It’s Valentine’s Day in Lawrence County and Susan Sovereign, my favorite columnist–in the tradition of Erma Brombeck–wrote a column for the Sumner Press the year before last that I forgot to post last Valentine’s Day. Sorry, I don’t have the … Continue reading
Category Archives: Susan Sovereign
It’s Valentine’s Day in Lawrence County and Susan Sovereign, my favorite columnist–in the tradition of Erma Brombeck–wrote a column for the Sumner Press the year before last that I forgot to post last Valentine’s Day. Sorry, I don’t have the … Continue reading
This November 29, 2007, column by Sumner Press columnist Susan Sovereign is so good that I re-typed it so you can read it without difficulty. Publisher Roscoe Cunningham, a former colleague of mine, gave me permission to reprint her columns. … Continue reading
This November 29, 2007, column by Sumner Press columnist Susan Sovereign is so good that I re-typed it so you can read it without difficulty. Publisher Roscoe Cunningham, a former colleague of mine, gave me permission to reprint her columns. … Continue reading
Today’s Susan Sovereign column actually fit the screen of the scanner. Usually I have to post this Sumner Press writer’s work in two pieces. That makes it difficult to read. This November 8, 2007, column is mainly about daughter Anna’s … Continue reading
Today’s Susan Sovereign column actually fit the screen of the scanner. Usually I have to post this Sumner Press writer’s work in two pieces. That makes it difficult to read. This November 8, 2007, column is mainly about daughter Anna’s … Continue reading
Down in Southeastern Illinois is a paper published by former State Representative and barrister Roscoe Cunningham called The Sumner Press. It’s not a huge paper by circulation figures—1,715, according to the last annual filing with the Post Office—but this Lawrence … Continue reading
Down in Southeastern Illinois is a paper published by former State Representative and barrister Roscoe Cunningham called The Sumner Press. It’s not a huge paper by circulation figures—1,715, according to the last annual filing with the Post Office—but this Lawrence … Continue reading