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Lots 7, 8, 9, 10, 17, 18, 19 and of Morton’s addition to Lakeland, Polk county, Florida, which said plan of survey of the said ad- dition is recorded in book “Q,” Page 79 of . the public records of Polk county, Florida, be and they are hereby required to appear to the bill of complaint filed in said cause on Unable to wol-k".\lmmn, the 3rd day of August, 1914, other- ’ {wise the allegations of the said bill will be [hat Helped Her. 14. 15, 16, S AS BABY | S0 se lm\..n as confessed hv the defendants so fail- ing to appear. It is further ordered that this order be pub- | lished nl‘:(‘k‘ a week for twelve (12) consecu- | tive weeks in the Lakeland Evening Telegramn, thw'l Va._Mls.“[Am;a I‘n m-‘\l\"i.]m[wrlof :o‘m'{':\l circulation p\ublishfld |SP ace' says: suf- 54 county and >(l_t(£‘, Rt Done and ordered this 9th day of May, A s with an awful pain in 'p 1914, in Bartow, Florida. . 5 caused from womanly J. A. JOHNSON (Seal.) yctored lots for it, but withe | ..o Clerk Clreutt Court. suffered so very much, | Solicitors for Complainants, wn in mind, and as help= | sTATE OF FLORIDA 1 was in the worst kind COUNTY OF POLK unable to do any work. i Iuv;‘vh}\l’ certify that the above is a true » 34 copy of the original order of publicatic ade g .Cardul, fhe woma_r's publication made relief from the very first it in said cause and filed in my office at Bartow, | Florida, the 9th day of May, 1914. Witness my hand a official ses 9 r i -%go‘g&efife""}smfi’gg e v:;; .\13?\'1‘;\.“?).[ ]IQVT:.(“I&.HI eal this 9th Ith . J. A, JOHNSON, (Senl) ;:grs ye?rslgld, ut feel ag 2520 Clerk c,rm': o(‘lvurt. | en only 16. — e l‘y saved me from losing eel it my duty to speak | 2525252525252525252525252525252525 | tw WS OLD SWEETHEART | | 7 "{3;1& wish 1 had some power . Suffering women, and could . gow the good it would do la from any of the ailments en, it will certainly be hile to give Cardui a trial, elping weak women for ears, and will help you, By FRANK FILSON. | | it Uncle Eustace seemed to be as old | as the hills. He was about forty-five, | 1 suppose, but to a boy of twelve that | {is an immense age. He was very| ruddy, very gray and very clean-look- ' ing, and slow and deliberate in all his | movements. He used to come to sxwud'\ | a week with us three or four times a year. Uncle Eustace was papa's| brother. “Poor old Eustace,” papa used to say, after he was gone, and there was a sort of affectionate contempt in his voice. “He'll never amouut to any- thing.” “lI don't know, my dear,” answered mo.lher. ‘He's getting along very|h nicely now as bookkeeper the | | Stearns-Rabbit company.” “Twenty dollars a week as book- keeper,” answered papa, in contempt. “But, my dear, many respectable people only earn twenty dollars a week. You mustn't think everybody can be like you, entering a broker's office as an office boy and rising to a | salary of fifteen thousand at forty.” “I must admit the old man hasn't treated Eustace any too well,” said papa. I told Miss Penton that Uncle Eus- tace was coming to visit us for Easter. Miss Penton seemed almost as old as Uncle Eustace. She was a sort of fix- ol tanooga Medicine Co., Ladies’ JChattancoga, Tenn., for Special case and 64-page book, "Home n plain wrapper. N.C. 121 ne ot t more’s Leading House, ' S. Charles St. W ti a ORS ATTRIBUTE fal diseases to the house g a germ distributor Ic ‘EXTERMINATE dbugs, Roaches, Ants, |]ture in our town, too. She had taught — leas, Spiders and all || school since she was a girl, and she ] 1 ” Insects. Precents the || bad known Uncle Eustace and papa ?01' contagious diseases, since they were boys. Miss Penton always encouraged me to tell her about my family, but somehow she never came to visit us, though papa always took off his hat to her when they met. | And then a very strange thing hap- pened. Grandfather Mortlock, papa's bath ang toilet rooms, gte pipes, garbage pails, ) 75¢; 1-2 Gallons, $1.35; t $2.50; Sprayer, 50¢ s Used With a Sprayer away New York. I had never seen ! him. He had got sort of crabby when | ¢ he grew old, and didn't care about peo- ple. It was said that Uncle Eustace had embittered his life when he was a boy by declining to go into his busi ness, and therefore grandfather had | cut him off with a dollar. Uncle Eus- | tace had just drifted through life. forty he was a broken man. Then mm': CHEMICAL CO0. , & Tampa, Fla, For li\le by Henley & Henley’s — Drug me, Lakelanq Seed Co., Land Co. US YOUR - ORDERS ANGLES AND ALL SHAPES U BOILER PLATE TANK STEEL STRUCTURAL IRON WORK OF ALL t papa got him a pdsition with the 1 ( } [ d[ KINDS TRUSS RODS : STAY BOLTS VGALVANIZED S SCOPPER AND P2INC SHEETS OAK CYPRESS MAHOGANY 'I-' CHERRY ¢ WHITE PINE \ and all HARD WOOD . LAUNCHES SKIFFS DORIES “What Does Your Uncle Eustace Look BUILT Like Now?” T()}y((;:kll;l'{‘li { Stearns-Rabbitt p(\oplsls: anf] he hng gouiivg stuck there and was “iaking good. AND But, as papa would say, how can any- | TANKS one “make good” at forty-five? | BUILT Well, Grandfather Mortlock died, | TO ORDER about two weeks before Easter. You ., Competent force of workmen i road work at all for mind of a child. I cried all day, al- | times ] though I had never seen the old man. | ™ Then, about flve evenings later, I "l -2 eve“s 0 heard papa talking about the will ¢ ) E “Elizabeth,” he said to mother, J.cksonV]"C) Fla_ “what do you think? The old man | has left Eustace a cool hundred thou- sand dollars, and only fifty thousand apiece to the rest of us.” | “You don't envy him, my dear?” | asked mother, slipping her hand into kis “Envy him? father. “Dear old thought the old man ia penny. I guess That ou to year to him.” 1 told and she was so pleased that I alo NOTICE I'm heartily glad,” said Eustace! Nobody would leave he'll be ve thousand a mean fi Miss Penton about th thought she was crying ins laughing. “What does your Uncle Eustace | look like now?” she asked. “Has he the same black, curly hair that he had s, ' when he was a bo oy \“dv-' \'{ g (_ | “Why—haven't you seen him sincs, Morton, Mrs. Mary " M Logan and F. G, Pitts and anl oth. | Miss Penton?” I asked her. interested or claiming am interest ing described property,| to-wit: leave her. beginning to grow fat. Eustace?” asked father. you invest it in a good mortgage or:' two? You know you never had much busi- | | ness sense.” | Eustace, such as I've always longed for—say‘ shiow visitors round v Te and slower; 1 whisper, “I don't feel well. £0 home."” father, died in his big house in far- Eustace a good chap. side.” sight At | ton and tell her e { when I heard voice | where Miss Penten used to sit to pre- | i | Unele Eustace and Mi ng next to each other, each looking | at the opposite wall know how such a thing affects the Miss Penton shook her head, and mething seemed to whisper to me to So I did. i At Easter Uncle Eustace came to e us. He looked just the same as ever, except that he was wearing a new suit of clothes and a brand-new overcoat. His hair was grayer than had been the last time, and he was “I tell you, Jim,” he said to father, | “it's a mighty fine thing for me to| have that money. get played out. —it’s time 1 took life easy.” 1 was beginning to I'm an old fellow now ‘ | “What are you going to do with it, | “Why don't | I'll take care of it, if you like “I've been thinking,” said Uncle “about a niee little farm, | venty-five thousand dollars’ worth of nd, and the rest—" “Eustace, why ed mother, looking at uncle sort of way Wiy, who would have an old fel- w like me?" he asked. ‘You are not old, Eustace; you are said mother an- i | don't you get mar- | | t in your prime,” “I¢ you think cf yourself as an | | ? | d man you will really be old.” | SPam. d Uncle Eustace to me xt morning, “when does your school open again?" 1 told him, and he seemed quite 1t what they taught us nowadays. He iid there had been a great change in 1e educational system since he was a boy, and he was interested in school | ork He also wanted to see the buildings and the way they were ven lated. “Why, ave to i Uncle Eustace, you won't it till school opens,” I told iss Penton is always glad to I'll ask her.” “No! Here, Wiit a minute!” nele Kustace shouted, but I was al- sady running down the street ahead 1. You: 1 had always wanted Penton to meet Uncle Eustace bout whom T had told her so much, nd this seemed like a heaven-sent op- ortunity When I reached Miss Penton's house im Fom! ce they told me she was in the school, yoking over some holiday work, so I went back and explained to Uncle Kustace. there,” I said to him. “l guess we can go straight “All right, Tom,” he answered. But when we got near the school house 'nele Eustace began to walk slower 1til he fairly lagged. “Tom,” he said in a hoarse sort of I think I'll “Oh, Uncle Eustace!" I exclaimed “1 did want you to meet Miss Pen- on."” “T tell you what, my boy,” said Uncle “You run home and get me my glasses. I've got nervous head- \che from not wearing them. That's I'll wait for you out- 1 ran home as fast as I could and got he glasses, but when 1 reached the school house Uncle Eustace wasn't in So 1 went in to find Miss Pen- was coming. I had barely stepped inside the hall in the little room and when I got to the strangest noise. | are the lessons heard the the loor | 1wadn't opened door before and Miss Penton's wce was redder than 1 had ever scer t before “Iere vour glasses, Uncle Eustace,” 1 suid “Oh, darn!" said Uncle stace, | you run back with th ir mother I'm going to bring 1e for dinner.” ent out thout saying anything 0 I had kuown all the be eethearts twenty G Chapman.) SALT WATER MORE BUOYANT Considerable Difference Between the Fresh Liguid of the Rivers and That of the Oceans. A Chinese lad dropped his ball ir narrow 1 and could not get it out according to a writer in the [Hustrated Sunday Magzaz So he poured wa ter | nking that he would | {"::H the ! to th As the ball wa ziitly heavier than water, 1 [ t he Jed with t anx- | fous to go to school with me and find ! 1 saw | s Penton stand-! THE BEVENING TELEGRAM LAKELAND, FLA, JUNE 13, 1914, IS FENOLE A HOUSE- HOLD NECESSITY? This auestion can best be an- swered by any one of the thou- sands of housewives in Tampa and elsewhere who have been using Fenole exclusively as an insecticide and disinfectant in their homes. They have found it to be the most economical, safe, effective and convenient prepara- tion that they have ever used. Fenole is economical to use, because distributed as it is with a spray pumn there is absolutely no waste; it goes farther ang kills more insects to the gzallon than any other preparation on the market. It is safe to use any- where and everywhere; insects killeq with Fenole will not lie around as a menace to the lives of your pets or chjickens; it does its work quickly and then evap- orates completely. It can ba sprayed all over the furniture, carpets and clothingand will nei- ther stain or injure the most del- icate fabrics. Fengle is very ef- | fective in its work. ORIGINAL GENUINE iy o SRBPEPED PR The You can not e S 2] only Kkil] al]l the insects in sight [ but the fine vapor penetrates (lhv & [ 1 smal cracks ang crevices, de & stroying the nests ang e com- 3 r‘ ! ) pletely It ig always ready to & use; you can ‘‘shoot” the trou- f € b s blesome pests on ,~iyhl‘ or on sus- * 9 P " picion without hesitation or ii i ' preparation. i . ’. 4 As a disinfectant. Fenole is in- | « ARA Y i I'he fine \.nmrx\' m | o wer searches ovt and kills | & < ang microbes in the air.on | & 3 2 = the floors and walls: its use | & %\ ’}fl around the kitchen sink, in t ® 3 b toilet. aroung the garbave eon, 5 ' 5 fl ete., will immediatelv dis & odors and gery s will aniel $ evaporate, ¢ ng ervthing The Latest Adder cleanly and odorless ; Sometimes a person buvine Fe nole for the time will ask: “Ig it dancerous te breathe the vapor odor of noone's Cosis But §35 The answer is 0, POSI- See Our Exhibit—Ask Y NO Its |m\;‘m'h_|| ;1]1111‘ sentic comnosition mak -+ it abso- for 10 davs ' tri: Iutely heneficial to Iu'w:‘\ll\n{ In for 10.d 1ys’ trial fact. the free use of Felone Ifere is a new nrice arouna the house will 2o a long way toward preventing the con- ] traction of contagious discases {] esnecially those which affect the throat and lunes. Ay We repeat: Use Fenole fre Trompetent fd clving Adder. On L witallible tained. You will then agree vith others that I HOUSKHOLD > angd stores where chines are a luxury, of thousands N 5 18 A NOLE CESSITY . a costly |‘- The verylatest machine Ad- & der. to be nlaced on one's desk, s close to one's books and papers. on ma- a that is rapid, fullsize and v een- T'se it ace inz to direetions 5 o PSR You will discover a thousand and To take .]‘ he vlace of the - one nses for it, and he more than \"If:‘lx”lltl:;‘r‘s”m requiring skilled pleased with the eood resnlts oh Tt s Ak dKten AN rau oflices ma- The price is due to utter sim- The Best F’-Drlnk Lunech af rouhi.m HORLICK’S Avold Imitations—Take No Substitute Rich Milk, malted grain, in powder form. Forinfants,invalids and growing children. Purenutrition, upbuildingthe whole body. Invigorates nursing mothers and the aged. A quick lunch prepared in a minute. More healthful than tea or coffee. Agrees with the weakest digestion. Keep it on your sideboard at home. Now We make this ofier so that oflices evervw THR learn — what filids oy meang to them ¥ [ IR 91N ten vars” lest We will sladly nlace in anv oflice, one rican Addcer for ten days' her, will ba no oh'ication, and charges will be nrenaid, Conpg it with any non- lister. Let any ore use it. See v machine can scrve bef- Sold by Druzgists. Groeers and -® nlicity, and to our enormous ter than this. Hardware Denalers ot output, Seven keys do all the Just send us this coupon and :§. work. we'il send the machine. 4 BEach copied number ; CHEMICAL COMPANY Is shown un for check- S L Rmen ! Tampa, Fla. & s qr}\l:lde. i i thial. 3 ] anufacture: @ e machine w | Sole Manufacturers @ add, subtract and mul- s ‘ Ig tiply. With very slight INBING s 4150 bied s sebevinoniaiany s 404 Sy | ] uru(‘(lcle unlv olnod(l‘lnn | compute a hundred fig- Shee 5§ | i e :g ures a minute. And | Street Address vt ovaidan St et 5 B LA A A 5 The hanlifite . never lany t % makes mistakes, City i Coun tless offices, ol A b s . [ S' M. Regal' COO :g large and small. are ‘ . ol % mi‘nimu frna\ tlu]\s;r“l‘nm Sale s IR s \ § Refrigerators and Butchers' & wgv {(:]asgnu?gscr\)lpce“ &hest :g: 4 Supplies. Toledo Scales. Store & i & % pixtures, 309 Zack St. L. D., % Manufactured and Guaranteed bymcac & & AMERICAN CAN COMPANY. C 1 i (% Phone 112, Tampa, Florida. & SOLD BY COLE & HULL, JEWELERS . I E TR R T EXTTL 2L ST L EL DA R oy oo B @l B el | BB OO O OB Qwudorize ~ yourForch AR S | ot . Porch Shades", |¢ | Summer Air for Summer Glare? Let Down the Vudors! Don’t just exist—LIVE this summer in your porch and gain the health and vitality that fresh, free air will give! Get the b air—shut out the glare! le Vudorize your porch with Vudor Porch Shades. Make it a dining room. | = vitalizes, gives you the punch next day. | | | | | | PASS. DO IT NOW. Feel the appetite the air gives when the glare’s outside. Make it a bed- room and know the deep “one session” sleep the Air brings. It rests, : Now is the time and this is the place to buy your : PORCH SHADES, HAMMOCKS, SWINGS, ROCKERS and REFRIGERATORS. DON'T WAIT FOR THE SUMMER TO R Largest and Most Comp'ete o2 LINE OF HARDWARE AND : FURNITURE AT % |akeland Furniture and Hardware Co. SO O $OBE0 O POPQPOBOILBLY R 203 =i n a2 m D P e T