» 5 5 test, SECTION A — PAGE 2 tik DALLAS POST Established 1889 “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its Tlst Year” Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Ine. ,Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subscription rates: $4.00 a year; $2.50 six months. No subscriptions accepted for less than six months. Out-of-State subscriptions: $4.50 a year; $5.00 six months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c. When requesting a change of address subscribers are asked tu give their old as well as new address. ~Allow two weeks for changes of address or new subscription to be placed en mailing list. The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local Fiospitals. If you are a patient ask your nurse for it. We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu- scripts, photographs and editorial matter unless self ~ addressed, stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be held for more than 30 days. ‘hat announcements of plays, parties, rummage sales or any affair for raising money will appear in a specific issue. Preference will in all instances be given to editorial matter which has not previeusly appeared in publication. Editor and Publisher—HOWARD W. RISLEY ; Associate Publisher—ROBERT F. BACHMAN #eaneiate Editors—MYRA ZFEISER RISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS Sports—JAMES LOHMAN Advertising—ILOUISE C. MARKS bi GA ; Some of our problems develop so gradually that it is difficult to realize the seriousness of their impact. One such is inflation. Oscar Schisgall tells in the March Read- er’'s Digest, for example, how when his son was born in 1931 he arranged to have $2,000 for his college education. At that time tuition costs at major private universi- ties ran to about $500 a vear and it seemed a reasonable idea. But by the time the boy was ready for college tinuing. inflation. Despite U. S. cost-of-living figures which show only an average rise of 23.1 percent] over the past decade, Schisgall writes, many essential costs have risen from 100 to 300 percent. Medical costs have gone up 47.4 per- cent. The poor and aged, many of whom live in rooming houses and eat in restaurants, face similarly spiraling costs. aA A pencil that cost two cents ten years ago now costs six cents, Schisgall writes; a typewriter which cost $130 ten years ago was replaced this year by a new one costing well over $200. The article, titled ‘Hidden Hazards of Inflation,” also notes that the tax collector profits on the 32.1 percent in- crease in the cost of living: the man who earned $4000 ten years ago, must get about $5000 this year just to keep up. Yet he paid 20 percent income taxes on his $4000 salary and must pay 22 percent on the higher figure, with no increase in his real income. ‘ Inflation,” Schisgall concludes, “is a national prob- lem, a national hazard which affects the lives and for- tunes of each of us.” Those who wonder how wild infla- tion can become may well recall that in Germany in 1923 it took a trillion paper marks to equal the value of just one in 1914. Thus, all Americans should read this article now—or be prepared to weep later. Dallds Woman's Club Sponsors ~ Annual Vogue Pattern Contest Mrs. Fred Eck, narrator for the Vogue Fashion con- test, sits at the left by Mrs. Raymond Goeringer, one of ‘ the judges. Standing are Mrs. Gustay Kabeschat and Miss Marian Wolfe RA Peggy Hall, Olga Jerista, and Barbara Prokopchak, home-making students, ‘and Mrs. Victor Cross and Mrs. Robert Milne are modelling outfits of their own making. Winners of the Vogue sewing con- | to appear at the Wednesday meet- ! sponsored by Dallas Senior Ji i \1ED Member Audit Bureau of Circulations 5 Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association ADL Member National Editorial Association Cas Unless paid for at advertising rates, we can give no assurance tuition costs had more than doubled as a result of con- and Junior Woman's Club, with prizes awarded on Monday at Dal- las Senior High School, are: Peggy Hall, first prize; Barbara Prokop- chak, second; runner-up, Olga Jury- sta; among the women, Mrs, Victor Cross and Mrs. Robert Milne. Judging was done in the Home Economics Room by Mrs. Gustav Kabeschat, Dallas, regional manager for Beauty Counselor Make-Up; Mrs. Raymond Goeringer, sewing instruct- or at Dallas night school; Mrs. Marian Wolfe, fashion coordinator from Fowler Dick and Waker. First Prize winner may enter the district contest at Bethlehem March 15. The winner in this contest will enter a State contest. The National contest offers a first prize of $1,000. ~ Contestants locally had planned % ing of Dallas Woman’s Club, but the meeting was postponed because of heavy snow. Mrs, Cross modelled a beige woo! ensemble with brown hat and ac- cessories. Mrs. Milne showed a basic lack wool suit with short box jack- et and three-quarter sleeves. Peggy Hall wore a jacket dress in powder blue brocade, a basic sheath with jacket.. Barbara Prok- opchak modelled a gold brocade afternoon dress, cut in a low V front and back, Olga Jerista wore a royal blue outfit with separate | jacket, and jewel neckline, three ‘quarter sleeves, Tea was prepared by students in Mrs. William Watchulonis’ Home- making class, and served by stud- ent teachers from College Miseri- cordia, Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas POst rr mappeNED 3{) YEARS Aco: Renovation of the old Bank Build- ing was being speeded for Com- monwealth Telephone Co. and Harv- eys Lake Light Company occupancy, Luzerne County Gas and Electric planned to have offices in the same building. Fred Kiefer owned a page from the famous Gutenburg Bible. The single page was valued at $1,200. Ice was six inches thick at Beech Laie, and the ice harvest was about to commence. Ruggles-Noxen road was to be relocated with the coming of good weather, with elimination of a bad curve ‘at Miller's Corner. Lehman held the lead in the Rural League, | with Orange in second place. H. A. Bronson, Alderson, had a lamb that! when ten days old weighed 29! pounds. James Oljver unloaded a car-load of Dodge trucks, the: third car- load of automobiles for the year to date. \ An Auxiliaxy to Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Company was formed. Shavertown and Trucksville were slugging it out Shavertown threat- ening to withiraw from Kingston Township. An @ditorial pointed out that Dallas Bawough and Dallas Township were | struggling against financial odds #0 maintain high schools up to Stalte standards, asked if the population of Kingston Town- ship preferred tw® second rate high schools to one fhest class building and faculty, ‘a goal which could be reached by hwmrying a jealous hatchet. \ Prohibition. was | a ; sore subject, many thinkers urging its repeal because of inability: to enforce the law. i ] Butter was 2 pounds for 49 cents, lard 3 pounds for 20; pineapple 2 large cans 29; eggs 21 cents a doz- en, evaporated milk '3 ‘tall cans for 29, hams 15 cents a pound. IT HAPPENED 20 YEARS AGO: Lt. Richard Wellington Cease was killed in action somewhere in the Far East, the first Back Mountain boy to die im World War 2. He was a navigator on an Air Force Bomber, Twenty-six years old, he was son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Cease of Trucksville. Orchard Knob Farm was sold to Donald Wilkinson and Fred Brok- enshire, the Johson ‘property passing for $23,000. x James Ellsworth Jones, 7, died after. spending most of his short life in hospitals with a baffling ail- ment. Only eighty acres of tomatoes were promised by local farmers in conference with a canner anxious to tpurchase 350. ; Registration for the draft showed 467 names, including two father and son teams and 12 of foreign birth. Henry Fritzes and son Robert Henry comprised one father-son team; Charles E. Gensel and William Gen- sel another. Many World War 1 men were on the list, including Robert Bulford, Sheldon Drake, and William McIntyre. The rule for no smoking in Dal- las Borough school buildings was enforced on visiting organizations. Names of more than 100 soldiers were added to the. Post’s mailing list, gratis, and a precedent was established to send the home pap- er all over the world for boys in service. Letters were beginning to come from the boys, giving news of themselves. 4 ‘Wardens were given instructions to turn off street lights at once when the “red” alert was sounded in air raid drill. Mr. and Mrs. A. YA. ‘Neely ob- served their 55th anniversary. rr narpeNED 1() YEARS aco: Mad foxes were still the main front page news, with four people getting shots, and manv foxes men- acing the area. Mrs. Richard Culver, the registered nurse who had seen Mrs. Harold Dickson through her last tortured days at .Nesbitt, was taking the Pasteur treatment be- cause of possibility of scratches on her hands becoming infected. Donald Derby was bitten on the “and while changing a tire: Mike Rrupsha on the heel by the same animal; Claude Campbell, retrieving his dog in Loyalville, was’ bitten. The dog had become infected while AWOL after a hunting trip. Foxes were reported everywhere, all of ‘hem acting strangely unafraid of 'uman beings. The Game Commis. sio was starting a program of trap- sing. The Whitesell Brothers were working on a 180 home develop-. ment at Oak Hill, expecting to get twenty homes finished the first year. ) Chick Smith was mamed head of the Sixth Library Auction. Paul Winter had his hat in the ring for Congress. Married: Irma Marcini to Dennis Ferry; Mary Tomascik to John J. Comer. Died: Mrs. Burton Wilcox, 52, Out- let. Mrs. Alex Mahoney, 45, Fern- brook. George ‘Youngblood, form- erly of Shavertown, at 61. Chester Puterbaugh, 58, formerly of Harv. eys Lake. t : | THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1962 5 \ a ca SR lh Lat J] TI ? iv Re { I § GRAHAM fe HUNTER THAT'S A DEPRESSED \ @: [2 § ~ REAR © ¢f . I Fh 0) Me 5 \ 4 g r= A | HCE Well known in this area for near- ly seventy years and in Dallas Borough for about half that length of time, John H. Frantz died rec- | ently in Cleveland, Ohio, at age 84. A little over fifty years ago, with his’ father-in-law John B. Hilde- brant, Mr. Frantz bought the Char- les D. Gregory grist mill along the railroad: tracks on ‘the southeast side: of Rice or Mill Street. It was a grinding mill then, quite an interesting operation, which elev- ated grain and then passed it down through various processes, until it came out as flour or feed or both, The firm also sold processed products of a similar nature, hay, straw, fertilizer, coal, etc. This is the building used by A. C. Devens for storage, across the street from his office. The adjoining building up the street, several times since remodeled, was the barn used for the heavy teams used in the busi- ness. These were soon followed by trucks. The partners built adjoining new houses on Norton Avenue. Mr. Hildebrant owned and lived in the corner house at Spring Street, now occupied by the Joseph family. The Frantz family, including Mrs. Frantz, Ola Hildebrant, and daughter Arline, lived next door. Arline be- came a teacher and taught in Dal- las schools for a time. In 1911, Mr. Frantz was elected a trustee of The Methodist Church and served on the official board in various capacities for many years. Ola Frantz sang in the church choir and was active in the women’s org- anizations of the church. Mr. Frantz was active In civic affairs and held various borough offices. His signa- ture appears on my high school diploma, 1911, along with W. H. Whipp, F. M. Gordon, Chester White, F. M. Garrahan, and William Bul- ford. He survived all the others. Mr. Frantz was noted for a smile or a grin, which ever seemed ap- propriate, and liked to chuckle and laugh heartily. One day I happened to go into his place of business SE EE EE EET TU HET CT ET ERA Rambling Around By The Oldtimer—D. A. Waters ZANTE EE OR TET RE TCT EC IO NE SE ET I ACIS and he was laughing with no one in sight. Said he, “I just started something, and you watch a few months and see if I am not telling the truth.” Then he went on to explain that he had just arranged a nice local girl, of rather uncertain age, to a likely fellow from a near- by town. His laughter was justified. Shortly thereafter they were mar- ried and some of their descendants live in town to this day. Another time we fell to discussing the public schools. Like many others, he felt that the modern schools (this was before World War 1) were not as efficient as the old ones. Then he gave me a problem used extensively in old Dallas High School by Prof. Frank F. Morris: “A farmer with a barn fifty feet square tied a cow at the middle of one side with a hundred and twenty- five feet of rope. How many square feet can she graze?” I went home and used up a couple of sheets of foolscap and a lot of time before I fell on a solu- tion. Since that time I have used this problem regularly to take the wind out of the mathematical smart alees, and usually get them in a daze on a few. minutes. Then. they sneak off to some high school teacher for help. Also, quoting Mr. .Morris, Mr. Frantz said he would like to see any present day high school pupils start out from scratch and trans- late the Lord’s Prayer into Latin and make it come out like the official Church Latin version. Of course the trick in this was that the several English versions do not in them selves agree in every word, and the official Latin version does not include the final clauses at all. In a friendly letter to my wife, Mrs. Bertha Blockage, wife of David Blockage, one of the first printers on the DALLAS POST and long time barber, printer, and local pol- iticlan in Dallas, asks about her old friends and comments on this column. She says they are both well. Safety Valve APPRECIATES CONCERT Dear Editor: On Sunday, February 18th we had the privilege of attending a concert and recital on the organ at the new High School. We would like to extend our congratulation and praise to the Dallas Area School District for putting its equipment and facilities to such use, whereby the public is able to enjoy this new building as well as to have their cultural needs full filled. Recently we read or heard that our new modern expensive schools are not being fully utilized in many respects, but we feel that the Dal- las Area Schools are proceeding in the right direction in this matter, with evening classes for adult edu- cation and such an affair as was held Sunday. We hope in the near future more opportunities of this mature will be made available to the residents of the Back Mountain Area. Once again we say to our local school authorities, “Thank you.” Mr. and Mrs. Percy Love and Family WE MISS HER, TOO Feb. 13, 1962 Dear Mr. Risley: As everyone knows the ‘Dyer’s loved every part of Dallas—but Norton Ave., especially, will never be the same without Maggie. She meant so very much to each of us and the most beautiful words written about her in the Dallas Post just received were to us the most gracious expression of love I've ever read. Thank you, Sincerely, Virginia K. Dyer Largo, Fla. The line between properties is never more closely defined than when your meighbor shovels his front walk, Local Bovs Combletina Basic Training In 8S. C. Two Back Mountain boys are completing basic training at Fort Jackson, S. C. They entered the service January 3, their numbers drawn in the draft. Pvt, Arthur Spencer, and Pvt. | Donald G. Steltz, both attended Leh- Iman Schools, Steltz graduating in | 1957. | Spencer, a pole-man for Sordoni { Construction Company, is son of Mr. rand Mrs. David L. Spencer, 33 Elizabeth Street, Dallas. Steltz, son of Mr, and Mrs. George Steltz Jr., Sweet Valley RD 1, was a mechanic at Meeker's Garage in Kunkle before induction. During the last two weeks of the eight weeks of basic training, soldiers live in the field under sim- ulated battle conditions, applying knowledge gained during the first six weeks. Both boys are with Compay C, 18th Battalion, Fifth Training Regi- ment. Cavnles Club Sea Slides Of European Trip Idetown Couples Club were host to Lehman Methodist Couples Club, Saturday night at the Idetown church house. Sam Davenport showed slides of his recent European trip. Present were: Rev. and Mrs. Nor- man Tiffany, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bergstrasser, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Al Swelgin, Mr, and Mrs. Richard Ide Mr. and Mrs. Merrel Burnett, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ide, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stroud, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sweit- zer, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Fox, Mr. and Mrs. Arlington Vanderhoff, Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Barnes. Mrs. Marshall Harrison and Mrs. Joe Ide served refreshments, Rubber Stamps Made To Your Design THE DALLAS POST Turn Signals Now Required On All Autos Trucks Must Have Additional Flashers Under New State Law Owners of passenger and com- mercial vehicles in Pennsylvania must bring vehicles into compli- ance with new lighting and reflector equipment requirements as quickly as possible. Recent amendments to the Motor Vehicle Code require that all ve- !hicles including passenger type be equipped with electrically operated directional signals, and that com- mercial vehicles meet new standards involving approved lights and re- flectors, plus the installation of a hazard warning switch. Commissioner O. D. Shipley, Com- mission of Traffic Safety, said, “Al- though the deadline for compliance with the new amendments has been extended until October 31, it would ibe unwise for vehicle owners to {wait until the last minute to have new equipment installed. The best time to have this work done 'is during the semi-annual inspection periods.” The electrical turn signal require- ment will affect older model autos, other than those registered as ‘‘an- tique,” as well as foreign-made cars and commercial vehicles not equipped with turn signals. Among the more important of the new lighting provisions affecting commercial vehicles is one requiring hazard warning switch equipment. “The new hazard signaling is an important safety innovation that will reduce the number of rear- end collisions at night,” Commis- sioner Shipley said. So The law states that every motor bus, motor omnibus, and every commercial vehicle including pickup trucks and house trailers must be equipped with a switch which will cause signals to flash simultaneous- ly when the vehicle is disabled on a highway or its shouder. The hazard switch regulation also calls for a red “tell-tale” indicator either installed on the dash or incorporated in the switch itself. Equipment must be of a type ap- proved by the Secretary of Reven- ue. Shipley pointed out that the switch requirement is patterned af- ter a recent Interstate Commerce Commission rule and that Pennsyl- vania is the first state to adopt and apply the I.C.C. standard on a state-wide basis. The Commissioner said, “The new lighting standards give Pennsylvania the most complete vehicle lighting program of any state in the nation.” Mrs. Arline Rood Wins PTA Life Membership Those, who attended the Dallas Borough PTA meeting on Monday evening were enthraalled by ‘the program. Miss Enid Housty, sen- ior in the music department at College Misericordia, from George- town, British Guiana, gave a brief piano recital, brilliant and inspir- ing. i SH A birthday party in recognition of Founders’ Day was held, and a collection taken for Pennsylvania Congress of Parents and Teachers. Mrs. Arline Rood was given honor- ary life membership in the PTA. Mrs, Stephen Hartman, Jr., pre- sided [Plans were revealed for a movie which will be held March 3 at the Dallas Township school, open to children of all ages. Room visitations were held, and a social period folowed. Refresh- ments were served by mothers of Mrs. Steele’s and Miss Davis’ third grades. The attendance award was won by Mrs. Fleming's second grade. More Trout For Area Lakes This Week Pennsylvania Fish Commission planted 1500 brook and 1500 rain- bow trout at Lake Silkworth on Monday. Two plantings of trout were sched- uled for this week at Harveys Lake, one on Monday, of 2,500 and 2,500 rainbow trout, and one on Wednes- day, 4,000 each of brook and rain- bow trout. The first planting took place last Friday, 4,000 rainbow, 4,000 brook. Plantings of large trout are made, not fingerlings. 2 Electric Home Heating Advantages Outlined If you're planning to build or re- model, heating experts claim your home will stay modern if you sel- ect electric heat. They state that { there are no fumes, no smoke or soot, because there are no ducts, chimney, or furnace! That means electric heat system installation costs are .lower. And with an electric heating system there are no seasonal check-ups and clean-ups to get ready for the heat- ing months. Service is reduced too, for electric heat has no moving parts, There is less chance for break- downs in the middle of a cold snap. For full electric home heating system details, call your electric power company. A smart man never tells his wife a secret—he just thinks he does. From Pillar To Post... by Hix I had been looking forward to getting back my savings account pass-book. Like a miser gloating over his coins, I had figured out the amount of interest due since the last deposit some three years before, and visualized the nice black figures added for free to the total. ~ There were things about that pass-book that I treasured. Twenty years old, it was, and its entries sketched a history. There was the happy time when a small legacy came my way, and was prompty stashed away to hatch. There was the year when everything was going out and nothing coming in, a painful account of withdrawal after withdrawal. There was the sizable figure representing the down paymen* on a house, and a correponding entry from my mother. How many years ago? Twelve? Thirteen? ' Then, for a time, there were steady deposits. Birthday presents and Christmas presents. “An occasional welcome bonus. Repayment, me to me, of moneys abstracted for the account with a firm resolve to replace them. One withdrawal indicated a drilled well, and a pretty penny THAT took out of the account. A graph of a period, a whole middle of a life. : There were some important dates to remember. They were doubtless entered in the House Book, but they would also appedr in the pass-book. Let’s see, now, when it was that a daughter-in-law was at the point of death? Ten years ago, eleven? The pass-book has the answer. The years are beginning #o fly: The pass-book holds them all. Important transactions, personal things, Not to be entrusted to a check book, buried in the anonymous mechanization of a modern bank. The envelope from the bank. The decision not to open it until evening, when there would be time to go over it at leisure, and run a finger down the entries, the tragic and the triumphant, re- living an important period of time. The envelope seems strangely glossy. How nice of the bank to replace it with a new jacket. And now for the pass-book. Stiff and new and gleaming, it emerged from the jacket. Only one entry, the latest. Plus of course the interest. the total And Twenty years reduced to one line. : “You can’t do this to me,” I wailed over the phone the next day. “Where is my old pass-book?” “But you have a nice new passbook, and it is all up to date, interest and all. You NEEDED a new book.” “It isn’t the same. 1 need the entries and the dates. Puhlease send me my old book.” “We changed ALL the books some time ago. The only reason your's wasn’t changed is because you haven't made any deposits recently.” (Maybe I should let the bank in on the news that Savings Loan Associations yield a better rate of intérest, and that any little spare change that came my way was automatically put to work in a more fertile soil.) “Won’t you see if you can locate it? I need it for reference.” “We'll look. Could be it’s down in the storage room instead’ of having been destroyed.” “Oh, THANK you.” ® \ \ 100 Years Ago ThisWeek...in THE CIVILWAR | (Events exactly 100 years ago this week in the Civil War— told in the language and style of today.) Jefferson Davis Becomes South’s First President RICHMOND, Va.—Feb. 22—Jefferson Davis was inaugurated as permanent president of the Confederate States of America in a rain- soaked ceremony here today. The 53-year-old native of Mis- sissippi gave a crackling inaugu- ral address, criticizing the north’s President Abraham Lincoln. on several points, but seemed unahle to draw the crowd out of its gen- eral air of gloom. Accounts reaching this Confed- erate capital of decisive defeats in Tennessee, notably at Fort Don- elson last week, have plunged the city into despair and for- boding. Alexander H. Stephens of Geor- gia, 50-year-old former Congress- posts provision- ally when the STEPHENS = ago. Davis is a striking-looking man —more than six feet tall, with finely-etched features and eyes the color of pine cone smoke. He served as secretary of war under President Franklin Pierce from 1853 to 1857 and was twice a U.S. Senator from Mississippi. * * * BORN JUNE 3, 1803, in Ken- tucky—ironically, only 100 miles from the birthplace of Lincoln— Davis was the 10th child of Samuel Davis, a tobacco planter who served in Georgia during the Revolutionary War. : Davis attended Transylvania University in Lexington, Ky., and later the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, graduating in 1833, 23rd in a class of 33. He served in the Blackhawk war and with distinction in the Mexican conflict, being wounded at Buena Vista. Personal tragedy blighted his young adulthood. His first wife Sarah, daughter of former president Zachary Tay- lor, died three months after their marriage. The present Mrs. Davis, the former Anne Howell, is the daughter of a rich Missis- sippi planter. ; ; The Davis plantation, ‘“Brier- field,” on the high banks of the Mississippi, is a Southern show- place. * * WHILE SERVING in Congress as a representative of Georgia, Stephens, a small, intense man, earned a reputation as a hard and unswerving fighter. He and Lincoln were allied, as fellow Whig congressmen, in op- posing the Mexican war, and Stephens has battled incessantly Begins six-year term nterim Con-|84 against the Know-Nothings and anti-Catholic movements in Geor- “He is widely quoted as once having told a Know-Nothing group: “I am afraid of nothing on the earth, or above the earth, or under the earth, except to do wrong.” Earlier this week, the Confed- eracy’s new permanent constitu- tion went into effect. The docu- ment differs from the original U.S. constitution in many re~ spects, notably: —The president is elected for a six-year term and cannot suc- ceed himself. —Specific mention was made of slaves and the rights of slave owners, although further importa- tion of slaves is prohibited. President’s Son Dead at 11 WASHINGTON, D.C.—Feb. 21— The capital was saddened today by the death of William Wallace Lincoln, 11-year-old third son of President Lincoln. The chief executive and his wife were reported to be plunged in grief. Their eldest son, Robert Todd, is enroute from Harvard University to join them. The death of young William is the second severe blow to the Lin- coln family. Another son, Ed- ward, died in Springfield, IIl., home of the Lincolns before the election that proclaimed Mr. Lin- coln president. And their youngest son, Thomas —whom they call “Tad”—is re- ported to be dangerously ill, con- fined to his White House room. Cause of William’s death has not been determined, but typhoid is suspected. } (Copyright, 1962, by Hegewisch News Syndicate, Chicago 33, Ill. Photos: National Archives (Brady for Signal Corps) and Library of Congress.) Vi | il |: Kenn | admitte room 8 her sis Calkins Faith | the we and si Barry Howarg laced e U. ciation several | Mr. a ville, a | im ) I Mrz merly ¢ to 50% Prinzin; lent to | Mrs. s Lak fter ~~ & i f rove d an rout Mr. a Mr. and Hill Ro for a v Mr. Harveys birth o Hospital business Capta | in-law | Hick . Force B | family | Mr. fl cute I | announc | Februar \ § il Lake N announ: Februar Henry his hom | ery. Leslie las-Shax about home 1 Mulcey, State 1