Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, January 17, 1913, Page 2

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PAGE TWO. = — = m ( = = =< (o] - A hydrocyele for two was recently Craft. given a tryout at Milan with great success by its builders, the Moretti the fact that instead of its propellers being placed in the water at the stern will be sgeen on all of the machine, as is usual in water of Europe and America. — OT{D]NA NCE No. 1 3 cept as hierein provided, which may Round Tablecloths. ficult to launder and almost hang well after laundering. vised Ondina lan (I COS 1 the City of Luke- shall then kill said amended so as to read as days, he threo y prohibited under the fol- restrictions: ever the Mayor 10 effoct immediately upon its pas- by the Council and the sizna- ttare of the Mayor, Shoes and Short Skirts, "\vl shall deem iv City of Lakeland, for owners of | City of Lakeland, Fla.. on the 15th! dogs to keep them off the streets and |day of January, A D, 1913, i | public places from and after auy MORRIS G. MUNN, given date, unless the same shall h» Pres. City Couneil. n I PARK HILL WA AWV VWVANVANRANVAAN VWWAWAWWW AN WY Ten Goosd Reasons Why You 3! 4 Own a Lot in Park Hill . n"\ e ral waldela First. Because it is in the Best Town in South Florida. P | Seccad. Because it is as HIGH if not HIGHER than any point in Lakeland. Third. Because it has One Mile of Granolithic Side Walks. Fourth. Because it has High Class Building Restrictions. Fifth. Because 4 Beautiful Lakes canbe seen from its Summit. Sixth. Because Shade Trees will be planted on all streets this Fall. Seventh. Because all Streets will be Graded. Eighth. Because it is the most attractive Residential Section in Lakeland. Ninth. Because Lotscanbe sold on REASONABLE Terms. Tenth. Beause if you don’t, you will wish you had, if you do, will always be glad. _—_—-:see= Deen- Bryant Go' Co Rogan Building or S. M. STEPHENS predicted that within a short time it (Y v anien ne n»1 14 E»:- tound runnil_x;_ at lu_r::v_in viola- Tahlecloths with circular designs, of the lnmm\l Code of |h- tien of -.L,.‘ provisions of this seeiic n; suitablc for round tables, are used B \ ud U i idine e o Ord .’ 108 of the City of and tlnlw]ul,‘ |;|‘l‘l’l”lllr mlu; || ) more than ever: but those who h“wi :i“, & : ‘i):,““,‘v,vl: d\: lie J,-.]llrpt,: 11 notice had expericnee have learned that it e . i e » . ot 1! ) b i {y Council of the it unding of said dog, at the is better to purchase a tablecloth with ! ol tha f Prawida City 1 md at the City Pound Sauare corners and the circular design | That seition numier eishteen giving Tiption of the “dog: and inside rather than one finished round. ! (18) of the Criminal Code of the Re- it the said dog noty called for in The round tablecloths are very dif- never | Even the i lifeboat i ! i { wtion 2. ANl ordinances and manufacturers have learned that les- The running at L rarts of ordinances in conflict with £on. o that some of them do not even ot 28 on the strectz and pol'ic this ordinance are hereby repealed. make the round cloths—Harper's ! piaces of the city of Lakeland, l‘!d. Seetion 3. This ordinance shall g9 Bazar. The modern short skirt should make Lo ry to insure public ty, het 1 hereby certify that the foregoine g woman very keen about her shoes, ghall iss iz proclamation by no- ordinance number 148 was duly ghe ghould learn the modes and ob- tice in a newspaper published in the sed by tho City Council of the serve them, she should be willing to be extravagant even, in footwear, and ! ghould she hesitate let her scrutinize ' the shoes of others, and their trans- ) sceurely muzzled; and such prohibi- | ttest: ‘gressions will be an effective aid to ticn ¢hall continua until public no- H. L. SWATTS, | speedy el.imina'lon of any ¢arelessness fce of the discontinuance thercof is City Clerk. ! in that line in herself. similarly given by the Mayor. Any 1,0. M Mayor of the City dcg running at large in violation ‘m Lake a., do hereby approve NS of this section shall be deemed the forezoing Ordinance Number 148, W eattool a public nuisance, and it shall be the the 16th day of Janu A. D i men fools, an dvty of the marshal and othes | 1913, 0. M. 'ON, ld men know yeuuw men to be 8o~ policomen to impound such does | Mayor. # Meijcalt ke A ALL THE MAN'S FAULT' By GERTRUDE MILLETT. “No,” said Bella, “I'll not go with vou on a lake ho’:t this year. I have 100 vivid a recollection of my last lane teip. AMrs, Clark invited me te Iceanaba with her and Fay on N beat. T was delighted. FPay ‘n en the trip before and she cd that she had the time of o o B a frei a was a dream, rs could not do It was moonlight and b ced beautiful. I felt as it vacht. It was rerfeet till we s od back. “At Escanaba they loaded the boat with tons of iron ore. The vessel sank deeper and deeper into the water, un- til it began to look like a submarine. Then when we started for Chicago we were towing a barge loadcd with | nicre tons and tons of ore. “We had been on cur way a day, when I saw that the sky looked like ' lead, with ugly yellow streaks across it. I said to Mrs. Clark, ‘I think we i shall have a storm.’ “You know how. optimistic she is! ' With ‘that sky above us, she gayly . remarked, ‘Oh, do you think so? | It was not long before the storm | broke. The wind came suddenly and this water-skimming cycle has ' the rain came down like an overturned its propellers placed in the rear ofnm-l the fron frame, far removed from the ! of the cabin and w We hurried into the protection atched the storm. brothers. The novel'y of the hydro water. Considerable speed can be ;| "It was awful the way the boat cycle. which 1s foot propelled. lies in made on this hydrecycle and it s | creaked. 1 will say nothing. about i the way it rocked. The rope which inland waters | pulled the barge broke like a thread In a few minutes it secmed miles away. | “Presently | saw | way to the anxiously. ropes. “1 said to Mrs. Clark, ‘He is going to lower the lifr hoat .md you must krow what that, means.’ “she did not answer me, but pushed ihe sereen door open and rushed up to the man, pulled his sleeve and asked, ‘Are you going to lower the He paid no attention to lifeboat. He was I watched him working at the her “She came a geat and sobbed. my hushand again.’ “Tables and ghairs about. In despair 1 dropped upon the floor. Oh, why did I ever Tons of iron below me! [ could see the boat go down into the lake like a cannon ball. “‘l know when I strike the water, I cried ‘I'll go straight to the bottom.' “Fay answered, despalringly, ‘We all will. There'll ba no other place to vo!' “Like a flash all the mean things { I had ever done rushed through my i wind. 1 never knew before that crisis | wa the lake that there were so many of them. “Suddenly zoing to put exclaimed. “There was none in sight. We be- gan to hunt frantically, The boat pitched us in every direction. “We looked on the ceiling, on the walls and even tore the cushions from the chairs. There was no sign of life preservers. \Where could those men have put them? At last Mrs. Clark found them in a closet, covered with insect powder. We pulled them out and each grabbed one, “Fay was wriggling into hers—it looked like a doughnut. I had on a cork jacket with the back to the front, ‘Tie it!" I kept on gereaming to them “Mrs. Clark had one on and was trying to get into.another. We were all sneezing because of the insect powder, “Mrs. Clark fresh air. “There is the ‘I shall never see Pay jumped up. ‘T on a life preserver,’ am she to the door for called Ve 18 us tea s siill in its place!” “Fay and 1 made a dive for the door. Yes, thore was the lifeboat! I could hardly believe it “By this time the steward came up. ‘Is the boat going to sink?' cried Mrs. Clark. y «*8ink? No, everything is all right, he said. “*\Why, that sailor was lowering the lifeboat,” shrieked Fay. “The captain came in at that min- ute. ‘He was sent to fasten it more securely,” said the captain, “*‘Then why couldn't he say so? cried Mrs. Clark. “I never could tell you how those men laughed. We began to pull at those life preservers. When mine | came off I looked as if I had been ‘rolled in insect powder. It was a | comfort to see the other two look as ! it they had just escaped from an in- sane asylum. | “:My puffs are gone!’ cried Fay, | teeling her flattened head. ‘They were brand new!’ “t won't matter,’ said Mrs. Clark. ‘Brown puffs do not match yellow hair.’ “‘Insect powder in my hair? screamed Fay. °‘It's all that man's fault!’ “‘Did you really thmk you were gning down? asked the captain. “pid we think we were going down!’ we cried in chorus. “He looked at the general disorder ——upturned tables, stripped chairs, life preservers and contents of closets on the floor and our disheveled appear- ance. Then he turned to the steward and said, with a wink, ‘It's the worst storm we've had in thirty years!"” she Justice for the Rooster. A government bulletin on the egret asserts that the bfmyard rooster fur- nishes a great many fancy feathers that pass for “aigrettes.” “Enormous quantities of fancy feathers,” says the report, “are used by American milli- ners, but many that go for aigrettes are rooster tails.” a sailor make his back, threw herself into ' were sliding | come! ' PRETTY RIBEONS FOR NECK,*' ‘:! motif of exquisite delicacy. Another | 9:45; preachi is a square of finest filet lace mesh p. m, wrought in platinum and dizmonds, Wednesday- pr placed diagonally on the rihbon and | 7:15 s : held at the two opposite oc rs byl P B two diamonds. These are again at. ! ity tached to a jeweled section that cuv-‘ - ers the ends of the ribbon. If a sim pler chain for the lorgnon is d there is the solitary any metal and strung as a slide on a silk cord. | adopting this inconspicuous but hand- t No Time Have These Adornments | 2rst Wednesday .; ; Been So Handsome and Worthy The latest development of the sau- toir is the grosgrain or moire ribbon with plain or pilot edge and a large single ornament on the left side. of the prettiest of these is a circular tome device. et Perhaps one of the most pleasing Pnyebmeet'ne W i novelties of the moment is a velvet|® ™ "neck band with slides of seed pearls. These come with two or three slides or with a simpie festoon. both radical departures from the old- faghioned themes, such as the rosette and the bowknot.—Vogue. It's not so easy whom the pressur: lingers in the peli.--John Inglesant. 7P m B e e e e AT ) Christian Endcavor = {p. m. CUMBERLAND PRESBY- { Prayer Meetingz, Wi TERIAN CAURCH. !pg at 7 p. m. | Sunday ingaty: vited. Corner Florida avenue snd Bay St Ive Rev. 0., vastor. Sunday school 9:45 a. m. ‘tevens, superintendent. Preaching Sunday 8t 11 8 m. ave 7:15 p. m. Weekily prayermeeting Wedrerday »vening at 7:3¢. Woman's Missionary an! Ald So {ety Monday 3:30 p. m Baptist Young Pegple's SO L EOPOFOELHFOPOPOFO DONATOPOPOPO OTO ¢ R L VR F e CAPOED IV RPN e | i ? THOBUPOITEOE FJBOEOADS P AP O QOB OR P IOPOS e P w Regular morri, FIRST PRESBYTER]: - .af Praise as Now. S (Tennessee Ave, [ One Sunday Serij ired LC without ; pear! Both men and women are East Lakeland Mis. They are s Sunday school at 2 p Milton, superintendent meeting Thursday at 7 Y Lutheran Church S Cor. E. Orange and So T, Sunday schocl 10:00 4 Rev. A. B. Fox, Pastor are held or fourth Sundays Invioiable, to ruin him with of Christ's hand Services CHRISTIAN CHURCH Sunday School at ¢ Preaching service ut school every Sunday morn- 5. Everybody cordially in- EPISCOPAL (ALL SAINTS J. M. Weddell FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH. ! Rev. : charge. Services—11 a. every Sunday, except tiiil Sunday School-—10 | Sunday. H. ~ | Lakeland Branch of !Auxlllary meets on the \o: {lowing the first Sund: 'month, at 3 p. m., at ¢ 1 of some one of the men's be announced. All Saints Guild meets « ! after the third Sunday. Vaeting | hall, at 3 p. m. m. ol William Dudiey Newlir NOTICE! Weclose every day th week from 10 until 11 . m. Also at 6:30 p. "Please ptone in your - ders carly. ey Pure Food Sto: W. P. Pillans (‘3 . PHONE 93 o > QEQ BB .)"-‘v T, ) FQRODOPOE0C O QBOIOSOE I e, 2 Lakeland Artincial Stone tn. S Near Electric Light Plant : MAKES 3 RED CEMENT PRESSED BRIC« 3 CALL AND SEE THEM. CAN SAVE YOU MONEY Crushed Rock, Sand and Cement for S»¢ BUILDING BLOCKS OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS 12 and 18 inch Drain Tile for Sidewalk, @ate Poats Fis Mounds, Ete, @Good Stock on Hand WE Deliver Free ¢’ & H. B. ZIMMERMAN. Proprietor. BOSIOODS e rw I WOOO\)QOQOQQ A Snap For Quick Sate, 80 Acres As fine land as there is in Florida, ore and a ! mile from st:tion; 60 a res under good wire fence 30 acres cultivated; 122 large bearing nr.‘rm troes 200 gr.«pc!run trecs, budded. 4 years old: 30 act fine pn'e timber: 10 acres cheice hammock Ian ercd with oak: 10 acres good muck lard. T he fi: st man \\nh $2.200 cash gets this barga'n. re® b . ar thos £ 200040 bepoid in ene, twe and three vears At (,"..u as this wili not last, Call 01 write THE Al EX HOLLY REAIIY C(l., lalelaml fla M.“'Q\w‘rorbtb\.

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