THE LISTENING POST By THE VETERAN Pots go right on calling the kettles black. The latest materialization of this absurd political habit was widely publicized after District Attorney Leon Schwartz had addressed the first rally of the Luzerne County Repub- Schwartz denounced, and asked Republicans to destroy, the impli- cation of the Democratic county ticket posters. Done in a beautiful array of the national colors and with a licans. plea for support of Defense, the slate cards are really splendid in design. They must be good, or they would not be denounced by the opposition. Take it for granted that the Dem- ocrats were alive to the possibility of trading-in on the national im- pulse to join the international sui- cide. But, what did the Republicans do? They borrowed the “V” cam- paign for their county posters. Lib- erty Magazine borrowed it too. Lib- erty published in its latest issue, a cover with the arms of Adolph Hit- ler spread up from his picayune head, so that the arms perfectly formed the “V” of victory. But, in the six weeks that must elapse be- tween acceptance of a cover design and the actual appearance in the hands of the public, the “V” page had come to represent the Hitler conquest in Russia, which was ex- actly what Liberty didn’ t want it to suggest. The Republican cards with the “Vy” design also are an attempt to trade-in on American pressure to- ward war and all it connotes. So, it is simply another case of name-call- ing. Both parties would be very silly, indeed, if they failed to note the ttends and take advantage of them, If there is differentiation at all, between the Unterrified and the G. O. P. it is on the side of the . New Dealers; because, after all, they are making the war, aren’t they? And with all the help that a ma- jority of Republicans can give them, ©00. Fear Light Vote __If there is consensus in the minds of politicians, in Luzerne County, it is on the side of fear, and what to do about it, Politicians big and lit- tle are afraid that there is going to be a very light vote, even though the people face a judicial test that may change the party majority of the Bench, and choice of officers who deal with all the court business of the people and with the stop- watch on the race to county default and bankruptcy. Fear of a light vote is tinctured by hope. The Republicans to large degree have remote consolation in the possibility that a light vote may mean a G. O. P. conquest, since on the side of the Republicans there are more jobs, better organization, more direct means of inducing favor. The Republicans build from the bot- tom up, when organization is to be constructed. The Democrats nomi- nate the very finest tickets, then forget that county battles are won by the boys and girls who get out in the townships, boroughs and cit- ies to elect burgesses, tax collectors and school directors. So, a light vote ought to favor the Republicans. Any trend toward a heavy vote should be motivated from belief in President Roosevelt, and in the necessity of arming the provinces with sympathetic small governments, whether of the home community or the collective county. One would suppose, then, that the Republicans would seek to keep down the vote; but, that would be against the forensics, the frenetics, the enthusiasms. Political speakers must make speeches, they must tour, they must coax and cajole. All of which will help to get out the vote. A layman looking at the scene without undue expectations either way will tell you that it is going to be hard to get out the vote, unless something happens. All the glory- burners have done so far is to leave the public stubbornly apathetic to what's coming. Even when it comes, there will need to be a weight of happening back of it to get the av- erage citizen sentimentally em- broiled. The average citizen feels as though something is being pulled and that the great likelihood is that it is his leg. Wallis Speaks Up The Junior John B. Wallis, Coun- ty Treasurer by grace of Republican choice, went all the way out as a critic of his party this week. In private conversation the genial and highly religious Mr. Wallis had said that the people of Luzerne County would be frantically silly if they permitted his party to get control of all the county business offices. In particular he mentioned the Con- troller’s office, because there is where budgets are scanned, recom- mendations made, audits performed against possible extravagance. Then Wallis made his opinion wholly public. In a letter to the County Commissioners he cited their own resolutions as carried in the minutes of their own secretaries, to prove that on the one hand they were plunging Old Luzerne into de- fault and bankruptcy, and on the other hand were resolving two or- ders so opposite to each. other as to be impossible for him to obey. One resolution recited the borrowing of a million dollars on tax anticipation to be paid back December first. The other resolution ordered the Treas- urer to transfer tax funds to meet the due dates of bonded debts and interest charges. In his letter received at this week’s business meeting of the Commissioners, the Treasurer cited the pledge by which Penn Mutual Insurance Company extended a loan of one million dollars. The pledge a million dollars on tax anticipation, was that all incoming 1941 taxes would be deposited in Miners Nat- ional and Second National banks to pay off the loan on December first, with whatever interest charges were thereto appended. The second reso- lution sought diversion of the same taxes to meet the bonded debts and interest coupons. To do both, said Wallis, is impossible. So, he informed the County Com- missioners that he will default on the bonds and coupons and pay off the loan. If necessary, he said, he also will default on the November and December payrolls of county of- ficers and employers. He fixed the blame directly on the Commission- ers for failing to provide a sinking fund against the duedates of bonds and coupons. No Word From Fredna No one hereabouts seems to know just when Fred and Edna Kiefer are to get home from Alaska. What brought the matter to this vet- eran’s mind was that no less than three judicial candidates want to meet Fred and his Dallas friends before election day. The hunting Kiefers ran a-foul of War Defense on their way in; then they ran plumb into Aid to Russia on the way out. ( A trip that should have been con- summated in early October gives promise of indeterminate extension. A whole week the Kiefers were held back in Seattle, awaiting a boat to Seward in Alaska. Then, when they had spent five weeks garnering white mountain sheep and Kodiak bear from the thumb-out of our far northwestern possession they discovered there was no as- surance as yet of a passage back to the States. Alaska waters and the Pacific Coast were bristling with cargo boats carrying all manner of munitions and material of warfare. J Abandons Politics ? As .a stormy petrel of politics, Paul Winter of Trucksville keeps on making the news. Years have passed since Paul led the legions of the Klan down Wyoming avenue, in a grand car implemented by uni- formed servitors. From then forward Paul: Winter alternated as a New Deal field man on State pay or as a county servant attached to the Re- publican payroll. He resigned his latest job, tax clerk to the Luzerne County Commissioners, It is under- stood he has made a better connec- tion with a national advertising firm, In The Sixth You can get a bet on two radic- ally different surmises as to what this Sixth District is going to doin the forthcoming elections. Men who gamble on the people’s whims have one construction of thought along the line of a split result, with Flan- nery breaking through to carry the top vote from a Republican strong- hold. There is a tendency also to favor the chances of Controller Rob- ert Bierly and Prothonotary Peter Margie, both of whom have done fine jobs. But, you also may gamble on the proposition that the Sixth will cars ry a straight Republican majority, for all hands, including Thomas M. Lewis to succeed Judge B. R. Jones and Judge Andrew Hourigan to re- main where Governor James put him, as President Judge of the Eleventh District Orphans Court. One thing to be said for Flannery is that he is striving with might and main to go up with his running- mate, John Hilary Bonin. Birth Certificate No one is applauding the decis- ion of Director Tom Williams of the State Bureau of Vital Statistics, to prevent professional messengers get- ting birth certificates for clients at a charge above the legal fee. The legal fee is one dollar for certifica- | tion of birth in 1906 or later; with | $2.50 for entering and certifying a birth in the years earlier than 1906. But citizens should remember that | they can get birth certificates in | their own county courts and Reg- ister’s office if they were born earlier than 1906. Tom Williams was a Wilkes-Barre councilman, a bad one as politics goes. His nemesis was John Nobel, honest man. The Bureau of Vital Statistics is a thumb in the eye of the James Administration. This old man of the prints wrote a letter to that bureau seven and one-half months ago and is still waiting for an answer. Men whose jobs depend on their birth records have lost the jobs for weeks and months while waiting to prove their American birthright. Tom Wiiliams might have done worse then to let the professional messengers stay in bus- iness. They were cutting down de- lays. Dorothy James Gossip ran wild about Wyoming Valley at week-end when it was dis- covered that Miss Dorothy James had been spending an unscheduled vacation at the home of her secre- tary, Miss Jean Griffin, in Ashely. The tongue-wagging lashed on the proposition that, displaced as First Lady by a second marriage of the Governor, her father, Miss James was not exactly thrilled by the demotion. If there have been better state- ments in ‘support of stepmothers, better than the one Dorothy James made at the time of the ceremony, and after at the reception, this old THE POST, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1941 hack never has read it. The charm- ing young lady who saw her father through almost three years of his administration was composed in ac- ceptance of her new mama and even elegant in her praises of the fine traits of the new First Lady. What Miss James was doing in Wyoming Valley on her unan- nounced vacation was a matter of personal relationship and sympathy. The nurse who had looked after her mother, and cared for other mem- bers of her family, Miss Jean Ichter, was ill. And Miss James was staying close at hand to see to it that she was on the road to recov- ery. She sought no attention. Fact is, Miss James traveled about in the car of her secretary, with Miss Grif- fin at the wheel. Miss Griffin said that she would put the car in stor- age and both she and Miss James would be back in Harrisburg this week, HUNTSVILLE Miss Betty Rood and Miss Gene Weiss spemt last Sunday visiting Miss Rood’s parents in Muhlenburg. Rummage Sale W. S. C. S. will conduct a rum- mage sale in the Lord Building, Main street, Luzerne, October 30, 31 and November 3. Antique Show Jackson Grange will sponsor an antique show in the Grange Hall, Saturday evening, October 25. The show will be open to any. exhibitor who has old relics to display. Special awards and a program will be pre- sented. Refreshments will be sold. Give Wiener Roast Miss Mary Mekeel, Mys. Richard Owens and Mrs. Richard Rice enter- tained recently at a wiener roast honoring their brothe,r Charles of Pittsburgh, who left for Camp Lee, Monday. Present were: Mr. and Mrs. Fred Harloss, Mr. and Mrs, Stanley Case, -Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Kun- kle, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Coolbaugh, Mr. and Mrs. George Taylor, Mr. and Mrs, Emmet Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mekeel, Mr. and Mrs. George L. Rice, Mrs. Russell Cease, Mrs. Elmer Labaugh, Rhoda Thomas, May Smith, Jane Owens, Lois Jean Taylor, Miss Stark, Glen Case, Paul Walters, Harold Rice, Howard Rice, Jack Tribler, Harold Coolbaugh and Bobby Rice. SWEET VALLEY Misses Thelma Updyke and Bess Klinetob spent last week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Smith at Pot- ters Mills. The small son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Natt has returned from Moses Taylor Hospital. Larue, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- lard Sutliff, submitted to an opera- tion at the Nesbitt Hospital last week, Miss Neva Hagenbaugh R. N., has left for Flint, Michigan to visit her sister. Mr .and Mrs. Herbert Ross have purchased a home at Bloomingdale. Mr .and Mrs. Ralph Naugle of Harrisburg recently spent a few days with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hoover and Mr. and Mrs. Torence Naugle. Dop-In Party Mrs. Parris Callander was hostess at a drop-in party last Tuesday eve- ning. Present were: Mrs. Lucy Kel- ler, Mrs. Hattie Edwards, Mrs. Leon Dodson, Naomi Dodson, Mrs. Charles Long, Mrs. Loren Cragle, Rev. Ira Button and Mr. and Mrs. Parris Cal- lander. Dallas Alumni Twenty-six members of the Dallas Borough Alumni Association met at the high school Tuesday evening to make plans for a Hallowe'en party, Thursday, October 30. Committee: Rhoda Thomas, Rhoda Veitch, Gert- rude Kintz, Bill Baker, Dick Major and Roy Verfaille. Next meeting will be held at 8 o'clock, November 11th. City Dweller Thrills To Fall Beauty Along Highway Route From Tunkhannock To Dallas Without Equal In State By Mgrs. T. M. B. Hicks JR. Each October, when the foliage begins to turn, I take a trip along | | | J | gray stone wall against the same background. $ © OPEN LATE Friday & Saturday Nights! Eat More Meat for Health All Meat is 96 to 98 per cent digestible and contains plenty of the necessary Vitamins. You can always depend upon Acme Quality Meats—Real value in Acme Meats—Complete satis- © paGE THREB | by this time any driver ought to If you have ever lived in a sec- tion of the country where water is | at a premium you can better appre- cidte the lovely little brooks and streams hereabouts. I notice that some enterprising folks are even! having themselves a lake Whats! no lake grows before. The only thing I really miss sol this scenery is the somber back- drop of white pine to bring out the pastels. There seems to be ‘compar- | atively little dark evergreen growth to provide contrast to the flaming hardwoods. ®ut in the Pacific Northwest, the situation is reversed. There is plenty of pine and Douglas- fir and redwood, but no maples and brilliant hickories. You don’t realize what it is that you miss until all of a sudden it dawns on you—no au- tumn coloring. Nothing but dense forests, lofty and remote, where no sun filters through, a fitting foot- note to the glacier-crowned Cas- cades, but too silent and withdrawn to seem homelike. Scenery around here is much easier to live with. The hills are not too high, the woods are nice gentle woods, the streams, run more quietly. Cleared fields look as if they had been cut out of the mass of colors with a pair of sharp scis- sors. Comfortable red barns, well- kept houses, stone fences, familiar little brooks. A gracious place to live. The Dearest Thing A woman is the dearest thing That nature gave to man. She’s mothered him and babied him | Since first the world began. : Route Six, straight across the state of Pennsylvania, turn north at War- ren and pay a visit to Chautaqua County, New York State. Until this year I have always felt that the most rewarding . scenery and the best and most vivid coloring lay at the far end of the road, and cross- ing the High Alleghenies; but since taking the new route from Kings- ton to Tunkhannock instead of the older one along the river, I am be- ginning to be doubtful. Each curve in the new road shows a more beautiful picture than the last. There is a stone barn with a stone ‘silo, situated high on a hill about a mile and a half east of Beaumont. Somebody with an eye to a view ought to buy that barn and revamp it into a summer home. It would be hard to find a better location, near. enough to town and to a ‘main-travelled highway to make it easily accessible, far enough from town to be away from the crowd, high enough to insure sparkling days and cool nights. There is a truly remarkable view of the surrounding country to be had from the jumping-off-place at the top of the steep and rocky road which connects Beaumont with the road running between Noxen and Harvey's Lake. The last time I drove over the road, some two or three days ago, it resembled nothing so much as the dry bed of a mountain torrent, but it was worth the climb. The car hiccoughed and spit, the springs protested and the passen- gers hit the roof going over one boulder, but the view from the top compensated. It pays to get this particular view just before sunset, when the coloring is changing fast and the blue shadows begin to march across the hills to the West. Going down the other side of the hill is just as bad as coming up, but She mends his clothes and cooks his meals And caters to each whim. Yes, woman is the dearest thing know what to expect. There is a That ever came to him. steep pitch toward the bottom, a narrow bridge, and then a sudden upturn to meet the Noxen road. The ‘thing to do is to lean on the horn and shoot up the incline as fast as possible, hoping that no- body will collide with you at the top. This road would give a flat- country driver from Delaware or Tide-Water Virginia acute heart- failure, but people who are accus-| Ah, truly she’s the dearest thing. tomed to taking their scenery on That over dirie to man the perpendicular think nothing of R B it. . Bus On the stretch of road leading from Dallas to Huntsville Dam there is a succession of the best-looking and best-kept stone fences in the district. High and wide and solidly constructed, they have doubtless stood for many years and look equal to a couple hundred more. In She never misses at a sale; She wants her own coupe. She never likes to wear again The dress she wears today. She “charges” things, he pays ny them On some extended plan. SOAP SPECIALS: Ivory Soap Chautauqua County there are very 4 hey 2 ic few stone fences, though stone cakes abounds in some of the hillside large guest pastures. There was another and Qe 19c: aire 21 9c handier way of making a fence in ; the days when the land was being Oxy d ol ww 21° pkg cleared. Instead of having the little medinm size pkg 9c boys of the household carry stones large on aching arms, the farmer hitched wll a team of oxen to a stump, tore it Camay out with a mighty heave, and set Toilet Soap it up edgewise with the dirt still clinging to it, its roots enlaced with that of the next stump in line. Those old stump fences are growing scarce and are being replaced by modern barbed wire, but numbers of them in a fairly good state of preservation are still to be seen in the more remote districts of western New York, Their grotesquely twisted roots silhouetted against vivid red sun make as telling a contrast as a 1 L 4 cakes 2 5c | Chipso fo med. Cc ®large 2 1 : pkg a Pkg When you borrow—borrow at bank rates Toit You make Selox You You 6% Discount Plus 12 monthly borrow | receive | Life Insurance |Payments of 2 pkize 2 8c $108.00 $100.44 $ 7.56 $ 9.00 216.00 | 200.88 15.12 18.00 White 324.00 301.32 22.68 217.00 | P. k PIG. Naphtha 520.00 | 502.20 37.80 soo |} SOAP You need not be a depositor to apply for a low cost banking loan No Collateral . . . No Co-Makers Required The FIRST NATIONAL BANK Of Wilkes-Barre 59 Public Square = Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. tH cakes 25¢ Ivory Flakes | Ivory Show we Oe hr 22¢ || Lava Soap ; || 319° Rome | | | Super Markets faction guaranteed. Best Center Cuts CHUCK Roast Tender Beef Liver b &5C0 Sliced Bacon pk 23 2§c > L16cC 8-0z Best Center Cuts Pork Chops + 29° Eat Pork for Health, Scrapple > 12c/Sausage Philadelphia style. Lean Rib End Po. k Loi 21° Cut in chops if you wish. Fresh Breakfast Pan style. Swift's Premium Bologna Swift's Premium Meat Loaves *™ 13c Long, Ring or Minced ~ Baked, Pickle and Pimento, Macaroni and Cheese. 31c »28c Boneless Skinned Cod Fillets or Ocean Perch Fillets Fancy Stewing Oysters >. 29c Large Round Whiting » Lc nm gc Large Variety---Fresh Fruits and Vegetables CABBAGE Solid Heads n PC YAMS io 4-17 + GRAPES © 2 ~ 15° Large Juicy Calif. Oranges dozen 35¢ U. S$. Ne. | Yellow Onions 5s 6c Pancy Washed €arrots 21s 5¢ 2 large bunches [$e . Crisp Celery Hearts : “THE BUY OF THE WEEK" dozen $1.29 Case of 24 cans $2.58 45C0 Fancy Hand Packed TOMATOES “ET can . 1941 New Pack---Fresh From The Fields Specially selected, vine-ripened, thoroughly washed, peeled and carefully by hand immediately after picking to retain their garden-fresh ed Pad A really special buy at this price. Del Maiz Niblets Corn °*t 10c¢ Phillips Beans "i, For and A can 19¢ Kleen Kut Spaghetti ee 10C Demestic Tomato Paste 4 *™ 23c Clapp’s Strained Foods 3 =" Qc E-Z Serve Liver Loaf 12-0z 28¢ Fancy Woodside Roll or Fine Quality Tub BUTTER 2:73°| Gobd Seal “All-Purpose” Family FLOUR 24:85° “Rlithon 24 bag $1.08 Gold Medal Flour Fine Quality Pure Lard 2 ™ 23c Rockwood Chocolate Bits 2 o=-28¢ Duff's Ginger Bread Mix oz 1Qc Gobd Seal Cake Flour sree 4c Ocean Spray Cranberry Sauce eas 12¢ NBC Ritz Butter Crackers = 20¢ MBC Shredded Wheat 27 9c Maxwell House Coffee * 3le Bonnie Oak Evaporated Milk 10 5. 79c Puss 'N Boots Cat Feod 4 => 19c Sunbrite Cleanser 5" 3° 13¢ . Woadbueys Facial Soar bar le | Fresh | Baked, Ae orted DONUTS dozen I 2C Very delicious—low price. Win-Crest Mild COFFEE Save the coupons for valuable premiums. rer: Enriched aD large 2. Save 30 % You’ll like our ‘“heat-flo” Roasted Coffee. fuller, fresher, better flavor because it is ‘“heat-flo” Roasted. Try a pound today. All Prices Effective to Close of Business Saturday, Oct. 25, in Your Nearby A Acme, 17° on Bread. 2" 37 Richer, »