SECTION: A+ PAGE 2 THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its 73rd Year” A nonpartisan, liberal progressive mewspaper pub- lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania. Faded) Member Audit Bureau of Circulations 4 ) Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association <u ys Member National Editorial Association iat Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. Entered as second-class’ matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subcription 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; $3.00 six months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c. 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. When requesting a change of address subscribers are asked to give their old as well as new address. i Allow two weeks for changes of address or mew subscriptions to be placed on mailing list, The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local hospitals. If you are a patient ask your nurse for it. Unless paid for at advertising rates, we can give no assurance that 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 net previously appeared in publication. National display advertising rates 84c per column inch. Transient rates 80c. Political advertising $1.10 per inch. Preferred position additional 10c per inch. Advertising deadline - Monday 5 P.M. / Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged at 85¢ per column inch. Classified rates 5c per word. Minimum if charged $1.00. Single copies at a rate of 10c can be obtaineu every Thursday morning at the following newstands: Dallas —- - Bert's Drug Store. Colonial Restaurant, Daring’'s Mark _;, Gosart’s Market, Towne House Restaurant: Shavertown -— Evans Drug Store, Hall's Drug Store; Trucksville — Gregory's Store, Trucksville Drugs; Idetown — Cave’s Maket; Harveys Lake — Javers Store, Kockers's Store; Sweet Valley — Adams Grocery; Lehman — Moore's Store; Noxen — Scouten’s Store; Shawnese — Puterbaugh’s Store; Fern- brook — Bogdon’s Store, Bunney’s Store, Orchard Farm Restaurant; Luzerne — Novak's Confectionary. Editor and Publisher—HOWARD W. RISLEY Associate Publisher—ROBERT F. BACHMAN Editors—MYRA ZEISER RISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS Sports—JAMES LOHMAN Advertising—LOUISE C. MARKS > Accounting—DORIS MALLIN Circulation—MRS. VELMA DAVIS Photographs—JAMES KOZEMCHAK Associate - Editorially Speaking: Do You Know Him A reader has sent us the following word picture of a twentieth Century American: A young man lived with his parents in a public housing development. He attended public school, rode the free school bus, and participated in the free lunch program. He entered the army then upon discharge re- tained his national service insurance. He then enrolled in the state university, working part time in the state capitol to supplement his GI education check. Upon graduation he married a public health nurse and bought a farm with an FHA loan; and then obtained an RFC loan to go into business. A baby was born in the county hospital. He bought a ranch with the aid of the veterans’ land program and obtdined emergency feed from the government. Later he put part of his land in the soil bank, and the payments soon paid off his farm and ranch. His father and mother lived very comfortably on their social security and old-age assistance checks. REA lines sup- plied electricity; the government helped clear his land. The county agent showed him how to terrace it; then the government built him a fish pond and stocked it with fish. The government guaranteed him a sale for his farm products at highest prices. ~ Books from the public library were delivered to his door. He banked money which a government agency in- sured. His children grew up, entered public schools, ate free lunches rode free school buses, played in public parks, swam in public pools, and joined the FFA. He owned an automobile so he favored the Federal highway program. He signed a petition seeking Federal assistance in developing an industrial project to help the economy of his area. He was a leader in obtaining the new post office and Federal building, and went to Washington with a group to ask the government to build a great dam costing millions so that the area could get “cheap electricity”. He petitioned the government to give the local air base to the county. He was also a leader in the move- ment to get his specific type of farming special tax write- offs and exemptions. Of course, he belonged to several farmers’ organizations, but denied that they were pres- sure groups. : Then, one day, he wrote to his Congressman: “I wish to protest these excessive governmental expenditures and attendant high taxes. I believe in rugged individualism. I think people should stand on their own two feet with- out expecting handouts. ; “TI am opposed to all socialistic trends, and I demand a return to the principles of our Constitution and the policies of States Rights.” Do you happen to know this man? —The Brookville American, Brookville, Pennsylvania. HOTEL JEFFERSON ATLANTIC CITY NEW JERSEY CR NR Gy aw C1 rer Central location overlooking Boardwalk and convenient to Piers, Churches and Theatres — Near Rail and Bus Terminals — Inviting Lobbies and Parlors — Closed and Open Sun Decks Atop — All Rooms Delightfully Furnished — Modified and European Plans — Conducted by Hospitable Ownership Management that de- lights in catering fo the wishes of American Families. Write for Literature and Rates Hotel Jefferson Atlantic City, New Jersey Safety Valve KING-ANDERSON BILL IS POLITICAL Dear Editor: According to the “Liberals”, when teachers strike for higher salaries, and defense workers strike for high- er wages, and steel workers strike for higher fringe benefits, they are merely exercising their “democrat- ic rights”. But these ‘democratic rights” suddenly become ‘‘black- mail” when doctors merely threat- en to strike (not to increase their own incomes) but to alert the American people to the socialistic pitfalls in the superfluous medical- care-for-the-aged program proposed in the King-Anderson Bill. " From time immemorial, U.S. doc- tors have treated, free, anyone who could not pay. They assure us that they will continue this free care. Nowhere on earth are citizens of all ages better cared for than they are in this country. In no other place is the medical profession as free from the deadening dictation and control of politicians, bureaucrats and de- magogues. The Federal government can best help the elderly (and everyone else) by (1) reducing, instead of in- creasing the hugenumber of Fed- eral bureaus and (2) cutting Fed- ‘eral taxes so that each local com- munity can continue to care for its own, under free enterprise medicine. To insure future vitality, progress and improvement, the medical pro- fession needs free competitive enter- prise just as much as business men need it. Regimented doctors, like regimented business men, provide inferior service. Sincerely yours, Helen Payson Corson LIKED TABLOID Dear Mr: Risley: Qur English class is presently studying the importance of news- paper communication, and we are required to write to an editor of one of the newspapers concern- ing some opinions we have formed: I think we are particularly fort- unate in having a mewspaper with- in our local community, bringing to us the mews of friends and neighbors as well as other current news items. Tre mew tabloid section of Tre Nallas Post is of much interest with its featured articles and timely ad- bertisements: 1 was greatly inter- ested in your article about the revo- lutonary mew printing equipment and was pleased to know that our local paper is one of the pioneers in the use of this new process. The Dallas Post is to be commended for its progressive acticn. I extend my good wishes to the Post for its continued success and hope it will continue its forward looking policies: f Sincerely yours, Marsha [Sowden 78 Summit Street : Shavertown *Thank you, Marsha, your kind thoughts are much appreciated—Edi- tor : Honored DONALD D. Donald D. Smith, West Dallas, member of the firm of Roushey, Smith and Miller, engineers and architects, with offices in Kingston, was installed as vice president of the Pennsylvania Society of Pro- fessional Engineers at its Conven- tion in Hershey last weekend. Mr. Smith was recently appoint- ed to the National Executive Board of the Professional Engineers in Private Practice and has been ap- pointed vice-chairman of the North- eastern Region of the United States; the largest of six regions. Not long ago he was named Eng- ineer of the Year by Luzerne County Chapter of Professional Engineers. He is a Director of the Chapter. He and Mrs. Smith, the former Mildred Kitchen, will attend the National Convention at French Lick, Indiana, in June. : 7 The Smiths have a daughter, Don- na, student in Dallas Junior High School, where both graduated when it was Dallas Township High School. They also graduated together at Pennsylvania iState University. Don- na will accompany them to the National Convention. Mr. Smith's firm designed the new Lake-Lehman High School now under construction. SMITH “The wrong way to make an im- pression is on another driver's fen- der.” 2 “Only on teevy could they do it—a cartoon feature by people commercials,” interrupted _THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, MAY 17, 1962 HimgmnnmneInmnz The all day local freight on the Bowmans Creek Branch carried an old baggage car instead of a ca- boose. One evening the flagman washed up the dishes, pulled back the sliding door, and threw the dishwater in the woods. Upon his return to his terminal he was as- tonished to receive orders to re- port at the superintendent's office at 9 am, the next day. The super- intendent was usually hardboiled and he felt nervous going in. The superintendent opened a drawer in his desk and held up a | knife, fork, and spoon tied with a string. Said he, “Are these your cutlery?” Then the flagman re- membered he had lost them the night before and replied yes, al- though he did not know what had happened to them, Said the super- intendent, “It is bad practice when | you throw dishwater in a man’s | face to leave the cutlery in it. You are likely to hurt someone as well as lose your stuff.” He had stood along the track when the water hit | him. Then he called the crew dis- patcher and said the man was not to be penalized for anything. Albert Lewis, who had extensive lumbering operations in the Bow- man Creek area, had similar opera- tions at Bear Creek. When he dis- tributed turkeys at Christmas time he included the members of the local freight crew that served him from White Haven. All the men ac- cepted the turkeys as a valuable tip, excepting one trainman, whom we will call John. He made it a practice of covering the saloons for two or three weeks before ang after the holiday bragging about his close friendship with Albert Lewis. One fall he was displaced on the crew and resigned himself to the idea there would be no turkey. Then one of the men had a bright idea. He secured ‘a block of wood and spent hours rounding off the cor- ners and generally shaping it up like the body of a turkey. On the day the turkeys were received, he took an axe and cut off the neck of his own turkey close to the body and the feet at the knees, and nailed these parts to the block of wood. Then all hands assisted in padding this with waste and sew- EE TE EE SE TE REE EE Rambling Around By The Oldtimer—D. A. Waters 30 ESE Ea E23 ACHE EI SC CTS JUTE ing it up in a burlap bag, wifh the head and neck and lower legs and feet sticking out. They were pleased with the job and called the agent at White Haven on the telegraph to notify John that he should meet seven-thirty to pick up a turkey Albert Lewis had sent him. : John had two or three hours to wait and improved these by a quick round of the nearest saloons, pass- ing the glad news that Albert Lewis, on account of their many years of very close friendship, had sent him a turkey. Then after the train came down, he took his pack- age and made a real tour, during which he became pretty loquacious. The story spread around ahead of him as he traveled, and he was en- couraged to outdo himself. The next day he realized that he had. That | was the last time anyone ever heard {of kis close friendship with Albert | Lewis, or anything whatever about | his gift turkeys. One of the engineers named Mill- er, there were several of the same name, put a wet bandana over his face and brought a train down the Bowman's Creek Branch through a raging forest fire. 2 More hair-raising was the ex- perience of another engineer, when | tain cut-off between Mountain Top | and Pittston. He tied down the whistle on the steam engine and hung on. As the train passed the towers, all the operators knew something was wrong. The train | dispatcher cleared the track ahead {and had the switches at Pittston | Junction set for the main track up | the river. With ‘the whistle still | tied down, the train roared up | through Coxton yards, where the | ascending grade began to slow it up a little. Tt finally rolled to a stop up around Ransom. | The engineer was taken home in | a state of severe shock. After being | off for several weeks, he came out to work one day and in looking at the big board for the number of his engine, he saw marked up the very same engine. Said he, “I will not ride her”. No one blamed him, jm that was the only engine fired | up and ready to go, so another man made the trip. Salvation Army Units Here Are Making Annual Appeals Salvation |: Army Service Units throughout Northeastern Pennsyl- vania are seeking $100,000 to en- able The Salvation Army to fulfill its pledge to meet human need wherever it is found. The Annual Appeal for 1962 will be conducted during May for all units who are not Quotas for area Service Units have been established as follows: Beaumont, William A. Austin chair- man, $90.00; Center Moreland, Mrs. affiliated with Federated Funds. Clarence Schoonover, chairman, $57.00; Noxen, Mrs, Helen Dend- ler, chairman, $125:00. The 1962 appeal has been sched- uled for the month of May rather than during the fall months as a result of The Salvation Army's ~ef- fort throughout the entire region to coordinate all fund raising act- ivities for over 100 units at one" time .to coincide with the’ observ- ance of National Salvation Army Week during May. More than 6,100 persons received local emergency welfare service through the activities of these Units serving Northeastern Pennsylvania. These emergency services were rend- red by volunteers in the com- munities where The Salvation Army is not otherwise located. The Annual Appeal for funds will not only provide the means for the continuation of local welfare serv- ices but will also provide support for many state and regional serv- ices which are also available to the people in this area through the local Salvation Army. More than 900 boys and girls enjoyed 5,500 wonderful days of camping at Sal- vation Army's Camp Ai-Yuk-Pa serving Northeastern Pennsylvania. Other regional services which meet a real need would include: Salvation Army Booth Hospitals for unwed mothers where shelter, the finest of medical care and expert coums- elling are available, Men’s Social Service Centers where unattached and homeless men have a time to reclaim their lives and regain a place in society. When a local resident seeks the held in the local Salvation Army in locating a missing relative or friend, the officer can call on the resources of The Salvation Army Missing Persons Bureau to help him, An international organization active in 86 countries and colonies, The Salvation Army is especially well equipped to offer help in the location of loved ones. Young women from this com- munity who go metropolitan cent- ers to find jobs, to further their studies in aret or music, or to em- bark upon careers, find comfortable home-like accommodations in the Evangeline residences, which are women’s club’s The Salvation Army maintains in big cities across the country. i The Salvaton Army often serves as an important liaison between an imprisoned man and his family, liv- ing in a distant community. Whenever disaster strikes, The Salvation Army stands ready to an. Sal- { serve in whatever way it ; vationists manning Salvation Army mobile canteens, strategically locat- ed in centers across the country, may travel miles to bring coffee and hot food to disaster workers and sympathy and a comforting word of prayer to the disaster vict- ims. You can help your less fortunate neighbors by contributing to The Salvation Army Annual Appeal. Contributions should be sent to your local treasurer. The following public-spirited citi- zens serve as members of The Sal- vation Army Service Unit Com- mittees: BEAUMONT COMMITTEE: Chaim- man, William A. Austin; Treasurer, Mrs, W. A. Austin; Welfare Secre- tary, Mrs. Herbert Goodwin; Secre- tary, Mrs. Harry Clark; Members: Mrs. George Charney, Mrs, Herbert Downs, Mrs. Dorothy Johnson, Mrs. Lambert Traver, Mrs. Alma Brown. CENTER MORELAND Committee: Chairman, Mrs Clarence Schoonover; Treasurer, Mrs. Frank Williams; Welfare ‘Secretary, Mrs. Blanche Faux; Secretary, Mrs. Ruby Bested- er; Members: Mrs. Alva Eggleston, Mrs. Ellis Weaver. NOXEN COMMITTEE: Chairman, Mrs. Helen Dendler, Treasurer, Mrs. Ruth Bennett; Welfare Secretary, Mrs. Letha Schenck; Secretary, Mrs. George Montross; Members: Dr. Les- ter Saidman. Outdoor Tips NO-LEAK BOOTS Oh, the horror to step into a spring stream and feel the telltale icy flow that benumbs the limb | while enraging the mind. Don’t take | the chance. Check boots and wad- |ers .now with a flashlight. Darken | the room and shove the light inside. {Even tiny pinholes show as you | play light around. HIGH HAT TROUT FLIES Neatest fly and bug holder in the world is a piece of cellulose sponge or lamb’s wool sewed or glued on the brim of your fishing | hat. Even if you don’t catch fish, {you will LOOK like you should have. CLEAN UP ON CATFISH Ready to start setting troutlines ? Try this bait. Reports say it works like crazy in some areas, fizzles in others. Trick is a slab of ivory- colored soap on each hook, Who knows what the cats see in it, but they do. THREE TO REMEMBER T Inexpensive floor mats keep your regular car carpet in' good shape. . but they also prevent a tedious windshield scraping if freezing rain or snow is the forecast. And those empty plastic spray bottles your wife throws away by the scores all make dandy oil cans. Pressure amount you need. Need a Phillips head screwdriver bad? A new large the screw isn’t set too tight.) them when they came down about | his air brakes failed on the moun- | of your hand regulates the exact’ nail can sometimes do the job. (If Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas POst IT HAPPENED 36) YEARS AGO: Lindbergh baby, kidnapped over two months earlier, had been found, covered with leaves and brush, not over four and a half miles from the Lindbergh home in New Jersey. The gruesome discovery was made by a negro truck driver one week be- | fore the fifth anniversary of Lindy’s lone flight across the Atlantic from Curtis Field to LeBourget Field in France. The mystery of what had happened after the kidnapping of the most famous baby in the world had been solved, but the perpetrator {of the crime had not yet been | caught, The baby had apparently | died at the time of the kidnapping, which was accomplished with the aid ‘of a ‘crude home-made ladder erected outside the sleeping infant's window. - * Bob: Bulford was. €lected presi- dent’ of the Rural League, which included Beaumont, Shavertown, Orange, Idetown, Ferbrook, Dallas. Hugh Ransom, Dallas, took part in the mock convention held at Oberlin College. Charles: Linskill, 92 year old Civil War veteran, died at his home in Wyoming. : Buster Keaten, wooden-faced, was playing in “The Passionate Plumb- er” .at the Himmler Theatre. Butter was three pounds for 59 | cents. ‘rr uAPPENED 2) YEARS AGO: Pvt. William Edward Simpson, Hayfield Farms, wrote that he liked the Australians, saying the Aus- sles treated the American troops like kings. A bus service for Qutlet was ap- proved by Wilkes-Barre Transit. Folks who were on strict gas rationing planned to attend the Lekman parade by horse and bug- ry, carryall, or farm wagon. George Urick, Jackson Township, died of injuries in Australia, where he had been stationed for two months with the Signal Corps. Marietta Ide, native of Lehman, and a semi-invalid most of her life, died at the Sonyea (Sanitarium. Rev. Frank Abbott conducted services. War Department release said U.S. planes raided Japan, and that 21 Japanese warships were sunk or damaged in the Coral Sea. Dim-out regulations were put into operation on the Pacific Coast. fred Jackson, Central America. "Mrs. Lottie Post, 82, resident of Carverton Road for more than forty years, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Fred Burklin, Wilkes- Barre. rr HAPPENED ]() YEARS Aco: Mystery shrouded the death on the highway of William Walter, 37, Courtdale, whose badly mangled body was found on the Shavertown- Trucksville Highway in early morn- ing hours, by Paul Hilldreth of Elmira, who applied brakes just in time to avoid running over the dy- ing man. No broken glass, no skid marks. Francis = McCarthy, police chief, said signs might point to the victim having been thrown from a speeding car. Harold’ Payne, resigned manager of Commonwealth, purchased the Murrysville Telephone Company. Senator iSordoni presented a large organ, formerly installed at the Wilkes-Barre Elks Home to Prince of Peace Church. Library Auction Kick-off dinner attracted 300 to Irem Country Club. Front . page picture showed Harry Ohlman auctioning off an even- Dorrance. Paul Warriner, first resi- dent of the Library, sketched its beginnings. Dorothy Munster became the bride of John Rice- Steven Wolfe, Meeker, died aged 96. Black headlines screamed that the DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA / From Pillar To Post... by Hix... It's all a matter of relativity. Down in Virginia a month ago, the red bud was in bloom, and the dogwood a drift of white in the spring woods. Around Dallas. the dogwood and the red bud are now in bloom, but the beautiful display passes unnoticed by one resident of Pioneer Avenue, who is gloating over just two blossoms, one each, on small dogwood trees which have never bloomed before, and had been despaired of two Heard from in Safety Valve: Er-+ ic Weber, Great Lakes; Corp. Al% ing wrap knitted by Miss Frances years ago. Those dogwood trees looked like pathetic though watered carefully and cherished with humus they were planted six years ago. little twigs for a time, ever since But until this spring, not a peep out of either of them. And now, a large white blossom apiece, which proves that the trees can do it. Nothing like having your own, your very own, tree in bloom. There are handsomer trees along Pioneer Avenue. And down in Kingston, one of the most beautiful dogwood trees in the country, with low sweeping branches is stopping traffic on Wyoming Avenue. And even right next door, a dogwood tree set out by Herb and Mary Smith some years ago, is spectacular after a considerable per- iod of suspended animation. y But it can’t compare with that small dogwood holding aloft one white blossom in the flower bed, and another little tree in he back yard overlooking the bird bath where the thrushes and the downy woodpecker come to cool their wings in the shade. Hardly visible to the naked eye except upon the closest inspec- tion, those two white blossoms, but a promise of more to come next y year, and the next and the next. : 7 those ~ two’ struggling trees have planted their At long last, \ feet solidly in crevices of the living rock ledge which ‘underlies ‘the ° thin soil. And maybe next year the five other little dogwoods that have never borne a flower, will get the spring. themselves established and hail Red Rock Invites The Public To View Radar Installation Saturday Babpeinair For the first time -since instal- | relatively slow compared to the high lation was made at Red Rock, much | speed jets of the present. Benten of the intricate radar equipment | Air Force Station is modernized to will be open to the public in ob- servance of Armed Forces Day on | meet changing conditions, adapted to give longer and higher range Saturday. Guided tours will be con- | detection, more automatic systems, ducted from 10 am. to 4 pm. to acquaint residents with the ways in which Benten Air Force Radar Sta- tion helps guard against assault by playing a major role in the SAGE system of air defense. and integration with defense mis=~ siles. Lt, Steve Bethky, a resident of ‘ Harveys Lake and with Red Rock for two and a half years, ony by the Dallas Post on Monday to is- It is ome of the largest radar |sue a personal invitation to every- installations in the United States, orjainally established in 1950 as part of the radar network that spanned the northern section of the United States from Maine to Seat- | body in the area. “If you've never visited Red Rock,” he said, “this is the best time to do it, when many of the things that were never open to the tle. At this time threat from the | public before, may be seen at the. . . * | air was by piston-engine bombers, Open House.” Dallas Junior High School To Stage Three-Day Science Fair May 21 to 23 Parents are invited to Junior High School Science Fair in Dallas Junior High School gymnasium ‘fAex{ Tuesday evening, 7 to 9. The | Fair exhibits will be on display for pupils May 21 to 23, an outgrowth of last year’s one-day show. Sheldon Mosier, Howard Shiner, and John Cathrall, science teachers, have obtained three outstanding judges to assay the exhibits, and award first, second and third prizes in each of the three compet- ing grades, seventh, eight and ninth. Dr. Daniel Detwiler of Wilkes Col- lege faculty; Anthony Ruddy, Cough- lin High School; and Thomas Carr, Dallas Senior High iSchool will give their opinion on 125 exhibits. In- cluded are demonstrations of photo- er, fuel cell, seismograph, Merry-Go- Round of Time, Fun with Air Pres- | sure; block and tackle, the air-car of “the future. solar energy, and :a score of others, some of them defin- itely space-age products. Students, says Dr. Cathrall, have been working on their projects ever. since September. With a number of local students placing well in the larger Science Fairs, interest on the Junior High School level has grown, to ' dimensions where exhibits can no longer be housed in individual classrooms. a Interested residents are urged to attend the exhibit, and see what ' younger teen-agers can do in the exacting sciences, proving their abil ity to deal with the future in its synthesis, diffusion of cloud chamb- | many challenges. 2 dogs. DO YOU RECALL THIS NOVEL TEAM Maybe some of our readers will remember th The picture was taken in front of Tom Dolan’s Hotel in Noxen AA NE is man and his team of veys Lake Woman’s Service Club installed at the fifteenth birthday party of the club held at O'Connell's Twin Lakes. At the same May party, Charter Members and Senior Citi- zens were honored. Officers, reading left to right: seated, Treva Traver, first vice Pictured above are officers of Har- | New Officers Of Harveys Lake Woman's Service Club president, Mrs. Charles Williams, president, Mrs. Earl Crispell, second vice president, Mrs. Calvin McHose, recording secretary; standing, Mrs. | John Zorzi, assistant recording sec- retary, Mrs. Malcolm Nelson, cor- responding secretary, Mrs. Howard Jones, treasurer, Mrs. Rowland Ritts, assistant treasurer, Mrs. Lee Bicking, Assistant corresponding secretary. Mrs. Williams, president, will en- tertain. memmbers of the Board Monday evening at 8 p- m. Assist- ing her ‘will be Mrs. Clarence Oberst and Mrs. Francis Shuler. Sia, Es a A = mT A
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers