the night. A sigh of sleeplessness paced the hand thrust out to pull aside the blind. Unmistakably on the glass was a misty impression, faintly lum- inous and wholly indicative of a cold palm having been thrust against the = = FREEDOM The columnists and con- tributors on this page are allowed great latitude in expressing their own opin- ions, even when their opinions are at variance with those of The Post = pane. My old eyes can make many mistakes; so, your correspondent arose and threw open the French doors. And the presence came in. You couldn’t call it anything else, because at first it could not be seen, only sensed. I do not like the violence which incandescence inflicts when an elec- tric bulb is switched to its current. A better contribution to manifesta- tion of the supernatural is the infra- red lamp, one of which occasionally comes to the rescue of your cor- respondent’s neuritis and, therefore, is kept within call for immediate service. : The rather astringent rays drew the presence into tangible form. And, may the saints preserve me in faith and honor, if there wasn’t Eph McCoy. About him there was the frowziness of mould, as thought too long he had immured in the vasty earthiness of his repose. “Hello, Eph,” I said. His lips moved but he uttered no sound. I noticed then that in his eyes was a look of utter despair. He pointed to his lips. They were still moving, soundlessly. “Poor Eph,” I said, “now I under- stand.” I directed the red cylinder of the infra-red lamp flush in the face of the bedraggled ghost and summoned | to my aid all I had ever heard of the art of lip-reading. And, over and over, Eph was try- ing to ask: “Where is he?” My editor, you too must under- stand. There is a ghost to lay. Howell Rees is guilty of malfeasance, non- feasance and dereliction of duty. He brought Eph McCoy back to interest in mundane affairs and then went into non-support of his resurrec- tion. | Eph is no Zombie. You can’t tell him to go hunting Howell Rees away down there in the West Indies. {both sides. MUSINGS OF AN By The Bystander We know through the medium of the press and radio that i a devastating war is going on in Europe. We have been told AVERAGE MAN that this war endangers us and that unless we arm ourselves quickly and enormously, our very lives and surely our liberty, are dangerously threatened. We have been told by those in authority that a state emergency exists, and that unless our man-power and manu- facturing facilities are mobilized to their fullest extent, we will not be able to arm in time to avert this catastrophe that hangs over our heads. We have been led to believe that planes and more planes are our most vital and impelling need. We have believed this, we average peo- ple, and feel that no sacrifice is too great to make in this extreme emergency. Our sons, and our neighbors sons, have registered for the selective draft. Many have already volun- teered. Our factories are being mo- bilized and geared to work at their utmost capacity to fill our great need for armament. In the fore- front of this need for armament stands our potential ally—the coun- try whom the average man believes is standing almost alone between us and this frightful fate we have been told awaits us, not just around the corner, but actually in full view. This nation that we are pledged to aid in every way possible short of war has been clamoring for planes and more and more planes and we are bending every effort to supply this need—or are we? Out in Downey, California, is lo- cated an airplane factory with con- tracts for 84-million dollars worth of military planes. This factory employs 5,200 men. These 5,200 men are on strike. All work on the planes that are so vital to our own armament program and are so sorely needed by England is stopped. The reason for the strike is that some workers in the lower wage brackets want more money. The company on its part claims that it connot pay more and still make the profit it feels it is entitled to on its investment. Now the “average man is not in- terested in who may be right or who may be wrong in this contro- versy. As is always the case, in all probability much could be said on The thing the average man is interested in, is that this strike has been permitted to go on. It has been stated, and we believe generally accepted as a fact, that the deathblow to the liberty of France was delivered by striking workers and a weak government which permitted these strikes to] cripple the French rearmament pro- gram. We could digress here and ask what the laboring man of France gained, even though he won his strike; or on the other hand, ask the investing public of France what it gained, even though it won its He'd get all tangled up with Voo- | Doo and never again be the same old Eph. This, then, is a petition to the] absent Postscripter. He's got to take | the spell off Eph and give him back to his generation. Without Rees he’s voiceless and he ought to be a void. It’s disgraceful to have the heroic pioneer in unaccustomed places, and | playing the part of the dummy. His Buckskin Party has given us enough of that kind of performance. | SENTIMENTAL SIDE By EDITH BLEZ We had Thanksgiving in My Town in New Jersey last week. It certainly made an awful mixup with Pennsylvania celebrating this week. Most of our commuters go to Phila- delphia to work, and it meant that we had two Thanksgiving days. The women celebrated one without their husbands, and the other without their children! Officially the twenty-first was Thanksgiving Day so we had our traditional football game. If half the men were working, I don’t know what would have happened if they had been home. There were so many people at the game that there wasn’t room to breathe. The game was scheduled for two o'clock and the crowd began gath- ering about twelve. There were long black streams of people coming in all directions. Two hours before the game began there wasn’t a place to park within five squares of the field. The game was played in Had- donfield which is about a mile from My Town. The two teams have been bitter rivals for generations. There was a time it was so bitter that the Thanksgiving game was cut out of the schedule because the game always ended in a fight. This year the rivalry was friendly; at least until the game was over. The football team in My Town hasn’t lost a game in two years and it was all set to defeat a team it never suspected was so good. Both teams were keyed to hysteria. When the bands and cheerleaders marched on the field the crowd went mad. There wasn’t a vacant seat. In My Town the members of the high school football team are little tin Gods. Most of the boys have been born in My Town and when they turn out to be good football players the residents look on them an officer in the United States Navy. ; las something out of the ordinary. “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 mn advance. H. W. Risley, Editor and Publisher H. J: Price 0... Mech. Supt. We have one family of four boys and the oldest has been a football star for four years and many a time during an exciting play I have heard Joe’s brother shout: “Come on Joe—Ma says we can have two quarts of ice cream if you make another touchdown.” Joe's mother never misses a game and I know she knows as much about football as any of her boys. At the end of the first half the score was a tie. It never occurred to anyone in My Town that the team could lose! While there was time there was al- ways hope! When things looked the worst the crowd on our side were all thinking the same thing: “Joe would get out of that huddle and make a another touchdown some- how. Joe would run the length of the field, Joe couldn’t be stopped.” But Joe didn’t get out of the huddle and Joe didn’t make another touch- down. When the last whistle blew My Town had lost the biggest game of the year! The opposing team was hilarious but on our side you could have cut the gloom with a knife and when the team arrived back home those big husky football fellows burst into tears, and nobody told them to stop ed — THE LOW DOWN FROM HICKORY GROVE This Mr. Willkie don’t need to feel too bad about the election. He came out second best, but any duck who will get around 21 million votes versus around 25 million for the other side, is mot doing so bad. Mr. Willkie's outfit was not organized. His boys just went out there and tackled the other side— out in the open—uwhere- ever they could get a toe on the platform. You take Red Grange when he was runnin’ ram- pant for Illinois, he only went to town when his buddies got organized and helped open a hole for him. This Mr. Willkie and his young go-getting crew are gonna be poison too, when they get a little more practice. Yours with the low down, JO SERRA. BN — aS crying, and no one thought they were doing anything they shouldn’t do, because that defeat meant as much to every resident. There has been a deep gloom all over town since Thanksgiving Day. The crowd | in the drug store talks about noth- ing else and the members of the | hour increase demanded by the la-| point. We could even turn this into a sermon and ask, “What profit it a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul.” But we won’t do any of these things. What the average man wants to know is, what is our government going to do about this strike that has tied up one of the main gears of our vital armament machinery. We average people firmly believe that the prin- ciple involved in the few cents an borer or the firm’s denial of abil-| ity to pay, is a very trivial matter when weighed against the common good of all of us. We feel that this stoppage is sabo- tage if it does not boarder on trea- son. This strike may not have its inception in sabotage; it may not be fostered by saboteurs; but its result | is the same as if it were. 5.200 men, eight hours a day for a period of eight days, adds up to a total of 332,800 man hours to date. Laugh that off. The average man believes that this strike is merely a trial balloon sent up by land do it at once. labor leaders who are anxious to know if the president meant what " THEOLD | SCRAPBOOK | —By “Bob” Sutton — A Good Morning: ra One day out of the year is ol Ae : pecially set apart to give thanks for blessings received. It should be one of the happiest days, for a ¥ grateful mind and heart is a happy one, and he enjoys much who is thankful for little. oi ! i I met a man last December, who said he was going to ‘swear off” on New Year's. swearing on and off! Since then he's been of : ~~ People who spend so much’ time “raking others over the coals” will some day find themselves raking coals somewhere else! goes after the things that other peo- ple are waiting for! vy LETTER TO A FRIEND I think about you often, And I'd write you every day; But there's so very little i That seems worth-while to say. It either rains, or doesn’t, It’s either hot or cold; My news is uninteresting, Or else has all been told. : I think of your smile often, Though I can’t recall your touch; But distance lends enchantment, And I miss you very much. d The only thing that matters, Is the fact that you are there And I am here without you, And it’s lonesome everywhere. —John E. Tyler Remember: A diamond with many vi flaws is more valuable than a per- fect pebble! 7 he said when he asserted that la- bor was to lose none of its gains on account of the rearmament pro- gram. They, we believe, are anx- ious to know if they may use the strike weapon with impunity to LATE gain from the employing public the last cent that the traffic will bear. The average man believes that this great country has achieved its greatness because it was founded on the principle of equality and he de- nies the right of a group, large or small, to endanger the life and lib- erty of all of us because of selfish interests. Surely there is one bureau in existence in Washington that could investigate the merits of the case of Voultee Corporation versus its employes and come to a fair and unbiased settlement. Surely, the President armed with power as he is, has the right to stop this evil thing and serve notice to all who would foster subversive ac- tivities. We average people believe that he can and should do this— Are we to be saved from a fate like that of France by a strong government, or are we like France going down to bitter defeat because of a weak and vacillating administration? . Time is growing short and we will soon know the answers to some of these questions. SMARTNESS that Housewives Rave About 7 Models Now On Display In Our Showroom team are keeping out of sight. They feel that something has died and they are responsible for it. I doubt if the coach had anything to say to his defeated team. He knew they | were grieving in silence. Tomorrow | night the yearly football banquet 5) to be held but I doubt very much! if it will be much of an affair be- | cause My Town is feeling low, and there doesn’t seem to be very much — VISIT OUR SHOWROOM — EASTERN PENNA. SUPPLY CO. 56-62 South Pennsylvania Avenue—Phone 3-1181 to celebrate. Everything comes to him who . Fir +24,