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MAY 2003
MAY
INFORMAL MEETING This
is our May Meeting at MIDLAND
LUTHERAN COLLEGE This
is a VERY Interesting Program! Pippa
White presents "The Orphan Train" BROWSE
NITE MAY 26th 7
p.m. at Mares Meeting Room NORTH
BEND GRADS The
regular annual commencement of the North Bend high school was held at the opera house last
Friday evening. The program was well rendered
and an oration given by each graduate though the class was large. There were the following sixteen graduates: Clarence Walrath, Bertha Allen, John Purcell,
Loren Edson, Andrew Harvey, Mary Seelig, Elizabeth Ladenburger, Mabel Acom, Margaret
Kimbrough, Lizzie Powers, Herbert Armstead, Asa Farnham, Flora Conley, Helen Verhs, Fred
Swan and Theola Linn. There was a severe hail
and rain storm on that evening but nevertheless the house was crowded to uts utmost
capacity. Music was furnish by the North Bend
orchestra and in addition vocal music rendered by Professor McProud, Miss Flora Conley and
Miss Virginia Francis. noted in Fremont Tribune 27 May 1903 2:3 POST OFFICE SUBJECT Subject
of Post Offices - - - - bet you never thought of this next as a post 9/11 problem. The headline in This Weeks News, May
21, 2002 a free email news service for postal employees, read: Postal Irradiation
Taking Toll On Mail Sent to Library of Congress.
The article explained that much of the mail sent to the Library of Congress
is being irradiated because the building is connected by tunnel to the House and Senate
ventilation systems and the fear of anthrax was real.
The irradiated mail arrived yellowed, crinkled and sometimes burned beyond
recognition. Even though the thermostat has
since been turned down to a mere ten
times the normal zap, the mail is being cooked at temps as great as 170 degrees, and
damage is noticeable. What does this mean to
the genealogist? Materials that have been
sent to the collections division or submitted for copyright have been severely damaged. Photographs of potentially histories value have
been fused onto cover sheets where the caption ink has melted off, making them impossible
to decipher or preserve. Some videotapes of
oral history interviews are no longer playable. The
journals and serials have that yellowed and embrittled look as if you the Sunday newspaper
out in the sun, said Nancy Davenport, director of acquisitions for the Library. This is not good news......... |
Spotted
in the Genealogy Bulletin Also
from Genealogy Bulletin Issue # 55. NO
SMOKING signs are everywhere these days just as they were in early Puritan New
England. In the early days of the
Massachusetts Bay colony (1640s), indulgence in the weed was restricted to a pipe after
dinner. In New Haven the authorities offered
informers part of the fine assessed upon violators of the law: It is ordered that no tobacco shall be taken
in the streets, yards, or about the houses....in this jurisdiction, or without doors near
or about the town, or in the meetinghouse....under the penalty of six pence a pipe or a
time...(and if he cannot pay) he shall then be punished by sitting in the stocks one
hour. Smokers, no matter how
beleaguered you feel today, rejoice that you arent in 17th century
Massachusetts. The
Genealogy Bulletin articles were written by Donna Potter Phillips DODGE
COUNTY NEBRASKA MARRIAGES 100
YEARS AGO BOOK 10 1903 Otto
Schluter to Emma Gerths on 3 May REMEMBER
Mothers Day on May 11th. Memorial
Day Observed May 26th 1910
Census Index for State of Nebraska(however, it cannot be loaned out, so Claire put it on
her computer and will check it for our members). The
index info can be printed off. Digital Imaging for Genealogy VHS tape. Renee plans to use this tape for a meeting. It is 1 hr 21 min in length. |
http://www.usgennet.org/usa/ne/county/dodge
Copyright 2002,2003 Claire Mares
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