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PAGE TWO Q 1] L : CHURCH CALENDAR, X-3-2-3-2-3-E-2-2-2-2-K-R-R-R-3 Presbyt+risn Chureh. Rev. W. F “aalmers, pastor, Sunday = ool 9:45 8. m. Morp’ ;¢ sermon 11:00 a m. Ev n!.g sermon at 7:00 p. m, Y. P. S. C. E. meets at 6 p. m. Prayermeeting, Wednesday, 7:30. Christiaa Church. Geo. W. Weimer, Pastor. Sunday school 9:45 a. m. Communion 10:45 a, m, Preaching, 11:00 a. m. Y. P. 8. C. E. co-operates with other societies at Cumberland Pres- ayterian church, Evening sermon, 7:30 a. m. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH. Corner Florida avenue and Bay St.] The Rev. William Dudley Nowlin, D. D, pastor. Sunday school 9:45 a. m. H. C. Stevens, superintendent. Preaching Sunday at 11 a. m. and 7:15 p. m. Weekly prayermeeting Wednesday evening at 7:30. Woman's Missionary and Aid So- clety Monday 3:30 p. m. Baptist Young People's Meeting at 6:15 p. m. Regular monthly business meeting first Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. East Lakeland Mission. Sunday school at 3 p. m. ‘B, A, Milton, superintendent. Prayer- meeting Thursday at 7 p. m. Episcopal Church. Rev. J. H. Weddell, rector. Each Sunday excepting only the third Sunday of each month. Sunday school every Sunday at 1 m. Service 11:00 a. m. Evening Prayer 5:00 p. m. M. E. Church, South. 1. ¢, Jenkins, Pastor. Sunday school 9:45 a. m Morning scrmon 11:00 a, m, “pworth League 6:00 p. m. Kvening service, 7:00 p, m, Prayermeeting Wednesday 8:00 . m. " Lutheran Chusch. Rev. H. J. Matbias, Pastor. Sunday school 10:00 a. m. Preaching service 11:00 a. m,, and 7:00 p. m., sccond and fourth Sun- days. Catholic Church, Rev. A, B, Fox, Pastor. Services are held on second arnd fourth Sundays at 9:00 a. m. i Cumberland Presbyterian. Without pastor. Sunday school at the regular hour. Y.P.§CB at :30 p. m. L. M. Futch. J. H. Gentry. Gentry Undertaking Co. Successors to Angle Undertaking Co. :: EMBALMERS AND FUNERAL DIRECTORS. 'Phones: day or night, 245. S. L. A. CLONTS DEALER IN Real _[state CITY AND COUNTRY PROPERTY— SOME FINE BARGAINS. Office in Clonts’ Building. J.W.ELLIS REAL ESTATE AGENT City and Country Property; Im- proved and Unimproved Orange Groves a Specialty: WE HAVE SOME OF THE FINEST TRUCK LAND IN FLORIDA Room 1, Raymondo Building. Phone 309. m&&mgns AND BeADDESR ! Dave should be tie only Put Away Despair. Fight like a good soldier d if thou gometimes fail !Lrn‘mh frailty, take again greater strength than before, trusting in My more abundant grace. —Thomas aKempis. Making Up Natural Defects. A French physician has discovered | the means of planting artificial eye- lashes and eyebrows. The former op- eration is very painful, but the latter less 80. E-2-2-3-E-X-R-2-2-X-2-K-X-R-E-1-0 | while back. By Looiss Besifeld 5 (Copyright, 1911, by Asesclated Lisesary Pross) “If it wasn't for Glory Aan, I'd die peaceful like and calm,” old Mrs. Salisbury bad said over and over for years, whether she took time to consider her golden egg that had turned into so comely a chick. “But nobody knows the awful feeling of responsibility that comes when you've got a girl poet in the family.” “l always kind of Mked good poetry,” Mr. Salisbury would put in soothingly, swinging one foot back and forth as he smoked in the rocker by the window. “I could swing out ‘Casablanca’ with any one when I was as old as Glory there.” “Now, father, don't bolster Glory up in her nonsense. She's made up poetry ever since she could climb the big pine, and swing up and down on its branches when the wind blew. And she can't cook, nor sew, nor plan ahead, nor do anything like girls should that expect to marry and set- tle down some day.” “I'll never settle down,” Glory Ann put in, mischievously. “Father's go- ing to hand over the pine grove to me, and the hill pasture, and I'm going to raise Christmas trees and Angora goats, and write poetry al my life, mother dear.” “Will the good Lord ever bless such a combination?” asked Mrs. Salisbury, plaintively. “It ho don't he'll bless Glory Amn anybow, so don't fret, Lyddy,” the old man laugbed. 80 Glory Ann was allowed to write her poetry, and ramble over the hills she loved, and grow as tall and sweet and strong as one of the wild flowers themselves. Dreams came to her, but not of fame or wealth. She knew her voice was not one of might, only that its message was true. 8She never planned to go out into the world on a wild gose chase after fortune's flying heels. It was enough to stay near her pine grove, and be free to sing when the call came to her. “They don't pay much, seems to me,” her mother would say, but the ' i 5 4 i A Ramble Over the Hille. old man would adjust his spectacles with fingers that shook from excite- ment, and read Glory Ann's little tender verse in the local paper with blurred sight. “Angels couldn’t suit me better,” he'd say. “My, my, look at our girl's name right there in real print, ma." Glory Ann rose softly, and slipped out the side door. It was early even- ing. A young moon was riding high in the clear winter sky. The ground was hard with frost, but there was no snow. Down at the base of the hill the brook made a zigzag line of black in the moonlight. Down the road she heard the sound of a horse's hoofs, and hesitated until the rider came in sight, and drew up beside the bars. “It's only Dave,” Glory Aun called back over her shoulder, to where her mother stood in the doorway. “Aren't you going to visit a little, Glory?”" the boy asked unsteadily. “I came purpose to see you. “But 1 don't want to visit,” flung back Glory Ann, teasingly. “I'm going for a walk.” “I'm going, too,” he persisted, keeping beside her, after he had fas- te ed the horse to the bar post. “I've got news for you. I've got my ap- pointment.” Glory Ann stopped short, and faced him. There had always been Dave Phillips in her life. They had been playmates, schoolmates, and last of all sweethearts, in a way. She knew she had spoken carelessly when the boy had asked her to be his wife a It had seemed almost vears of peetry, prince 10 come wooing. Now she remembered the look in his eves, and his promise. He would not let his life be ruined just because a girl didn't know her own mind. He loved her. and she knew it. 1e would take his examina- tions just the same, and try for the appointment as mate on the lakes. And when his boat rounded the straits he would look out toward the pize-crowned hills south of Mack- pitiful that afier | inac, and think of Glory Ann, but he ! would not break his heart over her. “When are you leaving, Dave?” asked Glory Ann, faintly. “I'm aw- fully glad for you. Will you be gone long?” 1E EVENING TELEGRAM LAKELAND, FLA., JANUARY 1, 1912 “All the season. I'll be home in November, and I don't have to leave until March, when we fit oot the h“‘n “March?” Her eyes questioned his quickly. “It's only December now.” “Are you glad, Glory?" he bent over her with swift eagerness. “I—I thought maybe we coujd be married by Christmas, and I'd buy that Mill lot and pine grove you like so from your father, and we'd bulld the nest there. You can see the straits from that hill, dear, and we'd manage to send out signals to each ether. I'd pass through them every week. And you could keep on writing poetry if you wanted to. But if you say the word, I'll keep away from you. I can take the navy examinations next, and then I guess I'd never come back.” There was a dead silence. Glory had stopped short. Poetry seemed a very small matter somehow in the general scheme of life at that mo- ment. There was only Dave's face. with the clear light in his eyes as they looked down into her own, “And you want me to tell you—-"" “Glory Ann, you'll catch cold out there with the frost coming” called Mrs. Salisbury shrilly from the porch. “Come in and sit by the fire.” “In a minute, mother,” Glory Ann replied, clearly. “Oh, I know why you can't make up your mind, Glory,” went on the boy, crushing his cap in his strong hands. “You know me too well, and I'm just Dave to you.” I read the stuff you write, and all through it you keep wondering when the fellow you call your prince is coming along. If you really want to wait fer him, I'll quit now, but I mean to know one way or the other for sure. 1 wom't dangle around for years after any girl on earth while she makes up ber mind. You know well enough wheth. er you like me well enough to marry me, right now, Glory Ann—" And strangely enough, Glory Ann's glance fell at that, before the fire in the boy's eyes, as he flung out the accusation. “So, I guess I'd better go,” he add- ed, after a pause. Glory Ann siretched both hands out to find his in the darkness. “Dave,” she whispered, “could we build the house facing the straits? | Don’t all sailors’ wives love to watch , the ships come home?” | ST VB | NOW IT'S A SLEEP FAMINE| It Is Said That Many Perscns Are' Not Resting Sufficiently in This Age of Overwork. In the present age of overwork and artificial excitement there are numer- ous people who find it very difficult to get sufficient sleep, 1 Included in this category are those who suffer from sick headache, hys- terical and neurasthenic persons, those under the influence of some ob- session, and melancholic and neuro- pathic subjects of all kinds, Sleep may be obtained by simple means, It is enough to act upon the brain by means of physical agents. The patient may be induced to fall asleep by some continuous, monoton- ous excitement, a prolonged use of the sense of sight, as, for instance, as fixation of some brilliant object or of the sense of hearing by means of ticking of & pendulum, When the doctor has succeeded in making the patient fall asleep he en- deavors to cause him to sleep as long as possible, This is a dificult mat- ter in cities where noises are too in- tense and too varied. They do not ceace even during the night, and un- ceasingly they recall to the nervous patient his business, his occupations and social ¢"ligations. The physical and moral overstrains which are the inevitable consequences of our intense civilization must be counteracted by sleep, which while re- pairing the nervous waste will also strengthen and temper the nervous en- ergy. For this purpose scientific methods are being devised and applied in the establishment of homes for treatment by means of a sleep “cure” remote from towns. Dr. Felix Regnault in an excellent article on this subject, from which the information here given is extracted, says the European edition of the New York Herald, speaks in the highest terms of a sanitarium founded for the purpose by Dr. Lemesle of Loches, Milking by Electricity. We have had milking machines for some while; now comes the electric machine which jealously watches the milk from cow to pail, from pail to dairy, from dairy to sterilizer, from sterilizer to separator, from sapa- rator to church, from churn to re- frigerator, neatly packed up as germ- less butter. You press a button. Four cows are electically milked simultaneously, and all this happens. And not a germ, not ’ a molecule of contamination. This is | an era of hard choices for the man | who loves health and beauty equally. | The farmyard of the future is not an | spiring speculation. but the meost | aesthetic person cannot prescrve a | blind eve to the sediment in his glass | of milk. ———— Nature Anticipates Art, The re ns of the mastodon.” the scie in the museum, found buried in an iceberg.” ‘ “fi'm,” responded the man from Chicago. “That cold storage idea ism't ' s0 new, after all.” said “were His Choice. City Guest {at breakfast)—“What fresh fowl have you? Waitress—Apple sass, currant jell and prunes.—Harper's Bazar. Special attention <iven — Q. We thank you for the fine business of 1911, wish you a most prosperous New Year and solicit a continuance of your busines-, assuring you that it will ever be our aiin to please you. ¢ The Professions DR. SAHU‘EL F. SMITH 7 Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat y Glasses Scientifically Prescribed ‘Phone: Office 141, Residence 22 Bryant Bldg, Lakeland, Fla. DR. W. S. IRVIN DENTIST dstablished in July, 1900 | Rooms 14 and 15 Kentucky Bullding | Phones: Office 180; Residence 84 | | DR R R SULLIVAN, | — PHYSICIAN— | Special attention given to Surgery and Gynecology Kentucky Building 'Pone 132 LAKELAND, FLA, C. M. TRAMMELL, Attorney-at-Law. OMces, Bryant Building Lakeland, Fla. ROGERS & BLANTON Lawyers. . Bryant Block, 'Phone 319 Lakeland, Fla. JNO. S. EDWARDS Attorney-at-Waw Office in Munn Building. LAKELAND, FLORIDA. —Lawyers— Raymondo Bldg. Lakeland, Florida R. B. HUFFAKER, —~Attorney-at-Law— Roor 7 Stuart Bldg. Bartow, Fla. DR. W. R. GROOVER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Rooms 3 and 4 Kenwncky Buildiog LARRLAND. l‘x:nunn. OSTEOPATH PHYSICIAN i Rooms 5, 6 and 17, 2Bryant’ Building 2 LARKELAND, C. F. Kennedy J. B, Streater STREATER & KENNEDY Contractors and Builders, Estimates Cheerfully Furnished. Let ug talk with you about your building large or small Telephone 163, or 104 Blue. FRED T, WILLIANS, C. E. to design anrd construction of Sewerage and Water Works Sanford - - - Florida Time's Greatest Evil. The greatest evil of the times is not the love of pleasure, but the love of ! o8se. ) | Located on East Lake Morton, Yours for Business, T. 1. Woods & Co. LAKELAND MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS, John Edmunds, ? Solicts the crders of all requiring anything in this line Fira v el R DON'T WOR ABOUT IT Just insure your property with us and forget it. W. » you in good companies only (time tried and fire tested; ® L just your losses personally and pleasantly; pay you jprot without discount; look after the renewal of your po vacancy permits and gasoline permits without charze that good agents should do for the protection of tir \We insure both country and town property. THE R. H. JOHNSON FIRE INSURANCE AGENCY P. E. CHUNN, Manager Lakeland. Fla Successor to Johnson and Cannon. w A LOLOMOIOFOH01 QIOFOTOHOPOS0 DPOROPOFOTOTE T & T 0 Lakeland Artifictal Stone Worls Near Electric Light Plant RED CEMENT PRESSED BRICK CALL AND SEE THEM. CAN SAVE YOU MONEY Crushed Rock, Sand and Cement for BUILDING BLOCKS OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS 12 and 18 inch Drain Tile for Sidewalk, Gate Posis ~ Mounds, Ete. i Good Stock on Hand WE Deliver i1 H. B. ZIMMERMAN. proqric“t“r Sale T e £ 2 w Sy R REAL ESTAT: :d, City or Count-y Fome, or get inte cantile business, or reut a home, or get infor concerning onr City or surrcunding country. we will he p'- =2d to have you call on us for s We hav _ome nice Groves. Improved Farms. provad Fo: :aw lond lose to Lakeland. and them to -~ TOTAY! WARING &EDWARDS SUITE 12 BRYANT BLDG