PAGE EIGHT THE POST, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 42, 1939 CLASSIFIED ADS LOST AND FOUND REWARD—For return or information leading to recovery of small black and tan terrier, believed in or near Benton; taken from Harvey’s Lake. Phone Har- vey’s Lake 263 or Kings- ton 7-6915. 518 WANTED TO BUY Wanted To Buy—Used piano in good condition in this vicinity. Box HR Dallas Post. 511 FOR RENT For Rent—Small modern apartment, heat, hot water, garage, $25. Phone Dallas 241-R-7. 511 FOR SALE For Sale — Pigs, 8-weeks old, 6 shoats weighing 125 to 150 lbs., 2 heavy grain-fed hogs, have had no garbage. Also Rhode Island Red pullets and roasters for breeders. Brown and Fassett, Fernbrook. 411 For Sale — Capons for Christmas. Paul Carlin, Dallas 316-R-7. 511 For Sale—Barber chairs, mirrors, shelves; reasonable. Joe Cicero, 360 Main Street, Swoyerville. 511 For Sale—Baby chicks, New Hamp- shire Red; January hatches; every Friday; Penn. official blood test; 8c delivered. Joseph Davis, LeRays- ville, Penna. 50tf For Sale—Rental Leases, For Sale signs, No Trespassing signs, Nu Hunting signs, For Rent signs, et: Dallas Post 401: Guaranteed rebuilt Ford V8 engines 4,000 mile guarantee. $7 month Stull Brothers, Kingston, Pa. 19tt Coal: Nut, stove, egg, $7.30; pea, $5.75; buckwheat, $4.90; rice, $4.00. Delivered at Shavertown. 25¢ per ton additional in Dallas. Stewart J. Eustice, Dallas. 460-R-9. 411 We Buy Used Cars For Cash. Perry’s Service Station, 375 Bennett St., Luzerne. 26tf REUPHOLSTERING All work guaranteed, large selec- tion fabrics. Write or phone 7-5636. John Curtis, 33 S. Goodwin Ave. Kingston. 10tf Wanted To Buy —Old horses. We pay highest cash prices for old live horses. Must not be diseased. Write or phone Ralph R. Balut, Dal- las, Pa. Phone 371-R-3 and re- verse charges. 34tf MISCELLANEOUS Miscellaneous—Kunkle Garage open afor business under new manage- t Expert repair work on all makes of cars and farm machinery. Welding done. Phone Dallas 458-R-13. 511 For prompt removal of dead, old, disabled horses, cows, mules, phone Carl‘ Crockett, Muhlenburg 13-R-4, Phone charges paid. 40tf LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT SHERIFF'S SALE FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 1940, AT 10 A. M. Seized and taken into execution at the suit of The Federal Land Bank of Baltimore v. Petronela Ka- puscinski, mortgagor, and Bronis- lawa Drapczynski, mortgage as- sumptor and real owner. ALL that certain piece, parcel or tract of land situate in the Town- ship of Plymouth, Luzerne County, State of Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows, to-wit: BEGINNING at a corner in the Public Highway leading from Cease Mills, to Hunlock’s Creek in line be- tween lands of Albert G. Decker and the grantor herein; thence from said beginning point and along line between lands of said Decker and the grantor herein, S. 37 degrees 40 minutes E. 1057.5 feet to a soft maple corner thence from said point and still along line of said Decker and the grantor herein, N. 76 degrees 35 minutes E. 600 feet to a corner at the junction of two stone walls; thence from said point and along line of other lands of the grantor herein it being line of a stonewall, N. 8 degrees 00 minutes W. 435 feet to a corner; thence N. 49 de- grees 20 minutes E. 1880 feet to a stake and ‘stones corner by a gnarled hickory witness tree, said corner being common to line be- tween lands of the Spring Brook Water Company, and the grantor herein; thence from said corner and along line between lands of said Water Company and the grantor herein, N. 6 degrees .02 minutes E. 1528 feet to a stake and stones cor- ner witnessed; thence still along line between lands of said Water Company and the grantor herein, N. 64 degrees 13 minutes W. 1847 feet to a stake and stones corner, said corner being common to properties of the said Water Company, Stod- dart & Company and the grantor herein; thence from said corner and along line between lands of said Stoddart & Company and the gran- tor herein, S. 62 degrees 00 minutes W. 125 feet to the center of the be- fore mentioned Public Road; thence from said point and along the cen- ter line of said Public Road in a southerly direction the following courses and distances: S. 7 degrees 35 minutes E. 190 feet, S. 6 degrees 45 minutes W. 200 feet, S. 14 de- grees 00 minutes E. 56 feet, S. 30 degrees 10 minutes E. 145 feet, S. 24 degrees 50 minutes E. 200 feet, S. 10 degrees 20 minutes E. 100 feet, S. 0 degrees 25 minutes E. 100 feet in old fence row; | to a point at the intersection of the center line of a private roadway; thence continuing along the center line of said Public Road, S. 46 de- grees 35 minutes W. 230 feet, S. 40 degrees 00 minutes W. 800 feet, S. 31 degrees 30 minutes W. 100 feet, S. 5 degrees 00 minutes W. 500 feet, S. 12 degrees 40 minutes W. 100 feet, S. 22 degrees 50 minutes W. 400 feet, S. 24 degrees 30 min- utes W. 400 feet, S. 28 degrees 30 minutes W. 100 feet to the place of BEGINNING. CONTAINING one hundred and forty-one (141) acres of land be the same more or less. BEING the same land that was conveyed to said Joseph and Petro- nela Kapuscinski by deed from Jo- sep F. Krystopa, a bachelor, dated Oct. 1, 1922, and recorded in the of- fice for the recording of deeds in said County in Deed Book 569, page 561. SUBJECT to all conveyances and reservations of minerals and ease- ments of record affecting the land hereby conveyed. ALSO EXCEPTING AND RESERV- ING, HOWEVER, out of the foregoing | described piece and parcel of land ‘all that tract of land consisting of 20 acres, strict measure, as conveyed by Peter Drapczynski and Bronis- | lawa Drapczynski, his wife, to Pe- | tronela Kapuscinski, widow, by deed bearing date May 10, 1932, and re- corded in the office of the Recorder of Deeds of Luzerne County on May page 431, reference being made thereto for more complete descrip- tion thereof. IMPROVED with a farm dwelling house, barn, outbuildings, etc. WILLIAM R. THOMAS, Sheriff. Fred B. Davis, Atty. SHERIFF'S SALE FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 1940, AT 10 A. M. By virtue of a writ of Fi Fa No. 21, January Term, 1940, issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County, to me directed, there will be exposed to public sale by vendue to the highest and best bidders, for cash, in Court Room No. 1, Court House, in the City of Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, on Friday, the 12th day of January, 1940, at ten o’clock in the forenoon of the said day, all the right, title and interest of the defendants in and to the following described lot, piece or parcel of land, viz: The surface of that lot of land in Plymouth Borough, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows: BEGINNING at the Southwesterly corner of Orchard Street and First Street; thence along said First Street, South 60 degrees West 100 feet to a corner; thence South 30 degrees East 47 feet to a corner of land now or late of Tedor Rakowski; thence along the same North 71 de- grees, 20 minutes East 102 feet to a corner on line of Orchard Street, aforesaid; thence along the same North 30 degrees West 52 feet to the place of beginning. Containing 5,050 square feet of surface be the same more or less. Being part of lots Nos. 172 and 173’ on plot of lots of E. A. Outen on record in the Re- corder’s Office of Luzerne County in Deed Book 246, page 88, etc. IMPROVED with a three story frame dwelling house and a frame barn, known as 141 Orchard Street, Plymouth, Pennsylvania. Excepting all the coal and other minerals as the same have been ex- cepted and reserved in previous deeds in the line of title. Seized and taken into execution at the suit of George Tancin vs. Michael Hreha, Josephine Hreha, Andrew Hreha, Joseph Hreha and Helen Hreha, and will be sold by WILLIAM R. THOMAS, Sheriff. E. F. McGovern, Atty. SHERIFF'S SALE On Friday, January 12, 1940, at 10 A. M., Court Room No. 1, Court House, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., execution from the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County, Pa., real estate of Tracy C. Ferris and Minnie C. Ferris, his wife, situate in the Bor- ough of Kingston, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, bounded and de- scribed as follows, to wit: Being the Northwesterly one half of lot No. 22 as designated on a | plot of lots of the Anthracite Land | Co., recorded in Luzerne County in 'Map Book 1, Page 35. Beginning at (a corner on the Northeasterly side |of Church Street, the same being a corner of Lot No. 21; thence along the line of said lot North 60 degrees 20 minutes East 140 feet to an alley; { thence along said alley South 29 de- {grees 30 minutes, East 25 feet to a | corner of the Southeasterly half of | said lot Ne. 22, now or late of Dan- |iel R. Peffer; thence along said land, | now or late of Daniel R. Peffer South 160 degrees 30 minutes West 140 feet to said Church Street; thence along said Church Street North 29 degrees 30 minutes West 25 feet to the place of beginning. Containing 3500 square feet of land more or less. Being the same premises convey- ed to the said Tracy Ferris, et ux by deed of Edward Darling, Guardian of Charlotte V. Dilley, dated April 27, 1934, and recorded in Luzerne County Deed Book 734, Page 333. Improved with a frame dwelling known as No. 78 Church Street, Kingston, Pa. WILLIAM R. THOMAS, Sheriff. J. F. McCabe, Atty. SHERIFF'S SALE On Friday, January 12th, 1940, at 10 A. M.,, Court Room No. 1, Court House, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., ex- ecution from the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County, Pa., real estate of Walter W. Dettmore and Sophia R. Dettmore, his wife, situate 12, 1932, in Deed Book, volume 717,. in the City of Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pa., bounded and described as follows: Being lot No. 448 in Block M on the Plot of H. H. Derr, recorded in Luzerne County Deed Book 260, Page 461, 25 feet in front on North Pennsylvania Avenue and 100 feet in depth, bounded Northerly by North Pennsylvania Avenue, Easterly by lot No. 447, Southerly by lot No. 452 and West- erly by lot No. 449, now the prop- erty of the City of Wilkes-Barre known as the East End Bridge. Being the same premises conveyed to the said Walter W. Dettmore, et ux by deed of Thomas McDermott, et al, dated April 9, 1928 and re- corded in Luzerne County Deed Book 671, Page 119. Improved with a frame dwelling known as No. 439 North Pennsyl- vania Avenue, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. WILLIAM R. THOMAS, Sheriff. J. F. McCabe, Atty. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT NOTICE OF WITHDRAWAL Notice is hereby given that, pur- suant to the provisions of Article X, Section 1015, of the Business Cor- poration Law, approved May 5, 1933 the LUZERNE LUMBER COMPANY a corporation of the State of Dela- ware, with principal office at 900 Market Street, City of Wilmington, County of New Castle, State of Del- aware, and Pennsylvania address at 445 Main Street, Luzerne Borough, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, which was granted a Certificate of Authority by the Department of State of Pennsylvania to transact business in said Commonwealth, will on the 5th day of January, 1940, present application for a withdrawal of the said certificate and the can- cellation thereof. ; Al J. Kane, Attorney, 108-10 Brooks Building, Wilkes-Barre, Penna. Postscripts (Continued from Page 1) But on top of all that, one of the last phone calls I received at The Post was from a lady whose name and address had appeared in the social column. “Young man,” she said, her voice shaking with emo- tion. “I live in Dallas, not Fern- brook.” Well, that was that. One of my pet reforms was the construction of a centralized sew- age system for Dallas and Kingston Township. I wrote long and in- volved technical articles on the ben- efits of a centralized sewage system. I spoke to the proper authorities and helped provoke the annual Ac- tion against the haphazard sewage disposal means of Dallas. I even ran what I thought would be a community eye-opener, and the clinching argument for The Post’s campaign for better sewer systems —a cut of a sewer pipe emptying into Toby’s Creek, spreading conta- mination and shame for all to see. But I made the mistake of labell- ing it “A Dallas Garden Spot,” and the accompanying caption was just too, too facetious. Much of the de- tail I had planned on showing—tin cans, the sewer pipe itself, and a few other unsanitary items—didn’t ap- pear clearly enough in the picture. As a matter of fact, the whole ef- fect was rather nice and the paper received, if I recall correctly, num- erous communications compliment- ing it on a vivid example of the sylvan beauty which is one of Dallas’ best assets. No one could say I didn't try, anyway. The sidewalk situation will, I suppose, be taken care of the time under the suspices of the WPA. About all I could do to promote that was to write stirring stories on the progress of the latest project. I wish the sidewalk committee would take cognizance of conditions on Lehman Avenue, however. I got my feet wet walking into the office this afternoon. I never knew enough about The Post’s plans for a centralized police system to write anything about it, one way or the other. In fact, all I know about the police force to this day is that if Chief Stevenson does- n't catch speeders at Harvey's Lake,’ Pop Covert will. And if he misses up, one of the Kingston Township gendarmes will do the honors. All other matters of more im- portance have always received the cooperate action of the police here- abouts, and why say changes should be made, at least until a real crime wave comes to town, is more than I know. But that line about central- ized police forces looks very nice in the masthead, and it may stay there from now until doom’s day, as far as I'm concerned. When I spoke in guarded tones about taking politics out of local school systems, I merely took the masthead at its word that the sit- uation was acute. And, subsequently, the more I looked into local school affairs and became acquainted with the school board members, the less case I could build up. In fact, the only real stand, as far as I can recall, that I took in the school situation related to the old Goss Manor school house. A young matron of Dallas Township gave me to understand that conditions in the building weren’t all they should be. I wrote a story about it, and the very next day Chris Eipper came to see me. The school board didn’t have enough money to build a new school house, Civic Program or no Civic Program, and that’s all there was to it, he said, and banged my desk. When the reserve fund be- came large enough to effect any ne- cessary changes, such changes would be effected, he said, and banged my desk. Furthermore, he said, it wasn’t a good policy to run stories counter to the school board without first consulting the board. And he banged my desk. Then he banged the door, That was enough for me. There- after I confined my efforts to writ- ing accounts of PTA meetings and spelling bees, and left local school politics for posterity to handle. That concrete highway from Dal- las to Tunkhannock seemed to be proceeding in the right direction during my term with The Post, and I was quite willing to leave that matter in the hands of the state and settle for the By-Pass and the re- paving of Main and Bennett Streets in Luzerne. I stayed long enough to see both come to pass, but as soon as I left I learned that the Dallas to Tunk- hannock highway was to avoid Dal- las entirely. Fine stuff. That shows how things can go all to hell if you don’t keep at them. When I think that I could have saved that part of The Post’s program from the fate it has now met by concentrating on it, my blood boils. But what’s done is done . . . The more I think about it, the more I realize that I didn’t come to be the Voice in this community that I had hoped to become. But I maintain that in other respects I upheld the traditions of The Post and the trust its publisher put in me. I wrote in glowing terms of Col. Reynold’s live-stock sales—a custom which I took on when I came, and one which has survived my regime. I interviewed, as others had be- fore me, all the likely old characters hereabouts. Since their longevity SWEET VALLEY Christmas exercises will be held at the First Christian Church, where Rev. Ira Button is pastor, on Sat- urday night. The choir will sing a special program and the children of the Sunday School will have a part in the festivities. Santa Claus will make a personal appearance. McKinley Long, who has been ill, is about again The parsonage of First Christian Church has been renovated and makes a fine appearance. has now become a matter of course, I suppose that the men who follow Rees and myself will interview them again and again in the years to come. I wrote of the Dallas Junior Wo- men’s Club, of the Frantzes and Hil- debrants and Roods and Shavers and Olivers and Schooleys and Conynghams and Majors, of Old Dal- las institutions, of new Dallas insti- tutions, of the hopes and fears of local businessmen, of the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars and Rotarians and Kiwanians, of the passing of the street cars and coming of the buses, of the PTA’S and alumni associations, of Pete Oberst’s barber shop and Hayden's bar, of churches and schools, of young people and old people. I wrote of Dallas. I wrote The Post. I think I wrote just enough to qualify as a country newspaper- man, and at least a near approxi- mation of a Postscripter. I wrote next to Rees. I wrote next to Risley. And I wrote next to that pine tree and the split-rail fences . . . but I've written so much to justify my- self as a guest columnist that I'll have to postpone my own whimsical philosophy until next week. DASH DIXON By Dean Lal: 12 2 SLEW THE ROYAL DRAGON- THEY ARE CROWNED THE RULERS OF THE LAND OF BAT— 7 ZZ), 7), THE GIANT OH MIGHTY QUEEN OF THE DRAGON-— YOU HAVE DOOMED THESE 5 WORTHY ONES TO A 72 HORRIBLE DEATH/ YJECAUSE DOT AND DASH THIS LAND OF P TRUE—|F THEY DO NOT SUCCEED IN CONQUERING WEALTH AND A MILLION LINGERING DEATHS, THEY NEVER RETURN evT FABULOUS IF “THEY DO SUCCEED , “THEY SHALL CONTROL ‘THE WHOLE. MOON // ) Sn IT DOT AND I MANY BRAVE. STARTE! @ ¥ BUT NONE HAVE RETUR. J A — MAY YOU HAVE BETTER >. LUCK / ©coD SPEED / — TER NEW ADVENTURES | ull AT DASH — 225. By Richard Lec | MERELY WISH TO GLANCE THROUGH THE REGISTER- | AM CURIOUS ABOUT SOME { B TRE MANAGEMENT # DOES NOT PERMIT i THE INSPECTION $¥ OF THE REGISTER § BY OUTSIDERS” b 4 NO DOUBT A FEW & GOLD COINS WiLL GIVE ME THAT PERMISSION ? A ) Uy P SAL By ’ 3 i 0 ro ® RILEY P- A NAME IS FAMILLIAR - i THE AMERICAN d DETECTIVE // = LET ME SEE- i AN!) HAVENT! ne re A SERY INT OF MINE ! JaINING FORCES WITH AN AMERICAN DEVI, -.- HE WiLL RUE TRE DAY 4 panes Td i i | ge mi tte ee ee CAY THERE, BUDDY, UT LE RUD WHATS BILLY DOING UP ON A NN = 257 a Er 5 LA SIA [1 LL FOLKS , IT's 7 THE DAY BEFORE THE BIG ELECTIONS — _THE CANDIDATES AS YOU rUERY" MELEAN _ Q.GONKLE THERE SEEMS TO BE QUITE A BIT OF LAST MINUTE CAMPAIGNING GOING ON....LET'S HAVE A LOOK !! Soe By Bruce Stuary | I'M PLAaYing DOCTOR MOM, AND BILLY IS ONE OF My BEST PATIENTS! Wr — : Wi TE LUNI i] er a or Pe = h “VME THAT T WUZ N 7 > “- CSCI a JY z BAL WP = : A) Ww 0.04 1 STARTED OUT |, >» T'VOTE FER