THE DANBURY REPORTER Established 1872 Volume 71 Of People and Things LETTER TO SANTA CLAUS , .!T Dear Santa: Please do not bring me this Christmas fire- j works, air rifles, tooting tin horns, deafening blares. I These are incidents of the old-time Christmas, dear Santa, when the world lay down Christmas | eve night to sleep in peace and security and hap piness till the gay morn, then to rise and cele brate. Oft in the stilly night when Dad had thrown on the last hickory log and banked the fires for the night, have I lain awake and listened for your jingling entourage as it swept across the frozen hills to bring joy to a thousand homes. Then at dawn I heard the merry Christmas bells. This was the signal for celebration and hil arity and riots of fun and jollity as the kids awoke to say "Merry Christmas to all." Now, dear Santa, the scene has changed. Our country is sorely troubled. At the hearthstones of a hundred thousand homes memory and sad ness brood for those who are gone. There are va cant places at the table. Dear Santa, please bring me back my brother who is somewhere on a foreign strand, away from home where we miss him so. Is this a time for fireworks, for boisterous shouting and cele bration ? But, dear Santa, we are proud of nim—how handsome he looked in his uniform. We know he will do his bit for the country which we all love so well. Ten thousand times we will surrender our pleasures and give our best rather than our people and our beauteous land should become the victims of the cruel and treacherous foe thai: is trying to crush us. . But we do ask you, dear Santa, to protect him, to safeguard him in the midst of the dangers that encompass him, and to keep him ever in the simple faith of our mother as of the days long p.go when we knelt at her knee In the twilight to say "Now I lay me down to sleep." How futile are the dubious doctrines and phil osophies of this modern day when compared with the teachings of that Book which "has been recognized so beautifully by our great army, when its leaders are presenting every soldier and marine and sailor with a copy of the Bible, and our great President fit to conduct a Thanksgiving service in the White House. Please, dear Santa, lead our magnificent arm ed hosts onward—ever onward—to Victory. Let the white dove of peace fold its wings once more over our country. At last may the gallant fleets loaded down to the water's brim be moored safely back in the home ports and may our splendid boys view through the lifting mists Old Glory waving triumphant from t!\e ramparts of the castle of ouj*'dreams .and listening to -the eres ccrdo playing Elj> Ameiica?'' * "• / . '**■ ■ • " 'v.•. WISE POLITICIANS ""t y^rj r, "ISw -•• v"" .':7 V '»*■ not fools: of this proposition we reifer. you ;to thcifr' i^Sjptective' statements "in the newspapers in Danbury, N. C., Thursday, December 17, 1942 DANBURY'S FIRE HAZARD At the risk of being considered officious, the Reporter would warn the people of Danbury of our fire danger, which is serious. With a very weak and doubtful supply of water, and with no organized protection against flames, the town runs constantly a serious risk especially on cold nights and days when spigots ere frozen. Danbury has a number of large old buildings, j each a fire trap. If fire breaks out in a home or business place, with a high wind blowing, the ; county seat could # be destroyed in a few hours. Citizens would stand by practically helpless. i The most particular and constant caution is rec-1 'ommended wherever there is a stove or electric wires, or kerosene lamps. Every family would do well to keep tubs or pails of water standing by as a reserve in case of emergency. The danger is imminent always. THE TRAITOR PETAIN One of the first acts after the victorious allies I have hanged Hitler and Mussolini should be to punish Marshall Henri Petain who we read has 'agreed to Hitler's proposal to raise an army of French to fight the allies. Petain's actions ever since he lay down and be trayed his country when the Germans invaded it have been cowardly, yellow and traitorous. He is an old man, but he is not too old to suffer for his crime of collaboration with France's ene mies and for his hostility to England and Ameri ca who are battling to strike off the shackles from the heroic French people. Future historians will record the infamy of this old scamp in words that burn with contempt and execration. THE BEAUTIFUL SNOW It is falling again today, the third snowfall of the winter. White, pure and unpolluted is this quiet soft mantle that settles over the land of peace— the home of the star-spangled banner. What a contrast is offered by the crimson snow of the vast steppes of the Ukraine where the de fenders of home fall with the invaders, and what a pity that the beautiful snow that comes in the season of the birth of the Prince of Peace should be dyed red with men's blood. which each of them declared he would not be a candidate for Republican President in 1944. Gallup's poll, which is generally considered un cannily accurate, shows that the man now in the white house the favorite candidate of the peo ple for President in 19.44. Of c.ourse v it is qujte a,long-time till : the ' next presidential,-election, and much water will go un der the wheel 'before another President elect ed; But it will- take a lot of the old wfreel against ffife♦current:• -• * 4 '* ' :v •' v this better tfi&ir *£)ewey, Taft and Vandenburg. EDITORIALS Published Thursdays THE DYING WPA Let the bells toll. The WPA is dying. Its creator administers a lethal dose. He creat ed it. Let him kill it. His is the responsibility for its birth. His must be the reward for its virtues. If in its evil, the WPA should die, if its usful ness is over, let it gently cease to exist. Let it softly, unobtrusively, breathe its last like a spent stabbed giant that has made his last great fight, and won. The WPA was the outstanding gesture of the New Deal. It was an institution that brought sav ing grace to a nation in extremis. The early 1930's saw the country reeling on the rocks of its master depression. No one to throw out a lifeline. The populace discouraged, hope less, desperate. Widespread unemployment dammed the chan nels of trade and traffic. Business was rick unto death. Countless thousands of idle men and wo men walked the streets and the highways with nothing to do but condemn the hour of their birth lor their country's undoing. Revolution was show ing its sinister lineaments, and plotting for the overthrow of government and .übiety. Suicides everywhere. Desperation, despair, chaos. Then what happened ? I The Man of the Hour appeared on the scene. He called for a rope to toss out into the seething flood for the rescue of those who were perishing. | Congress under the dynamic leadership of Franklin D. Roosevelt passed the law to give ! work and pay and hope to the masses who were : :n need of succor. Clothing, coal and food for those who were freezing and starving. | Then began that cruel, unfriendly fight on the |WPA. Intrenched privilege condemned it. The j upper bracketeers denounced it and instituted jwar on its provisions. Political dopc-ters of an party derided it. Bi;r tux-payers openly jproclaimed the ruin that would follow FDR's j raids on the treasury. The nation with its 30 |billion dollar income could not stand the exnense |of thp feedinc and clothiner of millions of peo* | pie who should earn their living and pay the cost of their subsistence. Today the country with its $110,000,000,001) in come can stand anything. ! Of all statutes passed during tie present gen eration the WPA has been the most discussed and the most cussed. Today when we see the flush of health in the cheeks of the country which was rescued, shall we place on the brow of its savior a crown of thorns, or shall we hand him the diadem of life? FIRECRACK ER NI ISA WE I The Governor of North. Carolina is roqiu.- ting thai .all good citizen- I:.?ep their bow* fi\V.i ,j,..0£ ing fireworks this Christmas so;:--in.. « He sa.\ s he has had letters tronva lftrge niim ;bei of- people-requesting a bun, on .this-danger ous and foolish practice of the kids-, but that j there is noiaw to prevent it, >;et he kindly asks the-co-operation of those who have ,sense- and reason the4ast 3 words are oui*s)/' D&ngerbtis fo life anicf property- out of place this serious time. * * * Number 5,682