‘Ah, Spring! Sweet Spring! ‘ Come in, have your fling. ‘Commingle our sneezes ~ Pray now, don’t be fickle, old thing, ‘Here's how! Tip a julep "SECOND _ THOUGHTS | By javie aiche Sweet Spring Hello, there; you're welcome, by jing. Come in with your budding, Your claying and mudding And even your flooding; The birds and the bees are a-wing And Nature is trying to sing; Aloft in the trees is A fragrance, the breezes With air that has zing. Too long has old Winter been King, We're marking his rule up. To crocus and tulip And brooks murmuring. Ding-dong sound the bells, and dong-ding, For church and for school. them ring! The bells we have ears for Are blue-bells. Three cheers for The gay little dears! For, It’s Spring! The Candidate He isn’t candid, he’s profuse In praise of self, plus much abuse For all who would oppose his aim Upon the target labeled Fame. When he’s elected, this his sin: He has no date; he’s never in. While The Iron Is Hot In union there is strength, they say, Yet unions seem to disunite The forces which we would array To meet the menace known as Might. Be strong in labor. Labor’s strong And ready yet to strike, we know; But some one has directions wrong When we are struck and not the foe. The Word For It Is Greek Benito Mussolini pouted up a martial mess, : He talked a mighty conquest to the world, He licked the bow-and-arrow boys of Egypt's wilderness And then at all his stout defiance hurled. Benito Mussolini thought it time to make a splurge, He thought the time propitious, fame to seek, And now instead of paeans he is harking to a dirge, He doesn’t understand it, for it’s Greek. They pounded him And hounded him, Then rounded out his track, They trounced him so And bounced him so He beat his shadow back. Let ® Benito’s Axis partner followed up his pal’s mistake Was doubled back by Jugoslavs and Turks For Hitler it was Jerko when he thought ’twas really Jake So now he too has had to shoot the works. The Greeks have panned his Panzero and his Blitzers have the blues His Luftwaffe was a bluff and all too weak, He's found a foe whose lexicon has no word meaning lose But many meaning courage; all are Greek. ‘Who hears a foe? Who fears a foe Of this the best of lands? All such we'd rout By calling out Our lunch and candy stands. ~ THE OLD SCRAPBOOK By "Bob" Sutton On this, another Good Friday, let our minds be centered upon the Cross of the Savior of the world. Let us think briefly of THE TERROR OF THE CROSS By Rev. M. C. Davies, B. A. Who is this, whom men are re- viling, mocking and scoffing? Is he some criminal who deserves all this shame? From those to whom we speak, we learn that he claimed to be the Son of God, and as they go about their work or pleasure there is no terror here for them. But as ‘we approach the foot of the Cross we find there three lonely and sor- rowful figures, one man and two women. Perhaps they have caught some taste of the terror of this aw- ful ordeal. learn that one of them is the Moth- er of this, her Son. is His most beloved disciple, John. Ah, yes, they have learned and are learning something of the terror of the Cross, for upon it, with out- streched arms, is the One they love the most in all the world. We gaze into the face of the vic- tim. Strange to say, there is no terror there: only a deep concern for those about Him, not for Him- self. Even His enemies are His con- cern—those who love Him are in His thoughts, and those who love Him not are in His mind. PRAISE FOR THE CROSS By Nellie Mayes THE LOW DOWN FROM | | used to drive by so fast that I nev- We speak to them and The other is Magdalene, one of His closest and most devout followers, and the third "HICKORY GROVE You will half-way ques- tion a person's I. Q. if he says a good word for the tax collector. But if the tax collector gets us woke up, he is doing us a good turn. And brother, is he getting busy? And the more pockets he fumbles around the more enemies he makes, the better it will be for everybody—in the long run. We been figuring it is 0. K. for the Govt. to dive into this business or that business, just so it wasn’t costing us anything. If Sambo wanted to be a Socialist, let him be one. But mow the Old Boy tis limping home like a prod- igal, and everybody is gonna get micked — and plenty. And brothers and sisters, it will be painful. Digging up taxes, and doing without a mew suit or hat or something, so that ome million persons working for the Govt. can have a mice job, and may- be a new car every year— including free gas—is not going to give us a sweet disposition. You can get a tooth out with mowocain, but for taxes, there is mo quick relief. Yours with the low down. JO SERRA FOOTNOTES es 5 Bitch Te All on Balken Front By CHARLE S HODGES Transradio War Expert > The Palm”Sunday offensive of the Nazis in the Balkans opens the nine- ty critical days of 1941. The Ger- man High Command between now and mid-summer must fight on two fronts for the decisive results upon which Hitler's future in Europe de- pends. The assault on Yugoslavia is the Nazi confession that the nerve war has failed again to bring about bloodless victory for the Axis. More important is the fact that the British have chosen to give ground—even if it is desert sand—in Libya rather than weaken the war effort in the Balkans. The leadership of General Wavell appears to figure the North African Nazi-Italian counter-attack as lacking great strength for a real drive against the Suez Canal: The desert hot season, notwithstanding: reports of special training for Nazi shock troops in desert fighting, is believed to burn up all possibility of sufficiently large forces operating from the west. The Nazi infiliration in Libya, though larger than expected, is not regarded by the British general staff as large enough in numbers, mechanized equipment and gasoline to challenge the main covering force left to defend Cyrenaica, while Gen- eral Wavell drives the Italian rem- nants out of East Africa. Supply Headaches «By EMMONS BLAKE - Can you think of some product you have grown up with, and maybe associate with some milestone in your life? My father can. His product is Shredded Wheat. Many years ago there was a line on the Shredded Wheat package that read, “Tell us what you eat and we will tell you what you are.” My father sent in a detailed account of what he ate, and received in return a let- ter making him “Official Window Sticker Sticker.” With it he re- ceived a package of decalcomanias and a squeegee, and instructions to place stickers on every grocery store in his town of Parsons, Kansas. Forty-four years later his family is still eating Shredded Wheat. I too have a product that I can remember from way back and it al- so happens to be a cereal. There is an old road that leads from my town around a large bay, and to the city nearby. About ten years ago a new road was built with a bridge across the bay and the nar- row old road is seldom used. The gas stations are closed and all the advertising signs along the side have either fallen or faded past rec- ognition. One of these signs adver- tised Albers Flapjack Flour. It was wooden and hand painted, a large reproduction of their famous trade- mark, a westerner complete with six-shooter and flannel shirt kneel- ing beside his camp-fire making flap- jacks. The sign fascinated me be- cause of the box the westerner held. It was an Albers box on which was a picture of a westerner holding an Albers box with a picture of a west- erner holding, etc., etc. My father er had time to scramble up the back seat of the car and see just how many men were in the picture. It was the period of my life when my parents, older brothers, relatives, and interested spectators were try- ing to teach me to read. Every time we passed that sign they would try to focus my mind on the spelling of one word, Albers. But it was fu- tile, my mind was busy with more important things. I would try to please them by reading everything on the next sign, but received little praise; it was a giant coffee pot and bore the letters M J B. Recently I stopped and looked for the old sign. I found it fallen and almost barren of paint. Weeds were growing through the cracks in the shrunken wood. I scraped some mud off with my shoe. Dimly I could make out one word. Albers. He laid down His glory to be Our substitute on Calvary! How can we dwell upon the scene ? Lord, may Thy passion to us mean That, melted, we will count all loss, And glory only in the Cross! O costly love! the price He paid, Sin and the curse were on Him laid; And as a criminal there He died; God’s holy Son was crucified! Oh, make the vision clearer still! We would see Jesus on the hill Of Calvary, and Him adore Who ever lives to die no more! We praise Thee for Redemption’s plan, Wrought out by Thee for ruined man, And the blessed One-in-Three Our praise shall rise continually! But let us go on to Sunday, and BOOK REVIEW WHAT THE CITIZEN SHOULD KNOW ABOUT THE ARMY By Harvey S. Ford Publishers—W. W. Norton and Com- pany, Inc. Date of Publication—March 8, 1941 Reviewed by Lionel Ross What the Citizen Should Know | About the Army by Harvey S. Ford | is not a book written for experts. It is written for the common layman who know nothing about triangular divisions or flank attacks. It is written plainly, and so that it can be understood by every reader. Mr. Ford leaves out as much technical material as he possibly can. He tells what the Army contains in the way of men and material, how the Army and its branches operate, and what they can be expected to do in the future. The book is not an official publication. Mr. Ford says he alone is responsible for it. It does not represent the opinions of the War Department of the United States or of any Army member. The book is divided into eight sections: The Organization of the Army, the Enlisted Man, the Officer, the Arms, The Services, The Citizen and the Army, the General Staff, and The Conduct of War. less a general review of our Army and its organization. Mr. Ford ends and the system by which they are combined are international rather that national in character, and by transposing a word here and a phrase there one might use the above exposition as a fairly work- able guide for any major army in the world.” In the section on enlisted men he discusses discipline, military duties, | fatigue, which is waiting on table, dishwashing, or any other work a The opening section is more or! by saying, “The units of an Army | “More than a newspaper, a community institution” THE DALLAS POST ESTABLISHED 1889 A non-partisan liberal progressive mewspaper 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. Editor and Publisher HOWARD W. RISLEY Associate Editor MYRA ZEISER RISLEY Contributing Editors FRED M. KIEFER JOHN V. HEFFERNAN Mechanical Superintendent HAROLD J. PRICE ® units larger than an army. The only American officer ever to hold this title was General Douglass Mac- Arthur, who was made a Field Gen- eral by the Philippine Common- wealth The R. O. T. C. and military schools such as Culver or Valley Forge are mentioned as some of the institutions used for the develop- ment of good officers. Among the various arms and branches of the Army are the Air ! Corps, the Armored Force, the Cav- ! alry, the Coast Artillery, the Engin- eers, the Signal Corps, the Infantry, and the Field Artillery. When Mr. Ford writes about the soldier must do in addition to his military work, recreation, and the advantages, aside from the oppor- tunity for earning a commission that the enlisted man has. If he saves only five dollars a month and depos- its it with the Army Banking Sys- tem, he may retire at the end of thirty years service with ten thou- sand dollars in cash, and a pension of one hundred dollars a month. At the time of his retirement he should probably still be under fifty, or very close to it. However, ten thousand dollars and a pension of one hundred dollars a month doesn’t seem to be too much for a man of fifty with a wife and two or three growing children. The life of a soldier is fully ex- plained in the section, and the des- cription of a day in the Army is very interesting although getting up at six o'clock on a cold winter morning isn’t exactly every person’s idea of Utopia. There are many courses open to men who are qual- ified. Among the many schools are the Cavalry School, Chemical War- fare, Coast Artillery, Engineering, Dental, Finance, and the Signal Corps School. These schools teach high finance. In the United States, officers’ com- missions are granted in the Regular Army, the National Guard, and the organized . Reserves, by the Presi- dent. The officers’ complicated work, duties, and training are dis- cussed minutely by Mr. Ford. In one place he mentions that almost every country in the world, except the Glorious Resurrection! Christ How sad and lonely was the road That Jesus, our Redeemer, trod! Jesus could not be held of Death. the United States, has the rank of Field Marshall for commanders of services such as the Finance De- partment or the Judge Advocate’s work of the American Military In- stitute. He knows the Army thor- oughly, and in addition to all his facts, including historical data, the book has fine drawings on every topic discussed. This is a very excellent and time- ly book. It is full of definite precise informatioin that the people are looking for. It should have the large sale this reviewer hopes for it. ee QA pe WHAT THE CITIZEN SHOULD KNOW ABOUT THE NAVY By Hanson W. Baldwin W. W. Norton & Co., Inc., Publishers March 8, 1941—$2.00 Reviewed by Bernard Smith Hanson W. Baldwin is on com- pletely familiar ground when he writes of the Navy. He is a grad- uate of Annapolis, and is now the naval specialist of the New York Times. As a result, What The Citizen Should Know About The Navy is an informative, up-to-date, and com- plete book about the first line of defense of the United States. If anything, it is too complete, and at times encyclopedic. Pages of tables, diagrams, and statistics lend to a textbookish atmosphere that is bare- ly dissipated by a brisk, running narrative. Every conceivable phase of naval operations seems to be cov- ered. The book opens with a general discussion of the importance of sea power. It goes on to tell the life of the enlisted man in the navy; his train- ing, pay, chances of advancement, and life aboard ship. latter, it seems inconceivable that anybody would willingly join the navy, knowing the daily schedule he must follow. As presented by Mr. Baldwin, it goes something like this: up at four A. M.; breakfast; shine the brightwork; knock off the bright- Department, the book becomes a | little dull, although the reader be-'! comes interested again as soon as | ‘the author starts a discussion of the | Chemical Warfare Department. The! agents,odors, and effects of many of | the main gases are identified for the reader. The section on the Conduct of War should be very interesting to the layman. Everything technical has been left out, and the whole section comes down to one impor- tant idea. Success in our war de- pends mainly upon good leadership. Without skillful generals the army is on the way to defeat no matter how fine its equipment is or how well-trained the troops are. Mr. Ford tries to show people in this Country how they can best serve their Army by learning more about it, and not just taking it for granted as they have been doing for the last twenty years. He needn't worry himself too much on that point. The American people are taking their Army very seriously at this particular time. They realize that it is a tremendously important factor in their lives. This book is one of a group of three, designed to acquaint the citi- zen with the Army, the Navy, and the Coast Guard. They are all by important writers who are thorough- ly versed in their particular fields. Mr. Ford is a reserve officer on duty in the office of the Chief of Field Artillery. He is assistant editor of the United States Field Artillery work; inspection and setting up ex- ercises; general drill; dinner; sweep decks; drill; sweep down; knock off brightworks; clear decks; supper; sweep decks; scrub clothes; drill; and so to bed. The impression is given that the decks of a battleship must soon be worn by such continual sweeping. The author goes on to tell of the naval officer; his pay, training, duties, and chances for advance- ment. An interesting matter for discussion is brought up here, al- though Mr. Baldwin neither con- demns nor condones, but follows his policy of mere statement of fact. There is decided social discrimina- tion between the Naval Academy graduate and the non-graduate. Two officers may be of the same rank, but if one is a graduate of Annapolis and the other is not, a definite gulf remains between them. The first may rise to a high commission, while the second has little chance of do- ing so. Definite cliques of Naval Academy graduates are formed which are im- pregnable to non-graduates. This system is obviously open to adverse criticism, and has recently been at- tacked in magazine articles. The various types of fighting ships are next discussed so that the reader will know the difference be- tween a battleship, a battle cruiser, a destroyer, and a cruiser. ‘The fleet as a whole is taken up along with the elements of tactics and strategy. Fortunately the author As to the The greater naval grip of the British on the Mediterranean lines of communication, vital to large- scale Axis operations outside Eu- rope, assures a major Nazi head- ache over supplying a Libyan cam- paign. Nazi air power, though able to ferry across from Sicily, lacks air- dromes, ground crews and fuel for any air blitz to be launched simul- taneously with the Balkan offensive; the Nazi need now for air superior- | ity in three theatres of Sverations—1 The British Isles, the Balkans, North | Africa—does not seem attainable. General Wavell has added up| these probabilities, in order to fig-; ure out his own chances. The re- sult seems to be that the British expect to wear down the Nazi-in- spired counter-offensive from Trip- oli as a local operation with close cooperation between the Army and Navy. Wiping out the other threat to Suez, continuance of Italian re- sistance to the British campaign of liquidation in Ethiopia, is being | rushed to get ahead of the rains. | Very little now stands between the British and complete surrender of Italian forces on the Red Sea flank. British Are Stronger This destruction of the East Afri- can empire of the Italians is essen- tial for the solution of Wavell’s ma- jor strategic problem: blocking Hit- ler in the Near East. Once the Mussolini is destroyed, the new Bal- kan pressure from Hitler can be met with assured supply lines. It is true that the British have “swept” the Mediterranean to bring through con- voy after convoy for both the Army of the Nile and for the Greek cam- paign. The greater security of Ethiopian threat of | THE SAFETY VALVE This column is open to everyone. Letters should be plainly written and signed. Editor, The Post: The Wyoming Valley Council, Girl Scouts, wish to take this opportun- ity to express our thanks for the fine articles which have appeared in recent issues of the Dallas Post. We are always very appreciative of the space that you have so willingly given us. . May we look forward to your con- tinued support and co-operation? Sincerely yours, Dorothy Page Conrad, Director. —_——— : April 7, 1941. Editor the Post: — I have read your fine editorial ap- pearing in The Dallas Post under date of March 28th and I deeply appreciate your complimentary ex- pressions in this matter. Sincerely yours, Arthur H. James. Governor's Office Harrisburg, Pa. SONG The year’s at the spring And day’s at the morn; Morning’s at seven; The hillside’s dew-pearl’d; The lark’s on the wing; The snail’s on the thorn: God’s in His heaven— All’s right with the world! Robert Browning. “LOVLIEST OF TREES” Lovliest of trees, the cherry now Is hung with bloom along the bough, And stands about the woodland ride, Wearing white for Eastertide. Now of my threescore years and ten, Twenty will not come again, And take from seventy springs a score, It only leaves me fifty more. And since to look at things in bloom Fifty springs are little room, About the woodlands I will go To see the cherry hung with snow. A. E. Housman. ly back upon the culminating de- struction of Britain herself to finish the war by September. Such a campaign envisages the disruption of Yugoslavia by the de- struction of Serb military resistance; the folding up of the Greek front on the Albanian and Thracian wings; the ejection of the British from Mainland Greece, with the con- sequential loss of sea and air power between the Adriatic and the Aegean. This concept of German strategy disregards the Soviet Un- ion, probably correctly as even a likely military factor so long as the longer lines of supply converging in the Indian’ Ocean for the final dash to the Mediterranean via the Red Seat is paramount. Unless Hitler believes that he can smash through the Balkans, crack Turkey astride the Straits and seize the whole Near East, the Nazi strat- egy aims only at restoring security Britain is finished off in the west. This means that the Reichswehr leadership intends to overrun the Balkans with the typical britzkrieg attack of depth and then turn swift- reader is not lost in a maze of naval techniques. The importance of naval bases, the relationship of air power to sea power, and the problems of equip- ment and communications are all taken up in this book. What The Citizen Should Know About The Navy is a book that should interest any man or boy who has ever thought about signing up for a term in the navy. As a hand- book of naval information it is ex- cellent. And once the reader has finished this book, he can indeed think himself an expert on matters in the rear of German arms while | Nazi can localize their operations | to the west. Eyes On Arab Oil If the Nazis do not so intend to handle what for the moment looks like a punitive expedition to re- store “order” in the Balkans, then the ‘war will spread from the Near East to the Middle East. The spread will be very rapid unless the Germans are stopped before they get a bridgehead into Asia Minor. We must remember that the Nazis have intrigued throughout the Arab world to burst open new trouble for the British between the Levant Coast and the Persian Gulf. This is the longer-range objective of oil, and, beyond that, even India. These explosives of Asiatic poli- tics are well known however. More than a ninety-day time scale is in- volved; for that reason, I am not letting my eyes be taken far away from the European Continent. For Hitler, the British in the British Isles remain the key to final vic- tory. A spreading war means a longer war. A longer war means the ex- haustion of the Axis in Europe— greater pressure against the dicta- tors from the outside world steadily naval. lining up against Hitlerism. ro Jesus Christ is risen today, 4 eluia! A Our triumphant holy day, Alleluia! : Who did once upon the cross, Alleluia! Suffer to redeem our loss, Alleluia! The melody is now one of the “JESUS CHRISG IS RISEN GODIY; - ~ » LATIN 14% CENTURY . . . —_—o » This favorite Easter hymn. with neity of joy, is no doubt a translation of a 14th Century Latin hymn. » / its swelling Alleluias and sponta- most famous of all Easter carols. Journal, and has been active in the writes clearly enough so that the (hm A 3) HOWARD H.WOOLBERT FUNERAL DIRECTOR DALLAS 400 ® SHAVERTOWN; PA,