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: $5.00 a year; 33.00 six months. No subscriptions accepted for less than six months. Out-of-State subscriptions, $5.50 a year; $3.50 six months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c. Member Audit Bureau of Circulations Editorial Association Inc. re Te Shits Myra Z. RISLEY i Faia Mgrs. T.M.B. Hicks Mgrs. FREDERICK W. ANDERSON Mgrs. FrepErick W. ANDERSON CATHERINE GILBERT con AEE RD ANE Louise MARKS filed for future reference. for the return of unsolicited. manu- editorial matter unless self-addressed, and in no case will this material be National Weeklies . Associates, Member : Member Greater £ditor and Publisher Agssnriate Editor Social Editor Sports Editor Tabloid Editor Advertising Manager One-column cuts will ‘be We will not be responsible scripts, photographs ard stamped envelope is enclosed, held for more than 30 days. The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local hospitals. If you are a patient ask your nurse for it. We will not be responsible for large “cuts.” If your organization wants to pick up its cuts, we will keep them for thirty days. A non-partisan, liberal progressive mewspaper pub- lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania, 18612. Jee, Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association “4 ABE) o nerfs eee Editorially Speaking The Man’ Without A Country His mother and father named him for the Father of his Country, and the Savior of his Country. He served his country honorably in World War II Nobody knows what happened to George Lincoln Rockwell during the course of his forty.nine years, to swerve him from his sworn duty to uphold the United States of merica. But certain it is that his Country denied him, as he had denied his Country, when the avowed Nazi leader was refused burial in a National Cemetery. The silent Civil War veterans who sleep quietly in the Culpeper Cemetery would not have noticed the Nazi armbands, nor the German funeral march on the phono- graph, nor the huge funeral piece with the bent and tora tured cross emblazoned upon it in red. They would have rested lightly under the tread of storm-trooper boots. They would have reflected that during the next one hundred years, nobody would have known or cared that a misguided citizen of the United States of America had found a final resting place, accorded him in pity and re- gret. : They could have said, “We, also, tried to destroy the Union, and we were defeated. We, the unknown dead of the Confederate Army, who died at Shiloh and at Antietam and at Gettsburg. “We, the defeated, can spare a little space for a man who was convinced also, that he was right, and who fol- lowed his convictions. “It was so little that he asked. “Six feet of earth and merciful oblivion.” Death is the great equalizer. If the greatest nation on earth had wished to create a martyr, it could have not have played its cards more skillfully. A defiant man, head of a tatterdemalion group of dissidents, has now become a part of history. A RR A CR Sa —. Diddy-Bags For Vietnam Christmas is closer than you think, considered in terms of men in our armed services overseas. Annually, the mails are flooded with packages destined for our soldiers and sailors in Vietnam. If everybody waits until the last minute, the chance of getting gifts to the men in Vietnam on the date of December 25 is completely stymied by sheer bulk. There is a move on foot to make sure that no service- man is without a gift from home at Christmas time. The American Red Cross is asking for small and un- breakable items to be packed in diddy-bags for shipment. The Dallas Post has been designated as the pick-up -point for these articles, serving the Back Mountain area. Your own soldier will receive his gifts from his own Rome but what about the men who have no close home ies? Have a thought for them. A diddy-bag contains about sixteen items. In addition to your own Christmas shopping, spend a little time and money on the other boys. Most of the articles that are asked for. may be read- ily obtained at the drugstore or the variety counter. The collection date is October 10, for packing and shipping during the following week. Small toilet articles, combs, brushes, nail clippers. Paperback Mysteries, puzzles, pens and pencils, pads of writing paper, self-sealing envelopes. Decks of cards, regular and pinochle. Nothing breakable or perishable. Save the cookies for your own overseas packages, on which you can pay extra postage to insure their reach- ing their destination before they get too dry and hard. Do not include chocolate. ; } And contribute your articles well in advance. They'll eep. ET A Emm § We Need The By-Pass... BUT The Back Mountain needs that cross-Valley link with the Turnpike, but not at the expense of eliminating Park Place and the beautiful plot of ground where John Vaughn used to run his captive steam engine. We feel that another route could be found, one which would preserve one of the few prime residential sections of Kingston. Residents of Park Place are up in arms, and right- fully so. With all this hoo-ha about beautification, to delib- eratelv destrov a beauty spot for the sake of speed seems completely ridiculous. So, the Back Mountain needs a bypass to get travel- lers to and from the Turnpike without encountering traf- fic tangles in the Valley. Let the hichwav engineers dream up something else, something which will preserve a carefully laid out and ‘carefully maintained residential area which Kingston and Greater Wvoming Valley can ill spare. We'd like to get to the East End Boulevard without inching traffic light after traffic light. We'd like the viaduct, but we'd like it where it will not be a liability. Only Yesterday It Happened 30 Years Ago Annual meeting of New York Free Methodist Conference in East Dallas, 300 expected to attend. Bus lines were expected to re- place trolley service when the new by-pass should be constructed. No | change in fares was proposed. The | rate was not mentioned. We think it was twenty cents. Wilkes-Barre { Transit was planning to transform its old trolley system into a track- less trolley arrangement, more mobile in traffic, permitting pass- engers to board at the curb. The new by-pas was to utilize the for- mer trolley right of way. Fifty percent of the Back Moun- tain found itself too busy to registor for voting. Young folks were negli- gent, while oldsters protected their | right to vote by re-registering. State Highway Department har- kened to the angry protest of Lake and Lehman taxpayers. Three-weeks old organization got results. Shavertown artist George Weitzel was 90 years old. Frank Wagner Lake Protective Association, ceeding Arthur Stull. Bill Moss’ pigeons made it from Harrisburg to the home loft in| | three hours minus. The first 33 birds arriving in the races were Bill's. Robert Jackson, Harveys Lake; placed 20th in the President’s Cup Race, among 56 swimmers from the East. Democrats Mountain. It Happened 20 Years Ago Drew Fitch, aged 4, parted with the tip of his finger, but Mrs. Ralph iB itch located it in the back yard (and rushed it to Dr. F. Budd Schooley’s office where the stump was waiting for the tip. The in- jured finger was coming along fine a week later. Tt was a sharp axe, | and it had made a clean amputation. Independent Republicans, backed 1 by Earl Layou and Frank Townend carried the Township. Uniforms were ordered for fifty members of the Kingston Township High School’ Band, Joseph MacVeigh apbointed i a five man Planning Board for Dallas Boro- ugh. Named were Harris Haycox, Harold Titman, Durelle: T. Scott, James Lacy, and Howard Risley. \ Fifty homes were under construc- tion in Kingston Township. The community was speculating on the identity: of ‘Man of the Year,” slated to receive the Hemel- right Award. Donald Reinfurt, 9, cut his | head .t seriously in a fall.. Postal receipts were increasing in Dallas, and a new mail route was contemplated. The opening of Na- tona Mills boosted circulation. The Post Office, open Saturday after- noons during the war, was back on its pre-war schedule, closing at noon. Arthur Ehret defeated John Hew- itt for Lehman school board. Peach crop was excellent. Married: Margarette Puterbaugh to Jorhua Bryant. headed Harveys suc- increasing in Back .| Died: Mrs. Lorenzo Dymond, 665. Beaumont. Mrs. Emma Honeywell Frantz, 82, Chase. It Happened THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1967 KEEPING P ST August 30: THOUSANDS OF ACRES burning in Cali- fornia temperatures continuously over 100, hu- midity nil. no rain in sight. ] Four Western states and British Co- lumbia ravaged by fires, Idaho a disaster area, THURGOOD MARSHALL, first negro ever nomi- nated to Supreme Court, wins Congressional ap- proval. Grandson of a slave. NAZI CHIEF CREMATED. George Lincoln Rock- well’'s body refused burial in National Cemetery Cemetery because of swastika armbands. Five hour fracas at gates of cemetery. NEW DELHI floods. rabid followers wearing NASSER AT SUMMIT says unless other Arab na- tions themselves, get together and stop scrapping among there'll never be a solution to the Israeli-Arab situation. Sixeday war was a doozy. MILWAUKEE MARCHERS rally again in front of burned out Freedom House. REFUGEES TRICKLE back across Jordan, * * August 31: PRE-ELECTION TERROR in Vietnam. Out- breaks of sniping and arson. Many draft-age men kidnapped from villages. U. S. OBSERVERS OBSERVE. Democracy at work? TROPICAL STORM ARLINE being watched care- fully. Could turn into hurricane. NATIONAL CONFERENCE for New Politics in Chicago, Martin Luther King gives keynote speech. U. S. STEEL hikes prices. SCATTERED FROST in upper Midwest. * * * September 1: birthday. * COMMERCIAL AVIATION marks its 40th ADDITIONAL MILLION tons of wheat for India. BETHLEHEM STEEL follows lead of U. S. Steel. FORD IS TARGET for proposed Auto workers strike. ARAB CONFERENCE ENDS remains closed. * * September 2: THREE POLLING PLACES bombed, more voters kidnapped. GROUND ACTION slacks off as election nears. in Kartoum, Suez * IN HONG KONG, ten miles of barbed wire fence. 10 Years Ago Lightning started a fire at the | Adametz home. Leslie Barstow was featured in two pix on the front page, on a ladder at the Adametz fire, and leaning over the stretcher which carried Sam Epstine to the Dallas ambulance. Mr. Epstine, 54, summer resident of Dallas. was struck by a car on Center Hill Road near the American Legion building. Compound fractures of both legs resulted. Dviver of the car was Lloyd Bishop, 17, Dallas. Mrs. Paul Meeker, Evans Falls, ‘was charged with murder in the | fatal shooting of her husband. Johns Hopkins Hospital by Ambu- lance. Johns Hospital by ambulance. Radio antenna was erected on Dallas Borough Building, and two- way eivil defense radio was being installed. Running dogs, weeds, and Toby's Creek presented problems for Boro- ugh Council. Same as today. Local school enrollment was 4,546. Tomy Shaver, 6, was improving after his skull wag fractured in a bicycle accident. Died: Frank P. Anstett, 82, Hill- side maintenance man for fifty years. Anniversary: Mrs. William Chapple, 86. Married: Emily Baaz tp; Robert Antanaitis. > SWIPED FROM ROTARY September Song: From north and south and ast and west, vacationers ‘have packed and dressed, for that OIL PUMPING resumed in Arab countries. RACIAL DISTURBANCE continues in Milwaukee. KKK CONVENES near Atlanta (with guns) * * Weekend: SWEDEN TRAFFIC Gas from left to right Sunday at 5 a.m. MILITARY RULE ' continues in Vietnam, 80% registered voters cast ballots, U. S. observers say cautiously it looks legal. Could be basis of peace. " FOREST FIRES out of control in Idaho at Sun- dance Mountain. TIDAL WAVE in Southern California. MEDIATION BOARD works overtime to avert broadcasting strike. * * * September 4: ACROSS THE SUEZ, sharp exchange of artillery.’ OPEN HOUSE MARCH continues in Milwaukee. "MILTTANT BLACK POWER forces take over SNCC convention in Chicago. Rap Brown. POPE PAUL, 76, ill with influenza. LABOR DAY. * * * September 5: FIERCE NEW FIGHTING in Vietnam after election lull. JORDAN AND ISRAEL exchange fire across the Jordan. "AGREEMENT REACHED between NBC and Union, in time to avert a strike. DeGAULLE VISITS Communist Poland, foot in mouth. RICHARD NIXON backed for Republican presi- dential candidate. * * * September 6: FIERCE FIGHTING in China, trains to and Hong-Kong stop running, usually 150 a day. Food suoplyv cut off. prices skyrocket. VIETNAM ELECTION is seen chances of peace. NEGOTIATIONS BROKEN OFF, Ford plants due to be struck at midnight. as improving Bov In Service Strongly In Favor Ot Setting Up An Outpost Feature gweet journey home to rest. There's a boy in service who strongly favors setting up an “Outpost” department in the Dallas Post, for exchange of in- | formation on service men. Such a denartment was a regular feature of the paper during World War II, when men and women in the armed forces exchanced information and kept up with movements of their friends through pages of the news- paper from the home-town. Petts Officar By claas John David | of military life, Where 1 nicked (ambobell. at the Naval Auxiliary Air up. I'll never know but vou're wel- Station in Meridian, wrtes: “Dear Dallas Post: POST” sounds like a idea, Here's one vote that's 100% in favor. “The “OUT “The real reason I've written is | wonderful | [ sure there's a lot of Sauids. T mean | eailors, who would enjov it.” The crnimnled niece of paner was ~eetty illegible. We think it went | ike this: What ie a c0ilayr? ts eive my versonal thanks to the | security. of childhnod and the in- peonle of the Rack Mountain for serurity of Second Childhood. we their overwhelming <upvort of the | find a faeninating group of hu- havs in uniform. To be soecific, those men now serving in Vietnam. | “Whether or not evervone hack | woiohts Thow cam he found in al- | manity known as sailors. They come in assorted sizes and home snmno¥ts this war. IT wouldn't | most any place, on ships, on shore know. hut it seems they do, and | |'and alwave in debt. The eirls Jove | them. the towns tolerate them, and that’s what counts. “Your continning sunnort makes ns strive a little harder toward the goal for which so manv of our fellow shiomates have died. “That goal is Freedom. “The bovs overseas don’t have the time to thank vou for your sun- rort, but IT am sure they feel it. The freedom of the Vietnamese peo- nle and the world can onlv be won hv the presence of armed forces, SA long a« we are present in Viet- nam. we will need vor stivnort. “IT would nersonally like to see a young people’s groun start send- ing letters or posteards to these hove Leters are the hiocgest morale. builders a service man can have, believe me. “The crumpled piece of paper en- closed represents the lighter side statinns. in bars in love, on leave. the Government suvvorts them. A =ailoy is a vrotertor of his Conn- trv with a conv of Play-Bov in his hand. He hac the braverv of a bull with a tattooed arm. He ‘has the slvness of a fav and the charms of | a Casanova, When he wante some- | thing. it is nsuallv immoral, illegal, or against Navv regulations. Some of his hahite are women, girls. ladies, broads dames. and the onposite sex. Ha dislikes oetting up on time, waiting in line for chow. wearne his uniform. and his smunerior officers. Hea snends most of his money on girls, in bars, in noker eames, and the rest he spends foolishly. Noone but a sailor can get into one jumper pocket a comb. a church key, a picture of his girl, a pack Cocaluschu News A spinning and dyeing demon- stration is slated for September 23, at Camptown Information may be obtained from Mrs. Robert Crosson. Camptown is easily reached by car. It is not far from Wysox. In October, Mrs. Crosson plans to demonstrate spinning and carding on Back Mountain Memorial’ Li- brary grounds, possibly with sheep. The date is October 7. weather permitting, at 2 p.m. Rain=date is October 14. The demonstration. will he staged at 2 p.m., and continue for some time. The project of weavine is hrought out in a recently publi-hed booklet written by Mrs. Crosson, entitled “The Story of the Coverlet.” It is illustrated bv coverlet nat- terns, both traditional and modern, and carries a bvicture of a loom of the type used in weaving large pieces. The booklet delves into the early history of weaving, stres~ing the fact that many early settlers had rich backeround= of weaving ex- perience in the industrial centers ef England a know!~2ze which they need in dealing with the rougher fibres of a new land. It goes into some interesting <*de- lines, such as why an unmarried woman came to be called a spinster, and the origin of the common phrare. “distaff side’ The booklet brings the history of weaving up to the present, ‘where an age-old craft is once more gain- ing ground and becoming a popular pastime and source of revenue. Mrs. Crosson finishes her book with a quotation from Aunt Sal Creech, on untutored but far from uneducated mountain woman from Kentucky. Education is not always found in books. Aunt Sal says: “Weavin’, it's the purtiest work I ever done. It's set- tin’ and trampin’ the treadles, and watchin, and watchin’ the blossoms come out and smile at ye in the | Kiverlet.” Requiem Mass Saturday For Mrs. Daniel McGlynn Mrs. Daniel McGylnn, mother of Mrs. C. J. Ankner Sr., New Goss Manor, died Tuesday evening at her daughter's home at the age of 84. A Mass of Requiem will be cele- brated from Gate of Heaven Church Saturday morning at 9:30, follow- ing services at 8:45 from a Wilkes- Barre funeral home at 142 South Washington Stret. Burial wil be in St. Mary's Cemetery. Mrs. McGlynn, a former resident of the Heights section, had made her home with ‘her daughter for the past three years. The former Gertrude Hovencamp was a native of Ashley, and attend- ed Ashley schools. Uvon marriage, she ‘moved to the Heights. Her husband aDniel: died four years ago. She was a memberof St. Mary's Church, becoming a member of the Gate of Heaven Parish and its Altar to Dallas. She leaves, in addition to her daughter, Mrs. Ankara, ‘a son, Jerome T. McGylnn, Wilkes-Barre .architect; four grandchildren, eight greagrandchildren; a sister, Mrs. Arthur Shippee Jr., of Butler, N.J. What's A Nice Girl Like You? etc. What's a nice girl like you doing [in a place like this? is something folks are bound to ask when Shirley Temple becomes a candidate for Congress. ‘Makes Editorial Mag. Dallas Post Editorial page has | made the Grassroots Editorial Mag again, with its editorial of August 3, entitled “Mute Reminders.” It | is available for reprint by: other | members of the International Con- ference of Weekly Newspaper Ed- itors. The Dallas Post has been featured time was on the occasion of the as- Mississippi, jos to print it if vou desire. Tm | eassination of President Kennedy, lan editorial which brought the | Golden Quill to the Dallas Post, and | which was widely copied throughout it | | the country. “Ice Station Zebra” If you're interested in submarines and stories of the sea, read Alistar Ba “Ice Station Zebra.” It's a suspense storv staged un- Between the der the Arctic Ice Cap, and it's | guaranteed tp give you an Arctic | chill. Where can you get it? At the Back Mountain Memorial Library. Tell Mrs. Davern that Hix sent you. of smokes, and “what | ist o Teft of Tast month’s pay. A sailor is a magical creature. You can lock him out of vour house. but not out of your heart. You can cross him off your list but not off your mind. He is your long-away-from-home, good-for-nothing. bundle-of-wrong, | and all your dreams become in- significant when your sailor comes un to you with those bleary blood- shot eves, and says to vou in a sad, guiet way, HI HONEY! Editorial Note: Tell us more about the church key “He who builds a wall. shuts out more than he shits ; in. “Old Chinese proverb. “There may be more painful things than truth . . . but I've never found them.” From— Pillar To Post... | DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA by HIX There was that odd and high pitched sound, late Sunday night, like a small leak in a steam pipe, or a defective electrical connection. Maybe the plumbing. It wasn’t the plumbing. Opening the basement door and leaning an ear down cellar, there was nothing, but the zing-zing-zing continued. Obviously somewhere—-in the No stench of escaping gas. drip-drip of the spigot. It was hard to track down, from everywhere. The electric clock on the wall. in-one oil. The refrigerator. Nope, not in the refrigerator. kitchen, but where? Nothing more than the ordinaryigly because it seemed to be coming Maybe it needed a drop of 3- Glass jars ‘were far enough apart so that there was no ringing sound. Zing-zing-zing. A dense silence, and then zing-zing-zing again. I remembered stories where the victim of a grudge had been driven nuts by a constant and undefinable sound engineered by somebody who had rigged up a little something and timed it to go off at a certain hour, late at night, when odd noises sound the most - suspicious. Could anybody hate me that much ? Well, ularity. maybe they could. I've never made any claim to pop- Had I been writing something in Pillar to Post which was in- digestible to the reading public ? Probably not. I don’t make fun of other people, I make fun of myself, been doing it now for Pwonint five years in the Dallas Post. Editorials ? Editorials have a way of boomeranging and coming home to roost. on the return trip. This is the penalty for speaking out in meeting. Take a swing at something, and you're pL to get clobbered Writing -edi- torials is not the most fool-proof way of making friends and influenc- ing people. Could be I'd stepped on some more sore toes in the community... Unless you adhere strictly to home and mother, Christmas, tn J way the stars look on a frosty night, the coming of spring, and the first branch of flaming red~in the =1, you're going to step on some- body. better. ~~ You're also going to pass up a chance to jack up the conminite® and call attention to its backslidings as well as its progress. use letting the public become too complacent. No We could all do ET and Rosary Society when she fnoved | several times in Grassroots. The first | Business of prowling around the kitchen again with a geiger counter, poking under the washing machine, inspecting all the elec- tric outlets, going over all the shelves to see if one glass might be jarring against another. Whoever it was who aimed to drive me nuts was doing a good job, and they could now cut it out, with my blessing. One last bit of rummaging, pulling out the laundry basket from under the ironing machine, and there he was, the culprit. "He was industriously sawing one leg over the other, and he was backed as far as he could get into a corner of the flagstone floor. His fiddle struck a higher note of desperation and all of a sud- den he stopped in midstride. He was getting out of there fast, head- ing for another hidey-hole, when I got him with the fly swatter. If you have never swatted a cricket, my advice to you is don't. A cricket may look thin and lacking in substance, but he is meaty. Swatted, he splashes. Funny, if I'd heard that high pitched zinging at the Pump House, I'd have identified it instantly as a cricket, but it has been a long time since I have heard one. : He was probably planning to move in on me for the winter, having read somewhere that Charles Dickens once wrote a nice story entitled The Cricket on the Hearth. I had a hearth, therefore I should welcome a cricket. What Charles Dickens failed to mention was that crickets live off the land. When they get hungry, they eat holes in the rug. This is fair warning to crickets: Stay, Out. This means you. ee eee : BR Prime Health Hazard Tt is the seemingly small things that are remembered forever. That rat business, for instance. The President of the United States asked Congress for an appropriation for getting rid of rats, and it was turned down. That one bit of shortsightedness is going to be held against Congress. Congress apparently doesn’t realize it, but rats an- nually destroy enough food to feed dis in a year of famine. And rats are a prime health hazard. In crowded waterfront areas, where wharf rats con- gregate, the rats grow so large that they are a menace to children.” They can, and do, bite babies. The fleas from rats are the carriers of Bubonic Plague. : The relatively small appropriation should have been passed without question. Out here in the Back Mountain, there are plenty of rats. If you see one rat, there are a dozen in hiding. Barns are their favorite hide-out. It wouldn’t hurt the population in the Back Moun- tain to initiate its own rat eradication program, instead of waiting for George to do it. The loss in food and proverty is not so staggering as it is a congested area, but the rats eat plenty, and they @ $ » ® Ee i ought to be eliminated. Sometimes you scorch at the Hay- market Antiques Show and Sale. sometimes you- dash for cover out of a sudden shower, but Saturday everybody "froze the instant ‘they left the bright sunshine for the shade of the barn, when inspecting the art exhibit. Out of the wind. and in the gun- shine, it was a lovely day. Displays set up on patchwork anilts, coverlets, and pieces of tap- estrv. seemed to take up more room on the ground than usual, or per- haps the crowd was more dense. Plenty of rain this summer in- sured no dust Evervthing was green and delightfully fresh. Station wagons lined the sides of the field. their tailhoards extended, and their wares spilling over onto tables. Any number of Library Auction fans were on hand, some to look, some to buy, some to visit. The displays ran mostly to glass and china. small bits of ironware, decoy ducks, large glass bottles, jewelry, and junk at bargain prices. One shop showed the type of . i Bright Sun For Haymarket Show | handbells qQnce used by school teachers when summoning the fl at the one-room school. There were some china doll heads minus bodies, an ancient doll car- riage, and several small chairs, childr-size. By 10 a.m. traffic was crawling along Route 309 at Evans Falls, and turning tn the right at the grounds. Small bovs directed cars to the parking lot. The weathered grey walls of the barn provided aninteresting back- ground for a disolav of waintings and drawings hung bv Bill Ohme Jr of Philadelnhia. Robert Heffel- finger and Hattie Emmick of Scran- ton. : Mr. Foote. who has arranged the show for ‘the past several vears, reported ‘that thirty-four dealers weve displaying their wares, from neighboring states as well as Penn- sylvania. Bv six p.m., with the sun already slipping behind the mountain, and the chill of evening on, the station wagons were loaded up and ready to go, and th crowd dispersed a den que mee bur: day. com Pro at 1 outc ning ned. Mrs Pat hon Win wee Mrs New on Knc Kno with wee and a fe lian fam less cele nive har fam the Mrs Jr. Mrs ert Barl gar sper son ville tert: thei hon day. Sha Nan Erni Elgi into Albe Shal lata Ter: Wile ‘Wrg Dav the to I end. beer mer, few Colle for 1 ws |B
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers