7 THE SENTIM By EDITH BLEZ ENTAL SIDE Today the new young lady in our house is having a birthday! The new young lady who took the place of the baby we used to have has reached the ripe old age of seventeen. She is a Senior in High School and it won't be very long before she will be on her way to college! We hope you will forgive us for being just a little sentimental on the seventeenth birthday of the young person who has be- come an adult all too quickly to suit us. For seventeen years we have watched this child who was first a helpless baby, then a noisy, rowdy little girl, then a self-conscious ado- lescent, grow into a real young lady. We have known her as we know no other person in the world. We have been closer to. her than any other person. we have ever known. We seem to have lived a second life with her. We have never felt that we have been a good mother because there are so many qualities a good mother possesses which we seem to lack but even though we have made mis- takes we feel that it has been a rare privilege to raise a daughter. We like to remember the fat cuddly baby who seemed to climb all over us. It is but yesterday that she smelled so sweet after her bath. Her fat cheeks were so pink and she thought her toes so amusing. Then we went through the stage when the baby became a general nuisance, everything had to be put out of her reach, and her favorite indoor sport was to get all the pots and pans out of the kitchen closet and scatter them where someone was sure to fall over them; then for the last four years we have struggled with an adolescent who had a difficult time in what she considered a hostile world. We know we have fussed and fumed when silence would have been much wiser. We know we have found fault too many times but | nevertheless the new young lady and I have always been good friends; and even though we are re- luctant to leave the baby and the adolescent so far behind it is good to see that our new young lady is fast becoming a fine adult. We like this seventeen-year-old daughter of ours because she appears to have both feet very firmly on the ground. Above everything else she is fearless. She has learned at an early age to “take it.” She dares to be herself and yet she isn’t rude and inconsiderate of others. She loves the out-of-doors and she has learned to appreciate good music and good literature. We suspect we are just a little partial to our new young lady, but we think she is one of the nicest, if not the nicest, per- sons we have ever known! = RE FREEDOM Phe eolumnists and con- trfbuters on this page are allowed great mn esprossing their own opin- i1ems, oven when their opiniens are at veriance with these of The Post = — “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. “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. Single copies, at a rate of 5c each, can be obtained every Fri- day ‘morning at the following newsstands: Dallas: Hislop’s Rest- aurant, Tally-Ho Grille; Shaver- town, Evans’ Drug Store; Trucks- ville, Leonard’s Store; Huntsville, Frantz Fairlawn Store. Editor and Publisher HOWARD W. RISLEY Associate Editor MYRA ZEISER RISLEY Contributing Editor JOHN V. HEFFERNAN Advertising Department THE LOW DOWN FROM HICKORY GROVE This is a queer and fun- ny era. You will look high and low and find no one who 1s sure of anything— except that trouble 1s lurking around the corner. Farmers don’t know which way t o turn. Whether to raise more or to raise less keeps ’em in a quandry. Every . farmer needs a secretary. Other- wise, if he just farms and raises what he can raise best, he may do the wrong thing and find himself in a government jail. Every- . body is fearful of some- thing. It may be inflation. It may be socialism hov- ering over us. It don’t seem like the U. S. A. But, here and there, are faint flickers of re- turning confidence, like where the folks there in Illinois and Colorado and Washington state, and some others, are electing themself a square-jawed governor. “Where there 1s life there is hope” is a saying as old as the hills—and there 1s still mo law against it, yet. Yours with the low down, JO SERRA POETRY Winter Song By Sara Van Alstyne Allen Sing a song of snowflakes In the winter sky. Sing a song of a smooth pond And skaters gliding by. Sing a song of sleigh bells Ringing clear and sweet. Sing a song of a white fence Where tree and meadow meet. Sing a song of icicles Shining smooth and bright. | Sing a song of footprints On a path of white. And a window glowing With a welcoming light. Sing a song of home again In the winter night. Street Lamps by one, the sun flowers they bloom gloom. not know, slow a-bloom. November Night Listen . . . With faint dry sound, Like steps of passing ghosts, The leaves, frost-crisped, break from the trees And fall. —Adelaide Crapsey The Warning Just now, Out of the strange Still dusk . . . as strange as still, A white moth flew. Why am I JOSEPH ELICKER grown HARRY LEE SMITH So old? —Adelaide Crapsey é@ . "ws LPanGe LINGUS GLORIOSI Now, my tongue the mystery telling Of the glorious Body sing And the Blood. all price excelling and King, = Once on earth amongst us dwelling Shed for this world's ransoming. Which the Gentiles’ Lord A SEER Thomas Written by St. Aquinas for the office of Corpus Christi in 1263, this, the greatest of all Communion hymns, is modelled on the Pange Lingua of Fortunatus. The translation is based on the versions of Caswall and Neale. ali Zs) Qu UE RR: 3 FUNERAL DIRECTOR DALLAS 400 ® SHAVERTOWN, PA. nd ad ut Softly they take their being, one |p From the lamp-lighter’s hand, after 4 Has dropped to dusk . . . like little | § Set in long rows amid the growing i iXg Who he is who lights them, I do |&2 Except that, every eve, with footfall f And regular, he passes by my room | i And sets his gusty flowers of light | 24 "SECOND THOUGHTS By javie aiche I wish I had, as a certain woman I know of has, the flair for the fire- side. It would please me no end to go back over the dear dead days and pick out the joys and thrills no longer apparent, all of them probably dated and impossible of collaboration with the confused world of today. What would be enthralling to me would be to know the aura of satiety, scintillant as a mantle of star-dust, that settled about a certain little fellow when the days had drawn to that juncture where the sun.in des- cent back of the blue. hills left no twilight and made compulsory the lighting of the big hanging lamp ov- er the dining room table. ! What there was about that trans- ition from natural light to artificial illumination I couldn’t say, not hav- ing the penetrative psychology of Mrs. Hicks, but the suffusion that became an intangible cocoon of con- tentment lasted right up to the new diversiqn, which was the first snow- fall. I should like to know again the planning of a bob-sled, the building of it, the testing of it on the foot- hills that reached to the top of Cen- ter street cobbles and then plunged a full load at devil-may-care speed all the day down to Main street. Why, when the snow does come the cleaners leave scarcely a vestige of it, and what they leave is so crushed by the wheels of traffic and so adul- terated by oil and dropping waste it wouldn't be of much use to a bob- sled. And, what’s more, who makes a bob at home anymore ? The facts, of course, are that the lighting of the lamps belongs to a primeval conception of home. There are any number of days now, even in the summer, when the clouds come and the sunshine fades. You turn a switch and there you are. And“how fast did a bob-sled go? For the clumsy kind we had and for the pitch of the hills that only seemed steep, the speed probably was never more than thirty-five miles an hour. How sorry in com- parison with the pace of fifty miles legally allowed to the motorcar, and the seventy miles an hour the cheapest of cars will roll off when chance offers to be free of the eyes and tickets of the law. Once in a while I meet a miner with a dinner bucket. I meet no one at all with a lunch box. The oddity of the occasional miner and the freedom from food preparedness evidenced by the majority of toilers far from home combine to suggest what children have lost in not be- ing able at the end of day to meet the old man on his way back from his shift, to grab his pail and forage for fodder, purposely left by him in anticipation of the search. He got as much fun out of it as the kids did. And I want to know if anyone goes hunting for mushrooms. Does anyone ever gather the luscious cups and miniature umbrellas of fungi, salt them down on the lid of the coal stove and then sip the nectar of the gods? No one of whom I know. Indeed, few whom I know have the hot stove-lids. The homes to the fretted gas lid. Last time I met a mushroom party it was made up of a group of Polish-American citizens. They had baskets of pickings, looked at them the varieties were they made me take a basket home. into the garbage can. ing of the dangerous streets, the of speeding motors. Maybe com- munity celebrations’ hold the an- swer, such as the one for Hallo- we’en; but, all too often I wonder: fun anymore ? LUGGAGE Suitcases and Bags for the Holidays Cheapest prices for quality merchandise JOHN LEIDLINGER 117 S. WASHINGTON ST. Dial 3-9459 Wilkes-Barre, Pa. JORDON Men's Furnishings and Hats QUALITY 9 West Market St. Wilkes-Barre TODAY'S FARMING PROBLEM The national emergency has created a labor shortage which can only be filled by labor saving machinery. Even in this field the demand is so great that deliveries are frequently uncertain. We can supply your needs from our large stock of famous Me- Cormick-Deering Equipment. but you can help national defense production by anti- cipating your needs. Call GEO. BULFORD HUNTSVILLE @ PHONE 311 Mail Coupon KINGSTON, PA. DIAL 72181 Please mail me complete charges. Name Address [J] Repairing New Roofs, Siding Ruggles Lumber Go. RAILROAD AND UNION STREETS Payment Plan on Building Costs which covers all cost of ma- terial and labor, with no down payment or other added finance I am interested in [1 Building It is understood this coupon is for information only and does not obligate me in any way. Ruggles Lumber Go. INCORPORATED RAILROAD AND UNION STREETS, KINGSTON, PA. Dial 7-2181 For Information information about your Time and [J Remodeling Rooms, Porches have gone electric or have recourse ! but when I|H what I mistakenly would call toad- | @ stools. To convince me I was wrong | a Only to please them, I did, and | i: then I threw the whole consignment | fi I'm getting in line with the Post's | § editorial columns and their arraign- |g 7 | torn town highways, the menacers |§ How in the world do kids have : rere CA TR LT Ea A Personal Loan Will Do It THE OF WILKES-BARRE 59 Public Square — 3 2 ~ FIRST NATIONAL BANK | 8 WHAT THOMAS M. LEWIS THOUGHT AND | ~ SAID OF GOVERNOR JAMES AND ANDREW HOURIGAN A FEW ‘SHORT WEEKS AGO: (From a public address by Thomas M. Lewis on September 2, 1941, when he was fighting Andrew Hourigan for the Republican nomination for Orphans’ Court Judge—a post to which Governor James refused to appoint Mr. Lewis.) James is for my opponent, Judge Hourigan. I am not surprised. However, what was disappointing to me is the fact that State employes who, in the past, were ordered to stay out of politics are now ordered to go up and down the County, together with County em- ployes, during working hours, to campaign for the : Governor's appointee (Judge Hourigan) and to cam- : q paign against me. Last year, during the Presidential campaign, Governor James directed State employes to keep out of politics yet, only a few weeks ago he fired William Hamilton, Jr., Secretary of Revenue : and a member of his cabinet, because of political ac- ad ob tivity in Philadelphia, his own County. “Now, the Governor, himself, is taking an active part in Judge Hourigan's campaign and is ordering State employes to go down the line for Judge Hourigan. State employes are used in State-owned buildings with light and janitor service paid for by you, the taxpayers, for political meetings on behalf of my opponent (Judge Hourigan.) Further, in his public attacks on Governor James and Judge Houri- Rr A ¢ gan, Mr. Lewis charged, and we quote Mr. Lewis; : i “State employes, during working hours, and at the expense of the taxpayers are tearing down and de- stroying my cards along the public highways and at the same time they are posting cards of my opponent (Judge Hourigan) on State owned property as well x as on the poles along the highway. 3 “Highway employes, on your time, are smearing my cards with tar and oil purchased by you taxpayers for the State roads. Are such tactics American? If you travel the highways you can daily see State : highway employes working against me and formy = = hy opponent (Judge Hourigan). | ; “] AM NOT BLAMING THESE EMPLOYES. THEIR HEARTS MUST BE WITH ME BUT THEY. ARE DI- RECTED BY THEIR SUPERIORS IN AN UN-AMERI- CAN CAMPAIGN!” The above are but a few of the thoughts pub- licly and only recently expressed by Mr. Lewis against Governor James and Andrew he Hourigan. The private, personal and off-record pieasan- tries and acrimonies thathave been ex- changed between Mr. Lewis and Judge Houri- gan would make interesting but not delight- a ful reading. HAS MR. LEWIS SINCE CHANGED HIS OPINION OF GOVERNOR JAMES, ANDREW HOURIGAN, HIS PRESENT RUNNING MATE, AND THE REPUBLICAN COUNTY LEADERS? WILL MR. LEWIS NOW REPEAT OR RETRACT THE CHARGE HE MADE PUBLICLY ON SEPTEMBER 2nd OF THIS YEAR THAT... * “THE REPUBLICAN ORGANIZATION OF LUZERNE COUNTY HAS SOLD PRINCIPLE AND PARTY DOWN THE RIVER.” LUZERNE COUNTY CITIZENS OF ALL PARTIES WHO BELIEVE IN ELECTING TO THE LUZERNE COUNTY BENCH MEN WHOSE PRI- VATE LIVES AND PUBLIC RECORDS ARE ABOVE REPROACH OR SUSPICION WILL VOTE THE STRAIGHT DEMOCRATIC TICKET. John Hilary Bonin for Orphans’ Court Robert Bierly for County Controller J. Harold Flannery for Common Pleas Court Harry Schaub for Clerk of the Courts Peter Margie for Prothonotary Patrick Finn for Jury Commissioner SRE Ae BRA