The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, December 28, 1961, Image 1

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0% island, Wuliam ~~ Dorsnefski,
¥ 72 YEARS A NEWSPAPER
Oldest Business Institution
Back of the Moun
tain
THE DALLAS POST
ORchard
TWO EASY TO REMEMBER
Telephone Numbers
4-5656 OR 4-7676
TEN CENTS PER COPY-—FOURTEEN PAGES
Footprints On The Sands Of Time |
MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION
Christmas Cheer For Many Area Families a
Record Of 1961 In Brief
Extremely cold weather, 18 be-
low zeio reporved at Pikes Ureek.
SKing condiuons In State are
finest 11 years.
narveys Lake froze over Decem-
er 20. :
¥ Boy Scouts, Shavertown Troop
204, enjoy survival test In Kout
Houow in oitter below-zero weatner,
rooert Jduitler, 1U, iractures skull
in sicaqung accidedt at hunkle.
baea: Cars aviuorodt, 64, Lauet.
urs, mma Cragie, 41, Huniock
reek Rp. Haroid Pauw Moore, 3,
former orf rernvrook. Stepanen De-
‘Barry, ((, rox Hull, .
YANUARNX 9, LUDL
rrigid weataer continues after
coluesy December on record.
_ Jacqueune Hoyt, 13, Koss Town-
“ship, 1ractures skull wnue coasung.
iiervert Upuyke replaces Jesse
Cosietc as Kingswon Township cniet
or police, on a rotation or duty
plan. : )
weu: Thomas R. €lemow, 51, Shav-
ectown, Jomunick rajaujis, ol, Lake
Sukworta, Roland €. Nolt, bb,
Krankun, N.Y, James Payne, 40,
70, Lake wnukworon.
Umparced, 82, Mt. Zion.
Wwropleskl, bob, Dallas.
JANUARY 1%, 1961
Lx-Governor Kine
income tax evasion.
§. Fue at Carverton destroys brood-
“er house, 300 chicks,
Rustlers steal 900 pound bull at
Vernon, property of (erald Brown.
Petty thievery rampant in area.
Died: Minnie Coolbaugh, 77, Shav-
ectown. Mrs, Alice Rogers, 179,
Trucksville. Mrs. Beulah Freeman,
Mrs. Bessie
Stanley
indicted for
Plattsburg home of Charles Ever-
etts damaged by fire.
Prutzman barn collapses
snow.
Died: Albert M. Clifford, 63, Trucks-
ville, Harry Owens, 75, Trucksville.
Dixie Dornsife, 9, Goss Manor. Wal-
ter Puterbaugh, 65, Shawanese.
James Sutton, 69, Harveys Lake.
under
Anniversary: Mr. and Mrs. John
Newell, 53rd.
Married: Carol Inman to Harold
McDermott.
MARCH 2, 1961
Westmoreland cagers destined for
PIAA playoffs in Scranton, March
8
bowling.
Death releases Mrs. Charlotte Mac-
Veigh after long illness, aged 74.
George Jacobs, Pennsylvania win-
ner of Voice ofl Democracy, lays
wreath on George
tomb.
jures two top brass of Linear,
Lewis and Sadler.
Died: Harry May, 82, Beaumont.
Mrs Elizabeth Engelman, 97, Noxen.
Mrs. John Southwell, Chase. Mrs.
Emaret Kocher Shoemaker, Noxen
native.
Married: Alice Jean Piatt to Joseph
C. Martin.
Westmoreland girls basketball
closes a perfect season, along with
the varsity team.
MARCH 9, 1961
Westmoreland loses to West Haz-
leton in PIAA playoffs, 69-53.
Died: Mrs. Frank Jackson, Harveys
Lake: Gerald E. Stout, 53, Shaver-
70, Meshoppen. John Arndt, 56, Lake
Silkworth. . g >
Married: Linda
Alan R. Root. § &#&
Smelts disappear from
Lake after 3 years of heavy harvest.
JANUARY 19, 1961
Carrie Caperoon is stabbed in arm
as pickpocket makes try for her
purse in Philadelphia.
Westmoreland takes Ashley 78 to
a
54
erton, celebrate Golden Wedding.
Died: Mrs. Maude Sutliff, 81,
Trucksville. Willis Turner, 56, Sweet
Valley. Margaret Knorr, Carverton.
John Ide, 68, Idetown.
JANUARY 26, 1961
a Two homies destroyed PA fire at
Harveys Lake, Charles Casterline at
Sunset, George Kanarr near Picnic
Y More blizzards, more sub-zero |
temperatures. :
Presbyterian church for this area
is planned.
Martin-Fladd Engineering = firm
established. . Sil,
Died: Wayne Wandell, 68, Bloom-
ingdale. Mrs. Mary C. Goss, 91,
Red Rock. Lee Bradef, 77, Roaring
Brook. Mrs. Blanche Vesler, 73,
Hunlock Creek. Mrs-. Bridget Mich-
alowski, Lake Silkworth.
FEBRUARY 2, 1961
Proposed recreation program dis-
cussed by Dr. Robert Mellman and |
John Zerbe.
Died: Mrs. Lewis LeGrand, 69,
Balwin Street. Arthur Ehret, 68,
Meeker. Mrs. Rebecca Jane Moss,
nearing 84, Trucksville. Byron J.
Traver. Gerard Carey, infant, Mead-
owecrest.
tarrics: Carol Jane Fitzgerald, to
Joseph Burezyk. Josephine Radan-
ovitch, to Thomas Bunney Jr.
Coldest weather of the winter
5 with no let-up. Coldest
anuary on record.
FEBRUARY 9, 1961
Robert Bachman reelected at’ An-
nual Library Meeting, Mannear, Mc-
Cutcheon named auction dinner
chairmen. Miss Lathrop gives final
report.
Blizzard over weekend, area still
digging out.
Died: Floyd Scouten, 59, formerly of
Noxen, at Penndel. Mrs. Helen P.
Warden, 69, Shavertown. John H.
Clemow, Ohio. William Wright, 77,
fatally injured in a car accident
at Noxen.
Married: Betty Fink Henning, form-
erly of Shavertown, to William
. Heilig, Orchard Park, N. Y.
Westmoreland cagers licks Lake-
\i@.chman, for eighth straight win.
Edward Morgan buys Overbrook
Water Company.
FEBRUARY 16, 1961
Borough Council adopts $3 per
capita tax, refuses usual payment
of $300 to Library set collection
commission at 5%,
year. r
Leslie Warhola stricken with part-
ial stroke while driving home alone
from Pittston.
Dallas school board equalize per-
centage of tax collection for all
districts to take effect in 1962: 2%
for prepayment, 3 for net, 4 for pen- |
alty. 3
Civil War roundtable names J.
F. Sallada president.
Died: Anna Laincz, former resident
of Harveys Lake. Mrs. Lucy Kline,
54, Noxen, Willard Gregory, Muhl-
enberg. Charles Wilkie, 62, Noxen.
Westmoreland still tops league. All |
wins to date.
FEBRUARY 23, 1961
Westmoreland takes 12 straight |
games,
At school: Harry Haas, Kunlle, |
gets concussion falling from audi- |
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Parsons, Carv- |
same as last |
0 e. Jr. 42, Meadow-
: ' Hunter, 65. Sweet
34, Sweet Val-
SP rs.
Mrs. Lizzie Bilby, '87, Huntington
Mills, Seymofir Eveland, 73, Lake
las.
Mrs. Jennie Boice, Sugar Hollow
is 89.
Married: Grace Thomas, Kingston, to
David Ide, Dallas RD 4.
Anniversary: Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Stroud, Sweet Valley RD, Golden
Wedding.
Ocelot panics Shavertown . . .
in imagination. Was in cellar all
the time.
MARCH 16, 1961
Daniel Zimmerrrym 28 Qnorhrook
Road, is killed in the Luzerne toy
| factory explosion that rocked the
| Back Mountain.
Both parties announce complete
tickets for Primaries.
Married: Ruth Phillips Jones,
Daniel Federici.
Died: William H. Post, 79, Sweet
Valley native. Arthur E. Marth, 48,
Trucksville, Amos Hoover, 75, Rug-
gles. Mrs. Amanda Brink, 61, Sweet
to
ton Mills.
A & P building nears completion,
MARCH 23, 1961
William T. Morris Foundation.
March 30, 1961
Library Board honors memory of
Mrs. Lewis LeGrand, seeks new
librarian to replace Miriam Lathrop,
Mrs Lottie Hess, 48, Sweet Valley. |
Cliff Garris gets perfect score in
Washington's |
Three car crash on highway in- |
ella White, 80, Noxen. |
Silkworth. Mrs. Daniel Cowen, Dal-| Postoffice and Wyoming National
Valley. Edna Harrison, 54, Hunting- |
shopping center due to open in June.
Library recipeint of $500 from |
|
who is retiring in the fall. |
Died: Elmore Turrell, 78, summer |
| resident of Noxen, in Florida. Mrs. !
Catherine Phipps, 66, Dallas. Harold
L. Holmes, 55, Mt. Zion, Mrs. Lillie
| E., Belles, 75, Trucksville.
| Married: Carolyn Dickson, to Rob-
| MARCH 30, 1961
Teen-age toughs from Wilkes
Barre steal guns at Lake, threaten |
| woman in Dallas. Honeywell makes | §
arrest. |
| Died. Mrs. Sterling Williams, 71, |
| Dallas. Mrs Sarah DeWitt, 66,
| Trucksville. Miss Anna Holcomb, 81,
| Shavertown invalid. Mrs. Gwen
Roushey, 82, Dallas. Stanley A. Gery,
| Harveys Lake. }
Shavertown is League champion,
| defeating Huntsville 60 to 47.
Anniversary: Mr. and Mrs. Arthur |
J. Webb, 59th. Edward Master, |
Sweet Valley, 90th birthday.
Dallas Acme opens remodelled up-
| to-date store.
APRIL 6, 1961
Mrs. John Girvan gets PTA life |
| membership, for founding Dallas |
{ Township PTA in 1930.
53 Dallas Cub ‘Scouts ‘sworn in
as junior deputy sheriffs.
Dog-catchers are busy.
| Nancy Wolfe, Betty Jean Davis, |
in State Chorus. !
{ Married Ira Frantz, Mrs. Minnie |
{ Redline. Thomas E. Williams, Lois |
| Vanderhoff, :
| Died: Dennis Bonning, 61, Jackson |
| Township chief of police. Mrs. Luc- |
| inda Brong, 83, Evans Falls, Doug- |
| las Evans, Sutton Creek Road. Mrs. |
Anna Noll Parry, 63, Luzerne. Mrs. |
Harriet Richards, 43, Luzerne.
APRIL 13,
Dallas Schools accept budget of |
$1,087,250. |
Lease for Postoffice
town signed, $7,000 annually. Old
Acme store, to be divided between
in Shaver- |
| Bank.
Died: Frances Pike Schooley, 83, |
| Noxen. Mrs. Josephine Felter, 54,
formerly of Noxen. Mrs. Tressa Race,
70, Center Moreland. Clyde Stev-
ens, 54, Loyalville. William H. |
Condon, 89, Beaumont. Mrs. Rena |
Rood, 88, Broadway. Floyd Boyer,
84, Endicott, N. Y. Lindsey Wash- |
burn, 57, son of the late Mr. and |
| Mrs, William O. Washburn at Bryn |
| Wawr. Adam Skovich, 85, Sylvan |
Lake, Homer Whitesell, 63, Hunlock |
' Creek, Mae Lamoreaux Ross, 82,
Sweet Valley.
Anniversary. fiftieth, Mr. and Mrs. |
William Davis, Dallas. Twenty-fifth, |
Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Ide. Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde H. Cooke, fiftieth, Mr.
i and Mrs. Ray 'Shiber, fifty-fifth.
Married: Lois Vanderhoff to Thomas |
E. Williams, [
| (more next week) |
{
NOTICE
Because of the New Year
Holiday, will ministers, school
writers, correspondents please
mail all or part ef their news
to the Post early enough to be
set in type on Saturday? The
remainder must be in the office
Tuesday morning at 8 a.m.
¢ Please cooperate.
|
|
| ert Spudis. | §
1961 bo
Packing Christmas baskets Wom. -
day night in the basement of the |
George Searfoss home, members of |
the Basket Committee of Harveys
Lake Woman's Service Club ar-
ranged for cheer and food baskets
for their area, some baskets con-
taining complete Christmas dinners,
Seek Hit-Run Driver
State Police are seeking a hit-
{ and-run driver who sideswiped the
automobile of Richard Grieshaber,
| owner of Continental Inn, Tuesday
night at 10 near Dallas Shopping |
Center. {an annual project of the Harveys | baskets are packed and sent an-
Mr. and Mrs. ' Grieshaber were Lake Woman's Service Club. This nually,
driving toward Dallas to see the project has grown over the fifteen | The baskets pictured represent
the Christmas lights.
Mrs. Harvey Kitchen, Mrs. George |
some of them gay reminders of the | Searfoss, and Mrs. Ivan Steinruck,
season. for shut-ins. Deliveries rere made on Tuesday
Reading from left to right, and by Mesdames Malcolm Nelson, Del-
up to their elbows in oranges, ap- | mar Wintersteen, Charles Williams,
ples, groceries and Christmas green- | Carrie Rood, Earl Crispell Ralph
ery, are Mrs. Albert Armitage, Mrs. | Lutes, Mildred Darnell, and [Fred
Clarence Swire, Mrs, Wilfred Ide, | Dodson.
photo by Kozemchak
‘Harveys Lake Women's Service
Club Packs Christmas Baskets
Packing of Christmas Baskets is
organized until an average of 150
‘years that the Club has been | many hours of work as each is
Keeping Posted
ST. JOHN’S LODGE No. 233 F. and AM. Pittston will hold its
114 annual banquet at Irem Temple Country Club January 10 at 7.
Reservations may be made by calling Stanley Salavantis, chairman.
PENNSYLVANIA INDUSTRIAL Development Authority has given
final approval to two loan requestssfrom the Committee of 100 Ing.,
of Wilkes-Barre; one for $15,000 representing 30 percent of the
cost of improvements for. plant occupied by Leslie-Henry Company,
| the other: for $48,000 representing 40 percent of the cost of an‘ad-
ditional to: the plant of Metropolitan Wire Goods Company
EIGHTEEN B. G. COON Construction Co. employees were cited
for safe-driving achievements at the firm’s Christmas Party held
Presentations were made by G. F. Fritzen, PMA
safety engineer and A, Harden Coon, Jr., vice president of the firm.
ST. JOHN’S DAY Banquet of George M. Dallas Lodge 531 F. and
A.M. will be held at Irem Temple Country Club January 23 at 6:30.
FAMILY OF THE LATE COL. DORRANCE REYNOLDS has made
available to Wyoming Historical and Geological Society the remain-
ing unpublished volumes of the famed Susquehannah Company
Papers which will possibly be published. Dr. Julian Boyd, librarian
of Princton University, assembled the material. Four volumes have
at Continental Inn.
previously *been published.
TWO BOOKS of unusual interest to historically-minded resi-
dents of Luzerne County are: “A General of the Rvolution: John |
Sullivan of New Hampshire” by Charles P, Whittmore and “Indians |
by P. A. W. Wallace may be purchased from |
Wyoming Historical and Geological Society. Both are excellent should |
In Pennsylvania”
be in every local home library.
packed to meet the requirements
| of the individual who will receive
| it. The Cheer Baskets contain that
{ which will cheer the hearts of our |
| aged and shut-ins. A Food Basket |
supplies the Christmas dinner for |
a needy family of our area.
Homemade cookies, toys, canned
goods and treats are donated by the
members, Merchants donate toys
whenever possible, and other treats
such as fruit, candies, tobacco ana
small gifts are purchased in whole-
I sale lots. oq
The Harveys Lake Lions contri- |
bute $100. toward the project and |
several smaller amounts of money |
have been gratefully received from |
friends of the Club. The money will |
be used to defray expenses,
Headquarters for the project for |
the last two years has been the |
basement workshop. of the Service |
Chairman, Mrs. George Searfoss.
i
SURPLUS FOOD |
Surplus Food for the Back Moun-
tain will be distributed Thursday,
January 11, at Trucksville Fire Hall,
9 am, to 2 pm. Bring Containers. |
|
|
|
|
|
{
torium stage at Jr. High School. Following their long established | community at a Christmas Party at ing Santa Claus.
John ‘Stahl’s thumb mangled when
caught in car door.
custom, members of Dallas Rotary [Prince of Peace Parish Hall, Every- |
: | Club entertained youngsters of the | body had a wonderful time includ- | leadership and interest in youth, see | Graduate of Dallas Schools, George | Student Exchange program.
For more about the local club's from the Philippines on page 2. A !in foreign countries under Rotary's | Foreign competition,
Rotary Works With Youth At Home And Abroad
|
|
{
{
| George Jacobs’ Christmas Greetings | is one of 5 Dallas students studying |
od,
i — fom pe a
{ Indicatop. during 3962,
{ coming slowly,
VOL. 73, NO. 52, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1961
Roger Babson Looks Forward To 1962
As Being A Better Year Than 1961
Forsees Neither Nuclear War Nor Total
Disarmament—Fall Out Shelters Silly
1. I am hopeful for 1962; it
should be a better year for my
readers than 1961. Industrial pro-
duction will exceed that of 1961,
2. There will be neither a nu-
clear war nor total disarmament in
1962. Considerable progress may
be made toward a ban on atomic
weapons.
3. Some thirty stocks may reach
an average of 1000 during 1962, al-
though these will not necessarily be
the thirty Dow-Jones stocks,
4. Retail trade will make new
records during 1962. Increased
newspaper advertising, especially in
colors, will be a great boon to mer-
chandising.
5. Commodity prices will act
erratic during 1962. Agricultural
prices will be held up by legislation,
but many metals will sell for less.
6. The official cost-of-living fig-
ure will rise slightly in 1962, but
there may be scandal in Washing-
ton over how this figure is calcu-
laked or adjusted. The real increase
in the cost-of-living will be due to
increased wages demanded.
7. The only certain shortages
during 1962 will be in land suitable
for parking places and waterfront
property readily accessible to build-
ing lots; also for automobile “grave-
yards” near cities which have been
zoned.
8. The building of shelters will
look silly before the end of 1962.
Certainly the [Federal Government
will not underwrite the building of
private shelters of individual fami-
lies.
9. Good real estate must rise in
price as the population increases.
Elementary mathematics determ-
ines the price of suburban real
estate. This is notwithstanding the
claim of the “space companies”
which are said %o be interested in
selling rights on the moon. There
probably are crazier speculations.
10. While the land on which
| your house now stands should in-
crease in value during 1962, the
building itself depreciates from the
| moment when it is first occupied.
A possible exception would be cer-
| tain very attractive ranch houses
painted in color.
11. Automobile production will
be the most important statistical
This applies
to both the number of automobiles
and their sales value, We now have
no reliable figures for the latter.
12. We will gradually approach
an average of two cars for every
family. The life of automobiles
should gradually increase. The per-
centage of
destroyed will decrease in 1962,
13, Automobiles and gasoline
will be, increasingly, sources for
raising money by taxation. These
means will be extended to include
an additional assessment on the
manufacturers of automobiles.
14. Taxes, as a whole, will con-
tinue to increase in 1962 for every |
i family, Business net taxes,
how-
ever, will decrease in 1962,
through the granting of deprecia-
tion refunds which can be done by
| Executive order. The manufacturer
may greatly increase his deductions
for past investments and new ma-
chinery, plant, and equipment.
Douglas Dillon feels that such tax
reductions will increase the pur-
chase of new equipment, develop
greater efficiency, and result in a
net improvement in the employ-
ment situation. This ¥ good news
for 1962.
15. Speculation in real estate
and securities will be active during
1962; Hit good children will gradu-
ally be recognized as the best in-
vestment. Young people will be
married earlier and will want to
have large families.
16. Public education will gradu-
ally be reorganized during the
years ahead. Schoolhouses will be
built as places to ‘park the kids”
while the parents are at work. New
schoolhouses will be built so as not
to be over one story high, with lots
of sunshine.
17. Owing to the ldck of airport
facilities and to inadequate equip-
ment, there will be increasing air-
plane accidents during 1962.
18. With all the above changes,
plus increased public improvements
and longer vacation periods, fami-
lies must save somehow and cut
somewhere, I think it will begin in
1962 with clothing. This will gradu-
ally become cheaper and more at-
tention will be paid to color.
19. The time is approaching
when the weaving of cloth will be
greatly curtailed.: Clothes will be
made like paper. Plastic coats are
already on the market. These are
produced by feeding ‘the cellophane
into a machine which cuts to de-
sired sizes and bonds (not sews)
the material into beautifully fin-
ished goods of different colors.
20. We will hear more . about
automation during 1962.
cost of building automatic factories
is so great that the change is
has been overemphasized.
21. There need be no unemploy-
| ment among steel workers during
1962.
ment
But Government unemploy-
figures will remain high.
due to low
wages abroad, will be an important
Ta
== : . a aia:
automobiles annually |
But the
Even electronics |
o>
Carl Updyke, 32,
{illed As Car
Crashes Store
Korean War Veteran
Has Broken Neck
End Fractured Skull
On his way to Warminster after
visiting his parents in Kunkle, Carl
(Kiler) Updyke, 32, was instantly
killed Tuesday night shortly after
10, when his car left the curve in
Luzerne just before reaching the
traffic light, crashed into a tree,
and tore into the porch of a small
vacant store housed in a dwelling.
Attempts to rescue the victim
from the badly crushed car by use
of jacks, took fifteen minutes. Up-
dyke’s neck wash roken and his skull
fractured. He was pronounced dead
on arrival at Nesbitt Hospital.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Palmer
Updyke, were informed of the trag-
edy shortly before 11, after author-
ities had checked with Herbert
Updyke, Kingston Township chief of
police, a second cousin of the de-
ceased.
Mr. Updyke, an experienced truck
driver and mechanic for Buckman
Truck Co., Doylestown, had driven
up from the Philadelphia area in
the morning to get a tractor-trailer
back on the road in Benton. Fin-
ishing the job, he drove to Kunkle
to see his parents before taking the
Turnpike back to Warminster.
Kiler, a native of Dallas, was
wounded in Korea September 9,
1950. His outfit, the 24th Division,
| was almost wiped out in the front
line. Kiler was in the hospital in
| Tokyo for months, then was brought
| to the United States and spent more
time at Valley Forge Military Hos-
pital, well over a year in all. He -
entered the service shortly after
graduating from Dallas Township
High School.
The young man was the only
He was born September 8, 1929.
Two years ago he moved to War-
minster with his wife, the former
| Catherine Steffney of Philadelphia,
and two children, Arlene and Pal-
mer.
| Also surviving are three sisters:
| Mrs. George Hackling, Kunkle; Mrs.
| Victor Payne, Philadelphia; Mrs.
| Jerry Scott, who is flying in from
| Boston, Massachusetts.
Services will be held Saturday
| afternoon at 2, Rev. Roland Updyke
| officiating at the Nulton Funeral
|Home. Burial will be at Warden
Cemetery. Friends may call Friday
afternoon and evening.
factor, Women will prefer to work
in air-conditioned factories and
have their home pantries filled with
precooked foods.
22, Labor unrest will grow in
extent and power. The Kennedy
Administration is friendly to union
leaders and their demands. There
will be demands for more “fringes”
in 1962. IA steel strike is possible.
93. This means that with in-
creased taxes, prices of retail pro-
ducts will be higher. This will be
blamed on “inflation” of money;
but it will be due to inflation of
living standards. ;
24. The real value of the dollar
will decline slightly during 1962,
due to the decrease in the produc-
tivity of.labor, The electronics in-
dustry will temporarily suffer in
1962 if atomic warfare is outlawed.
But otherwise the electronics in-
dustry will increase for some years
to come and hold up the dollar
value. Watch polymer chemicals
and “epoxy” cements.
25. There will be enough money
for mortages insured by the Federal
Housing Administration in 1962.
Plenty of money will be available
for mortgages guaranteed by the
Veterans Administration, although
this supply varies with different sec-
tions of the country. Interest rates
on conventional loans not having
any government guarantees will be
a little higher. Real estate people
will worry about the public's desire
to build, rather than about their
obtaining mortgage money.
26. The kilowatt hours of elec-
tricity produced in 1962 will exceed
the total, of any previous year. This
is favorable to utility preferreds.
27. Steel production in 1962 will
exceed this year’s 100 million tons,
but the increase will come from
producing steel in colors.
28. Cement production will be
about the same in 1962 as in 1961,
but the industry's capacity to pro-
‘duce is increasing too rapidly in
view of the. demand. The cement
manufacturers must give more at-
tention to colors.
29. Expenditures for plant and
increase,
equipment in 1962 will
supplemented by large appropria-
tions for repainting factories and of-
| fices in many colors,
EV eae Cs
“4
soir Of Pabmer and dArlema Updyize: