Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, October 17, 1914, Page 6

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| For every | little ache and | pain and big aches and i big pains is quickly absorbed—good for sores, neuulnia-. i stiff joints, rheumatism, etc. 25¢ at druggists. [ For sale in Lakeland by Henley | & Henley. —_—e IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, TENTH COUNTY. K FLORIDA. - AD CERY.—Alice J. Bailey vs. liam R. Bailey—Bill for Divorce, ' It appearing by the affidayit of | Alice J. Bailey, complainant in the | above stated cause that Wiiliam R. | Bailey, the defendant named in the Lill of complaint, is a resident of the | State of Florida, residing in Mulber- | ry. in Polk county, in said State, but Jmt he conceals himself so that pro- cess cannot be served upon him. l ‘That there is no person within | the State of Florida, the service of a | subpoen uJ)on whom would bind | said de?en ant, and that the said | defendant is over the age of twenty- | one years; it is therefore ordered : that said defendant be and he is | hereby reqiuired to appear to the bill | of complaint filed in said cause on or before Monday, the 2nd day of | November, A. D. 1914, otherwise | the allecations of said bill will be taken as confessed by said defend- ant. i It is further ordered that this or- | der be published once a week for; five consecutive weeks in the Lake- | land Evening Telecram, a newspa- | per published in said county and | State. This October 1st, 1914. ! J. A.'JOHNSON, | Clerk Circait Court. | | NEAR DEATH | BY SMOTHERING| — | Bat Husband, With Aid of Cardui, | Effects Her Deliverance. i N. C.—Mrs. Helen Dalton, of i Draj this pm. says: “! suffered for yeana with pains in my left side, dnd woull often almost smother to death. | Medicines patched me up for awhile but then 1 would get worse again. Final- [ ly, my husband decided he wanted me to ui, the wcman’s tonic, so he bought me a bottle and I using it. It did me more good than all the medi- cines I had taken. | I have induced many of my frjends to try Cardui, and they all sahlh y have been benefited by its use, ere never has been, and never will be, a medicine to compare with Cardui. I believe it is l.)l X medicine for all womanly trou- es.’ For over 50 years, Cardui has been re- lleving woman’s sufferings and building weak women up to health and strength. If you are @ woman, give it a fair trial, It should surely help you, asit has a million others. Geta bottle of Cardui fo-day. | Werite to: Chattanooga Medicine Ladies’ | Advisory Degt., Chattan T-nn..ogfi- _.FA«:‘:‘ lome 4:@.&':’»‘3" a;mmt%.fi? p .G, 190 | i [ | Why not get one of thosel; large Cement Urns to beautify your yard ? Why rot get the oldest reliable cemant man to put in your Walk? Why not get you Brick and Blocks of these . PRICES ARE RIGHT. SO ARE THE GOODS FLORIDA NATIONAL VAULT CO. 508 W. MAIN ST. L. W.YARNELL LIGHT AND HEAVY HAULING HOUSEHOLD MOVING A SPECIALTY HORSES AND MULES ¥OR HIRE Phones: Office 109; Res., 57 Green £ PPPHOHEDDIILAPISEIISBIIDD Lake Mirror Hotel MRS. H. M. COWLES, Prop. § Under New Management. Refurnishedand thoroughly renovated, and everything Clean, Comfortable and First-c Dining Room Service Unexcelled. Rates Reasonable. Your Patronage Cordially Invited. Raaaa i S i Lt S I Y & GHPPHESSHBDHIOBBPBIBBEEHDE $ ‘ | * s 3 * If all the water power in the | United States were developed elec-é trically, it would save the handling of 285,000,000 tons of coal! a year. l 1 | Western farmers are experiment- ! ing with potash fertilizers as a pro- tection from frost. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, TENTH JUDICIAL{ CIRCUIT OR THE STATE OF FLORIDA, | IN AND FOR POLK COUNTY.—IN CHAN- CERY.—Edward A. Keller vs. Annie H. Boyd—Bill to Quiet Title. It appearing from the affidavit of com- plainant’s solicitor appended to the bill of complaint in the above stated cause that the - 'defendant, Annie H. Boyd, is a non-resident of the United States; that the sald defend- {ant is over the age of twenty-one years; that there is no person in the State of Florida, the service of a subpoena upon whom would bind the sald defendant, it is therefore or- | dered that said defendant be and she is here- by required to appear to the bill of com- plaint filled in sald cause on or before Mon- day, the Tth day of December, 1914, the same being the rule day of sald month, oth- crwise all the allegations of sald bill will be taken as confessed by sald defendant on the succeeding rule day of sald court thereafter. It is further ordered that this order be published for eight consecutive weeks in the I.gkeland Evening Telegram, a mnewspaper published in the city of Lakeland, Polk county, Florida_ Given under my hand and official seal this 9th day of October, 1914. (Seal) J. A. JOHNSON, Clerk Circuit Court, Polk County, Florida. Copy. 3267 RUB-MY-TISM Will cure your Rheumatism Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps,| Burns, Old Sores, Stings of Insects Etc. Antiseptic Anedyre, used in- ternally and externally." Price 25c. HARNESS HEADQUARTERS The place to get harness is at harness headquarters. We have ev- erything needed to ride or drive a horse and of good quality at rcason- able prices. From the heaviest team Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts and harness to the lightest buggy har- ness this is headquarters. Special attention to repair work of all kinds. MCGLASHAN Apples We will have a Car Load of W. Va. Mountain Fancy Apples Here next week. Ask your Grocer for SLEEPY CREEK APPLES Sleepy Creek Orchard Company J. F. CRUTCHFIELD Phone 292 Black Fresh Norfolk 60 c Opysters, quart Thirty Cents » Dint | Peanur, I-;rit,tle - 20c. 1b. Chocolate Fudge 25¢. 1b. H. O. DENNY : West Side Munn Park Phone 226. Prompt Del. 2 Sfl!'mfi; Stove Wood | 1 have the finest lot of | PEBDPPPEPPLIORV PP IDEPPPE ' H Heart Pine and Qak Wood ever brought into Lakelani. 12 to 14 in. lengths and full § measure. Price il $2.90 per Strand || Place your order now for your Winter supply, as the price will surely GO UP. Also a lot of i| | . Fireplace Wood! Phone 291 Red, or P.O. Rox 261 TerMs: Cash on Delivery | SEED POTATOES || Crown on the rugged hills of Steubon County, about 1500 feet above sea level. FREE FROM DISEASE. Strong, Hardy, Prolific varie- |! ties. Give them ga trial. Send {! for Catalogue. WALKER SEED POTATO | FARMS. Box ], Avoca, Steubon Coun- ty, N. Y. ! | “‘Girl In Green! THE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAKF GROIOISIIOIIL LD GBI 3058088 A FORTUNATE: THING By GEORGE MUNSON, “There she is! ‘The Girl in Green,’” said John Latham, unveiling his newly completed painting. Mies Agnes Manton uttered a little Irrepressible scream. “Why, John, dear, that ist—that is perfect!” she exclaimed. “Only—I am sure you have grossly flattered me, John.” “Not a bit of it, my dear,” protested her flance. “You are prettier far than my poor efforts have shown you on the canvas. And this picture is going to make my reputation.” Heaven knew he needed that it should. John was a etruggling artist, just rising out of the ruck. He was twenty-nine; Agnes was only two or three years younger, and they had been engaged for several years. A struggling artist has little chance of making enough to support a wife in London. However, though it had not been sold, one of John’s pictures had been accepted for exhibition by the Royal academy the summer before, and he ] had little doubt that this would be . ping her hand into his. She knew the ; “hung.” Perhaps it would attract the notice of a rich purchaser. Then they could be married. “How much is it we said we wanted, dear?” asked John. “A thousand pounds, wasn't it, to begin?” John,” answered the girl. “But we agreed that we wanted a thousand pounds to fit out our house nicely with antique furniture”—like most poor people John had extrava- . gant aspirations—"and really start in oomfartehly &nd dety thie wolt?s ' not quite satisfied with that. It wasn't ! nearly as pretty as you are.” “That would be nice,” Agnes an- swered. “Very well, dear. I shall insure this ' for a thousand, and I shall place that | price upon {it,” said John. “And I won't take a penny less, either.” A month later, to his delight, John recelved an intimation from the Royal academy to the effect that his picture ' was to be placed on exhibition. On | varnishing day he and Miss Manton ! went to look at it. Both feared that it had been “skied.” But it had not been skied. On the contrary, it occupied & very prominent poeition, low down, next to the door leading from the to the second salon. “Just the place where it will attract attention!"” exclaimed Agnes joyfully. T i "‘;‘ liin Vit Lag “We could do it on five hundred, "followed by a »fwum:) i . T, FLA., OCT. 17, 1914. managed to get it open. Then she pulled from the interior—not a pair of glasses, but a very serviceable meat- | chopper. { Smash! Rip! Rip! Rip! The can- vas was torn into shreds and long | strips hung from the frame before John, aided by half a dozen men i3 the vicinity, could rush forward and stay the work of devastation. i “There!” screamed the lady, trans- formed all at once into a viragoi | “That's what you get for letting dear ; Mrs. Pankhurst starve to death!” | “A suffragette!” screamed an offi- | cial, maneuvering cautiously around | her. “Have you got her? Then let me | get at her!” For about three minutes longer the . academy room was filled with a strug- | gling crowd, each member ef which | seemed supremely anxious to lay hands ! upon a struggling old lady who, bon- netless, and with disheveled clothing, ! was giving as good an account of her- | self as was possible under the circum- | stances. At last she was placed in the | |c!urga of a policeman and conveyedi away. | John stood looking ruefully at her i handiwork. The painting wase injured | ! beyond all possibility of repair. There | f were half a dozen vertical and three or | | four horizontal slashes in it, each ex- ! tending nearly the whole extent of the | ' plcture, which had been cut literally | into ribbous. | “John, dear!” whispered Agnes, slip- | bitterness in his heart. He had spent ! 80 many weeks trying to create her, | plain little Agnes Manton, as she knew herself to be, into the reproduction of | the image that lay enshrined in his heart. And this was the end! | Slowly they went out of the academy, | small throng, which had guessed the tragedy from the likeness between Agnes and } the woman in the picture. “I'll paint you again, Agnes,” he said. “Do you know, somehow I was “0, John!” protested Agnes. Suddenly he brightened up. He stopped still in the street. ‘“Agnes, what a fortunate thing!” he exclaimed. “I know what the trouble was. I ought to have painted you as I intend to now, in our new house, with the antique furniture. Agnes, isn't it lucky I in- sured the picture for a thousand pounds!” (Copyright, 1914, by W. G. Chapman.) |THOUGHT IT STILL DUTCH first ' Englishwoman Decidedly Behind the Times in Her Knowledge of Things of the United States. Some one, at luncheon, had told a story about an Englishwoman who said she had been shocked to learn how slow the trains were in America, and on being told that they were nothing ! of the sort, insisted: “But they must be. I saw in a paper that it took 24 hours to go from New York to Chicago!” And the company had laughed. Wat- kins had laughed with the others. Then Watkins said: i ' Smash! Rip! Rip! Ripl “Everybody will see it staring at them the moment they come in at the door.” The day of the opeming of the exhi- bition was one of fine weather, and vast crowds of fashionable and would- be fashionable people attended, to- gether with a sprinkling who were genuinely interested in art. John and Agnes, {inconspicuoue among the crowds, watched their picture from 8 near place, while pretending to display interest in others. “Hum! ‘Girl in Green,’ is she!" snorted a stout old gentleman. “‘Girl Looks Green,’ would be a better title to my mind. I never saw a healthy young woman with that sort of com- plexion.” “How delicious!” whiepered Agnes in John's ear, squeezing his hand. That sort of criticism was too ignorant to sting. Still, when a gentleman with a square beard, looking for all the world like a successful banker, stopped and said to his companion, “That ‘Girl in Green’ is one of the best things here this year,” they were breathless with happiness. For the stout, square-beard- ed gentleman was none other than Sir Valentine Sparks, one of the greatest of English painters. A mild, inoffensive-looking elderly woman in gray, overhearing the re- mark that had been made, stopped in front of the painting and surveyed it critically. Then she turned to John. “Is that a really good painting?” asked the elderly lady. “A truly val- uable painting?” “That picture, madam, while not the ! finest thing in the academy, is undoubt- mother. | edly a very fair specimen of the mod- ; ern English school,” said John. *“I happen to know that the author is i placing a valuation of a thonn.nd‘cent reply. pounds upon it.” “Dear me!” sald the elderly lady. How interesting! T must really have a better look at it. Where are my glasses?” . Last night I sat down deliberately by | “That's a pretty good story. But I know one that’s better. It's a remark that was made to me.” “Go on,” offered the man who had told the story about the trains. “You give us your word it's true?” “I give you my word it's true,” Wat- kine echoed. “It was at a hotel in Switzerland, where I, being alone, | chanced to be put at a table with sev- . eral Englishwomen at dinner. We fell to talking, as one always does, about traveling ‘abroad’ and about languages, and hotel-and-train vocabularies, and all that. They knew that I was an 1 American, of course. “I happened to say that I could not speak, understand, or learn one sen- tence in the Dutch language, and that I felt decidedly helpless whenever I went to Holland, The remark followed. The tallest Englishwoman leaned across the table eagerly, “‘Oh,’ she said. ‘But don’t people speak Dutch in New York?' The Lonesome Man, “That old saying about being lone- some in New York is all right,” said a Pittsburgher. “There are plenty of men who are lonesome by nature; they'd be lonesome fn the place of their birth as well as in a strange city; they simply don’t know how to make friends, or how to keep them it they make them. But if you want to see the most lonesome thing on earth, you will find it in the man who sits alone in a hotel cafe at night, taking his solitary drink because he is so- | ciable by nature, and longing for some one to talk with, but fearful of | ‘butting in’ where he {isn't wanted. | a stranger marooned that way, and I never saw a man so grateful in my life. He was so lonesome he nearly had the horrors.” s i In the Style of the City. A certain small boy had lived all his life in hotels. Presently, soon after the family moved to a suburban home, Harold came into the house looking amused and puzzled. “What pleases you, my son, and what have you been doing?” asked his “Oh, I was just sitting on the front | porch listening to a man with a wagon paging blackberries,” was the inno- e U, Happiness. | “What is your idea of true happi- ness?” he asked. | “To have a husband who could af- She pulled an absurdly large bag ford to buy all the hair I wanted with- from her muff and fumbled nervously out making it necessary for either of with it for quite a minute before she us to deny ourselves anything else.” sympathetic | B Florida’s. § Surpassing g ¥ Grapefruit , U™ Is Supreme Plant Freely of the Best Late Variet Each year adds to the sufiremacy of Florida’s Surpag grapefruit in the markets of the North. With the proceyg. education of the American public as to the uses and merit 1 citrus fruits, Florida grapefrvit will become more apq n: popular. The grower whose land is adapted to grapefrujy make no mistake in planting freely of the best variczies“:" cially of the late kinds. B Get the New Buckeye Nurseries Catalog This attractive book tells all about the culture of P fruit as well as oranges and other citrus fruits. It descri the leading kinds—several of them the introductions of Bug eye Nurseries. Whether you are an experienced grower o new beginner in citrus culture, this catalog will help yoy The most successful grove practice is fully explaineq j this book. While the catalog represents an enormous outly on their part Buckeye Nurseries will be glad to send 3 ¢ free to any person intending to plant citrus fruit trees, you want one write for it today before the edition is exhausteg| Buckeye Nurseries 1068 Citizdhs Bank Building Tampa, Fla. “ov v SPPPEEPPEPPEOP PP EEIR OB IS & J. B. STREAT CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Having had twenty-one years’ experience in buil and contracting in Lakeland and vicinity, I feel compes to render the best services in this line. If comtempli building, will be pleased to furnish estimates and all irs mation. All work guaranteed. Phone 169. J. B. STREATE — Pt i del e el atd el futinds L yal teld & IR OO B QOB DCHITREOHECrEOREHORSOREHOH L DGO Tn G w s | Do You Want Fresh Cl GROCERIES! We are at your service for anything carried bv an Up-to-date Grocery Phone orders glven prompt attention W.J.REDDIC pleitagatng Te Slu SRR et Sulal Bul Bu tlat 2 T S KELLEY'S B ARR Plymouth Ra BOTH MATINGS Better now than ever M High class breeding ‘.,L‘ reasonable prices. Fyu high'class peuas for h:tching Write me before ordering? where, H. L. KELLE®Y, Griffin] HOLOTO IO D 10F Heinz 57 Varieties Good Things to Eat Will be demonstrated at my Store Saturday, October 17th By a Special Representative of the Factory Hot Lunches ang Fr. will be served to v pickles, relishes, ‘ree Samples of their leading prod® isitors and customers on that day. T¥ and canned specialties are unsurps Large Lot Just Received A Cordial Invitation Extended GIVE ME YOUR GROCERY BUSINESS Satisfaction Guaranteed D. B. Dickson

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