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i —— = . fo \\_ ~ N& SR o Puy wages, store bills, or any kind of bills with checks. This is ! tian paying with mouey. You can also keep your accounts straight and have a LEGAL il 1T for every dollar you pay out. A checking account is also a great convenience. 3 We want your “commercial” account. Come in; let's talk it over. Let OUR Bank be YOUR Bank. w N First National Bank OF LAKELAND VALV TOFOPODOLQU O GE0S DOOOC T Y L LA S Long iife of Linen alcay with gaod {.andsy work is what you are looking for and that ir just whes oo are givies, Try wa. Lakeland Steam Laundry Weost Fain # Aad B B — b\' irtes WG O S POE IR0 DEORO R0 O O B QOB L0 IT iS THE WISE WHO! H Wisely Insure Otherwise We Would Not e In The Fire Insurance Business It has been sald, At r? d Pk Lia ; “A fool is a mortal who is wise too late,” e And agaln, “He may hope for the best, that’s prepared for the worst.” ARE YOU AMPLY PREPARED. e it wili cost you no more to have a policy in the stronnest\c:)r-npnniei Fire Insurance ia my sole business, ..~ Your bysiness will have my personal attention, Raymondo Bldg. 'Y. Z. MANN =50 DL v 30, Qe N QPRI O 303 Q0 SOTUS0 LD L OIS THE BEST IF EN~ “I1s awto s HARCQURT Q0. comizcee MANUFACTURING ENGRAVERS LOUISVILLE, KY,U.S.A. WE ARE, THEIR EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR THEIR EXCLUSIVE LINE: Full line of Denuison’s Gift Dressings; also Gibson Art Co's Rugraved Specialties, Holiday and Fancy Goods, 1oys, Ete. LAKELAND BOOK STORE; R. L. MARSHALL CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Will faraish plans and spesifications or will follow any plans and sposifisations furnished. SUNGALOWS A SPECIALTY. Ley me taow you some Lakelond homes I have bailt LAKRLAK3S, Phone £67-Greea. | | | STORY OF MRS. JONES By JOSEPHINE BRANDON, | | n————— Mrs. Jones was on her way to the! ! broker's, in the lower part of the city. ' | Her bug contained some bond3 that| i had to be sold—the last bit of stock | | she possessed. It was lunch time; and | i 3| the quictness of the marrow streets, | | deserted save for a belated passerby | # or so, proved conducive to introspec- tion, Her thoughts harked back to by-| gone days; to the time when her re | maining parent had died and left her, | with & few thousand dollars, in thel first bright glow of womanhood. Soo! after that she met Jones. Everybody thought he was such a nice young man, So, as his calls grew more and more frequent, she came to rejoice in the belief that the other girls were secret- ly envying her. He bought violets for her and brought her candy; he was al very nice young man indeed. There were old maids in those days, and she' had the common fear and horror of being left single—stranded on the shores of the ocean of matrimony.' One evening he had tremulously asked her to marry him; and she had as tremulously answered him, yes, But that was a good many years ago. Since then several little Joneses had come into the world to laugh and cry, and get married. They must be clothed and fed; when old enough to go first bright glow of womanhood. Soon to school they asked often for pocket- money, the :irls e:pecially. The little boys saved theirs. On making closer acquaintance with Jones, she had discovered that the position he held was rather more respectable than remunerative. In fact, she didn’t see how he could have hoped to support a wife and family on his salary. He must have been look: ing forward to an early promotion— or e!se he wasn't looking at all. ! But with the help of her little in- come they managed to get along pret- ‘I ty well, »t least until the panic of '93. ! Then many employes were turned out of a job; and Jones was one of the number. He comforted her with the assurance that he had never been duly appreciated, and it wouldn't be long before his friend, Mr. White, could get him a position worth while. Meantime they lived on her money. She shivered at recollection of the check she had written to be eashed by hi.. in the city. It was less pain- ful to “lend” that way; because he was enabled to keep tacitly to himselt the money he nceded for personal ex- penscs. Bit by bit hud her small fortune dwindled until these few bonds alone remained. Opportunities for work had arisen in plenty, but always to be passed over as too Insignificant. The places would lower his standing, he sald, hurt his chances for bigger things. Next week or uext month Mr. Blank or Mr. Ray had as good as promised to procure him this or that fine position. And the loan, you know, might go through. Then he would pay her back all he had “borrowed,” and | they'd be on Easy street for the rest of their lives. He then had hinted at an automobile; for he fully expected to get several thousand a year. | But since time flew by and these ex- pectations were left behind unfulfilled, it appeared that he set greater store by himselt than did others. She thought of how he would look when she returned home. There he'd be sitting, with the eternal paper in his { hand, smoking one cigar after another. If only he would lezrn to like a pipe. Soon after she came in he'd begin to berate the government for “its being possible that such a state of affairs can exist, when—" i She was tired of his fatuity. These ' bonds were the last she had. When the money for them was gone, what should she do? Go to the poorhouse? He wouldn't let her work as long as she stayed with him, because she was his wife; and yet he didn't do anything himself. She would leave him. Then ! she thought of the children—after all, they belonged to him, too. But, pshaw! ! He seemed to regard them as a mat- | ter of course, not as a charge (“hosts| 1 ages of fortune,” flashed through her wind), Was it for this she had promized to “love, honor and obey” Lim? Iow ab- surd those words sorndod in such & connection! Was she (o love a man she rather des to lLonor one | | | | | pised; | whom she could nct wdinire; to obey ker husband when she did not love him? She had been forcod by soclety to promise what she either could not, ' have helped doing, or could not pos sibly have done. | Suddenly the breath was driven out of her by a blow between the shoul | ders, and her bag jerked from her hand by a man, whom she then saw “Oh, stop!” won't do you any good—" But he had vanished round & eor THE EVENING TELEGRAS, LAKELAND, FLA., APRIL 4, 1913, INO ONE RULE IS SAFE ' wlands may take the form of inactiv | and white Chantilly lace are combined " CONDITIONS DIFFER AS TO PROP- ER CLEANSING OF FACE. tndividual Requiremenis Must Be Re- sponsible for Varying Methods Empiqyed—Many Gradations Between Cited Cases. We had so many published rules for the proper cleansing of the face that we are led to believe there must be at least one best method, and that we | i should be able to find out what that one is and to follow it faithfully. We do not take into consideration the fact that the individual requirements vary greatly, and that the methods must vary accordingly. A It always seems both arbitrary and foolish to give set rules for things, because, while the rules may apply perfectly to nine cases, they may be absolutely inappropriate to|. the tenth one. For instance, there 18 | the woman whose skin is perfectly normal; who has soft water for bath- | ° ing and who lives where the air is pure and free from soot. This woman can keep her complexion in good con- dition by the daily ablutions of soap | ' . and water, without any further care or trouble, and she cannot understand why her methods do not apply to the || needs of every other woman, Then we find the opposite case—the woman who lives in a region where the air is laden with smoke and grime; where steam radiators dry out all moisture from the air of the living rooms; where the water is hard and | ! the winds are nipping. This woman has learned that she must use soap and water sparingly, cleansing cream generously, and must give her com- plexion constant care and attention to keep it from growing brown and leathery, or drying up into a network of wrinkles. As long as the sebaceous glands and sweat glands act normally and the skin retains its elasticity and natur ally moist condition, no especial care is necessary beyond the ordinary methods of keeping the skin clean and the pores open. When the nomr mal action of these glands is interfer ed with something more than the or dinary methods becomes necessary. The abnormal condition of the ity or of over-activity. If the trouble is due to inactivity of the glands and the skin becomes dry and fecls drawn it would be worse than foolish to in- | sist upon drying up the secretions still more by the uze of soap and wa- ter, borax and a bristle brush. The application of a clransing and sooth- ing cream would answer the purpose much better and would prevent any ill conscquences. Should the seba- ' ceous and sweat rlands be overactive the thorough cleansing of the fau: with soap and water may be permit. | ted, but in many cases a lotion con- || taining slightly astringent properties will keep the skin in splendid condi- tion, cleansing and toning it up and helping to counteract the tendency to enlargement of the pores. Besides the extreme cases noted there are all the gradations between and we can see how impossible it is to give cast-iron rules for even so semingly simple a thing as the proper methods of cleansing the face. It is necessary to use our own judgment in selecting the method best suited to our individual needs, and whea we read any published directions to give them a little consideration before ap- plying them. (Copyright, 1913, by Universal Press Sya- dicate.) WAISTS MADE WITH FICHUS. A bandsome evening gown, quite simply made, is shown in today’s sketch. Nattler blue crepe meteor construction. The foundation corsage is of white mousseline, cut by a simple kimono-sleeved pattern, is draped the Chaatilly with edges surpliced below the Subscribe for The Telegr We Won’t Sacrifice Quality but we are always studying how to Increase The Quantity We give the “most now but we are anxions 1, more. Phone us and;prove it, Mm.”tm. oo @Besee 000000 soar,,,,, 5| 6 cans baby size Cream.........w....ce....... 12 pounds best Flour. . ... ... imimentn, . Cudahy’s Uncanvassed Hams. ........ w.o..... Ground Coffee, per pound 6 gallons KeroseBe ..o .. v mecvneen... E. G. Twee¢' SOHOH0E0 FOFOPOPO P00 ¢ ¢ IF YOU ARE ‘THINKING OF BUILDING, + MARSHALL & SANDE! © The 0ld Reliable Contractors Who have been building houses in Lakeland for who never “FELL DOWN" or failed to give satisfui All classes of buildings contracted for, Tl residences built by this tirm are evidgnces of thcir i i u make good. MARSHALL & SANDERS iy Phone 228 Blue Smith & Steit For Al hinds of REAL ESTATE See Us For ROSEDALE and PARK fiiliici % Deen & Bryant Building Lakelan. F'd Q000AQOO0O0D 0T f()R S Al[ FROSTPR " Land and We own, or have for sale, some of the choicest .7 groves. Timber, turpeutine acd colonization tracts. Al Lakeland strawberry farms, groves and city property Ohlinger & Al LAKELAND. FLORIDA facent to the town of Frostproef, including a few - A AN Florid . The Town of Beautiful Location The Town of Progress The Town of Opportunity Inquire Abeut It At Roem 1, Raymendo Bldg., w_d.—/nu C. D. M’'CAIN, MANAGER. Telephone 309.