Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, May 21, 1912, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

e pri i PAGE EIGHT. Our sified ariment 3 E2R SALE—A good buggy horse. Ingazire R. W. Weaver, Steam Laun €ry. 5-14-tf GENERAL TEAM WORK—Furni-| fure and piano moving. Call Phone; 289 W. E. Tyler. 1-23-tf WHEN in Tampa visit the Alham- Bra Cafe, the only Spanish American in the world. 512 Franklin St Farm deliv 1 at ten cents per quart, reduced from twelve cents. Phone 190 Red. FOR RENT --Furnished rooms to gentlemen or couple without chil- arce Mrs, Darracott, 311 South Flor- #a avenue. -6 & RENT-—Room in Tharp build- g m Florida Ave., now occupied by Wredws News Co. See D. H. Sloan. 5-10-tf. "3R SALE AT A BARGAIN—Com- dever outfit for leather and harness repaicing. Cheap for cash, if taken Can be seen at E. S. Mc- lasan’s store. MIR SALE—Good, strong work- Borsi:; will work anywhere, Apply W J. . Stanley, East Palmetto St. 5-18-3t PR RENT-—Furnished home, 4 or & eooms. All modern conveniences, ¢ MILK from Lakeland Dairy | H=11-1mo | fHE EVENING TELEGRAM LAKELAND, FLA, MAY 21, 1912, For FIRE, LUCIDENT, PLATE- GLASS, and STEAM BOILER IN- SURANCE, sce D. H. SLOAN, room 9, Maymondo Huild'ag. Residence phone 165 Gireen 4-6-tf. FOR SALE--Preszsing Club. Good jepening for a business alrendy well tdeveloped. Apply immediately Skip- por & Duncan, Room %, Adams build- g (upstairs). Phone 66 Red. 5-21-1p WANTED—Money to patent an invention—one that will really pay jond come into general use. Would like to talk if you mean business, Address Patent, care Telegram. 5-17-tf Jersey cow, FOR SALE—Young fwith cal?. Apply to S. M. Stephens, | Lakeland. 5-17. FURNISHED ROOMS. Without board. The Elbemar, 217 South Tennessee, 5-18-3p Ambitious boy, who wants to earn some money this summer, and able and net afraid to work, can learn of a fing opportunity by sending his name and address to “Opportunity, ’ Lakeland Evening Telegram. 5-21. WANTED—Young lady for light work. Eight and one-half hours per e ZEVERYTHING TO BUILD A HOUSE Largest Stock of Lumber in South Florida [LINING FOR SILVER DRAWER| Velvet That Shows Signs of Wear Should Be Replaced Before It Is Worn Through. l Every silver drawer should have a | lining of velvet with a short pile, and | where this pile begins to show the ! marks of long usage it should be re- | newed to appear at its best. To do this it is best to peel out the velvet that ' is to be replaced and measure off the new lining to the correct measure- ments of the old one. which it is made to adhere is made of the same consistency as the sizing that would be used in paper hanging, or slightly dryer, and after the inside of the drawer is sand-papered it is ap- plied to the wood and the velvet pressed to it with a piece of paste- board or rubbed with plain papev. | Brush well after it is dried and be. ' fore the silver s placed in its new re. | pository. New Color Schemes. | Navy blue and violet are dominating colors in m!/linery, and are mixed very | artistically with light threads of cerise, orange, gréen and gray straw. Even | the new flowers show the influence of these contrasting mixtures, and often | some novelties in their arrangements. day. Vacation each year. Address Box 85. 5-21-3. Peculiar Choice of Fiance. A pretty young woman in France recently chose as her fiance a harden- ed criminal who had been condemned to death. She herself was serving a sentence in jpison for theft, and when she heard that a fellow prisoner was to be guillotined she immediately pe- facing Lake Morton. Address M. L. Bradley, city. 5-18-tf, FOR SALE—At a bargain: Smith Rremicr typewriter; mew. Can be aecen at News office, upstairs, 3-19 FOR SALE—Nice six room hous: eun one-fourth block, orange and grapefruit trees, 2 blocks from Lake- Raad high school. Price $1,800. Ad- dress owner P O, 556, city, 3-29-tf. FISH! FISH! Z18 North Kentucky avenue, phone 252 Red. Yaun's Fish Mar- Ret. 4-15-tf. For quick service try the 0. K. vestaurant and 5 cent lunch coun- ters, 107 North Florida avenue. Hot eofico at all honrs, 4-15-t1, FOR RENT--One turnished room. SWentieman preferred. Further par- Rienlars apply to 310 West Lemon Mreec H-15-6t. FOR SALE—Dry oak stovewood. %2 per strand. Phong 163 Red. 5-14-tf FOK SALE - Horse, wagon and har- pess Apply to C. F. Brush, vr write titioned the authorities to be allowed to wed him. Her strange, request was not granted. Municipal Golf Course. A piece of waste land near Canoe Lake which has long been an eyesore has been leased at a nominal rent by the Ryde Corporation, and Charles Jacobs, the professional to the Royal Isle of Wight Golt club, has been en- gaged to lay out a miniature nine- hole course, where he and his sons will give lessons.—London Daily Mail, —— Let Him Pick His Own King, “I want you to see it you cant find out that « am aescended trom a King,* said the man who nad become sud. denly cich. “Very weil sir, repied the geneaiogist: "we have a large stock of Kings to seiect from. Have You any preference? Surely Matter for Complaint. A lawyer noted for his ignorance, filed a petition in a divorce case in which he alleged that: “At divers and sundry times the deles at tried to poison the plaintiit withcut rcasonable Box 126 2-18-t7 cause.” Poppies of shot taffetas succeed the | white popples of velvet. Each petal rests on another large petal of green crepe de chine, forming a border all round, while the heart or center of the flower s in ostrich feathers, elither black or yellow. This is an amusing novelty for the spring millinery. I Skirts and Panniers, Nkirts are fuller at tbe walst, but tlis is merely that they wre cut rath- er straight in shape than curved, and the fulness is put in in gathers, not in darts or seams. Around the foot they are still as narrow as ever, though aore width is predicted. Pannjers are not in any way preva- lent, although a few have appeared cn the gowns of extreme designers. They are so far from pretty that they have not caught the American taste.—Har- per's Bazar, Sachet In Shoes. Many girls like to have even their shoes scented with their favorite per fume, and the way to do It is to sew a satchet into the lining and into the leather of the shoes. Even the tongue laced shoes may be slit and a little of the sachet powder swrinkled in. Un- derneath the buckles there may be room for a sachet, and the wide silk | ribbons sometimes will conceal a little one. | Natural Explanation, “Why is it (hat women will not learn by experience?" “Because they object to Time's giving them any wrinkles.” $20.00 $18.00 $15.00 $14.00 $12.00 $10.00 suits now going s its now going suits now going at $14.40. suits now going at $12.80. suits now going at $12.00. suits now going at $11.20. JOS. LeVAY e ——— Mammoth Two Weeks ALL WOOL MEN'S SUITS. at $9.60. at $8.00. All Felt [ ® ] At JOS. LeVAY'S & | Every suit in the house to be sold regardless of cost, strictly high-class merchandise right at the beginning of the season. fered is new, clean and fresh. No trash, no truck, no soiled stuff, n ling before your eyes. We clean up stock every year--we will not ¢ We rather give it t0 you at your own prices--that’s US, A b i B il it M i A SOME EXAMPLES OF HOW PRICES HAVE BEEN SLASHED MEN'S PANTS. All Wool and the Latest Weaves. $6.00 pants now going at $4.80. $500 pants now going at $4.00 $4.50 pants now going at $3.60 $3.50 pants now going at $2.80. HATS! HATS! HATS! Hats Are Greatly Reduced THE HUB The paste with | 5 ) IT WILL PAY Brick Lumber Lime Shingles Cement Lath Mill Work % The Paul & Waymer Lumber Company Office: Foot of Main Street, City PRICES RIGHT SERVICE RIGHT NOW Plaster TO SEE US! ) Police Dog Dies on Duty. CEMENT PAVEMENTS. The staff of the police station of St. Denys, one of the roughest of the| Sealed bids will be received up to outlying suburbs of Paris, are neart- s p May 28, 1912, by the Coun- broken at the loss of their principal- police dog, Charlot, who had to be killed as the result ot terrible 1n- Juries inflicted by apaches.—Paris correspondence London Daily limes. Where Sailors Disagree, On two topics the great trans.At lantic steamship companies are not agreed. Some creep through a g 3t a snail's pace. Others dash it at topmost speed—the quick of it the better. Some insure he 1y against loss by ire. Others carry ay their fire risks themselves. ¢il, for the construction of cement pavements in the town of Auburn- dale, Fla. Specifications can be ob- tained by addressing the town clerk. The Council reserves tha right to re- ject any and all bids. Mark envelope plainly, “Bid for Cement Pavements.” E. B. LANE, Mayor. W. D. Howells, Jr., Clerk. Work for Hair Dresser, Sir Edward Sugden, a celebrated English lawver, who was elected to parliament in 1825 having heard that he had been turned into ridicule for be- ing the son of a hairdresser, replied: “So I am, and | come into the house to give a dressing to the Whigs.” Red Hail in !reland. Red hail 1s not unknown. in May of 1885 there was quite a aecavy il of it at Castiewemnan, 1 oy Down, Ireland. Red ana white ¢ gether. And the rea hue wi: Technically Explained. merely on the surface ot b A Rockford (Il1) boy, while at the | but went through ana thr table the other day asked what a st e spinster was. Refore anyone else had Bound to Mave Its Effect. time to explain his ten-year-old broth- | He who is false to Present duty appier ] g alw: ‘Huh! Don't | preaks a thread in the I :llilel:}‘l;qln ::;:mr:c- nlx::lo rh::) l::;:‘li;llé“:'): |you kno.w? A spinster is a woman | fing the flaw when h: n:;(:,?x.'” ) ters of action.—Henry James, ! who ain’t married to her husband. gotten its cause.—Henry Ward 1.t —_— T er. Undeserving of Sympathy, Critics. There 1s no use wasting sympathy | Agnes—"You saw Belle's wedding on a man who can't be happy with |Bifts; how was her silver marked?" good health, good meals and good | Ethel—"From the looks of it, | should weather. say most of it was marked down.” Regretted Womanly Limitations, She gave an envious thought to the ier condescendingly said: Beyond the Touch of Time. A man never becomes tuo old to throw out his chest as he puscs a looking-glass.—Atchison Globe [ Remarkable reductions on Every article of- 0 left-overs dang- arry clothing over. BOYS' CLOTHING. MEN'S SHIRTS We have the swellest line of Boys' is i : Suits ever brought to Lakeland. They plyrtfu s:u-?: t;:: :mhl,’,.:..: t’::e are beauties, and LOOK AT THE when you note the following prices: PRICES: $1.25 and $1.00 shirts now going at $8.00 suits now going at $6.40. 80 cents. $7.00 mits 2w going st $5.60. 75“0:: shirts now reduced to 50 $6.00 suits now going at $4.80. 50 cent shirts now going at 40 cents '18 S. Kentucky Ave.

Other pages from this issue: