Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, October 15, 1912, Page 7

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THE EVENING TELEGhAM e e S S IN THE LEAD ‘MWHI ARSTUEE LT ST IRGTR PETT "‘_ , Tull- sun- es 19 fresh, pu , toilet articl il dr ‘o vour phene and call 1z store merchan- cur special order department, and vour particular desire will be taken care of with satisfactory, 20od and prompt service. HENLEY'S | “txerybodys Dom lt “Doin’ What?” Going To The | ake Pharmac 1% DO IOTQ C~9‘Z£&¢’MWW‘M N(_‘df(‘!i" tore’in Town . O IR S T it St o il e Sl D w x‘lq R R EaSIer-chKer-Befier ife will be. Come here and et us talk this matter over. ¢t us show you the little inexpensive Kitchen nplements that will make an easier day’s work r your wife==food choppdrs, handsome, dur- I: Kitchen ware of all kinds, keen edged itlery, toasters, percolstors, etc. heJackson &_, ilson Co. 4 WHY , roaches, mosquitocs and all kinds of is CONTAGIOUS DISEASES and we will tell you how to rid your i 2 1ome of them les and disinfectants of all kinds for rus, sick rooms, etc. ENTRAL PHARMACY | poultry yards, It won’t cost you much, and hink how much happier your| | WGIAN THAT | CROSSED HIS PATH By PAUL TRENT. It was the third time that men had made the same seat on the nent their resting place for 1. lll wondering what it'll be like |w hen the cold weather comes.” "8 nt unto the day,” Philbank { laughed harshly. It was weakness and not vice that had brought him to this state. In South Africa he had fought brilliant- ly, and returned to England with the brightest prospects. But a woman had crossed his path—a woman with the devil's beauty that had made him forget everything save his desire. Career had been sacrificed at her al- tar—money had been thrown away— and then she had coldly dismissed him. The descent had been rapid, and now for months he had been existing from hand to mouth—and for the last few days homeless and half- starved. “I wish to God they'd give me an- other chance,” the younger suddenly said. Philbank looked at him suspicious- ly and seemed about (0 s . then hesitated, and finally ren 8i- Ient. Could you make good ~with an e | OLhOT chianee?” he asked at lost, “1 believe so.” “Then you shall have one. Wit a ] moment.” Philbank hailed a passing police- man. “Officer, can you oblige me with a piece of paper and pencil?® he asked, The constable put his hand in his pocket and produced the required ar- ticles. Philbank wrote rapidly, and handed back the pencil with thanks. “Take this to the Savoy and ask for Colonel Strathmore. Dut i want your word that you won't say where you have seen me” Philbank said roughly to the other. “Good luek to you." “Thanks, and - “Cut along.” | Philbank w other sid ched him eross o the bankment now,” he the parapet, wore taut do it his museles s body relaxed, “I haven't got the pluek,” he said | with a groan, and he viaed himself the more for his cowardice, He w about to tarn away, when a i be heard some thiny v erowd quickly gather- poering eagerly toward the roand asked doover” son H mph Thea her strugeles ceased and he commenced to tow her slowly toward { the embankment. Her clothes became saturated and his burden the heavier, but still he struggled on. Bodily weakness told at last and his strength wavered, until his arms barely moved. “I'm done!” he gasped, and his senses were vanishing, when a dark | body ‘tkound(-d in his cars. When Philbank recovered con- | seiousness he was lying in a bed with {elean sheets, the touch of silk on his skin. “Where am 177 he asked, feverish- Iy, Aud kindly blue eyca looked down at him. “Strathmore!” he gasped “You musn't talk, old man. sleep.” was the gentle answer. A couple of deys later he was seat ed on the balcony, but now he was well dressed and his stomach was no {longer empty. Beside him was Col onel Strathmore, “You are sure you are :4-xmus:h to go to the inquest?” innt-l asked anxiously. “Quite sure is dead. Well, she wanted to die.” i An hour later Philbank entered the Go to stron; the col face of the woman whose life he had struggled to save. “Heaven!” was filled with horror. It was the woman who had ruined his life. touched her hand and trembled at its chill. Her eyes—they were blue were open, and on her forehead was a bruise. Slowly he bent his head. skin; the memory of fierce overwhelmed him. And then he went out to face the world. } Mice Aeronauts. There is a young Hungarian in New York who has an ingenious turn of mind, spiced with humor. His lodging is on the seventh flocr, which for |some time had been infested with mice. He traps two, and sometimes three, a day. There is a flag-pole fixed just below his window in a nearly i horizontal position. ! Having fixed an improvised paper [pmchuw to the tail of the mouse, he i starts him off along the pole. The ro 'dom. invariably runs to the other ¢nd, then a sudden shake of the pole, and | he is @lslodged and slowly and grace- fully descends to the street below, whence he scampers along the pave- | ment, followed by his uncanny attach- | ment, to the bewilderment of the pass- ers-by. LAY ELAND, i1 e —— e | the two Xx.ul‘ loomed over them and voices | And so the poor devil ! mortuary and his eyes rested on the | he cricd, and his voice | He | and the lips touched the discolored | kieses | \. OCT. 15, 1912. €AY 1) RESTORE HAT‘E 1 | RK OF FRESHENING MAY 1 CCOIMPLISHED. Wonders With the Frame— led Flowers the Hardest to Bring Dack to Color. i 1 Waching in Denatured Alcohol Wllll | | surprising amount of freshening. Let her remove the trimming and freshen the hat itself. A black hat is easy. It can be made to look like new by washing in denatured alcohol after dusting, The entire hat may be soaked in the alcohol and while still damp ft is straightened where bent. The woman who once a week wipes off black hats with alcohol and also uses it on ribbons will find her hats wear much longer. Colored hats that have faded are seemingly hopeless, but a box of wa. : SOOI OTOT0T 0‘:0 BQHE Qe > Dealer in Electrical Supplies. ...... eAnCan o) Ld [ =V oW & 7y g, Timber, Turpentine. Cut-over i i’i,?\l_;' SAE Lands, Choice Colinization .01 ;. Flarida Humr and Groves on I’ aying !l property ju f.al inted a d on [Deauti .n"PM[m \n'-:l lnnu v and l ru as reprosented by us Ohhnge“ For reliable injorinativn see & Alfield IAKELAND, FLORIDA Mt Py 4 .o«mce GOPHLOTO »mowmmm L. W FULGHUM ELECTRICIAN House Wiring a A i ‘ tercolor paint, or some of the spe-|® Specialty. ... Estimates Cheerfully Given. .. 3 cial dyes for straw hats, soon restores | 2, %hop and Store Room: Rose St., Jackson & W' o their beauty. Soiled white hats can -] & be freshened by bread crumbs—a fa-|g Warehouse : . i . : vorite method of cleaning with many | ¢ & milliners—and they are improved by | X Q PHONE 153 T 9% co « thickly with magnesia, which 9 is lept on over night. One woman ,3' us. . the whitener that she put on her & shoes Sunburnt hats are hard to freshen. | ™ If cood, they should be sent bleacher; if not worth that, try bleach- | § ing them at home with oxalic acid, a & teaspoonful to a pint of water. Scrub the straw well, then rinse once with hot water, followed by cold Wipe dry and hang in the sun. While still damp, press with a hot iron on the wrong side, with a thin cloth over the straw, White feathers and the numerous | aigrottes of the season may be made ¢ 0‘2’0% OO snowy by cleaning in a paste made of IQ gaoline and white cornmeal, and rins- ::; ing ith gasoline alone, or with mora | ¢ of the paste until it shows no soil. 1 x:,: the curl has come out, hold it over the | kitchon range or curl the flues, a fow | ¢ at o time, with the back of a heated silvor Knife, Ribbous may be warhed in alcohol and pressed under heavy paper or a thick cloth while still slizhitly damp. Faded flowers »almost hopeless, | & but may be freshencd by coloring with powdered rouge, rubbing off the ® edges for shaded effects. Steel buckles ean be soaked in coal ;:; oil tor six or eight hours, then pol- | ishod with fine emery. Jot ix hright- | € cuod by rubbing in o ohol and poli & [ ing with tissue paper, Dullcd bronze {an g5 are difficult, hut 1 it freshened by geod | € e opolich thinned with aleohol in- & ol waley P paes it will wash should hoe first hed nocold water, then put in a to a|G0IOIOIDIDTOLRHOIOID g RGO Qe N QIO QTR0 QOO0 L OFOSRHOSOIIEOHOHOHL lakeland foumlry and Machine Co. We are now prcpared to funmh iron and brasu ast., ings of all descriptions. We .ulso do all kinds of machine work. ; & ; Lakeland Foundry and Machine € Lakcland, Florida Phonei236 T S T = SRR T T £7@ 4 13 208 S S VGG O GUODO B0 D DR QBP0 Another shipment of those delicious Peanut Butter Kisses have ar- rived, When wanting something in candies don’t forget them. §C Sack. H. ©. DENNY 22 - FA 9 & AN at el DRSPS0 vowith Jukewarm water' and :x“.-_. on sy ch of borax and well ghaken, o Qe il e dial gt b e g s s well in several hot waters, | precze out most of the molsture and | § o d.\ by covering a drawing board with | lvl APS B LU E PR i i‘{j i' i@ Turkish towel, to which the lace is l pinned, each point in position. Dry in RS the sun, Maps of any description comphied on shorl notieo Speelal attemtien, Lace that will not wash may be cleaned with French chalk or mag: nesia. snable rates, Power to Do Good. The Increment that comes to any bhuman faculty through use is the sweetest of all suiisfactions to be got out of work-—sweeter than materfal rewards, sweeter than the praise of one's fellows, sweeter than purchased case. To feel that one 18 steadily growinz i one's power to do good-- ‘Uurn is deeper gladness in that, to (o earnest sonl, than in almost any- | thing ¢lse this world shion affords. —Pun- t Hardly Satisfactory. Glanecing hastily down the pages of Tommy Jones™ examination papers, | the teacher’s heart thrilled over Tom- 1 ¥'8 unexpectedly geod showing, for not one of the questions remained une mswered. Put upon subjecting the |paper to a more careful perusal her pride in Tommy's proficiency had a fall. After s n of the ten ques- tlons Tommy had written politely: “I am sorry that this is a subject omn i\\hlch I have no information.” MY LlNh II\LLUA)ES 3 'Newspapers QIQIOIQIOLQ Magazines = i Stationery Post Cards QPQIOPQ Y Cigars Come and scc me before pur- PO QP O chasing elsewhere. Your|: patronage appreciated, =S 08 = (=083 Miss Ruby Daniel |2 News Stand Lobby of Edisonia Theater. . Y3 wiven to compiling city, display and advertising maps. maps kept on hand. SRR County and Btate Chemically prepared, non-fading blue 9rints at res- Special rates for prints in large quantities, Prompt attention given mall ordera. South Florida Map and Blueprlnt Co Room 213-216 Drane Building LAKELAND, FLA. HOPUHAEADFOHOPOBD AOTOHITHIMIAIOS0HIEI0ST0N Lakeland Artificial Stone Works Near Electric Light Plant MAKES RED CEMENT PRESSED BRICK CALL AND SEE THEM. CAN SAVE YOU MONEY Crushed Rock, Sand and Cement for Sale BUILDING BLOCKS OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS 12 and 18 inch Drain Tile for Sidewalk, Gate Posts, Mounds, Ete. Good Stock on Hand WE Deliver Free of Charge H. B. ZIMMERMAN. Proprictor. * 42400000008 Flower QUOLOIOIOIOIL IOV OFOIOIOIOIOIOIOCOIO TOTOTM E vaporated 1 0 c ® Cranberries For Sauce, Jelly, Pies, Tarts or for any purpose for which fresh Cranber- rics are used. Thor- ougoly cleaned. Pure Food St.ore W. P. PILLANS & CO. FOIOFOIOFOFOPOL SUSRPQIRPCECEL PSPPI QB G POPLIRIOFOPOPO T QPO POFOF QPG

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