Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, May 22, 1912, Page 8

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IDENT, PLATE- and S1EAM BOILE N- see D. H. SLOAN. room 9, monde nild az. Residence phone 4-6-t1. ssing Club. Good ness already we'l wediately i an, Roem 9, Adams buil FOR SALE ing for a FOR SALE—A good bugzy horse. 1 Inquire R. WV, Weaver, Steam Laun- ber & D WANTED—Moeney patent an one that will really pay into ger 1 use. Would alk if you mean business. Patent, care Telegram. 5-17-tf SALE—Y Jersey cow, 15, Apply to S. M. Stephens, and. 5-17. FURNISHED ROOMS. The Elbemar, 217 5-18-3p to JRAL TEAM WORK—Furn piano moving. Call Phone 289 W. L. Tyler. 1-25-tf WHEN in Tampa visit the Alham- bra Cafe, the only Spa c1 Cafe in the world PURE MILK from Lz Farm | J recuced from tweive Red. FOR RINT —Furnished rooms to gentlemen or (ouple without xhil»é‘ dren. Mrs. Darracott, 211 South Flor-| Ambitious boy, who ¥ A jda avenue 5. some money this summer, and able FOR RENT— Room in Tharp build «nd not afraid to work, can learn of FOR RED t harj - 5 4 g o ing on Florida Ave., now occupied by . fine opportunity by sending his i : “Opportunity,’ fnion News Co. See D. H. Sloan. | v i 5.10-t5, | 1keland Evening Telegram. 5-21. FOR SALE AT A BARGAIN—Com-| plete outfit for leather and )mrnv,\ss repairing. Cheap for cash, if taken! at once. Can be seen at E. 8. Mc-! Glashan's store. FOR SALE-——Good, strong work- horse; will work anywhere. Apply to J. H. Stanley, East Palmetto St 5-18-3t FOR RENT— Furnished home, 4 or 5 rooms. All modern conveniences, facing Lake Morton. Addres M. L. Bradley, city. 5-18-tf, FOR SALE—At a bargain: Smith Premier typewriter; Can be seen at News office, upstairs, 3-19 FOR SALE- Nice six room hous: on one-fourth block, orange and grapefruit trees, 2 blocks from Lake- land high school. Price §1,800. Ad- dress owner P. 0. 536, city, 3-20-tf. FISH! FISH! 218 North Kentucky avenue, phone 252 Red. Yaun's Fish Mar- ket. 4-15-tf. For quick service try the O. K. restaurant ard 5 cent lunch coun- tors, 107 North Florida avenue. Hot coffco at all hours. 4-15-tf. FOR RENT - One mrnished room. Gentleman preferred, Further par- ticulars apply to 310 West Lemon strect. H-15-6t. FOR SALE-~Dry $2 per strand. Phong 163 Red. 5-14-Uf FOR SALE Horse, wagzon and har- ness. Apply to C. F. Brush, or write lox 426, 2-18-tf invention nd like to e ung FOR 3 per guart s, Phone 140 S-11-1mo| { Without board. South Tennessee tnts 1o earn name and address to WANTED-—Young lady for light work. Eight and one-hal! hours per day. Vacation each year. Address Box S5, 5-21-3. pairs Silk E. F. Hosiery. Six gnaranteed for six months. nd lisle Sold only by wiley, Lakeland, Ever-Wear To Preserve Old Photographs. One way to preserve old photo- graphs is as follows: Put the photo- graphs into clean, hot water; very soon the pictures loosen and may be easily removed from the cards. \When dry, either trim down to economize space, or carefully cut away the back- ground entirely. Mount them in a scrap book or a book made especially for kodak pictures. You will then have a book with which you can spend many happy moments looking over familiar scenes and faces. Animals’ Ability to Learn. Animals which have never met with an electric current become sensitive to it in a marked degree. thereby dis- proving the theory that animals pos- sess only traits that are due to natural selection by a long process of the “sur- vival of the fittest.” This sensiiive- ness is called “galvotropism” and is rather a body blow .0 Darwin's the: ory. ——— Proved His Ability. A man in New Jersey when his automobile burned up took his wife on his back and carried her six miles without once putting her down. That is the sort of husband who knows how to support a wife. ouk stovewood. TELEGRAM LAKELA f[V[RYIIIINfi 10 BUILD A HOUSE Largest Stock of Lumber in South Florida ———— IIPRETTY TABLE FAVORS ’ DECIDED NOVELTIES THAT ARE I EASY TO FASHION. | ! l IAny Number of Devices to Choose | From—Bunches of Sweetmeat Flowers—Pink Roses for the | Birthday Cake. | The popularity of the little velvet or silk bunch of flowers for the cor- sage, with beautifully chosen colors— bright ones or “weary” ones together only in one bunch—has led to the fashion abroad of another sort of lit- tle posy. They are choosing bunc hes of sweet- meat flowers for the table, and very pretty these are and quite easy to make. | You get green-covered wire and a spirit lamp. You burn one end of the | wire in the flame and when red-hot | you stick into a piece of melted su- gar, which hardens and binds the | stem to the flower. Then you make wires for separate petals and coat them with sugar icing and tint them, say, pink or white for | roses, mauve for violets, and use eith- er spinach-colored icing or else an- gelica for the leaves. Orange drops : you heat and roll in granulated sugar for centers of the flowers. vices may be very numerous. For instance, you may dearest little bunch of white sweet- meat snowdrops to lay by each plate, Arrange and it dahlias, dalsies—what not. a flat bunch of pink roses The greatest fun is to have a dif- The de- | make the | or one of red autumn berries, tiny | charmingly decorates a birthday cake. | ferent flower to lay before each plate | G Brick Lime Cement Plaster -5 i, _ Lumber Shingles Lath Mill Work - IT WILL PAY TO SEE US! The Paul & Waymer Lumber Company PRICES RIGHT Office: Foot of Main Street, City SERVICE RIGHT NOW . . Temperament, The poet says that we live by ad- at a dinner table. All sorts of ready- made sweets, tiny to big, that you get at a confectioner’s may be pressed in- to the service, and split, skinned Jor- dun almonds make good petals; red comfits may be adopted for pimper- nels, and so on. Twist some crystallized violets or basket, and to the handle fasten some i violet flowers, and you have a dainty little ornament to set on the table at dessert. Why His Head Ached. Boswell one day complained to John- son that the noigse made by a group of literary men with whom they were dining the day before made his head ache. “No, sir; it was not the noise that made your head ache,” replied Johnson, “it was the sense we put in- to it.” “llas sense that effect on the head?” asked Boswell. Y sir; on heads not used to it,” answered John- son. miration, hope and love. Strong feel- | Ings not only affect our bodily proc- | esses, hut they react upon the mind | and make life worth living or death de- irable. Feeling or emotion is what | makes that desirable thing, tempera- { ment, which is but another word for | | intercsting ch roses up into a bunch, adding leaves | and wire, and pop this into a llmul Man's Affections. | In a recent case in which the ques- ! tion of affection was an important is- | sue. a judge spoke wisely as a philos- | opher. “A man's affection for a wom- an,"” said the modern Solomon, “is :shm\'n by his willingness to take | trouble in her behalf, to do little serv- fces for her, to do with a willing hand ! that which a man not in love would deem tiresome, troublesome and dis- quieting.” Truth in Russian Proverb. There is an old Russian proverb which says: “A secret is only a se- sret when one person knows it." This oroverb is well worth remembering. Every suit in the house to be sold regardless of cost. strictly high-class merchandise right at the beginning of the season. Every article of- fered is new, clean and fresh. No trash, no truck, no soiled stuff, no left-overs dang- ling before your eyes. We clean up stock every year--we will not carry clothing over. We rather give it t0 you at your own prices--that’s US. | iron for a medium-sized nail, sugar to What a Man is Made Of. The average man has “ingredients” to make fat for seven bars of soap, Woman's Beauty in History. We all know that beauty in woma holds a unique, preponderant and mantic place in the world's ! that it has plunged nations i fill a small bowl, salt to fill a shaker, i that it has altered the map of rhe lime to whitewash a chicken coop, phosphorus to make 2,200 match tips, | world; has given us some of the magnesium for a dose of magnesia, | est masterpieces in every ar sodium to neutralize a pint and a half l"h“ it is as changeable as f:\s“ ) of water, potassium to explode a toy | self, as uncertain as the wei cannon, sulphur to rid a dog of fleas, | Roger de Chateleux. and albumino¥ds to make a case of eggs.—Leslie's Weekly. Relic of Cruel Rome. One of the most impressive of all the old ruins in Rome is the great Coliseum. It was in' this open amphiteater that the cruel ¢ were witnessed—gladiators fo mortal combat, Christians w to fight starving lions and Death was inevitable, The ¢ had a seating capacity of 87, sons. Iconoclasts. Now they say the game of golf orig- fnated in Holland. Oh, go on with the cruel work of despoliation. The dudle sack has already been awarded to Ger- many and probably an Italian will be valong directly and claim the haggis while a Greek walks off with the Kkilts, —New York Evening Telegram. What She Wanted. Jealous. An editor speaks with unhe fippancy of the “skyscraper There isn't any building boom it own. Clerk—*"Perhaps, madam, you would like to look at some goods a little |more expensive.” Customer—"No, not I more expensive, but of better quality.” —Boston Transcript. Mammoth Two Weeks i Remarkable reductions on SOME EXAMPLES OF HOW PRICES HAVE BEEN SLASHED BOYS' CLOTHING. ALL WOOL MEN'S SUITS. Al $20.00 suits now going at $14.40. $6.00 $18.00 suits now going at $12.80. $15.00 suits now going at $12.00. $14.00 suits now going at $11.20. $5.00 pants $4.50 pants $3.50 pants MEN'S PANTS. Wool and the Latest Weaves. pants now going at $4.80. now going at $4.00 now going at $3.60 now going at $2.80 We have the swellest line of Boys' Suits ever brought to Lakeland. They are beauties, and LOOK AT THE PRICES: Ply of Shirts, You will lose no time when you note the following prices $1.25 and $1.00 shirts now going & 80 cents. $8.00 suits now going at $6.40. $7.00 suits now going at $5.60. $6.00 suits now going at $4.80. THE HUB $12.00 suits now going at $9.60. W B Sl $10.00 suits now going at $8.00. 75 cent shirts now reduced to 5’ cents. All Felt Hats Are Greatly Reduced 50 hirts cent shirts now going at 40 cen's JOS. LeVAY '18 . Kentucky Ave.

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