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PAGE TWO ~a x.f'\ QUR CA Vi), - PLE/SE HER/, a) 0f all the attentions you can show | or the presents you can buy nothing | is more appreciated than a box of | rice candy now and then, Our Candies Taste Good and Are in Good Taste| This is about all the argumcnt 8o needed for the young fellow, but re- womber this.. After she is yours such things are appreciated even She knows that: t| il s likes to be fold and she tkes more than before. you think more of her. of course, bu to be shown even better. Naturally, she can't tell you this but try her just cxce with a box of our candy and see how much it means. Why not? Norris, Atlanta, Candies | 29 meets the first Thursday night in Lakeland Lodge No. 91, F. Regular communications held on wond and 4th Mondays at 7:30 p. Visiting brethren cordially in- vited. J. L. LOVE, W. M. J. F. WILSON, Secy. Lakeland Chapter, R. A. M. No. Visit- G G. HB each month in Masonic Hall, ing companio welcomed. Arendell, s J. F. Wilson, Sec \ Palm Chapter, 0. E. 8. meets every ond and fourth Thursday nights m. Mrs. | P, B at 7:30 p. M., Lucie cach menth lnx a Keen, W, Euton, Secy. Lakeland «amp No. 7%, W. 0. W., meets every scoond and fourth Thurs- dn night. Woodmen Circle first Uthird Thursdays, W, J. Estrider, Council Commar ie Scip- or Guurdian of Circle. [. 0. 0. F. Meets every Friday night at 7:30 at I, 0. 0. F. Hall ,corner Main and Tennessee. Visiting brothers cor- dially invited, T. K. ROBERTSON, R il “Well, it's beginuin® to look a little like spring, ain't it?" ventured the groceryman as he tramped a muddy path across the kitchen floor and be- gan dumping the supplies on the tablo. “I ain't seen no robin yet, of these guys that's writin' to the pa- pers, but I kin sort o' feel it in my bones. Spring fever, huh?” The pretty cook smiled disdainfully gues | as she brought out the mop and start- | ed to clean up her tloor. “That's a good name to call it, 1 s she said. 1 know brothers back on the f they couldn’t do ing they used to t ver. Dutn all the ch have spring { “That's thc the grocer when [ th little it sentin of spring and matin’ of birds and—and all that. Don't you never feel that way in the spring, Lvelina? You know—like you ought to have a strong arm to lear. on?” “Any time I want a strong arm to lean on I know where to find one,” retorted the pretty cook. “If you dont’ want to feel a strong arm your- sup- pose,” when my d to do busy to the comin’ Nobie Grand. . M. SMAILES, Rec. Sec. K. OF P. tegular meeting every Tuesday Quick Delivery Red Cross Pharmacy PHONE 89 RTINS T FREE CIGAR (@ This advertisement with TEN CENTS is good for Three Cigars| at any store handling the A. H. T. | Ing | president; 7:30 at 0dd Fellows Hall, Visit- members always welcome. J. W. BUCITANAN, JR., Chancellor Commarder. ACKSON, Secrctary. G.I A toB. of L. E. Orange Blossom Div. No. 499, i LA to Boof 1. E. meets every second fourth Wednesd of at 50 p. ting Sisters always welcome, MRS, J. C. BROWN Sec'y. Mrs. J. B. HOGAN, Pres Grand Order of Eagles and nth m. Meets every Wednesday night In 0dd Yellows hall, . W. Rowland, W. B. Hicks, secretary, fwon't you? The Amateur Gardener, The trouble with icing an amateur T |®eardener is that usually the things that come up and lonk like weeds aren’t; and the th:' -« that don't look like weeds. are MY LINE INCLUDES Newspapers Magazines Stationery Post Cards Cigars Come and sce me before pur- chasing elsewhere. Your patronage appreciated. Miss Ruby Daniel CIGARS SURE DEATH T0 BED-! IBU(]S AND INSECTS ts want nywhere and ev- ._\\\z Rid your houscs today of bedbug it's rost. 1t will s guaranteed, or It will kill any to a cockroach r $1.25 delivered Apph ELLERBE a zood nigl cest you little, and set Lo shoe and harness North wenue Lo S. L. A. CLONTS DEALER IN Real [state uifice in Clonts’ Building. CITY AND COUNTRY PROPERTY— SOME FINE BARGAINS. News Stand Lobby of Edisonia Theater, 'W. Fiske Johnson REAL ESTATE | Loars Negotiated ' | Buys and Sclls Real Estate. 'e Grove Property a Specialty. Oranl i ROOM 7. RAYMONDO BUILDING — CHINESF lAlJNl)RY 'Will open next Monday 'at 106 Massachusetts Avenue, near corner of Rose street. lSAM WING, I'ronnetor self you'll o along out of this kitchen and let me get my work done.” The groceryman sighed and moved slowly as far as the door with his box under his arm, but he kept his gaze on the pretty cook. e | I could think up some way of makin' you ml the way I do,” he said g! <0's you wouldn't hand me a b "- that every time T try to talk about somethin® besides groce- ries. [ should think yon'd want to look ahlead a little bit and think whers now. lLet's lo, nxionely, The pretty cool off the stove and po Iy, but the stream splash dishpan a moment lats groceryman breathed more “If that's the way makes you talk,’ she said spring fover like somie | By Rosalie G. Mendel. ! “Maybe, while you are away, our house in the suburbs will get sold,” helped pack his new wardrobe trunk. “\Well, by jinks, I hope it will,” em- answered Mr. Morse. “It been on the market long enough, Yesterday I put it Mavbe | w.“n =5 knows. : of a new agent. ing with it.” g, somehow, that | ] dear, and t \\nl help matters along,” j Mr., Morse; “and on the sthoof it Pl make an agreement if + iz sold before my return, you | » permission to order for yourself :ome a l'uvalier as your dear | .rt desires.” ou angel man, r one for age: t feeling, yoil I've just been E \(1 na, | “you'd bets | ma 5. Morse, throwing her arms nrnuud her husband’s neck. \ “Don’t count your l'avalier before | it's ordered!” warned Mr., Morse, A few days later Marjory, Mrs. Mors ster, came rushing into the house, ing, “Sis, I think your sub- urban house is going to be sold! Con- gr.nu‘.mons"‘ at makes you have surh an | idea?" eagerly asked Mrs. Morse. “[ slept at Dorothy's last night. On ! : my way home I passed the house and | saw three ladics, a man, a child and | the porch. The ergaged writirg gome- » of paper. And it all | bu like to me. that at last you are oil ILess exclaimed | J& said Mrs. Morse to her husband as she | | that blankety blank § but we are always studying how ‘s Increase The Quantin, “most now but we are anxi Phone us and prove it We give the more. Best Butter, per pound . Sugar, 16 pounds ... ‘ Cottolene, 10 pound pails. . ... Cottolene, 4-pound pails Suowdrift, 10-pounl pails 4 cans family size Cream 7 cans baby size Cream....... 1-2 barrel best Flour. . 12 pounds best Flour Picnic Hams, per pound .... | Cudehy's Uncanvassed Hams. . I Octagow Soap, 6 for.. 1 to her friend that it would + to Lcep the luncheon wing to a most impors ut. Then she told the to attend to ull the household | ant enzage ter go and see a doctor and get it out 1 (A.lu‘\. as an unforscen crrand called | I'm too busy to do of your system. any figuring this morni and that wagon load of groceries yor've got out there in the street will get wilted if yom don't hurry along with ‘em. What are you waiting for, anyhow? We pay our grocery bill by the week, you know.” “I know,” said the groceryman, edg- ing slowly toward the door. *I ain't worryin' none about your bill. If you folks was to fall a little behind and the boss should mention it to me, Eve- lina, I'd just pay it myself on account of you, rather than say anything to your missus. Honest, I'd settle it up and work it all out if it took me six months. That's the kind of friend I am.” “What do I care?” said the mald, scornfully. “I shouldn't be surprised 1t 1t took you six months to earn what our grocery bill s every week—the prices that man you're working for is charging nowadays.” “Aw, now, I didn’t expect you to get into the knockers' club about the prices,’ protested the groceryman. “I've told you half a dozen times that we don't get the money! It's them farmers that's gettin' it all. Haven't you been readin’ about ‘em ridin’ around in automobiles and havin’ tele- phones from the house to the barn to give the hired man orders, and all that? Us folks are payin’ for thut swell business, and it's the poor grocer who gets the blame. That's Just what I was thinkin' when it felt 80 balmy and epringlike today—If 1 only had a nlce little place in the country, with a few pigs “You'd feel right at 1 " snapped ‘s where y elowly edged b porch. But sti “l can't understand i aloud . “Now, to look at vo anybody would think ¥ sentimental girl th 'n thize with a feller when be With a deft move t! stepped behind the door a jon the s mental gro: | cago Daily News A Lover of Candor, Impecunious Man—I wish vou woul be =0 kind as to loan me $£5. Il pay you back in a few d Candid Friend—If you had asked ms for the loan in a candid and stralght- forward manner I would have lent you the money, but asking me in the way you did causes me to distrust you. “I don't understand you” “You asked me to be so kind as to lend you $5." “Yes.” “If you had been candid you would bave sald to me: ‘Be so stupld, be mch an Ignominious ass, such a hope less 1diot as to lend me $5, and you might bave got it.” her away In great haste. Her con- | cert ticket for that afternoon she sent ' to a neighbor, dered a taxi to take her to the dopoL | As she boarded the suburban tmln! which was to take her to the “old” | house she said to herself: “If that husband of mine had a grain of sense he would have told me the mew agent's name. Then I could have telephoned instead of taking this unnecessary trip. Men are so care« Her loag trip was rewarded, how- ever, wien on arriviag at the house ska discovered that the “For Sale” sign had beeen removed. “Goody! Goody!" she exclaimed. “Didn't I tell Dick that I had a feeling ft would be sold while he was gone? He'll be =0 glad. I'll wire the news at once, Then for downtown to order my long-wished for I'avalier.” The next morning Mrs, Morse rec- | eeived an answer from her husband, stating: “Order l'avalier! I celebrat- | ed the sale last night with Bob. Love. Dick.” The following day the new agent | telephoned to Mrs. Morse. He said: | “I just received a letter from your hus- | band that is quite puzzling to me. | Maybe you can put some light on it. | He thanks me for seiling your house with such dispatch. I dorft under- and.” i “You sold it, didn't you?” “Not that T know of,” answered the gurprised man. “Why, my sister Marjory said she | !:n\ some peopie looking at it. The ! ay the ‘For was down. » veice over t was look- » build in the dying ¥« r Sale’ n ife Qs & fnow Later, it was ¢ from the house. | date, as far as I s not sold. Good- | porch | had been shovel by found a few | Up to the prezent know, the hous Mrs. Morse; s not sold, after all, « feel kind of fool ~l my l'avalier, and nch a joke on me ied our porch 1 ‘pressed it in- ~huwl' Absard! conclusion, ary- to have my ed now Not Hollering Now. Church—What e of that fel- low who start ess and who was continually hollering that he was tn business to stay? Gotham—Oh, the sherif shut him ap. ————— Resentful Recollections, ‘Did they make you recite ‘Little | drops of water” when you were 3| child ‘ “Yes" replied Colonel Stiliwets, | «And it didn't stop there. When [ | grew up they tried to insist on myl adopting them as a beverage.® | Then Mrs. Morse or- f» Ground Coffee. per pov F' 5 pallons Kerosene . G, Twee-a;;“ e Dak i i mx_u"::'—_m Job Printing | A WING to the newspaper and publishing busivess enlargement of our it has been necessary to move The News Job Office up-stairs where it will be found m Roon 11 and 12, petent charge of Mr. G. J. William- Kentucky Building, in th anything that can be printed. il vov the best work at the right prices. « Mr. Williams, The News Job Office Rooms 11 and 12 (upstairs) Kentu T R S YT D S R A M T T SRR SR W L. B. WEEK —DEALER IN Staple and Fancy Groceries. Grain and Feedstuffs PHONE 119 Cowdery | WITH WO00D'S MEAT MARKLT “‘» \3 16 lbs. Sugar . 10 lbs. Bucket S'lovtdnft Lard 4 lbs. Bucket Snowdrift Lard . .. 1-2 bbl Flour in Wood 24 1b. Sack Flour..... 12 1b.Sack Flour ... 7 Cans S 2all Cream. . 3 Cans ° stra Large Cream...... 3 Car- _omatcos " 11t ° acker Boy Coffee. .. 11t “aat Bat Stafolife, per Sack Hay, best. per 100 lbs.. Chicken Feed. per Sack. Oats. per Sack ......