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PA. (¥, NEV")R any fear of vanlts--huilt the worliV’s ¢ against iire ) on the most siie 4 PR b o by S PR Yo JGobuig papers, vaduables and jewel i ovoun kep yout in our deposit clentific modorn lines by malvers, Utterly proof = OF LAKELAND ' N e R T 'FO “FORRENT: if you have rooms or a honse *: with a conscientious and capas | lands, ete.,, will tell you feal linse or not. QEET P S LI P TLTF ] R. L. V CONTRACTOR YA » to rent, see me. to rent rooms or a house, se: me building, Room 1, and 1 offer wmy services to all who have business real estate agent. | pieased to show you properties, cither city or country, groves, truck the .truth about it and give you a fair I you are a strauger, drop in and see me. to uive yon what information I can, whether you wish to pur- Yours truly, N. K. LEWIS, Phone 309. e e et e T e S R T et If you want I am located in the Raymond:. will b2 1 will be glad SOOIV IVDTOCO “WOGDMAN SAVE THAT TREE” | <hondd e ihe modern version of the femons poent. Don't let it wilt and dio duet for the want of a little at- tetton Come here oud get a tree Jasy with which you can rid your trevs of all moths, cxterpillars, bugs, i, et You would not sell one trees for o lor of money. mrnestuess of vour regard by cving ic from its enemics, widnd flardware & Plumbing Co. AND BUILDER Will furnish plans and specificaticns or will follow any plans and specification: furnished. BUNGALOWS A SPECIALTY. Let 3¢ show you some Lakelond Lomes I have built, “ap. SMITH & Deen-Eryaut inve it Phone 267-Green. Live Where You Will Like Your Neighbors We are exercising great care to seil our ROSEDALE lots only to the best class of people. you desirable neighbors in addition te ROSEDALE'S other attratcions. Widy sfreets, shade trees, fertile saf!, dbuliding restrictions. Inside the ¥, one block east from Take Mor- nd G. C. ROGAN Whaterer you want 'n rea lestute Thus we give STEITZ Building. . | parade, THE EVENING TE] 10 B3 3F DREAMS uiit on Old-Fashioned Ideals. e (3157 By ANNIE HINRICHSEN. A torpedo, It with the full strength oi ound, tanned arm, : M ¢ dreams. 1! / struck the elephant's side and explod- | <" ! o SN e R 4 : : Eior a0y ’n a real home. 1! 1 \ ed. A shover of t pedoes followed on young men I the crowd the first one. A ¢ and women pus at the curb to In * noisy mis- ciles at the elep The great ani- mal, the star attraciion of the circus jogged his way along the street, undisturbed by the bombard- ment. The girl who had thrown the first torpeao was leading the bembarders. The crowd on the sidewalk was laugh- ing and checring. The pranks of the residents of the summer colony of Lakemoore were the chief joy of the village. The lcader of the toruedo throwers ran down the street cr missiles against the unconc phant. It missed the clep! and exploded at the feet of a man standing at the cdge of the sidewalk. The girl turned o sgce where torpedo had struck. The man was Iocking at her with amusement and curiogity, Her merry i: sobered. he Lox of torpedses in her hand céropped to the ground. One of the men i her parly picked it up and handed it to her. phant and the man watching her from the sidewalk and disappeared in the crowd. At one of the summer cottages Grace Audrey met Ralph Norman, “We have scen each other before,” Norman remarked. “Indecd?” Miss were elevated. There was a super- cilious note in her voice. “] saw you circus day at the pa- rade.” “Is it possible?” she asked, indif- ferently. Two weeks later Ralph Norman was still in Lakemoore ut the sum- s mer hotel. ‘ All morning he and Grace Audrey had been sailing in her boat. Nor- man, who had been sitting in the stern of the boat, left his seat to ad- { | | | | i [ | There Was No Sign of Human Life. 3 fjusl the sail. A sudden puff of wind : struck the sail. The boat tipped far [ over and Norman was in the water. . Grace pulled down the sail and the |boat stopped. Once he rose to the | surface. Then he sank again. Grace | caught up the oars and rowed the { light boat toward him. As he rose a second time she saw that his eves were closed. She jumped into the water, caught him by the collar of his coat and drew him to the boat. With one hand she held his head above water, with tho other she clung to the boat. People on the shore had seen the ace ; cident, and several boats were com- ! ing toward them. An hour later Grace and Norman | sat on the beach at Lakemoore. They | wore dry clothes, and Norman’s head, . Which had been struck as he fell from i the boat, was bandaged. i “You will have to marry me.” Nor- [ man sald decidedly. “You saved my life. When a woman saves a man's life she always marries him. I've loved you since the first time I saw you. You were throwing torpedoes at an elephant and—" “And you loved me because I was |acting ltke a spolled tomboy.” The girl’s face was white; her hands were clenched. “I shall never marry you. Please—please don’t speak to me agaln of your love for me. I can't stand it. I won't listen.” That afternoon Grace Audrey walked through the streets of summer homes, past the villages and out into the country. A mile from the village | she came to a house which stood back 'from the road. It was a large, ram- . bling house, with wide verandas, | Vines grew over the verandas and roses climbed to the windows. Majes- tic old trees cproad their great branches over the ouse and made a thick shade on the green lawn. There was no sign of human life about the place. Grace sat down on an old bench in 2 corner of the veranda. Long, golden | lances thrown by ihe s:tting sum lay across the lawn. Qccns 1y a bird's bedtime chirp broke i s | - “Grace, what bLrings you here?” ncee s JGEAM, LAWY neq ele.| A torpedo flew from her hand. | | her | But she shook her | head, turned from the bombarded ele- | Audrey's brows \D, FLA., OCT. 1t boside the vee : - ou’ | 1 | ' she retorted. .E l ity. No one lives | l ore, 1 cowe bere because—be- | ” ! cause— | lie drew il over thé railingt and sat down near her. “Tell me, Grace, wly veu are here. Give me | the real roason.” H .- ve” she said slowly, | “be- | 87 e Smeke.... with my guardian. |§ nothing for home | » plenty of money. ! # . hotels, stay in lhe;;/ fora few months, |! rond o few weeks at his cottage | 5 | i have always wanted a quiet dc»-E 1 life @and a home built on the | ) ol ' uzhioned ideals and faiths, This lioo-e scemed to me a perfect place for « home. It is a house in which . . i Lak people have been happy, . A. H. T. CIGAR CO. athy and peace. I do not wite lived here or who owns comz here sometimes be- » of the dreams I have dreamed tero of what a real home could be. “e kind of home you would cx- o tor you is not the; W Ao, e W § Yo in love | 1] PR Bt | i the tears choked her| Lake]andq C160173a by “hecause I scemed to you a Loy, 2 v hoyden. T COTed Or | 'mscmmemmmemesnass: o s mm ssa v 6.5 s s LR R the fi time I saw you. You kSO SR st 2 RSk the fin g jaw of a worth- t oves of a very, vus ashamed to appear | you a hoyden. [ thought you were the man to love a different sort of woman, the true, womanly kind| ¢ that I wanted to be. I want to be a5 woman that a man will love for her womanliness, in whom he will find | the Dbest attributes of a sweetheart, wife and home maker. You love a| superficial, frivolous person. You ‘ would expect her to remain what she |- is now. When I pulled you out ol""f the water this morning you added| gratitude to the small amonnt of love | | vou had for me and found that you had a feeling sufliciently strong m! justify marriage. Of course I refused you. You love a hoyden, when I wish you to love a better woman. The life you offer me is one I have always hud, | 4 and not the one I have always hojd | g for.” “And did you know, my little hoy. den, that when I saw a merry tomboy I also saw a true, gentle girl, one with all a woman's best attributes? I did not fall in love with you because you were a tomboy, nor ask you to marry me because vou pulled me out of the lake. I fell in love with you because I realized what sort of a girl you are, 1 asked you to marry me because I wanted you in my house of dreams. This is my house, my old home. 1 came to Lakemoore to see if the old house needed repairs. I saw you and 1 could not go away. It is our house of dreams, and the dreams shall all LI 10 We Won’t Sacrifice Quality but we are always studying how to Increase The Quantity i 4 | 1 <7 T \ ‘ % b Tk i wa Racetd | come true—they shall come true for | & We give the “most now but we are anxious L more. Phione us and prove it | (Copyright, 1412, hy ?fl:,] _— | : Best Butter, per pound . .......vveeiivninins i “Sample Case” Can B‘ SURAY: TBPOIRGE 050y oo b e viois s b v e Not lous ago the Lrookivn Fagle'i gotyolene, 10 pound pails. ........o..vnnn.. told of ihe cleverness of an l;nglhhlg : " i drummer for a drug firm, who had de- | §3 Cottolene, 4‘Pm1nd palls ......... . T fvised an elaborate horse drawn cart Snowdrift, 10.»0““] paflg_ S e e which co d a tull fine of samples, | 4 cans family size Cream and al:wo provided 1oom where hej . o Lcould entertoin his customers. DPer 7 cans baby size Cream. ... 1 havs this wag intended as an advance | § 1-2 barrel best Flour........... W R e notice to introduce the “sample case” | 0 P i which a droggeist syvndicate has put on | ™ l'_' p.mmds best Flour. . ... ..oooiiininniinn, the railroads out west, 1t reached the | Picnic Hams, per pound .... .......... Union depot in Cleveland, the other Cudahy’s Uncanvassed Homs.............. ! day, and when local druggists came to < see the novel “sample case” which thel 8ctagt:lnc§.o;p, 6 fopu. . d TSR Bk - 2 drummer had bragged about they Toun! ee, per pound. . ‘e ’ o found a sumptuously fitted private car, I with tens of thousands worth of sam- ples on display and a dozen young men to show them. There is a sleep- | er, with dining accommodations at- Ilached to the “sample case,” where the clerks and the boss drummer live and make it attractive for buyers. Still this ingenious and expensive departure has its drawbacks—the customers must be lured to the railroad station, and, after the novelty wears off, it may not be as easy to get them there. ~=Springfield Republican, 5 gallons Kerosene ....... E. G. Twee del Well Laundered LINEN <+ Is the pride of the jood bouscwite and the clean cut man or woraén .Here you have the eare that makes you a constar: customer. We aim at being the “L.axdry that is different” YOUR OWN SPECIAL LAUNDRY Try Us Today—Just Once ++ Lakeland Steam Laundry ione 130 West Main St B One Hocsier 1s Happy. “One of the unusual things T saw' {on my vacation in mnorthern Indlana| iwas a contented farmer,” sald Annis | Burk, secrctary to Mayor Shank, the ; other day. “We were going in an automobile on a fishi expedition north ull Bass Lake.,” Burk related, “and we stopped to ask a farmer the road. He gave us the information, and, just to let him know we were friend- ly, T asked him his opinion on poll- tics. “‘That’s something Rfhat don't worry me,” the farmer said. ‘Why should T worry about politics or any- thing else? Here I am, lving on a good farm, got a good barn and a wife that's a good worker; why should I worry? "—Indianapolis Star, A Rich Order. The Legion of Honor, with which the prince of Wales wae recently in- vested by President Fallieres, is one of the richest orders. It is pos- sessed of considerable revenues from various properties. which are paidl out in pensions, principally to wound- | ed and disabled members. The splen. | did palace of the Legion of Honor was burnt down during the Com- |