PAGE EIGHT THE POST, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1940 CLASSIFIED ADS WANTED TO BUY Wanted—DBeef cattle and veal every Monday. Also fresh cows with calves by side and close springers. Must be TB and blood tested. Call Albert Race, Centermoreland 6 or Nathan Conners, Harding 29-R-12. 44 Beef cattle and veal calves every Monday. Call Albert Race, Center- moreland 6 or Harding 29R12. 84 | FOR SALE For Sale—Young Pure Bred Guern- sey Bull, from high producing Dam and Fashionable Blood lines, Sure Sire, fully tested and accred- ited and from an accredited herd of years standing. Price reasonable to quick buyer. W. T. Payne, East Dallas, Luzerne Co., Pa. 83 For Sale — One Ampico electric piano. Priced reaconably. Phone Kingston 77-0327. 81] For Sale or Rent—8-room house | with bath, 3 porches, electricity, | furnace, spring water, nice nvm Herdman, Alderson, Pa. Cupboards, Corner Cabinets, Book- cases and all kinds of occasional furniture made to order. Reasonable. Write or phone Sheldon Bennett,’ Trucksville. Phone 146-R-13. 81. ! For Sale—10 tons of hay. Inquire of | Arthur Hazeltine, Shavertown, Pa. 7 For Sale—Baby chicks, New Hamp- shire Red; February hatches; every Friday; Penn. official blood test; 8c delivered. Joseph Davis, LeRays- ville, Penna. 50tf LEGHORNS CROSSES ROCKS REDS . MAYWOOD FARMS BABY CHIX from Bloodtested Breeders Every egg we hatch is laid on this farm. Our experience in hand- ling thousands of Chicks and Hens Z assures you of getting the best. A visit here will convince you that we have the quality chick you want. ° WILLIAM SCHLIEDER, Manager, Stillwater, Pa., R. D. 1. Columbia County. For Sale — Chicks — bloodtested, trap-nested pedigreed. Foundation stock purchased direct. Hanson Leg- horns, Bishop Rocks, Parmenter Custom hatching. Circular free Hen- ney’s Poultry Farm, Kunkle. Phone 410-R-10. 72 i chattels on the above premises. Reds. 250 to 300 egg blood lines. ' [Lean Bacon LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT SALE FOR TAXES BY VIRTUE OF AUTHORITY in me vested by the Act of Assembly in such case made and provided and sundry warrants to me issued by competent authority and to me directed, there will be exposed to PUBLIC SALE on Friday the 23rd day of Ferbruary, 1940, at 9 o'clock in the forenoon at premises situated at Glenview Terrace, Dallas R. F. D. 3 in the Township of Dallas, the following property to wit: House- hold Goods and all other goods and Seized and taken for non-pay- ment of 1938 Personal Tax in Dallas Township as the property of Jennie Shaver and to be sold for cash only. Herbert A. Lundy, Tax Collector Russell Davis, Deputy LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT SHERIFF'S SALE by competent authority and to me directed, there will be exposed to PUBLIC SALE on Friday the 23rd of February, 1940, at 9 o'clock in the forenoon at premises situated on Yeager avenue in the Township of Dallas, the following property to wit: Household goods and all other goods and chattels on the above premises. Seized and taken for non-pay- ment of 1938 Personal Tax in Dallas Township as the property of Her- bert and Carrie Githens and to be sold for cash only. Herbert A. Lundy, Tax Collector Russell Davis, Deputy LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of writ of Fi. Fa., No. 78 March Term, 1940, issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, there By virtue of writ of Fi. Fa., No. will be exposed to public sale on 77. March Term, 1940 issued out: Friday, March 15, 1940, at 10 o’clock |of the Court of Common Pleas of | A. M., in the Court Room No. 1, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, there | Court House, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., by Friday, March 15, 1940, in depth, and being lots numbered Estate of Alexander McLean, de- | | will be exposed to public sale on 'the Sheriff of Luzerne County pro- at 10: o'colck A. M. in the Court Room ! No. 1, Court House, Wilkes-Barre, | good garden, chicken coop. Cragg J. | Pennsylvania, by the Sheriff of; Pennsylvania, bounded as follows: 81 | Luzerne County, the property of Beginning at a point on the State | Cecile Simmons, being 80 feet in Highway in the Village of Mountain ‘front on Poplar Street by 122 feet | Top at the intersection of said State perty of Edward Carey and May Carey, his wife, situated in Fair- view Township, Luzerne County, Highway with Maple Street; thence 1227 and 229 of plot of lots of the | along Maple Street South 50 degrees 22 minutes East 150 feet to a corner ceased, in the 14th Ward of the !of lot No. 41; thence along lot No. City of Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne with a-two story double frame dwell- | ing house. 3 DALLAS C. SHOBERT, Sheriff. A. L. TURNER, Attorney. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT SALE FOR TAXES BY VIRTUE OF AUTHORITY in me vested by the Act of Assembly in such case made and provided and sundry warrants to me issued’ The Better Super Market LARE’S SUPER SERVICE 188 Main Street, Luzerne —SMOKED— ib. 15¢ Picnic Shoulders Ih. fic SLICES OF SMOKED For Sale—Coal from any breaker. Stove, furnace, fireplace wood. Ralph D. Lewis, 128 Shaver .Ave., iE For Sale—=D & H Anthracite Coal— egg, stove, nut, $7.75; pea, $6.25; buckwheat, $5.15; rice, $4.40. De- livered. Bag coal. Edwards Coal Co., Main St., Dallas. Phone Dallas 457-R-3 or 121. 2tf | Coal—Nut, stove, egg, $7.50; pea, $6.00; buckwheat, $4.90; rice, $4.15. Delivered at Shavertown. 25¢ per ton additional in Dallas. Wood $2.00 per load. Stewart J. Eustice, Dallas 460-R-9 or 288-R-8. For Sale—2 sets Dayton Computing Scales, National - Cash Register, Slicing Machine, McCasky System, Electric Refrigerator large enough for side of beef and vegetables. Many other store fixtures, priced cheap. Box W, Dallas Post 524 3tf For Sale—Rental Leases, For Sale signs, No Trespassing signs, Nu Hunting signs, For Rent signs, etu Dallas Post 406 Guaranteed rebuilt Ford V8 engine: 4,000 mile guarantee. $7 montk Stull Brothers, Kingston, Pa. 19tr We Buy Used Cars For Cash. Perry's Shavertown. Phomne Dallas 253-R-8. | —HAMS— 29¢ — CHICKENS — killed and dressed to your order. —VEAL-—- SHOULDER ih. 15¢ LEGS or LOIR Ib. i8¢c We Will Deliver In Forty Fort _CHOPS— LAMB — VEAL 19¢ We Will Deliver In Kingston Boiling or Stewing Beef—Lamb Luzerne. 26tf REUPHOLSTERING All work guaranteed, large selec- tion fabrics. Write or phone 7-5636. John Curtis, 33 S. Goodwin Ave., Kingston. 10tf MISCELLANEOUS For prompt removal of dead, old, disabled horses, cows, mules, 13-R-4. Phone charges paid. Service Station, 375 Bennett St., | phone Carl Crockett, Muhlenburg 40tf 9¢ We Will Deliver In Swoyersville \ | PORK SAUSAGE or HAMBURG 2 20 We Will Deliver In Luzerne —PORK— SPARE RIBS 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 SHOULDERS We Will Deliver In Trucksville BEST BONELESS ROASTS GREGG SHORT HAND BY MAIL! "BEGINNERS Eight Lessons, $5 Forty-Eight Lessons, $25 ADVANCED Five Lessons, $5 Forty-Eight Lessons, $26.50 TERMS GRACE H. CALLANAN 13 Clarke Street Danvers, Massachusetts | BEEF — VEAL 25¢ " Fresh COCONUT BUY FOR EASTER We Will Deliver In Shavertown 41 South 39 degrees 38 minutes ' County, Pennsylvania. All improved | West 50 feet to a corner of lot No. 39; thence along No. 39, 150 feet to the new State Highway; thence along said Highway North 39 de- grees 38 minutes East 50 feet to Former Beaumont Woman Dies At Luzerne Home The funeral of Mrs. A. J, Lord was held from her home, 202 Main Street, Luzerne, Wednesday after- noon at 2 o'clock. Rev. S. E. Davies, pastor of Bennett Presbyterian Church, officiated. Mrs. Lord was the former Martha DeRemer of Beaumont, Wyoming County. She was 65 years of age. She is survived by her husband, A. J. Lord, a daughter, Mrs. Herbert Porter; two sisters, Mrs. Elija Clark of Plymouth and Mrs. Al Bunn of Trucksville; and four brothers, Wal- ter DeRemer of Vernon, Louis De- Remer of East Dallas, Daniel De- Remer of Idetown and Harry De- Remer of New Jersey; two grand- children, Albert and Mildred Porter. Pall bearers were the following nephews of the deceased: Russell DeRemer, Louis DeRemer, Howard DeRemer, Walter DeRemer, Clarence Fine and Walter Fine. Interment was in Warden Cemetery, Dallas. / She is pretty and smart —and keeps up to date By reading those ads That run on page eight. the place of beginning. Being Lot No. 40 on plot of lots recorded in Map Book 3 page 138. Improved with a two story frame dwelling house, fruit trees and other out- buildings. DALLAS C. SHOBERT, Sheriff. A. L. Turner, Attorney Postscripts (Continued from Page 1) sion. It was the tiny incident of the upset glass. Somehow, in an eloquent move- ment of her left hand, Miss Colt tip- ped over an empty glass. We've known sheer agony in such mom- ents. When we upset a glass it frequently spoils our evening be- cause invariably, when we attempt to retrieve the glass we hit some- thing with our elbow, drop a fork on the floor and finally pull the tablecloth off, bringing the dishes crashing upon our neck. At least it seems that way. Maybe Miss Colt showed the slightest trace of a promise of a frown, but nothing more. She right- ed the glass quickly, apparently by some magic, never interrupting her conversation, her poise or her charm. It was a lovely thing to watch, and it was done so swiftly we almost missed it. It was good manners, but more than that it was the mind of a born actress, respond- ing to a minor emergency which threatened the attention of her audience. It was a beautiful thing to see. It was pure Barrymore. —— It will probably relieve Mr. A. S. Culbert to know that we have solved the mystery of the cryptic telegram which he received and relayed to us about a month ago. A solitary, dangling “What?” at the end of a seemingly mean- ingless string of words had us both on the ropes for a while. That telegram turned out to be an invitation to week-end with Warren and Gerry Williams in Philadelphia. They were one word under the limit, |- they explained, so they just tacked on a “what?” Last week-end we accepted the invitation and it turned out to be a grand reunion. Since he shook the coal dust from his heels about seven years ago, Warren, whose nickname, Duke, still clings to him, has been ac- cumulating journalistic background in the New York, Indianapolis, Chicago and Philadelphia bureaus of the Associated Press. When we kept our rendezvous with them in a down-town hotel it was the first time we had seen each other in four or five years. Both Warren and your Postscripter confessed to a need for sleep and were agreeing earnestly to get to bed early when Gerry rebelled, with several caustic remarks concerning the Saturday night manners of newspapermen. We compromised finally, though. Gerry consented to return to the apartment, after browbeating us in- to a promise to sit up, for a little while, anyway, to talk. By the time we had draped our- selves over the Williams’ best furni- ture a great many things were wait- ing to be told. Warren had some- thing complimentary to relate about “Hap” Ward, another Record re- porter now with the AP, and that would remind us to counter with a new yarn about John Heffernan. The words piled up and the hour hand kept slipping around. Once Garry lured us away from the sub- ject by reading some poetry and another time she cleverly manipu- lated us into a debate over Grant Wood's “Washington and Parson Weems’ but each time, with un- quenchable determination, we fought our way back to shop talk. It was 5 a. m., we suppose, when, in the midst of the Yankee-Penn- amite War (we had worked our way back that far) we glanced over at the love seat and discovered that the indomitable Gerry had fallen sound asleep. There was nothing to do but awaken her and coax her to scramble some eggs, in the hope that, seeing our obvious relish for her cookery, she would forgive us. ——— The reunion in Philadelphia was not the only loose end which was tied last week-end. Warren and Gerry had showed us a postcard lately received from Jim Jennings who, having fled the political caul- dron at Harrisburg, was vacationing in Miami. When we reached home there was a number to call, and when we rang it, it was Jim Jenn- ings, home from Miami. That seem- ed to conclude the late returns on most of our foot-loose friends. But there was one more item. Jim had a message for us from another out- post. He had brought home greet- ings from Joe and Jane Elicker, who left Dallas just before the New Year for Nassau in the British West Indies. Reconditioned thor- oughly—New tires— Mechanically perfect. $285 CITY CHEVROLET CO. — Phone 7-1171 — Market & Gates Sis., Kingston 1936 CHEVROLET DELUXE COACH — Exceptionally clean— DASH DIXON AMAZING OF ALL —HIS QRAGON'S SERVICES mmnmeeny. YUTPHE GUIDE HAS OFFERED HIS SERVICES AND MOST IN DASH'S CONQUEST OF THE LANG THE GIANT PET /T ACCEPT YOUR YOUR PET/ ib. 121¢ Ib. 10c Ib. 19¢! - OFFER FOR YOU AND THE. GUIDE ISSUES A SHARP COMMAND — OHOOWA // HE DRAGON KNEELS ND DOT, DASH AND THE GUIDE MOUNT THE PET BEAST 1” Th ¥ SURE BEATS ; ST . ~ \ Fa) \ a y Copyright SAFER TOO — WE 1 | HAVE GRAVE DANGERS | “TO FACE // 1 SEE ; vi 7 G ~7 3B LC Al §\WW/HAT NEW ADVENTUR DO THEY FACE ~.00 Lincoln Newspaper By Dean Carr IT'S MICH mia ats / YOUVE GOT TO TELL Buopy To STOP KICKING THINGS AROCUND WHEN HE GETS, na WN \\ \ Wi WV 1 MAD WN ~Z 2A 6 C7 ZA £8) = 7; © : § i wl) \ dl LITTLE. 3UDDY_ A re DEAL WN Am Fre TOE OF TRAST SHOE 1S COMPLETELY GONE —— AND THEY WERE BRAND NEW ONLY A WEEK Aco! WHAT HAVE You GOT Jo SAY FOR YOURSELF? ‘By Bruce Stuart THINK “THEY Ne Re | GRow ON TREES? SO Poon yoo REALZE mors {VT reared Mes. Jones NN THT SHoEs CosT WHAT © NN SAY SHE GAVE HER A MONEY ? Do You wanTeD | NNN HUSBAND Some : TO TASK You ABouLT= >> AH W) t ~ SHOE" TREES For HIS BIRTHDAY \\ [r 7. ~~ DETECTIVE . RILEY, SOON THEY REACH THE END OF THE NARROW TUNNEL, THE ORIENTAL PRESSES A BUTTON AND A PANEL SLIDES OPEN— THEY STEP INTO A SMALL ROOM 7 7 /) ( y £43 37 AV Opi Ze Vv WE WAIT HERE —MOST CELESTIAL ONE WILL 3 mr I~ / SIGNAL FOR YOUR DEPART IN HASTE — NOW LOWLY DETECTIVE RILEY I WILL RESENCE MAKE IT KNOWN TO FROM THESE ROOMS IS A LOUD SPEAKER, SET [Z IN THE WALL, SUDDENLY [ZZ BLARES FORTH IT'S METALLIC VOICE — ESCORT THE FOREIGNER INTO THE 7 THRONE ROOM, GUARD, THEN ¥ YOU THAT ESCAPE IMPOSSIBLE £ % RILEY IS LEFT ALONE IN THE THRONE ROOM THE SPOT, BUT I'LL WIGGLE MYSELF ouT [ANE SOMEHOW A SS AML RX VF SO—YOU FOREIGN DETECTIVE 2 DEVIL, YOU WOULD POKE YOUR LONG NOSE INTO MY AFFAIRS — NOW YOU WILL SEE HOW I DEA WITH MEDDLERS — BUT FIRST I WANT YOu TO SAMEET ANOTHER %/ STUPID AMERICAN WHO THOUGHT SHE CouLD STOP MY By Bob Dart 19 yEAR OLD IRENE KALMAR OF HUNGARY, 4 l THE TONGUE MOST 24 SHOP SIGNS / RUSSIAN A CHARACTERS... = TA LD In CONCESSION IN SHANGHAI, USED |S RUSSIAN, EVEN THE ARE IN “THE WIG WAS ONE OF MANKINDS FIRST INVENTIONS! PALEOGRAPHERS HAVE DISCOVERED TRA CES OF IT IN CAVE Queen lsaseLLA, .. OF SPAIN AND R BENEFACTRESS OF ® COLUMBUS, ONCE H BCASTED THAT 673 DURING HER EN- TIRE LIFETIME, SHE HAD TAKEN ONLY TWO BATHS, J HER SECOND 241: P=h RESULTED FROM AN TRS ACCIDENTAL FALL \ n INTO THE EBRO Aw RIVER! ™N 240 FISH FILLETS Ib. 8c TE HON- WHITING FISH 6 Ibs. 25¢ SoA GOOD CHEESE Ib. 18c Ellie — ALWAYS THE BEST EGGS — Eooay TOMATOES Ne. 2 can 5¢ Vices . KROUT 3 Ibs. 10c Times Tall Can ERIDAY ALASKA SALMON 12%c TE BUTTERINE 2 Ibs. 25¢ GOOD APPLES peck 25¢ BEST POTATOES pk. 29¢ > RS rom,