Housewives and Kingston Township are about to lose another round in their con- tinuing battle with Old High Cost of Living, but this time the blows are coming from an unexpected di- rection. Local garbage men, confronted with the closing of the Kingston Dump, say that garbage disposal costs will have to rise if they are forced to drive to Nanticoke or farther distance to dispose of their loads. The Kingston Dump was closed this week because of protests of Kingston residents who have been forced for months to breathe the disgusting smoke from the smoul- dering garbage piles. Rats, too, have created a nuisance in their retreat from the fires. Up until this week most of the garbage collected in Dallas Bor- ough and Kingston Township was disposed of in Kingston. Kingston Township no longer has any provision for garbage disposal. According to Arthur Smith, presi- dent of the Board of Supervisors, truckers abused the privilege at the former dumping ground, strewing debris in the roadway so that the owner of the property cancelled his contract with the Supervisors. . Dallas Borough has made some provision for disposal on the Bun- ney plot at Fernbrook; but only tin cans and clean ashes can be dumped there. Dallas Township takes care of its citizens by providing a'®dumping ground on the Roushey Plot, but will not permit out of township truckers to leave garbage there. _ Local garbage men are not cer- tain where they will be able to dispose of their loads. “Maybe we can find a place in Nanticoke or Lake Township, but that will in- volve longer hauls,” Don Smith said, “and that will involve in- creased costs to housewives.” “I don’t know what we'll do,” Kenneth Kocher said, “but we'll find some way out. Norti Berti who has long agi- tated for adequate dumping facil- ities, said there ought to be some provision for dumping in the Back Mountain Region without hauling the stuff to Valley communities. “We're just passing the buck when we ask Kingston to solve our problems.” At any rate—it looks now as though Old High Cost of Living has won another round—and garbage disposal rates are going up! Evelyn Williams Buried Thursday Loyalville Native Dies Sunday At 80 Mrs, Evelyn Allen Williams, (Cam- bra, died Sunday night at her home after a year’s illness, She was buried in [Lehman Cemetery Thursday afternoon following services con- ducted from the Bronson Funeral Home and Sweet Valley (Church of Christ by Rev. E. J. Waterstripe. Mrs, Williams, daughter of Fred and Lucinia Allen Eipper, was born in Loyalville in 1872, A graduate of Wyoming Seminary and Blogms- burg State Teachers College she taught school locally and in Neb- raska for thirty-five years. Upon marriage to Nesbitt Williams, she lived in Loyalville until 1946, when the family moved to (Cambra. She was a member of Sweet Valley Church of Christ, teaching the Bible Class until ill health prevented. [She is survived by her husband and two nieces, Mrs. Fred Fisher, Warrenville, and Mrs. Alice Wood- side, Summit, N. J. Kingston Township Tax Cards Being Mailed Tax Collector Ted Poad has an- nounced that tax cards will be mailed to all Kingston Township taxables on Saturday. Mr, and Mrs. Poad returned Wednesday from a week’s . vacation in Philadelphia where. Ted watched his favorite Athletics defeat the St. Louis Browns, Game Party COMBINATION Breasts & Wings Legs 179: 529c Mrs. Thomas Stephens, Carverton, Dies At 57 Following funeral services in Kingston this afternoon, Mrs. Thom- as |Stephen’s body will be taken to Calicoon, N, Y. for burial. Rev. Robert Wood, pastor of Carverton Methodist Church, of which Mrs. Thomas was a member, will offici- ate. x Mrs. Stephens passed away at Nesbitt Hospital Tuesday afternoon. Survivors include her widower, Thomas; a daughter, Mrs. Mary Southerner, Erie; a son, Thomas, Jersey City; one grandchild; two sisters and a brother, all of New York State, Mrs. Stephens had lived in Car- verton for twenty-five years, and was active in Methodist church af- fairs, a member of the Sunshine Class and WISCS. She belonged to Carverton Mountain Grange. She had been ill for some time, requiring hospitalization. Realizing that she would not recover, she asked to be brought home. She was readmitted to Nesbitt Hospital the night before her death. Carverton Wins Over E. Dallas Carverton upset East Dallas with a sixteen hit attack and beautiful pitching by Andreko. Carverton scored two runs in the second inning on a walk to Andreko, a hit by Brozena, and errors by East Dallas, The inning ended in a double play, Wilson to /G. Brobst to IC. Brobst, Both teams raliied in the third inning to tie the game at six all. East Dallas runs came on a home run by (Cusick with the bases full. Carverton broke the tie with a single by Hunlock, a pass ball and a single by R. Parrish. Jots From Dot (Continued from Page Two) I thought his wife had enough babies of all kinds. His remarks were both funny and exasperating, but picture the black future ahead their mother work the gardens to feed that mob of men; 8 wives to pay for and only 3 to be paid for. That on top of almost having been left with all those 11 on his hands alone.” “If fathers at home think it’s rough having babies, they should think of this poor man. It’s a won- ider we didn’t lose HIM!” ‘I'm staying in with a cold this weekend. A terrific rain broke into dry season last night. We give exams next week. Conference is June 22 at Minga. Mrs. Larsen is waiting for her 5th baby momen- tarily. Love, Dottie = . . . and I quote: — ae “I have been driven many times to my knees by the overwhelming conviction that I have nowhere else to go.’-—Abraham Lincoln. SANDY BEACH Drive-In Theatre HARVEYS LAKE, Penna. FRIDAY “Lorna Doone” * technicolor Barbara Hale, Richard Greene “He was ruthless in anger, reckless in love.” SATURDAY DOUBLE FEATURE iCity Beneath The Sea” technicolor Robert Ryan, Mala Powers LUS P] “The Son of Dr. Jekyll” ‘starring Louis Hayward Jody Lawrence SUNDAY & MONDAY DOUBLE FEATURE “San Antone” Rod Cameron, Arleen Whelan Forrest Tucker "““The price of her kiss . . . a rope around his neck.” PLUS “Crazy Over Horses” Huntz Hall, Leo Gorcey and the Bowery Boys TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY x “Anna” with Silvana Mangano “The Italian sensation who is clashing again with Vittorio Gassman.” THURSDAY “High Noon” Gary Cooper, Thomas Mitchell Lloyd Bridges “The story of a man who was too proud to run.” 2 SHOWS NIGHTLY 2 9 P.M. and 11 P.M. All Kiddy Kides ONLY 5c SANDY BEACH IS THE SAFEST BEACH IN PENNA. FOR BATHING. BRING YOUR CHILDREN. Mamie Thomas Buried At 81 Dallas Native : Dies In Shavertown Mrs. Mamie G. Thomas, 81, was buried in Evergreen Cemetery Wednesday afternoon, Rev. William Davis conducting funeral services in Luzerne. Pall-bearers were (grandsons: Walter and Harold Darrow, Thomas Kloran, Eugene Gordon, Harold Barnard, and William (Calkins. Mrs, Thomas died Monday morn- ing at the home of her daughter, Mrs, Cyril Darrow, 'Shavertown with whom she had made her home for the past five months since leaving another daughter's home in Luzerne. Mrs. Thomas had been ill for several months, following a stroke. ; She was a native of Dallas, daugh- ter of William O. and Malvina Ide Ferrell, pioneer stock of the area. Her father was a squire in Dallas for many years After marriage to Walter Thomas, she resided in Luzerne for seventy years. Mr. Thomas died in 1921. There is one brother, Ralph Fer- rell, Bayside, N. Y., formerly with the Wilkes-Barre Record and a for- mer secretary of (Chamber of Com- merce, Wilkes-Barre. Two daughters survive, Mrs. Darrow and Miss Beat- rice Thomas; five grandchildren and ten great-grandchildren. Legal— NOTICE ESTATE OF BRUNO B. NAJAKA, Office of the Register of Wills of Luzerne County, No. 467 of 1953. All persons indebted to said estate are requested to make payment and those having claims or demands to present the same without delay to Bruno Najaka, Jr., Administrator, Main Road - Lee, Star Route, Nan- ticoke, Pa. NOTICE ESTATE OF JOSEPHINE NA- JAKA, Office of the Register of Wills of Luzerne County, No. 468 of 1953. All persons indebted to said estate are requested to make payment and those having claims or demands to present the same without delay to Bruno Najaka, Executor, Main Road - Lee, Star Route, Nanticoke, Pa. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Letters Testamentary have been granted in the Estate of Gertrude Painter Hanson, late of the City of Wilkes-Barre, to Dr. Carl F. Stein- hauer, 18 S. Main Street, Wilkes- Barre, Pa. All persons indebted to said estate are requested to make payment and those having claims or demands to present the same without delay to the said Executor, or to Roscoe B. Smith, Attorney, 820 Brooks Building, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Letters Testamentary have been granted in the Estate of Joseph Keller, late of the City of Wilkes- Barre, to the Wyoming National Bank of Wilkes-Barre, Pa. All per- sons indebted to said estate are re- DALLAS OUTDOOR THEATRE Children under 12 — Free 2 Shows Nightly Starting at Dusk FRIDAY 4 “Outpost In Malaya” Claudette Colbert Jack Hawkins “High adventure at the end of the earth” News & Cartoon SATURDAY “The Duel At Silver Creek” technicolor Audie Murphy, Faith Domergue “Silver made it rich, hot lead kept it poor.” News & Cartoon SUNDAY & MONDAY “The Big Sky” Kirk Douglas, Dewey Martin “Mighty adventure of the men who conquered the untamed Northwest.” News & Cartoon TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY “Distant Drums” technicolor Starring Gary Cooper “Swamp fighters who turned the tide of the savage Seminole War” News & Cartoon THURSDAY Belles On Their Toes” technicolor Jeanne Crain, Myrna Loy Debra Paget “The ‘Cheaper by the Dozen’ family is back” News & Cartoon Stan-Lite DRIVE-IN . TUNKHANNOCK, PA. FRIDAY & SATURDAY DOUBLE FEATURE “Lure Of The ‘Wilderness” technicolor 3 Jean Peters, Jeffrey Hunter PLUS ‘Untamed Frontier” - technicolor Joseph Cotten, Shelley Winters SUNDAY & MONDAY DOUBLE FEATURE “Has Anybody Seen My Gal” technicolor Piper Laurie, Rock Hudson PLUS Battle Zone” John Hodiak, Stephen McNally Linda Christian TUESDAY DOUBLE FEATURE “The Raging Tide” Shelley Winters, Richard Conte PLUS “Fargo” Wild Bill Elliott “The town that law forgot” WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY flLast Of The Comanches” technicolor Broderick Crawford Barbara Hale quested to make payment and those having claims or demands to present the same without delay to the said Executor, care of the Wyoming National Bank of Wilkes- Barre, Pa., or to Roscoe B. Smith, Attorney, 820 Brooks Building, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Bids for operation of a school bus route in Ross Township will be accepted up to August 10, 1953, 7 PM. Bids may be left with Al- fred D. Bronson or Charles H. Long, Sweet Valley, and detailed information may be obtained from either of the above-named. Ross Township School Board re- serves the right to reject any or all bids. Signed: Alfred D. Bronson Secretary. SHAVER THEATRE SHAVERTOWN FRIDAY & SATURDAY July 31 - Aug. 1 “Abbott and Costello Go to Mars” Cartoon - Comedy - News PAGE SEVEN Wanted To Rent SMALL APARTMENT in central Dallas, close to bus and stores wanted by employed woman. Dial Dallas 4-7226 after 5 p.m. HIMMLER THEATRE Dallas, Pa. TODAY & TOMORROW “The Snows of Kilimanjaro” Technicolor with Gregory Peck, Susan Hayward also News MONDAY & TUESDAY “] Love Melvin” with” Donald O'Connor Debie Reynolds also Short, Novelty & Cartoon WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY “The Hitch-Hiker” with Edmund O’Brien Frank Lovejoy also Comedy and Cartoon DOUBLE “These jackasses are nuts of monkeys. FEATURE and funnier than a barrel 1 sin by sin” Innocent or mission available in %-, PHONE No Cost, mail us this APPRAISAL FORM worth $ Name No Obligation —We’re __condition. I think it is __in a trade. I under- (or 'phone in the information) me ee ed