Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, July 9, 1912, Page 2

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PAGE TWO —— OURCARDIES — — 0 .‘hll N Lakeland Lodge No. 91, F. & A. U ;| ¥o.7§ M. Rezular communications held on il b !second and 4th Mondays at 7:30 p. g ni. Visiting brethren cordially in- Of all the attentions you can show ;. . J. L. LOVE, . AL J. F. WILSON, or the presents you can buy nothing is more appreciated than a box of Lakeland Chapter, R. A. M. No. each month in Masonic Hall Olll’ CdlldiCS Tdsti‘- G(}Od ing companions welcomed. €. 2 Arendell, Sec’ I. F. Wilson, H. and Are in Good Taste This is about all the argument 1M ' second 1o: the young fellow, but re- or caci rice candy now and then, G. i pter, 0. E. 8. ourth 7 "hurs ter she is yours i s suci things are appreciated even more than before. She knows that e day nigh you think more of her, of course, but still she likes to e told and she iikcsv to be shown even better, Nz(tun'nllf 1.0.0. F Meets cvery Friday she can't tell you this but try her just | chnew,«- Visiting brothers ‘dl dly invited, T 1 ROBERTSON, [ Nobvie Grand. Norris, Atlanta, Candies|® » "+ v K. OF P. Regular meeting every Tuesday t 7:30 at 0dd Fellows Hali, Visit- {ing members always, welcome, \W. GUCIHANAN, JR., | Chance llur Commar der, A\CKSON, Secrctary G.I A toB of L E. Oranee Blossom Div, No. {395 to B, of 1. E. meets cvery pseeond and fourth Wednesd month S0, p. m, Sistors ¢ weleome, Red Cross “ioiid. Pharmacy .7 0" PHONE 89 | R Smoke a Few ‘ of the how much it means. Why not? o | ! | | ! | i Quick Delivery 109 A Gec'y Meets every Wednesday 0dd Fellows hall, . W, Rowland, president; W, B, Hicks, secretary. The Amateu: Cacdener, The trouble with i ing an amateus gardener is that usually the things that come up and iwok like weeds aren't; and the thi that don't look like weoeds. are night in MY LINE INCLUDES Newspapers Magazines Stationery Post Cards NEW A.H. 1. PANET[I‘AS Come and sce me before pur- Watch for our|dwine chevhere. - free cigar offer|"" e e ©next Saturday | in this paper. SURE DEATH T0 BED- (BUGS AND INSECTS Agents wanted anywhere and ev- erywhere. Rid your houses today of bedbugs and get a good night's rest. It will cost you little, and is guaranteed, or your money back. It will kill any irsect from a red buy to a cockroach. $1 a zallon or $1.25 delivered. Cigars Your —_— Miss Ruby Daniel News Stand Lobby of Edisonia Theater. W. Fiske Johnson REAL ESTATE Loars Negotiated iBuyl and Sells Real Estate. ‘e Grove Property a Specialty. Apply to Orang ELLERBE 'Inrp the { office. meets the first Thursday night in | s \'i~iL-*‘ to the great st [ plaved | night at 7:30 | s cr.ce with a box of our candy and see | 4t | 0. 0. F. Hall ,corner Main and | { into the offics { force of the | put that order trom Smith’ | In 1 Drake. Mary_Drake By JANE OSBORNE Associated Literary S.) (Copyright, 1412, the Mary pher at preuy stenogra- wits Kneeling be- ibinet in the outer paced back and offices clutching his Old Grr | forth through th | long, white hands ance, years' Never experic the wh + had proved Ty of el defe wehed with screnity throuszh the files Grenoble stood torn between real an- ger and compasszion unrufled and still I do wizh I conld find that letter.” | | the girl mur seqd in o conversational | tone At this moment Tom Wayne, (;rt--; [ noble's clever sistant, came | iis eves fell from t that he had been ks on rapher. il strug i H ion, and | ¢ he W wone | Migs Drake wos the t to break| the gilence “Please, Mr. Wayne” f, without looking 't you think where |1 Mr. Grenoble wants to s away and it will fake 'l the noon for me to look in ever fter- folder this cabinet, It isn’t it ought to bie and 1 can’t think v el could have put it” Of course, the letter wa tonnd, Tom Wayne himsell helped the girl | look through the files for it It had been misfiled Miss Drake's fault, of course—and even Mr, Wayne realized then that Mixs Drake would have to leave, for this error, anq several oth- ers which had not been of so great moment, only went to prove that the little woman was as useless on the files as she had been at typewriting, or stenography, or at the office tele i phone switchboard, where, after a | week, she had proved herself incap able of mastering the mechanism of the wires and plugs. “See here, Wayne,” Grenoble sald to his young assistant that afternoon when they had finished discussing the important business of the day, “you will have to discharge that Miss | I have tried a half dozen | times and somehow she doesn't seem to understand. The first time I told her to go she was so nice about 1t | that I promised to let her try another week. Then when I told her that she had shown no improvement she! pleaded se earnestly to stay that | turned the telephone boy into an office boy and gave her a ¢y at the tele phone, Hut you know how Impossible she was there. Then it was on the files and she has falled. 1 have tried | again to discharge her but I don't be- lleve she qulite understood me To! tell you the truth, Wayne, she is so | near the age of my own daughters | that 1 haven't the heart to tell her brutally to go. But I think 1t would | be easy enough for you. Mr. Billing- | ton will be back in a day or so and he ! would never stand for any one like Miss Drake."” True, indeed, thought Wayne \ary Drake would have to leave lefo Pillington'’s ret Dne of the cretg of the great fir i was his ability to choose his employes Now for the first time since he had been In business he had consented to go away and had sailed for Europe for | a few months of rest. Before he had gone he had suggested that a new stenographer be employed to lighten the tasks of the hardworking women S RUCCess in the office during the summer months. Miss Drake was the result of the suggestion—she had ¢ fro the employment agency Billington left, and for t in history an employe of was chosen \\hhn 1t his pe —_— | view 1y. thonght T« Wa shoc and harness <o, 207 North | ROOM 7. RAYMONDO Bun.nmai'«f rferbigiin, . v avenue Lowyer build hts _ CHINESE LAUNDRY : o n Tom Warne s S I_ A CLONTS fr office that nich: in 1 harging Mary Dr N od deliberately to d he DEALER IN Will open nextMonday = o o 1ok at e Refll [State at 106 Massachusetts Avenue, near corner of| uiice in Clonts’ Building. ROSC street. CITY AND COUNTRY PROPERTY— SOME FINE BARGAINS. |SAM WING, l’ronnetorwmu catching one of h s. He drew a cha | desk where she sat w | files, and explained to her § monotone that her sery files had proved worse “Yon as well once,” he said. “There more to do.” “l know that I ha failed,” said Mary. looking at “ln out of those “and I am sorry.” Discharging T | very much I hit on this plan. | things ] fdono my work better if I had not had business to let father know what youn | | were doing"” “Then it has all been a game,” Tom | clever, 'pugllists in the same class “1 am sorry, too,” said Tom, forced < lock at her, but he dared say no (ve He had discharged her and t the end of it. Then he sat ching her as she went 10 the ward- to wet her wraps, and followed s adjusted her hat little brown gloves. and only smiled as ht to him and slip- motion as she I she =aid zoc pe 41 out of the night T suffered mental tor- v and longing— g ght of the cruelty pt dismizsal of the v us he thought of the : that awaited her, and s the worst of ft. A wd at his heart, re glimpse of that Tom Wayne came to wy heart, hut 10 was Mary ith a het L (% I wbont Diltington. i 3 1 t you, (& Dial ill start wogo. 113 | 3 4 ! Tom thought that {t sisier to make Mare under- # fiom the office that she wou » to leave, but before the | evening came he had decided to set- | tle the problem of digscharging Mary 7 | Diadee inoa way that made him long ¢ with for five o'clock to % | o It was sirange, he thought to , [ himeelr that he had not thought of 1 Iition before 4 | night when Mary Drake walk- ; ‘ 1 1l W Tom \ ne ‘ 1! crowdeq streets he s rot of his love, and ¥ 1ol it she Tooked into his eyes 3 i ch a spirit of confidence and 4 nions that Tom w d ‘, wvhy 1 Leciated to 1oy tle v i M after- * o the ) 1 told I het 10t turn up .g won't be so hard, cove now, will it, little thing 1 have is yours, now, d oW not worry about the ary, We will talk that over later.” As they walked Tom noticed that | they were gtill walking up the bright- k] Iv lighted thoroughfare, and when ; he asked to sce her home Mary pro- |} tested, E “Don't be ashamed, little girl,” he sald. “Cone, 1 Insist.” “C‘ome, then,” said Mary, and lfll the way past the business section to the brilllantly lighted fashionable res- fdential section. Tom rairly gasped as she led the way up the wide brown \ gtone steps of Billington’s house. | “I am not Mary Drake,” he heard the girl at his side saying as they | stood before the front door. “I am | Vivian Billington. [ have been play- | ing the part of a spy,” she went on. | “You know how father hated to leave | his office even for a day, and thls‘ summer when he needed a rest so | I knew | | | he didn't like to leave because he | thought things would go wrong while | he was away. One day he said he | would go if he had a son to leave In | his office while he was away to watch and let him know just what was doing - keep him constantly post- | ed by wireless and cablegram and let- ter as only one of his own family could do “I told him 1 wonld take the place of a son -so he had me sent through | the agancy and, as you know, I didn’t know the first thing about nnythlmz /but T did know enough to keep my | eyes open and to stick to my job, even | when you and old Grenoble tried to | i discharge me. I think I might have | to spend so much time when you were not around keeping the run of the Wayne began, as he studied the girl's face. “You have been using us—you have been imposing on our sympathy and now your father is home you nre through with us?” Youn have been very Miss Qilllngton, and 1 con- gratulate you sincerely.” “Why, Tom,” Vivian's two small hands were held out before her. “Tom, dear, it has all been a game but this, and this is the realest thing | In the whole world™ Norway Turning to Wagner. [ “One of th ropean countries to accept Ric er,” says a let- 1 Christiania, “is Norway, To ! i s queer that, de this country has cquainted with the many or “Ain't ¥o: e to H at?” n*m'ued Spoarty. “That's the feelin' that two has for each other.” | - We Won't Sacrifice () 'w-fl-.— K R Bl o Ao but we are always studvin, Increase The Qfiafl We give the "most now but we are an more. Phone us and prove Best Butter, per pound . Sugar, 16 peunds Cottolene, 10 pound pails Cottolene, 4-pound pails Snowdrift, 10-pounl pails 4 cans faniily size Cream 7 cans baby size Cream 1-2 harrel best Flour 2 pounds best Flour Picnic Hams, per pound ...... . Cudahy's Uncanvassed Hams. .. ... OctagouiBoap, Bfor. ... ... ciiil i Ground Coffee, per pound. .. ... 5 gallons Kerosene . E. G. Tweed:! b NG TR I ) Job_Printin A OWI\G to the enlargement of newspaper and publishing Tusiroes it has been necessary to move The News Job Office up-stairs where it will be found m R 11 and 12, Kentucky Building, in th petent charge of Mr. G. J. William- anything that can be printed, if 1o the best work at the right prices. Mr. Williams, The News Job Office Rooms 11 and 12 (upstairs) Kentucky Build.: I |L. B. WEEK —DEALER IN— Staple and Fancy Groceries. Ha). Grain and Feedstuffs PHONE 119 Cowdery Bu: WITH WO0OD'S MEAT MARKET 1G 105 SUBAP covviivocms 10 1bs. Bucket Snowdnft Lard- 4 1bs. Bucket Snowdrift Lard .. 1-2 bbl Flour in Wood 24 1b. Sack Flour. . . 12 1b.Sack Flour . ... ¢ Cans $-all Cream 3 Cans ° t:a Large Cream.............. 3 Cans ~ matoes ...... B shenisreanne LI Ul ey Colles. .l c.oouiiliin 11Y ° st Retter . Stafoi:.., pu 3ack. . Hay. best PEAW I, . ... .ccvvacins Chicken Feed, per R Oats. per Sack & Shorts, per Sack . .

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