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The Tampa Tribune from Tampa, Florida • 20

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The Tampa Tribunei
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Tampa, Florida
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20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

her sympathy for freedom, and she Measuring Strain Florida Land Took From Owner Weds Countess He Life of Poverty in Germany SKY PINWHEELS ARE UNIVERSES GREAT AS OURS, SAYS SCIENCE pany st Akron, Ohio, sod the Wt to be roaile there. airship is la' ot the semi-rigid Ijpc, an which is obtained by menus or a rigid keel to which the gas bag in attached. Tit r.uienu Standards in describing the says: "This model is about feet 4 tr.chc ong by 5 feet 2 inches in diameter, being made to a scale of about one-thirtieth the size ot the completed ship. It is filled with water and is suspended upside down. In this position a properly designed keel will deform in respouse to the froces due to the load of water in the same way at the keel ot the full tifd airship may detirmed by the force due to the life the gas.

Dr. Tuckerman has shown how the keel must be designed to produce the "A study of the deformation of the model keel rives a direct measurement of Princess Marie Louise of Wittelsbach, Once i Most Talked-of Woman in Court of Vien In Airship Frame Will Be Achieved Direct measurement of the stresses in the frame of an airship not yet built is to be accomplished by means of a water-filled model of the airship, accord ing to a theory worked out by Dr. Tuckerman of the Bureau of Standards at Washington. The design is being perfected Rv Vmfmnr TTnvranrrt of the MassachuSr etts Institute of Technogoly. at which institution the keel of the model will be made.

Th. nt nf th model is be cons'ruct ed at the plant ol the Goodyear Com earth. With a knowledge of the distances of these nebulae, we find for their diameters, 43,000 light-years for the Andromeda nebula an-" 13,000 light-years for Messier 33. These quantities, as well as the masses and densities of the systems, are quite comparable with the corresponding values for our local system of stars, the one in which the earth is but a mere speck. "Although these nebulae are the most distant objects for which we have reliable data, it seems probable that many of the smaller spiral nebulae are still more remote and appear smaller on this Hubble concludes.

"From this point of view the portion of the universe within the range of our Investigation con sists of vast numbers of stellar galaxies comparable to our own, scattered about through nearly empty space and separated from one another bv distances of inconceivable magnitude." FRANCE RESCRGENT ling where the bodies of Rudolph and Mary wera found together. Suicide, the court circle report was. but there were many who had their doubts. "The face of Rudolph was badly scarred, there were bulhet holes in his body, and Mary's beautiful face had been beaten to a pulp on one side and one of her ejs gouged out. Did that look like suicide? "You see.

Empress Elizabeth arranged with the King of Belgium to have her son, Rudolph, marry his daughter, tlra Prinoess Stephanie, and, although they, despised each other from the day of their marriage, they had to remain husband and wife in the eyes of the world. "About a vear or so after his marriage Rudolph met Mary, who was a young girl of such beauty that men raved about her. She fell in love with the dashing Prince, find he was mad about herv They couldn't help it. They had stol-en meetings and in stories that were circulated here 1 was blamed for those meetings. Rudolph never came to me for help until it was too lat-e and I could do nothing.

4 Just One Tragedy was just one tragedy in a generation of tragedies and horrible events that- I have seen in Austria and over the rest of Europe. Yon know, it was strange, but Empress Elizabeth became a Spiritulist before she died, and while sae was melancholy and sad she said the end of the Hapsburgs was near and that the Hohenzollerns had about run their reign too. Remember, that was long before the World War." Louise, in talking over the past, was reminded how Empress Elizabeth hated to grow older. 'Marie Louise, see, 1 am getting old!" If you have the cash I can offer you some of the BEST Strawberry and Trucking Land in Hillsborough County at a ridiculously low price, large or small tracts. na, Later a Cook Plain American.

EY JULIA V. SHAW ELL. (In Niw York World) The war has made paupers of royalty, has sent Europeans 'into exile, JTtnees and their Princesses to meni-t-labor, it has revised and thinned firt the royal lists of Europe, but tvhea recently it brought the once beautiful Priacoss Marie Louise of Wittelsbach to New York and changed er into plain Mrs. W. Myers dded a placid and- happier aftermath iuapter to the hectic life story of -ne ''of the famous women of families until a few years ago.

reigned er millions. As Marie Larisch, wife of i Hampsenburg nobleman, Marie X-pmse vaf the most talkvd of woman i the Coutt of Vienna. She was from jririhood the favorite of Empress Elizabeth of Austria, her royal aunt. And she a complacent, plainly rarWsd wife of a Florida landowner in comfortable circumstances, satisfied with safety where Intrigue once thrilled her, willing to rest on the Memories of a life more fully lived ahan that of most women, tven in woyal courts. Most Feted Princess Thousands have passed by this eld-rly bride as she shopped in.

New "XorR-durins the last weeks, not ijiowinff thvy were brushing against ue hplped thange- the his-iory ct the Hapsburgs. that she was ewee the most arrogant, feted Prin cess on a continent of royalty, first Owner 305 Franklin Street. 6000 ACRES In ten-acre tracts, already subdivided. Four railroa stations. Over 100 lakes.

Two paved roads. The last; tract of -acreage to be! had in County i at the price. BOB WORTHINGTON REAL ESTATE Phone 2115 The spiral nebulae in the sky are i universes consisting of uncountable hosts of stars, at distances so inconceivably great from our own starry system that it takes light, traveling at the rate of 1S6.000 miles a second, over a. million years to reach the eaith. says a Science bulletin.

The astronomer who has just completed this dizzying discovery is Dr. Edwin Hubble, of the ML Wilson Observatory in California, according to announcements given out by the Carnegie Institution of "Washington, i Nebulae are the hazy areas of light common in the Milky Way. which may be seen also as isolated patches elsewhere in the sky. Some of these nebulae have a curious spiral outline, appearing in the telescope like vast Fourth of July plnwheels. The question of the nature of the spiral nebulae Is one of the most Interesting problems of astrononry and has led to a marked divergence of opinion on the part of those who have studied them.

Some astronomers have believed that they are at enormous distances from the earth and constitute independent stellar systems or. "island universes." while others consider them as objects within our: own stellar universe at distances comparable with those of our fainter stars. The number of spiral nebulae is very great, amounting to hundreds, of and their apparent sizes range from small objects almost star-like in character, to the great nebula in Andromeda which extends across an angle of some three degrees in the heavens, about six times the diameter of the full m'oon. "The spiral nebulae are much too distant to admit the use of the simple method of triangulation employed successfully in the case of the nearer stars." Dr. Hubble explains.

"There r-re. however, powerful methods available which depend upon the possibility of determining directs the true or int-insic brightness of stars from the characteristics of the light which they send to us. If the intrinsic brightness of a. star is known, it is a very simple computation to derive its distance bv com parison with its apparent brightness in tna skv. One of these methods and that employed by Dr.

Hubble in his investigation of the two brightest spiral ne bulae depends upon the fact that cer-v tain stars which vary in light in a definite way are known to show a direct light variation and their true or intrinsic brightness. The investigations of, Dr. Hubble were made with the 60-inch and 100-inch reflectors of the Mt. Wilson observatory, the extreme faintness of the stars under examina tion -making necessary the use of these great telescopes. The revolving power of these' instruments breaks up the outer portions of the nebulae into swarms- of stars which may be studied individually end compared with those in our own system.

From-an investigation of the. photo-' graphs, thirty-six variable stars of the type referred to, known as.Cep-heid variables, were discovered in the two spirals, Andromeda and No. 33 of Messier's great catalogue of nebulae. The study of the periods of these stars and their intrinsic brightness at once provided, the means of determining the distances of these ob.1fts. The results are striking In their confirmation of the view that, these spiral nebulae are distant stellar systems.

The" are found to be about ten times as far away as the Small Magellanic Cloud, or at the distance of the order of a million light-years. This means that light traveling at the rate of 1S6.000 miles a second has required a million years to reach us from these nebulae, and that we are observing them by light which left them in the Pliocene age upon the See Thrower Bros. Inc. 1 for Prices Lots and 8, Block 1, Ex-celda" Sub. Price $3,000.00, one-third cash.

2S05 Morgan SVa 14, Block 2. Fairburn, $5,000.00. J1.000 cash, balance mortgage. Lots IS. 19 and 20, Block 35, El Valle de Tampa.

Make offer. Lot 32, Block 6. Englewood Sub. Price $200. Lot 9, Block 3, Edgewater Park.

Price $700. Half cash. 501 Franklin Street. Phone 4655. sh-j would -exclaim anxiously to her young friend as she gazed into, the mirror, the lines of time on her face.

"And she had the most wonderful beauty secrets In ttii world, you know. I had to supervise their preparation -for her, and, she took such care of her beauty that when she as a woman of sixty years old she looked scarcely forty. Her gorgeous hair was something to marvel 'and she was really the most beautiful Queen, in the world." The Princess found life not so gay and happy in the later period of Elizabeth's life, when her leanings toward spiritualism led her Into a regular correspondence witn iving J.udwlg ii. who, as Marie Louise says, "was at that time already losing his mind." iving was Jiving his roman tic dream life. Some of the hallucinations.

were happy and some were awful. Every night at midnight he had a table in his castle set with sil ver and. flowers. A dinner, prepared by his servants, was arrantred for twelve persons. There he would sit at the head in his Jcingly robes.

The servants had to attend to him and had to fill and lempty the other eleven plates. The King would speak to the phantoms around him and then would write the Empress Elizabeth what they would tell His Phantom Guests Y'Ludwi? thought he had as his gu-ests Marie Antoinette. Mary Stu art. XIV. France.

Julius Caesar, Hamlet. the old German Roman singer Wolfram von Alexander the Great. Parsifal. Lohengrin, a Man in a White Habit and the Fairy of the Alns. Ludwig would await his guests at midnight, and with the strok-a of one he would lead them to the door, which had to be o-pened by a servant.

These servants were under oath not to re veal th-s King's actions. Later Ludwig was taken Into cus todv by his cousin. Prinee Luitpold of Bavaria, who had him declared Insane and "shut him up in one of the royal castles. Empress Elizabeth wanted to bring him heln, but it was too- late, for the King drowned and his waiting doctor In the lake on Ills grounds. "Poor Empress Elizabeth was Quite restless after that.

I think her mind was affected by Ludwig's death. Of course it is history how Katherine Schratt of Vienna became th-e favorite friend and companion' of Francis Joseph through Empress Elizabeth herself, who said she wanted to be free because sh-s thought herself spir. ltually united with the poet Heinrich Heine. "Most of the time arter that Elizabeth stayed in her new castha in Iainz, near Vienna, living as her fancy prompted lier, encouraging Katherine Schratt to remain with the Emperor. The life in tire royal court at that time was almost unbelievable, but it was true.

"While Elizabeth was ruling Austria with her husband she revealed We Have Just Received Another Carload NEW RANSOME CONCRETE MIXERS and are prepared to supply your needs in any size oF these wonderful machines. W. R. Fuller Eishty-eight per cent of the houses In France that were destroyed during: the war had been rebuilt by July, 1924: 90 per cent of the damnpejj canals had been reconstructed: 80 per cent of the trenehe used by the troops of both armies have been filled fci. and 88 per cent of the damaged factories had been put, in operation.

While to a ereat extent the repairing of damage done in the repions was executed with Government aid much was due, nevertheless, to the energy and industry of private individuals and owners. Agricultural land has been reclaimed, pop-ula'ions have been returned to their oriir-inal dwellings and manufacturing and mining industries have been put into operation. Since last reconstruction has gone forward at an increasing rate and with nothing to interrupt the present pro-gre it may be completed before the middle of 1923. EASTERN STAR MEETS The regular meeting of Mystic Chapter No. 110.

Order of the Eastern Star, will-be held at John Darling Hall, 610 Madison Street, at 8 o'clock tonight. This will be the first meeting with the new officers in their stations-- AIL ARSEIfS 'EST LISTINGS Spanish Bungalow A fine little home consisting1 of living room with fireplace, diningroom with built-in china closets, kitchen and back two bed-roorhs' with "large closets, bathroom with a large linen closet and medicine cabinet. Built of finest materials. The home is screened throughout, also awnings and shades, practically new. Nice lawn, flowers and shrubs.

Stucco garage. Whe lot is 62x137. Paving, sidewalks, curb, etc. Gas, electricity, etc. All Improvements paid for.

The price is $7,500, unfurnished, or $8,500 including furniture, which is very attractive. The terms are $2,000 cash tinf ur-nished or $3,000 furnished. Balance $45, monthly. This property is west of the river in fine section. Ball Larsen SUCCESSORS TO GRAY BALL 607-508 Citizen' Bank Bldj Phone 2826 Our Field Office 1010 Memorial Highway In charge of John Fitawater, ll ipen from 9 a.m.

till dark to show vou any of our propertie Phone 85-847. Stucco 'cousin to half the reigning monarchs Europe. But marriage In America to a man good means, who. In the olden days could, not have hoped even for the Acquaintance of a Princess is a god-seml to Marie Louise. It took her from poverty and service in the new tJermany.

where the aristocrats are ervants. to a home where, at least, he didn't have to worry about the erdinary comforts of life. Eut even ft that, the existence of a quiet Twusewife in Florida is a revolution fTom' the royal years of Princess Wittelsbach and Countess larisch. it to Marie Louise, it's all in a -lifetime. -A short while ago, and Mrs.

yr. Meyers were married by Mayor Kenan in Elizabeth, J. a 'fclmple event in th-a morning routine Xt a city executive's office, with some Vlerks as witnesses, the civil cere-Anony united Marie Louise of W'ittals--Teh to Mr. Myers, whom land speculation in Florida has made, well to--to. -nnil who has rescued his Princess Vride" frcm her poverty abroad.

1 Ar year or so ago, Mr. Meyers, home is In Melbourne. with sympathy, accounts in sev- -ral papers of the fate of the Jormer Princess, whom the war had jnade destitute, who had lost not only titer material possessions but hvr. 'daughter, a nun. and her son, a He read how this woman, "whose beauty had once thrilled royalty everywhere, was working as a -rook for a family of In "Munich and he felt sorry that a Prin-'fss of the blood should be so reduced in circumstances.

So he wrote letter to Marie Larisch in Munich nd his message was: Wby should you be poor over when I have so much and am -line? Won't you come to America marry me?" Life seemed rather hopeless wlwn VMarie Larisch received that letter "rnd she answered, it. H-m- reply started a correspondence' across the wicvaar. She had her choice, -offered "ty "her cousin. Queun Elizabeth of rBelgium. of feoing to Africa with a "Tied Cress mission, or going to America and being married again she chose America.

The result rfwas that Marie Louise received her Tassage to America, arriving in Xew --Vork recently without title or dowry. nt with only the hope that she would lind a little peace at last owr here. "And I have found wonderful peace," she said with a smile just as she was leaving New York for Florida -She ether night. Down along the St. 'John's River in the Southern State.

-Mrs. Meyers and her husband will a sanitarium, for. as the former jrincess explains, "I did medical work AlO.at the front during the war and 4b last ten years have made m-3 forget how to be idle, so I want to help wthers during the time I have yet to 'tve. -You know I worked with Prince Ferdinand, who ia- now a doctor and I learned much while taking Vare of thousands of sick and wounded with him. "Yes.

1 am glad to be in America, like It here. Your crowded New "Tork strvets frighten me and your New York climate is a trifle cold, for 3 'am getting old and am not so fend ht the excitin-r things I enjoyed in trrv youth. is more to my -liking in December. "When one has lived all through 'H-hat I have gone, oira is happy for a uict.ctl.eu LCF me retiixia emu lectins ui material in poetry and prose following out the republican ideas of Heinrich Heine. She scorned Emp-erors and Kings, and it was at this time she predicted the end of the Hapsburgs and the downfall of Austria, being divided in parts and ruled by the peopte.

Prince Of Wales "Empress Elizabeth, when I was a young girl, told me everything about the royal families of Europe. You know, I spent some time in the-Brit-ish and G-erman Courts when Edward was Prince of Wales, the grandfather of the present Prince. Of course I was very young then, almost a child, but you grow up very quickly in court life. "Once Prince Edward wanted to arrange a marriage with me and the Duke of Norfolk. His photograph was shown to me.

He was handsome but tall, and as a girl I loved tall men, so I just laughed. That was when I was with the Queen Maria Sophia of Sicily, and she told me if 1 married the Englishman I would have the real necklace of Mary Stuart, which was in the British family, but I answereS I would rather have a nice hunter, and about that time I was 'taken to live with Empress Elizabeth." A royal marriage to Count George Larisch, aristocratic nrember of the Hapsburg dynasty, was arranged for Mary Louise by the Empress and the young girl could not even voice a protest against the royal decree. The wedding, with all the splendor and pomp of a court event, attended by titled nobles from all over the world, was a striking contrast to the wedding of Marie Louise a few weeks ago heid out in a Mayor's office in New Jersey. Exciting, Happy Years Thvn there were the exciting, happy years In Austria, in Germany, at the courts of Vienna, London, Lisbon and Berlin. Always Marie Louise was the Empress Elizabeth, the days when the Queen began to get melancholy, later when she took up Spiritualism, after which she became absorbed in the Republican ideals and "views of Ilenrich Jl-elne, the German poet, hiie lived with the Queen for weeks at a time on the island of Corfu, where Elizabeth had erected a monument to Hein-e and where Elizabeth believed herself spiritually unitea witn tue German poet." The castle" that was bunt on coniu iot me jjmpress was later bought by Emperor Wilhelm who often -visited the place.

But the good times ended and tragedy started in the wake of pleasure. Count Larisch died and the war found Marie Louise as a Ited Cross worker In the front lines, working with Prince Ludwig Ferdinand. Events in Germany fallowing the war brought her to destitution. She sold her father's castle for what would not keep and her family in food many months. 1 In '1918, during the.

revolution, while she was working in a hospital, she had a warning that she was to he killed. She escaped in the night from Munich and the nejtt other royal workers in the place were sic.i and wounded were being cared for, were killed by" the revolutionists. The invasion of Metz meant the Ios Ing of all her- jewels and whatever she had rfiot disposed of, and from then oh her story was like that of many other titled women whom the last decade has shifted from among the high to the lowly peop'-es. Her daughter died and her son killed himself, leaving another son whose health had not been affected by all he had suffered. That son.

Count Charles Larisch, soon will jo'n his moth-er in Melbourne. From the role of a fated Princess to serving newly made rich, the position of Marie Larisch descended, and it was the story about her cooking for war millionaires of Germany that Mr. read and which excited his sympathy for a poor Princess who could not even get enough to eat. So the Princess dropped her title Into a past upon which she has closed the door and she has taken an ordinary title of Mrs. "But I'm happy, and happiness is the most impoilaiil thing in life," is the philosophy of a woman who has tried out everything else.

PORTABLE DRILL USED FOR GRAPEVINE HOLES LOS ANGELES, Jan. 1. One of the most ingenious uses, for the. portable electric drill was demonstrated recently in the fruit-growing territory of California, where a pair of automatic augers, operating from one motor mounted on a smairtruck, bored holes for ro.000 grapevines in ten days. This resulted in a saving of 5400 a day over hand labor.

Six thousand holes, three inches In diameter and eighteen inches deep, were dug each day. Eg Wait? ent ebnn Office: 408 Zack St. Phones 2207- -3566 mrn- lorcfB nicn cmmufc i satisfactorily calculated, but which must be known as closely as possible to make the keel of the airship lierht and at the same time amply strong." Phone 2501 mJ- 0' INVESTMENTS 51154 Franklin, St. Warehouse i 334 So. "Franklin Phone 4287.

Sale At 4 H' mi II; II QUICK in Munich Wife of a glimpse of it so far, but It Is won- aerrui. Husband Approves And Mr. Meyers, bridegroom of a Bavarian Princess, smiled approbation of everything his wife did and said; he rushed for her-glasses while she got out the few mementoes in photographs and books that the war has left her. "You know, the occupation of Metz took from me whatever I had retained during the war," Mrs. Meyers said.

"Some jewels that Empress Elizabeth had given me, gems with histories that run back hundreds of years, were all taken, and-1 was left destitute" Eut the mementoes and her recollections are but the skeleton of a story that would outdo tha wildest imagination of any writer of European intrigue and romance. Her life started in Bavarra. with her titled parents watching over her' eariy A happy youth spent in the Bavarian mountains with occasional visits to her aunts, the Queen Maria Sophia of Sicily and the Countess Trami, who was unhappily married to tha brother of King Francisco of Sicily. When she was fourteen Marie Louise stayed with her aunt. Maria Sophia, in St.

Mend's, near Paris, and it was there that the child-Princess had her first proposal of marriage, the suggestion of an old roue, a titled member of the Sicilian court, that she elope with She was not inclined to romance at that agia; life and his tory interested her more, but the pro-, posal of the Count was discovered oy her relatives the King, and he was sent to Switzerland, posthaste. Of her life in spent partly with the Duke and Duchess de Mont-pensier. whose youngest daughter was later the first wife of Alfonso of meeting the most famous member of the world's most -exclusive circles, Marie Louise remembers much. She remembers distinctly her first meetin with Prince Edward of Wales, befbfo be became Monarch of Great Britain, and of the later friendship with the young heir to the throne. Intimate Of Queen A.

year later sne was taken by her father to the royal castle near Buda pest, where she was left with her aunt. Empress Elizabeth, hunting and riding for months. From then on she became the intimate companion of Austria's Queen and she was the most powerful feminine figure in the court. The first lady of Austria, after -the Empress, she was known in royal circles, and her dashing figure mounted on horseback, her gorgeous beauty at formal functions, her proud air as she rode in the royal coach along Viannese streets, are events already dimmed in the memories of the oldest survivCTS of those luxurious times. The scandal of Meyerling.which involves Crown Prince Rudolphr son of Francis Joseph and Elizabeth and heir to the throne, and tl-t Countess Vetseral a beautiful Aubirian girl whom he loved, the finding of their dead bodies together and the subsequent 'sjandal that touched both the Austrian Court and the Belgian noble family tor Rudolph was married to Irineess btephanie daughter of the old Belgian King had its reflection on Marie Louise.

Thei-3 were tears In the eyes of Marie Louise when 6he spoke of the Countess Mary Vesta and Prince Rudolph. "The world outside so misconstrued that even members of th-3 royal household never forgave the memory of Mary Vestera for bringing scandal upon the Haps-burg circle and for cheating the crown of -its heir. know Empress Elizabeth-always hated Mary, but she never spok-a much of it to me, for she knew Mary and I had been dear friends. "I think she blamed me somewhat fcr their love affair, but the story that I was banished from Austrian Court because of the double death Is a lie, as most of the stories which have come to America concerning me have been false. People got a fabric of truth; and built up monstrous fiction.

Mary In A Convent "Now, th-ere arn't a dozen people In the world- who know positively that Mary Is still alive. But she is living in a cloistered convent in an, isolated lake region in Germany, know-right where -it -is, but it is not fair that the secret hiding place be given out. The place is in a section little visited," but some dear friende of mine saw Mary once at the wall of convent, with one empty eye-socket and the horrible ptirplish flesh on the side of her face, while the other half was perfect. "These friends talked with th'old nurse who followed Mary in her exile where she had been ordered by Empress Elizabeth when Her Highness told every o-ne. even me, that Mary and Rudolph were dead.

Dr. Wiederhofer. the royal physician who attended Mary the night "her body was found in Meyerling, I have learnea, coniessea Deiore ne aiea mat, while he said Mary was dead, it had he-en on orders of the Empress, who had sworn even the girl's uncle to secrecy. "The old people who stationed themselves near her in alittto hut built on the, outskirts' of the convent grounds say she is horribly disfigured. so much that when they see her once a year she wears a veil.

That account would fit in with the story ner relatives tola about being summoned to the hunter's lodge in Mayer- interbay We are offering eighty acres in the Interbay Peninsula. This property has a frontage of one-half mile on a main thoroughfare that is to be paved soon. It is only a five-minute walk from the Ballast Point car line and Bayshore Boulevard. This tract is now ready for subdivision. We have a blue print showing a' suggested subdivision into 3S3 large lots.

Many of these lots would have frontage on a beautiful clear lake. We are offering this property at a price that will enable a buyer to make a 'profit of 1150,000 when the property Is sold out in lots. This can be handled with a reasonable down payment and the balance arranged to suit buyer. For further details see R. C.

RICKER Sub division SALE You Will Eventually See the Advantage of Investing In My 40 acres of land, consisting of 20 acres in orange grove, large bearing trees, crops of fruit estimated at 5,000 boxes, 20 acres in round timber. A1J for $13,000.00 $6,000.00 cash, balance 1, 2 and 3 Present crop of fruit should make first Located in the Citrus Belt of Lake County. see- Zinsser Owner V. r. or HACKNEY ZINSSER i Safety Harbor, Florida little auiet and peace.

For in ahe, memories are enough even though is much for me to forget. Th-ese 4ves of mine see, oh! I can't ell you all. and I have been caught In the storm of events, dashed around fiv fata until I wondered often why lfe was so long and death so far fiway. But often, when we least de- Mre it, ine apart i me is siruiis vith-in nd now 1 am glad that I lve. '''-'For old age and simplicity your TJorida, away from the big resorts, of Jaurse, is the place.

I have just had gewooi Ed For Why Geo. E. bales Approximately, four miles water front, Haven Beach, that is platted. If these lots are sold at today's value, this property would bring a and a quarter dollars. Am in position to deliver this property, -if purchased within the next thirty days at three hundred and fifty thousand dollars.

Terms seventy-five thousand dollars cash, the balance five equal payments at six per cent interest. Ag Fifteen Minutes (West) from the Heart of Tampa R. A. Wackerman Co. 309 Franklin Street Phone 3987 FIELD OFFICE Gray Gabies, Memorial Highway Fone 84-324 $100,000.00 Will buy this $125,000.00.

proposition. $22,500.00 Cash, balance on Easy Terms. Now earning 6,000 per year. $8,000.00 next -Three large new brick buildings containing up to date garage, hardware, drug store, picture theatre and Ford Dealership. Also a hotel( furnished, post office building, two story dwelling, sheet iron warehouse, shoe repair shop building and .18 city lots.

'Fronting on four wide paved streets and two main corners the city. In the Heart of the business section. The prettiest town in Florida located in the hills of the Central part of the State. The new ehort route from Tampa to Jacksonville passes this property. Must be seen to be appreciated.

SEE Hackney Zinsser Safety Harbor, Florida R. E. BALLARD REAL ESTATE Mortgages Bought and Sold 102 East Lafayette Street Tampa, Florida Properties 316 Franklin St. Tampa 403 E. Lafayette St.

Tampa. 11.

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