Ny 3 s Oldest Business Back of the 73 YEARS A NEWSPAPER Institution Mountain THE DALLAS PO TWO EASY TO REMEMBER Telephone Numbers 674-5656 674-7676 TEN CENTS PER COPY—EIGHTEEN PAGES MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY INSTITUTION VOL. 74, NO. 39, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 196% Switch To All Number Dialing Starts Tuesday 674 and 675 will Be The Prefix In Place Of ORchard Commonwealth Telephone Com- pany’s preparation for change in the numbering system for Dallas Orch- ard subscribers is near completion and the change to seven figures, or All Number Calling, is scheduled for 3:01 A.M. this Tuesday. J. N. Landis, district manager, said the numbers will change very little — the main difference being a substitution of numbers for letters. When the new numbers go into operation here Tuesday, OR 5-1816 will change to 675-1816 and OR 4- 2631 will become 674-2631. All Number Calling, Landis ex- plained, has several advantages over the two-letter, five-figure system. Scientific ‘tests have proved that seven-figure numbers can be dialed faster and more accurately than let- ters and numerals, since there is no “switching of attention” between the letters and the numbers on the dial. “With the new system, you just forget the letters on the dial,” said Landis. ‘“There’s no confusion be- tween the number “O” and the let- ter “0” — or between the letter “I” and the number “1”. Dialing is made simpler and easier all around.” “But there’s more to the new sys- tem,” he continued. ‘Compared with the letter-plus-number system, seven-figure numbers increase by almost 50 per cent the quantity of telephone numbers possible with seven turns of the dial. This is be- cause some of the available letter combinations just won't fit any cen- tral office name telephone people can think of.” “Take ‘5-5 for example,” Landis said. “The dial letters associated with that combination are J,K and L. Try and come up with a good name beginning with two of those letters!” The these limitations and makes all dial combinations usable as “telephone numbers. Eventually, according to Landis, when all telephones have the seven- | figure sy$vem, ‘it will be possibléito’ remove the letters from the dial | i completely. This will improve legi- bility of the numbers on the instru- ment and lead to the design of miniaturized telephones and other equipment for the phone system of the future. “All Number Calling will also pave the way for other improve- ments,” Landis said. “It will bring national and international direct dialing of long distance calls, direct radio dialing, expanded and im- proved services for businessmen, and other advancements that tele- phone scientists and engineers are working on right now.” Fire Destroys Barn At Noxen Smoke still rosé Monday evening from the remains of a barn con- sumed by fire Friday afternoon on Schenck Street, Noxen. The fire started when boys were playing in the building, owned by d. Franklin Patton, dropping a spark or flame into hay. It was the first consequential fire in Noxen this summer. Several tons of the hay and dried B flooring caught immediately, and the two-story structure was en- veloped in flames before Noxen Volunteer Fire Company arrived. According ‘to Chief Fred Schenck, one person on a party line refused to yield so that he could call the . engine-house. This added to the delay. Destroyed were some hand-ma- chinery, several chickens, and the hay. Nearby houses were threatened, To Stage Panel On School Cost Citizens Committee For Better Schools will stage a program on “A Quality Progr am of Education, What It Costs,” in the Dallas Senior High School auditorium October 10, at 8 p. m., which the tax-paying public is urged to attend. A panel of four will answer ques- tions The questions must be writ- ten, prepared either in advance or written and given to the ushers as the meeting progresses. Dr. Irvin Jacobs is chairman of the program committee. Morris Slater is chairman of the organiza- tion. Panel members are: Ray Caron, district director of Central Division of Pennsylvania Economic League, Inc.; Welton Farrar, on the faculty at Wilkes College; William Clewell, former member of Dallas School Board and financial chairman; and Dr. Robert A. Mellman, supérintend- ent of Dallas Schools. seven digit system avoids | Four men from Back Mountain Area are presently performing their 15-day short tour of duty with the 92ND Air Terminal Squadron at Dover Air Force Base, Delaware. Major Carl J. Schreiner, Com- mander of the 92ND Air Terminal Squadron, Captain Robert A. Hughes, Freight Officer, and Staff Sergeant Willard Newberry are as- sisting the 1607TH Air Terminal Squadron of Dover Air Force Base to prepare for a combined Army — Air Force Operation scheduled for the latter part of October. Dover Air Force Base has unique status of being the largest Air Freight Termi- nal in the world. The 15-day annual tour is part of the unit’s training to achieve its op- erational readiness. The mission of Four Back Mountain Men On Short Term Duty At Delaware Air Base the'Reserve Air Terminal Squadron is to control, document, load and offload passengers, cargo, mail to overseas destinations. During the year the unit holds it’s monthly meetings at the Wyoming Air Reserve Center, Wyoming. Major Thomas Garrity is present- ly serving as Squadron Censorship Officer with the 1607TH Air Termi- nal Squadron. Both Major Schreiner and Major Garrity reside at Harvey's Lake, Major Garrity operates the Thomas P. Garrity Insurance and Realty Company. Captain Hughes and Staff Sergeant Newberry reside in Dallas. Captain Hughes is connected with the Wyoming Valley Equip- ment Company of Kingston while Sergeant Newberry is self employed as a contractor in Dallas. Body Recovered From Icy Lake In Ontario Clarence Schoonover Lies In State At Center Moreland Drowning Victim SH Cop 'SCHO®NOVER. ¥ The body of Clarence Schoonbver, 62, was recovered on Saturday from the icy depths of Bar Lake in Ontario, where he and two friends had been fishing Tuesday morning. 13kin-divers using special lights, and almost freez- ing in the 33 degree temperature at the bottom of the lake, hampered by clouds of silt, were unable to locate the victim. When diving attempts failed, though sixteen other divers were a- lerted to take the search in shifts, a drag-line was employed. Working with the line were Carl Besteder, Draper, Loren and Bill Schoonover; who had joined Stacy Schoonover, in Canada when eariier attempts to re- cover the body were fruitless. Apparently what happened on Tuesday was this: the small boat with outboard motor started to swamp under the weight of three fishermen and their equipment, the motor drag- ging the stern dangerously near the water level. Mr. Schoonover called, “Shut off the motor.” This was done, but the boat continued to sink. The three men floundered in the icy water, hampered by heavy fish- ing garments. Mr. Schoonover was the oldest of the trio, least able to stand the shock. Lloyd Story, 46, and Mr. Schoon- over clung to the swamped boat while William Story, 51, swam for shore. William ran around the shoreline, found another boat, and rowed to- ward the two men in the water. Mr. Schoonover is reported to have said, “I'll try to swim to shore.” He struck out, swam about a boat length, gasped “I can’t do it,” and sank. Lloyd made a futile attempt to hold him up, though suffering from shock himself and at the end of his strength. Mr. Schoonover disappeared. William towed his brother to shore, wrapped him in blankets, turned the truck heater on and got him to the hotel, where he was given first- aid for shock and exposure. Police stated that the body might not come up from the icy water for some time, if skin-divers were not successful. Special lights had to be employed, as the naked eye is unable to penetrate the murk at forty feet. The three Center Moreland men had fished many times at Bar Lake. They had driven to Canada on Satur- day, and had expected to drive back on Thursday. When William called his wife on Tuesday, she , informed Clarence’s wife, then left for Canada with Stacy Schoonover. Mr. Schoonover, a lifelong resident of Center Moreland, was son of the late Stacy and Jessie Schoonover, He was self employed as a painting contractor. He belonged to Center Moreland Methodist Church. He leaves his widow, the former Ruth Weaver; sons: Stacy, Center Moreland; Clarence Jr. at home; Gene, Selinsgrove; a daughetr, Mrs. Nicholson Safe As Flying Tiger Ditches In Sea News Of Disaster On TV Precipitates Rgenizing Vigil The stark announcement that a Flying Tiger Superconstellation had ditched in the North Atlantic with 76 people aboard, broke briefly in- to Sunday night Television and radio programs. For the Foster Hall Rogers fam- ily in Huntsville, it was the begin- ning of an agonizing vigil. = Five hundred miles west of Ireland, and Mrs. Rogers’ brother was one of the officers on the plane. Not until Monday afternoon was the news confirmed that Samuel T. Nicholson, navigator, was among the forty-eight who had tossed for six hours on a life raft before being rescued from mountainous waves by the Swiss freighter Celer- ina., bound for Antwerp. Would anybody else be found alive? Two rafts were known to have disappeared. Twelve bodies were found. Another body had been sighted, but had been lost. Sixteen were reported missing, One engine had failed shortly after; the. mammoth. chartered plane, 7 carrying American servicemen and ying their families on a flight to Ger- many, had left Gander, Newfound- land.” A second engine failed. A third. Navigator Nicholson on the in- tercom, alerted the passengers, in- structing them to put on their life belts. He charted the position of the plane, warned shipping that ditching was inevitable, gave the exact position to ships within reach. For five years he had been with the Flying Tigers, coming within a hair of being lost at sea on a similar ditching. Flying on a Supercon- tallation in the Pacific, he had been relieved at Guam. The plane took off, and was never found, lost with everyone aboard. More news on Tuesday. No hope left of the other passengers having survived. Several children were among the missing. There had been a fire aboard, and two passengers were badly burned. Wednesday, Helicopters h a d taken fourteen people from the freighter, “seven of them bound for Cork, Ireland. Seven .for Burn Rock General Hospital. The Rogers family still waited.’ A : cablegram was on the way from Samuel. They still waited. Late afternoon: a transatlantic phone call, Samuel at the hospital in i Cork, Judy in Huntsville. They kept 'it light. “Be home next week. The Flying Tigers are still on the job.” The young navigator, a graduate of Wyoming Seminary and Lafayette College, served’ in the Air Force in Texas and Alaska. He is son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Nichol- son of Huntsville. Bonnie Ruth Jenkins Wins Honor At Wilkes Bonnie Ruth Jenkins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Jenkins of 91 Terrace Drive, Shavertown, a Wilkes College senior, was one of two students to receive coveted awards at Wilkes College Student Assembly on Thursday, September 20. Miss Jenkins received the Linda Morris Award. ' Linda Morris Award, presented to Miss Jenkins by Mrs. Hervey Ahl- born, dean of women is awarded each year by Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Morris in memory of their ‘daughter, Linda, to the Wilkes Co-ed who has maintained the highest academic record during her three years at the college Curtis Edwards, East Dallas; six grandchildren; brothers and sisters: Draper and James, Mrs. Walter Lam- oreaux and Mrs. Ruby Besteder, all of Center Moreland. Services were conducted from Cen- terMoreland Methodist Church Tues- day afternoon, with burial in March Cemetery. Officiating was Rev. Wil- {liam Watson, Lake-Lehman School opened Mon- day with a total enrollment of 856 | students, who managed to. find their | assigned rooms in the confusingly new halls with a minumum of diffi- culty. | Meanwhile, back of ‘the scene, workmen quietly went about their duties, doing, major construction on the east wing, and putting finishing [touches on the main hall ceiling. Classes met in a mixed atmosphere | of the primitive and the ultramodern, ' because of certain unfinished facilit- ies. A boy might attend an Industrial Arts class on the porch, when the! shops are incomplete, oad next per od learn a language (bottom right), dictated to him individually by means of a brand new master-console and personal booth system. For Fourth, Fifth A Back Mountain Children’s Chor- us is being planned for this area, sponsored by O’Connell’s Twin Lakes | and directed by Mrs. John O'Connell. | Mrs. O'Connell has asked each school in the area to announce that the first rehearsal will take place Lakes; from 7 to 8:30. - There is na charge. Mrs. O’Connell, who directed the Girls Chorus while was a music major, is giving her services. She enjoys directing a chor- Tuesday evening, October 9, at Twin | ~A-Chorus=Mrs:~0Q’Connell hopes. to-have attending Wilkes. College, where she | Children's Chorus Being Organized Sixth Graders us. When she was teaching in Wald- wich, New Jersey, she organized a chorus for elementary school, child- | ren. { Children from fourth, fifth and | sixth grades, from Dallas, Lake-Leh- | man and Gate of Heaven, are invited to join the Back Mountain Children’s Christmas and holiday music whipped | into shape by December, ready for presentation on club: or organization ‘programs Charcoal Dealer Hit By 4th Fire Fred Drake's Garage Burns At High Cost For the fourth time this season, Fred Drake, Dallas charcoal-products dealer suffered costly damage from fire, when his garage on Woodlawn Drive burned down Sunday might. Dr. Henry M. Laing Fire Company, with some 15 men, tried to save it. Like Drake’s Fernbrook warehouse which was the ‘scene of another fire early in June, the contents of the garage was charcoal materials. The Fire Company used two truckloads of water to extinguish the blaze, which did $800 damage, destroying the garage completely. No other structures were threat- oned, according to Chief Alvin Shaf- fer, although some houses are not too far away. Drake's garage burned twice be- fore, this season, early in the sum- mer, but the Fire Company was able to extinguish the fires before they got going. At one of those fires, it was reported that there was gasoline saturation in part of the building. Saturday morning, June 17, some bags of charcoal in Drake’s ware- house, Fernbrook, caught fire, en- smoke. Fire was discovered by | Fred Drake, Jr.. who had just come to open the place up. the cause of the fire lay in some new bags just received, which pro- bably contained a spark. Smarter Than Thief John R. Richards, 79, service-sta- tion attendant from Trucksville, proved smarter than the bandit who" held him up at Purcell’s Ser- vice Station, Tunkhannock. The thief evidently waited in Lo- gan’'s Diner next door, Sunday night, until Richards closed the sta- tion, and then went to rob him. But the young man kept imper- fect vigil, because he believed Rich- ards when he was told, while point- ing a gun at the elderly attendant, that the owner had just left with the day’s receipts. After the gunman relieved Rich- ards of his wallet, containing $18, he jumped in the Trucksville man’s car, and drove it for one half a mile while sitting inches from $200 receipts. The money was on the seat of the car, under Richards’ coat, veloping the building in thick black At that time Drake surmised that | | Reithoffer Has Rides In South Local Showman Also Plays Canada Pat Reithoffer, Jr., well-known eastern showman and owner of Reit- hoffer’s Shows, with headquarters on Route 118 at Lehman, is expand- south. A pioneer in revitalizing popular- ity of carnivals in the east, Pat has experimented this summer with Can- adian fairs by sending eleven. rides north under a lease to another show. If he is successful with these fairs this year, he may send Reithoffer’s Shows under their own banner into the north country next season. Expanding ‘the summer season well into the fall this year, the Dallas showman has scheduled a number of North Carolina .fairs for October and November. He also has feelers out for areas in Florida, for future development. When asked if he thought this i might make a year-round season for him, he said: “I hope not. Our sea- son is long enough as it is right now.” But he’s still trying. Pat feels that 1962 has been a good season for his show, one of the old- est in the business, compensating somewhat for all the rainy weather last summer. Firemen Urged To Give Blood Jonathan R. Davis Volunteer Fire Company announces that it will co- sponsor The Red Cross Bloodmobile unit which will visit ‘the Back Moun- tain Y.M.C.A. in Shavertown on October 5, 11:45 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. It is requested that all Back Moun- tain Firemen participate in this drive { which will replenish the blood supply used by John Chesnovitch Jr. who | passed away this summer, and who was ‘the son of a J. R. Davis fireman. Mrs. Ruth Ide “Fair” After Heart Attack | + Mrs. Ruth Ide, RD 4, Dallas, is in “fair” condition at Nesbitt Hospital where she was taken Monday morn- ing in Lehman ambulance after suf- fering a heart attack in her home. Fire Chief Lee Wentzel, driver of the ambulance, reported that Mrs. Ide had to be administered oxygen the whole distance to the hospital, ing his itinerary both north and | Men from Pennsylvania Cas and | ‘Water Company have been calking | Huntsville Dam, against the ravages | of frost and bad weather. The pro- | cess is carried on every ten or twelve years. This year work has been made easier by the drought, which lowered Huntsville Dam Calking In Progress the water level. According to one of the workmen, | the upper blocks are more susceptible to frost-damage than the lower. Work on the dam began over a week ago, and will continue for a- bout one more week. Trucksville Fires | Chief Vought Long, eh Fire Company, extinguished three | fires in three days this week, one | of which burned a bunk-house to | the ground, and threatened surround- ing woods and the old convales- cent home, Cliffside Avenue. Monday twenty men with a pump- er put out the boys’ bunkhouse fire, which took the contents of the cabin with it—matresses and sleep- ing bags. The day before, Chief Long and Paul Sabol put out a cinder-truck fire on Carverton Road, after a punctured crankcase resulted in an oil leak. Owner of the truck was unidenti- fied. At 8:30: Tuesday night, during a heavy rain, fire broke out myster- jously in a pile of brush on Post Road. The Chief and fifteen men em- ptied the pumper on it. An arsonist or vandal may have been the cause. Jewish New Year Begins | On Friday at sun-down, the shofar or ram’s horn will be sounded in synagogues all over the world, to usher in Rosh Hashana, the Jewish New Year, and the beginning of the ten-day penitential period leading up to Yom Kippur, the Day of Atone- ment, the most solemn day in the Hebrew calendar, } Local Breeders ‘Take 12 Ribbons Sands And Hillside Win At Harrisburg Back Mountain cattlemen took a total of twelve honors at the recent Ninth Annual Pennsylvania State Black and White Show, Harrisburg. Local champions were Holstein cows owned by Ralph M. Sands, Car- verton, and Hillside Farms, Trucks- ville. Sands received First Prize in the Senior Bull Calf Division for Sands- dale Sovereign King B, now owned by Donald L. Williams, Tunkhannock. Other Sands honors were: Fourth Prize in Junior Bull Calf, Junior Year- ling Bull, and Three-Year Old Bull Divisions; Fifth Prize in Junior Bull Calf, and Four-Year old Cow Divis- ions; and Sixth Prize in Three-Year Old Cow Division. : Hillside Farms ‘took Second Prize in the 100,000 lb. Class with Pen- state Armac Star Lass. The famous old farm also took Third Prize in Pro- duce of Dam and Daughter-Dam Classes, and Tenth Prize in the Four- Year Old Cow Division. Third Prize in the Club Herd Class was awarded to Columbia-Luzerne- Montour Counties, No Confusion As Lake-Lehman School Opens Gymnasium And Auditorium Are ° Still Uncompleted Lake-Lehman High School opened Monday, a mixture of frustration and achievement. The opening was frustration for school officials in that the brand new high shcool did not receive its students September 5 when others did. And in the fact that the east wing, including gym- nasium, theater, auditorium, shops, lockers, and music rooms was still incomplete. The opening was an achievement because of the valiant effort put forth by teachers and PTA mem- bers over the weekend, carrying furniture and supplies in all kinds of vehicles, to open, no matter what. The fact that the east wing was not complete Monday was a surprise to no one. Principal Anthony Mar- chakitus said there is a strong pos- sibility that the gymnasium will be open in time for basketball practice. Enrollment the first day was 856, with negligible confusion among the student body in searching for rooms along the new corridors. The first lunch served in Lehman's new cafeteria was pizza. Almost all facilities in the main wing were functioning normally, in- cluding the water-fountains and the two-way radio between principal's office and classrooms. Soft-radioed bells announced each hour exactly. Electricians still roamed up and down the ha.ls, putting in finishing touches, but there was no noise. . Since the east wing is still in embryonic stages, some classes have to catch as catch can.. Music classes met Monday in ‘the ‘Library. Li- brary books were not yet shelved. Industrial Arts classes convened the first day on the porch. Until their shops are roofed, they will be working on practical projects around the school. The shop roof cannot be put on until the auditorium roof is installed, probably two months from now. A home field for football games is a reality for the future only. This year home game: will be played on Dallas Junie» Figh School Field. “Gym classes will “micet outsid There are no facilities to change clothing. There will be no locker ‘rooms until late November. The home-economics department was still house-cleaning Monday, but expected to be in operation within the week. It is beautifully equipped, and includes a modern built-in-the- wall oven. This suite and those for the doctor and dentist remained the only facilities incomplete main wings of the school. Among the most modern teaching equipment in operation the first day . was the 32-man language labora- tory, capable of running several programs at once from one master console. Local Bands At Fair On Friday Reithoffer Shows Sparkle On Midway Reithoffer’s Shows, Lehman, opens ed at Bloomsburg Fair, Monday, with all rides, concessions, and shows in good order. A free gate greeted the opening-night crowd, which, as usual, was more interested in looking a- round than spending money. Admis- sion will be charged other days. Dallas and Lake-Lehman High School Bands will ‘travel to Blooms- burg Friday to feature in the school- band exhibition that afternoon, un- der the direction of John Miliauskas and Lester Lewis. Jimmy Dean, popular country and western music star, led off as head- liner, to be followed during the week by Ginny Tiu and Anita Bryant. Many other nationally-known stars are al- so featured. Side-shows featured on the Reit- hoffer midway include a snake-eater, motorcycle-drome, animal shows by Von Brothers of Red Rock Game Farm, exotic dancers, and Club 21, a rock 'n roll show. Several new rides are among des scores of thrill-machines which Pat Reithoffer has spanning the long mid- way. New this year is the “Meteor”, which is a sort of flying side-walk cafe, without food, on three Plat: forms. For food there are countless stands and restaurants stretching along the mile-long midway, which serve every- thing from french-fries to waffles, chicken-dinners to pizza. ] Featured in four brick oxhiblidon buildings are flower shows, and ex- hibits of industrial arts and famous collections. Ninety On Saturday Mrs. Emma Gensel, Hellers Grove, will celebrate her ninetieth birthday anniversary quietly at her home on Sunday. She and her daughter, Kath- erine live together. Her husband, Arthur died several years ago. in ‘the -