a I ® entertained at a family dinner Wednesday evening, marking her ninetieth birthday. Mrs. Clyde Eggleston of Vernon was the host- ess for her mother, and Mr. and Mrs. Arch Austin of Beaumont, guests. Mrs. Austin is not quite so vigor- ous now as she was when she ven- tured into the wilds of Canada at the age of seventy-seven to fish with her son Arch in the wilder- ness, but she still reads without her glasses, and remembers with delight that she once drove the fastest horses ever seen in these parts. She was born on what was once Ryman’s Pond, now Lake Catalpa. Her forebears on the Ryman side came from Prussia at about the time of the Revolution, on the Spencer side from England earlier in the century. Peter and Richard, grandfather and father, were tre- mendously tall’ men, capable of dealing with the virgin forest as pioneer timbermen. ; Christened Frances Adelaide Ry- man, little Addie attended a one- room school near Demunds, and later the Beaumont Academy. Living on the Penn Kirkendall farm in Kunkle, now the Morrett place, for many years before she and her husband William bought the present farm in Plattsburg, Mrs. Austin learned how to cope with necessity in days when cars were unknown and doctors were un- available in time of emergency. When her elder son, E. Ray Austin, was nearly drowned in the pond, it was Mrs. Austin who rolled him on a barrel, working over him for hours after his cousin Lawrence pulled him to shore. Lawrence won a Carnegie medal and four years at Ames College for his exploit. Mrs. Austin had the satisfaction of seeing her son grow up to be an educator, superintendent of Laurel Run Schools for thirty-five years before his death in January, 1954. The younger son, Arch, is super- vising principal of Monroe Town- ship schools, the subject of a Know-Your-Neighbor column in the Dallas Post three years ago. William Austin died in 1927, but Mrs. Austin still lives on the place in Plattsburg, though tenants now work the farm. Charles J. Glasser, 83, Lies At Mt. Greenwood Charles J. Glasser, native of Wilkes-Barre and former resident of Dallas, was buried in Mt. Greenwood Cemetery Wednesday afternoon, ser- vices conducted by Rev. William Heapps. Mr. Glasser, 83, died Monday morning lat the Ransom Home, where he had been a patient since June, 1953. He was a carpenter by trade, a member of Sons of Veterans of G. A. R., Wilkes-Barre. A vet- eran of the Spanish-American War, he played in the fife and drum corps of the old Alexander Ninth Regi- ment Band. : Junior Play Tonight In Lehman Auditorium Marcia Elston and Grace Major take the lead in tonight's presenta- tion of “Stranger in the Night,” at Lehman-Jackson- Ross High School auditorium. Mrs. Jule Hoover di- rects the Junior play. Legal— SHERIFF SALE FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1954 At 10 o'clock A.M. By virtue of a writ of Alias Fi. Fa No. 16 May Term 1954, issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County, to me directed, there will be exposed to public sale by vendue or outcry to the highest and best bidders, for cash, in Court Room No. 1, Court House, in the City of Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne Coun- ty, Pennsylvania, on Friday, April 23, 1954, at 10 o'clock in the fore- noon of the said day, all the right, title and interest of the defendants in and to ALL those certain pieces or par- cels of land situate, lying and be- ing in the Borough of Dallas, Lu- zerne County, Pennsylvania, bound- ed and described as follows, to wit: THE FIRST THEREOF: Begin- ning at the intersection of Eliza- beth Street and the easterly side of Charles Street as shown on plot of lots of Joseph and Elizabeth Wallo in Map Book 2, page 309 in the Recorder of Deeds Office in and for Luzerne County; thence along Charles Street, North 62 degrees 45 minutes East, two hundred forty (240) feet to a point at the inter- section of said Charles Street with Park Street; thence along said Park Street, South 27 degrees 15 min- utes East, one hundred fifty (150) feet to a point in other lands now or late of said Joseph and Eliza- beth Wallo; thence along the same, and along the rear line of lots 30, 31, 32, 33, and 34, South 62 de- grees 45 minutes West, two hun- dred forty (240) feet to a point on Elizabeth Street aforesaid; thence North 27 degrees 15 minutes West, along said Elizabeth Street, one hundred fifty (150) feet to a point, the place of beginning. BEING lots 30, 31, 32, 33, and 34 as shown on the aforesaid map. Being lots 30 and 31 as conveyed to John J. Tibus, et ux. by Walter Kolankowski, et ux. by deed dated May 5, 1942, and recorded in Re- corder of Deeds Office in Deed Book 815, page 539. Being lot 32 as conveyed to John J. Tibus, et ux. by deed of Peter V. McLaughlin, et ux. dated May 20, 1946, and re- corded in Recorder of Deeds Office in Deed Book 989, page 287. Being lot No. 33 as conveyed to John J. Tibus, et ux. by two (2) deeds, one dated May 13, 1946, from Camilla A. Burke and recorded in Deed Book 989, page 280, and the other dated May 29, 1946, from Joseph and Elizabeth Wallo and recorded in Deed Book 879, page 522. Being lot No. 34 as conveyed by deed of Camilla Burke, et al. to John J. Tibus et ux. by deed dated May 13, 1946. THE SECOND THEREOF: Begin- ning at a point on the northeast- erly side of State Highway Route No. 309, said point being in line of lands now or late of Grace P. Rich- ardson; thence along said Richard- son land, North 63 degrees 40 min- utes East, one hundred seventy six (176) feet to a corner in line of the right of way of the Lehigh Val- ley Railroad Company; thence along said right of way line, South 28 degrees 32 minutes East, seventy (70) feet to a corner; thence South 63 degrees 40 minutes West, sixty two and eight tenths (62.8) feet to a corner; thence South 36 degrees 35 minutes East, ten (10) feet to a corner in line of other lands of Shiber; thence along said Shiber lands, South 63 degrees 40 minutes West, seventy seven (77) feet more or less to a corner on the north- easterly side of the State Highway; thence along said State Highway on a curve to the right with a radius of 795.52 feet, eighty (80) feet more or less to the place of be- ginning. BEING the same premises as con- veyed by deed of Raymond F. Shi- ber, et ux. dated July 12, 1948, and recorded in Deed Book 991, page 457, in the Recorder of Deeds Office in and for Luzerne County. THE THIRD THEREOF: Beginning at a corner of land late of Ray Shi- ber on the northerly side of the State Highway leading from Dallas to Harveys Lake, forty (40) feet from the center line thereof; thence along the line of land late of Ray Shiber, the following three courses and distances: 1st. North 68 degrees 18 minutes East, eighty five and six tenths (85.6) feet; thence 2nd. North 36 degrees 35 minutes West, ten (10) feet; thence 3rd. North 63 degrees 40 minutes East, sixty two and eight tenths (62.8) feet to a corner in the right of way of Bow- man’s Creek Branch of the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company, thirty (30) feet measured at right angles from the center of the main track; thence along said railroad right of way on a curve to the left, with a radius of 440.28 feet, a chord course of South 38 degrees 32 minutes East, and a distance of one hun- dred fifty three and seven tenths (153.7) feet to a corner thirty (30) feet measured at right angles from the center line of the track; thence South 53 degrees 55 minutes West, sixty four and three tenths (64.3) feet to the northerly side of the State Highway aforesaid, and forty (40) feet from the center line there- of; thence along the northerly side of said highway on a curve to the right with a chord course of North 62 degrees 20 minutes West, and a distance of one hundred ninety five (195) feet to the place of begin- ning. BEING the same premises as con- veyed by deed of Raymond F. Shi- ber, et ux. executed, delivered and duly recorded. Seized and taken into execution at the suit of John Prokopchak vs. Mary M. Tibus or Mary J. Tibus and John J. Tibus and will be sold by ROBERT SHERROCK, Sheriff J. S. RUSSIN, Attorney MAIN HIGHWAY SHAVERTOWN GRAB $ A BAG FOR A Not one bag with value less than $1.00. Others up to $25. MANY ITEMS IN EACH BAG Jewelry ® Cuff Links Gift ltems © Wallets Watches ® Earrings é Clocks Lighters (ALL SALES FINAL) $1.00 in our drawing. MAIN STREET DALLAS use Electric Ranges. LUZERNE E “THE UNI You will be amazed 22 (COUNT THEM) Many of them in our PHONE Dallas 4-360 . Box 127, Dallas