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FOR ~THE MEDIGINE THAT’S DR. KING’S= NEW_DISCOVERY TAKE THIS RELIABLE REMEDY FOR COUGHS AND COLDS WHOOPING COUGH AND ALL BRONCHIAL AFFECTIONS PROMPT USE WILL OFTEN PREVENT PNEUMONIA AND LUNG TROUBLE PRICE 500 and $1.00 DOLLAR NlLL DO THE WORK OF TNO We Don't Talk Cheap Groceries y BUT WE DO TALK VALUES . Qur volume of business enables us to buy : uality At Its Lowest firicéfi ence a dollar will buy more of us than elsewhere. ry 1t and See, San . -.p.-'-——mqhfl‘w-,-—uw...-.. 100 fl . ..-...-.....-.ldwm--n-‘.......-....... T m-.mm-fl--fl.---.-. ‘ . #-uu-vc‘hq.-lt.-o Sashbaen Wafer -m-.m-m—.—ouq--.--n- Leaf Wm..ong‘o..oam...-u ‘n Inln S e W A s s o o S (0 [ “Le B0 1o o 0 mm @ aluile ¢ie oot ane m i mn-uw L PR o W.P. PILLANS & (0. The Pure|Food Store Ask the laspector. i ;B ’E! (Copyright, 1912, by Assaciated Literary Press.) Mr. Gerald Rochester was & man of {wenty-seven and very prim—very. Miss Agnes Frayne was young woman of twenty-five, and n‘c prim —very. No mistake must be made lgtveen prig and prim. , The terms are not synonymous. These two people could - have been prigs just as well as not, but they weren’t. They were merely prim—very prim. They weré born that way and, couldn’t help it. Mr. Rochester was a buokkeeper o a sav- ings bank, and there was no rule againgt his being rather jolly in con- versatlon and a bit careless about his but after five years had gone by no one could recall that he had ever forgotten himself for a single moment. Even during a memorable run ‘on the bank he had been prim, al- though some of the officers used reck- lesg language and had taken their coats off, All honor to Mr. Roches- ter! Let & man be one thing or the other—prim or unprim. Miss Frpyne had also been born prim, As a girl she had never skated SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY jon the sidewalk, slid down hill or chased a bad boy around the block. At eighteen she might have had a beau, but she kept her modest eyes on her toes and discouraged hlm. After three years more no.ome on- ‘earth could have got her to cflmh a tree, even to réscue her lost camary bird. She was in the millinery business. Some of her patrons thought her rath- er too prim, but others said it was better ‘so than to find her- chinning with half a dozen drummers at orce. At any rate, what swas sald for or against made no difference. . Migs Ag- nes went right along with her prim- ness. All honor to her also. Mr. Rochester and Miss Frayne bad to take the same electrie car to get to gnd from thelr work. - They had often noticed each other—not in a bold-faced but a prim way. They had not been introduced, and what .could they do but sit side by side and stare out of the opposite windows. On one |occasion the car crashed into & too confident milk wagon and scat- tered broken glass and splinters of wood about, and thonnt-ulot a broken leg and his horse & broken ‘There was & panic, wlt‘h shouts ?; g 55 g§§§§ S E f§ g i 7;1 R5EE S :E"{:s i !, ." il E P ductor locked to see Mr. Rochester offer his arm to the lady. No offer. It an offer had been made it would have been refused. “That jars me,” sald the conductor to the “motorman, as the two went sliding away into the but there were more Miss Frayne had gone and nine inches when a shoot and downshe | prim—not very prim. again, The gentleman did a lttle better. He didn't sink, but came down with a thud that rattled his teeth, The car was waiting its sch { time before starting back, and the conductor and motorman were wateh- ing the sliders, “What s it, William?” asked ml motorman after the mra fall, “Damfino!" “It isn't moving pletures?™ “Can't be. There are no cowboys in it.” “If it was a meuordmm there'd be Injuns.” <‘Bure.” “If 1T was a gent,” eontinned the motorman—"if T wae & gent with pat- ent-leather shoes anu no rubbers on and the street was like glass—if I was that kind of a gent and there was a lady sitting down om the lce not three feet away from me-" Miss Frayne got up and clawed the air and uftered a little shriek and settled down agaln. Mr, Rochester performed the same antics, with the shriek left out. “What would you do, Jim? ukol the conductor, The motorman jumped dowp and walked back to Mr. Rochcester and grabbed him by the collar and ex- claimed: “Now, then, you wooden-headed chump, what d'ye think you are u-r ing to do?” “Be—be careful of yonr hnmp. sir!” was the reply. “Caretul! Up wlth m!» Youldton't seem thmo the sense of & i e | 2 Myoubuy .f« { hardware-no f muer what it is--you want the best, don’t you? v‘_.,., e i | = i @l !ll /_. That brings you * here,fortheleast ”"‘ ~ skillful buyer ' can come here . and be sure that =% what he buys ls.good because--we make Customers are coming to us in comstantly inc - numbers. It will pay ¥Ou to get acquainted with u pay in quahty ixf serviceand in money saved, The Jackson & Wilson (s Lakehnd Florida WING to the enlargement of our mewspaper and pubhshmg business, it has been’ ueeessary to move The News Job Office up-stairs where it wfll be fouud in Rooms 11 and 12, Kentucky Building, in the com- petent chatrge of Mr. G. J. Williams. For anything that can be printed, if you want the best Work.it the right prices, call on Mr. Williams, ’fl)e News Job Office : “-llilllfl(n‘mmbmm } ffl seddies’ and Men’s Shoes made to order. Give usa trial. - Repairing neatly, qfi#k and cheaply done S Have Your Shocs F