The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, October 22, 1964, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    SECTION A — PAGE 2
THE DALLAS POST Established 1889
Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas,
Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1889. 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; $3.00 six
months or less. Students away from home $3.00 a term; Qut-oi-
State $3.50. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c.
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations R=
Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association <4 °
Member National Editorial Association A
Cunt
Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc.
Editor and Publisher
Associate Editors—
Mgrs. T.M.B. Hicks, LeigaroN R. Scott, JR.
Social Editor Mgrs. DoroTHY B. ANDERSON
Advertising Managers... .. 08, U5 Louise MARKS
Business Manager ... div... ivi niin, Doris R. MALLIN
Circulation Manager ...%"....c ico Mgrs. VELMA Davis
Accounting SANDRA STRAzZDUS
“More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution
MYRA Z. RISLEY
“ses ase ee eee
National Advertising Representative
AD) X n
(NR) AMERICAN NEWSPAPER REPRESENTATIVES inc.
ATLANTA eo CHICAGO eo DETROIT e LOS ANGELES eo
Editorially Speaking
Will Your Child Be Killed?
Probably some child will get killed before school
zone-signs are posted, and traffic held to fifteen miles
an hour during times when children are going to school
or coming home.
In cities, there are usually enough officers to guard
main crossings.
There are two extremely hazardous crossings, in this
area, where drivers speed regardless.
One is at Shavertown, the other in Lehman.
The schools do not front on the highway, so State
law does not require reduction of speed.
But the area immediately surrounding both ‘schools
is as much a school zone as if the buildings crowded the
curb, and the danger is as great, probably greater.
Needed are speed signs of the type used in Falls
Church, Virginia, where a blinker light warns that school
is in session and clearly states the speed limit.
: Drivers go on their hands and knees, no matter how
late they are for an appointment. The town has a repu-
tation for giving no quarter to a driver who races through
a school zone.
The schools are as far off the highway as Lehman
Elementary or Shavertown schools are.
Installation of traffic lights is costly, but installation
of a school zone sign costs very little. Cars come zoom-
ing up the long hill at Lehman, and before the driver
knows it, he is scattering children, not visible until the
crest of the hill is reached.
Slowing a car down so that it has a fighting chance
to stop in time, is the answer.
NEW YORK
In Shavertown, it is an old complaint, and residents
are rightfully incensed about the absolute disregard for
pedestrians that motorists display while speeding on that
beautiful straight highway.
There used to be a traffic light at Center Street.
For a time, it was the type which had to be switched from
the pavement. You had just about time to get back into
your car before the light turned against you once more.
This was not satisfactory, so a different type of light
was installed.
Most people continued to think that it was controlled
by a hurdle imbedded in the pave, but actually it was
timed, and it was possible for a car coming in from Cen-
ter Street to join the stream of traffic or make a left t1 turn
without disaster.
Now there is no light at all, and none at the inter-
section of Harris Hill Road . . . two safeguards jetti-
soned, the roadway widened to invite heavier traffic, and
nothing at all in the way of protection.
The median strip forms a slim island of safety, but
it is all too easily crossed by hurtling cars.
Small children cannot be expected to stand quietly
while cars thunder by them on either side.
Now that the white lines have been painted, and the
highway officially onened, nobody is paying any attention
to speed limits at all.
But a school zone speed limit sign would be regarded,
- just as a stopped school bus with its flashing lights is re-
garded.
wel
NOTHING TO IT
A number of blood donors who had never
visited the Bloodmobile before, entered the
Shavertown YMCA with forebodings last
Friday, and came out walking on air.
Nothing to it, they said, and meant it.
There is a film available which explains
whole business in simple terms, step by step,
making it completely understandable, and a
commonplace performance entirely divested of
any worry.
The film is available for PTA groups.
Some of the clergymen of the area coop-
erated by asking their people to go to the Blood
Bank and contribute.
More cooperation is needed, in order to keep
"up the standard set by last Fridays donation,
the
At CADDIE'S
* Big Supply —
Insulated Winter Jackets
* Woolrich Clothing
Wide Variety — Boys’ Shoes
$10.95 Hightops for $4.95
Caddie LaBar Sporting Goods —
MEMORIAL HIGHWAY
__THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1964
Only
Yesterday
Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years
Ago In The Dallas Post
30 Years Ago
Remember Shirley Temple? Here
she was on the front page, holding
hands with Harold Lloyd, Jr., aged
3. The midget star, complete with |
curls, dropped off an entire year
| somewhere along the line, to keep
| her
the sweetheart of the films.
She earned a fabulous amount of
money. Exit Shirley Temple, hail
to the Beatles.
Frank P. Douglas, explorer, talked
to Dallas High School students
about his adventures in the Gold
Rush in the Klondike.
World attention was centered on
the Bruno Hauptman trail in Flem-
ington, N. J. Hauptman was charged
i with kidnapping and murder of the
{
|
crawlers at night.
Lindbergh baby.
Mrs. John Girvan deplored crowd- |
ed conditions in the Dallas Town-
Harvey Kitchen
ship school. Mrs.
was PTA president.
A Harveys Lake man, caught ‘dis-
in a washtub, was 1
| cleared when it appeared that im-.
tilling liquor
prisonment would be a hardship for
| a man 75 years old. He had. been
® ®
i NOBEL PEACE PRIZE for Martin Luther
ing.
October 15: HURRICANE ISBELL lashes across Florida
; and out to sea.
October 15: KHRUSCHEV VANISHES. Pid he fall, or
was he pushed? And where?
October 15: CARDINALS WIN SERIES.
October 16: WILSON BEATS HOME in close election.
Labor now in power.
October 17: RED CHINA explodes nuclear device.
October 18: PRESIDENT JOHNSON addresses Nation on
+ KEEPING POSTED «
Motors still on.
October
medals.
We. fond out why the prowler.,
| clothes, and middle-aged.
paying his helpers with do-it- ryours
self whiskey.
Robbers Roost was ending in the
about to begin as a serial.
a # #
20 Years Ago
The White Church on the Hill
celebrated its Centennial.
Two column picture of Irvin C.
Davis, missing in action in Europe.
Harry Bean, Noxen, was killed
in action in France. His wife: re-
ceived a letter from him written
the day before he died.
Christmas boxes were on the way
to the boys in the service. Mail
early.
Amos Swire, 25, was badly vound-
ed three weeks after landing:
France.
Ten killed in action, four died in
service, eleven missing in. action,
seven prisoners of war, from: this
area. And 1002 free Dallas Posts
to service men and women. ’
Heard from in the Outpost: Roy
Schultz, New Guinea; Bill ‘Gensel,
England; Jimmy Wyant, Pacific;
Dick Phillips, Little Creek; Harry
Randall, Hawaii; Harold Spencer,
ski-trooper training on a torrid
Texas plain; Bud Nelson, .Fort
Meade; Phil Cease, . Alabama;
Howard L. Piatt, France. i
Died: Stanley Miner, 63, “Pikes
Creek. Betty Cowan, ‘8, Alder-
son.
Married: Alberta May Klein to |
Thomas Reilly. Olive Lee to Rob:
ert J. Sutton.
Sgt. Kenneth P.. Jones woe
in action in Germany.
* * %
10 Years Ago |
Wallace Wakefield, Orchard Knob
Farm, president of First. National
Bank of Wilkes-Barre, was instantly
killed in a head-on collision near
Harter’s Dairy.
Melvin Frantz,
Huntsville, col-
lapsed and died while clearing brush’
from his grounds.
Hurricane Hazel roared into: the.
area, tossing trees like ‘jackstraws.
A cyclone cut a 300 foot swathe at
Point Breeze.
tically untouched. A silo was blown
away at Sweet Valley.
Hazel’s visit, Friday, October 15,
1954. Porch roof of ‘Country Club
ripped from its moorings.
Married: Agnes Astor Zolko'to Wil-
liam Doberstein. Margaret: Stray-
er to Charles B. Strome,"
Himmler Theatre
The
ater, Student Prince.
where.
Political advertising was picking:
up, President Eisenhower; - Dan
Flood, Congressman Bonin.
SHAVERTOWN CUBS .
ORGANIZE GROUP
Shavertown Cub Pack met Thurs-
‘i day night, at 7:30 p.m. in St. The-
rese’s auditorium, Shavertown. Jos-
eph Precone, cubmaster presided.
Den 3, with Mrs. John Mihalick
as Den Mother, opened the meeting
with the flag raising ceremony. Den
2, Mrs. John Gebhardt Den Mother,
closed the meeting with prayer and
the cub song. The following awards
were made: Wolf badge, James
Hughes; gold arrow on wolf, John
Mihalick.
Plans were discussed for the com-
ing year. Fred Kroll, neighborhood
commissioner from Forty Fort was
a guest. The following are the
officers for the year: Joseph Pre-
cone, cubmaster; Michael Silic, asst.
cubmaster; John Mihalick, secre-
tary; Robert Boylan, treasurer; Eu-
|| gene Brown, chairman; Peter George,
asst. in charge of Webelos and Mrs.
James L. Brown, publicity. Mrs,
Andrew Ondish and John Woychick
are in charge of ideas for the com-
ing year.
The next Pack meeting will be
held Thursday night, November 19.
RED LIGHT
Red light means go when you
cover the lens of your flashlight
when you are picking up night-
Red somehow
cals as much as white.
was leaving Dallas fairly quiet last
‘week: He was out toward Lehman, |
specifically near Huntsville Dam.
Same description—white hair, white
> I'm late
in telling you this, because that was
apparently what all the state police
| activity was, the state police activ-
Dallas Post, When Worlds Collide !
ity that nobody knew anything
‘about, except the Dallas Post.
Oh, well, in two years I've been |
in the newspaper business I've come
to .accept the fact that people are
basically sympathetic with police
efforts to sit on ‘‘adverse publicity”
(20th century phrase meaning
“news’’) that might cast a ‘bad
light” on one’s neighborhood.
SEEN AND HEARD - |
Word’ has it that the Grobleski
brothers will build a doctors’ clinic |
this side of Idetown, probably start- |
ing in the spring.
Caddie LaBar tells us it's been |
the" best bow season ever. : |
Len Crawford tells us we ought to |
) make more of the fact that there |
is going to be a ski-run above the |
“Outlet, as it will pep up local econ- |
omy‘ at the Lake in a year when |
things haven't been all that good.
"Pete Lange has a new orange
raincoat he is pretty proud of, and |
it -will make him extremely visible |
‘at night in precarious traffic. In,
the: dark he resembles a burning |
barn:
". We were glad to have the state |
pave Church Street, but submit that |
it ‘was nowhere near as bad as up-
Red China and Krushchev.
equal free time over the air waves.
October 19: AMERICAN MOTORS strike ended. General ~
20: FORMER PRESIDENT HOOVER,
statesman, is dead, at age of 90.
October 21: SUMMER OLYMPICS in Tokyo sees U. S.
team doing fabulously well, stacking up gold
Totter Leighton N ever
| son busts up the straight ticket.
last for a while, having been ob-
| probable forerunner of many sim-
| met bearded Al Goble, said he was
YT THES Lh an
MY HEART LEAPS UP - — 2
‘With ‘Autumn and “October’s bright blue wenthet™ —
Goldwater demands
elder
per Demunds Road, which
vicious tank-trap, . full of antique |
axle-busting drain pipes which be-
| cofe evident only at the precise
moment they send a shuddering !
whack through the entire car. Let's |
fix that one.
Expect hunting season to eclipse |
the November elections as far as |
public interest goes. There will be |
a lot of routine voting for the estab- |
lished administration, and shoo-in
Republican candidates around here
may find tough sledding if John-
A light blue TR-3 roadster seen
busting around the Lake in past
months seems to have busted its
served adorning the stern of a
wrecker recently.
The guy who hit the medial strip
in Trucksville and cracked up is |
ilar instances, especially this winter.
Dave and Nik Fritz climbed
| Schooley Mountain Sunday, and
took one of Cal Strohl’s boys along.
While the kid climbed a tree to
see Harveys Lake even better, Dave
pondered thetrip back down du-
biously. On Market Street, Dave
going back up, and asked Al to
climb along. Al said: “Hardly.”
Several political figures stood on
the breezy shores of Harveys Lake
last week, sniffing the wind, more
or ‘less after the fact, but before
the election. Popular reaction T
encountered was not a op
52 | tion ‘of the Lehigh Brick Co.
here in the gorgeous Back Mountain countryside— our
thoughts turn to these two spirited bits of verse by Edna
"St. Vincent Millay and Bliss Carman. Both poems so filled
Alderson. was prag--
Aerial photo of somewhere in the
Back Mountain, but nobody knows
Date of |
with the joy of living—yet both poets dead!
GOD'S WORLD
O. ‘world, I cannot hold
Thy winds, thy wide gray skies!
Thy mists that roll and rise!
Thy woods this autumn day, that ache and sag
And all but cry with color! That gaunt crag
To crush! To lift the lean of that black bluff!
World, World, I cannot get thee close enough!
Long Sie I known a glory in it all,
But never knew I this;
Here such a passion is
. As stretcheth me apart,
-. Thow'st made the world
' My soul .is all but out of me, —let fall
“No burning leaf; prithee, let mo bird call.
A VAGABOND SONG
There is something in the autumn that is native to my blood—
Touch of manner, hint of mood;
was. showing And my heart is like a rhyme,
Magnificent Obsession; Shaver The-
With the yellow and the purple
The scarlet of the maples can
‘Of bugles going by.
And my lonely spirit thrills
To see the frosty asters like a smoke upon the hills.
There is something in October
We must rise and follow her,
When from every hill of flame
She calls and calls each vagabond by name.
Book Club Members See Themselves
As They Were Fifteen Years Ago
It was a totally unexpected pro- |
gram, but members of the Book |
Club called for more and more on |
Monday . afternoon, demanding re- |
runs of their favorite Library Auc-
tio scenes.
Miss Miriam Lathrop, Back Moun-
tain’s first Librarian, sent on some |
color slides taken at former Auc- |
tions, after she returned to Sun |
City, Arizona, following her sum- |
mer trip to Dallas.
Book Club members gasped as |
they saw themselves on the projec- |
tor, looking fifteen years younger
and with grandchildren, now in col-
lege, clinging to their skirts. They
all agreed that Mrs. Paul Gross
could not have arranged a more
interesting program.
At the brief business meeting, the
list of new books was presented.
They include: ‘Anyone Got A
Match?” by Max Shulman; “The
i Method,” by Stanley |
llin; “The Clocks,” Agatha Christ- |
ie; ae Moon,” San San; ‘The |
Eyes Around Me,” Gavin Black;
“The Flags of Doney,” Harris |
Greene; ‘The Ice Saints,” Frank
‘doesn’t scare the rapid little ras i “The Mark of Murder,” Dell
Shannon; “My Autobiography,” by
| Dag Hammarskjold.
| gay with autumn coloring, gold and
thee close enough!
Lord, I do fear
too beautful this year;
and the crimson keeping time.
shake me like a cry
sets the gypsy blood astir;
Charlie Chaplin; “Question of Loy-
alty,” Freeling; “Recluse of Herald
Square,” Joseph Cox; ‘Sixpence in
Her Shoe,” McGinley; ‘Tomorrow's
Fire,” Jay Williams; “Markings,” by
Secretary's report was presented
by Mrs. Ornan Lamb; treasurer's
by Mrs. Herman Thomas.
Mrs. George Gregson and Mrs.
Guy Faust poured from a tea-table
rust chrysanthemums and yellow
twist candles. |
Present, other than those already
mentioned, were Mesdames Edgar
Brace, Hilda Levy, Dana Crump,
James Hutchinson, Stewart Fergu-
son, Arthur H. Ross, J. Stanley
Rinehimer, George H. Montgomery,
Thomas E. Heffernan, Arch G. Ru-
therford, Stewart Ferguson, and
Miss Mary Jane Faust.
REFLECTING BEANS
Buy a quarter's worth of white
dried beans at the store on your
way to the ice fishing grounds.
Sprinkle below holes. Fish show
up against the white bottom. Fish
are attracted to the cloud of small
stuff i in the water.
| LES
DAYLIGHT SAVING
ENDS SUNDAY AM.
SET CLOCKS BACK
Daylight Saving will end Sun-
day morning ‘at 2. Set clocks
back one hour before retiring
Saturday night, to insure ar-
rival at church at the correct
time, not one hour early.
Guest Speaker At PTA
Dr. Aaron Lisses, Dallas optome-
trist, was guest speaker at a recent
meeting of the Northwest School
Jointure PTA.
Son Of Tannery
Founder Dies
Robert K. Mosser, son of George
Mosser, . original founder of Mos-
ser's Tannery in Noxen, died aged
77 Sunday at his home in Trexler-
town.
For a brief time as a young man,
he helped his father with operation
. of what was later the Armour Tan-.
‘ nery, but his main interest was al-
| ways in the field of ‘bricks. ‘He
retired ‘some years ago from’ er
Allentown.
Old-timers of Noxen remember
that the Mosser children went away
| to school, patronizing locals schools
for only the first few grades. It
was a great day when the boys
came home from military school and
took out the horses during vacation
time. Social life picked up speed,
and Noxen was in ga whirl.
The stables were always a mecca
for youngsters of Noxen. The family
owned one of the first automobiles
in the area, a marvel at the time.
. During World War I, Mr. Mosser,
a 1905 graduate “of Pennsylvania
Military College, served with the
U.S. Army. :
He was maanger of the Common-
wealth Building, Allentown; was
treasurer of the board of trustees
{of the Good Shepherd Home, and
on the board of Lehigh Valley Trust
Company and the Sacred Heart
Hospital.
He served on . the Muhlenberg
College board for fifteen years, and
in his prime was active in the Com-
munity Chest in Allentown.
. Church affiliations were with St.
John’s Lutheran, where he was a
member of the vestry, and was a
member of the Lutheran Ministeri-
um of Pennsylvania.
His parents were the late George
J. and. Ida Hausman Mosser, of
Allentown. y
. ‘An older brother Fred died some
years ago. !
One sister survives: Mrs. Dewey
Fuller, Krocksville,
‘Burial was on A dren, with
services from St. Johns conducted
by Rev. Arnold S. Keller. Inter-
ment was in Allentown.
Rotary Women
Introduce Officers
“First Fall Blanes Mastitg of ‘the
Dallas Women of Rotary was held
recently at Irem Temple Country
Club. Mrs. Hanford Eckman, presi-
dent, introduced these new officers:
Mrs. H. R. McCartney, first vice.
president; Mrs. = Stanley Hozémpa,
second vice president; Mrs. Archer
Mohr, treasurer; Mrs.
Krimmel, corresponding secretary;
Mrs. Robert Graham, recording sec-
retary; Mrs.
chaplain.
Committee chairmen: Mrs. Robert
Bodycomb, wheel chairs; Mrs. Jos- |
eph Sekera, shut-ins; Mrs. Earl
Phillips, cards; Mrs. Walter Mohr,
hospitality; Mrs.’ John G. Konsavage, |
publicity; Mrs. Archer Mohr, budget;
Mrs. Mary Jennings, ways and
means; Mrs. W. B. Jeter, auditing;
Mrs. Dale Parry, Mrs. Jack Landis
and Mrs. Willard Seaman, welfare.
Mrs. Spencer Martin was appoint-
ed chairman of the Christmas din-
ner dance to be held December 5th
at Irem Temple Country Club.
Mette Krog Larsen, Rotary Ex-
change Student from Svolvaer, Nor-
way, presently residing with Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Steele, Oak Hill,
and a student at Lake-Lehman
School, gave a delightful talk on
her native country and showed col-
or slides of Norway.
Marjorie. |
Andrew Pillarella, |
~~
. you mixed in a couple of eggs.
DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA
From— ;
Pillar To Post...
By Hix
Looking back over some of the Pillar Post written twenty years
ago, I'm reminded of a lot of things I had almost forgotten.
Gasoline rationing, for one; and food stamps; and the impossibility
of getting a seat on a train. If you were smart, you carried the
kind of a suitcase that was sturdy enough to sit on, not a simple
hatbox or a handbag which might collapse under your weight.
The trains pulling out of the Lehigh Valley Station in Wilkes-
Barre were loaded to the gunwales with soldiers and sailors, and
mothers of soldiers and sailors going to see soldiers and sailors some-
where down the line.
‘If anybody complained about the crowds and the confusion,
the standard reply was, “Ain't you heard? There's a war on.”
This explained everything.
Why you couldn’t get a berth on the Pullman, for instance.
The porters made a pretty good thing of it along about half past
midnight. A well-placed tip usually bore fruit, but it was a very
hush-hush. affair. The porter would be happy to sit up all night,
and it just happened that the berth he had expected to stretch out
in was vacant, and “Oh THANK you ma’am.”
“Some folks wangled extra gas, but it was frowned upon. It was
' When it came to food, it was every man for himself.
—a badge of patriotism-to walk or borrow a bike, or even stay home.
Families
witha numbeér of children did pretty well. Food stamps were elastic, 4
and most young children could pass up the coffee with ease.
But those meat counters, sparsely populated with a littie bologna
and chickens past their first youth, did nothing to inspire a cook.
By some miracle, housewives were expected to serve delectable meals, 3
but it was a struggle. If your family took to corned beef hash, you
could every oncé in awhile find a can of corned beef on the shelves,
and you could get potatoes.
Curly-cow was something for which you dressed for dinner.
Curly-cow used to be a breakfast dish. Then it moved up onto'the
luncheon menu, served on triangles of crisp toast and garnished with
sliced hard-boiled eggs, a sprig of parsley, and a dash of paprika.
During the war it came into its own, and appeared on the dinner
table.
Men in the service viewed it with disdain, but they got it every
once in awhile, and it was a nice exchange from K-rations.
We used to call it cat-
Nobody ever
‘A can of pink salmon was a treasure.
salmon: and buy it, ten cents acan(for the pussy-cat.
thought of actually EATING it.
Then :came the war, and pink salmon moved up into the luxury
class. You fished out what bones you could reach, scraped off the
skin, aid then miked the salmon with breadcrumbs, chopped onion,
and baked it in the oven. If you wanted, to be downright fancy,
Most of us forgot what to do with a standing rib roast.
But the situation wasn't grim as it was in the First World War,
because nobody in the Second World War suggested that you eat
whale steak.
Whale steak, take it from one who knows, is THE MOST.
It will support life. Let that be its epitaph.
An Elder Statesman Dies
Former President Herbert Hoover is dead, and with
his passing dies the tradition that a great statesman must
have been born in a log tabin, and of humble parentage.
Herbert Hoover's modest birthplace is preserved for
posterity. Son of a blacksmith, Herbert Hoover's Quaker
"background placed no barriers in the way of his amassing
a large personal fortune as a mining engineer,
Brought up in the quiet atmosphere of a Quaker
household, where no unkind word was ever spoken, he
was ill prepared to withstand the. frustrations of the
Great: Depression, when the President of the United States
was held responsible for the crash of the stock market
which put an end to an economic cycle.
Seldom has a man in high office been more bitterly
reviled, or: more completely repudiated.
A huge dam which was to have born his name, was
re-named. ;
The word Hoover became anathema.
The world forgot that it was Hoover who had or-
ganized the massive program of feeding the hungry dur-
ing and after the First World War.
They forgot that every penny of his salary, and later
every penny of his retirement pay, was turned over to
charity.
‘But when another world-wide feeding program was :
found necessary, they remembered Hoover, and again
called upon him.
+ During the past twenty years be was again accorded
his status of Elder Statesman. Without rancor and with-
out bitterness; he accepted this.
~The Nation mourns his passing.
to half mast.
Flags are lowered i
‘His body lies in state in the Capitol at Washington. :
Politicians who reviled his. name, rise up and call
him blessed.
Herbert Hoover was a victim of the times, the whip-
ping boy for the Great Depression.
He was a great and worthy man, a magnificent
humanitarian.
EE ET EES CE 20 CS EAE OE ESS EET EI EET? =
C200 CHO CCC ACUTE ACEI
SERVING RESIDENTS OF
THE GREATER DALLAS AREA
erp ga DIRECTORS
A funeral home should be carefully selected . . . before
the need arises. Back Mountain residents are invited
to compare Snowdon facilities . . . services . . . prices.
LHI
"HAROLD C. SNOWDON
HAROLD C. SNOWDON, JR.
ARE SEE ES EE ETE SE
Hi all HEN Loi
NER RA
ESA ESLER HS
¢ EC COC CC C303 CA 3 ES 3,
{ Nax
lon
fowa
Shave
rom
{aval
The
;rous
1Cros
week:
Scien
missi
Office
IT a HE TTT ag im al
Be Tr dace ad Abr a
PA bedind MN lo A AAA A a FA
Ob ON eadignd a en
SEO ay |G