$n AL i 3 iH me Si 3 4 " 4 a * i “w . “'with an oxidizer that causes another to burn such as! #4 a Yr Roe “In future years science may have | aone wav or _* "mankind. They are making and are SECTION A — PAGE 2 year; $2.50 six months. six months. months or less. State $3.50. Member Audit Bureau Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association “4 ): National Editorial Association % Nady! o° Member Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. Editor and Publisher Managing Editor Associate Editor Social Editor... ......... Advertising Manager Business Manager Circulation Manager Accounting 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 No subscriptions accepted for less than Out-of-State subsecr iptions, $4.50 a year; $3.00 six Students away from home $3.00 a term; Out-of- Back issues, more than one week old, 15c. to ila of Circulations a Myra Z. RiSLEY .. LeigaroNn R. Scorrt, JR. Mrs. T.M.B. Hicks Mgrs. DororHY B. ANDERSON LT SNE Louise MARKS Se ay Doris R. MALLIN Mgrs. Verma Davis .. SANDRA STRAZDUS Editorially Speaking Do Not Swim Alone The swimming season is upon us. All organized camping spots have safety regulations, with the buddy system incorporated so that a child never swims alone. There is no such regulation on the open beaches, or in places where individual waterfront property invites a family and its friends to swim at any time of day or night. Commonsense should dictate commonsense precau- tions to every family. No swimmer, he should never matter how experienced the swim entirely alone. In the case of children, they may venture too far, and somebody must be on the alert. In the case of adults, a heart attack may strike with- out warning, and rescue must be carried out immediately. Nobody wants to cut down on the pleasure of swim- ming. Nobody wants to take a gloomy view. But water is water, get tion again. and down in the gentle surf Each year, children are drowned because noticed that Johnnie was no longer bobbing happily up enough of it into your lungs, and it is either difficult or impossible to set you in mo- nobody Even on a beach guarded by life-savers, a man can- not be everywhere at once. Unless there is some one person who is trained to watch out for another single person, the danger exists. ‘Not Yet Invented It’s called the Buddy System, and it works. Automobile manufacturers are able to build in al- But there is one which There could easily be anything was in the crack. most any safety device necessary to mechnical security. so far has been neglected. ; There is nothing yet invented which will prevent a child from crushing his fingers in the door. some sort of electronic eye which would prevent a door from closing solidly when = A mother in the driver’s seat is the nearest thing yet to’a safety device, but though most mothers have eyes in the back of their heads, than the eye, the car jumps child small child, and the damage the hand is frequently quicker and fingers are mangled. Somebody outside the gun, giving a mighty slam, or an older inside the car becomes impatient, reaches over a is done. With the Government about to reduce ‘taxes on new * cars ONLY if safety safeguards for factors are built into them by 1968, small, children should be specified, and they should extend farther than safety-belts. “Forecasts Power Sources Of Future The Dallas Post asked the science department at Lake-Lehman to designate an advanced student to write, to a layman of small of the future. in terms understandable scientific knowledge, a paper on power sources The Post published, some weeks ago, a crystal clear explanation of how the Early-Bird, relay satellite apparently hangs motionless in ~ space. Howard Weiner obliged, at the request of Thomas Carr, his science instructor at Dallas High School. John C. Jenkins, Judy Kocher, .. power for the future. more to do with our daily lives than we may fully realize. Today’s scientists are looking to the future. Their study aid research will in another, benefit all going to make our daily lives more comfortable with added fences. + One such area in which intense conven- research is being made is the ques- | tion of future power sources -- pow- er to run factories and machines. What source will give us more pow- | . er with more convenience and less expense ? Evervwhere the general corsensus is electricity. The revolution in electricity is centered around the task of finding | a way to generate electrical power quickly and easilv. Three such methods are under investigation now: (1) Direct converters will change | light or heat enerov directly into | electrical energy without using to- | day's batteries or dvnamos. These thermoelectric (electricity produced | bv heat) celle are made of materi- als similar to those used to make transistors. These cells generate e- lectricity if thev are heated or light is shona on them. (2) Fuel cells are chemical bat- teries that will never need recharo- ing. They generate electricity hy combining a fuel (such as hvdrogen) (anv substance ~oxvgen or air). These fuel cells keep ‘generating ® 4 electricity. steadily as long as they are fed fuel and oxy- dizer. (3) MHD (magnetohydrodvnam- ie) generator is a dvnamo without N {RY oy Re Zi mizchanieal parts that move. It uses a rushing blast of very hot. electri- fied gas to induce electrical cur- rents. Jt may eventually be used to provide entire cities with elec- tricity. At the present time these new, modern sources of electricity are being used mainly to operate mili- science instructor at Lake-Lehman, presents about to enter her senior year, who writes about tary devices ang spaceship equip- ment. In a few cases they are being {used to run ordinary machines of | everyday life. | In the future the biggest change i perhaps, will be seen in your auto- { mebile. Electric motors make very little noise and emit no smell. They | economical to manufacture and they cperated cars will is no shifting necessary because the electric motors adjust their speed to the load they are carrying, pulling | hard to start up or climb hills and | purring lightly for straightaways. Small electric motors may be put into each of the four wheels of vour car adding the four-wheel drive effect. Electric « motors will also power lawn ‘mowers, tillers, and chain would light a small kerosene burner built onto the mower. A group of | thermoelectric cells placed around the flames will convert the heat directly into electricity to power the mower. | Inside the “house small fuel cells ‘cr thermoelectric converters may | onerate your small appliances. Solar cells, which convert licht into elec- | trical energy, may roof vour house. However, these solar cells generate only during the day. The excess daytime power is used to electro- lvze (separate) water into hydro- gen and oxygen. Then at night | these two gasses are fed to fuel {cells which, in turn, generate elec- | tricity to the lights and the tele- , Vision, | These thermoelectric cells are quite efficient beccause they work ion “free” energy or wasted heat. Home furnaces in a few years will be self-powered with no connec- tions to power lines. Thermoelectric cells wrapped around the chimney will generate electricity from the / ~~ Yesterday THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1965 Only Wins Award For Excellence In English Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post | | 30 Years Ago Helen Himmler, daughter of Mr. { and Mrs. Wesley Himmler, was vot- ed Miss Wyoming Seminary, as the most beautiful girl in the school, with popularity to match. Children’s Home opened its an- nual camp at Noxen, on land do- | nated years before by Arthur M. Stull. Director, Miss Agatha M. Hill. Much needed rain relieved the drought, crops were improving. | Dallas Township baseball team lost to Swoyersville 9 to 10, losing also its chance as Luzerne County champs. | Tunkhannock got the Farm Loan Office. T. J. Rummage, farmer and lum- berman, died at 78 in Sweet Valley. Ralph Hazeltine headed Trucks- | ville firemen. The Nation was celebrating Flag Day, New green cabbage was 2 pounds | for a nickel, and potroast was 19 | cents a pound. Pink salmon was still only 19 cents a can, hamburg {19 cents a pound. 20 Years Ago The area was girding its loins for Primary Elections, set for June 19. | Tax collector and school board con- test took the limelight in Kingston | Township. Ted Poad and Harry Bo- | gart were running neck and neck. John Sidler, founder of the voca- tional ag program at Lehman, re- | signed to go to Washingtonville. | Silas Ide, author of a book on | the Ide family, died at 77 in the home where he was born in Loyal- ville. Jive Junction was ready to open | for the teen-age crowd in Dallas. | Dr. Hanry M. Laing community | | band opened the summer season in | ; the bandstand on the Wardan Kun- | KEEPING TED kle plot in mid-Dallas (A Gulf sta- 3¢ <2 tion now occupies the site.) Elaine Dixon, Dallas High School graduate, receives hearty con- gratulations from George McCutcheon on winning of the Bud Davis Award for excellence in English during the past three years. The award was given at assembly on the last day of school. Miss Dixon is daughter of Mrs. Margaret Dixon, Dallas RD 3. Her senior year instructor in English was Miss Foley. * * * * Vine now sheting rink at Sandy June ‘9: ASTRONAUTS COMPLETE physcial check-ups on Carrier Bouck. a Wasp, fill up on solid food, gain back lost weight. Bud Nelson, wounded in Italy| DEBT CEILING raised by House to 328 billions. | after V-E Day, was showing slight | STEVENSON RAKES UN Security Council over coals for down- | improvement at an army hospital | grading efforts of OAS in Dominican crisis. . | in Charleston S. C. : - | Harold Titman imported a family | June 10: GEMINI HEROES land in Florida, en route to Texas. NAVY SEEBEES constructing airstrip near Saigon, in heavy battle with Vietcong guerillas, 24 Amercians killed. Number of U.S. dead now 420. ; of cats to discourage the Toby Creek | rats invading his store. 1 In the Outpost: Robert Prynn, Phil- ippines; Dave Evans, Germanv; Mi- | Patrick. Atlantic Fleet; Paul Carlin, | | Camp Blanding; Edwal Owens. Wil- | [ liamsburg: Rudolrh Baloga, India. .| Back Mountain Memorial Library | June 11: SOVIET MOON-SHOT off course, heading for infinity. INTENSE FIGHTING at Dong Xoai. TEXAS CLOUDBURST, 155foort wall of water. | Constitution and By-Laws were a-| June 12: CIVILIAN GOVERNMENT out in Vietnam, military in. | dopted. : Aunt Ruth Kocher, 78, died in| June 13: U.S. PARATROOPERS counter guerillas in Dong Xoai. Noxen. | RED CHINESE claim Soviet is playing footsie with the U.S. Daniel M. Crispell died at his | STATEMATE in Santo Domingo. | home in Outlet. | Feld 24% | 10 Years Ago | Dale Mosier posed for an oil | | painting by Vincent Civiletti, des-| | tined for a Brown and Bigelow cal- | endar. Front page stuff. | Mrs. W. G. Meyers, The Maples. | remembered former employees and | Dallas Church in her will. Anthony Marchakitus was elect- ed principal of Lehman-Jackson- Ross School Jointure. Both Dallas and Lehman planned driver training courses for the fall. | Lehman - Jackson -.Ross baseball | team toek the pennant. | Died: Mrs. Lottie Williams, 71, Dal- | June 14: FLAG DAY. ASTRONAUTS PROMOTED by President. in Chicago. BROADCAST direct between London and Washington, Hum- phrey answers questions of foreign students via Early-Bird satellite. Ticker-tape parade 15: TERRORIST BOMB, South Vietnam, many wounded in air terminal. ‘VIETNAM SETTLEMENT urged by Fullbright. SENATE VOTES 4.7 billion tax cut. * * * * June Better Leish ton Never t | Dear Myra: f | your | phone Bill {contain few parts. These parts are | | | | almost never wear out. Electrically | Loyalville, | | cemetery, Rev. B. Kirby Jones con- | ducting services at 2 from Sweat las. Mrs. Anna M. Newcomb, 71, Dallas. Married: Marlyn Jean James to Robert Marr. Susan Zurinski to Francis Stolarick. Gate of Heaven Parochial School | graduated a class of twenty-one. Area was getting set for Lehman Horse Show and Library Auction. To Be Buried Saturday From Christian Church I got lost somewhere between the | Elephant Nose and the Khuli Loach, | | but it was really interesting to see | the wholesale pet business that the | | Rices are operating on the premises | of what was Orchard Farm Dairy. | 2 ; oT Vestiges of the dairy remain in| form of a storage room, ultimately | to be an interim home for consigned | |or for sale monkeys and in a line | of OF milk bottles each of which contains a blue male fish, name I can’t remember, but which has to be kept alone because he takes an | argument so seriously that he will y Mrs. Jean Harris Whitesell, 50, died Tuesday night at ¢ start instantly | General Hospital where she had In any type of weather. Also there | been admitted four weeks earlier. She will be buried in the Bronson | =at his opponent. There are scmething over 80 tanks -- maybe 90, and they con- | tain quarter pound goldfish to put | in a pool in your front yard, al- | ligators that will grow big enouch to take up your bath-tub, and mid- | them big catfish you fries and eats, | Stroudsburg and would feel nothing more than peripheral annoyance, | completely unknowing of any] change that took place. And catfish -- there ain't just in this world. There's little ones too | -- Talking Catfish. and Upside Down | Catfish. (The former makes what are thought to be communicative noises out of water and the latter like to swim upside down.) | Then there are all kinds of water dwellers, fish with goony names that T can’t remember, like the Khuli T.oach, a radiant wormish sort of a fish. | I asked Jan if the supply house | could get me a camel or a hyena on order. A hyena, yes, but maybe not a camel, she said. Nonetheless, while the Rices’ pet supply business | { { Valley | etyy, the WCTU and the PTA. She saws, and there will be no trailing | was employed at Maple Hill and cord. To start the mower the user | Christian Church. Friends| get varieties of sharks that live may call Thursday and Friday at | their whole life cut no bigger than Bronson’s Funeral Home. | a little goldfish, and a cast of Mrs. Whitesell was born in Ash- | thousands. lev. daughter of John and Harriet Williams Hannis. She was active in her church. the missionary soci- they will in time stock monkeys My ‘hostess was .Jandt Rice, who, housed in the pet building yet. is first assistant to Ken Rice, the owner He was off to New York to get a monkey at the time I dropped S arcund. Jan says she has learned all | Carpenter Nursing homes. ‘ |about the fish and pets from She and her husband Fred ob- | scratch. Mr. Rice started to collect served their 32nd anniversary June | tropical fish, and later bought the! "2 . 1 | wholesale Pet busines: haa firm | Wild, turtle he had brought in. The She leaves her husband: her par-| in Old Forge. It is a big operation [ turtle withdrew from our company ents; these children: Mrs. Lenore ’ ; | almost immediately. and supplies man northeastern | Cragle, Wheaton, Ill: Mrs. Carl Gra- Sap : i line of pet foods, cures, cages, play- things, and I don’t know what all. Right-hand man Floyd Heim and assistant were in process of bring- ing in a monkey cage while I was Pennsylvania retail stores. has mostly aquatic pets right now, | and hamsters, etc. Mr. Rice has a, . few monkeys now, but they are not | The business also has a complete | | guaranteed to raise a ruckus if a | Jap should be in hiding. there, and he showed me a large | Jan says the ranks are presently bowski, Indiana: Leon, Oklahoma; | Miss Alice Whitesell, Wisconsin: Roger. Harveys Lake: Janet and Fred Jr. at home; seven grandchil- dren; three brothers: Lee and Gil-| bert Hannis, Ashley: Melvin, New | York Citv: a sister, Mrs. Elsie Wash- burn. Lairdsville. heat that is usually lost. This extra | electricity will run your thermo- | stat. oil-burner motor, air blowers, | and water pumps at no cost to you. This would mean a real saving in| the electric bill. : All of the methods of producing | power mentioned here have been | built on experimental scales. Some | are even being produced on a com- | mercial basis at the present. The others perhaps will soon be also. Judy Kocher Sie Ad to buy a goldfish.) a long green iguana -- a statuesque | little lizard. Three white mice that | | survived of a litter nestled together (Incidentally, they don’t sell pets | £0 i By one pipania I the retail, so don't go calling them up '2mous little meat-eating Amazoni- [an fish, which in packs always lurks { beneath the plot of every South 2 | American sharks and guppies, and there was | There were the alligators and the | in a box. All manner of teensy trop- | ical fish floated serenely back and | forth in their cool shady tanks, to- | tally unaware of their surroundings. One got the feeling that they could | be picked up and trucked to simply make confusion. shaft. “The man looked up to see down. It was. He was fifty-three.” the breezy heights of Orchard Farm Classic short-short: The cub reporter was assigned to cover a rumor that a man was caught in an elevator Keep it short, was his instruction. adventure movie until the very end when his and his friends bellies grow by the weight of one fragmented villain. More of these are to be stocked. The supply house, situated on hill, is not identified even by a sign to passers-by, since there is no retail trade, and people would His report: if the elevator was coming Safety Valve 2 TRIPLY GOOFED June 6, 1965 The enclosed verse is topical, what with astronauts, Gemini, moon ; | rockets, etc. But please! ! I think your proof Williard Ed Note: Thass life. Hix. | hone Bill Robbins If a swarm of bees alights on shrubbery or your fence, Robbins, Staub Road, Trucksville. Bill will come with a carrying | box and take them away. Bill says that there are more | swarms than usual this spring, be- | cause of the unusually mild winter. | Bees, are spurred into activity by ! leave | warm midwinter days, and the hive. With the next cold spell, they have not sufficient time to form their protective ball, and many of them die. That leads to unusual activity the following spring, with queen bees produced in extraordinary numbers. Queen bees lead to formation of | many swarms. Bill already has a couple of bush- els of bees safely hived, and will take more. When bees swarm, he says, they will hold together in a solid mass for at least overnight, sometimes for as long as two days. The mass sheds rain like a thatched roof. Bill gets stung on occasion, but he does not hold it against the bees. Sometimes he has to jostle them too roughly when working a mass of bees out of the confines of a shrub or a picket fence, and they | retaliate. Bill is dead set against the use of insecticide on swarms of bees. He explains that without honey bees to pollenate the fruit trees, the food supply of the nation would drop off alarmingly. He asks residents not to try to cope with the situation themselves, but give him a call. The bees are just going about their business, which is buzzing, pollenating the fruit, ‘and making honey. Don’t thwart them. Local Character ANDY PRESLOPSKI Andy Preslopski, flexing his mus- | cles and exhibiting a wide expanse | Services Friday For Mrs. Elizabeth Lord of mahogany, strolled into the Dal- i las Post to say hello Thursday morn- | ing. Andy does push-ups for ten | minutes every night before hitting | the sack, which is pretty good for | a man of middle-age. : be in the business, but terminated it abrupt] h Mari assed | was daughter of the late William Ty nen 2 Hs first and Ann Harris. She and her hus- out cold on the floor prick of the needle. Andy is a do- band, ! it-yourself artist. Right-handed, it’s their 40th wedding anniversary on hig left arm that is tattooed from |APril 29. | biceps to wrist. The snakes writhe | around when Andy shows his mus- | cles. On his 35-acres near Orange, he | Barre Chapter. raises phenomenal onions, evolves | reader must be mad at me. The L | last three were goofed. Let's try |' again. : Regards, | | DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA From— Pillar To Post... By Hix It looked like a solid idea at the time. Hot biscuits with straw- berries for an old fashioned shortcake sounded like a good Saturday night meal, to eat with the feet propped on top of the Franklin stove, and the typewriter table alongside. It was chilly, and growing chillier by the minute. The heat from the oven would be grateful. And nothing like taking advantage of the latest innovations in the frozen food department. That r of friz baking powder biscuits looked like just the ticket. Ly bother to work butter (or a reasonable facsimile thereof) into flour, and baking powder and salt, moisten with canned milk, and pat gently on a floured-board ? Hurray for progress. The oven turned up to 500 degrees for a quicq bake, I read the instructions. They said, “Rap the roll briskly on the edge of the table along the diagonal black line.” I rapped, but nobody answered. Rapped again, but the roll re- mained silent. — Toadsticker in hand, I operated, along the diagonal black line. And the doggonedest white serpent leaped out, hit me in the eye, and subsided to the porcelain table top. There, it ‘writhed briefly, and subsided. Arranged hurriedly in a pan, the biscuits went into the oven. Ten minutes later they came out, the requisite beige, but with none of that tantalizing aroma of butter biscuits. It must be something the manufacturers put in. It couldn't possibly be something they take out to make the stuff keep for a month under refrigeration. Yankee thrift said sternly, “You paid. for this disaster, now you can eat it, either with or without berries.” : Home-made biscuits have something which the commercial pro- duct lacks. There is a texture which cannot be duplicated in a bis- cuit which is designed to lie quietly in the dairy case until called for. Are we bringing up a whole generation of children who will never know the delights of seeing a pan of biscuits come out of the oven, to be split, buttered, and smothered in crushed strawberrie liberally sugared ? 2 ) Real biscuits, fairly oozing butter between their layers, mixed so swiftly and with so much milk that they are difficult to lift into the pan? Biscuits that do not call for the rolling-pin, only a deft patting with the hands? ) Could be it is lethal to the waistline. ? But you know something? There are other measurements be- sides inches and poundage. Measurements in memory, to be brought out and treasured in years to come. Mother, flushed from stooping over the oven to bring out that pan of delicious golden biscuits, a dab of flour on her nose, her practiced hand crushing the strawberries and adding a bit more sugar. Delightful memories that stay with you until your dying day. We can get too mechanized, too regimented. Sweet Valley strawberries call for old fashioned biscuits. Mrs. Jenkins Will Be Hostess To Antiques Committee For Auction Mrs. Mitchell Jenkins will be hostess to members of the Library Auction Antiques Committee Mon- day afternoon at 2 at her home in Shrine Acres. Those on the committee are re- quested to bring one of the two antiques which they will donate to the sale, so that the member- ship may gain from this, an overall picture of what sections need fil- that a telephone squad be alert for action, to insure that everybody is notified, in addition to notifica ion in the Dallas Post. # Time does not permit sending out written invitations. Final plans for the part of the Antiques Committee in the Auction will be laid Monday afternoon. Many sub-chairmen have already been enlisted. ling in. Members are advised not : to bring articles of furniture, as Mrs. Homer Moyer, in charge of space will be somewhat limited. chances for the hand-decorated settle decorated by Helen Gross, will have chance books ready for advance sale at the tea. Antiques will be ‘received at the Things which will be needed for a good display on the long table devoted to antiques at the auction include colored glass, china, brass and copper pieces, small objects of ; Auction Barn Tuesday and Wednes- art, wrought iron, examples of his- day of Auction Week. Mrs. Harold torical significance. | Titman will be in charge, assisted Furniture will, as usual, be rang- | by =~ a committee of her own ed in front of the table, but roped | selection. off to exclude sitters. Mrs. Fred Howell is in charge of Members of the committee are the work schedule, dividing hours automatically invited. However, as behind the display table into periods time presses, Mrs. Jenkins suggests acceptable to members. A 1944, Mrs. | died Tuesday afterndon in General Asked how he got the tattooing | Hospital, where she had been a on his left arm, he said he used to | patient for a week. Confirmation Class Accepted By Church Resident of Shavertown since Elizabeth Harris Lord ! these young people of the Confirma- bership in the Trucksville Method- ist Church: Ned Bessmer, Bullock, William Bradbury, Gerald Fritzges, Joanne Gensel, Jeane Hef- , fner, Dean Johnson, Diane Morgan, Harry Owens, Maeryta Parkhurst, Born in Wilkes-Barre, Mrs. Lord Clarence Lord, celebrated She was a member of Albright hay Reese, Brenda Richards, Rob- - U. B. Church, and its societies ont Sahol, Robert Shoemaker, Kitty {and Daughters of America, Wilkes- | | Vernon and Wayne Youels. She her husband; two leaves spine-chilling faces from roots, and | children, Mrs. Joseph Allen and | FERNBROOK FARM TEAM can tame anything in the way of | James Lord, both of Shavertown; a brother, animals. | During the war in which he won three bronze stars to go along with his Asiatic-Pacific Campaign medal, he trained a fleet of armadilloes to stand watch over the jungle trail which led to his quarters, and when he ventured into the jungle, he had a monkey on a leash, riding point, In the accompanying cut, Andy had on a shirt, a departure from established custom, a salute to the green issue published in 1957. How, he inquires, can you work up a really good tan in a shirt Funeral Services For Mrs. Stem. Friday At 2 Mrs. Bessie Stem will be buried in Huntsville cemetery Friday aft- ernoon, Rev. Robert Shechan con- ductig services at 2 from the home on Huntsville Road. Friends may call at the home on Thursday. Mrs. Stem, 78, died early Wed- nesday morning at Mercy Hospital. She was born in Huntsville. daughter of the late Edgar and Josephine Blaine Shaver. Living in this area for 49 years, she belonged to Dallas Methodist Church. Her husband James died in 1936. She leaves one daughter, Mrs. Richard Ostrum. : Arrangements by Bronson, William Harris, Beach | Candidates for Fernbrook Farm On June 6th, Pentecost Sunday, tion Class were received into mem- Debra Emilie Peters, Brock Phillips, Bar- Haven and a sister, Mrs. Mabel | Team will meet for their first prac- Iveson, Shavertown; four grand-' tice Saturday at 1 p.m. at the Fern- children. ; | brook “practice field. Jim Stein- Services will be held Friday from , hauer says boys age 8 to 12 are a Kingston Funeral Home. "eligible. FATHER’S DAY “SPECIAL” Squibbs "Broxodent Electric Toothbrush $19.75 Value 14.89 SUPPLY LIMITED HALL'S PHARMACY SHAVERTOWN, PA. Air-Conditioned for Your Comfort on SE SEAN i a BR)
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers