7B Only yesterday 50 YEARS AGO - NOVEMBER 17, 1933 Drawing from his own exciting experiences as a member of the Candian Air Force during World War I, Rev. Fred Sellers, pastor of Shavertown Methodist Church, painted a graphic word picture of war’s horrors and waste at the Armistice Day services for area ex- soldiers. : College Misericordia presented scenes from five Shakespearean plays. The episodes, sponsored by the English Department at the Col- lege, were enacted by members of the Classic Guild of New York City. About 500 students from local high schools attended the presentation. Deaths - Blanche Sickler, Hunts- ville Road. You could get - Sardines 3 cans 10¢; bacon 19c Ib.; prunes 2 lb. 19c¢; pie cherries 2 cans 25c; Victor Coffee 19¢ 1b.; Crisco 2 1b. can 39c; flour 24 1b. bag 99c; eggs 37c doz.; beans 2 Ib. 15¢; sugar corn 10c can. 1943 3 Two local men shot bears on the first day of the season. Dr. Malcolm Borthwick shot a 135 lb. black bear at West Creek Gap in Columbia County while William White killed a 130 1b. black bear along Stony Brook above Forkston. Pvt. First Class Michael C. Sten- cil, USMC of Trucksville ws one of six marines awarded thé Purple Heart ‘for injury received as a result of enemy action in the South Pacific.” Michael, a gunner, was the son of Mrs. Ann Stencil of Trucksville. Engaged - Roberta Crocker to Pvt. Gilbert F'. Huey. Married - Charlsie Matthews to Charles Windsor. Deaths - Charles B. Hoyt, Hunts- ville; Leon Kromelbein, Tunkhan- nock. < You could get - Fresh ground beef 25¢ 1b.; veal rump 29c Ilb.; lamb chops 39c 1b.; link pork sausage 39c 1b.; evaporated milk 3 tall cans 26c; granulated sugar 10 lb. 63c; eggs 57¢ doz.; Ivory soap 31g. cakes 29c. 30 YEARS AGO - NOVEMBER 20, 1953 Mrs. Alfred Bronson, Sweet Valley, received word that she had passed the State Board examination for funeral directors.” Now a licensed funeral director, Mrs. Bronson was in business with her husband at his Sweet Valley Funeral Home. Dorothy Pellam, Beaumont, spent three days at General Hospital after being bitten by a neighbor’s monkey. Dorothy, 16, was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pellam. Engaged - Irene Polisky to Stan- ley Cook; Doris Mae Hazeltine to Leonard Stoner. Deaths - Mrs. Fred H. Renard, Dallas; Ellen Brown, Shavertown; Mrs. Clyde Kocher, Endicott, N.Y. You could get - Turkeys 55c Ib.; Long Island ducks 59c¢ Ib.; pork roasts center cut, 69c lb.; emperor grapes 2 lb. 29c; cranberries 23c pkg. canned pumpkin 2 1g. cans 25¢; fruit cake 98c 1b.; walnuts 49c 1b.; peanuts 39¢ 1b. 20 YEARS AGO - NOVEMBER 21, 1963 Dallas football team subdued Wyoming team 32-0 to garner their second West Side Conference First Library news Place. A terrible house fire on Orange Road in Carverton claimed the lives of two pet kittens owned by the David Voitek family. Fortunately, the Voitek family was uninjured although house damage amounted to $7,500. Engaged Linda Gosart to Thomas Major; Barbara Jeanne Payne to Edward Andrew Uftring, Jr. Your could get - Turkeys 33c 1b.; sirloin steak 75c¢ 1lb.; fresh ham roast 43c lb.; Gold Seal Flour 5 lb. bag 47c¢; cranberry sauce 2 cans 39¢; cream cheese 8 oz. pkg. 25¢; 2 cans pumpkin.33c; Scott napkins 25¢ pkg. of 40. 10 YEARS AGO - NOVEMBER 21, 1973 Area residents sadly remembered the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas, Texas in November 1963. Sixteen cherry trees were cut down by vandals at Lake-Lehman High School. In addition to the tree damage, pads were stolen from the football team’s seven man practice charging sled. These pads were valued at $40 a piece. Engaged - Mary Ann Smith to Richard L. Warner. By NANCY KOZEMCHAK Library Correspondent The week of November 14 through 20 is National Children’s Book Week. The children’s annex at the Back Mountain Memorial Library will be celebrating with various special programs and activities for JOST 25¢ on newsstand Rick Shannon Dotty Martin Mike Danowski $12 peryearinPa. ....Advertising Representative GARR Circulation Manager trom the children. Besecker’s window in the center of Dallas will be filled with some interesting items as well a many selected new books. The theme for this year’s book week is “BOOKS ARE BEST FRIENDS.” Bookmarks will be available for children in the annex. We would like to thank Mr. Joseph Kubic who is responsible for a book being presented to the library. “The Delaware, Lacka- wanna & Western Railroad In The Twentieth Century’’. by Thomas Townsend Taber has been donated in memory of Gerald F. Cruse by the National Railway Historical Society, Lackawanna & Wyoming Valley Chapter. The book is copy- righted in 1981 and covers the his- tory and operation of the ferries, the freight activities in New York harbor, public relations and adver- tising, locomotives and cars, and a station listing giving information concerning every named point along the railroad. We are indeed grateful for this book which will be added to our memorial collection. New books at the library include: “Crochet Workshop’ by James Wal- ters is a down-to-earth discussion of every aspect of crochet ‘technique and an invaluable reference book. It is meant for those who would like to learn as well as the experienced who are looking for more informa- tion in order to experiment and devise their own designs. Motifs, patchwork, crochet lace, jacquard and colour work, free-working and finger crochet are covered. “And I Don’t Want To Live This Life” by Deborah Spungen is the very moving true story of one woman’s relationship with a deeply |disturbed child--and how that child almost destroyed her. It is a strong indictment of the medical commu- nity, and a powerful, extremely sympathetic insight into the struc- ture of a modern family. It is also a scary look at that family’s brief fling with unwanted notoriety and fame. T.M.B.. Hicks, known as ‘‘Hix’’. JL, area residents for- years to come. her death. boy holding a hand-let- tered sign “YANKEE GO HOME,” waved enthusiati- cally at President Kennedy Friday afternoon and Presi- dent Kennedy waved back with an answering smile. Moments later, three shots rang out, and the holiday crowd scattered as the offi- n Dallas, Texas, a smiling President broke from the cavalcade and raced for the nearest hospital. The incredible news was on the air. : The message flashed around the world that the President of the United States had been assassi- nated. Everything that made John Fitzgerald Kennedy his berant self, perished in the crash of a madman’s bullet through the familiar head with its dark unruly hair, bared to the breeze of Texas as it had been bared to the bitter January wind of Wash- ington on the day of his inauguration. The body of the President lived for half an hour before the courageous heart was stilled. longer...IT. A body, to be carried ten- derly. A body, to be encased in a bronze casket and flown to Andrews Field. A body, to be slipped quietly into a sleek grey ambulance enroute to Bethesda Naval Hospital, while another President of the United States, already sworn into office, faced a battery of television cam- eras against the clamor of jet planes, paces away on that same landing field. That supreme self confi- dence; that somehow endearing arrogance; that vital youthfulness; that stiff- necked pride which kept his head unbowed through family grief; that almost off- hand reaction to danger; that determination to win which had drawn to an inside straight,” forcing the Premier of the Soviet Union to throw in his hand in the Cuban crisis of a year ago, all that tremendous capabil- ity and potential power...gone forever. Dallas, Pennsylvania, heard the news from Dallas, Texas Friday afternoon with the same incredulous horror which gripped the rest. of the country and the world. In Dallas, Texas, the holi- day crowd had dispersed, leaving behind a crumpled placard, ‘“YANKEE, GO HOME.” The Yankee had gone home, and Dallas, Texas, bowed its head in shame. BY HICKS ow would you like-to be Thanksgiving and get lost in the Christ- mas rush? Have you ever noticed how the Christmas season begins earlier every year and the Thanksgiving holiday has become almost a forgotten one? : Isn’t it funny how local borough employees have already begun to hang Christmas lights and Season’s Greetings signs everywhere - and it’s only the middle of November. My goodness, we’ve got a month and a half of beautiful fall and winter weather and a very peaceful holiday like Thanksgiving lying in between now and Christmas. Why is it that we have allowed Christmas to get so out of hand? What have we done that'has turned Christ- mas into such a rushed, commercial season? It seems every year the stores begin their Christmas advertising earlier, while the consumers allow themselves to be swallowed into the trap, buying more and more and spending not just more time, but more money. . It is somewhat dishearten- ing to see Christmas decora- tions going up shortly after the masks and costumes of Halloween are put away rather than waiting for the disappearance of the Thanksgiving turkey. It makes one wonder if maybe nothing other than an obsta- cle between the American consumer and Christmas. After all, Thanksgiving was long ago declared a national holiday and has always been treated as one - school bells do not ring, places of employment call it quits for one day and stores are forced to keep their doors closed. And, with the stores not open, Thanksgiv- ing Day has become nothing other than one less shopping Christmas shopping day. What is just as disappoint- ing is the fact that we have allowed a nice, peaceful holi- day like Thanksgiving to go by the wayside is the way we have exploited Christmas. The yuletide season started out as the ‘‘season of giving” and has mushroomed itself into the ‘‘season of spend, spend, spend’’ and the ‘“season of expect, expect, expect.” We have rushed the Christ- mas season and now spend almost two solid months pre- paring for it. We have man- aged to forget why we cele- brate Christmas in the first place and we have managed to turn the beautiful reasons for Christmas into the most commercial holiday this land has ever seen. While - Thanksgiving Day parades are now ending with Santa Claus and his sleigh full of Christmas packages, maybe it is time for us to pull a little tighter on the reins of our pocketbooks and on our expectations for the Christmas season. If each one of us does our own little part of removing the com- mercialism from the Christ- mas season, perhaps the mushrooming effect will move us into the direction we should be headed - the direction where we can all appreciate Christmas for what it really is and not for what we have made it to be. After all, wouldn’t it be the Thanksgiving dinner table with family and friends and thank the Lord for the food we have, the good health we enjoy and the hap- piness we have known? Then, and only then, can we also thank him for allowing us the opportunity to look forward to wishing Him a happy birthday on December 24. — DOTTY MARTIN ey, Mister! That’s a principal serving doughnuts. A tip of the early morning coffee mug to Sam Barbose, the bright-eyed and bushy- tailed principal at the Dallas Township Elementary School, for making Dad’s visit to his child’s school last week more convenient than ever. Barbose, with the help of the school’s Parent-Teacher Organization, served coffee and doughnuts to fathers of elementary children during the early morning hours last Thursday. Thus, fathers were given an opportunity to visit their child’s school during American Education Week - an opportunity they may have otherwise missed due to hectic work sched- ules. By visiting, the school, fathers had the chance to become better acquainted with the programs offered to their children and had an opportunity to meet and talk with the people who are edu- cating their sons and daugh- ters. It is encouraging to see a man like Barbose put the important aspects of a young child’s education ahead of a few extra Z’s in the morning. And, if Barbose hits the five extra minutes button on his alarm some day this week, none of us will really blame him. _ poTTY MARTIN DEAR EDITOR: Back Mountain PAK would like to thank all of the area businesses who helped to promote The Chemical program on their billboards. on our local panels, the school BACK MOUNTAIN PAK