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e e e = la m; 2d and 4th Sabbaths, 7:30 1o for Her Pet. : , 7:30 p. m. - rg;d? ‘Aibright of Palmyra, N, | Sabbath School—3 p. m. N unusual pet, a tame pig, | Prayer Service—Thursday night [A b she raised by artificlal means, |at 7:30. Myrtle Street Church— o taken from the litter when a fervices—1st; and 3d Sabbaths. jars 0id. The little animal shows ¢ zZect’on for it young mistress, | 7.30 5 1, . 29 ang 4th Sabbaths, 11 a m. ",mg her about, as would a dog, Sunday School—3 p. m. g its jealousy of ber other Prayer Services—Tuesday nigh ol ghowin B e n—— - at 7:30. W. H. STEINMEYER, TPHOLSTERNG AND Pastor. MATTRESS MAKING. ola Mattresees made over; cushions t CUMBERLAND PRESBY. TERIAN CAURCH THE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAKELAND, FLA,, APRIL 7, 1 BEST FOR THE HAIR |Slmple Shampoo Mixtures That Can Do No Harm. Soap Jelly Mixed With Egge Is Al ways the Staple—Blonde T-esses Frequently Require Special Treatment. There are almost as many formulas 913. A N AT HIS UNKNOWN RIVAL By LOUIS E. CHARLTON. They were both in the chorus. Every night they sang love ballads and non- isense rhymes; flashed for an hour oF \two in spangled garments behind glit- tering lights, and then went into dark- ness and forgetfulness again. bave died any day, either of them or both, and the manager would merely 'l‘lny' were only of the mob. They might . ralR SEVEN, x Velvet Bean Seed Home Grown] Velvet Bean Seed $3.00 per bushel. In 10 bushel lots $2.75.| et o s ot e’ | MYeS Grocery Go. o all Kind made 10 order. Drop m- s postal Arthur A D&gm 416 8. Ohlo ureh? (irten fI2sT NETHODIST CHURCH. (3outh Kentucky Ave.) Rev lsaac C. Jenkins, pasor. qow; orary residence, 911 South Florida avenue. Office at church. Fours, 11:30 to 12:30. Sunday Services— sutday school, 9:46 a. m. Sunday school every Sunday morn ing at 9:45. Everybody cordially in- +ted. ALL SAINTS CHURCH. Corner of Lemon Street and Massa- printed for shampoo mixtures as for have written a letter, or nodded t'“m every M"’ aight at 1 face creams, Some of these are ex Word, and hardly a soul in the mext |oclock, at McDonald's ball. cellent, and others possess no special night's audience would have knowa R. L. MARSHALL, President. cleansing proporties, while some are that there had been a change in the J. W. LAYTON, Vice Pres. positively injurious and should mever chorus. J. W. LOGAN, Treasurer. be experimented with. Here area few | And yet these two of the chorus J. H. FELDS, Fin. Secy. formulas selected from a long list, and were set far above the common lot of 2 ll' F. DIETRICH, Rec. Secy we can select from them according to mummers and onlookers alike. They e 4 ? chusetts Avenue. our special needs. Rev. J. H. Weddell. minister in Three eggs lightly beaten with three charge. tablespoons of warm water. Rub the Services at 11 a. m. and § p. m. | mixture into the hair and on the All Sundays except the third in the 'SCalP, taking pains to cleanse quite as month, Other services as appointed. | 1Oroushly as though you were using ia soap shampoo. More eggs can be {used if necessary, but the proportion East Lakeland Mission. of water should be a tablespoon to each egg. If the odor of the eggs is Sunday school at 8 p.m. E A unpleasant to you, a little toilet water Milten, superintendent. Prayer |can be put in a half pint of cold water meeting Thursday at 7 p. m i and poured over the hair after the last e rinsing. urel An egg shampoo with soap jelly is Lutheran Ch ‘ sometimes more satisfactory than eggs alone, and the general rule is to use g‘" E. Orange "f‘ 80. Tennessee | ;1 teaspoontul of soap jelly to each Sunday school 10:00 &. m egg, niixing them well; then fill & ba- | were lovers. When the opera demand- 'ed that they sing the chorus of & drinking song, the eyes of these two met and drank to each other the in- toxicating song of silent love. When their hands met in some stately min- uet or mazy peasant dance, the thrill of shrinking, fearfully sweet pleasure touched them both. The people be- vond the footlights saw none of these things. Every night he waited until she came from the big dressing rooms, he opened the door of the stage en- | trance to let her pass out, and with a smile and tender adieu, she was gone into a world he knew not. Several times he had tried, when it had been fierce weather, to accompany her to her home, to lend her aid, protection, but no, she had always gently declined H. L. COX, Conductor. SAMUEL BOYER, J. W. 8CARR, C. L. WILLOUGHBY, .Board of Trustees. Lakeland Lodge No. 91, F. & A M. Regalar communications held o» second and 4th )ondays at 7:3v p m. Visiting brethren cordlally in vited. J. C. OWENS, W. M. J. . WILSON, Secy Lakeland Cbapter, R. A M. N 29 meete the first Thursday night I each month fn Masonic Hall Viait ing companions welcomed. A. D {MY LINE INCLUDES Newspapers Magazines Stationery Post, Cards Cigars Coeme and sce me hefore pus chasing c¢lsewhere. Your Leonard, H. P.; J. F. Wilson, Secy. ¥ A T Y e+ Services are held on second an: |gin with two quarts of hot water,hold ' tourth Sundays. the bead over it and suds the hair well | these offers, and so they both came patronage :q»preciated. Preuching, 11:00 &, m, Epworth League, 6:30 p. m. Preaching, 7:30 p. m. weck Day Services— CHRISTIAN CRURCH Woman's Missionary Soclety, Sunday 8chool at 10 a. m. Monday afternoon. Preaching service at 11 &. m. sa¢ prayer meeting, Wednesday even-|17 p. m. ing, 7:30. Christian Endeavor Soclety at ¢ Teachers' meeting Friday evening.|p. m A cordial invitation to everybody | Prayer Meeting, Wednesday even to all services. wgat?p m FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. ‘(Tenucesce Ave., Between Maln and Lemon Streets.) g Rev. W. S. Patterson, Pastor. . Sunday Services—Sunday school 9:4%;, preaching, 11 am. m., ana 1:39 p. m. Wednesday—Prayer meeting at :30 p. m. FIRST BAPIIST CHURCH. Corner ¥lorias avenue snd Bey S The Rev Willlum Dudley Nowlin N . vastor Sunday echool 9:46 s m Preaching Suuday st 11 & m. ap’ 18 pm Weekly prayermeeting Wednesday | avening at 7:3¢. Woman'’s Missionary and Ald 8o ~lety Monday 3:30 p. m Rantist Young People's 'u 6:16p m Regmilar monthly business meetiny Aret Wedneaday 730 o ™ DIXIELAND AND MYRTLE SILLLT METHODIST CHURCHES Dixisland Church — vs—1¢t and 3d Sabbaths, Ill Meeting <) mooth Shave for a Rough Face No matter how ter.der your skin or tough and wiry your beard, we can sell you a razor that will give you aclean, velvetshave. It will give you a light orclose shave with no roughness, no irritation. If you cannot shave yourself, we will seil You a safety razor that gives an casy, safe, quick, convenient shave, at very small cost. Besides razors. we sell _strops, brushes and other kinds of cutlery. Come in nd talk to us about it. a Qi with the egg mixture, using the water from the basin to assist in the cleans- ing; rinse in several waters and dry in the sun, For blonde hair the following is ad- vised: The whites of two eggs, four ounces of rose water, a half ounce al- cohol and a level teaspoonful of pow- ! dered borax. Rub into the hair as you would any other shampoo, cleansing both hair and scalp, and rinse well in several waters. A simple shampoo consists of a halt cup of olive oil soap, a level teaspoon- ful of baking soda and a generous pint of hot water. Let stand till cold when it will be a soft jelly. Wet the halr first with warm water, and shampoo with the jelly. For very olly, dirty hair, take a table. spoon of green soap and dissolve it in ono pint of hot water by constant stir ring. Add a half ounce of glycerine and an ounce of alcohol. This is ex- cellent where there is thick dandruff, as it {8 very cleansing to the scalp. White hair is sald to be greatly ben- efitted by a shampoo composed of a small cup of shaved white soap in one and. a half pints of boiling water, and when dissolved add a half pint of bay rum, a teaspoonful powdered borax and 20 grains bisulphate of quinine. Keep in a glass jar. A few drops of laundry bluing in the last rinse wa- ter will help to prevent the yellow streaks which spoil many an other wise snowy “crown of glory.” No matter which shampoo mixture you sclect, remember that the secret or successful shampooing consists of thoroughness in the washing and in the rivsing also. Three times for the sudsing are none too many and the last rinsing should be very moderato. If the washing and rinsing are proper ly done, the hair will be soft, glossy and quickly dried. Carelessness in the cleansing process is responsille when the hair is sticky, hard to dry and hard to comb. Artificial heat ghould not be u:ed to dry the hair. Sunshine and frezh air are best and the hair will retain its health and vitality much longer it dried in the sun. A few moments’ brisk brushing is good, but the hair ehould never be pulled or the scalp {rritated. Hannah.—Probably the fault with your figure is due to the fact that you do not keep your chest up In position. When the chest is held well up the shoulders remain in their natural posi- tion and a rounded back is not pos- sible. Try lifting your chest up as it you were trying to bring it up to your chin, and do this whenever you think about it. Take a half dozen deep breaths also, several times a day, and you will be able to gradually overcome the tendency to drooping shoulders. Jennie W. L.—A good, nourishing cream is necessary for the massage. Not only for its beneficial effect on the skin, but also to aid the fingers In (their work, as the constant friction would be likely to cause frritation. Only the best cream should be used, and an excellent metnod is to follow the massage with a cloth dipped in quite cold water and held against the face for a few minutes, after which the skin should be gently patted dry. New Reader.—Shampooing the halr ' cannot cause the least harm to either | hair or scalp, no matter how frequent- {ly it 18 indulged in, provided the , proper ingredients are used in the shampoo preparation. Once a week is | not too coften, if the hair gets very ; dirty and the scalp needs cleansins. A preparation which is strong e:nv.izh The Jackson ~—————and Wilson Co. to dry out the natural oil and r.2ke the hair dry and harsh ghould rot ha used even once a year. You ai come to the formula for a good =i um- poo mixture. Sophia.—~Have you tried the quick enld eponge bath in the morning to help overcome the feeling of lascituda you complain of? I believe it will prove of immediate benefit. Ten- minutes is sufficient time for the en- tire bath, with the brisk rubbing after ward, and I am sure you will find it just what you need. (Copyright, 1912, by U 'nightly out of the unknown, danced awhile in the light of a love that nev- er spoke, and went out again into the | unknown, { But one night he was waiting for her sooner than usual. Eager and trembling he waited for her coming. He held out his hands to her. She hardly knew why, but she took them in her own and looked into his face wisttully. “Well,” she said timidly. . “Oh, Fan,” he said, “you know what I mean. T love you, that's all. Long ago I told you with my deeds, and you understood. But that is not enough. Now, Fan, I must know. Will you be my wife? Strange is it not, that T hardly dared ask before?” | Pain crept into her face as she list- ened—pain that struggled with joy. | “Yes,” she said in low agitated tones, “I knew that you loved me. 1 knew—and—I loved you, too—dear. 1 love you now—but—I cannot marry you—I cannot.” . Her head dropped upon his breast and she sobbed softly. Then she held herselt erect and wiped away the tears quickly. “You understand.” she sald dully, insistently—"1 cannot marry you.” An awful thought came to him as she spoke. Could it be that she was already married—belonging to anoth- er? How should he have known? Had she not always gone Into the unknowa 'and forbidden him to follow? And , there came to his lips that cry ot thousands like him, thourands of lov- ers in whom a sudden jealousy creates a frightful monomania of suspician. “Ah, then there is—somebody else!™ Why is it that lovers always think that because they are not chosen some one else must needs be? Is there no such thing as a woman who refuses to love simply from disinclination, in- stead of from a previous exhaustion of the sentiment? But in this case the girl nodded her head and said: “Yes, there is somebody else.” “Then why.” he retorted, with quick anger evolved from his passive grief, “did you not tell me so before—with your eycs? Why did they always say ‘Yes,’ if your lips were to say ‘No?” You are cruel. How is it possible? And he—who is he? Ah, well, what | does it matter? You have turned my :._y into night. 1 will go away into He turned to go, but her hand was on his sleeve. 4 “Stop,” she sald. “Come with me. I will show you the somebody else. And it 18 you who are cruel. Do I not say that I love you? Come.” Thus for the first time he accompa- nied her into what was to be no more the unknown. They reached the house at last. She opened the door and beckoned him to follow her. In the dim, shabby room, he saw a figure lying on the bed, a wasted, shrunken figure that breathed heavily. . “This,” she sald, “is my mother. She is dying inch by inch of a wast- ing disease. Every moment that is not spent at the theater I must devote to her. Every thought of mine must be for her and her comfort. She, she has so litle left of life. Would you have me deprive her of the care she needs?” | A lump came Into the man's throat and seemed to wish to stick there for ever. He choked a little hoarsely, and when he had found his voice, asked: “And is this—the somebody else? She nodded, and turned to the bed, but the vicitor picked her up in Illli arms suddenly and covered her face with kisses “You are an anc~l on the stage and f\fl." he whispered in a voice which had a suspicion of tears in it. But why didn’t you tell me at first?” “Because,” she eaid, “you wouldn't let me.” And now a certain member of the chorus is daily trying to postpone hi. marriage by his self-sacrificing ten derness in nursing the somebody else. He is doing it to ease Fannie's bur den. But poor somebody else has not long to linger with them, and some _day there will be a wedding in the . chorus. Palm Chapter, (). E. S meets ever: sacnond and fourth Thursday night of each month at 7:30 p m Mr Viora Keen, W. M.; J. F. Wilson .37, Miss Ruby Daniel News Stand Loooy o1 mdiswuia Theater Lakeland Camp No. 18, W O W meets every second and /~arth Thure day night. Woodmen Circle 8re 't thivd Thursdave W J Fstrides “ouncll Commander, Mrs Sallie Scip +v Guardian of Cirele. FOHOSLO0ON SOPDEOSOFOHAE0HOFOLOFOG0N -The Protessions- DR. SAMUEL F. SMITE. SPECIALIST. . By, Ear, Nose and Throat @lasses Boien Prescribed Phone: Office, 141; Residence, 38 Bryant Bldg.,, Lakeland, Fla. DR. J. ¥. WILSON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Phones—Office, 27Q; residence 297-2 RNQg. Munn Building, Laimland Florida Elnora Reheksh Lodge No. ¢ meets every second and fourth Mon day nights at 1. 0. 0. F. hall. Visit Ing brothers and sisters cordiully in vited. MRS. F. C. LONGMAN, N. G MRS. ILA SELLERS, Seec. K.OFP Regular meeting every [uesda W 7:30 at Odd Fellows Hall. Vieit ing members always welcome. P. D. BRYAN. Chancellor Commander A M. .ACKBON, 8ecretary. POST 33, G. A, B. Meets the first Saturaay In ever) month at 10 1. m. at the home of J. M. Spacling on Kentucky avenue A. C. SHAFFER, Coanuander J. R. TALLEY, Adjutant. DR. W. R. GROOVER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Rooms 8 and 4 Kentucky Bldg Lakeland, Florida. -t KELSEY BLANTON LAWYER " P 0. Bldg. Phone 319, Lakeland, Fla. DR. SARAH E. WHEELER O0S1TEOPATH PHYSICIAN 'Rooms b, 6 and 7, Bryant Building, Lakeland, Fla. Office Phone 278 Blue. House Phone 278 Black Lake Lodge No. 2,1.0.0 F aicets Friday nights at 7:30, at | 2. 0. F. hall. Visiting brothers ar nordially invited. J. L. REYNOLDS, Sec W. P. PILLIANS, N. G G LA toBolL E Orange Blossom Div. No 49 {3, L A to B.oof L. E. meets ever: {second and tourth Wednesdaye o each month at 2:30 p. m. Visitin: Sisters always welcome MRS. J. C. BROWN Sec’y ! ORDER OF EAGLES. { The Fraternal Order of Eagle: | meets every Wedzuesday night at 1:30, at Odd Feliows' hall. J. H. WILLIAMS, Preaident. B. M. SMAILS, Secretary. @ D & H D MENDENLALL Civil Engineers and Auchitects Rooms 212-216 Drane Bldg. LAKELAND, FLA. Phosphate land examination. veys, examination, reports Blueprirting. A. J. MACDONOUGH, Room 6 Deen & Bryant Bidg. Architect. Newest Ideas in Bungulow Desi thhn".“l.'lofldl. D 0. ROGERS, Lawyer, Room 1, Bryut' Butidiag. Phone 259. Lakeland, Florida. R B. HUFFAKAR, ~Attorney-at-Law— vam 1 Armert Blds Bartow. Pla. DR. W. 5. RVIN DENTIST Establisked in July. 1900 Qooms 14 and 15 Kentucky Bullding Phones: Ofce 180: Residence 84 TUCKER & TUCKER, —Lawyers— Raymondo Bldg akelane, TNO. 8§ EDWARDS Attorney-at-Law. Office in Munn Buildisg Sur Mirrors at Noad Corners. A mirror about three feet high, which shows the approaching trafiie, 'bas been placed on a sign post erect od at the junction of four roads st Beckenham, Kent.—London Mail. Fierits YOU WILL BE “ON TIME” ||! you go ahout it in the right way { punctuality. ! to secure such a result. | | IF YOU CARRY A WATCH ‘ PURCHASED HERE | it will give you the reputation of Illere you can tind ALL EKINDS, GOOD WATCHES AT LOW DOWN PRICES. Every watch £oid by us is guaranteed . (. Stevens LAKELAND, FLORIDA. ———————eeeeeen o e W. 8. PRESTON, LAWYER (Offce Upstalrs East of Court House.) | BARTOW, FLORIDA. Examination of Tities and Real Estate Law a Spectalty. PROFESS80R H. E. HAYDEN TEACHER OF PIANOFORTE ANB ORGAN. Room 11, Putch and Gentry Bilp Hours: Momonday, Thursday aad faturday, 1 to 8. AR Bt oo 0 e