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PAGE TWO. LR E-E-B-R-R-E-B-X R-R-B-0° Ellle I’rofessions-: sgppeRORBRORRUOR ool Ul il Bl s oy DR. SAMUEL F. SMITH. SPECIALIST Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Glasses Scientifically Prescribed *Phone: Office 141, Residence 22. Bryant Bldg. lakeland, Fla. et s i o — | 0f all the attentions you can show R. W. 8. IRVIN ; b DENTIST or the presents you can buy nothing Established in July, 1900 Rooms 14 and !5 Kentucky Bullding Phones: Office 180; Residence 84 DR. N. L. BRYAN, DENTIST. Rooms § and 9, Deen & Bryant Build- ing. Phone. 329. Residence Phone 300 Red. LAKELAND, FLA. is more appreciated than a box of nice candy now and then, Our Candies Taste Good and Are in Good Taste This is about all the argument reeded for the young fellow, but re- DR. W. R. GROOVER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Rooms 3 and 4 Kentucky Bldg. Lakeland, Florida. PR. R R SULLIVAN, vember this.. After she is yours such things are appreciated even She knows that you think more of her, of course, but still she likes to be told and she likes more than before. —PHYSICIAN— Bpecial attention given to Surgery|to be shown even better. Naturally aad Graesology she can’t tell you this but try her just R. B. HUFFAKER, once with a box of our candy and see ~Attorney-at-Law— how much it means. Why not? Roor 7 Stuart Bldg. Bartow, Fla. C. M. TRAMMELL, : womu, |Norris, Atlanta, Candies Offices, Bryant Buildiag N Lakeland, Fla. ; i P ol Quick Delivery wyers.. N IE gry o Bryant Block, 'Phone 319 Me gl £1 & Lakeland, Fla. ; ! Red i Cross Pharmacy TUCKER & TUCKER, —Lawyers— Raymondo Bldg. Lakeland, INO. 8. EDWARDS Attorney-at-Law. Office In Munn Building. LAKELAND, FLORIDA. J. B. Streater C. F. Kennedy Florida STREATER & KENNEDY PHONE 89 Contractors and Builders, Estimates Cheerfully Furnished. | (NN Let ug talk with you about |————— your building large or small WE HAMMER OUT Civil Engineers and Architects SA"SHC"()N Rooms 212-215 Drane Bldg. mavRy (R LAKELAND, FLA. with every set of hors, shoes we put Phosphate land examination. 8ur-|on. For we make the shoes fit the veys, ";*:r:::fi:": reports. feet, not the feet fit tho shoes as is 8. often done. To know how much dif- VIOLIN INSTRUCTIONS ference this makes send your horses By the Man Who Makes the Violin|here to be shod next time. You'll be Talk, amazed at the improvement in his Prof. Murphy, gait and temper. 610 East Orange St. Phone 11 Black. . The Fix-em Shop Pine Street, Opposite Freight Office. Telephone 169, or 104 Blue. . D. & H. D. MENDENHALL Phone 6 P. O. Box 567 EVFERYTHING IN REAL ESTATE e ——— T MY LINE INCLUDES & SELSEMEYER|Nevspapers Magazines SEE US BEFORE BUYING Rooms 200-202 Drane Bldg. LAKELAND, FLA, Stationery Post Cards Smoke a Few of the Cigars Come and see me before pur- chasing elsewhere. Your patronage appreciated. Miss Ruby Daniel News Stand H 'I' Lobby of Edisonia Theater. l \. [ ® DEALER IN Watch for our free cigar offer next Saturday| e i o s in this paper. Real _Estate CITY AND COUNTRY PROPERTY— “I've heard that the Mathesons are going to give a large card party next week Friday,” remarked Mrs. Allen to her husband. “Been invited?” asked Allen, looking up from his paper. “No, the invitations aren't out yet.” “Well, I suppose we'll be asked, all right.” “Yes, that's the trouble.” ne “Trouble?” echoed Allen, }uyim’.i the down the paper. | not The most scrupulous cleanliness is iod for the health and beauty of , and so a daily bath and a Wwle supply of stockings are “Yes, trouble. You know, Tom, I | The best results are ob- just can’t bear those stiff, tiresome ped by putting on a fresh pair of parties Mrs. Matheson is always giv- ckings 'y day, and in case of use perspiration they should be wod at least twice a day. If the tuckings are washed out immediate- upon being taken off, six pairs nld make an adequate summer sup- Silk is undoubtetdly the best stocking material for hot weather, this being cooler to the feet than cotton and permitting the shoes to slip on more easily. Gauze cotton is the next best thing In point of softness to the | foot, and three pairs of quite fine stock- | ings in this material can be had for one dollar. Lisle, even in the finest qualities, is to a certain degree rasp- ing to the foot, causing often, besides, 8 most disagreeable burning. Women in the smart set go to the pedicure for the removal of corns and callouses, but these afflictions can be treated at home and there are special baths for softening the horny places and for resting all the feet. One is made with ordinary washing soda— about a half cupful to a gallon of wa- ter—this being for softening the cal- louses preparatory to their removal with a knife or file or pumicestone, | for all of these tools are used. A bath with a pound of sea salt will harden and strengthen the feet. Camphor is| useful for massaging, thus reducing | swelling, while massaging the feet! and ankles every night with olive oil, will, as the beauty saying 1is, keep them younz. All care lavished upon | the feet tends to keep them in good condition, even if the work consiste ! only of o dainty polishing of the too naile. When thege are neglected they | harden and coarsen, sometimes chang- ing their nature and shape entirely. Befora ministering to tormenting corns, bunions and callouses the feet must always be soaked in a softening bath, after which they should be serupulously dried at every point— particularly between the toes—and then powdered. A good and cooling foot powder, by the way, 18 one of the greatest comforts one can have in summer, and there is scarcely a drug | store that does not keep several brands of it. A foot powder which can also be used to advantage on per- spiring hauds, and which is very con- venient for gloves, is made after this formula: ing. The last time we v out to one we | both declared that we'd never go to an- ; other.” “It's simple enoush to send regrets, |y isn't it?” ! “Without any reason and cause nl:l old friend and neighbor to be offended for life?” “Then send an excuse. Say that I'm ill or that your Angora cat is under the doctor's care because of an attack of the pip.” “Don't be silly, Tom. This is a se- rious matter. The Mathesons always know everything that goes on in this house. How could they live right across the street and not know wheth- er I was telling the truth or not if I sald you were il1? No, we've got to have some real reason for declining.” “We might run out of town,” sug- gested Allen. “The fishing is fine.” “Fishing!” Mrs. Allen gave her hus- band a withering glance. “When you feel impelled to go fishing, Tom, please leave me at home. I've had enough of leaky hpats, wet feet and blistering sunburn.” “Well, we might go to some other city for a little change.” “I'm not prepared to go away from home. My clothes aren’t in order and I have a dressmaker coming next week. I think we'd better just invite some people to dinner the evening of | the card party. Suppose we ask the Doolittles?” “Do you think,” inquireq Allen, “that an evening with the Doolittles will be any more enlivening than a party at the Mathesons? Have I got to listen for three hours to Doolittle’s maunder- ! fng talk about his one hunting expedi- tion to the Maine woods and to Mrs. Doolittle’s bromide reminiscences of her single trip to Paris? Why the Doo- littles, my dear? “You know very well that we owe them some hospitality. T think Mrs. Doolittle is quite interesting and that story Mr. Doolittle tells about the moose he missed Is really exciting.” “Yes, the first twenty times you hear it. After two dozen repetitions my hair has ceased to stand on end at the crit- ical moments.” “Well, anyway, I like them.” “No accounting for tastes, my dear. I asking the Doolittles to dinner will satlsfy a soul craving of yours, ask | Rhenic scid them by all means. Never mind me.” | Btarch ... “Don't be ridiculous, Tom. You know I'm not crazy over them, but as long as we have to have some one, I think we may as well have them.” “Oh, very well,” replied Allen, When he left the house a few min- utes later he dropped a note of invi- tation into the nearest post box and grinned. Three days later he asked his wife: “Are the Doolittles coming?” “Yes, Mrs. Doolittle telephoned an enthustastic acceptance. She has had some of her Paris photographs en- larged and she's going to bring them over to show us.” “Has Doolittée had any photographs taken of his moose story?” “Tom, you ought to be ashamed.” “I am, my dear; but I'd rather be ashamed than hear that story agaln. By the way, did you remember to send your regrets to Mrs. Matheson?” “No.” “Why not?" “Well, it’s awfully strange, Tom, and I can't understand it at all—we're not {nvited by the Mathesons” “Not invited! And the sacrifice on the Doolittle altar iz all for nothing?” “But T can't see why they didn't in- vite us.” persisted Mrs, Allen. The night of the party after the Doo- littles had taken leave, Mrs. Allen gazed dolefully from her front win- dows. “Just look how gay it is over there. Tom!” she said. “After our dull evening the lights and laughter are really alluring. It appears to be an! unusually lively affair. 1 honestly can- not see why we weren't asked.” “We weren't; that's the main thing to be thankful for.” “I'm not a bit thankiul. disappointed.” “Why, I thought you never wanted to go there again.” Florentine Essence of violet 2 grams A special powder for perspiring feet s made of one ounce of alum, two ounces of powdered orris root and five | ounces of rice powder. Where the perspiration has an unpleasant odor, | however, a powder with lycopodium s better than any other, and such sorts are kept at all drug stores of any slze, this condition being recognized as, something of a disease. After the bath, attend to the corns or callouses at once, trimming the nalls only as often as is needed. They should be cut square across and left a little longer than the flesh. If there are soft corns, several foot baths a day are needed, also larger shoes, and in extreme cases it may be necessary to place bits of absorbent cotton wet with some healing lotion or salve be- | tween the toes. For relief from blis. ters the excessive pain of corns and other callosities, this simple pomade is highly recommended: Melted mutton tallow Mugwort, fre bruised veee 3 Qrams | Mix thoroughly and rub the whole | { foot with it, massaging it well into the skin. | A good bunion lotion is made of two | | drams each of carbolic acid, glycerin | and tincture of jodine. { Flatfoot is a condition much recog- nized just now, and in severe cases | it is as deforming as lemeness. It is | | not always recognizable at first, only | | the pata and difficulty in walking be- | ing perceptible; but after a while the arch of the foot breaks down and then | the beauty of it is gone. So when | | feeling a definite pain in the instep | Ot Wt it T o MR NS T e L o e | out and vou know yoursell, Tom, the |4 . . ‘1‘\.}{1' c::;::facitn :,?: ::]:tleap’t =1 Doolittles are the worst bores among | gance of the arch. Inner sol:s ‘_;';. our acqunin(am‘;s. 1 d;:n s “hY | high arches are also gold for the pun | }'O‘l'l i'nsisted on dvlmg t e | pose, while doctors recommended foot | .“E hy, my'denr. ’DC"rl‘f—' T 1l exercises for strengther'ng the mus- Now, don’t deny it, b"“" ou sald | a1ag of the arch and its supports. for me to have them by all means.| "Byt to go back to the mere com- Those were your exact words. Look, ! goet of summer time, the sil ! they've begun to dance over there.' oo may do to t::’e t: . fl”"'.j Ob, dear, T haven't danced for an age!” | gaet whoee only failing z:y::!;o‘::: ! —Chicago Daily News. | with hot weather, extreme cleanliness | Never, Never, Never, !:?'; lmport‘l:c“e.m‘Ah“ ::fithlnu - A woman is never as old 88 the ¢y feet too, will improve Qh:r“:: women who are jealous of her | dition and beauty, while the mere heat .15 onnces T'm greatly she looks. {of the hands, while maseaging with | P—— some unlllelflkit" other, will be an im- sed. te rel to straln tired *“1 wish I knew how to kill timel® :::.: i *“Why, I bave heard you sing.” QTS 3 ,ff'L USRS (2 ’ Y- i< /\ - ) € S, - 2 P </, e -~ - A 3 et X e ] —~ Charlevoix ---co -oo-o. $50.03 Clautangea Loke Dis, --. 47 1) 5 ClilcAgn < nasascanmnnane 43.50 ) Deever ---- --- 58,60 Niagara Flls Detroit ---e.- -e- 43.50 PuilnBuy / 4 ) T L RO 1. { { o "d Feexch Lick Spriags «---- 5.2 X Mackinac Island -«-- e Rt ;; | Mammoth Cave-cec-o-- 3050 Waukesha .. . .‘5\ ¥ N —"- N N7 L- &" Let Us Arrange Your Vacation Ty N0 (AN AR o) Disgolve the acid in alcohol; add - the violet essence, then the starch and | I S u n e r 0 r orris root. as ’1Low round tnp fares | North and West | Commencing June 1stand daily the trip tickets over the Louisvilley& N:ahf:ieg r%un.'d é road will be sold at greatly redyeq 1., " all the principal lake, mountain a4 cC;A.ef S\ resorts and to many of the larger Cli‘i; ’ ¢ ‘.‘ North and West. These tickets wil Lo &' returning until October 31st, and b;‘p,;w. stop-over privileges. Vi These are but a few of the pcints, great many others and we will be pic full information upon application. p H. C. BRETNEY, Fla, P:s;. Agt. 118 West Bay St. Jacksonvilj (¢ YOUR DOLLARS Wil DO DOUBLE DUTY At our great SUIT SALE. A wr dollzcr bill takes any suit in the hous, consisting of Priestlv Mohairs, Surus and Cassimers. Sale limited 0 stock. GIVE YOUR MONEY A CHAMCE g AT THE HUB]| JOS. LeVAY Building Contractor Tywes work. Y me figur small. A attent TWO NEW HEIGHT RECORD3 10,500 Feet in an Aeroplane HALLMARK QUALITY in SHIRTS at$l HALLMARK SHIRTS z have 07 ¢ are a brand new brand, and you i®*® . pert word for it, they set a brand }\\U“ style cad quality at the price. i You can see for yourself. All styles of Negligees— $1 and More CARVER'S DAYLIGHT gTORE