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Simpson's Leader-Times from Kittanning, Pennsylvania • Page 3

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Kittanning, Pennsylvania
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A I KITTANNING, PA. SATURDAY, AUG. 16, 1958 -22 Weekend Vacationers Die When Liner Crashes, Burns NANTUCKET, Mass. (UPI)-A Northeast Airlines plane crashed and' burned Friday night on fogbound Nantucket Island, killing 22 of the 34 persons aboard, including former Atomic Energy Commission Chairman Gordon E. Dean.

The twin-engine Convair was filled with vacation-bound weekenders on a flight from New York Nantucket when it slammed to -earth near the airport and disintegrated. The dead included the entire crew. The other 12 persons among the total 34 aboard were injured, some critically. Seven were flowr this morning to Boston for special at the General Hospital's Massachusetts 'burn center." Seats, bits of flaming fuselage and wheels were hurled helter- skelter into woodlands east of the airport when the two-engined airliner crashed. Baby Survives The body of Dean, a week-end 'vacation was identi- by his A baby, 2-year-old Cindy Lou Young, was hurled alive'from the wreckage but her mother was killed.

The baby was among those hospitalized. Eye-witnesses reported that the plane split apart like an eggshell enabling some passengers to escape just before it burst into A i the flaming wreckage, strewn about pine woods near Nantucket Airport, year round residents and summer vacationers risked: death when fire neared gasoline tanks to carry survivors to safety. Joe Indio, editor of a Nantucket said the first fire alarms sent hundreds i to, the When he got there, Indio "said, huge chunks of the plane were still burning. It looked, he said, as- if the plane had just plummeted down. Pilot Also Dies Indio said he found one man, sitting down, holding his back.

"All he could say was 'Hold my said Indio. "A litter crew carried him off." It was the second crash of a Northeast Airlines plane in south- a Massachusetts in 11 months. A fog delayed airliner crashed Sept, 15, 1957 at New Bedford, killing 12 and injuring 12 others. Besides Dean, the dead in Friday's crash, Included the pilot, Capt. John Burnharn of a veteran of eight years of service, and his co-pilot, David Carey of Nantucket.

The 'stewardess, Eileen Dabek, 25, of Manchester, N. also was killed. She had been flying only since January. From the sky before dawn the scene was eerie. Jagged streaks cf lightning and pouring rain added gloom to tragedy.

From the air, emergency lights could be spotted ringing the area. Fires Put Out By 4 a. m. e.d.t. all the fires were out.

Northeast announced that some of the survivors would, be flown to the famed "burn center" of Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. The center was set up after the Cocoanut Grove nightclub fire in 1942 that lolled 492. The airliner, a Conyair, had left New York's LaGuardia Airport as Flight 258 about 10:30 p. m. e.d.t.

after a two hour delay a by weather and crowded week end traffic conditions, at the air center. LaGuardia officials said plane made a normal takeoff but as it neared Nantucket it went into an "instrument approach." At the last minute the scattered fog worsened and the Nantucket tower failed in efforts to warn the pilot the airport then was fogbound. Entire Island Alerted Within minutes of. the accident the entire island had been alerted. Cottage Hospital, said nine vacationing doctors offered their services.

Dozens of other vacationers hurried to the hospital- to offer blood. went directly to the crash scene to aid in rescue work. For hours after the crash the chunks of wreckage burned, with two bodies inside. Firemen said that at one point they could see what appeared to be a woman's body beneath an 'engine and a crane was summoned to lift the weight away. The Civil Aeronautics Board at New York ordered three investigators- flown to the scene immediately to find the cause of the crash.

Dean "Frequent Commuter" Dean was the first identified by airlines officials in New York as a passenger. They said, he had 3 a "frequent commuter" during the summer to Nantucket. Dean was appointed to the Atomic Energy Commission in 1949 and served as chairman from 1950 to 1953. Jobless Pay Benefits Hit Low For 58 WASHINGTON (UPI) The government has reported that the number of Americans drawing jobless benefits dropped to new low for this year-in the week ended Aug. 2.

But the Labor Department indicated at least half of the decrease was due to workers exhausting reported their benefits. And it the number of unem- The Death Record ployed filing initial benefit claims rose slightly last week. The unemployment report Friday followed a separate announcement that the nation's industrial output rose in July for the third straight month to a point 6 per cent above the recession low of last' April. The Federal Reserve Board said its index of factory and mine production climbed two points above the June figure to reach 133. The index uses the nation's 1947-49 industrial production as a base of 100.

Government economists evaluating the July production report were pleased by a spurt in durable, goods production, which had been hardest hit by the recession. The overall report bolstered their belief that the downturn hit its bw point' in The Senate Finance Committee meantime went part way toward meeting an administration request for a boost in the national debt limit necessitated by the recession and stepped-up defense spending. The committee approved. President Eisenhower's request, for lifting the temporary debt ceiling from 280 billion dollars to an. all- time peak of 288 billion.

But it limited the temporary authority to one year instead of two. Further, the group chopped two billion dollars from Eisenhower's request for an increase in the permanent debt ceiling. The Pres-' ident had asked that the permanent limit be hiked from 275 to 285 billion dollars. The committee voted to fix the lid' at 283 billion. One bee hive may hold as maay as 70 thousand bees.

Dancing At The Kittanning Eagles SATURDAY NIGHT Music by Nicfc Mottillo and His Orchestra Dancing 10:30 p.m. fa 1:00 a.m. SUNSET-VIEW DRIVE-IN THEATRE JUNCTION RTS. 28 908 TOP OF FREEPORT HILL 3 BIG HITS Show starts at 8:45 p.m. with cartoon Hit No.

1--Bowery Boys in "SPOOK CHASERS" Hit No. 2 "THE DEEP Technicolor and CinemaScope, Alan Ladd and William Bendix Hit No. DOBBS" with Clint "Cheyenne" Walker and Virginia Mayo. SUNDAY and MONDAY "DESIRE UNDER THE ELMS" Sophia Loren, Anthony Perkins and Burl Ives "MARACAIBO" Technicolor and VistaVision with Cornel Wilde and Jean Wallace Kittanning Street Sweeping Schedule APRIL 6, 1958 NOW IN EFFECT No parking will be permitted during the hours specified on the sides of streets to be swept on the following weekly schedule: Sunday midnight until 7 a.m. Mondays the north sides of streets running east and west and the east Aide of streets running north and south.

Mondays midnight until 7 a.m. Tuesdays the south side of streets running east and west, and west side of streets running north and south. Johnston and Oak avenues and all streets south of Reynolds avenue and east of North Grant avenue, will be cleaned on both tides between 4 and 7 a.m. each Thursday. Parking forbidden on thoM streets at that time.

Marker street will be swept on both sides, early each Monday, Thursday and Saturday mornings. W. M. lOWtRS, Police Chief Moon Rocket Stands Tall At Cape Site United Press International CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) -An immensely tall rocket with a knobby contrivance on top stood gaunt in an Air Force tower on Cape Canaveral today.

It apparently was ready for a widely anticipated "shoot for the moon" Sunday. The Air Force and Defense Department still would not confirm that the big test, marking man's i uncertain leap to bridge the chasm between the planets, was imminent. The maximum goal' of the test is to orbit an instrumented satellite of under 100 pounds around the moon and obtain a crude television picture of its eternally hidden "dark side." They're Getting Ready Informed sources have noted that Sunday is the best day for such a test. If the rocketeers can not get it off then, they have the next three days when the moon still is relatively close to earth- within 230,000 miles. Only a short period of each day will provide a celestial alignment favorable for shooting and the whole thing could bs called off for another month.

All signs of a major missile launching evident here. Activity continued far into Friday night on the Air Force service its bright lights showing through a squall line that enclosed the cape. All living space in nearby motels was sold out. i were circulated by "beach telegraph." I As for the kind of shoot planned, the rocket standing in an extended thor missile tower was certainly like nothing ever fired here before. Bomarc Scores Hit Apparently completely assembled in the last day or so, it looked to be almost 100 feet tall and towered above other missiles in position along the cape skyline.

The moon rocketeers can only hope to do a portion as well as an electronic brain did Friday in sending up a Bomarc interceptor missile against a B17 drone. The Bomarc was fired by push- from Kingston, N. more than 1,500 miles from the launching site here. But, checked out for the first time by an all- military crew, the Bomarc exceeded its mission of a near-miss which would be enough to blow up the target with a nuclear warhead. It scored a hit, damaging the Susanna (Stilt) Marquandl Susanna (Stitt) Marquandt, Washington, D.

C. and formerly of North Apollo, was killed last night, Aug. 15, 1958, in an automobile accident of Rt. 126 south of Breezewood. Born May 13, 1938, in North Apollo, she was the daughter of Roy E.

and Frances C. (Newton) Stitt. She was married Aug. 5 this yeat to Phillip Edwin Marquandt, who has been critically injured in the same accident. Mrs.

Marquandt was a member of the Apollo Lutheran Church. A graduate of Apollo High School, class of 1956, she had been employed since that time in Washington, D. C. Surviving are her parents and the following brothers and sisters' Edward at home, Judith and Herbert J. of North Apollo, Mrs.

Jean Casella and Mrs. Frances Barto of Kiski Twp. and Mrs. Nina Gentles of Columbus, Ohio. Friends will be received from 710 tomorrow evening and from 2-5 and 7-10 p.

m. Sunday in the King Brothers funeral home, Apollo. Private services will be held at 11 a. m. Tuesday.

Rev. William Hankey will officiate. Burial will follow in Riverview Cemetery. Mrs. Harry Zeigler Dorothy (Geiger) Zeigler, 53, of Dayton, died at 7:40 a.m.

today in the Armstrong County Memorial Hospital. She was born November 11, 1904, in Echo, the daughter of Warren and Catherine (Schrecengost) Geiger. She. was a member of Echo Lutheran Church and a life long resident of the area. Surviving are: her husband, Harry; four sons, Floyd, Pittsburgh; Raymond, Yatesboro; iV.n- neth, Blanco RD; John, Chicago, one brother, Walter Geiger, Echo; and nine grandchildren.

Funeral services will be held from the Ely Funeral Home Monday, August 18, at 2 p.m. with Rev. E. R. Fabian officiating.

Burial will be in the Glade Run Cemetery. Robert A. Jack Robert A. Jack of Natrona Heights RD 1, Alter died Friday night, Aug. 15, 1958, at the age of 76 years.

His wife Alice preceded him in death in October 1956. Survivors are two daughters, Mrs. Martin (Louise) Dugan. and Mrs. John (Martha Jean) McGee, both of Natrona Heights RD 1 and a son, Dorsey of Natrona Heights.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete. Friends- will be received after 7 o'clock tonight in the Ferver funeral home, Fourth Ave. at Wood Tarentum. Louis W. Beers Funeral Funeral sendees for Louis Beers of Kittanning RD 2, whose death occurred last Wednesday in the Armstrong County Memorial Hospital, were held Friday afternoon in the Mft'rwin funeral home Rev.

R. D. Merkle, pastor of Free Methodist Church, conducted service. Bearers were Theodore Trudgen, Lloyd Lasher, Elmer Grafton, James Rudolph Deemer Stitt and Phillip Budd. Burial was made in the Rupp cemetery.

W. Fry Funeral Funeral services were held In the Dornan Funeral Home, Ford City, a 2:30 p.m. Thursday for John W. Fry, Ford City RD 3. Rev.

Walter Kennedy, officiated with Rev. Charles Empfield, as- Joyce Elaine McCausland Joyce Elaine McCausland, 18, Apollo, was killed last night, Aug 15,1958, in an automobile acciden on Rt. 126 south of Breezewood. A daughter of Earl R. and Lou ella CAshbaugh) McCausland, sh was born Feb.

13, 1940, in Gilpi Twp. (Armstrong County), A 1958 graduate of Apollo Hig School, Miss McCausland was em ployed as a secretary in Washing ton, D. C. She was a member the Apollo Methodist Church. In addition to her parents she i survived by two sisters, Roberta Washington, D.

C. and Sharon, a home; a brother Kenneth at home the maternal grandparents, Mi and Mrs. Robert L. Ashbaugh Leechburg, and the paterna grandfather, W. B.

McCausland Vandergrift. Friends will be received from 7-10 p.m. tomorrow evening anc from 2-5 and 7-10 p.m. Monday i the King Brothers funeral home Apollo. Private services will be held a 2:30 p.m.

Tuesday in the funera home. Rev. G. G. Gallagher wil officiate.

Burial will follow in Riverview cemetery. Shirley Ann Swenson Shirley Ann Swenson, 19, of Apo: lo, was killed last night, Aug. 15 1958, in an automobile accident or Rt. 126 south of Breezewood. A daughter of Russell M.

an Kathleen (Freetly) Swenson, sh was born Aug. 23, 1938, in Apollo Since her graduation from Apoll High School in 1956, Miss Swensor had been employed as a secretarj by the government in Washington D. C. Survivors, in addition to her par ents, are a sister, Mrs. George Maines, Jr.

of Paulton, and a bro ther, Russell at home. Friends will be received from 7-10 tomorrow evening and from 2-5 and 7-10 p.m. Monday in th King Brothers funeral home, Apol lo. sisting. Burial services were private, held Friday at 11 a.m.

in the Homewood Baptist cemetery. Cold Front Brings Cloudy Skies With Shower Activities B17. Radio crews drone back under landed it. brought the control and National Plowing Exhibit Selects furrows i HERSHEY, Pa. (UPD--Daunna Doebler of Jersey Shore reigns today as "Queen of the Furrows," chosen for the National Plowing and Conservation exposition here Aug.

21-22. The 19-year-old brown haired queen, an art education major at Pennsylvania a University, won Friday night over nine other finalists judged on the basis of natural attractiveness, personality, poise, and ability to converse. With the title went a complete wardrobe and a weekend in New York City with her parents, and radio and television appearances. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

David A. Doebler, 446 Maple Porter Jersey Shore, Miss Doebler is five-foot six inches tall and has light brown hair and gray eyes. She is a 1956 graduate of Jersey Shore Joint High School. United Press International A cold front which moved into Pennsylvania during the night will cause generally cloudy skies with scattered showers in Southeastern portions of the state early today followed by clearing in the afternoon as a high pressure system builds up. In western and northwestern sections, clear skies and pleasant weather were expected to dominate throughout the weekend.

Elsewhere, in the state, widely scattered showers in morning hours will give way to the clearing trend by afternoon and continue through Sunday. Temperatures today will range from the low 70's in northwest portions to the near 80's in southeastern sections. Lows tonight will be in the 50's in mountainous and higher elevations and in the 60's elsewhere. On Sunday, the temperatures Private services will be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday.

Burial will follow in Riverview cemetery. Nancy Jane Henry Nancy Jane Henry, 18, of North Apollo, was killed last night, Aug 15, 1958, in an automobile accideni on Rt. 126 south of Breezewood. Born April 9, 1940, in Butler to William C. and Margaret (Youn kins) Henry, she made her home with' her grandmother, Mrs.

Jose phine Henry of North Apollo. A 1958 graduate of Apollo High School, Miss Henry was as a secretary in Washington, C. She was a member of the Apollo Church of God. Surviving are her parents of Gravel Bar (Parks a sister, Mrs. Joan Kowvaluk of Gravel Bar; three brothers, David and Leroy of Gravel Bar and William Ralph of Aipollo, and her grandmother, Mrs.

Henry. Friends will be received in the Dunmire funeral home, 244 Franklin Vandergrift. Arrangements are incomplete. Notable Deaths From Everywhere NEW YORK (UPI)-Mark Hanna, agent and personal manager for a host of literary and theatrical celebrities, died Thursday following a Cerebral hemorrhage. He was 59.

At one time or another in his career, Hanna represented such luminaries as Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, Gypsy Rose Lee, Dorothy Kilgallen, Woolcott Gibbs, Leo Du- roclier, Helen Hayes, S. J. Perelman and Marc Connelly among others. PEEKSKILL, N.Y.

(DPI)--Howard C. Taylor, a former president of the American Assn. of Nurserymen, died Friday. He was 55 years old. NEW YORK (UPI) Frederick Keck, 72, for twenty-five years a member of the Appellate Division Committee on Character and Fitness, died Friday.

NEW YORK (UPI) Norman S. Bope, prominent in cotton textile circles here died at his home Friday. He was 81. will be slightly higher in Western portions with readings in the middle 80's, while little change is expected elsewhere throughout the state. Only the newer European hotels approach the American standard of bath with every bedroom.

Five Face Judge For Non-support Five men faced Judge J. Frank Graff yesterday during non-support court session at the county courtroom where each was charged with failure to support their wife and children. Joseph McCool of Vandergrift was ordered to make payments of $45 a month, Neal Saunders of Lcechburg RD 1 will pay $100 a month, Edwin E. Schaeffer of South Jefferson Kittanning, $30 a month, David L. Cousins of'Kit- tanning RD 4, $160 a month, and Anthony Park of Vandergrift, $50 a month.

Lewis Wolfe of Adrian RD I. charged with paternity, was ordered to pay lying in expenses and $3-a-week until the child Is 14 years of age. Draft Board Calls Eleven Area Men Eleven County-area men have been ordered to report for induction into the armed forces on Tuesday at 6:15 a.m. Local draft board officials said today that the following call-ups are to report to the Selective Service rooms in the Prank Building: Donald Leroy Robinson of Tcm- plekm, Philip Campbell Schreceri- gost of Rural Valley, Ronald Henry Miller of North Apollo, Thomas Koonte of Vandergrift RD 1, ard Joseph Tevelonis of Vandergrift RD Prank Louis Spachtholz of Ford City, Ronald Eugene Calhoun of Vandergrift RD 1, Richard Bernard Gowetski of West Kittanning. William Charles Roselle (A Apollo Star Route, Clyde Dentzel of Apollo and Henry Ellis Craig of New Bethlehem.

Congressmen Heading For Home-stretch Press International WASHINGTON (UPD-Congress worked desperately, today to patch up an adjournment agenda with the senate tackling its benefit- boosting Social Security Bill in a Saturday session. The Senate was meeting after a late Friday nigh session. Leaders expected the bill increasing both benefits and payroll taxes for Social Security to pass the Senate with little change and be accepted, by the House. They hoped this would improve the chances of adjourning this 1958 session by midweek. Their optimism was encouraged by agreement in the House, which recessed for the week end, to bring up on Monday the long- dormant Senate passed Labor Reform Bill, a new housing bill, a minerals subsidy bill and the Fryingpan Arkansas water project measure.

The House at the same time Friday passed its $279,500.000 bill to aid depressed areas with federal loans and grants. Must Stop Horsing But the speedup was shadowed by refusal of House leaders join in a conference on the sub stitute farm hill, a key to anj adjournment plans. Most legisla tors expected the farm stalemate to be resolved by Senate recon sideration and acceptance of th bill which was rammed througl the House on Thursday. "We've got to have a farn bill and the time has come to stop horsing around," one Senate spokesman observed. Senators who have worked lab every night the past week wer plainly getting tired of each other and the delay in adjournment.

But despite their irritation and time consuming oratory, thej managed to send two big tas revision bills to the White House pass a $3,866,000,000 supplementa money bill and return it to the House, report out a new nationa: debt limit bill, recommend a com promise welfare pension fund measure and still face today's overtime session. The day's for action, already passed by the House, would boost benefits foi some 11,800,000 Social Security by about 7 per cent and increase the taxes on 75 million workers. Want 10 Per Cent Only slightly altered from its louse form in the Senate Finance Committee, the bill still contained i public assistance section whlcl be administration warned mighi bring a presidential veto. But the major floor fight was to come over an effort by Democrats to push the benefit increase up to 10 per cent. Senate Democrats, with Major- ty Leader Lyndon B.

Johnson voicing' their viewpoint, 'virtually nvited the President to use his reto--if he cared to take this political risk in an election year. Johnson tried to get an agrce- to limit debate on the ial Security Bill before the Senate quit at 10:50 o'clock e.d.t. riday night. But Sen. Wayne Jorse (D-Ore.) raised the lone bjection which blocked this time- aving move.

Before tin's second session of the 5th Congress adjourns for the ear, it still also must act finally its foreign aid appropriation ID, a big rivers and harbors loney bill, the measure to boost le debt ceiling to 288 billion ollars and probably pass some egislation to satisfy pressure for estrictions on jurisdiction as- umed by the Supreme Court. Johnson said the foreign aid and ebt limit bills would "come up ast" in the Senate. But he re- ised to predict just when that ill be. James Kline, of 199 Maple reported this morning hat a "Snowball Bush" he owns blooming for the second time his year. He said the bush had our new blooms.

Erratic Cleo Drifts North At Fast Pace MIAMI (UPD Hurricane Cleo, with top winds of 115 miles an hour, drifted erratically northward today on a general course which forecasters said it would probably maintain. through most of the morning. Cleo, which moved west-northwest most of Friday, made a gradual shift to the north. A reconnaissance plane pinpointed the center near latitude 19.4 north, longitude 50.1 west, or about 1,000 miles east northeast of Puerto Rico at 11 p. m.

It was also about 2,000 miles east-southeast of both Miami and Cape Hatteras. Cleo, the first hurricane of the season, reduced in velocity from 145 to 115 miles per hour Friday. But the San Juan weather bureau emphasized that "this is a severe hurricane." Miami forecaster Gilbert Clark said Cleo's path made it difficul to assign it to any definite direction. "It has strayed from its previous west northwest course and is now moving in a general northern direction," Clark said. He added that there were indications that it would remain on the same rough course "for some time." Cleo was the first hurricane of the season but the third tropical storm.

Neither of its two predecessors, Alma and Becky, developed into more than severe storms. NAUTILUS U. WASHINGTON (UPI) The nuclear submarine Nautilus will put in at New York harbor for three days after its return Aug. 25 from its historic journey under the North Pole the Navy announced Thursday. INDIGNITIES CHARGED Erml P.

Debnar of Kittanning RD 5 seeks a divorce from Pauline Debnar of Kittanning RD 5 on grounds of indignities, according to records today at the prothono- tary's office. Probers End Second Week WithHoffa United Press International WASHINGTON (UPD-The Senate Backets Committee ended its second week of inquiry into affairs of Teamster boss James R. Hoffa with a sign its labors were bearing fruit. Court-appointed monitors for the Teamsters Union late Friday recommended proceedings i could lead to ouster of Owen (Bert) Brnenan, Teamster vica president and Hoffa's close buddy. The monitors' action brought praise from members of the committee, which developed testimony that led up to the tion.

A "Good Sign" Chairman John L. McClellaa (D-Ark.) said the monitors should "move to the limit of their powef in areas where the committee's in- yestigation has revealed tion and wrong-doing." Another committee Sen. Karl E. Mundt said the action Was "a good sign tha monitors mean business." The monitors by a 2-1 vote urged that Brennan be charged by the union with misuse of funds and engaging in activities which bring the organization into disrepute The monitors fixed a 10-day deadline for the 'union to comply with their recommendations. They presumably could ask a federal judge for a court order to enforce the proposals if the unior balked.

Boxer Enters Picture At issue was the payment of $75 a week for two years from Teamster welfare funds to Emberl Davidson, a former Detroit heavyweight boxer once managed by Brennan. Davidson told the committee in the first week of its renewed investigation of the Teamsters that he never did any worK for the welfare fund in his job classification of "claims investigator." USE WANT ADS FOR RESULTS A COMPLETE SELECTION OF CEMETERY MEMORIALS RAYMOND i i im JncrrfT" "rvr J. '4 I'' I E. E. SCHAEFFER MEMORIALS SINCE 189 433 Union Ave.

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KITTANNING OPEN SATURDAY MONDAY NIGHTS TILL There are two and a half times The Continuing Study of Newspaper Reading shows that ncws- as many traffic deaths on rural papers arc thoroughly read by roads Its on city reels. both men and women. Marriage License Applications Armstrong County Sherwood Allan Cole of Socltis, N. Lee Ann Kaste of Vandergrift. Robert Dale Shilling of Templeton, Eleanor Joanne West of Dayton.

William T. Carroll of Schenley, Loretta Marco of Lcechburg RD 2. William Burgayne Lansdowno of West Middlesex, Elizabeth Suzanne Bierer of 940 North Mc- Kcan Klttannlng. Counly) Donald James Klmmcl, Rural Valley; Judith Ann Oliver, Punxsutawney. P.M.

GRUSKINS 36-HOUR SALE!.

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About Simpson's Leader-Times Archive

Pages Available:
131,433
Years Available:
1926-1977