The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, January 03, 1941, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    IL
ti]
THE POST, FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 1941
PAGE SEVEN
TTT 3
Based on a story by
ADELA ROGERS ST. JOHNS
Serialized from
starring
5 DICK POWELL and JOAN BLONDELL ©
the Paramount Picture
SYNOPSIS
Allan MacNally, young suc-
cessful divorce lawyer, pays so
much attention to his business
that he begins to neglect his
beautiful wife, Jerry. When he
flies to Reno on an important
case, Jerry goes out with her
divorced sister, Wanda, and
two men friends, on a tour of
the night clubs. Allan returns
but Jerry is still out on the
town.
CHAPTER X
Jerry wandered wearily in as the
clock was striking four. She had
been in no hurry to get home, al-
though she couldn’t ever remember
being more bored in her life. Act-
ually, she was a little afraid of
going home. If she didn’t find Mac
there on her arrival, she didn’t
quite know what -she would do.
But she saw him, hunched uncom-
fortably in a chair in the living
room, dozing. He woke quickly,
rubbed his eyes and looked at her.
“Oh, hello,” Jerry said very
calmly.
She had determined that she
wouldn't lose her temper, that she
would hear him through without
interruption. They must have an
understanding, and make an earnest
attempt to get back to their old
basis, where they had loved each
4 ~
{
“You can go Brandon’s way, or you can go mine, but you can’t go both,”
she hear herself saying.
other so much, and when every-
thing had been glorious fun.
“So you've come home,” Mac said
sarcastically. “Well that’s very
very considerate of you, I must
say.”
His attitude did nothing to help
Jerry keep her self-made promise.
Here he has had me frantic all day,
she thought, and he turns on me as
though I'd done something wrong.
“Yes, I couldn't think of any
place else to go,” she said very
casually, still holding herself in
check. “Have you got a cigarette?”
“No, I haven’t got a cigarette,” he
answered wrathfully. “Where have
you been?”
“Hither and yon, hitting the high
spots,” Jerry said, knowing that she
was being irritating.
“Who with ?”’ he screamed at her.
“Wanda—" Jerry started.
“And a couple of boy friends,”
he finished. “I know that much!”
“Then why did you ask?” she
wanted to know.
“Why did I ask?” he said losing
all patience. ‘My wife's out all
night with a couple of men and all
she says is ‘Why did I ask?’ Well,
I'm asking, see? Who were they?”
“To tell you the truth,” Jerry
said, coldly furious, “I don’t even
remember their names. Look, my
little man,” she turned on him.
“Don’t give me that jealous husband
stuff. Suppose you tell me where
you've been since nine o'clock yes-
terday morning. Not that it’s of
any importance, but just as a mat-
ter of information.”
“Where have I been? What have
I been doing?” he asked, hurt at
the suggestion. “Working. What
I'm always doing—working. Work-
ing my fool head off so you can go
out dolled up like a sailor's bride
with strange men, That’s what I've
been doing,” he said with fine
righteousness.
“Oh, poo,” Jerry said with disgust.
‘I'm going to bed.”
}
“So that’s it. Your conscience
bothers you so you're ducking,” he
taunted her. “Well let me tell you
something . . .”
“Oh, no,” Jerry interrupted.
“You're through telling me any-
thing. You've been screaming
enough. Now I'm going to scream
for awhile. Ever since you wiped
the egg off your chin at breakfast
yesterday, I haven’t seen or heard
from you—and all the while I was
ninny enough to sit here praying
that nothing had happened to you,”
she continued furiously. “And the
only = difference between your
thoughtlessness yesterday and the
kind you dish out every other day
in the week is that yesterday hap-
pened to be my birthday, and it
made it difficult to alibi for you to
my relatives.”
Jerry knew that if either of them
caught their breath for a second
there was a chance of straighten-
ing this particular tangle out. But
there was so many tangles, and this
was just a small part of them. Be~
sides, she rationalized, he has acted
as though I'd given him a dirty deal.
If I give in now, it will only happen
a hundred. more times. This had
better be settled and my way, she
decided.
Mac was still indignant. The
same sort of thoughts were running
through his head. His conscience
was clear. He had been working
and hard, and what thanks did he
get. Nothing but complaints and
haggling question. He wanted more
than anything to take Jerry in his
arms and call off the cross words.
But he felt she had been completely
unjustified by attacking him.
“I remembered your birthday. I
even got a present,” he said in a
conciliatory way, bringing out a
small jeweler’s box from his pocket.
“I’m not asking for presents,”
Jerry said scornfully, not taking it
from him. “All I'm asking is just
a little ordinary consideration. Not
much. . . . Oh, what's the use?”
she said turning out into the hall.
Mac was after her, holding on to
her arm,
“Will you listen?” he pleaded.
“I'm trying to tell you I had to fly
to Reno in a hurry.”
“Did you ever hear of the tele-
phone?” she defied him. “It's a
great little invention. Or didn’t
you have a nickel? That’s a good
alibi?”
“Didn’t you get my message?” he
asked, surprised.
“What message ?”’ Jerry said.
“I told a porter in the airport to
phone you,” he started.
“With a phone in every drug
store, you tell a porter?” she quer-
ied. “Or you couldn’t have phoned
from Reno—if you went there? Or
wired? Don’t expect me to believe
such idotic lies?” she flared at him.
“You're going to hear me out,” he
told her. “You're going to get it
through your head that I did fly to
Reno because Brandon . ..”
They had finally arrived at the
root of the trouble. Mentioning
Brandon’s name was like waving a
red flag at Jerry. She had been
wanting to have this out with Mac
for a long while, have him leave
Brandon as he had promised to.
Then, she solemnly believed all
their differences and petty troubles
would be over. She wished that
they both weren't so angry, but as
long as the subject had come up,
she figured she might as well have
her say.
“Brandon ?” she flung at him. It’s
always Brandon, Brandon, Bran-
don. So he whistled and you went
to him ?”
“Will you get wise to yourself ?”
he said, livid with anger. “If it
hadn’t been for Brandon, we'd still
be in the shoe string class. We'd
still be squeezing nickels for coffee
and doughnuts.” y
“And that would suit me,” she
told him. “My grandparents lived
on a shoe string and they'll die on
a shoe string. But they’ll have each
other.” There|were tears in Jerry's
eyes now, and they weren't there
from anger. But Mac didn’t notice.
“When I'm their age, maybe a
shoestring will be okay,” he al-
lowed. “Right now, though, I'm
reaching for the champagne and
caviar! I'm going places.”
“Calling your shots, are you?”
she asked coldly.
“You bet I am,” he answered de-
fiantly. .
“Then I'm calling mine too,” she
said, quietly determined. “It looks
fas though you and I were up against
{ Brandon for keeps, and nothing I
{ can say will alter that. So we have
to face it.”
“What are you talking about?”
he wanted to know.
“You can go Brandon's way, or
you can go mine, but you can’t go
both,” she heard herself saying. “It’s
plain you don’t want to go mine.
That's it. Simply that.”
“Look here,” he shot back. “I've
worked hard and I'm on my way up.
I've sweated and I've broken my
neck to build a fifty thousand dol-
lar a year reputation. If you think
I'm going to toss that in the gutter
you're mistaken. That's as plain as
I can ever make it.”
“It’s very plain,” Jerry admitted,
as she walked upstairs. Crying
quietly, she packed a few things in
an over night case, and walking
past Mac, who said nothing and did
nothing to stop her, she went out
the door, and hailed a taxi to take
her to Wanda's.
(To be continued)
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
SHERIFF'S SALE
Friday, January 17, 1941, ten
o'clock A. M., Court Room No. 2,
Court House, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., ex-
ecution from Court of Common Pleas
of Luzerne County, Pa., real estate
of Mary Eckertt, situate in Ross
Township, Luzerne County, Penn-
sylvania, bounded and described as |
follows:
THE FIRST THEREOF: Beginning
at the southeast corner in line of!
lands late of Silas Nevel, formerly
lands of Joseph Nevel, and also in
line of land of one Beckhorn; thence
North 7% degrees East along lands
of said Beckhorn, thirty-five (35)
perches to a corner in line of lands
of W. Parry, now or late of J. E.
Snyder and formerly of Anthony
Benscoter; thence along lands of
said Snyder, North 65 degrees West |
one hundred thirty-three (133)
\perches to a corner in line of lands
of Mary Wandel, it being the east
line of the John Murray survey;
thence along the same South 25 de-
grees West, thirty-five and five-
tenths (35.5) perches to a corner in
line of land now or late of Silas
{Nevel; thence along lands of said
Nevel, South 65 degrees East one
hundred forty (140) perches to the
place of beginning; containing
thirty-four (34) acres and sixty-five
(65) perches of land be the same
more or less. Coal and other min-
erals excepted and reserved as in
former deeds in chain of title.
THE SECOND THEREOF: Begin-
ning at the South corner, a stake
and stone corner in line of Isaac;
Brown and Asa Nafus, late of Kazi- |
mierz Kolendowicz and Jacob Boock- |
us, now property of Mary Eckertt;
thence along lands of said Kazi-
miercz Kolendowicz and wife, North
65 degrees West, one hundred fifty-
one (151) perches to the line of
Andrew Sutliff, now or late of Will
Ortwine; thence along lands of the
said Will Ortwine, North 25 degrees |
East, thirty-five and five-tenths |
(35.5) perches; thence South 65 de-
grees East one hundred thirty-nine
(139) perches along lands of Henry
Long to land of A. Nafus, now Clark i
Benscoter, South 11% degrees West |
thirty-seven and one-half (37%)
perches to the place of beginning; |
containing thirty-one (31) acres of !
land, more or less.
Being the same premises conveyed |
to George Callender by deed dated
the 26th day of April, 1940, and re- |
corded in Deed Book No. 791, page |
524. The said George Callender
subsequently reconveyed said prem-
ises to Mary Eckertt by a deed not |
recorded.
IMPROVED with a farm house,
barn, outbuildings, fruit trees, fenc- |
es, etc. [
DALLAS C. SHOBERT,
Sheriff.
Patrick J. O'Connor and
J. Q. Creveling, |
J Attorneys.
Somewhere in the Mediterranean, south of Sardinia, an Italian battleship fires her broadside of heavy guns
during a recent battle with the British near the island. The Italian vessels roared—like this—and ran, seeking |
safety in port. Each side has put out conflicting claims of damage.
ITALIAN SHIPS ROAR—AND RUN
{
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
SHERIFF'S SALE
By virtue of writ of Fieri Facias
issued out of the Court of Common
Pleas of Luzerne County, I will ex-
pose for public sale for cash at Court
Room No. 2, Court House, Wilkes-
Barre, Pennsylvania, on Friday, the
17th day of January, A. D. 1941, at
10 o'clock A. M., the following de-
scribed real estate, to be sold to the
highest bidder:
All those certain pieces or parcels
of land situate in Franklin Township,
Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, de-
scribed as follows:
THE FIRST THEREOF:
BEGINNING at a point on the
North side of a public road leading
from the Orange Road to the Carv-
erton Church, said point being two
hundred twenty-two feet northeast-
erly from the dividing line between
lands now or formerly of Charles M.
Parrish and land now or formerly
of Frank Hiltosky; thence North
nineteen degrees twenty minutes
West, two hundred fifty-two and
forty one-hundredths feet to a point
in the dividing line between lands
now or formerly of Charles M. Par-
rish and lands now or formerly of
Robert M. Walp; thence along said
dividing line North seventy-one de-
grees twenty-five minutes East, one
hundred sixty-eight feet to a point;
thence South nineteen degrees
twenty minutes East, two hundred
eighty-nine and ninety one-hun-
dredths feet to a point in the public
road aforesaid; thence along said
public road South eighty-four de-
grees West one hundred sixty-eight
feet to the place of BEGINNING.
Containing forty-five thousand five
hundred fifty-three square feet of
land be the same more or less.
IMPROVED with a frame dwell-
ing house, garages, outbuildings,
fruit trees and other improvements
thereon.
THE SECOND THEREOF:
BEGINNING at a point in the
northerly side of the public road
leading from the Orange Road to
the Carverton Church, said point be-
ing in the easterly line of lands now
or late of Frank Hiltosky; thence
in a northwesterly direction along
lands of the said Frank Hiltosky
two hundred sixty-five feet more or
less to a point in line of lands of
Robert H. Walp; thence in a north-
easterly direction along line of lands
of the said Robert H. Walp two hun-
dred twenty-two feet, more or less,
to a point in line of lands of Lewis
H. Dixon, et al., thence in a south-
easterly direction along lands of the
said Lewis H. Dixon, et al, two
hundred fifty-nine feet, more or less,
to the northerly side of the pub-
lic road aforesaid, and thence along
the aforesaid road in a southwester-
ly direction two hundred twenty-
two feet, more or less, to the place
of beginning.
THE THIRD THEREOF:
BEGINNING at a point in the
northerly side of the public road
leading from the Orange Road to
the Carverton Church, said point
being in the easterly line of lands
of Lewis H. Dixon, et al., thence in
a northwesterly direction along lands
of the said Lewis H. Dixon, et al.,
two hundred fifty-nine feet more or
less to a point in line of lands of
Robert H. Walp; and thence in
a northeasterly direction along lands
| of the said Robert H. Walp one hun-
dred fifty-three feet to the line of
a reserved road leading from the
public road aforesaid to lands of the
said Robert H. Walp; thence in a
southeasterly direction along the
easterly line of the said reserved
road two hundred seventy-one feet
more or less, to a point in the north-
erly line of the aforesaid public
road, and thence along the north-
| erly line of the aforesaid public
road, in a southwesterly direction,
one hundred fifty-three feet, more
or less to the place of beginning.
FOURTH THEREOF:
BEGINNING at a point in line of
land of Robert Bachman, said point
being on line of land now or late of
William Vosburg, and said Robert
Bachman, and being the south-
easterly corner of a parcel of land
purchased by said Bachman from
John J. Williams, August 7, 1929,
and recorded in Deed Book No. 686,
| page 328. Thence fromjsaid corner
along line of land of said Bachman
North 32 degrees 30 nuanutes West
three hundred seventy-three and
eight-tenths feet, more or less to a
point in the center line of a public
road; thence along the center line
of said public road North 70 de-
grees 30 minutes East a distance of
two hundred feet, more or less, to
a point in the center line of said
public road, thence South 32 de-
grees 30 minutes East a distance of
three hundred thirty-four feet more
or less to a point in line of land
now or late of William Vosburg,
thence South 56 degrees West along
line of land now or late of said Wil-
liam Vosburg, a distance of one hun-
dred ninety-six feet more or less to
the place of beginning.
Improved with a frame dwelling
house, outbuilding, fruit trees, etc.
thereon.
THE FIFTH THEREOF:
BEGINNING at a corner in line of
lands of Grace Atherton and Wil-
liam Vosburg, said point being dis-
tant three hundred forty-five and
four one-hundredths feet more or
less from a corner of Robert Bach-
man plot and the farm known as
the Jonas Frantz farm, measured
along the course North 56 degrees
East between said Robert Bachman
and William Vosburg lands, thence
from said corner, which is place of
beginning, North 32 degrees 30 min-
utes West three hundred thirty-four
feet more or less to the center line
of a township road, thence North
seventy degrees 34 minutes East
along the center of said township
road a distance of fifty feet more
or less, thence South 32 degrees 30
minutes East three hundred seven
feet, more or less to a corner, thence
South 56 degrees West fifty feet
more or less to the place of begin-
ning.
Taken into execution and sold at
the suit of Edward G. Chapin to the
use of Allied Building Credits, Inc.,
against Lewis H. Dixon and Harold
J. Dixon.
DALLAS C. SHOBERT, Sheriff.
George L. Fenner, Sr.,
George L. Fenner, Jr.
SHERIFF'S SALE
FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1941,
AT 10 A. M.
By virtue of a writ of Fi Fa No.
27, January Term, 1941, issued out
of the Court of Common Pleas of
Luzerne County, tos me directed,
there will be exposed to public sale
by vendue to the highest and best
bidders, for cash, in Court Room
No 2, Court House, in the City of
Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, on Friday, the 10th
day of January, 1941, 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:-
All that certain piece, parcel or
tract of land situate in the Town-
ship of Buck, Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, bounded and describ-
ed as follows, to wit: Beginning at
a point in the westerly line of the
Bellas Tract and on the northerly
line of the White Haven Road,
thence along the northerly line of
the said road in a southwesterly
course a distance of seven hundred
ninety-two (792) feet to a point; |
thence North 5 degrees East a dis-
tance of four hundred forty (440)
feet to a point; thence in a north-
easterly direction and parallel to the
northerly line of said road a dis-
tance of seven hundred ninety-two
(792) feet to a point in the west-
erly line of the Bellas Tract; thence
by said line South 5 degrees West a
distance of four hundred forty (440)
feet to a point, the place of begin-
ning. Containing eight acres, strict
measure.
Improved with a frame cottage
and other out-huildings.
Seized and taken into execution
at the suit of W. O. Washburn vs.
Martin J. Healey and Julia A, Hea-
ley, and will be sold by
DALLAS C. SHOBERT, Sheriff.
Neil Chrisman, Atty.
ESTATE OF NELLIE DURKIN or
DURKAN, deceased. Letters of Ad-
ministration in the above Estate
having been granted to the under-
signed, all persons indebted to the
said Estate are requested to make
payments and those having claims
or demands to present the same,
without delay, to Joseph Durkan,
Administrator, 26 Main Street, Ink-
erman, Pa., or Al. J. Kane, Attorney,
1008-9-10 Brooks Bldg. Wilkes-
Barre, Pa.
SHERIFF'S SALE
By virtue of writ of Fi. Fa. No.
45, January Term, 1941, issued out!
of the Court of Common Pleas of
Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, there
will be exposed to public sale on Fri-
day, January 17th, 1941, at 10:00
A. M., in Court Room Number Two,
Court House, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsyl-
vania, the property of A. George
Prater on Powell Avenue, now East
Franklin Street, in Shavertown, in
the Township of Kingston, Pennsyl-
vania, the same being a lot of land
100 feet in width by approximately
130 feet in depth, being lots Nos.
15 and 16 on plot of lots known as
“Ferguson Heights” recorded in Map
Book 2, page 384, particularly de-
scribed in two deeds of record in
the Recorder of Deeds office of Lu-
zerne County, one in Deed Book
646, page 563 and the other in Deed
Book 656, page 444. Improved with
a 2% story frame dwelling and ga-
rage.
DALLAS C. SHOBERT, Sheriff.
H. Monroe Houtz, Atty.
SHERIFF'S SALE
FRIDAY, JANUARY 1%, 1941,
AT 10 A. M.
| By virtue of a writ of Fi Fa No.
40, January Term, 1941, 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.
2, Court House, in the City of
Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, on Friday, the 17th
day of January, 1941, 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:
ALL that certain lot, piece or par-
cel of land, situate lying and being
in the City of Wilkes-Barre, County
of Luzerne and State of Pennsyl-
vania, bounded and described as fol-
lows, to wit:
BEGINNING at a corner of the lot
No. 33 and McLean Street; thence
along said McLean Street 20 feet to
a corner on McLean Street and
Beech Streets; thence along said
Beech Street 127.45 feet to a corner
of lot No. 29; thence along lots Nos.
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
SHERIFF'S SALE
FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1941,
AT 10 A. M.
Court Room No. 2, Court House,
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, execu-
tion from Court of Common Pleas of
Luzerne County, Pa. real estate of
Thomas Harvey, situate in the
Township of Plains, Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, bounded and describ-
ed as follows:
BEGINNING at a corner on the
easterly side of Main Street, for-
merly Main Road, running from
Wilkes-Barre to Pittston, in the
center line of East Charles Street;
thence along the easterly line of
Main Street North 23 degrees 5
minutes East nine and fifty-seven
one-hundredths (9.57) feet to the
intersection of the northerly line
of East Charles Street with the east-
erly line of Main Street, and at a
corner of Lot No. 1 on plot of lots
of Thomas Harvey; thence North
23 degrees 5 minutes East thirty-
eight and one one-hundredth
(38.01) feet to line of Lot No. 2;
thence along the line of Lot No. 2,
fronting on Main Street, North 23
degrees 5 minutes East seven and
twelve one-hundredths (7.12) feet;
thence North 25 degrees 49 minutes
East twenty and eighty-eight one-
hundredths (20.88) feet along Lot
No. 2, and thirty-three and forty-
two one-hundredths (33.42) feet
along Lot No. 3 to a corner of land
of Patrick Kinney Estate; thence
South 57 degrees 07 minutes East
seventy and ninety-five one-hun-
dredths (70.95) feet to a corner;
thence North 31 degrees 12 minutes
East thirty-five and twenty-seven
one-hundredths (40.30) feet along
Lot No. 5, and forty and thirty
one-hundredths (40.30( feet along
Lot No. 4 to corner on line of Pat-
‘rick Kinney Estate; thence South
58 degrees 50% minutes East two
hundred forty-four and eighty-four
one-hundredths (244.84) feet to the
westerly corner of Lot No. 13 at its
intersection with the land formerly
of Patrick Kinney Estate; thence
along the line common to Lots Nos.
12 and 13 on said plot, South 24 de-
grees 09 minutes West one hundred
thirty-four and two one-hundredths
(134.02) feet to the northerly line of
East Charles Street; thence con-
tinuing to the center of East Charles
Street nine and fifty-seven one-
hundredths (9.57) feet; thence
along the center line of East Charles
Street North 65 degrees 51 minutes
West three hundred twenty-one and
two one-hundredths (321.02) feet to
the place of beginning.
Excepting and reserving, how-
ever, for public use, so much of said
land as is embraced within the lines
of East Charles Street.
Excepting and reserving also out
of said land Lot No. 5 as hereto-
fore conveyed to Margaret R. Mann-
ing, as shown on said plot of
Thomas Harvey, recorded in Map
Book No. 395, page 46.
Being part of the same premises
conveyed to Thomas Harvey by deed
recorded in Deed Book No. 430, page
189, and by deed recorded in Deed
Book No, 395, page 46,
Improved with a two-story frame
dwelling, known as tenement No.
149 South Main Street, Plains,
Pennsylvania, and another two-story
frame dwelling, known as tenement
“A” on the north side of Ruth Ave-
nue, Plains, Pennsylvania, and
greenhouse and appurtenances and
appliances, out-buildings, etc.
DALLAS C. SHOBERT, Sheriff.
Patrick J. O'Connor, Atty.
SHERIFF'S SALE
FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1941,
AT 10 A. M.
By virtue of a writ of Levari
29 and 30, 56.91 feet to a corner of
lot No. 33; thence along lot No. 33,
122 feet to the place of beginning. |
Containing two thousand four hun-
dred and eighty-four (2484) square
feet of land more or less. Being lot
No. 31 on plot of lots of the Estate
of Alexander McLean, deceased, in
the Fourteenth Ward of the City of
Wilkes-Barre, aforesaid, and record-
ed in the office of the Clerk of Or-
phans’ Court of Luzerne County,
aforesaid in Partition Sales Doce)
No. 7, Page 414.
BEING same premises conveyed
to Frank Rowker and Mary Rowker,
mortgagors, by deed dated June 29,
1929, recorded in Deed Book 686,
Page 201, and conveyed by said
mortgagors by deed dated Decem-
ber 3, 1929, recorded in Deed Book
No. 688, Page 588 to Joseph Grub-
lunas and Mary Grublunas, his wife,
terre tenants.
Improved with a two story frame
building designated as No. 1 McLean
Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., also
double garage, fences and fruit
trees.
Seized and taken into execution
at the suit of Michalena Kral vs.
Frank Rowker and Mary Rowker,
with notice to Joseph Greblunas and |
Mary Greblunas, terre tenants, and |
will be sold by
DALLAS C. SHOBERT, Sheriff.
Felix W. Bolowicz, Atty.
NOTICE
LUZERNE COUNTY, ss:
In the Court of Common Pleas of
Luzerne County, No. 2433 October
Term, 1940. Libel in divorce a
vinculo matrimonii. Patrick Di-
Muro v. Mildred DiMuro: To Mil-
dred DiMuro: Take notice that an
alias subpoena in divorce having
been returned by the Sheriff of
Luzerne County that you cannot be
found in Luzerne County, you are
hereby notified and directed to ap-
pear before the said Court on Mon-
day January 13, 1941 at 10 o'clock
a. m. to answer the complaint in
the above case.
DALLAS C. SHOBERT, Sheriff.
Donald C. Coughlin, Atty. i
Facias-sur Mortgage No. 78, Dec-
ember, 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. 2, Court
House, in the City of Wilkes-Barre,
Luzerne County Pennsylvania, on
Friday, the 10th day of January,
1941, at ten o'clock in the forenoon
of the said day, all the right, title,
and interest of the described lot,
piece, or parcel of land, viz:
The surface of all that certain
lot, piece or parcel of land, situated
in the Tenth Ward of the City of
Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, bounded and describ-
ed as follows, to wit: Beginning at
a point on the northwesterly side of
{Charles Street, formerly Catherine
Street, in line of lot No, 16, on the
plot of lots herinafter mentioned,
and lands of John C. Reinig; thence
North 38 degrees 33 minutes West
seventy-three (73) feet to line of
lands of Mallery Place Land Com-
pany; thence North 43 degrees 03
minutes East thirty and sixth-five
one-hundredths (30.65) feet to line
of lands of Edwin Cobleigh; thence
South 38 degrees 33 minutes East,
seventy-five (75) feet to line of
i Charles Street aforesaid; and thence
along said Street, South 51 degrees
27 minutes West, thirty (30) feet to
the place of beginning. Improved
with a three story residence and
other outbuildings.
Seized and taken into execution
at the suit of The Home for Home-
less Women vs. W. S. Casterlin,
May S. Casterlin, Walter Sterling
Casterlin and Asa N. Casterlin, and
will be sold by
DALLAS C. SHOBERT, Sheriff.
| Neil Christman, Atty.
LARGEST TREE IN STATE
The largest tree in Pennsylvania
is a sycamore located on the Grant
Noll farm on the Marietta Pike out-
side Lancaster. It is about 250 years
old, 102 feet tall, 27% feet in cir-
cumference and the branches ex-
tend from 70 to 80 feet.