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‘e | | . \ H 1" | S i | 1] | r) b VERY | v lt i st ¢ world Y"fl]lS bank hrough our connections we can make collections for vou in any part of the world. The lowest possible charges and the’most efficient service guaranteed. FIRST NATIONAL EBANK OF LAKELAND Onder Control of U. . Government' Gl REAL ESTATE . You want, see us l>cl'0rc you buy. We have it anvwhere and in any size tracts, and if it is 4 b y INSURANCE You are needing we can give you the bestjon earth and treat you rwht. Polk County Real Estate & Insurance? Co. Office: Room 7, Deen & Bryant Bnil- hn;.r T S Sl S 0 S e THE VALUE OF YOUR PRESERVING WORK dopetids on three things, The qual- ;},:;Tm ity of the frait, the =kill “_I- the pre ‘t}\y server and the character of the jars, v < clusres, rabbers, ete, empioyed. We supply the dast in any quantity at 5 the lowe t prices The most skill- 1 ¢ mukers in town get their s here, There's a ixelatid Ilardwale & Plumhmg Ln SR TRV DRI TR RS T SSRILI N L I R. L. MARSHALL CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Wil furnish plaws and : ecifice 5 6 renson. P e will follow auy p'ans and speciicaty tunished BUNGALOWS A SPLCIALTY Let e show you some Lakelond Lomes I have built, LAKELAND, Phone 267-Green FLORIDA Live Where You Will Like Your Neighbors' We are exercising great care to sell ovr RUSEDALE lots only to the best class of peaple. Thus we give you desirable necighbors in addition 6 ROZEDALE'S other aitratcions. Wide sirects, shade trees, fertile dullding restrictions. Inside the 2y, one blok east from Jake Mor- on SMITH & STEITZ ad G. C. ROGAN Deea-Bryant Building Whatever you want in roa leatate we have it . | cratefal. PATRIOTISH THAT WINS INTHEEND By SELLE K. MANIATES, “I wonder if i an ex-patriot” soliloguized X ton, as she leoked up 1 al of a let ter from hous ating with her for her prol hsenee, It was two years now had come to this land of & to study music uu months. At the « of that the people with whom :he had ¢ returned home, bhut May had for. od the acquaintance of an Inglish ily who had taken up residence n Florence, and they offered to her in charge. Her parents reluet oot 1y consented to a continuance ot «ojourn, and she was now more I+ i than ever to return. The charn of sunny Italy had worked its spell, @nd then, too, her voice g develop! g <0 marvelously that she began to have visions of grand opera. Mewn- !ories of home ties were becoming i dimmed, and three months ago she | had broken her engagement with Tom | Rowden. She could never have dora this except by letter, for there hed | ! been a fascination about Tom, and her | resolutions generally weakened in his | presence. | The letter twitting her of being ex- | patriated was from her father, who so i rarely wrote to her. He had launched into a eulogy over the United States, | and her duty to her family. i With a sigh Kate laid down the let- ter and began to dress for dinner. i Her friends, the Gordons, were hav- | ing some repairs made to their house, iand in the meantime they were all staying at a boarding place. ! She was roused from her reflec- tions of the stars and stripes by the antrance of Gwendolen Gordon. | “There is a countryman of yours below, May, who has just arrived straight from the states.” “Really?” asked May interestedly. {"It's so Jong since I have geen any- one ‘just over.’” “You will doubtless meet him at dinner. He is tall, well-formed, good ':nlor, bright eyes, well-tubbed. Really he might almost pass for an English- man.” And May was not yet so “expatri- ated” as not to experience a tinge of resentment at Gwendolen's inference that his passing for an Englishman was the highest compliment she could pay an American. The description | reminded her of Tom, and memories sf Tom always brought a vague dis- | comfort. He had merely acknowl- edged the receipt of the ring she had returned, and had formally regretted her “change of heart.” After the long, friendly letter she had writ- ten him explaining her “career” she had certainly looked for more notice than that. She had inticipated opposition, remonstrance ar a besceching letter from him, pos- sibly a visit from him. Maybe he, too, had “changed” And there had been in unaccountable silenee on the part of her tumily, who adored Tom. Her father, whose views on “henor” and the keeping of a promise were o im- placable, had never mentioned r hinted at her action—simply indited m oration on her country. She went down to dinner with a thrill of anticipation at lh:- thought of sluce meeting a “live man™ again, for she had secretly disda 1 the Italians and the men she had met at the Gor i She was doomed to disap- | m ent No inger appeared thoneh she prolonsed the meal mich as possible, Later in the eve baleony when she There <ittir on the of her heard the were a few random chord wre fell grandly on t v voiee renderd "Oh"‘ eriv with breath. By the thrill of ec \ she was not an alien 1 ive shores. she | She hastened down to the el which was crowded with Amer tourists drawn the by the masi {the home song. ! econd verse, M s the pangs of nestaizia something famiiiar in the | she worked her way |for a glimpse of the m was a little faint when ; nized George Amsden, Tom's partic ar friend. The sight of him brouz! vivid recollections of home, ho riends and Tom. She slipped into an adjoining little room to compose and adjust her | thoughts before meeting him. In vain ghe tried to stifle her emotious She crossed the room which was anoccupied, and stepped out to the balcony. A man turned, and in rayed moonlight she saw and flushed. “May;"” he cried. | | “Tom!™ she said with a little sob, | ‘T am homesick!" la | “Your father sent me mnhrim:} | yon home, May. the golden Tom, eager | At the underlying tenderness in | his tome, all her footlight aspirati dropped from her. “Yes, Tom,” she said meekly Three months later when iolen Gordon read the May's wedding “How very Ame«: ome down the » accou commier an it to to ‘“martial how to | is teach- | \mor ca is teaching ss its windows. Fu America how to kimpy clothing, wh | or above the ¢ Will you go back|; ith me?” | he o i R O | ne mmm o} 1d this natura. ping of the vell; ious to claim that re is to be used, | dr size of tl atures and the heigh But, for the most part, 1 is done « We Won't Sacrifice QL ity but we are alw ays studyving wany false | & i under | % 1 to mention, but E: l I h 1z, the switeh, the psyche putf, ! ncrease e uant]r\, 0 the transformation | 7 e some T We give the “most now but we aie anyd any of these pieces A : matched to a lock | more. A01¢ Us and prove ot t purt of the les ) + picce would be worn, fi o RO S On R ! T bungs and transformations are Best Butter, IOLPY 3 3 mitched to the front hair, switch Sugar. 18 Po‘md’ L B T e { are judged by the tints of the bac Cottolene, 10 pound pails. ......... S 128 ahir, and 50 on. The reason 1'01'v this Cottolene, 4-p0ulld plfls ......... PO 5 pi ularity is that naturally colored 3 il : hair is of many tones, and these seem Snowdrift, 10-pounl pails. . DR 115 to ose themselves over the hair 4 cans fami]y SiZe OPRAM . ......ccivommernoerss . 9 as they see fit; wherefore it is easy : r oLl B el Ayt Pdlka Rtk b 7 cans baby size Cream. ....................... SN gg slance, for the changing tones of the 1.2 barrel best Flouk.......co.onvimmunirnse, o z 30 : ural lmlo;' cannot Ilye) innld;od. So 12 pounds best Flour....... & 14 dyed false hair is without the com- i) Z al value of the false picces in Picnic ?{amS, per pound bt VI el i1 al colors, and when the tint re- Cudahy's Uncanvassed Hams. ............. ... .. - ] " ..M~l is a rare one the false ‘fifing Octagon Soap, BUON L g .U is still d"'.lr"l. All those shades of Ground Coffee, per pound A : e 9% brown which e a drablike tint, 4 Titian red, reddish gold and golden 5 gallons Kerosene ..... Ll and white lllvm(h‘ are dearer than oth- er colors. A very handsome hair arrangen :nt for the bride who is not too tall—:at is, much taller than the average w.m- an-—is called the “coronation,” this lending itself most charmingly to the laco veil put on in cap fashion, as is shown by the bride of the fashion pic. tures. For th tyle, which is rather intended to give a little height to the figure, the haw is parted in the middle, and two braids are carried around the head to form a large knot, showing from the front view of the head. This knot gives the support needed for the mop arrangement of the veil, which is fastened to it with a wreath of orange blossoms, the lace border of the veil falling about the face in a shaped frill. Such veils, be it understocd— those with lace borders-——are more widely trimmed at the bottom and sides than at the top, trimmed and narrower end is shuped as it should be for a pretty fall about the sides of the fac With the “cor- onation” coiffure a ribbon iz often worn about the braided knot, this end- ing in a bow v at the side. For classic, wsque types lace veils are far more becoming than those of thout ends staty tulle, which s rather to belong to vouthful { yvoor demure typ below the s always the head, the knot d form, which is, red by a cunning or tulle veil worn, fent feature 1 ave piled at often taking ay little curls they places—at the n or pointed rear knot aving ones der the t to the de as if the waving we ethod certainly gi ate look to the ar: for the bride’s ¢ sOome ver is to cover tle as it generally doe etter be ct “.tl\ the half ot the separate kno's s, used upon pins, ening on the veil s0 the lightly | e neck, below | n the round | i The News Job Office Tweedell L2 0 LTS E. G. R e R R e g o i o e e T o o o v better, more complete TRONS, MOTORS houts, | PODTDIDVVOIOVOOT I O Florida Electric & Machiit: DRANE BUILDING & F— WING newspaper amd pul <l to the it has been necessary to movy The News Job Office up-stairs where it will be fol Building, in G. J. Wi 11 and 12, Kentucky petent charge of Mr. anvthing that can be printed. 11 ¥ the best work at the right Mr. Williams. Rooms '1 and 12 (upstairs) Kentucky Bu: