The Dallas and Shavertown Water Companies revealed their plans on Aug. 2 for a $1 million improvement project for their water systems. The project, which will take approximately three years, calls for the digging of two wells, the addition of pumps, storage tanks and reservoirs and the repairing * of deteriorated pipes. The water companies are both owned by Eastern Gas and Water Investment Corp. of King of Prussia and serve about 2200 customers in Dallas Borough and Kingston and Dallas Townships. Although no cost estimates have been made for Dallas Water Company customers, it is estimated that custom- ers of the Shavertown Water Company system will pay as much as $60 per year more. : In the meantime, residents of both communities have been asked to curtial their use of water. Alleged rapist to be tried A hearing has been rescheduled for Aug. 11 at 11:30 a.m. in the case of Herbert Kern, 26, of East Mountain The hearing, which began last week, was rescheduled by District Justice John Hopkins because Kern was not represented by an attorney. According to an affidavit, the victim was allegedly raped and beaten at Kern's trailer. Kern is being held in the Luzerne County Prison Secret vote allowed to stand Common Pleas Judge Robert Hourigan indicated Aug. 2 that he would not overturn a secret vote taken by the Dallas Zoning Hearing Board to approve an application for a zoning variance. The applicants, Robert and Susan Kleiner, were granted the variance on June 21 during a secret session in which the press and public were barred. ; The Wilkes-Barre Times Leader filed a complaint July 17 and sought a judgment to force the zoning board to reconsider the variance because the board violated the Open Meeting Law. Judge Hourigan did not overturn the vote because the application in question had been withdrawn. Hourigan, however, was assured by the Dallas board solicitor that board members would no longer hold secret sessions. Buricks tried on lake ordinance District Justice Leonard Harvey of Dallas ruled Aug. 5 that a Harveys Lake zoning ordinance cannot be enforced against Adam and Diane Burick, of S. Moun- tain Boulevard, Mountaintop. The Buricks had been charged with illegally spending a night in a boathouse at Harveys Lake. A hearing on the charge was held Aug. 2. The zoning ordinance forbids the use of boathouses and cabanas for residential purposes. Harvey said there is no doubt the Buricks slept at their property at 111 Lakeside Drive, Harveys Lake, but, he also stated, the borough allowed them to construct the boathouse in the first place. Harvey added that his decision affects only the Burick A HIGHLIGHT of the enbarbecue and bazaar of Centermoreland United Methodist Church will be the appearance of the Jacobs Brothers on Friday evening, Aug. 12 from 6:30 to 7:30. The benefit bazaar and barbecue is scheduled for Friday and Saturday, Aug. 12-13. -0- associated with ‘‘Pennsyl- vanians for Biblical Moral- ity’, Harrisburg, will be morning worship service at 11 on Sunday, Aug. 14, in Northmoreland Baptist Church at Centermore- NEIGHBORS WILLING TO EXCHANGE SOME SERVICES FOROTHER SERVICES ° TOY EXCHANGE NEIGHBORS EXCHANGING SHOPPING HINTS, DO IT YOURSELF AND DOLLAR STRETCHING IDEAS, ETC. ° FREE ITEMS FREEENTERTAINMENT land. Mr. Birmelin, who is associated with the Canaan Bible church at South Canaan, Wayne County, will also speak at the Sunday School services at 10 that morning, Rev. James Howell, pastor, has announced. -0- MORE THAN 100 CHIL- DREN from the. Center- moreland-Vernon-Falls Vacation Bible School sponsored by the North- moreland Baptist Church at Centermoreland. Spe- cial awards were presented to Heather Dymond, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Dymond, for, bringing the largest number of visitors to the LEVI’S® Student’s Cords LEE RIDERS® ® 14 Oz. Denim ® Pre-Washed sp 1° WAIST SIZES 25-28 school each day. She received a Bible. The other award winner was Lisa Martin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Martin, Jr., who won the Bible drill contest at clos- ing exercises held Sunday evening, July 24. CONGRATULATIONS are extended to Mr. and Mrs. George Charney, who observed their 40th wed- ding anniversary on Satur- day and were honored by their daughters at an open house. -0- of Circle Drive, Carverton Heights, was honored at a surprise birthday party on Sunday at the family home. -0- BELATED BIRTHDAY GREETINGS are extended to Amy Pavlovec, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Rich- ard Pavlovec, 228 Manor Drive, who observed her 14th birthday anniversary on July 28. -0- JOHN SCOBLE of Carv- erton Heights returned home recently after sev- eral days as a medical patient in Nesbitt Memo- rial Hospital, Kingston. -0- SGT. AND MRS. PAUL MCSHANE and daughter Erin of Grissom Air Force Base, Indiana, spent last week with her parents, Rev. and Mrs. Donald COOK'S PHARMACY LEN KINGSTON Walter of Centermoreland. Rev. and Mrs. Walter returned Friday after attending a seminar at United Christian Ashram, Keuka College, «£euka Park, N.Y. Lo OUT-OF-TOWN GUESTS at the wedding of Joanne Bartos, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bartos, RD 3, Orange, to Edward Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Smith, Sr. of Plymouth, on Satur- day, ‘July 23, in: St. Frances X. Cabrini R.C. Church, Carverton, included Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wilson of Ocean Grove, N.J.; Mr. and Mrs. Michael Sczezny of Point Pleasant, N.J.; Mr. and Mrs. George Dorbad of Rockaway, N.J., Mr. and Mrs. james Modroff of Hasbrouck Heights, N.J.; Mrs. RoseModroff of Cliff- side Park, N.J., Mr. and Mrs. John DePierro of Stroudsburg, and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bresnan and Loren Bresnan of Rye Brook, N.Y. -0- FRIENDS OF MISS MAUREEN CULVER, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Culver of Vernon, will be glad to learn she after undergoing eye sur- gery on Wednesday in Wilkes-Barre General Hos- pital. -0- MRS. MELANIE KIL- LIAN and infant son are home from Community Medical Center in Scran- ton where the infant was born on July 18. He is the first child for Mr. and Mrs. Robert Killian of Tunkhannock and the first grandchild for the baby’s maternal grandmother, June Weed of Centermore- and not all owners of the approximately 275 Harveys Lake boathouses. News crew remains hospitalized WNEP-TV reporter Susan Jellig and photographer John Duffy remained at Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown. Their conditions, however, were upgraded from guarded to satisfactory. ) The two were injured July 20 when a homemade trailer carrying a 1956 Ford Thunderbird became unattached from a vehicle traveling on the Pennsyl- vania Turnpike. The trailer and car crossed, the center line and hit a Suburu station wagon driven by Duffy. A third passenger in the WNEP car, newsroom intern Fred Lettieri, has been released from Lehigh Valley Hospital. : No charges have been filed in the mishap. Charges brought against Haight was charged Aug. 1 with buying beer for a teenager who was killed in a one-car accident July 31 in Kingston. William C. Aston, 18, of 25 Stafford St., Trucksville, was Killed when the car he was driving slammed into a tree. A passenger, Frank Aritz, 16, of 79 Davis St. Trucksville, was injured in the crash and admitted to Nesbitt Memorial Hospital, Kingston. Haight was arraigned on charges of unlawful acts relative to liquor, criminal conspiracy and corruption of minors. Haight admitted in an affidavit that he had purchased two cases of beer for the youths. Joe McDonald and Jim Snyder. EDWARD KLIMASZEWSKI Edward Klimaszewski, 63, formerly of Kunkle, died July 30 at Community Hospital, Watervliet, Michigan. Surviving are sons, Richard, Coloma, Mich.; and Bradley, New Boston, Texas; three grandchildren. Funeral was held Aug. 3 from the Nulton Funeral Home, Beaumont, with the Rev. Pegg Ainslie Richards, pastor of Kunkle United Methodist Church, officiating. Interment, Woodlawn Cemetery, Dallas. GEORGE J. SABULASKI George J. Sabaluskim 74, RD 1, Sweet Valley, died Aug. 5 at his home. Surviving are sons, George J. Jr., Joseph P., both of Sweet Valley; daughter, Mrs. May L. Wyckoff, Bellvue, Neb. ; brother, Anthony Sabol, Kingston; nine grandchil- dren. Funeral was held Aug. 7 from the Curtis L. Swanson Funeral Home, Pikes Creek, with Mass of Christian Burial in Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church, Lake Silkworth. Interment, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Ceme- tery, Lake Silkworth. WILLIAM JAMES William J. James, 35, of Mohawk Farms, RD 4, Dallas, died Aug. 5 at his home. Full-time patrolman hired Jackson Township hired Jerome Leedock, 26, of 50 Hillside St., Courtdale, as a full-time patrolman. Lee- dock is the first full-time police officer for the township. The announcement of the position was made at the Aug. 1 meeting of the Jackson Township Supervisors. Leedock, who was formerly employed as a part-time township’s three man part-time force. The decision to hire a full-time patrolman was made after the supervisors received a large number of complaints about a rash of burglaries in the township. Residents want sewer system One hundred sixty five residents of Jackson Twp. favor having a sewer system installed in the township and 91 residents voted against the idea. The figures were the result of a questionnaire sent out to residents by the Jackson Township Board of Supervisors. The board mailed 1500 questionnaires to township residents. The 256 responses represent 17 percent of township residents. Sam Milazzo, Jackson Township Council president, reported that no funding will be available from the Environmental Protection Agency after Oct. 1, 1984 for: sanitary sewer systems in the borough. ! . Surviving are his wife, the former Deborah Milbrodt,. Harveys Lake; brothers, Norman D., Harveys Lake;’ Kenneth P., Edwardsville. 1 Private funeral services were held Aug. 7 with the Rev. John R. Justice officiating. 4 ARTHUR CULVER died Aug. 6 at the office of Dr. Shavertown. Surviving, are his wife, the former Lettie Lee; son, A." Lee Culver, Dallas; daughter, Mrs, Karen Roen, New- town Square; four grandchildren. Private memorial = services were held at the H Vv I C H A R D’. H. Disque Funeral Home, Dallas. : ROBERT SEABOLD : Robert (Hank) Seabold, 52, of 34 Church St., Swoyers- t Memorial Hospital, Kingston. ; Surviving are two daughters, Adrienne Seabold and" Lynne Seabold, both. of Swoyersville; a stepbrothers, Robert J. Seybold, New Cumberland, Pa. Private funeral services were held from the Hugh B., Hughes and Son Funeral Home, Forty Fort. The Pennsylvania Coun- cil on the Arts (PCA) will increase over last year’s PCA support of individual the Arts, Room 216, Finance Building, Harris-" June Batten Arey said. ' The deadline for fellow- TOPLACE YOUR ADAMS FREE COPING CLOTHES Bk. Mtn. Shopping Cntr. ot ASSIH ED Shavertown—675-1130 Mon. thrufFri.8a.m.-5p.m. Daily ‘til 53—Yon.. ; Beda 675-5211 0r 825.6868 Thurs. & Fel W148 i is ents are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Killian of Tunkhan- nock. Mrs. Killian is the- former Melanie Remetz, daughter of Fred Remetz SHAVERTOWN [YiSA1E gend thet your S's = {NETO Dallas Post I enclose $9 in Pa. ($11 out of state) for student subscription for: : Name Address Zip Given by Address ( )l would like a gift card sent (check if you would like ustosendacard). 4 of Dallas and June Weed of Centermoreland. award more than $235,000 in fellowships to Pennsyl- artists from discretionary federal funds. vania creative artists to assist in the development of their work in 1984. The funding for the 1984 fellowship program repre- sents a nearly 20 percent “The Council on the Arts is pleased to be able to provide more support to members of Pennsyl- vania’s arts community,” PCA Executive Director programs in: \ ® Surveying : ® Telecommunications ® Railway Engineering ship applications is Oct. 1, 1983, and announcements burg, Pa. 17120 or tele- phone (717) 787-6883 tig secure eligibility require-" of awards will be made in December, 1983. Interested Pennsylvania artists should write to the Pennsylvania Council on ments, application forms and instructions for filing forms. Artists are urged to, make applications ‘well: before the Oct. 1 deadline. ~ —Births A son, Aug. 1, to MARY ANN AND MERLE TAYLOR} Evergreen Estate, RD A, Lot 35, Sweet Valley in Wilkes Barre General Hospital. * A daughter, July 30, to SANDRA AND RALPH, KUNISKAS, RD 7, Shavertown, in Mercy Hospital Wilkes-Barre. » SENIOR PORTRAITS pH Hi = } | “ NC - & | i 2 & pr § . ONE POSE 1 - 8x10 Portrait 2 - 5x7 Portraits 8 - 2x3 Portraits *30.00 Yearbook Glossy Included For An Appointment Call 287-5411 BERT HUSBAND STUDIO 293 Wyoming Ave. Kingston, Pa.