= fice. DALLAS POST, SATURDAY, NO , 1929 ‘Established 1889 “An independent paper, of the people, devoted to the great farm- ing section of Luzerne and other counties. ~ Trucksville, Shavertown, Leh.nan, Dalias, The Greater West Side, . Shawanese, Alderson, Centermoreland, Fernbrook, Laketon, Valley, Harvey's Lake, Huntsville and Tunkhannock are circulated by ~The Dallas Post. Also 100 copies for Wilkes-Barre readers; y Luzerne and Wyoming Counties, ~ Pennsylvania; 200 copies to friends far away.’ Entered as second-class matter at the Post-Office at Dallas, Pa, “i under Act of March 3, 1879. Subscription $1.60 per year Sweet 150 copies outside of but within the boundaries of a Payable in advance Address all Communications to THE DALL Phone Dallas 300 2 Lehman Avenue AS POST Dallas, Pa. A GOOD CITIZEN AND A SOUND POLICY { } Weiley Himmler, owner of the Himmler Theatre, is seriously considering the installation of either an R. C. A. or Western Electric talking picture quipment in his theatre here. Such equipment will cost in the neighborho of $8,000 and if Mr. Himmler has it installed it will give his theatre talking _ picture equipment equal in quality with that in any of the large city play- : es. There are several companies manufacturing sound equipment for motion picture houses. Some of the equipment is priced as low as $700 or $800, but Mr. Himmler will consider none of these types in selecting sound reducing apparatus for Dallas audiences. € a always giving the best service obtainable to his patrons. dmire Mr. Himmler’s progregsiveness and his business philisophy of It takes coniderable ~ courage and an unbounded confidence in the community for a man to invest ousands of dollars in a community enterprise. Though there were many in Dallas who said thkt a theatre would not pay here when Mr. Himmler started to build a good theatre and to put the very best equipment in it. stop there. When he started showing pensive releases for his programs. He didn’t pictures he secured recent and ex- It is his philsophy of business to give the best obtainable to the public at any price, then if failure should come it will ‘be because 1:0 man could make a success of the business in the field m hich it is located. That, we think, is a sound philosophy and one which ould bring the rewards of success in any community. Contributors’ Column November 5, 1929. The Dallas Post, In your editorial column of last aSt- urday there peared an it me, the der if you really mean to convey, the ontwde ‘world the, impression Br of keeping it so. Iam ‘sure you did not mean that. May I give you some facts relating the Trucksville Post Office, facts you are not aware of according ' to your editorial? About 1,500 people are mail on the rural routes from this of- 165 subscribers receive the Wilkes-Barre Record daily on these routes and they may read their pap- ‘ers at not later than eleven o’clock on the morning of the day the paper is published. Ihave lived in some places where carrier service did not better his. 2 ‘A truck is required to haul the mail entering this office, but. leafed dled * ¢ ¢ 0, 0. oe? 2a? % 9% 0%. 9%" 000% “9 02% oR 0 ® % & ~ 0 00 Oud, E00 009 949 49 S909 + % 00 ese A ‘Girl I Left Behind Me,”” was reply and the inappropriateness being overcome. with heat or from some other cause, KR be! & Os 0 9 oF, qr o50 4303s With quick presence of = oi mind our hero had the patient re- YA