PAGE SIX THIS WEEK—THIS WORLD | In the course of Hitler's rise to power, he solemnly promised the Ger- man people that he would never make the mistakes of his predecessors. Those promises were: (1) Never to make war upon the British, to whom he conceded an unconquerable spirit; (2) Never to embroil the United States, which helped to lose the last war for Germany; (3) Never to fight a two-front war. He also prom- ised not to make Napoleon’s mistake of fighting a winter war against Russia. Like all Hitler promises, to the Germans or anyone else, they were not worth breath wasted upon them! &* * * The crime of the isolationists, Wood, Wheeler, Lindbergh, Nye, et al, was not that they did not see to the ends of their noses, but that they permitted themselves to be al- lied with, or exploited by, the rot- tenest elements in the American scene, Laura Ingalls, the flying fascist, who since has been jailed as a Nazi agent paid to spread the poison of disunity, was not the worst of them. There were enemies of the democrat- ic spirit such as Father Coughlin, who printed political forgeries in his publications; Joe McWilliams, who smeared venom aimed to stir relig- ious pogroms; A. Wheeler-Hill, an outright traitor now. imprisoned as a spy; General G. Van Horn Mose- ley, fascist-minded tool of foreign agents; and James True, pal of Fritz Kuhn, the German-American Bundist now in jail. The isolationists took the gran- doise name “America First Commit- tee.” It was a device which at- tracted many innocents. Innocents, too, were attracted to names such as “The Christian Mobilizers”, “Paul Revere Sentinels”, “Crusaders for Americanism”, “American Guards”, “American Nationalist Confedera- tion”, “Silver Shirts”, etc., etc. Hid- den behind these and other labels were personalities who connived to devitalize the prevailing American resistance to fascist influence. Also present and doing yeoman service were reactionaires of the stripe of George Deatherage, whose organiz- ation sported a red, white and blue swastika; the fascist-minded John Snow; E. N. Sanctuary of racial per- secution fame; F. K. Ferenz, exhib- itor of Nazi films; Benjamin Frank Bullard, anti-union agitator; and that redoubtable propagandist for the Japanese, William J. Baxter, Declaration of war on the United States by Japan, Italy and Germany, has liquidated the activities of pres- sure and subversive groups for the moment. But only for the moment. Not to be forgotten, now or in the future, is that the malefactors are still amongst us, and that given the opportunity they will come out of their sewers of political connivance to stab America again in the back. Be on the alert for bombers! Be on the alert, also, for blackguards! * * * Via Grapevine Telegraph: Yugo- slavia—America’s entry into the war resulted in pro-American dem- onstrations in Belgrade . . . 50,000 Montenegrins have been. executed by the Fascists since the occupation of the country by the Italians . . . NORWAY—Quisling Norway is com- pelled to pay five million kroners a day to its ‘liberators” by the Ger- man occupational forces . . . PO- LAND—More than 40,000 Germans have been drafted to combat under- ground Polish patriots who are caus- ing havoc among railways, roads and bridges. * * *® Embarrassing Quotations Dept.: Said Hitler on August 27: “The Rus- sian armies have been smashed from Finland to the Black Sea!” * * * In spite of assurances to the Ger- man people the past several months that the Russians have been defeat- ed and the British have been pre- pared for the kill, it is plain that they have been more than a little war weary. Undoubtedly it was that war weariness which impelled Hit- ler, as recently as last October, to attempt to bluff himself into a peace with the British and/or Russians. His plan was the old simple one: “Buy one off at the expense of the other. Then wait a few years to re- coup strength and finish off the job!” The “peace plan” was released by Herr Doktor Burckhardt, one time Nazi League of Nations Commis- sioner at Danzig, and was floated through Swiss and Swedish news- papers, It got nowhere. Both Churchill and Stalin turned the offer down cold. They even checked with each other, meanwhile giving assurances of mutual determination to blot out Nazism forever. * * * Score up the year 1941 as one for the democracies. Hitler is now fight- ing on two fronts—and then some. Russia is bleeding the Nazi armies white. America is all tooled up and stepping into high industrial gear. Central and South American nations Your Income Tax Seven Timely Articles To Help You Prepare Your Income Tax WHO MUST FILE A RETURN? Every single person having a gross income of $750 or more; every mar- ried person, not living with hus- band or wife, and having a gross in- come of $750 or more; and married persons living with husband or wife, who have an aggregate gross income of $1,500 or more. WHEN MUST RETURNS BE FILED ? For the calendar year 1941, on. or before March 16, 1942. For the fiscal year, on or before the 15th day of the third month fol- lowing the close of the fiscal year. WHERE AND WITH WHOM MUST INCOME TAX RETURNS BE FILED? In the internal revenue dis- trict in which the person lives or has his chief place of business, and with the collector of internal reve- nue, ; HOW DOES ONE MAKE OUT HIS INCOME TAX RETURN ? By fol- lowing the detailed instructions given on the income tax blanks, Form 1040 and Form 1040A (op- tional simplified form). WHAT IS THE TAX RATE? A normal tax of 4 per cent on the amount of the net income in excess of the allowable credits against net income (personal exemption, cred- its for dependents, interest on obli- gations of the United States and its instrumentalities and earned | in- come credit) in the computation of the normal tax net income; and a graduated surtax on the amount of net income in excess of the allow- able credits (personal exemption and credit for dependents) against net income in the computation of the surtax net income. Forms for filing returns of in- come for 1941 have been sent to persons who filed returns last year. Failure to receive a form, however, does not relieve a taxpayer of his obligation to file his return and pay the tax on time—on or before March 16 if the return is made on the calendar-year basis, as is the case with most individuals. Forms may be obtained upon re- quest, written or personal, from the offices of collectors and from deputy collectors of internal reve- nue in the larger cities and towns. A person should file his return on Form 1040, unless his gross income for 1941 does not exceed $3,000 and consists wholly of salary, wages, or other compensation for personal ser- vices, dividends, interest, rent an- nuities, or royalties, in which event he may elect to file it on Form 1040A, a simplified form on which the tax may be readily ascertained by reference to a table contained in the form, The return must be filed with the collector of internal revenue for the district in which the taxpayer has his legal residence or principal place of business on or before mid- night of March 16, 1942. The tax may be paid’in full at the time of filing the return or in four equal installments, due on or before March 16, June 15, September 15, and December 15. In making out your income tax return read carefully the instruct- ions that accompany the form. If you need more information, it may be obtained at the office of the col- lector of internal revenue, deputy collector, or an internal revenue agent in charge or at the revenue office in Wilkes-Barre Post Office building. Remember that single persons or married persons not living with hus- band or wife, who earn as much as $14.43 a week for the 52 weeks of the year, and married persons living together who have aggregate earn- ings of as much as $28.85 a week for the year, are required to file returns. A second article on your in- come tax will appear in next week's Post and in the next following six issues. Clip each one for your convenience in making out your income tax report—Editor. : have ranged themselves with the United States. The Battle of Britain has been won! The Battle of the At- lantic is being won! The Battle of Africa has been re-won! * THE CALL TO Dig deep. loan association. IS A CALL FOR DOLLARS need the planes, ships, and guns which your money will help to buy. Go to your bank, post office, or savings and Teli them you want to buy Defense Bonds regularly, starting now. ~ * THE COLORS! Strike hard. Our boys * THE POST, FRIDAY, JANUARY 16, 1942 i Copyright 1941 1. Keep ‘Em Flying ewspaper Features, Inc. SE THE BOOK SHELF Native American By Ray Stannard Baker Charles Scribner’s Sons. $3.00 Reviewed by Helen Breit Ray Stannard Baker has two dis- tinct personalities as a writer. The first is that of the newspaperman, later turned historian, who reports the events of his day. Because of his own close association with those events he has become the official biographer of Woodrow Wilson. The second personality is that ex- pressed in those books which he has written under the pseudonym of David Grayson: “Adventures in Con- tentment,” ’‘Adventures in Friend- ship,” “Adventures in Solitude,” to name a few. David Grayson seeks surcease and perspective by long tramps in the countryside and by simple, friendly chats with the per- sons he meets in that manner. The next best thing to taking such a trip is to read a David Grayson ad- venture. Both experiences are re- freshing, both restore zest to life. Now at 71 Mr. Baker in ‘Native American” integrates his two per- sonalities and shows from what stock and experiences they sprang. He spent his boyhood on one of the last frontiers in the St. Croix Valley of Northwestern Wisconsin. He knew Indians and listened to the lusty stories of loggers and river- men. The hardships of the frontier, he implies, shortened his mother’s life. But pioneer days were ending. The Indians he knew, he writes, “were fragments. of the once power- ful tribes of the Chippewa, degener- ated by liquor and the diseases of the white men, demoralized by the breakdown of the stern tribal us- ages which from time immemorial had constituted the morals and but- tressed the religion of a courageous and hardy people.” In later life he saw his father im- poverished by too much land— something the pioneer could not have understood, Indeed, his father himself had difficulty in understand- ing it. Nonetheless, young Baker learned to make his way through forest paths, he acquired the self-reliance the frontier compelled, and he learn- ed most of all not from the primi- tive schools which he attended but from his father, who had fought in the Civil War and who knew how to tell stories. The Baker family staged its own plays. The rich, in- dividualistic characters of three old aunts, sisters of the boy’s father and mother, helped mold him. At the age of fifteen he went to the Michigan Agricultural College. Important discoveries came to him there. He made a friend of the eigh- teenth century philosopher, Mon- taigne; he learned from Dr, William J. Beal the scientific method of studying and observing; he met the girl whom he was to marry, that professor's daughter. And he took his first tramp in the country. Of this he says: I had a vague idea of going to Hillsdale . . . It was sixty or seventy miles off and I never got anywhere near it, but as in so many excurs- ions of later years, if I rarely reach- ed my objective, I had a fine time on the way.” Until young Baker was twenty- one he did not know what he want- ed to do. Then he found his goal: he was to be a writer. For a year he sent stories to magazines and re- cevied rejection slips in return. He sold one—for five dollars. with the courage of 22 he went to the wilderness of streets which was Then, | Chicago in the early 1890's. Though Mr. Baker relates how he made himself a niche in The News Record of that city, his is no Ho- ratio Alger story, Those days re- vealed to him the inadequacy of frontier virtues alone for fitting the individual into an overcrowded city at a time of depression. With that revelation Ray Stannard Baker, in- vestigating reporter of social con- ditions, was born. Early in this autobiography Mr. Baker describes his father’s use of suspense in story-telling. It is a ~ THE LOW DOWN FROM HICKORY GROVE Everybody is bending his back to put the quiet- us on Japan, and we are gonna do it—even if it takes our last dollar. But when it is all over we don’t want our boys com- ing home to a Socialist U. S. A. Mr. Morgenthau says we should cut out 1,000 million of present planned non-defense spending. Mr. Byrd, the old “Virginia “Soreback,” says reduce it by. 2,000 million. Now, above all times, every dime should go into bul- lets and guns versus social experiments. Running the army . and the mavy 1s plenty for Uncle Sambo. Unless we watch our step, we won't be like the guy who lost his west when he took a Turkish bath in the fall but found it again mext spring, unm- der his shirt. We won't have any shirt left, to find a vest under. Yours with the low down, JO SERRA. “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. 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; Idetown: Cave’s Cash Store. Editor and Publisher HOWARD W, RISLEY Associate Editor MYRA ZEISER RISLEY Contributing Editor JOHN V. HEFFERNAN Advertising Department JOSEPH ELICKER HARRY LEE SMITH trick he himself playfully uses with his readers in this, as he “calls it, “the book of my youth.” A book worth reading it is. » * * Will Rogers, His Wife’s Story, Betty Rogers. The Bobb’s Merrill Company, $2.75, Indianapolis- New York. Any book about Will Rogers could not help but be worth while, and this one is more than that. No one could be more qualified to tell Will Roger’s story than his wife who ac- cording to Irvin S, Cobb in EXIT LAUGHING, is “in her own right a very wonderful person.” To those of us who remember Will Rogers when he quipped from the stage, and even to those who remember him as a movie player, this book will bring back those fond memories which tend to put one in a sadly dreamy frame of mind, To muse of the past—to remember the things we did and the people we used to know is a great joy—a privilege that even the humblest of us enjoy. So to Mrs. Will Rogers I offer my thanks for bringing back to us a really fine remembrance. One would not be wrong, I be- lieve, to consider this book as some sort of an anthology of Will Rog- erisms, for its greatest asset lies, not in its portrayal of Will Rogers, but rather in its presentation of so many of the numerous passages from the cowboy philosopher's life. We all knew the kind of man Will Rogers was and any effort to char- acterize him anew would be simply so much wasted ink and paper. Any person who saw Will Rogers on the screen saw the real man; they saw him as he was in private life, for one thing Will could not do was to act—perhaps he was too honest for that. His charm lay in his disarm- ing frankness, in the way he poked fun at people on top of the pile, and nobody enjoyed the ribbing more than the victims, In fact one con- sidered it decidedly an honor to have Will Rogers point a disparaging finger upon him. The government always bore the brunt of Will's wit. He said at one time “I don’t make jokes, I just watch the government and report the facts and I have never found it necessary to exag- gerate.” Seldom was anyone's feel- ings hurt by these remarks, for Will “never kicked a man when he was down.” But Will’s chatter was not all nonsense; in truth very little of it was nonsense. It was probably his ability to gloss over common sense with a veneer of drollness that caus- ed his long popularity. Almost twen- ty-years ago Will Rogers in one of his weekly articles for the McNaught Syndicate wrote “. . instead of teaching a boy to run an automo- bile, teach him to fly, because the nation in the next war that ain't up in the air, is just going to get something dropped on its bean.” Somebody once gave Will Rogers a license of free speech (or perhaps he took it without asking) and he never took advantage of it. He talk- ed to the King of England man to man—and the King loved it. What Mrs. Rogers lacks in writing technique is made up in her subject material, The book is not written with the ease and grace of a master, but it does tell a story and an in- teresting one, too,—not absorbing, not exciting, but unpretentious and memory provoking. I wish we had Will Rogers, but we haven't. We can recapture much of his charm in this book by his wife, THE SENTIMENTAL SIDE By EDITH BLEZ The new young lady in our house is going to college next year! We want our fair daughter to go to college but we do wish we could do with- out all the chatter and preparation which seems to go with attending col- lege a year from now! For months, in fact since, last summer most of our conversation at home has been punctuated with, “mother, when do Health Topics By F. B. Schooley, M. D. a Measles (Rubeola) is an acute in- fectious and highly contagious dis- ease, characterized by a catarrhal inflammation of the upper air pass- ages and a typical red rash extend- ing over the entire body. It is the most contagious of the childhood diseases, The average incubation pe- riod is fourteen days. Measles affects all races and oc- curs in all climates. It is more com- mon in the winter and spring months. It may occur at any age but is most common from two to fifteen years of age. One attack of true measles usually confers im- munity for life. It is possible to have a second attack in later life but recurrence is rare. Drug erup- tions, hives, allergic foods and chem- icals and German measles have been mistaken for messles, Scarlet fever and serum rash may resemble measles. It may be difficult to dif- ferentiate a mild case of measles from one of German measles. A cor- rect diagnosis may be impossible be- fore the skin rash appears. In Ger- man measles the catarrhal symp- toms are, slight, glands in back of neck are more commonly enlarged, the fever is less, the skin eruption is pink or lighter red in color and of shorter duration. In the catarrhal stage of measles, 2 or 3 days before the rash appears, typical spots will be noticed on the mucous mem- brane of the mouth, throat and cheeks. These spots are pinhead in size, of a dark-red color, slightly elevated and with bluish-white specks in the center. They are ab- sent in German measles, The most frequent complications are those involving the ears, the lungs, the gastro-intestinal tract and the kidneys. Secondary bacterial in- vaders as the streptococcus germ us- ually causes these complications and should be suspected when the fev- er fails to decline after the rash is completely developed. Bronchopneu- monia is the most serious secondary involvement. Epidemic or sporadic cases of ‘whooping cough, chicken pox and scarlet fever may occur with or following measles. Human convalescent serum and immune globulin have been used in the prevention afid modification“of measles, The globulin is an extract of human placenta or after-birth, the organ cast from the uterus or womb after the birth of the child. THE SAFETY VALVE In Appreciation January 13, 1942. Editor The Post: In behalf of the family of the late Charles J. Zinn I wish to thank The Post for the lovely item that appear- ed in your issue of January 2, 1942. Respectfully, Mrs. J. R. Steinhauer, 77 Alexander Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Syou think I will know what I want to study at college? Mother, where is——college located? Is it a small town or a large city. I refuse to go to college in anything but a small town.” Last summer there was much talk of attending a college in New Eng- land. For days we were bombarded with catalogues. The academic rat- ings and requirements weren't half so important as whether there were mountains nearby, and was there good skiing, and did the skating last all winter? Now that we have been having zero weather, New Eng- land is out—definitely out! Every time our fair daughter comes home from school or skating she sits on every radiator in the house! Many times we have discovered her prac- tically sitting in the oven, We have all kinds of trouble preparing din- ner because our fair daughter insists on literally hugging the stove. She can't get warm! She has decided now that she would freeze to death in New England. Now our college leanings are nearer home. Not quite South but closer to home! We have come to the stage where we are filling in registration blanks. All day and most of the evening we are interrupted by a voice asking: “Mother where was I born? Have I had any modern history? Well, I can’t see how English and French history can be any more modern than American history. Mother, does Civics mean Problems of American Democracy. It says here I only need three years of English, Why didn’t you tell me I didn’t need four years of English. Is the food good at most colleges, Mother? Will I have to send my laundry home each week ? Gee—!" Then there is the perfectly ter- rible business of finding a small pic- ture to send with each application. Our daughter will not have a new picture taken, She insists that she doesn’t take a good picture and that some of the old ones will have to do, So we hunt hours for pictures. Finally she finds one! She knows it doesn’t look like her, but it will have to do. She stands in front of a mirror with the picture in her hand comparing the face in the pic- ture with the one in the mirror, all the time sighing and saying "It certainly is strange. The picture is of me, but it doesn’t look like me.” We suggest that it is a very good likeness—as usual we do not know what we are talking about. The pic- ture looks nothing like her! If we rwouldronkynell the truth. We do not know what will happen next. We are a little afraid of what is to come! What we are in for we do not know, We have one wish— we would give most anything to have our fair daughter in college without all” ‘the things which we know we must go through. We have stood up bravely under four years of High School. What will college do to us! [~ § — 8 FREEDOM The ecelumnists and con- tributers on this page are allowed great latitude in evpressing their own opin- ions, even when their opinions are at veriance a those of The Post OUR DEMOCRACY ee eye | \{ WE WILL DEFEND {| OUROWN. hn I by Mat Th 7 / i! OI} | SE agg | iF Thins oF THE Ji | SPIRIT ALWAYS HAVE BEEN FIRST WITH US. FREEDOM i= 1S A PERSONAL lf POSSESSION OF [lk EACH AMERICAN. = WOMENFOLK. hai 5 J AN I LR nd ; 1I/| |= WE PROTECT OUR | jl. CHILDREN AND J In ADDITION TO THINGS OF THE SPIRIT IS THE COMMON SENSE FACT THAT THE AVERAGE AMERICAN HAS OTHER THINGS TO PRESERVE AND DEFEND.... HOME, FARM, JOB, SAVINGS, LIFE INSURANCE, BUSINESS, AND ALL OTHER THINGS WHICH MAKE POSSIBLE OUR HIGH STANDARD OF LIVING. OUR THRIFT GIVES LIFT TO OUR MORALE. >