Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, January 7, 1913, Page 7

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T o @ -cronl Big Cat in Maz- | B da Lamp Prices ! Rt ' 15. 20 aud 25 Watt were 50c now 40: 40 Watt were 58¢ now......... 450 60 Watt were 75¢, now......... 60c 100 Watt were $1.10, now...... 90¢ 1 ' 150 Watt were $1.60, now. .. 950 Watt were $2.60, now. ... @ florida Electric & Machinery Co. ' DRANE BUILDING PHONE 46. 503 OFOFOBRFOHIRY HEARHOIOTOFRPOTRHOSOBOIOIL Buy Mazda lamps and reduce your light bill. For sale by g 5030 0FOIOFOCOIOTOIO £000HO DON'T FORGET TO GO TO | LAKEPHARMACY FOR YOUR Drugs, Drug Sundries, :' Toilet Articles, Etc. 3 o AHOEROE JODADO DIQPOBOBOTOIOQLOTOBOTQIQIO $0608040 | 0000 HHEE0 HOROTRANOAOAALHCONIDILC VLN AN A LD | Timber, Tarpentine. Cot-over F OR SA ’nb Lands, Choice {olinization b Tricts ot Low Prices, Flerida Homes and Groves on High : Rolling Land, Situated on Beautiful Lakes, Paying Straw- " beary and Trucking Farms, Weguarantee all property ;ust as represented by us For reliable information see Otlinger (7N & Alfield Onpesite New Depot. LAKELAND, FLORIDa o e i COOCOIOO TP e COTTDOOO0S Southerbr wind and a dloudy sky Proclaim it a Hunting morning. | If you are planning a hunting rip this year, you cannot af- ford to leave this store out of your consideration. Ve have everythirg you may need at Pmesl tonsiderably lower than you will find in anY| oher store. We carry only the best guns id the finest rifles ofe description. We handle the best quality "'s, semi-smoke- s powder and revolver | cything, fin fact. to make your hunting suc. We have outfitted many huntsmen . .e. Their sat- isfied recommendations are the best proof that our hnat- '8¢ outfits are the best that can be bought. TheJackson Wilson Co. { clety. So why in fancy she should always be furnishing that spare cham- HE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAKELAND, FLA,, JAN. 13, 1913. i HER UNINVITED GUEST WASHING CURTAINS AT HOME 3 Results Can Be as Good as If They | Are Sent to the Laundry If | Right Care Is Taken, ' { By WILLIAM BURTON. Always when she dreamed her fa- vorite dream—that of some day lving in an apartment of her. own—she oc- cupied ber fancy more with the spare room than with any other. This was curious, inasmuch as she was a woman not much inclined to sociability, being fond of her own so- and cities find it necessary to con- | stantly hang clean curtains at the' windows. The house then lppelfif fresh and bright within and from with- out. If curtains are sent to the laun- dry they are a heavy drain on the housekeeping resources. When made of madras, swiss, muslin or dimity, they can easily be laundered at home. Begin by shaking them well out of | doors. In this manner :!1 the superflu- ous dust can be removed. Prepare a tubful of warm water Inl ber, laying the gray rug on its floor, hanging the dimity curtains and! smoothing the Mareeilles spread, she herself could not explain. She even arranged the books in the | Those who dwell in large towns PAGE SEVEN. E B Are You Satisfied With Where You For nice meals, good homecooking and pleassnt rooms, apply to MRS. HENRY BACON 211 South Tennessece Ave.—Miss Browning's Home FOEOLOBNPD s LD HAFO SO PO P % little white case, books calculated to put s guest in good humor with him- | self, books which would bring about | which a half cake of white soap has | O been dissolved. Souse the curtains | 5 up and down in this, and when the wa- H A H that peaceful state of mind conducive ; ter becomes black change to a second to sleep. She would have no eumnli tub of suds. If the curtains are very novels, no passionate poems, no soct- | much soiled they will require a third i room and had expressed themselves ological firebrands in her guest chamber. There should be such vol-| umes as “The Measure of the Hours,” “Society and Solitude,” “Sesame and Lilles.” These would become the shelves and gratify a guest even if he never got bevend the titles. So when by a generous increase irf | her salary the apartment was made possible she took one with flve rooms instead of four, because, as she told the agent, she “must have a spare The rooms of reality are never as well furnished as are those in the houses of our imaginatton. Still, her guest chamber was a marvel of white- ness and daintiness. There waf & lovely gray hand woven flower berd- ered rug on the floor and a French strined paper with a pattern of tiny rosebuds on the wall. The woodwork was white, and so were the little iron bed and the enameled dresser and the stiff chair. There wos another chair. a rocker, covered with cretonne of much the same pottern as the peper. | and it stoed close to a low wicker ta- ble on which waz pleced o small rain bow glass vase, an Inditn basket and a few hooks, The covers of the books were of | the same colors as those in the wall I paper—pink. to match the buds, or green, to match the buds' leaves—and they locked like the kind of books one i 18 prond to buy, hut never has tiine to read. But “The Measure of the HTours,” “Society and Solitude” and “Sesame and Lilles” stood up fresh and inviting. 1t was a conventional room, but it had cost much thought and self-denial to procure ft. And it was ten times more costly than her own. But where was the guest? After three months of residence in her new home rhe had never turned down the Marseilles spread nor put flowers in the rainbow glass vase, nor brought out the guest towel that she herself | had embroidered. Of course, all sorts | of imaginary persons had occupied the | as havirg slept the sleep of the ju:! and of Infancy, and of having: felt strong desire never to be obliged to emerge from the rose colored com forter and the Marsellles spread that covered {t. .Sometimes the guest was a cousin whom she had known in her child hood and who had gone through Hur vard and was now practicing law ir Boston; the rose comforter and th« “Sesame and Lilles” would be none too finé for him. Then again ft wus an old friend of her father’s, an aris in the days of their prosperity, and who, being literary in her would be sure to appreciate the qul ity of the quilt and to pounes upor the “Sesame and Lilies.” One day. a minute after she ! closed the door on the grocer's shah! boy., who had consented to deliver !+ groceries after she had returned hon: at night, g"e heard a crash on v back porch and the sound of some o falling. She opened the door quick!: and turned the electric light upon th« white face of the boy who but & mo ment before had been explaining to her why he had brought white cor: meal instead of the yellow she had | ordered. Now his face was as whit as the meal and he looked as if he | would never again deliver grocer!cs | He was only a mite of a boy and | she had little difficulty in getting him into the guest chamber and on top of the Marseilles spread, where he re mained until the arrival of a strange doctor, who ordered that he be placed under this prized coverlet and that he remain there until able to be re- moved to his home. That was not un til the end of the second week Those two weeks she declared to be the happiest of her life, thcugh the guest who occupled her spare cham- ber showed no interest either in books or bouquets. After he had gone she used to love to sit alone in the little rocker, staring meditatively at the backs of the books and at the roses on the wall. But this is not all of the story. he married the doctor and turned her back forever on the little room that never knew the presence of an n- vited guest. Yet she says that tie spare chamber more than fulfilled its purpose—it brought into her life a guest who remained. tagios Inconsistent. ! “It is odd that sailors and soldiers are 8o fickle in their love affairs.” “Why is it oM ?” “Because theirs are naturally cases of uniform affection.” | Classifying It. ! “Did you hear what the English vis- ' ftor to the zoo said about the fight among the animals?" “No; what was it?™ “That it was a beastly row.” [ tub of suds. Allow them to remain in this for an hour. Rinse in two tubfuls of clear water, the last of which should have a small | amount of cooked starch and a few drops of bluing added. | Hang in the sun to bleach and dry thoroughly before removing them from the line. Sprinkle well and fold, that the| dampness may be evenly absorbed., To successfully fron long curtains, | place a blanket over the kitchen ta: ble and fasten a clean sheet over this. | Pull each curtain into shape before | ironing. Nothing looks worse than curtains which do not hang evenly. Use hot irons and rub them over | paraffin wax to prevent the ntarch! from sticking. Iirst iron the plain portion of the ! curtain and then the frills. i If the curtains are plain, iron the | deen hem first, so that it wiill hang straight | Saiior and Cther Collars. If so, or if you need lumber or building material of any kind, or for any purpose, let us figure with you. In mill work, doors, sash, blinds, etc., we are the leaders. ARE YOU GOING 10 PAWT? We can save you momney on your paint bill and guarantee sat- Our paint department is in charge of Mr. W. R. isfaction. Vause, a very competent man, and we can furnish the material * and do the w ork for you in a way that will make you glad. Give us a chance at your work. Builders Lumber & Supply Company The sailor note .z .~il|;h- ‘ih a )l-ni‘tt E. H. & E. 0. GARLAND, PROPRIETORS, niy of the devices by which we light. : ey the ¢ '\"*l'lil_\' ot 'i-:' \m!‘\u:nl: nllilull‘ Phone 28, Foot of Main Street. | \ = rocollar enrried oat in s I red net, insorted near |« 1 Cwith erochiet, and edged with ! R . S i - —e i o narrow Valencieunes, looks 4 - ot OGO BO OGO OO very charming on a well-eut coat and ':w‘."EvO'E' BPOSTASHD P SR S i MW*UOC%—‘:; S0 do the high “T'Aiglon” col- . . P B lars, their double stand-up portion ear Another shlpme“t (}l lhOSL‘ de|lCl0us 3 ricd out in fine embreidery, which is B K. § solicued by fine rufles of cobweb laca | - o beneath. A very high cotlar with 4 peanut utter lsses have b '} slight rollback, reminiscent of Portia | : : 3 and e Medicls i one, is becommg, § F1ved, When wanting something in { and so are the turndown collars with \' square rabats of lace and net beneath candies don’t forgel them. sc saCk. } them | & 3 Vaalue | LA | PHONE 226 ! TELLS TROUBL Lady in Goodwater Describes Her Distressing Experience and Tells How She Was Finally Relieved. Qoodwater, Mo.—"'Ever since | was a little girl,” says Mrs. Riley Laramore, | was a great sufferer from dyspepsia. | I suffered misery after eating, and had terrible heartburn, ! I thought | had to suffer this way as !long as | lived, but when | began to take ¢ tocratic woman, who had visited them i & ! Thedford's B‘lack-Drlught, in small P | doses, every night, the heartburn wasall gone in a few days, and | could eat without distress. @ 1 took two small packages in all, and although that was some time ago, the dyspepsia has not returned. 1 speak a good word for Thedford's Black-Draught whenever 1 have the op- mw_n It eating causes distress, we urge you | to try Thedford’s Black-Draught. It cleanses the system, helps the stomach to | digest its food, regulates the bowels, and stimulates the liver. ! It acts gently and is without bad afters | offects. Tryit. Price 25¢c. JUDICIAL CiRCUIT, POLK l‘()L'.\'-l TY, FLORIDA.—IN CHANCERY. J. K. Futch vs. John L. Bartels| and J. H. Bartels.— Bill to Remove | Cloud from Title. It appearing by the affidavit of J. K. Futch in the above stated cause that John L. Bartles and J. 0SOPOSOPOPOPOSOVC S OIPOIHOR O L EOBOBOROVIEORIMOISLHISO S ¢ FOPOOOPOPOFOPY OHOHOPOHOTOPOHO 1O DT OFOE List Your Property Today And be ready for the New Year's rush. If you don’t find me in my office, mail me description, price and terms, Il do the rest. Loans negotiated. 2 a=g SO ¢ o ¢ W. FISKE JOHNSON REAL ESTATE LAKELAND, FLORIDA o QOOLO! For Headache Take SHAC | Safe and Reliable, it always produces resu'ts. The market does not offer a more reliable HEADACHE REMEDY 20 & ROOM 17, KENTUCKY BUILDING, STORE H. Bartles, the defendants, named in the bill of complaint, are non-resi- dents of the State of Florida, but are residents of the United States, That there is no person within the State of Florida, the service of a sub- poena upon whom would bind said defendants and that the saiq defend- ants are over the age of 21 years; i is therefore ordered that said non- resident defendants be and they are hereby required to appear to the bill of complaint filed in said cause on or before Monday, the 6th day of Jan- uary, A. D. 1913, otherwise the al- legations of said bill will be taken as confessed by said defendants. It is further ordered that this or-| der be published once a week for five consecutive weeks in the Lakeland Evening Telegram, a newspaper pub- lished in said county and State. This 3rd day of December, A. D. 1912, A. B. FERGUSON, Clerk Circuit Court. W. 8. PRESTON, Solicitor for Complaint. : 13-3-5Tues. D. Fulghum CASH GROCER 216 South Florida Ave. Phone :334 Just Look at These Prices 17 lbs Gnnulmdlbhgn ...... 1841& Coffee (ground), per Ib.... ... Balt Bacon, per Ib..... cemes Cnions, per Ib ...... i Compound Lard, per 1b. e | mmn;u. per pke..... 3 cans Tomatoes ..... Best Flour, 24-1b sack .. ... 9o | Nutriline Horse & Mule Peed. .$1.78 Best Flour, 12-1b sack. . ........45¢c|Corno Horse & Mule Feed....$2.00 Best Flour, 96-1b sack........ $290/0ats ...cocmuiel oonnnlll $LT6 7 bars Soap ........... seyst 25¢ (Shorts ........ RURTERROR | Head Rice, per Ib. ........... 7c|Corno Chick Feed ..........52.80 Coffee (Arbuckles), per Ib.. RN Coffee (Green), perlb.......... 23c ! Wheat ........ ... Il guarantee my stock to be strictly Fresh and First-class. Give me a trial and be convinced - 2 g 2T

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