PAGE TWO BOMBER! | Commentary for the BOMBERS One American factory—one of many— One bomber—thousands on the way. An angel of death— Death to those who mock at free peoples, Death to those who tell the world they are out to > wreck the American democratic system. i Hundreds here—thousands—tens of thousands on the way. ¢ TEST FLIGHT Every part tested—every combat conditions. Off the ground now—for Power to say, ! ing over i world!” Europe. MEN, MACHINES, AND MATERIALS Here, you get her insides—aluminum alloy—light and strong— Steel, copper, brass—a dozen other metals ; Put together like a fine watch. Wings made strong to hold her high in the air while she delivers— pounding a super-powered motor Each wing built to take all the can give it. Here is the fire bath, where the bombers begins to grow. Born in fire to fight fire with fire. She is going to. have the guts, wind, stamina, to fight and deliver death—a bellyful of it—to those who are asking for it. Made of metals tempered and strong— Woven together—strong— American mass production, American knowhow...... Hands with knowhow mind These workers—these riveters, welders, drillers— a genuine pride in their share— {All these craftsmen have pride, their participation in the titan Production”. ASSEMBLY |Parts—more than twenty-five thousand for each ship. piece of metal tested— : Every bolt, rivet and welded seam—tested under the pressure of the first time as a complete fighting unit. Power—power to travel far, dump her bombs and return. «I can outfly and outfight any pursuit ship now fight- I am the strength of the people of the free _ THE POST, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1941 ema destroyer traveling the sky. £ N Ef These precision-built sections roll Day and night a wee Three hundred and sixty-five days a year .... Body, bones and wings roll and join into the form 4 of a finished breathing bomber. thousands in the air now ...... Bombers Tens of thousands on the way. The motor—raw, naked power—a She packs guns—so many guns in air Here is America strong-hearted— Keen—aware—alive. o s with American knowhow...... “You can count on me!” DAWN FLIGHT Dawn America flies into the dawn. T Bombers for a new day. “National Defense ic job we call ( | ow.” Betty was his wife and the old THE LISTENING POST | By THE VETERAN You wouldn’t know about it; not unless you had snooping proclivities and then were of the mind to go one floor higher than the elevator reaches in the marble place which i$ your county court house. Hidden away in what a naive architect designed as a jury room, a chamber in ks wis 5 cgorous youre win nd which the panel sitting on a given case was to have conferred for con- | Stark ks clusion of a verdict, there is a staff of Federal workers that seems des- tined to change the entire industrial picture in Luzerne County. The hide-away room is at the top of the walk-up flight of steps reach- ing the courthouse fourth floor—or didn’t you know there are that many floors in the million-dollar structure? Fact is, there are five floors: One sub-basement for ma- chinery and its attendants; one basement for office workers and maintenance men; one business floor; one Orphans Court and law- office floor; and the top floor given over to what is described in Bulletin 338, issued by Pennsylvania Depart- ment of Public Instruction, as “Ap- prentice Education Program and Plan of Co-Operation With Other Agencies.” Four services, two of them State and two of them Federal, have co- operated toward the perfection of an apprentice program. Besides the State Department of Public Instruc- tion there are: State Apprenticeship Council of the Department of Labor, Federal Committee on Apprentice- ship in the U. S. Department of La- bor, and the Office of Education of the U. S. Department of the Interior. Both the United States of Amer- ica and the Commonwealth of Penn- sylvania, therefore, are responsible for taking over your county court house fourth floor and installing there a French-American, Lester A. Loiselle, as director of a plan by which all industries of Luzerne County and nine neighboring coun- ties are afforded means of planning apprentice feeding of their interests. Lester A. Loiselle is a practical man, taken from the mechanical depart- ment of the Washington Times-Her- ald. With an executive staff housed at the court house, he himself stud- jes the industries and meets the managements of all manufacturers in Luzerne, Columbia, Union, Snyder, Northumberland, Montour, Tioga, Lycoming, Center and Clinton coun- ties. It is true that no industry in all that territory has ever had a suf- ficient program by which its ranks could be supplied from labor pre- pared to enter upon duties essetnial to success. It has been a hit-and- miss affair with all the industrial magnates, training employees from the ground up when they needed them, delayed for unconscionable times when a sudden ‘spurt was] needed in production and the slow | system of getting the qualified men stood as a handicap. If Loiselle and his staff succeed, there will be an apprentice program from which all the indutsries may draw. Universities, colleges, public schools and libraries are tied into the preparations, and the plan is to enroll young men at the age of six- teen years. Vocational training pre- pares them for crafts, skills, trades and business. The Federal-State ‘Rebel did win the battle. ' Back in 1918, when Franklin ' Roosevelt was Assistant Secretary of the United States Navy, he commis- | sioned a war vessel to a junket in | the waters off the Coast of Maine. | Roosevelt, an inveterate sailor, knew the Maine coast-line. He sails it often on his way to Campo Bello, [one of his summer retreats. Roose- a Lieutenant-Com- | mander. It ‘happened that Stark planners offer the means, set up| was head officer of that war vessel. the systems, bring about co-ordina- As they approached a port men- tion of resources and co-operation |aced by the rocky coast, Roosevelt of facilities; then the industries go suggested that he take over com- ahead to make their future secure, | mand and get the ship in. To which at the same time affording a rea- | Stark replied: “You may be one of sonable opportunity for the popula- | my Navy bosses; but I am in com- tions contiguous to their plants. | mand of this ship. You tell me All is brought about by an Act | where you want to go, Sir, but I am of Congress in 1937, dividing the | the man who will take you there.” United States into five regions over | Strangely enough, it was in remem- Hoh are 1% field Joi In pe | brance of that rebuff that Roosevelt istrict ' embracing io, Pennsyl-|as President went down fifty-five vania, West Virginia, Delaware, Vir- names on the seniority and promo- eo oe ora tae agents ¥ith Sie similar of miral William Leahy had been sent those o r. Loiselle. to Free France as Ambassador. It is apparent that an Act of Con- | : 3 gress adopted in 1937 was far in ad- | Wide-Open Primary vance of the actual emergency that| Democrats of P ennsylvania may at present faces the United States, | find themselves helpless to nominate because it was two years earlier |a candidate for Governor next year, than the first step toward aggression unless they go along with United and war in Europe, So, a mead of States Senator Joseph F. Guffey. commendation is due the people’s | The third and concluding act of a law-makers. They foresaw a need of | drama by which Guffey seeks to an apprentice supply and they pro- | make himself all-powerful is ex- ceeded to have the need fulfilled. | pected to be out in full glare of the Along came the war. And then it | political footlights long before the was discovered that even with the time when the G. O. P. and New foresight of the planners the start, Deal will square off for the guber- had been made too late. With plant | natorial set-to. development tremendous shortages| In nominating of Governor candi- soon became apparent. For instance, : date, the people have most to say there are jobs for 17,000 trained | when they entrust their desires to men in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh | their State committees. In local con- alone; but there are no trained men | tests the Primary election gives the to a a : The Syfen Si | peopl? Dow chance to exercise their ments of National Defense swamped | will. e reason for the difference all business and industrial manage-|in favor of State conventions and ments Svan site an Plgense 2 iy | committee nominations is that if per cent had been made in the fix- | the Primary alone were trusted, ation of standards by which employ- with all factions entering candi- jens cold Be gauged, . | dates, the certainty would be on the n Luzerne County, three develop- | side of the man with most money ments have taken place in conform- | and influence. ity with the apprentice program:| That is why Guffey wants a Prim- One at Vulcan Iron Works inary to replace the committee selec- Wilkes-Barre, one at West Pittston | tion of a Governor candidate. He ¥iiegs, and pe unis guidance of | tried the plan out when the State the unionized workers who are | Committee voted him down in 1938; chartered with the Wyoming Valley he tried it again, without success, Carpenters. Inclusion of a program | last year, when he opposed the in any industry or business is en- | State committee selection of Wag- tirely up to voluntary action by the | ner and Ross. But, in his third ef- plant and business managements.) fort it appears that Guffey may But, if they are interested, for them- | win, thanks to war and his Number selves and for the public, the new | One position with the Roosewelt Ad- service will furnish the means to the | ministration. If his plans carry there end. will be a wide-open nomination of the Democratic Governor candidate, How Stark Got Command with the State wide balloting to de- Fan-followers of Admiral Harold | termine the choice. That choice just Sa Eons of them since the naturally would be the man Senator ilkes-Barre native was name Guffey picked for the job. Chief of Operations for the United 2 States Navy, thrill to the story of how he was chosen by President Roosevelt against fifty-four senior naval officers higher up on the pro- motion list. Admiral Stark carries the nickname of “Betty” among navy men; and that is because his Revolutionary ancestor, fighting against the British, went into battle Excitement In Harrisburg With election over, a real break for the citizens of Pennsylvania may be expected, provided Governor James was sincere in his pre-elec- tion statements about inquiry into the forgery case stemming out of the State Treasurer’s office, and the scandal in the Department of Unem- “By Carl Sandburg Defense Film, “Bomber,” Produced by the Office for Emergency Management oo : Parts stacked up, waiting to be assembled and woven into a living We are taking these parts—weaving them into a thing that breathes and lives.... Breathes with the Spirit of America That says, “Don’t tread on me.” Made to stand heavy toil and struggle— 5) Made to stand shock and storm and heavy travel. 2 Ready to flank and outflank the ener y Packing enough power to climb over the highest anti-aircraft barrage. Everything under control. From hundreds of sub-assemblies— From scores of major assemblies— Twenty-four hours a day ..... Seven days John Henry on one wing—Paul Bunyan on the other! Wires—miles of wires link the nerve centers of the ship. A giant wing spar protects the cables from enemy gun fire. the Army won't let us tell about it— A flying arsenal—she’s the toughest, fightinest ship of her size Massive—honest—this wing seems to say, daylight. Over Europe, over Asia—night, black night. : YJumanity with all its fears, with all its hopes of future years, is hanging breathless on thy fate!” ; | (Courtesy Council For Democracy | into final Assembly. 4 Niagara of horse powi~= Director Kelly. The man who was Harold Wagner's first choice as an assistant, at present under hospital treatment, was named in a warrant which the Governor's attorney gen- eral was prepared to serve. Governor James said there was | more back of the $13,000 alleged | forgery of the Deputy Treasurer | than had been presented and he] was determined to find all the truth. Ernest Kelly at th same time said that the million-dollar fraud in un- employment compensation also will require considerably more exposure than has been given up to this time. Let James and Kelly do as both promised to do and the post-election period ought to make interesting reading. The only regret then would be that Colonel Philip Mathews, West Pointer, seems to be contented in being ousted as State Director of WPA. Friends of Mathews, who ran WPA without political interference, are sure his release is merely pre- liminary to appointment of Senator Joe Guffey’s friend, Ralph Bashore, to prepare for the Governor fight next year in behalf of Guffey’s choice. Bashore, it is remembered, even though he was Secretary of Labor, went along with Guffey in opposing Governor Earle, his boss, and the Guffey-Mundy ticket back in 1938. i NEED GLASSES? | Get them fitted properly. Get them quickly, see * Dr. Abe Finkelstein OPTOMETRIST Main Street, Luzerne Oliver's Garage Hudson Distributor DALLAS, PENNA. “SMILING SERVICE ALWAYS” JORDON Men’s Furnishings and Hats QUALITY Kunkle Elected For Fitt { ed Twelve Years As Council President When he takes office on Janu- ary 1, Warden Kunkle, high man in Tuesday’s election, will start his fifth term as a councilman in Dal- las Borough. Mr, Kunkle served con- tinuously on Borough Council from 1923 until August 1939 when he re- signed to make his home in Florida. Had he continued to serve until January 1940, he would have com- pleted sixteen years of continuous service to the Borough, twelve of those years as president of Council. During his tenure a program of street improvements was inaugu- rated that gave Dallas one of the best systems of streets for any Send your Soldier Boy the home town newspaper. THE DALLAS POST ! Wanta sell that old car, or sofa, or even a piano? POST Classified Ads can do it. McCormick-Deering , CORN 5S SHELLERS OE V/ 1B) order for these DEPENDABLE TIME & MONEY SAVERS Solidly constructed of the finest materials to last longer and stand the gaff. * See... GEO. BULFORD HUNTSVILLE, PA. ©® PHONE Dallas 311 Now is the time borough of similar size in the coun- ty. This work was finished almost 100 per cent from Borough funds and when he resigned during his unexpired term the borough had a current debt of less than $7,000. 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Com Mor. 4477 SY, east oF BROADWAY FORMERLY 44H. 57T. HOTEL YOUR PATR “More than a Every week it faithfully comes into your home . « « an honest, fearless champion for a better community . .. a suburban reporter that does VOICE of DEMOCRACY! You can help keep its voice lusty ! SUBSCRIPTIONS . . FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS TO SUBSCRIBE WHEN THEY ASK TO BORROW YOUR POST. ADVERTISING . . . TISERS WHO SUPPORT YOUR PAPER ARE ENTITLED TO Read... ADVERTISE... BOOST he DALLAS POST DEDICATED IN 1889 TO A CAREER OF SERVICE s punches .. . a never to be stilled ® The LISTENING POST ® The SENTIMENTAL SIDE ® SECOND THOUGHTS URGE . are the life blood of its existence. is the food which keeps it growing. ADVER- ONAGE. newspaper . . . A community institution!” a