Found this in today's paper, The Press Enterprise Whose stone? By MICHAEL T. BURKHART Press Enterprise Writer CLEVELAND TWP. -- Ignatius Oswald has been dead for 70 years, but something of his showed up this spring in a local police department's lost and found box. Oswald's marble gravestone was discovered along a back road, and police are trying to find where the man is buried so the marker can be returned to its rightful place. The white stone marker, bearing Oswald's name and date of death, was found in May by an unknown individual along Happy Hollow Road between Knoebels Amusement park and Bear Gap, police said. It was turned it over to Ralpho Township police, who gave it to the Locust Township force, said Cpl. Allen Breach. The marker has remained at the police station since its discovery. Despite advertisements in area newspapers, no one has come forward to claim Oswald's marker. The rectangular gravestone is described as 16 inches long by eight inches high and wide, police said. Oswald's date of death -- Aug. 9, 1928 -- is clearly visible, although a symbol to the left of the stone's face with the letters F.O.A. inscribed underneath is indiscernible. As far as lost property goes, Breach said the white marker is one of the strangest things he's seen cross through the police department. He said he has no theories about where the marker belongs or where it could have come from. No reports of area graveyard vandalism were received at the time the marker was found in early May, he said. Police contacted the Roaring Creek and Catawissa Valley Historic Study Group to see if members could unearth any information about the stone's resting place, said Wayne Petro, president of the group. The group said it would help police ask around for information. Anyone who knows about Oswald is asked to call Locust Township police at 799-5806.