We Remember KILLED IN ACTION RICHARD WELLINGTON CEASE, January 29, 1942 KEATS POAD, March 3, 1942 CLIFFORD S. NULTON, November 26, 1943 ELWOOD BLIZZARD, March 1, 1944 ROBERT RESSIGUE, April 20, 1944 SAMUEL GALLETTI, May 23, 1944 JAMES DeANGELO, June 22, 1944 WILLIAM STRITZINGER, July 9, 1944 FREDERICK LOVELAND, SEPTEMBER 12, 1944 DIED IN SERVICE GEORGE UTRICH, May 16, 1942 HOWARD A. COSGROVE, July 3, 1942 THOMAS CLARK LLOYD, July 4, 1943 EVAN J. BRACE, February 15, 1944 MISSING IN WALTER CECIL WILSON, May 9, 1942 HAROLD THOMAS KEPNER, ,December 19, 1942 ' JOHN P. GLEASON, March 30, 1943 JOHN E, FRITZ, May 7, 1943 ALFRED E. MAURY, February 5, 1944 ROBERT A. GIRVAN, May 14, 1944 OTTO W. HARZDORF, June 1, 1944 HERBERT C. CULP, July 12, 1944 ELWOOD R. RENSHAW, August 20, 1944 JAMES B. DAVIES, August 25, 1944 ACTION PRISONERS OF WAR CLARENCE H. MORGAN, May 22, 1942 DONALD FREEMAN, May 22, 1942 FRED WESTERMAN, April 20, 1943 EDWARD SMITH, April 14, 1944 PETER SKOPIC, May 29, 1944 RAYMOND F. SUTTON, May 29, 1944 PAUL F. NULTON, Jr., July 19, 1944 + 1002 Free Posts to Soldiers this week. ALLAS PosT MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION Vol. 54, No. 40 4 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1944 6 CENTS PER COPY Sabbath School Lehman Defeats Convention Will / Tewnship In Be At Reading Season Opener : Rev. J. Arthur Heck, D.D., pres- S li ky’ 85-Y. d oT mi Sn) pn Brings Oly committee of nearly one hundred Touchdown Of Game leaders of religious work in Read-| h d . ing, who are busy at work, with Lehman and Dallas Townships re- seventeen subcommitteés, preparing: newed old football rivalries last Sat- for the annual State Sabbath School | ¥rday afternoon on the Dallas Association Convention, October 10, grounds in an evenly matched conn 11, 12, 13. The preliminary details| test marked by clean play and few have been completed and a thou. Penalties. Lehman won by a 7 to 0, sand homes of Sunday school| SCOT on a beautifully executed off-| people ‘in Reading will be open to. tackle play in the third Guarter entertain the two thousand or more, when Pat Salansky, Lehman's elus-| delegates expected to participate in|'V® broken field runner, crashed the convention’ through the line, then reversed his field, and ran 85 yards for the only, County associations in each of touchdown of the game. the 67 counties have a quota of] With one exception that was the’ delegates which total approximately only time that Lehman really 2,600. threatened. Dallas Township took! General sessions of the conven-| the offensive on several good plays tion will be held in St. Luke’s Evan-'by Tex Wilson, fullback and star gelical Lutheran Church, S. E. 9th passer and kicker of the Red and and Green streets, which with its White, but failed to convert in the two buildings and public address pinches. At one time Dallas ad-! systems can comfortably seat more vanced to the thirteen-yard line, than two thousand people. St. Ste-' but the Lehman boys thought they RR. phen’s Evangelical and Reformed were on the three and fought like| @ This Is National Newspaper Week By CuarrLEs L. FisHER Republished from the Philadelphia Record If you've been reading the papers, you may understand something of why newspapermen get more. impatient than most people when they hear the war blamed for every kind of slipshod service and cut in quality. The in- vasion put a heavy strain upon the press—heavier, per- haps, than the strains most civilian businesses know—but no reader found his paper a sloppy, uncraftsmanlike job to be excused under the sullen, swivel-jointed query: “Don’t you know there’s a war on?” ol Newspapers suffer from all the war handicaps: short- ages of men and materials and increases in the price of essential supplies. They do not, however, take it for grant- ed that the s should be satisfied with a jerry- built produc insolence, sli on a mihimum of service, shaved down to the t quality the law allows. We suggest that there are very few enterprises in civil- ian life of which you can say as much. Consider the things you buy and the services for which you pay: You know that clothes are going to cost more and be worth less; that shirts, pajamas, underwear and ties are going to grow more flimsy as their prices rise. You don’t ex- pect your laundry back until it turns up. You are cer- tain may restaurants will regard your custom as half im- position on your part half favor on theirs. You take it for granted that your house will be hastily painted with inferior paint, that the ‘very shine on your shoes won't last until supper time. If you are a well-meaning civilian, you don’t protest too much. You are aware that you are expected to sac- rifice a great deal of convenience during a war. You understand that every trade has serious problems. You don’t want to fall into the unpatriotic attitude of insist- ing that your own life be untouched. But it is hard to get away from a suspicion that a great many firms and organizations may be squeezing the war situation for just a shade more than the ordinary exigencies of the times indicate. The moment you step outside the letter of OPA requirements or enter a field where the OPA doesn’t op- erate, you begin to think of the ugly word profiteer. Every firm has a complete file of excuses, of course. But again we come back to our own business and the fact that a newspaper today maintains a tone, a level of qual- ity, which isn’t very different from that of the prewar period. They carry fewer pages, of course; the quantity of newsprint which may be used has been restricted by Government order. To that degree—and in the absence of such things as rubber rollers for presses and toner for ink—they’ve suffered as much as any other civilian in- dustry. But through rearrangement and condensation of minor news stories; through small details like the drop- ping of extra caption lines from photographs and the moving of news type farther toward the top of each page; through decreased size of advertisements, the papers have pretty well compensated for the paper cut. In the field of making adjustments for manpower short- ages, newspapers run into exceptional complications, They employ all manner of skilled and unskilled labor. Truck drivers, editorial writers, printers, clerks, reporters, desk men, editors, janitors, and a score of other kinds of work- ers aid in the making of a paper. Every department is shorthanded because of the war. Every department could excuse incompetence on the ground that there aren't enough men available. rdly circulated, offered with covert ' Church, the Covenant Methodist demons to take the ball on downs. Church, St. Paul's Evangelical-Con-| to score but lacked the punch to gregational Church, and the Berean produce a touchdown. Baptist Church will all be used for | It was their first test in inter- afternoon conferences. | scholastic football for most of the Among the outstanding spealiers| Bove on both teams. The Dallas are the Honorable Edward Martin, | team, light and inexperienced, was Governor of Pennsylvania; Rev, | paced by Tex Wilson, who called, Henry Smith Leiper, D. D., secre-|the signals from the fullback po-. tary of the World Council of! sition. Lehman, although slightly | Churches; Dr. E. G. Homrighausen, heavier and possibly more exper- professor of Christian Education at ienced, was playing its first game, Princeton Theological Seminary; Dr.|in interscholastic competition since Dan A. Poling, president of the it withdrew two years ago in favor World's Christian Endeavor Union;| of intermural sports. Mrs. Percy R. Hayward, Chicago, Coaching his first season at Dal- well-known writer on religion in las, Coach Tony Barbose had in his! the home; Dr. Clarence W. Craw- starting lineup: Irving Lamoreaux, | ford, pastor of Calvary Baptist a freshman, at quarterback; Russell | Church, Washington, D. C.; Isdac'Muchler, a speedy runner, at half;| K. Beckes, director of Young Peo- | Bill Hart, grandson of George Kir- | ples’ Work, International Council of| kendall, and a new:comer from New! Religious Education, and many oth-| York State, at half, and the veteran ers. Over fifty denominations are, Tex Wilson at guard. represented in the State Sabbath | In the line, Joe Tondora, a fresh- School Association, working as the! man, showed real promise at left State Council of Christian Educa-' end; Ray Kuhnert, a freshman, sub- tion. This organization ministers| stituted for Warren Chamberlain to 10,747 Sunday schools, nearly| who has been ill, at left tackle; 200,000 officers and teachers, and| Darrel Harding, a senior, played at approximately 2,000,000 enrolled. |left guard. In the center position, All delegates selected from the Lee Knecht; at right guard, Bob churches of Luzerne County should | Moore, a veteran from last year; at register with Mrs. Idris Jones, coun-! right tackle Bill Wasser and at right ty secretary, whose office is in First' end Bob Hughes. Presbyterian Church, Wilkes-Barre. | (Continued on Page Eight) Walter Kitchen Is Wounded; Wallet Int Breast Pocket Stops Rifle Bullet { 4 Walter Kitchen’ Emory Kitchen The Church, the Ebenezer Evangelical Dallas had two other good chances - One of two Dallas brothers who met recently on the field of battle using as a first aid station. owners left because it might get Killed In Action - FREDERICK LOVELAND May 4, 1917—September 12, 194) Set-Up Changed On "A" Rations In Eastern Area All Applicants Must Present Back Cover Of Current “A” Book Acting to remove the differential on the validity dates of “A” gaso- line rations that now exist between the East Coast and the rest of the country, the Office of Price Admin- istration will place all motorists throughout the country on the same “A” basis—using the same “A-13” coupons, effective November 9, ac- cording to an announcement made this week by Joseph Schuler, chair- man of Dallas War Price and Ra- tioning Board. “This will be done,” Mr. Schuler said, “by issuing renewal ‘A’ books throughout the Scranton area earl- ier than had been planned, and by validated ‘A-13’ coupons in the re- newal books on November 9.’ “Because of validation of ‘A-13’ stamps on this date there will be no need to use the last strip of coupons, the ‘A-12’s’ in the present book: This step, besides bringing the same ‘A’ coupon into use throughout the country, will have the advantage of removing from circulation the large number of counterfeit ‘A-12° coupons that have been printed. i “The new coupons are serially numbered, and can be traced back European Theatre \ Council Orders Sign Removed Discuss Appointment (To F ill Wilcox Term Holding firm in its determination to keep the highways within Dallas Borough free from unsightly bill- boards, Dallas Borough Council at its meeting Tuesday night ordered Jack Hislop, proprietor of -Hislop’s Economy Store, to remove a small signboard placed along the main highway within Dallas Borough lim-' its. According to the ordinance billboards may be placed only on property owned by the advertiser. | | | One councilman expressed the opinion after the meeting that local businessmen are doing more to de- tract from the beauty of the Lu- zerne-Harvey’s Lake highway than any other advertisers. He said there has been a recent rush of small billboards all along the high- way and most of them bear the names of local firms. , “The big companies have held off but one of ) these days they will start in, too and then you will have a highway cluttered up with unsightly signs of all kinds. Dallas Borough is go- ing to stick by its ordinance, and if Kingston Township begins to look like Luzerne with signboards stuck up so you can’t see the hills, the fellows who will be' to blame will be the merchants who earn their living out here and want to attract more home owners to this com- E munity. Seems like lousy business to me.” . ‘Members of Council discussed the appointment of a councilman to fill the unexpired term of Morgan Wil-| (Continued on Page Eight) $ That sudden breeze that took! your hat off last - Saturday night about 6 o'clock was not another; hurricane--it was Lieut. Stewart! Pilot, Stationed In Iceland, Visits Folks In Army Bomber easily to the motorist who was issued them. : “All applications: for renewal must be accompanied by the back cover of the current ‘A’ book,” Mr. Schuler emphasized. “The appli- cant who has lost or thrown away Lt. Lew Reese Is On Saipan elps Locate Grave Of Pal’s Bro Lt. Lewis Reese to prove to the board (1) th has a car, which entitl ply for an ‘A’ ration; ns. car is currently regist ferred from Hawa as use, and (3) that a re Operations Officer, according to a'‘A’ ration has not been issued for recent letter written by the young it and no application for renewal is lieutenant to his parents, Mr. and Pending at any board. Mrs. Thomas Reese - of Franklin] “The new ‘A’ book will provide street, Dallas. the same monthly ration as the old —eight gallons, or approximately Lt. Reese has seen plenty of ac-! : tion in the Pacific Theatre, havin g! 120 miles a month. However, cou- been stationed at Hickam Field Pons in the mew ‘A’ book will be during the Japanese sneak attack. | worth four gallons instead of three, Although he volunteered to go to the value of the present €oUpons. Saipan some weeks ago, it was not Six of these four-gallon coupons will until* the night of August 15 that become valid every three months, to provide 24 gallons of gasoline in each three month validity period, asic he received orders to pack and de-| part- b lane during the ‘®earl >. 2 g i except for the first period where hours of the following morning. ; : y When he arrived on Saipan it was] only three ‘A-13' coupons will be pouring rain® and the mud was up| Validated, because of the short to my hip pockets. The men washed period : : ir tholr holmes. shaved “ia Sool Basic motorcycle rations will be water — when they shaved—an d renewed during the same period. took Showess whdse. 5 The current basic ‘D’ ration which punched full of holes.” | barrel % |is used for motorcycles, expires on | November 11, 1944. The same pro- Acoprding to Lew, it was Bg cedure as for ‘A’ books will be used kits and pup tents all over again,” . A but he had lived that way before! pre an Ra = he ol ie that way again. oie Rogord will be issued with e mud had dried up when he) every renewal of a Basic ‘A’ ration. wrote, but the men were knee-deep, This will replace the tire inspection in dust, record as a record of all rations is- “There is lots of work ahead but! syed for use with any car that has we've got a grand bunch of fellows peen issued a Basic ‘A’ ration. to work with.” Although he has The new form will have to be pre- the rank there is no resentment.’ sented to the board with every ap- “This is just one big hard-working plication for a special or supple- family and in time this will be a mental gasoline ration, except in nice place.” the case of fleet or official rations, Lew says they average two meals | 4nd the board will make a notation a day and start work about 4:30 of all such rations on this new (Continued on Page Eight) form. The Tire Inspection Record will continue to serve this purpose | Record has been received.” | Jan Killer and Engineer, Sgt. Jennings of Pit- tsfield, Mass. Mr. Yorks went down to pick them up and after feasting on Mrs. the cover of his ‘A’ book will have ~ aE until the new mileage Rationing FROM The reader, indeed, receives a good deal more news for his money than ever before. His paper does not appear full of mumbled excuses. And it becomes difficult for any- one associated with the job, in however inconsequential a way, to understand the shoddy products and services offered in other fields. After .all arent we in the same war? * kk PILLAR TO POST By Mrs. T. M. B. Hicks, Jr. Speaking of earthquakes, that little tremor which shook solid citizens from their beds late at night on Labor Day or early in the morning hours of September fifth, depending upon the point of view, has passed largely into the realm of ancient history. Natural phenomena rate only a scant paragraph in newspapers dedicated to Marines and Paratroopers and to | bout fifteen miles from me now.! hit by bombs. The town is nice like the residential section of King- ton. A day later he wrote: 'I was with Walter four hours again yesterday. We had dinner together and our in France has been wounded in action. He is Pvt. Walter Kitchen son of Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Kit- chen. He met his brother Staff Sergeant, Emory, some weeks be- fore he was wounded. Walter is with an infrantry regiment and| picture was taken by a reporter. Emory is with a hospital detach-' It will be sent to The Dallas Post. ment. There outfits were side by I had a jeep so we did some run- side when they stormed a French 'ning around France together. While town. others presence until they met. Of that meeting Emory wrote a day later: “Guess What I actually saw Walter yesterday? He's a- home and two from his girl. I gave him paper so he could write. He doesn’t get a chance to write as often as I do. An then this week came another His outfit and mine were fighting letter. This time from Walter. side by side when we captured the Dear Mother, town “we are now in. His outfit. Just a line or two to let you moved out and mine stayed. I am know everything is O.K. As you writing this in the office of a beau- can see, I am in the hospital in (Continued on Page Five) tiful French home which we are (Continued on Page Eight) Neither boy knew of the I was with him he got a letter from, Yorks zooming over town in a B-25 York's good home meal, the boys Bomber. Trucksville folks were visited the Harvest Home Festival thrilled when it roared over the which was in full swing at the Fire quiet little village, circled over the House. Then Stewart took them| housetops, and gave a friendly flap! to Wilkes-Barre to see the sights of the wings, for it was piloted by, in the Anthracite region. one of their own hill-bred young-! Sunday morning, neighbors, who sters. were pretty proud of the young- Neighbors who were digging sters, drove down to the airport potatoes or cutting corn stalks to see them off. Lieut. Yorks is blinked casually at the first hum|with a Weather Reconnoissance of the motor, then rubbed their Squadron stationed in Iceland and leyes. When the two-tailed ship has flown all over the Atlantic Sea- gave a final flap of its wings, they, board. Just before his enlistment ran to the York’s back door and two years ago he graduated from asked “mom” to identify it. She Bloomsburg State Teacher's College. wasn’t sure at first, but shortly His brother, Capt. Ward Yorks is afterward a phone call from Forty in Corsica with an anti-aircraft unit Fort announced that Stewart was and before entering service three at Wyoming Valley Airport with years ago was a teacher. his friends, Co-pilot Lieutenant the sons of Mr, ‘and Mrs. Harold They are| T William Coward of North Carolina Yorks. alias hiy hool boy who re- cently killed two Japanese soldiers on New Guinea.