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Ne w Roads In Northwest Rally Day Draws Crowd Commissioner Bryson Gives Peo ; pie Long-Needed Service. Enthusiastic Interest in School Welfare Shown (Auburndale New -Era) tThe country to. the northwest of Auburndale has been in worse shape, as regards roads, for a longer time than any other sec tion we know of. Commissioner Bryson has just earned the grati tude of the residents of that sec tion and of all having to travel that way by doing the first work on the roads ever done by any county commisioner within the memory of man. The cash ex penditure has not been so large, and little or no hard surfacing has been done, but the roads have been made thoroughly good and passable, and by contrast with the old trails the improvement is immense. S A car can now go from Au "t burnda,le by Lake Whistler and up to Morse, and thence to the Wesley Bryant place, where his son-in-law, Mr. Reid Robson, now lives, and from there to Lakeland, or from Morse direct to Lakeland via Morgan Reyn olds' farm and the Combee set tlement. The old Morse-Lakeland road has been a public high way for years, tho in wretched shape. There was a very bad hole near Morgan Reynolds', where many a car and even wag on got stuck. It formerly ran di agonally across this farm, but now makes a square turn on land lines. lhe lmurovcments include a bridge 48 feet long over Prairie Slough, with good graded ap proaches; a bridge on the Morse road north of the old McLain place; a bridge over Alligator creek near Etryant's and several lesser crossings where needed Amoner other lines of travel opened up by the new roads and bridges, it is now possible to go from Auburndale to Green Pond by car. Morgan Reynolds has had charge of the crew for Commis sioner Bryson, and has certain ly produced a first-class bit of work all along the line. Need less to say, the commissioner has not made himself unpopular by doing this long-needed work. While the territory has no large settlements and so does not at tract much outside notice, it is a beautiful and fertile country with manv fine farms and groves, and the people living there are just as much entitled to roads as those anywhere else. MAIL DELUGE FOR LONELY GIRL TWO Oil A TRAIL By J. F. PETERS. Seaford. Del.. Oct. 30 The rural mall wagon driven by Frank Wheat ley from the local postollice is heavy laden with undelivered mail, and for many miles around this section cf the peninsula persons are trying to locate Miss Ethel R. Sweeney, oung woman to whom the mail Is addressed. lst week Miss Sweeney wrote to Mayor Price of Wilmiugton beseech Ing him to find a husband for s "lonely country girl," and gave her address as Concord, Del. Concord is situated about 3 miles east of here and the notoriety given the place by the voun? woman has laused old residents to treat strangers "cool. Loads of letters are arriving here daily for the "lonely girl," and al though a thorough search is bein made for her, as yet all efforts have failed. BARON VON BISSING (Auburndale New Era) That public school affairs hold high place in the interest of the patrons and pupils of the Au burndale school was attested Tuesday, Oct. 19th, when, in re sponse to the invitation issued by C. A. Parker, Superintendent of Public Instruction, and the mem bers of the Polk County School Board, more than one hundred and fifty children and grown-ups assembled in Putnam Park and participated in the first Educa tionai Kauy uay to De neia m this section. The affair was in charge of Mr B. H. Seiple. principal and the teachers of the school, and took the form of a. general picnic din ner, followed by a program of speeches by Superintendent Parker and General E. N. Law, representing the school board, Mr. Sheldon Phillips, State Ru ral School Inspector, and Prof. Buchholtz, Professor of Psychol ogy of the University of Florida at Gainesville. By eleven o'clock Putnam Park was thronged with a crowd of happy children and their elders. and the Education Department of of the Woman s Club, represent ed bv Mrs. Ilorr. Mrs. McLain, Mrs. May, and Mrs. Stone took hanre of the food so bounteous- v furnished bv the school par ents, and a royal feast was spread. The guests of honor, Supt. Park er, Chairman W. D. Owens and General .Law, of the School Board, Mr. rhillips and Prof. Buchholtz, were seated at the head table with Prof. Seiple, Mrs. Olsen and Miss Bryant repre senting the Auburndale School, and T. If. McLain. D. W. Mc- Craney, school trustees. "Co-operation between patrons and teachers" was the keynote of the program which followed the luncheon, and which program was held in the Dixie Canning Factory, rooms, where seats were provided for all guests. " 1 eachers, make yourselves known to the parents; parents, get acquainted with the teachers" was a point emphasized by Mr. Phillips, State Rural School In spector, who dwelt upon the ne cessity for greater co-operation m order to attain the highest stand ard of school idealism. Make the school the civic center" stated Mr. Phillips; "let your communi- tv revolve around the school- house. You have a great little city here and the name Auburn- lale is know all over the state. "Auburndale is to be congratu lated upon the spirit of progres siveness that is everywhere ap parent" said General Law. "A year ago I came here with the other members of the board to visit your school. We found an inadequate building, unsightly and in many respects unsate. There was some difficulty in sell ing your bonds, but a delegation from your Women's Club called upon us shortly afterward with a long petition, signed by the voters, taxpayers and patrons of your city, and pleaded with us to try to sell your bonds. Since then the bonds have been sold When Johnson reached old grange's cabin he was Just ten min utes too late. He had traveled four hundred miles that spring to woo Ma rie Legrange. His winter's catch bad been better than at any time in his ten years of trapping. He meant to ask the pretty French girl to come A pack of wolves had scented Du four and had attacked him. Johnson fired after them. He thought by the yelping that he had hit one; he was sure of it when he heard the beasts fighting over the body. He turned to Dufour. He saw at a glance that the man had fallen down the cliff. I He was fearfully injured, and lay as Le-1 if paralyzed. His horse had evidently bolted. Johnson turned his horse loose. It would have to look after itself; it might evade the wolves, but no halter or ropes could hold it there. It leaped, whinnying, into the darkness. John son crouched by Oufour's side, wait ing. There was no time to lose in ANOTHER DAY By HOPE BROWNING. Prolong Life by Using GRIGSBY'S L1V-VER-LAX South and marry him at Winnipeg, As has been said, he was just ten i wrds. and he knew the almost human minutes too late. Dufour had antici- cunning of the wolf pack, maddened pated him by that amount of time. He had heard that Dufour was ahead of him, and, though he had no reason to suppose that Marie cared for the man, he had been vaguely uneasy. He had seen Dufour at last, when he was within ten miles of the cabin, and had spurred his tired horse onward. But when he reached the top of Birch Rise, where a few dwarfed trees af forded an uncertain cover, he saw with hunger in the last days of winter. Suddenly, out of nothing, it seemed, two huge forms leaped toward them. They fell between Dufour and John son. Johnson clubbed his rifle and brought it down on one brute's head. It lay quivering, silent. The other sprang at his throat. , For a moment Johnson was forced back against the cliff. He felt the hot breath on his face and heard the hiss Marie and Dufour standing in front of in tne throat. Then somehow he had the cabin, and he saw Dufour take the evaaea the tangs ana hurled the mon girl in his arms. He mounted and rode away, round ing the ridge and proceeding aimlessly along the water hollow. His only thought just then was to get out of sight of Marie. She must never know his disappointment. He offsaddled and built a little fire in the hollow. He ster from him. He swung wildly with his rifle stock. By some good fortune he struck the beast behind the ear. It fell, stunned. Then the rest of the pack was upon him. But it was beginning to grow lighter. Johnson dragged Dufour into the shelter that he had dug in the had just finished cooking his bacon . ank. and stood in front of him. wait- hon h shw nnfnnr rlrto noat .Inn ' S- nrco llmcB U,B 1 ru"B m. h tnn f th ,.,, I and each time he shot down a form n . " that leaped in midair. beasts were snarling over their dead. line of traps every spring in the North j "Z Fork country, where winter always lin- ! Vrr V' a ,, " 7" I man's flesh to wolf-meat. Johnson I knew that, but he knew that only a concerted attack could overcome him first Johnson wondered why; then he ' remembered that the man set out a gered and some of the best furs were to be taken In April the fur-bearing I ! He Mounted and Rode Away. animals had not yet shed their coats, rich and silky from the prolonged cold. The lay of the land was peculiar in this direction. Johnson had descended to the trail that ran along the South Fork valley. The ridge grew steadily higher, the overhanging banks were covered with brush. Johnson could follow Dufour, beneath him, perhaps three hundred feet beneath him, for two days, keeping him plainly in sight, and yet avoiding discovery. In his bitterness he gave way to an impulse springing up in his heart against his will. He had loved Marie ever since she was a child. Dufour had stolen her. Ho would kill Dufour. None would ever know of the tragedy In this desolate region. In a year or two, when Dufour's death had come to be accepted, he would go back to Marie. The idea, with which bo had played at first, grew stronger, until it over whelmed his resolution. Burning with hatred for this man who had sup planted him, Johnson rode cautiously along the level beneath. For a whole day he followed him. It was dawn now. The beasts were lurking further back among the trees. Johnson fired his last two bullets into their refuge. He heard a yelping, and in the gold of the first sunlight saw the survivors stream away through the birch thickets. Then at lust he turned to Dufour. The man must have fallen ail the way down the cliffs, and a glance showed I him that he could not live. I Dufour clutched at Johnson as he bent over him. "Forgive!" he whis pered. "I followed you. I saw you In the valley. I made a detour and went behind you, to kill you because you took the girl I loved." Johnson stared wide-eyed at him; lie seemed to be interpreting his own heart. "I hated you when Mario refused to ; marry me. Slay by me till I die. She 1 loves you. Forgive!" whispered Du t four. Johnson clusped the man's hand in i his. He waited there until the breath ' grew fainter, stopped. Johnson closed the dead eyes and closed the mouth of the shelter securely. Then he set his feet upon the trail back to Marie's ! cabin. (Copyrlsht. 1915. by W. O. Clinpmun.) ALWAYS MAN'S BEST FRIEND i I Un ha si Imntrlnad thor Vi t a annmv wnillff and you have today a building of j 8tart on tne next day al sunrise. But w hich any city in the state might j when he awakened and crept stealthily be proud. You are to be con-i toward Dufour's camp he found the gratulated upon the spirit of your . Arc low and Dufour gone. citizens It is that which makrs He saddled his horse hastily and fol- im tn -irre six lowed him. Hut soon the snow began land vv orth $100 an acre six ( miles from a railroad. It i that merate(, Dufour had been leading bis spirit which makes a city worm packhor8e. iloofg anil footprints alike while." became hidden under the soft down- The value of education in the fan. world, was the subject of Prof. Johnson pressed on resolutely. The Buchholz's address, and having i snowfall became heavier. At last he devoted his lifetime to the pub- was forced to halt. He dug a shelter lie schools no one is better fitted in the hard accumulation of the winter i ii r n .1,1,1, tr. crw.nl; nr.- and crept inside, leaving his horse, than Prof. Buchhol. to speak up- telhfired under tne on this subject. He told of tj i tection of the bauk. progress of nations through the u muBt have been ,n the mmie of uplift power of education; of the tne nlKht tnat ne 8tarted up. He Tirocres of Japan though the in- looked out. The snow had ceased, and fluence of education ; and touched the stars shone brilliantly. Johnson upon the advance of Germany, I fancied that he had hoard a cry. Switzerland and other nations He listened, and now there was no through educational channels, j doubt of it. A roan was crying at the And closing he congratuiaten .iifl nosing . , rry came a furious snarl which had Polk county upon the possession on)y orff mPaninR for Johnw, anr for of a superintendent whose neart tne norRe as and soul is in his work. j Hastily he untoth md the trembling One of the most pleasing f-:-, animal, mounted it. and rode down, tares of the program was the He heard the cry acain. and the sound tin"in"- of the pupil in cl.nrus of a discharged rifle. Presently he ;,n,Ltr,o direction of Mr. Ethel came upon the little shelter of Du- Oben. Baron von Biasing, half brother of General von Biasing, military goven or of Belgium, though a naturalized British subject, was taken recently from his home in Kensington, Eng land, and interned tn a workhouse with other "enemy aliens." Truly a Remarkable "Bull." Humor expresses itself in actlonas well as words. The Iaish rebels of 1?8 enacted a "bull" of a remarkable kind. They wished to annoy .lohn lieresford. a banker. So. fonnms that every bank note that is lost relieves a bank of liability, they -o!!" t( d -it Kreat ex- ponse a Pi!e of Bere-iora papr and burned it with tr.u-. sound and fury. Willing to Go Half Way. Frank had been going to school but a week when he had some trouble with the janitor. The teacher took Frank to the janitor and said: "Now. Frank. I am sorry you and Jerry have had any trouble, but just to show Jer ry that you are willing to be friends I want you to shake hands with aim. Frank hesitated and then grumbled, "I'll giv him my left hand." four. Dufour was lying outside upon his side, his rifle grasped firmly in his hand. As Johnson approached his horse snorted and reared. Johnson leaped to the ground. A dozen slink ing forms disappeared in the shadows ot the stuntea trees. Dog Every Ready to Respond to the Mood, Pleasant or Otherwise, of Master He Loves. Fisher Ames, not the Revolutionary hero, but one of his descendants, once remarked that a dog Ib a better friend than a human being. "For," said he, "the dog will be at your feet, ready at any moment to respond to your mood, while a human being will go off In a huff If you do not respond to his mood." Amos bred Airedale terries and ex hibited them in Philadelphia, New York and Boston, until he won a cham pionship for one of them, and then he lost Interest In the subject. His mood for dogs passed, but whenever It re turned the dog responded as though he had not neglected them for other amusements. The Eskimos have put Ames' re mark Into a proverb based on a long experience In the Arctic wilds. They say that "a man's best friend is his dog, even better than his wife." The Brahmin blood of New England and the blubber-eating seal hunter of the North react In the same way when brought up against the facts of life. Men seem to be the same in all climates, and we have the authority of the Spaniards for saying that dogs are the same also, for their proverb makers have concluded that "dogs have teeth In all countries." Unfortunate? An old darkey appealing to a lady for aid told her that by the Dayton flood be had lost everything he had In the world, including his wife and six children. "Why," said the lady. "I have seen you before and I have helped you. Were you not the colored man who told me you had lost your wife and six children by the sinking of the Ti tanic?" "Yeth. ma'am," replied the darkey, "dat was me. Most unfort'nit man dot ever was. t'an't keep a fam'ly nohow." Irksome Restraint. "If you deliver that speech you have just read over to me it will jeopardize your political future," said the friend ly adviser. "What if it does?" asked the states man, fretfully. "I've been wanting to make a speech like that for 1 years, but fear ot the consequences kept me silent It 1 don t get it out of my sys tem 80i it will jeopardize my health." "If you could give me just a day's option, Mr. Beu." Marian frowned slightly, looking around the big, rest ful studio longingly. "I'm sorry, but I must give myself a chance to think it over. I'll 'phone t early in the morning." She went out into the square and sat down near the fountain, tryiug to make up her mind. It had been eight months since she had left there. Sea bury had received his appointment as staff artist at the front, and it had meant so much to his whole career. They were engaged. Sometimes it seemed to her that they had always been engaged ever since she had taken the studio below his and he had dropped roses on her window sill. Go up to mother's and stay with her until 1 get back. You can write all you want to, and she'll love to have you. She has me all dead and buried already, and it will brace her up to have jtou laugh at her. Go along, Marian." And Marian had gone. Up into the heart of Vermont to a great, rambling old farmhouse perched on a spur of land that overlooked mountains and valleys for miles. Seabury's mother was a darling little old lady, cheerful and motherly too motherly. Marian, after seven months, began to feel like u progressive duck with a hen par ent. She fretted after town environ ment and the incentive to work. Her stuff was Hat and she knew it. Sea bury was on the point ol sailing wheu he got an otter from an English pa per and wrote he would wait three months longer if she did nut mind. If she did not mind? Marina packed furiously and sent back u cablegram: "Going back to work." That night she dined out with friends of the Quarter dowu ut a little ltuliau place on West Eleventh street. And someone spoke lim namo. "You knew that Seabury was back, didu't you. Miss Earle? Made a smualiing record for himself, too. Looks awfully lit. 1 met him up at Naanie Bell's last evening at dinner." Marian smiled. No, she had not heard of Mr. Abbot's return, but she was so glad of his success. He was always such a clever, nice boy. "I'd like to see him marry Nannie Bell," went on her right-hand partner at the long table. "She's Just tho sort ot girl to develop and supplement the gilts of a man like Seabury." "YeB?'' Marian's tone waB sweetly interested and impersonul. "Are they engaged?" "1 don't know, but I suppose so. He's been around everywhere with her since he got back." Marian slept little that night. Wrapped in a kimono, she sat by her window thinking. And here she had been ready to even take back the old studio for sentiment's suke. It was all very well to tell herself thut she needed the old environment. She Just wanted tc be hack where they had first met and been so happy together. The following morning she was rather lute, but determined. Mr. Hetz stood on the basement steps, talking to the janitor, when she came along. "Go right up, Miss Earle. I'll be there in a minute," he called to her, and she went u, the long flight of stairs. The door was ajar. She passed through the high, narrow passogeway Into the studio and stopped short. Over by the window, looking down on the little patch of garden, stood Sea bury. He turned around at her step, and gave a quick exclamation, brimful of the boyish, explosive happiness she loved in him. "By Jove, it dragged you back, too. didn't it?" ho cried, catching her hands in a grip that hurt. "I've been trying to rent the place from old Betz, but he's put me off, telling me be had another party after it, and I'd have to wait another day. Lord, it's good to see you again, Marian." "You're looking well," said Marian, trying to draw away. "I am not. I m sick and disgusted and miserable, and I can't eat or sleep" "No? I thought you were dining rather regularly. ' "What do you mean? Oh, with Nan nie Boll? That's only business. She's doing the writing end of my series for the Dispatch. I didn't think you'd mind." "Why should I mind?" "Why?" He glanced beyond her to be sure of privacy and caught her sud denly in his arms. "That's why," he told her, after a minute. "Because you happen to be the only woman that can upset my life tor better or worse, don't you see? 1 dropped everything when I got your cable and came over. I understood how you telt. And when I got here 1 couldn't lind you, so I did the next best tning. I was going to rent the old studio because I knew you'd come back here some time." "Let me go," she said, struggling. "Somebody's coming." Mr. Hetz whistled jovially as he ap proached, perhaps as a kindly Bignal of warning. "Well," he asked, "what do you thiuk anout it?" Seabury beamed on him, his hands deep in Uis pockets. "We are going to take it directly aftei ifce wedding, Hetz. Fix up your lease. ' f :pjrriKftt. l1 kv the Mef:inr N"p pt-r Syt)'li'Mt; l A Harmless Vegetable Compound With No In jurious Effects Does Away With the Ise of Calomel Grimsby's Liv Vor-Lax sold and reccomtnended by Lake Pharmacy Manufarturtd by Lebanon Co-Operative Medicine Co. Lebanon, Tenn. Good and Bad Times to Sleep. Sleep is soundest on cool, clear, dry evenings, when there is little moisture in the air and some mild movement of the pleasant, soothing atmosphere. On cloudy, warm, soggy or even snowy nights, other things being equal, sleep was BtfuL restless and unsatisfactory. Of the Sams Opinion. Mildred "Don't you think Miss O derly looks much younger in her new hatr Helen "Indeed I do. Why, Mildred, it makes her look bul very little older than she says she is." Judge. Nothing New. '. '.use South Sea islanders are a queer lot. They have many things which are taboo, mustn't be touched." "I see nothing strange about that. It la the same principle on which we carefully plant a lot or grass for peo ple to keep off of." Hie Rare All Right Johnny Is a little southern boy liv ing In Texas with his grandmother, who Is a little deaf. One day while I ne was piaiDg sue cauvia iu uiui pt erai times, dui oe muni answer, fi nally she said:- "Johnny, dont yoe hear me?" and Johnny says. " 'Cos 1 heah you; my ears ain't lame." Cost. Friend of the College President "What did this beautiful dormitory eost you?" College President "Three doctors' degrees. One for the man that put up the money and the others tor two friends -of his." Life. Ne Un te Him. The prisoner threw the magazines' across his cell in disgust, and cursed eloquently. "Nothin' but continued stories." he growled, "an' I'm to be hung next Tuesday." Chicago Herald. When yotiwaitr Drugstore Tilings come to us Don't let yourself run down. Almost every se vere sickness could be avoided if a little medical advice and the riht medicine is taken in time. Come to us for your medicines and drug store things and know that you will get the right kind right prices too. We keep right up to the minute and always have everything a first-class drug store should carry. WOODS Drug Store PHONE 408 The Laundry Work Thatothers admire is the kind that will please you, and that is the kind that we do. Call us up The Lakeland Steam Laundry PHONE 130 R. W. WEAVER, Prop "Saving is the First Gain" --Proverb A small leak will sink a great ship preparation for contingencies will often provide the means of saving ilfe, and le a buffer against unseen misfortune and storm. Safely harboring the cargo of Life's Savings should represent one's greatest care. Man needs, every day and any day, the safety and con venience of the bank. The safety of funds and interest is absolutely assured by our conservative banking methods. An invitation is extended to open an account. FIRST NATIONALB ANK C. W. DEEN, President C. M. CLAYTON, Cashier. THIS BANK IS A MEMBER OP THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM.