73 YEARS A Oldest Business : Back of the po Som DALLA { {POST crm um tt TT KA Bt BT TWO EASY TO /REMEMBE! Telephone Numbers 674-5656 674-7676 CTR SEN RI REE TEN CENTS PER COPY-TWELVE PAGES Crop-Dusters | Crash Land, Held By Snow Three New Biplans Are Damaged Fro Freak Accident | “This is one trip we shfld've stayed home on,” drawled dshed crop-duster Bill Tucker sadljto a group of new-made friendgfrom the Back Mountain. All thte of the navigator’s brand-new gnes, which made emergency landigs in Dallas Township Thursday ifter- noon, were damaged. Louisiana-bound, with thdnext check-point Harrisburg, the lanes ran off course and out J £aS, whistled inches over Shrizview clotheslines, and miraculousljland- ed, one upside down. Fo Blizzard conditions for :veral days after forced the pilots | two of the open-cockpit, 2250 ound Grumman AgCats to postpon their trip from Forty Fort airport db Ly- ons Flying Service, Welsh, Lowiana. Only slightly damaged 1 the forced landing Thursday, al ough one flipped upside down, the| took off next day from their mapshift landing areas. The third plane, having jnded intact in a clover field on th Dor- rance Reynolds farm along with the one that flipped, somerfulted on take-off Friday when ois locked, and smashed badly. disassembled the next da trucked back to the factory mira, origin of the trio. Tucker thrilled the crowd ! Route 118, just west of Whi Brothers Friday, by taxiing oi short. distance and banking sh almost immediately upon cle the ground. His audience, most of whom just arrived from the scene ir of the same. The 39-year-old pilot, with than twenty years experience, joined the other salvagable cra at the airport. . The latter was flwn from the Reynolds farm, after|its | ‘propeller was replaced, by ovher Emery Lyons himself, who fad come from Elmira by car. Tucker had landed on Route 118 Thursday without serious dam diter séeing that Stanford put | on rough ground. He did n pilot Kenneth Kramer, 21, spring ditch with his right and flip his AgCat upside dow Hotly pursuing Tucker was § leyr Gardiner, Assistant Chief o lice, who followed as best he | through the Shrine Acres Complaints had mounted from rified "housewives who swore airplanes were trying to crash their homes. Actually, the three pilots been buzzing Route 309 tryi land, but the traffic was too hj Tucker was navigating by and ground check-points for the . light planes, which carry almdst no ‘equipment for long-range flight. He said he looked for ground- markers, but ‘could see none, spec- ulating that the Dallas marker vas covered by snow. : . ‘Without radios and directional equipment, crop-dusting planes are helpless in poor visibility. Tucker attributed misdirection to unpré- dicted winds which blew the planes fifteen to eighteen miles off cour in the first 60 miles. The pilots tried to find Wyomin| Valley airport, but visibility was such that it was not possible to sez even Wilkes-Barre, according to the navigator. Operations for righting the Kraft mer plane and plowing a runwa | for the two who landed in Zest Dallas were directed by land-owne; Although they didn’t know it at the time, the three crop-dusting ship’ Thursday were lucky. The worst was yet to come. MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER, A COMMUNITY [INSTITUTION All damage, three had avoided serious notwithstanding a | field. Only Unharmed Plane Crashes On Take-Off Takeoff of the only undamaged half | plane the next day was disastrous, pilots who crash-landed their new | somersault by one of the pair which | when a wheel locked and the craft | wreck was reviewed sadly by the planes out of gas in Dallas Town- | landed in an East Dallas clover- skidded and smashed head over chief pilot and Police Chief | heels (above left). { | Lying on its back, with smoke | pouring out of a broken engine, the Frank | Lange. CEA Crop Dusting Pilots Off Ground Two Louisiana crop-dusting pilots took off from Wyoming Valley Municipal airport late Tuesday eve- ning, according to the tower, ‘after waiting out: a frozen New Year which prevented their engines from working. The new planes were salvaged from a forced landing in Dallas Township Thursday, when they ran out of gas en route from the Grum- rasan factory in Elmira to Lyons Flying Service, Welsh, La. _ One other crashed in an attempt- ed take-off Friday from its make- shift runway on the Dorrance Rey- nolds farm, East Dallas. Postage Rates Rise January 7 The day of the four-cent stamp is on the way out. For the remain- | der of this’ week it will still carry a first-class = envelope. | Monday of next week it will take "a five-cent stamp for regular first | class mail, an eight-cent stamp for | air. mail. 2 & |. “Fod¥-ceit stamps are still ‘good . . Lif supplemented by a. one cent | stamp. They will also come in handy for airmail, a pair of fours. Besecker Home James Besecker came home four days before Christmas, after three weeks spent at Nesbitt Hospital. He is now permitted to be up for four | hours a day, recovering satisfactorily from a heart attack. Pat Reynolds and her lessee, farmer Joe Rodriguez, with tractors. Assisting there, and also with the plane at Whitesell Brothers’, were State Police Aviation Investi- gator Nick Pauley, Police Chief Frank Lange, and Gardiner, Damage to the land was little, according to Rodriguez, but Stan- ford’s plane suffered a broken crank- shaft and rudder assembly, and miscellaneous damage, to wings, struts, ‘and propeller. All pilots were held in their crafts by safety belts. Only other extra equipment carried were some spare wingtips, which regularly get knocked off during the hazardous crop-dusting. Gas tanks have only thirty gal- lons capacity, in order to keep weight down, and the planes, brought on the market in 1960, lcan fly just a few hours between | refueling. Hears Himself Reported Dead On Late Broadcast Back in) ‘Lockport, N. Y., Air Force Base as good as new except for one cracked rib, Rowland R. Ritts Jr. says the report of his death on the late news Christmas Eve was greatly exaggerated. When the news flash came, the 19-year- old radar and electronics man was enjoying television at home, while his parents were at midnight Mass at Our Lady of Victory Chapel where Mrs. Ritts directs the choir. The car which he wag driving early the morning of ‘the 24th was completely demolished , when it struck a tree three miles south of Tunkhannock. tate Police called Tunkhannock Community Ambu- lance, which took the dazed service man to Tyler Memorial Hospital for X-Rays and for suturing of scalp lacerations: In spite of hot coffee and a rest in Towanda; Ritts ap- parently fell asleep at the wheel. Young Ritts is a 1962 graduate of ‘West Side Catholic High School, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rowland Ritts of Oak Hill. Mrs. Ritts reports that the State Police could not have been more concerned, and that she they rendered. ‘Hillside Cow Is "Tron Grandma” “Super Select Honor Conferred On Cow Latest entry in the super-select “iron grandma” club of the dairy world is a 14-year-old Registered Holstein cow in the herd of Hillside Farms, Inc, Trucksville. She is Hillside Princess Path- finder 2964467 (GP) who ranks as the 179th cow to top the 100- ton mark in the official production testing programs of The Holstein- Friesian Association of America. Princess” has averaged more than 44 lbs. of milk a day for every day, milking and dry, since her second birthday in June, 1950. Her cumu- lative total of 200,017 lbs. of milk and 7,177 lbs. of butterfat is more than eight times the lifetime output of the average U. S. dairy cow. She hit her peak as a 13-year- old with .305-day totals of 23,859 lbs. of milk and 870 lbs. of butter- fat. | Weighing and testing of all of her production has been supervised by Pennsylvania State University as part of the official breed im- | provement work of the national Holstein organization. Dallas Not all of the Dallas Rotary guests are here... Cheated ¢ their spot in the sun alon their pilot, Jack Landis, are children from Lehman whos did not arrive in time for t ture-taking December 15 at otary Club Entertains Children At Party parish hall. By the time ering had completely as- there were 106 guests, all had a marvelous time. g in the background, left are Ross Walker, Rev. An- arella, Joseph Law, An- thony Guida, Dale Parry, Francis | Ambrose, Sheldon Mosier, Wilson | Garinger, Ralph Postorive, George | Jacobs, Dr. Robert A. Mellman, H. R. McCartney, John Konsavage, and Joseph Sekera, . Babson Park, Mass. — Fast. annual forecast “The process cally-oriented market in which putting it away will probably on rekindled enthusiasm.” Spear expects the Dow: to range between 570 and 750 in ’63, with 600-720 as the ‘inside” range to be maintained if no outright bull or bear assault occurs. Earnings of the Dow Industrials are pegged at 34 for next year in the Spear forecast, or close to ’62’s anticipated results. “With the market now trading in the’ lower portion of its expected ’63 range,” said Mr. Spear, “the upside potentials somewhat is sold solid on the service which | | outweighed downside risks.” Observing that there is little evi- dence suggesting another economic boom in the near future, Spear had this warning for investors: ‘Don’t tie your investment purse str’igs solely to words from Washingtun, for certain economists are apt to adjust their own economic thinking to suit political purposes. Frankly, we see little chance for renewed : om Business and Employment The business situation will vary with different industries, and hence with different cities. = Some de- fense centers will boom; steel cities will still find the going tough . . . but better than a year ago. Con- sidering the high level of the past ten years it will not be surprising for 1963 to show a moderate decline in business. If so it should come in the second or third quarter, with recovery in ‘the fourth quarter, followed by a good 1964. Disposable personal income will remain high. With increased "sav- ings deposits and little change in the cost-of-living, the public should continue to spend freely, especially if merchants maintain their adver- tising outlays! Inventories will remain about the same during 1963. But government spending will increase over $3 bil- lion — largely on defense — and $2 million on new roads. Whether manufacturers: will hike their ex- penditures for new machinery in 1963 in view of the depreciation tax credit, I would not now fore- cast. All this means that business and employment for your city in 1963 will depend largely upon the atti- tude of its leading businessmen. If they will be optimistic and spend more on new plants, advertising, and salesmanship, we should have nothing to fear. Stocks and Bonds My father used to tell me, “It is okay, Roger, for you to make fore- casts . . . but never put dates on them!” I forecast that the Dow- Jones Industrial Average will reg- ister lower sometime during 1963 and stocks will show an average \ yield of about 4%. Either dividends must be increased or prices of stocks must go lower. Both can- not continue forever so poorly ad- justed. The above comment refers pri- marily to industrial: stocks. I fore- cast that both the gross and net earnings of utility cumulative pre- ferreds have reached a point where- by they will closely follow interest rates as determined by the Federal Reserve Banks. The utility .com- mon stocks should slowly rise in price provided they are not un- justly limited by legislation or by state and federal regulatory com- misions. As for the railroad stocks, I gen- erally feel bearish. A war with Cuba or a world nuclear war break- ing out anywhere could cause the stocks of all our transcontinental railroads to go up sharply in price; but down they would come again. We are today in an electronic age and no longer in a railroad age. economic vigor in the year ahead. Spear “Moderately Optimistic” es Says Timing Vital In 1963 footwork will be the key to profitable stock investments in 1963, according to Spear & Staff, Inc., investment advisors. optimistic view, Roger E. Spear, president, said, in the firm’s Taking only a moderately of buying good stocks is going to become a lot tougher, and profits will be anything but guar- anteed. We look for a continuing news-sensitive and techni- the idea of buying a stock and give way to the concept of ac- curate timing — buying sound issues on weakness and selling { Nor do we expect to receive any tax . benefits: — even halfway ones -— | before late next year at ' the | earliest.” | Investment opportunities still | abound for the: alert and courage- | ous investor, Spear says, selecting : 14 groups as potentially favorable i for 1963: Aerospace, Airlines, Auto | Parts, Bus Lines, Chemicals, Con- | struction Machinery, Drugs, Electric 1 Utilities, Electrical Equipment, Elec- tronics, International Oils, Radio- TV, Rails, The dozen stocks rated highest I for growth potential in Spear & Staff's annual forecast are: “Quality { Giowth Issues”: Bristol-Myers, Her- | cues Powder, Litton, Pfizer, RCA, and: Texaco; “Higher Risk Growth i Issues’: Alberto-Culver, Bobbie | Brooks, Collins. & Aikman, Curtis Mathes, Delta Airlines, and Lease- way Transportation. #0 Those who desire to invest in com- mon stocks should stick to the oils, chemicals, and electronics. Even then keep in mind Newtons’ Law of Action and Reaction which will always determine the time to buy and sell common stocks. Regarding bonds'I1 am not pessi- mistic + for 1963. (Certainly, the non-taxable bonds will sell higher during 1963. Also, good short- term corporation and government bonds will be safest to hold. Long- term corporation and government i bonds may sell for less sometime during 1963. Long-term bond prices vary with interest rates and the probability of inflation. Building and Real Estate There may be some decline in residential | building in 1963; shopping centers in many develop- ments may remain at a standstill for a while. However, so much mon- ey is piling up in savings banks which must be invested, it seems that by 1964 many more new homes will be built. In this connection, when purchasing a house or bus- iness property, be sure to study the land, which usually price while the value of the building declines. ‘When constructing mew frame ! houses, build either single homes or | houses with only two apartments i on the ground floor. There will be | considerable new building of brick | apartment houses, which should {keep filled so long as they are well | maintained. Old apartments and old {houses will decline in price during | 1963. : home building generally does not apply to government or public build- ings, or to all commercial buildings. The real estate developers, however, must spend more on advertising in 1963 to meet the growing compe- | tition. | Retail Trade Naturally, there will be a season- al letdown in retail trade after Christmas and the markdowns which follow January 1. That will be the time ‘to look for bargains. Scan the advertisements well. This especially applies to merchandise that depends more or less on style. such as dresses, coats, hats, and shoes. Buy good-quality items that can be passed down to the younger children. Over all, I expect 1963 to see a somewhat higher level of re- (tail trade than has prevailed in 11962. : Purchases made af downs could be good real mark- ause for open- ing a new charge punt. But be | very careful ‘to bys name for {Cong A) | and Truck Operations. | and | improves in | The less attractive outlook for | Schools Suffer Minor Damage Sub-Zero Weather Freezes Plumbing Dallas schools, which remained closed yesterday because of minor damage suffered by plumbing over the sub-zero weekend, will open again this morning. 5 Liake-Lehman schools had no shut-down, though drinking foun- tains were frozen in some of the experienced at Ross Township, where custodian John Taylor re- mained on duty night and day dur- ing thie sub-zero emergency. Some“. of the custodians in the Dallas District also remained on duty for twenty hour stretches, un- der direction “of Johr-Pall main- tenance man. You Yesterday, Dr. Robert A. Mell* man, Mr. Paul, and architects con- ferred with plumbers over trouble centering about the auditorium. Dallas Junior high school suffer- ed similiar freeze-ups: Shavertown frame elementary building was the only unit which remained un- scathed. Insulation had not been entirely completed at the new Lake-Lehman building, but damage was astonish- ingly light. At Ross Elementary, principal Myron Moss gave the credit for keeping the damage al- most to the vanishing. point, to a dedicated custodian. Custodians all over the Back Mountain sacrificed their holiday to keep ‘the heating plants in full enough operation to ward off catastrophe. Brutal Cold Sweeps Area Service Stations Do Landoffice Business * Brutal cold swept into the area last Sunday ‘night on the wings of a bitter northwest wind which piled new fallen snow into drifts, im- mobilized cars, froze plumbing, and forced the thermometer down to sub-zero - temperatures. It was eight below at noon out on Upper Demunds Road on Mon- | day; zero in central Dallas; fifteen | below at Pikes Creek, long consider- ed the ice-box of the Back Moun- tain; a similar reading out at Orange Dairy; eight below at the State In- stitution. And colder weather pre- dicted for the early morning hours of the New Year. Service stations were swamped with frantic calls. By New Year's morning the weather had moderated, and a bleak forecast of fifteen. below was not | realized. Yesterday the thermometer was on the way up, and furnaces that had run constantly enjoyed a brief breathing spell. Service stations reported that it has been years since there was so great a demand for help. Brings Federal Suit A Lake Township woman is bring- ing suit in Federal Court, Scranton, for injuries sustained in an auto | accident along Route 115 in Saylors- burg, October 28, 1961. Commencing the action is Louise Scholl, Harveys Lake RD 1, claiming $25,000 damages. Defendant is Lou- ise Wnukowski, Dunellen, N.J., op- erator of the car in which plaintiff was passenger. Suit may be brought in a federal court when litigants are citizens of | different states. more exposed locations in the new | high school, and minor trouble was VOL. 75, NO. 1 TH Fund In Memory Ot H. W. Risley Memorial Library Will Reap Benefit A Memorial Fund is being started for Howard Risley, for benefit of Back Mountain Memorial Library. The Library was Howard's con- ing interest. Everything that cted the Library, affected him. ithout the Dallas Post’s con- tired support, and the unswerving loyilty of its editor, the Library could never have attained its pres- ent’ status. It is fitting that the man who frenly gave his property and count- less@hours of his time to establish- inc @®re annual Auction which in la part gupports the Library, sk¥ (dd be given a living memorial. Many people will feel privileged to contribute. Checks should be made out to the Howard Risley Memorial Fund and sent to the Library. It always gave Howard a tre- mendous “thrill to see how many children used the Library. Let the children contribute as well as the parents, so that they | can feel themselves a true part of | a sorrowing community. It is a heartening experience to join hands in a common grief. Children who have dropped by for a lollipop; children who have | been taken on a personally con- ducted tour to see the monkey; children who have had their fourth- | grade poems accorded a place of . they | honor in the Dallas Post . . all deserve the privilege of having a hand in the Memorial Fund. Let them come to the Library in person with their small change. Taking part in a heartfelt expres- sion of affection for an irreplaceable leader of the community is part of growing up. Faculty Team Named For Zany Ball-Game Dallas Senior High School Faculty All-Stars have announced their winning combination team for to- morrow’s - basketball game with the redoubtable Harlem Satellites. On the floor at 8 p.m. for the | home team will be: Clint 'Brobst, Leonard Kozick, Don Fossedal, William Price, Arthur Hontz. John Cathrall, George McCutcheon, Rob- ert Dolbear, Gerald Stinson, Alan Husband, William Morgan, Louis Palermo, and John Sulkoski. Sponsored by Dallas High School Athletic Council, the game proceeds will be used for annual School Recognition Banquet in the spring, when all athletes, band and out- standing students are honored. Tickets are on sale at many local business. places, 75 cents for stu dents and $1.for adults. URSDAY, JANUARY 3, 1 Howard Risley Leaves Are The Last Ti Editor Is Buried Saturday Momin Bt Tunkhannock Howard West Risley, editod lisher of the Dallas Post, who in the early morning hours of day after Christmas, was by Saturday morning in the fai plot at Sunnyside Cemetery, Tu hannock. Rev. Russell Lawry, pastor Dallas Methodist Church, was al sisted ‘by Rev. Charles Gilbe conducting services held at home. Committal services at cemetery, where a bitter v swirled the snow under the canog and glazed the highways, were heli to the minimum. Honorary pallbearers were Fred | Eck, David Schooley, Sheldon | Evans, Henry Peterson, Raymon | Hedden, H. W. Smith, Atty. Mitchell | Jenkins, Frank Slaff, and Wilbur Fleck. | Carrying the casket were Lei ton Scott, Durelle Scott, Dana Sv Robert Bachman, Harry Smi James Lohman, and Warren Hicks: Incredulous friends thronged the house in the days before the fu~ neral. People were asked not te | send flowers, but people could not (bear to see Howard go to his final rest without the sad tribute, ag flowers were there in profujs scenting the house, blanketin | frozen ground. | It is over, and the Dalla | dealt an almost mortal b} | the death of this man, is ple carry on its responsibilities people of the Back Mountai: | The staff cannot pencil a at the end of his obituary. A “thirty” means the end. Howard will live in the he his community, blazing the ws3 | tolerance and understanding | a bright future for the Mountain. rh=- ‘ Two Cars Smash | Due To Snow-Drift In the only sericus acci of the mountain over the holiday, two old cars were ished on the Fairmon:-Red road, and two teenagers rcoui) minor injuries, Drivers were Robert Evans, 1 Glen Lyon and [Samuel Kittle, | Dallas RD 4. Charelyn Evans, 17 | passenger in Evans’ car suffered | bruised knee. Marvin Kittle, | passenger in the Kittle car was ¢ {on the forehead. State police said both vehic] i collided when both attempted | pass through the one- lane orp | through the snow. 3 ~ Heartless Wretch Shoots Terrier, Five Blind Puppies Freeze To Death Claude + H. Cooke, Overbrook Avenue, was shocked to come upon the body of a female terrior shot to death at Nulton Hollow, North Mountain, while out bird hunting recently with his grandson, Charles H. Cooke, Utah. Six feet away from the mother’s body lay five little black puppies, four days old. Mr. Cooke, who raised’ English setters for years and has always loved dogs, says it appears that some wretch carted the animals to the spot, then killed the mother. The little pups, blindly searching for warmth and nourishment, were left l to freeze to death. Mr. Cooke told some of his neigh | bors about his discovery and the; too came away bitter at the hea lessness of people who havd, si !little regard for life, after vigwi | the remains which now lie b , under the heavy snowfall. | . The Cookes have always {av their children to love animals. 117% | feel that stronger measures should be passed to stop trespassers from | disposing of their unwanted animals | in the Back Mountain area, and stiffer sentences passed upon the transgressors. | Misericordia’'s Glee Club is seen here at the Christmas Assembly held Walsh Auditorium. Music was the predominant expression of the in students’ Christmas spirit. the program was the performance and Glee Club, | | Core of | of Misericordia’s String Quartette | ducted ‘the student Jog “A Christmas Med-! sang ley” was also sung by The Camilian | cofnpaniment College Misericordia Glee Club Sings Carols 55 5 oR Trio, Carol Ann Smith, Mary Lou Petro, and. Margaret Mary Balz. | Miriam Howells was their accom- panist. Duet Mary Petro and Virgin- ia Ménn sang “O Holy Night.” Lor-| raine Rowe and Carolyn Ainge-c hymns and se of Ann Aatoy Sister dent © Christmg (Goope V4