ad vd AK CR J VR J 8 vé ve ve Jo Je The Dallas Post 60 Years Ago - Oct. 23,1936 LANDONTO GIVE ED.R. GOOD RUN IN ELECTION Voters residing in small towns and rural America have registered a.straw vote for President. The majority are favoring Republican Gov. Alf M. Landon over Demo- cratic candidate Franklin D. Roosevelt. Getting down to cases, the battle fronts will very defi- nitely be in New York, Pennsylva- nia, New Jersey, Illinois and Mis- souri. Franklin D. Roosvelt will most likely be re-elected to the presidency according to results of a poll taken among 5,145 news- paper editors by Liberty Maga- zine. The Dallas Junior Woman's Club will sponsor a Bingo Party at Suburban Inn Oct. 23. Proceeds of their party will go into the gen- eral fund to furnish milk and soup to the undernourished children and also to supply Thanksgiving baskets which it has been the custom of the club to give each year. 50 Years Ago - Oct. 25, 1946 SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES FINALLY ARRIVE . Two hundred fifty safe deposit boxes on order for almost two years have been received and in- stalled by First National Bank. Shortly after their arrival here from a plant in Ohio, a representative came from New York City and spent three days installing them. Along list of customers who waited torent the boxes almost exhausted LIBRARY NEWS By NANCY KOZEMCHAK The Back Mountain Memorial Library is featuring a collage of library auction photographs in the referenceroomat the library. This group of photos is from the first library auction which was held on June 14, 1947. The idea of an auction was suggested by Ruth LeGrand and Alice Howell and supported by Howard Risley, who offered his barn on Lehman Av- enue, for the site and served as chairman for the first three years of the auction. Attics and cellars were emp- tied, barns and garages were cleaned...and the result from the first auction was a net of $3,000 for the library! It was a common thing in the beginning to auction To place your | | Post Classified Call 675-5211 Fellowship Evangelical g Free Church 45 Hildebrandt Rd., Dallas 675-6426 “Sunday Worship Service 9 am & 10:30 am Nursery provided for all services "A Church that cares about you" PHARMACY Prescription Service + Russell Stover | Gots 159 N Memoral er. Shavertown, PA 675-1191 the supply as soon as they were installed. A former Marine Corps gunner, David Jenkins, Davenport Street, general manager of Standard Equipment Co., Wilkes-Barre, was appointed to fill the unexpired term of the late Clyde N. Lapp at a meeting of the Dallas Borough School Board Friday evening. He will serve until December 1947. In other business Joe LaValle and Ken Grose representing the Ameri- can Legion asked permission for use of the gym one night a week for basketball games at which ad- mission would be charged. The board took the matter under ad- visement. 40 Years Ago - Oct. 19, 1956 SALK POLIO VACCINE AVAILABLE FOR KIDS Borough President Joe MacVeigh issued a stern warning to all hunters this week that dis- charge of firearms will not be per- mitted in Dallas Borough. There's a State law which prohibits the discharge of firearms within the « proximity of homes as well as a Borough Ordinance which out- laws the use of guns within the borough limits. According to action taken at a recent meeting of Luzerne County Medical Association, Salk vaccine preventative against polio will be given by private physicians and not as a service of the public schools. There is enough vaccine for any child who wishes it and quantities on hand are increasing to a notable extent. No child will be deprived of protection. You could get - Legs O' Lamb, 59¢ Ib.; cut-up [fryer breasts, 65¢ Ib.; pears, 3 Ibs. 39¢; onions, 5 Ibs. 19¢; Raisin bread. 19¢ loaf; Cherry pies. 49c¢ ea. 30 Years Ago - Oct. 20, 1966 TWO AREA POST OFFICES DEDICATED Not once in a blue moon do two past offices within seven miles of each other schedule dedications on the same day. Dallas and Harveys Lake are making news. Both structures modern to the last detail have been put into ser- vice within the past several months. Both will be dedicated with due ceremony on Saturday. The Harveys Lake dedication will occur at 11 a.m. Dallas dedica- tion will be at 2 p.m. Zip-Code forms have been dis- tributed in the Back Mountain. Local post offices ask residents fill out the addresses most frequently used and send back cards as soon as possible. Postmasters also ask that when a resident mails a let- ter, he put on the return address his own Zip-Code number. 20 Years Ago - Oct. 21,1976 DAMA CRACKS DOWN ON SEWER SCOFFLAWS DAMA at its Oct. 14 meeting moved to take “stringent” action against any properly owners in the Back Mountain area who have not paid their sewer assessments in full upon receipt of Oct. 1 billing. Since Oct. 1 billing was delayed the authority determined that it would take no legal action against property owners provid- ing their bills are paid by Oct. 29. Unless assessments are paid in full DAMA will not have the funds needed to pay off the assessmnt bonds sold to finance construc- tion of the Back Mountain sewer system when final bond payments become due Police Committee Chairman Willard Newberry reported to Dal- las councilmen Tuesday that the borough police had reached an agreement on their contract for the coming year. Police accepted a wage increase of $500 per year over this year’s salary and an additional $150 for holiday work. They will work 40 hours per week and receive time and a half for overtime. Old auction photos are on display at the BMT library off livestock and families often went home with a new cat or dog. The first picture is a group of people at the bidding in front of the Risley barn, which served as the block from 1947 through 1971. The second photo is a large group of people mostly standing during the bidding. A picture of Harry Ohlman, 1951 chairman taking bids with Norti Berti and Herman Thomas helping with a lamb. An early 1950's picture shows Harry demonstrating an exercise bike. Children gathered around Herman Thomas and a baby lamb waiting for auction. A bathing suit was modeled by a slim beauty as Bob Bachman was the auc- tioneer. The winner of the bid gave the acquired bathing suit to the model. New books at the library: “On With The Story” by John Barth uses the venerable literary device Trail of Tears. of the bedtime story, which links fictions as different as The Ara- bian Nights and Charlotte's Web. It weaves stories from an ongoing, high spirited but deadly serious nocturnal game of tale-telling by a more or less desperate loving couple vacationing at their ‘last resort’. The novel explores love in modern life and postmodern lit- erature. “Pushing the Bear” by Diane Glancy is a novel of the trail of tears. It takes place in 1838 when 13,000 Cherokee-forced off their lands in North Carolina, Alabama, Georgia and Tennessee—walked 900 miles through four winter months on what is known as the They were up- rooted from their homes, betrayed by the government that they had treated with respectand struggled to undersand how to make a new life. Thanks to person who returned lost wallet, Editor: This is in heartfelt thanks to the person who found the wallet I had lost at Boscov's in Wilkes- Barre on Sunday, October 6 and took the time and effort to mail it to me with contents fully intact. As | was saying Jack Hilsher Another casualty of our chang- ing civilization went Chapter 11 recently. Smith Corona Corpora- tion, last of the American type- writer makers, is probably stone cold by now. You could call them the latest casualty of computers and you'd be right. But that is sad, not the sort of progress we need. When I was 12 and tender, my parents gave me an upright L.C. Smith. Heavy, noisy, cumbersome to use...I loved it. Since then I've had uncounted, and largely unre- membered, instruments from por- tables to electrics to a word pro- cessor, but I still miss that old upright. It always sounded right. as though your words meant some- thing to it. “Clack-clack-clack,” it went: It understood your thoughts, accepted them, and decisively recorded them on pa- per. My word processor does not do that. It goes “sneck-sneck-sneck,” sneakily, sort of, as though it was reluctantly doing your bidding but didn’t think much of what you were saying. It never makes a mistake on its own, like my up- Your incredible act of kindness and honesty has saved me count- less future hours, days, and weeks of agonizing over its whereabouts and of attempting to replace its lost contents. You were quite literally an an- swer to prayer. Though you chose to remain anonymous, God ts know your identity. Be assured you are and will remain in my, thoughts and prayers. God Bless! and Keep You Always. You truly walk in His Service. Diana Lynn Tabbit. Dallag Glorious memories of the - friendly manual typewriter 454 right did. It never tilts a leller, or darkens a word, and you never getyour fingers inky when chang- ing a ribbon. It's not the same. At one time L.C. Smith had a workforce 0f4,200 in upstate New York, and shared a $1.6 billion market with Royal, Remington, and Underwood. Today the only manual manufacturer is Olivetti, an Italian company which makes machines in Mexico and sells them to the military for use in places without electricity. You can pick up hardly-used portables in flea markets [or a few bucks, and even that superbly- designed IBM Selectric for a few dollars more. Allare a far cry from the first machines in the late 1800's, when aman named Chris- topher Sholes [inally (after 51 oth- ers had tried and failed) made one which could write faster than a clerk could in longhand with a pen. Sholes was called "the 52nd man toinvent the typewriter," and had tried but discarded many dif- ferent models. (Think ofthe num- ber of times he and others used the Ulysses S. Grant campaign slogan, “Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their party.”) Remington bought his patent and continued to use his inelli- cient scattering of letters on the keyboard. Other keyboard ar- rangements never caught on. Mark Twain said, “The little joker Not Good With any other Offers. Offer expires 12/31/96 fo ——————— FEEL OVER- WEIGHT? FEEL OUT OF SHAPE? THAT'S O.K.! AT ERNIE'S WE'RE NOT ABOUT LEOTARDS & MUSCLES. Exercise in a comfortable atmosphere where you're accepted regardless of your physical condition and feel great about yourself! TT WEEK FREE. Visit our facility and receive a Gift | Certificate for a Week of Fitness. Don't forget to bring a friend! renal Lain iB a a anes a ily athe cool ol cc SS iS ErRNIESS 2) Fitness Club |© Route 309, Dallas (next to Treat Ice Cream) 674-2420 piles an awful lot of words on one page, " and his “Life on the Missis- : sippi” was probably the first typed: : manuscript in American publish-: ing. Typewriters took a good while | to calch on, especially since few persons knew how to operate them. In 1881 the YMCA in New Dallas, PA Wednesday, October 16, 1996 5 4 n Fy] bo 4 pot ‘ 3 Mid i York caused a furor by offering a" training course in typing and one - critic said, “This was an obvious error in judgment by the wéll-" meaning but misguided ladies of the YW.CA." Women who until then had f worked at low-paying jobs in fagc- : tories, schools or stores rushed to learn the trade, which offered a | substantially higher salary and promised entry into the glamor- ous world of business. By the year 1900, 60.000 female “type- writers” later and “secretaries” were all men) were working at their ma- chines in offices across the na- tion. Newspapers switched to word. (the word “typist” came processors long ago, and then to personal computers. Yet there are still some repair shops inbusi- ness still accepting and fixing manual typewriters. 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