| i i | | ‘the real issue: Borough was without police coverage. Had the emer- iY PAGE FOUR EDITORIAL a desperate need [1 The frontier town melee which occurred in Dallas recently is additional evidence (if indeed additional evidence is needed) that the Back Mountain com- munity can no longer tolerate the horse and buggy police protection to which it is accustomed. When it became apparent that seven or eight carousers were becoming increasingly abusive to passersby and showed little intention of leaving Dallas’s Main Street peaceably, special policeman . Willard Newberry attempted to contact Dallas Borough police. The policeman on duty, Sev New- berry, was attending a hearing in Kingston Town- ship and was not immediately available. Attempts to contact Police Chief Honeywell at his home were unsuccessful. Finally, Dallas Township police were summoned and, fortunately for everyone concerned, responded quickly to the call for help. That little damage and few personal injuries ‘actually resulted from the fracas should not cloud : In a time of emergency, Dallas gency been a matter of life and death, there would have been no police protection for Dallas Borough “citizens. The plea for a unified police force in the Back ‘Mountain community has to date gone unheeded. Petty political posturing on the part of a few individ- “uals has blocked the efforts of Dr. Hugo Mailey and responsible community leaders to establish a joint police force in the area. This is doubly unfortunate as the vast majority of Back Mountain citizens want—and deserve—the police protection that can be provided only by such a team effort. Must we endure further crises before acknowl- edging the near desperate need for a single Back “Mountain police force? family income [1 After we pay our Christmas bills we don’t feel very affluent, but the truth is that Americans are doing better financially now than ever before. That’s the word we get from a ten-year survey of American family income. ; : The average family now has an income of $8017 v 3a year, an increase of more than 571 percent over our median income 10 years ago. On the other hand, the cost of living in that same period rose only 15% Pp percent; so we're much better off on the whole. This survey was made by Meinhard-Commercial Corporation, the country’s largest factoring firm. That is, Meinhard provides more than a billion dol- lars a year in financing to manufacturers, distribu- tors and retail stores. It also provides these custom- ers with advice on marketing and research. According to Meinhard’s annual study of family income, nearly 70 percent of today’s families have an income in the big middle range between $4000 and $15,000 a year. The largest income group is now - the $7000 to $10,000 bracket. Meinhard says these families should be the main sales target for Ameri- can industry in the next few years. Until recently the largest income group earned $4000 to $7000, but now the higher bracket has taken over. Income in northeastern Pennsylvania rose dra- matically during the past decade. Effective buying per household, and total for Luzerne and Lackawanna Counties showed steady, economic progress, though both counties still remain below national averages. ; In Luzerne County the total effective buying in- come for 1960 was only $569,661. By 1968 it had risen to $841,213. ~ Effective buying income per household increased from 2.5 percent annually in 1960 to 5.2 percent in 1968. The effective buying income per household the first year of the decade was $5885, while in 1968 it had climbed to $7884. Effective buying income is wages, salaries, in- terest, dividends, profits, and property income minus federal, state and local taxes. All reports show a growing share of American _ families with high incomes, along with a decreasing percentage of families in the lower income group. This present decline in the percent of lower income brackets further amplifies the improving income potential for area residents. Tie DALLASO0ST A non-partisan, liberal, and progressive newspaper published every Thursday morn- ing by Northeastern Newspapers Inc. from 41 Lehman Ave., Dallas, Pa. 18612. Entered as second class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa., under the Act of * March 3, 1869. Subscription within county, $5 a year. Out-of-county subscriptions, $5.50 a year. Call ' 675-5211 tor subscriptions. The officers of Northeastern Newspapers Inc. are Henry H. Null 4th, president and publisher; John L. Allen, vice dent, news. Editor emeritus, Mrs. T. M. B. Hicks; assistant editor, Doris R. Mallin; editor of the editorial page, Shawn Murphy; advertising manager, Annabell Selingo. president, advertising; J. R. Freeman, vice presi- - You can guess the president’s plans sometimes outside ‘the White House. If a couple of fire- trucks wait in the rear he will be taking off soon in his heli- copter. If a TV truck is parked to the left of the portico of the flood-lit mansion, he’s holding a press conference. As you show your pass you note the noble loveliness of the edifice behind the black, leafless trees. ‘‘Gen- tlemen, the President of the United States,” says the attend- ant, and all the gilt ballroorn chairs scrape, and George and Martha Washington look down; and the crystals, of the three immense chandeliers twinkle in kleig lights." 2 This. is the eighth press con- ference in 11 months, the fewest of any president in modern times (FDR had two-a-week in . peacetime). You speculate on the president, the nation arid the era. Fifty million peoplé are watching on TV; it’s gfnazing. Fe has no notes; he stands alone. He is poised and confi- dent. Call it glib if you want, but would you'like to stand there batting back answers to quick questions? His best defense is that there’s no. follow-up; he turns to the next questioner quickly. He makes a couple of boo-boos, Marines have built the Vietnamese ‘250,000 pa- godas (about one to every 50 people) ; it is corrected to 25,000 next day. His figure that 35-37 percent of gross-national prod- uct now goes to taxes is wrong, economists say; it’s around 30 percent—a difference of maybe $50 billions in a trillion-dollar economy. But so what? It’s a remarkable performance. He . keeps his cool throughout. Yes, even when asked about Martha thissa ‘n The liberal brethren and sis- tren had better run to their typewriters to write a letter to the editor calling for the Gaf- fer’s scalp, because today’s preachment is going to offer the opinion that white people have just as much rights as colored people; further, that certain colored people are in- fringing on the rights of white people. What is irking the old gentle- man this week is the newspaper report that in Chicago, a cer- tain Rev. C.T. Vivian chose the Christmas season to issue the following manifesto: ‘Effective immediately, at 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew is established for all whites in the black community. No whites will be permitted to enter the black community for any reason during those hours and all whites inside the black community must leave by the 6 p.m. deadline.” His unilateral ukase went on that *‘ a black tribunal will be convened to try Negro judges, policemen, politicians and any other individuals who have been and who are presently cooperat- ing with the forces of power in this city (Chicago) to the detri- ment of the black people.” The Reverend who pulled in his horns somewhat on the fol- lowing day, allowed that there would also be a black investi- gation of the ‘murders’ of two Black Panthers who tried to shoot it out with the police and that policemen operating in black neighborhoods will be watched by community resi- dents. I will digress at this point to mention that I have read state- ments that the two Panthers { were shot in cold blood by the THE DALLAS POST, JAN. 8, 1970 '. . . AND IF THE PRESIDENT SIGNS THE MINING BILL, | HOPE YOU'LL REMEMBER WITH GRATITUDE ALL ARISEN \ RNY from Washington I'VE INI DONE FOR YOU! cams NH NK ND MARRD NAR N \» R \ ARN \N ticket to a ‘sinking Mitchel, the talkative wife of the attorney general. She has burst upon the na- tional scene as suddenly as Mr. Agnew, and is giving insights into her austere husband’s pre- sumed thinking en route. It was she who coined the phrase over TV “liberal Communists” against the anti-war demonstra- tors. The Washington News broke the story that she had undertaken personal telephone lobbying pressure for Judge Haynsworth on senators’ wives. They were hopping mad, ac- cording to an amplified account by another reporter .the next day. Vote for Haynsworth she threatened, according to one angry senator’s wife, or she would ‘‘go on national television and defeat him.” Her words were ‘strong and colorful,” ac- cording to the assistant of Sena- tor Gore (D) of Tennessee; the wife of one of the senators used sharper language.’ Mr.” Nixon shrugged off the incident wryly in a comment that will win the sympathy of many husbands, but he started trains of thought about. the ad- ministration as he went on. Mr. Mitchell, in Mary MecGrory’s phrase, ‘was the ‘‘architect of disaster” in the Haynsworth nomination. campaign which showed a striking insensi- tivity to Senatorial ritual; the three top Republican leaders all voted against Haynsworth. The objective Associated Press . (Dec. 10) begins a piece—*‘Pres- ident Nixon’s troubles with ‘Congress are being compounded by his failure to win support from key members of the Congressional Republican lead- ership.”” Proposals mentioned: Haynsworth, civil rights, anti- poverty legislation and a key provision of the tax reform bill. Where is the locus of Republi- can uneasiness? In Fortune (no liberal Communist sheet, that) James ‘Reichley explores the administration’s plan to capture the South most exhaustively set forth in The Emerging Republi- can Majority by Kevin P. Phil- lips, 29, special assistant to Mitchell. The bonds that would hold this new alliance together, Reichley says, would be (1) dis- like elsewhere for the populous Northeast and (2) “fear of urban blacks.” The President has publicly taken issue with the idea, Reich- ley notes, but with Phillips’ re- taining ‘‘his position at the at- torney general's side . . . it seems permissible to question whether the administrationlead- ers truthfully reject his theory (which Republican Sen. William Saxbe of Ohio calls ‘a ticket on the Titanic’), or merely are ‘chagrinned that he has spelled it out with such candid cyni- cism.”" Hasn't Mr. Phillips really done for Mr. Nixon ‘‘the i same dubious service that . Machiavelli performed Tor, ‘sare Borgia—describing,, ..in naked words what his hero had all along been doing by instinct.” Indeed, a lot of moderate Re- publicans worry about this ticket on the Titanic. The press conference zooms on. As many as 20 reporters jump up at once, trying to catch the President's eye. Now he is talking about taxes ; threatening to veto the Senate’s Christmas tree tax bill. The mind goes back; how did this business of inflation start, anyway? It started, we believe, be- cause the United States was willing to fight the Vietnam war, but not pay for it. The crucial year was 1965; it was then that the four-year boom needed a tax increase to cool it down. But the official theory of Vietnam’ was that it wouldn’t cost much, and would be over by Christ- mas. Mr. Johnson didn’t want to ask for taxes and he was vir- ‘tually certain Congress wouldn’t give them, or the public accept them. Economists pleaded in vain; LBJ waited more than a year, Congress another year after that. The taxes were too small and came too late. Infla- tion took over. The nation has made generous sacrifices for other wars: re- strictions, controls, higher taxes; not this one. The country was willing to fight it; not pay for it: It ducked the burden in two disastrous ways, inflation- ary IOU’s (i.e., went in debt) to raise cash, and postponed up- keep on physical plant and hu- man values. It's like owning a home: you can always ‘‘save’’ money by not puttying windows, fixing drains, painting walls. ..S0Cial structure.is.like that too, ~ we have been ‘‘saving’’ billions by ‘not ‘meeting -the frightful depreciation costs of big cities, or the human costs of poverty. If it’s a home, it decays; if it’s a country, it decays, too, as class and racial tension in- crease. Some of these ‘‘social IOU’s”’ of Vietnam are already coming due. This is the worst of all pos- sible times to cut taxes, but Congress is bent on it, mostly for the rich and middle income groups. If the unpatriotic ghetto rebels, there's always re- pression. thatta: biack disobeaience infringes on equal guarantees to whites police, one while he was asleep; and that I doubt it very much, but even if true, the Panthers had turned a building into a fortress, including such weapons as a machine gun, protected by sandbags and that two police- men were shot when they broke into the building. If these two . were sleeping or not attempting to defend themselves, they were ' cowardly Panthers. As I hinted, the following day the Rev. Vivian retracted his brave words and said that ‘‘no one was ordering anyone to do anything.” This came after the sensible black leaders of Chi- cago criticized him or openly . disavowed his ideas. In fact, four black aldermen submitted a resolution in city council de- ploring the curfew and the reso- lution was approved by a 46-0 vote. The Chicago Urban League, apparently a reason- able and fair-minded Negro organization, issued a statement calling the curfew ‘unilateral and provocative’ and that ‘‘they do not approve or condone it.” If my inferences are correct, the decent, sensible and law- abiding Negroes are in the majority and not only disap- prove of defying the laws but realize that-decent, sensible and law-abiding white people want them to share the fights of citizenship in full measure. Full measure means that race should be no factor in granting or withholding any of the privileges of citizenship, but it also means that the individual must accept the responsibili- ties of citizenship and obey the’ laws, regardless of the citizen's color. Many white people do not obey them and are accordingly treated as public enemies. Colored people who do not respect and obey the laws must expect the same treatment. People like this Rev. Vivian should be aware of this, as ap- parently he was not. : The paradoxical aspect of his hysterical manifesto is that he was making a plea for self- imposed segregation of Ne- groes, much the same as the 50 colored girls at an eastern col- lege, who demanded a separate dormitory for themselves and others of their race. Do the Negroes want to be segregated or don’t they? I suppose that some of them do and some of them don’t, being human individuals with poetry corner differing tastes; and I firmly believe that each viewpoint should have an opportunity of doing it the way he or she wants to do it. Whites have the right to live with other whites of their own particular brand and the same right should apply to Negroes. But neither white nor Negro has any right to break laws, nor to defy the police. The po- lice, remember, come in both colors too. : ‘ The Black Panthers are not doing anything to help solve the ~ racial problem in this country, nor is the Rev. Vivian. continued on PAGE 10 by F. BUDD SCHOOLEY, M.D. Dallas Man is more. than a speck in the land, His destiny is influenced by a higher hand. His life is bound by love, And redemption from above. His being more than microscopic dust, In a universal God that he can trust. A worthwhile purpose in humble labor, A meaningful objective in his behavior. In the past, today and hence, Conscious pattern of his existence. Man's spiritual goal was ordained To accomplish more than was attained. The finality of death is not all, The inner spirit hears the call; To guide him on the final journey home, God is there and he is not alone. From Pillar To Post ‘By HIX Hap Hazard and Hix ex- change insults freely, making scathing remarks and counter remarks on paper. Hap always gets a reply through the mail, because he invariably encloses a stamped self-addressed en- _ velope, a dodge which a good many business firms would do well to adopt in the interests of speedy returns and enclosed checks. When I get a bill with an addressed envelope, I remit within a week. When I get a bill - with a self-addressed envelope, with a stamp already in place, the mail practically glows red hot and sends up smoke signals. This accounts for the speed with which Hap is answered, every time he addresses a let- ter to Chipmunk Crossing. Native thrift will not permit Hix to waste a stamp, and as Hap licks them in place with a fervor which causes them to stay put, they are of no value on any other envelope. They resist steaming off. I've tried. I quote . . . and it is Hap Hazard who is not talking: “You must have removed the black patch over the eye to enable you to write me such a snide note. I may be on the string bean side, but I do have the capacity to take aboard an awful lot of food. Last night I had dinner at the Alexanders, and here is what Jeannie turned out: “Flounder, thin sliced and rolled, baked in milk and but- ter sauce; tiny onions with lima beans, done in cream sauce and delectable; a cole slaw fit for the Waldorf, all downed with a cauldron of milk. After that came a brown Betty mit cream yet, and contrary to your accusations, I had to leave half of the brown Betty on the saucer and could not take it home with me, seein’ that I love brown Betty and have it so seldom.” (How about a dog- gie bag, Hap?) “I see by your one-time rag that the community at large is going to give you a whoop- de-ding. On such occasions they normally present the victim with a hand-painted carpet bag, and instructions to get going. “®ham ‘réminded of ‘the big party ‘the! Sanitation « Depart- ment in New York City gave a very old Italian who was retiring after forty years on the force, pushing a'cart with a barrel on it and wielding a big broom and shovel. His con- terees decided to give him a FORTY YEARS AGO A. C. Devens, Kunkle flour and feed dealer, purchased the Dallas Lumber Company build- ings and announced plans to establish a modern flour and feed business in them. At the same time another feed com- pany, Brown and Fassett of Tunkhannock, announced that it had begun operations on a new plant to be located op- posite the Glen View Coal Com- pany on Demunds Road at Fernbrook. The astronomical program . for 1930 included two eclipses “of the sun and two of the moon; * thereturn of two periodic comets and perhaps several new ones; a gradual decline of sunspots and solar activity. As a result of the sunspots’ decline better radio reception was promised. Somewhat prematurely, a tDallas Post editorial noted that because Christmas business for 1929 had been as good as a year before the economic out- look for 1930 looked brighter than it had just a few months before. The reason people did not cut down on their Christmas shopping, The Post related, was because President Hoover's ‘business conferences in Wash- ington had restored public confidence in the soundness of the nation’s industries.”” With a decade-long depression still to come, the optimisim reflected in this prediction would soon seem hollow indeed. THIRTY YEARS AGO Luzerne County officials jumped the gun and listed as delinquent in payment of taxes hundreds of people who had in fact paid them and were em- barrassed by publication of their names. i an Credited with the delivery of over 3000 babies, Dr. H. A. Brown of Lehman was honored big party, to which they in-~ vited Mayor Laguardia, hoping - he would come. “The Mayor did come, and after the banquet he gave a glowing account of the devotion of this old Italian to his job, and his long years in service. At the end he called the A ; man up to the speakers’ ta 1 shook him by the hand, and presented him with a nickel- plated shovel. The little old Italian was overcome, and with tears streaming down his face he blurted out, ‘Tanks, Mr. Mayor, I'll remember youse after every shovelful.’ “With all good wishes to you and the big black eye-patch, I shall always look forward to receiving your caustic com- ments about my failings. I hope you will hang around these diggings for a long time and" complete the work you have: under cover, and when the alarm rings off at seven o’clog, you can thumb your nose a# it and turn over for a final snooze. One good turn deserves: an- other. But a friend of mgge once told me that when. ias wife did one good turn she had" all the covers. “When I heard you were in the hospital I thought maybe you had been expecting, though I hadn’t noticed it especially the last time I saw you in that outsize tartan house gown. Afterwards I read that there was a baby in the house, but not yours except by remote control. “When you stop playing the part of a pirate, I'll drop around; this time sans chicken.” (Forget the chicken, Hap. It was the wretchedest little chicken I ever saw in my life, taken away from its mother far too soon. About the size of a brook trout, but very tasty. It ended up in chicken Hoodle soup, noodles by courtesy Wi Mrs. Jimmie Kozemchak. The ravens are at it again. All small offerings thankfully re- ceived. : Happy New Year and every- thing. ; % by the American Legion for having typified during his 34 years of service as general practioner the highest ideals of ° the medical profession. The Governor Arthur James Mobilization Crusade against the downward spiral of unem- ployment was to be be headed in this area by Mrs. G. A. \. Kuehn. a J Luzerne County relief pay- ments were up sharply over 1939. To meet the challenge of providing warm garments for refugees of World War II, *® las Junior Woman's Club started a Red Cross sewing group. Mrs. Charles Jones was in charge. Died: Mrs. Frank Mazur, Trucksville, and her sister Mrs. John Walsh of Edwardsville died of peritonitis within two hours of each other; Sarah Thomas, 83, Noxen ; John Hayes, 72, Idetown. TWENTY YEARS AGO Dallas Township High School had alargerepresentation at the Farm Show, both band member and vocational agriculture . dents. Andrew Mattie and Wil- lard Race won gold medals for projects in state-wide com- petition: Mattie for five acres of tomatoes and five of cab- bage, Race for two acres of cucumbers. - Fred Anderson pressed for reinstatement of James A. Martin as supervising principal at a lively meeting of Kingston Township school board, as a first step toward complete ac- creditation of the high school. Dallas Borough PTA was. the only PTA in Luzerne County to win the certificate for achieve- ment of goals during the previ- ous year. Died: Amy Young, Shaver- town. 5 a ware Mai 2} mE EAE