Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, June 28, 1912, Page 7

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upbmkl ! fares and mation. of the prlntll"l CHAUTAUQUA LAKE PTS, --.-$47.40 DENVER DETROIT -ceeceeceecs DULUTH------- MACKINAC |SLAND MAMMOTH CAVE ... CHOICE .OF 3 ROUTES NORTH H. C. BRETNEY, Fla. Pass. Agent. mmmn and lake resorts in f"“"’ ting air will do We have on sale daily round l‘r’l‘p hcltetn:“lihlo'\.: th long return limits and will be glad to give you full infor. Follomng are the round trip fares from Jacksonville to some 118 W. Bay St. Vacation Days are here, Phnmwbmtogomdlctu-“dpyw. The NIAGARA FALLS ........$47.40 PETOSKEY -............. SALT LAKECITY ........ 71.60 TORONTO -.............. 4890 Jacksonville West are --- 4150 50.05 There must be something in our great assortment of hardware you need. Think carefuliy--is it a spade, ice tongs, air pump, hammer? No matter what it is, come to our store. Pick out what you need, and you will be surprised to find suchgood articles at a small cost. 710 are the hardest to satisfy. 0 Cal We please the hard-to-please—our best customers are those people No matter what you need in the way of hardware, it will repay you here and see our merchandise before deciding on your purchase. lhe Jackson & Wilson Co. o wr Best Grade on the Market. = 1 Flour, 12.1p sack Flowt, 4-1b sack., 1 Flour, 48.1b sack % Talx Flour, 12.1p sack 1 Talk Flour, 24.1p sack [LOUR- - FLOUR---FLOUR With wheat costing $1.17 per bushel in Chicago and it takes busk “ to make a barrell of flour. Therefore flour must go hlBh“ icre i suother rive. JRNREHY 3 et e ceemmen e DR L B W.P. PILLANS & (0. Ask the Inspector Pure Food Store camsetans $1.90 3 -soiins ... 80c Ime feel better.” THE EVENING TELEGRAM, L Perfect Love By Charles Wilshin What is that perfect love that some- times unites two people and continues undimmed through old age? For 40 years Mme, Versale and her husband had remained in this state. ! Their children had departed and many old friends hag dropped away. But the | viclssitudes of life had left their de- | votion unsullied, and they still sat in [©f Youth, and her red lips, inviting their little garden with its high walls | and, screened from the inquisitive world, held hands in that sweet com- | panionship that comes alone to two hearts in perfect accord. Yet Mme. Versale, it must be con- fessed, carried within her true wom- an's soul a disturbing thought that | grew with contemplation and brood- | ing. There were times when she ! would look in her mirror and sigh, | ! him [in the ancicnt forge of Cupid, their ARELAND, FiLA, JUNE 22, 1912, PAGE SEVEN | o | -<‘u iroas usn:n; to prevent a draught-- ...@.m . 1(g" Hn mlln\\uu. day she presented her | sell to the doctor. .1'11nk of what it would mean to re- fain the same mind, the same will, the Savie experience, and yet to g0 back— | back to those days when the skin was PATRIOTIC MUSIC n the Fourth as a matter of course. | smooth and the flesh firm and the glorfous impulses of youth swelled within! Thus a week later stood Mme. Ver sale in the garden. She had opened | { the latch and walked in quietly. Like Eve, she had come, once more to tempt { | her lover. Forty years had dropped | {away from her. Her full figure, erect | and seductive, with the feminine charm iut how about a piano to accompany the siagers? You certainly should Fave one and there is no reason why von can't, and at once. OQur pay as caresses—her soft, rounded cheeks! What a marvel of modern science! And, best of all, she felt, standing there, that she still loved him, loved just the same; for long ago, rou play plan will enable you to se- cure a splendid piano right now Some barzains in slightly used pianos. hearts had been welded together, and now what could make her feel differ- ently toward him? She advanced. Her husband had straightened up, and now, as she drew and then she would say to her hus- band: ! “l am not so good looking as I was.” ! And he would invariably reply: | “Tut, Tut! You are always the same. | How can you be auything else than | beautiful?" “I know that you say that to make They had many friends and some of these were new ones and young in thefr ways. When a particularly handsome young woman woufi visit them, Mme, Versale fancied that her busband's face would brighten. The thought of this made her sad. “It is always the same with men," she would say to herself. “Freshness, youth —these are what they de- mand.” Then her mind would revert to her own youth, when she was so beautiful and when around her always there was a circle of admirers. And how beautiful she was then! Even now the memory of it had not died away. She conceived the idea that her hus band only paid her compliments out of the gooduess of his heart. She thought that Lis adoration was much of it ussumed, and that out of gal- lantry he still paid his court. Some- times she would say to him briskly: “You know you don't mean that!" His protestations were of no avail. A thought like this, in the heart of a woman, will often grow to an absurd fty; to protest against it only seems to strengt.en it. Young Dr. Van Kale, a physician who attended them and occasionally dropped in to pay them a visit—for they interested him supremely — had already achieved a world-wide reputa- tion by virtue of some of his discov- erles In applled science. His labora- tory was the center of much that was speculative and much that was revo- tionary; but his opinion always com- manded respect. He had already done things. One morning he called upon Mme. Versale, whose husband, having read his paper, was nodding on a bench in a corner of the garden, “You look tired,” she sald, her keen eye accustomed to notice changes in physiognomy, Dr. Van Kale's face lighted up. “l am tiredl—but I have done what 1 conceive to be a wonderful experl- ment — it it turns out as I hope. | have not slept for 30 hours. It is the crisis of a long toll.” “Something intricate—that 1 can- not understand?” “Not at all. In plain, untechnlcal language, it involves a change in the human tissue. I can restore lost youth.” Mme. Versale started. “Impossible!” “Nothing 1s impossible to modern sclence. After all, the difficulty I had to surmount I8 actually less than any one might suppose. What are we? A combination of molecules wkich, ar- ranged in a certain manner, produce an Individual. Disintegration is con- stantly going on, produced by dynam- ic changes. The problem has Licen to counterbalance it—to make it work backward, 80 to speak. For years many of us have been on the verge of this great discovery. A certuin solu- tion of salts came near it. It has real- ly been a question of mathe last I have discovered the tion, and by means of my tr er I can make one young aguin.” Mme. Versale looked at I!m with intensity. Such a startling < :tement related so quietly, filled her vi'h com- plete astonishment. Yet, as ti. doctor had said, Why not? “Are you sure?” “Quite sure.” “Have you tried it?” “In the laboratory, but not as I would like.” “Is it harmless?” “Absolutely.” “How long does it take? | “A week.” “Will you try it on “That is what I desire You have made it easy [i: tully remely. | ‘; you have taken the words t of my mouth. Can you absent :ourelf lor! this length of time?” Mme. Versale clapped for ds rap- turously. “l must! I will!™ 'aimed. “Yes. There are time- I visit a relative. He will not =u=»ct. Con- gider the matter ectiicd The next day she t Ler husband that she was going 2 ! made a thousand trivial arra s for his comfort. He was not to g0 berond the garden. He must be sure and place his muffler across his ch n the wind was east; and he mus® [ut the rug at night under the bottoi n of the i home | Mme. Versale, “as 1 am now, compared [ with what I was? ‘by the years, were yet keen, and now a little blowout for him at the Sanga- | - | mon club after the show. The stories | - | had passed and the party was about to % i is owned b ,I’erry-lharp-BerryMusic Co. MAPS, BLUE PRINTS attention vear, he eagerly arose. “Welcome!" he exclaimed, hold- ing out his arms, his old chivalrous mahner unchanged. *“Ah! You are again! How 1 have missed | you!" “And how do you like me?” laughed Look at me close- ly! See! I am young again. [ am the sweetheart you courted so long— 10 years ago." “Of courge," he replied, taking her hands. “And why not? Haven't you always been my sweetheart?” “But,” Mme. Versale impatiently ex- clalmed. “Do you not see the change in me? Look! Look again!” ‘Her husband smiled at her. He drew lher face close to his and looked into her eyes. His own, somewhat dimmed Maps of any description compiled on short notice, Specia. given to compiling city, display and advertising maps. Coumy and State maps kept on hand. Chemically prepared, non-fading blue prints at res- sunable rates. Special rates for prints in large quantitiee. Prompt attention given mail ord crs. South Florida Map and Blueprint Co. Room 213-215 Drane Building LARELAND. FLA they remained undisturbed b'y his scru- tiny. “\Why, no, my dear!” he replied, with a quiet smile, as he folded her In his arms g sse o n his arms and kfssed her softly. “I OO DOPOHOHDPOSIPON HOHOQDOTOT O OO0 D cannot see that you have changed. 2 10 \\'h_\' should you? Have you not al- s e g Lakeland Artificial Stone Works E: Near Electric Light Plant | & " DEFECTS ALL POINTED ouT| 8 MAKES After Appraiser Got lThrough With lg R l D CIEMIES NI l)l{l.‘ghl.‘l) l;l{l(‘l\ gt oo CALL AND SEE THEM. CAN SAVE YOU MONEY D it S Inwi% Crushed Rock, Sand and Cement for Sale ou \ ever now us ) | many koles and stains a garment has ig BLI,LDXNG _BLO(':KS OF {\LL DESCRIPTIONS until the representative of » dry goods % 12 and 18 inch Drain Tile for Sidewalk, Gate Posts, Flower store passes judgment on it"said the & Mounds, Ete, woman. “The other day I wanted to |® Good Stock on Hand WE Deliver Free of Charge match the lace trimming on a blouse. | “ B ZlMMERMAN pl'ODI'IQtOI It was out of the question to rip the ' lace off, so the garment had to go to | GHOIGHOHGLOGFHOIOHOHCHGHOMAFOMISCHOPOF0S GOSOLOSIPIDIN LIFE TIME parcel of any description I telephoned for the shop people to call for the I am going to retire from active business and in order to do this I am offering my entire stock of Dry Goods, Notions, etc., ABSOLUTE COST match the lace. The driver was ac- companied by a regular appraiser. *‘What do you value the blouse at? he asked. “My estimate of ten dollars was the signal for him to let out a volley of depreciatory exclamations. By the time he got through 1 was ashamed to look at the poor old blouse, much less wear it. It was peppered with holes, threads of the lace were broken and where the material wasn't worn out it was solled. All those defects were carefally noted on a slip of paper! which 1 was required to sign. “‘We have to do this for our own protection in case any one should come back at us for damages which come to my store the garment was supposed to recelve Everything while In our possession,’ he sald. ‘We like to be accommodating, but we fight to the last ditch against imposition.’ “According to his own document there was nothing left to happen to my waist except complete annihilation, 80 I concluded not to match the lace.” if you want to make $1 do the work of $5, and lay in a supply of Spring and Summer Goods. will be slashed to rock bottom prices, including LAWNS, LINENS, GINGHAMS, PERCALES, CHAMBRAYS, SILKS, SATINS, SHOES, HOSE. Come land See My Line. My {Prices Will Astonish You mixc+s, but of those who know that it able. " When Richard was playlng 1n Springfield his friend Blll Shutt gave Fo SALE Timber, Turpentine, Cut-over R Lands, Choice Colinization Tracts at Low Prices, Florida Homes and Groves on High Rolling Land, Situated on Beautiful Lakes, Paying Straw- beary and Trucking Farmms. Weguarantee all property just Dick Carle’s Memory. “Cashing” on a valuable memory Is a part of politics practiced In every- body's notice. The actor who is a good mixer also adds tremendously to his popularity. Few of them are good break up when one of the Sprlngfleld men sald: “We have had a Jolly time, NMr. Carle, and we hope to see you agaln. L doubul, 1l N WL TY as represented by us For reliable information see member any of us ‘ “On the contrary,” replled Carle. “Pm pretty handy at that sort of thing.” And with that he ran over the present and missed only | § & Alfield LAKELAND, FLORIDA names of 18 two. hlinger Opposite New Depot, Woman's Fine Apple Orchard. Miss Elizaleti M. Hayward is the | GOOGUOGUGOGOOOGG000 el elelelelaleldlal ol | manager « f the largest applo country. The orchard | r Hancock, N. H,, and Hayward’s father, t hlmself untll a few ! years ago. “;‘. Lee uxw of his Illnell 0 PICKLING TIME farm comgrices L aies ;n;“wm - | Plenty Spices all kinds for Pickeling and Canning Fruit Jar Rubbers 5¢ and 10c orchards i is sltuated who managed the orchard. At the recent New Eng- ‘ land fruit show Miss Hayward won geveral first prizes. srchard Miss In addition to her troped e S iA Few Drugs Left But They are Going Fast LAKE PHARMCY MAIN ST. " PHONE 42 Exceptions. “Skipping the rope 1s a very danger- Sus practice to the health.” “Not to a convicted murdcrer witha smart lawyer" P T } |3

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