The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, March 12, 1986, Image 3

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No injuries
y Broody
No injuries were reported in a
two-car accident that took ! place
early Monday morning on Dug road
near Highland Avenue.
Lauren Marie Walsh, 210 Clear-
view Ave., Trucksville, said she was
traveling south on Dug road when
she made a right hand turn onto
Highland Ave to make a U-turn. She
said she pulled out and started to
proceed back north, failing to see a
vehicle operated by Michale W.
Castellani, RD 1, Box 299 G, Sweet
Valley, who was traveling south.
Castellani said he did see Walsh
make the turn into Highland Ave.,
but couldn’t stop in time to avoid
making contact when she came
back out onto the road.
Neither car was seriously dam-
aged.
-0-
A New York man was charged
with leaving the scene of an acci-
dent as a result of a one-car inci-
dent he was involved in last Friday.
According to police reports,
Michael E. Gray, 484 Southside Ave,
Freeport, New York, was traveling
west on Carverton road. towards
Property
transfers
Conyngham & Company al inc. to
the University of Housing Partner-
ship, P.O. Box 1127 700 First East-
‘ern Bank building, Wilkes-Barre.
Property - Lehman Twp., 10.79
acres.
Joseph E. Clemson al to Anthony
and Cynthia Katra, Wyoming, Pa.
Property - Dallas Twp.
Jule Wilson al to Melvin and
Marilyn A. Morris, R.D. 3, Box 332
D, Dallas. Property - 1-1 acre, 2-1
acre.
Stephen L. Hudacek to Jonestown
Realty Inc., 121 South Memorial
Manor Drive when he lost control of
his vehicle and mounted the curb on
the northbund side. Gray continued
west, driving across a lawn and
striking a tree and continued again
across another lawn. He then turned
back onto Carverton road, heading
west before he pulled info a parking
area of the Kandle-light bar.
It was there patrolman located
the vehicle and determined who the
operator was.
-0- ”
Dallas Township Police say they
are looking for a what is believed to
be a Chevrolet car that was
involved in a hit-and-run accident
that occurred early last Sunday
morning.
According to reports, the unknown
vehicle skidded through the inter-
section of Terrace and Hemlock
streets, striking another car oper-
ated by Helen Bestetter, RD 2,
Tunkhannock.
-0-
A Dallas man was involved in a
one-car mishap when he lost control
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{INE LVI AAUL ERY [IG SR CT VRE R43)
of his car and hit a tree on Lower
Demunds road last Thursday.
William Geurin, RD 3, Dallas,
was traveling north in his 1980
Dodge when he failed to negotiate a
curve and plowed into a tree.
He was not serously hurt.
By JOHN HOINSKI
Staff Writer
After being stifled by a number of
legal problems over the past few
years that have now been settled,
development at the Newberry
Estate in Dallas is once again
underway.
Construction of a four-unit row of
townhouses in the Meadows One
section of condominiums has been
in progress since December. The
two or three bedroom designs,
which are expected to be completed
by May, will cost from $120,000 to
$155,000. One unit has already been
sold with the other three under
speculation.
The 87-acre complex was estab-
lished in 1972 by the Troup Fund
Inc. But in 1978, the First Valley
Bank took a deed in lieu of foreclo-
sure. The estate was then purchased
in 1982 by Walter S. Robbins, who
later pasased away that same year.
Finally, in 1983, John Hlabing Jr.,
president of Youngsville Develop-
ment Co. now building the projects,
bought the development from the
Walter Robbins estate.
Since then a rash of legal matters
set in, causing a number of disturb-
ing problems.
“The people who already had
homes here had no clear titles,”
John Halbing III, vice-president of
Yongsville Development Co. said.
After over a year and a half, legal
work has been cleared up, enabling
the company to proceed with its
plans.
Designs are now being made to
construct 34 new townhouses, con-
sisting of two or three bedrooms
with attached garages. Halbing said
JONES
Memorial Highway
Shavertown
675-0393
United Penn Bank Bldg.
Wilkes-Barre
823-5181
a total of 250 homes will occupy the
land over the next five to 10 years.
: “We had an independent survey
done ‘that said we could sell 17
homes a year up here,” Halbing
said.
The project, however, has a
number of people concerned that
the expansion will erode away at
the estates scenery. But, Halbing
says, by document, they are bound
to leave 46 acres of open space. The
development presently contains 94
homes.
All homeowners belong to the
Newberry Estate Country Club,
which includes a swimming pool,
tennis courts, and a nine-hole golf
course.
Under the Agreement of Recipro-
cal Covenants Eneasements, home
owners, who now pay a certain
monthly charge for maintenance
upkeep and other services, may
eventually come to collectively own
the club.
The Township of Kingston in con-
junction with the Shavertown and
Trucksville Fire Departments has
made an application for grant fund-
ing to the Pennsylvania Department
of Environmental Resources
through the Title IV Rural Fire
Protection Program.
According to Fred A. Potzer,
seeks grant
Kingston Township Manager, com-
munities in rural areas with a
population under 10,000 are eligible
to participate in the program. Key
objectives of this program are to
save lives and protect property in
unprotected or inadequately pro-
tected rural areas.
“THE FAMOUS
COUNTRY STORE”
Memorial Hwy., Dallas
3
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