Kaminskas purchased the speller for a dime just a few weeks ago at a garage sale
on the west side of South Bend. She planned to sell it on the internet through "eBay", where she's
had success selling collectible books. In fact, she's known as "EBQ", short for "eBay queen", in the
processing department at the South Bend Tribune where she works. Kaminskas said with a laugh.
But when she discovered the book's actual value was minimal, Kaminskas began thinking of its
sentimental value. The dry spelling text was dressed up with a child's doodles and scribbles and
dreams. Surrounded by the shape of a heart on one page was the name "Mary
E." and the promise to marry her in 1940. Clearly inscribed inside the front cover were the names
"Harry E. Stoneburner" and "Tyner."
"My sister works on our family genealogy, and I know she
would be very excited to get a hold of a book like this if it had been in the family.: said Kaminskas
.

Harry E. Stoneburner's 1925 "The McCall Speller," which he used as a student at Tyner
School, includes plenty of doodles inside.
She found a Harry stoneburner in the telephone directory and dashed off a letter to him. She
described the book, how she acquired it and said she'd like to give it to him if it had been his,
if he wanted it.
