Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, April 14, 1913, Page 6

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::; FAGE SIX. THE EVENING TELEUNAM. LAKELAND, .fim., APRIL 14, 1913. : ' % SOHO PRSI L PRI UHORDS LMD ORI DAL 0T | ETITT T G T D ;OWWWWMWE : CURED e s FROM OUT THE PAST % Dr. Edga; H-Cfflexi“ not be here o. | sy morrow, Tuesda ril 15th . 5 REGILE ©F LINVWHACK BY WILLIAM E. GRANT. .f ick : WY) P il o8 dehoun % M E A ?‘L ":\ BY MZGY L. MILLETT The dclicate periume wafted by a % mna . n.ess' il s" ShOWing thf: % \: e 5 sy hundred fans was chastening the (g largeSl hne Of ‘]ewelry in Lakeland- 3 $_—"-::m htf‘\’r)l' a;rrof (t’he baliroom, and '.Lle g j 1 I.Z,. ) § (-‘?“‘t{ eat fl\a}." . :;x:olhopar(;set ‘:A‘i’c;ficf)te; :‘;'reatm; "4 pleaguis 10 Abow gooR” z Country Cured Hams Ib 2lc § | or vioter i ofred A maadolins. Wi s cusous wme o8 COLE & = U LL ' ith the rejected dish, Id fall her cameco face Mrs. Santell d | ; L] “ Picnic Hams lb lSC i ibashed and cluzch‘ l:\e()ru he:d, ;Lnrmcu:; othea l'uru:r: of :]I;f;s: :::;r é ; Breakfast Bacon Ib '25¢ “Ask for Red Wing Grzpe Juice” The Pure Juice i Pure ['ocd Siore ¥. P, Piilans & (. DU DR RO B OROE o DOE 008 AT TEOR PP by g ™ i stumber & Sunply COMPANY E 5 &E 0. GARLARD, PROPRIETORS, Phone 28 ; Foot of Main Gtreet LE5 8500 M, Gil GYPRESS S SR GG ¢ ; 400 1§ ] nTi j 131013300 GIPAESS LATH 450 M Wit FLG G GEILRIG SIDING, INVERTESS STOCK 25.00 M We are handling the cut of a small mill, and can furnisb you rouch and dressed framing from 2x4 to 16x12 best heart if wantc ], cut from round timber, We niake doors and sash and can furnisl any kind of mill work out of pine and cypress lumber. Re carry @ first class line of points, varaishes and oil. Our lumber and with business will be managed by Mr I3, H. Hopkins, who is well | Wi by the people of Lakeland as an nu-to-date lumber man. Teras: Strictly Cash on Delivery of Goods e Successors to D. Fulghumw 218 and 220 South Florida Avenue § Heavy and Fancy Groceries Hay, Grain, and Feeds a Specialty Phone 334 M Prompt Delivery Here at this drug store. °If the doctor says you need a certain“instrument or appliance come right to;this stere—we have it. Red Cross Pharmacy Phone 89 ¥ Quick Delivery P CPORCFORC 47 MOPIPLSOPALDEDEOEOR0 a1 4O BOFOSOSOSOSO 30 . l | wendering what on earth she could }coucoct to stay Arrowsmith's hunger ! an| | Arrowsmith was greatly pleased lwith his dvsp pcia. It was not the ,acutely painfil kind, but a comforta- ble sort of un! iness, someibing to taik about which he i could uce to attract sympathy to him- !scl." when attention in his direction ‘ scemed to be lag.ing. | { care without the t i to Germany. i “You owe it to y« | Linwhack said, “to t | time and not et it get it e of traveling 1 , my boy,” is thing in clutches on y, how I suflered!” rowsmith, eagerly. you, as T gid! { “So do 1,” 1 “I can't ¢ 4 | Arroy + life miserable for the members of his fawmily for weeks after this, wmirg and suifering un- der Linwhack's re zime., Then he de- clared that the was worse than ever, and announced that he decired no mere prane soups or cream steaks cooked. The chopped beef interlude was also , trying for those about him, for Arrow- smith would look so desperately re- proachful at the sight of the others devouring fricd. oy:sters and spicy sal- ads and rich dezeerts, while he dined off something similar to the dish ordi- narily zet before the family watchdog. Still, as Mrs. Arrowsmith pointed out, he really conld not expect every one else to go on a chopped beef diet. . “This s not a follow-my-leader game, darling,” his wife explained to him, as she devoured chocolate cake, and Arrowsmith ate a particularly 151, P 0y fl. “Shucks!” Said Aunt Melissa. wizened and anaemic cracker. man food, if you don't mind!"” at he possessed a stomach. th: l “The worst part of it is,” Arrow- Lo | What wouldn't I give to be well | again! Eventually, of course, it will insurance!” When Aunt Melissa came to visit the family was much concerned at sight of him. Arrowsmith passed a long and de lighttul evening relating his sufferings to her and describing his hopeless at- tempts at a cure. “Shucks!” said Aunt Melissa. *1 should think you would be sick, ta- king all those things and doing all these gymnastics! Now, if you'd take one of these pep'mints after each meal, like I do—" Arrowsmith groaned hollowly. “You d yet not collide with his dyspepsia. ' giving bim | Then, toe, he derived a eertain pleasure from tr, new remedies. il.im-.luu):, who hud no@n expen- | sive German cure for the sone trou- | ble, had ed to him t} Lout a ' whole | i expii just | how Ariov h could tuke the same “My | that I love you. Do you love me? I heart is wrung with sympathy for you, | must know that. i really, but I am going to stick to hu- | your ambition for me—for love? I can- | & Arrowsmith tried hot -water bags |spair in this maddening alternation, and plasters before meals and pow- | Tell me—yesorno!” And she had shut ders after meals, and still he knew | her teeth and said “No” firmly, al- mith would say, “that I can't tell | himselt, she remained calm for a few whether it aches for lack of food or | seconds and thén fell to the floor in & because of food. It is most confusing. | very delirium of pent-up terror. ' eause my death, but remember, Henrl- | paoq, Ah, the sight of that white face otta, I am keeping up a goodsized life | with the majesty of death upow it! Nobody ever did anything at the|pjcture. Why did that phantom come Arrowsmith house but sit around and ::.g of the p'utl wn:n't' to reproach | discuss Arrowsmith's affliction and ! pher? Had she not made a new life for J| read dyspepsia cures. pursuers of flect-footed happiness, . There was a crowd of admirers about her, and she was sparkling all over, .in jewels and wit—a cold satirical | ! wit. | Presently there came into the room 1 a girl and her cbaperone. The former . was Mrs, Santelle’s azughter, and the mother, nodding to the ciowd eround Fhone 173 .Lakeland, i3 . DHOBOFOLDCITHORIOLOLORDY QIOBEIIBOPIEOI0: O3 - Ler, passed over to where she stood. afl?,p/’ess&" “You are lco ite tonight, ) v:‘:,rlhn:»:\l islrlc‘un'm‘ nusual fi‘b(l;ui ! 0 18 09 | Wgy'/’{ )é/e bere WY it and Tilk ahout fhes ol pas hay 1s it pos- that the heir to tha 2s asked for your ceopted? No? Child, you lave ful mis- take, It must be thut : 15 somo- one elge. Ah, youugz llov.ard, the ar- \ tist who paints those preity pastelle i heads? But, my dear, ke hus next to ro money, Forget hini, you must for- | get him.» As the woman moved away sho fooked buek once and she saw that the girl's face W overshadowed with you. nandg! | loom. ‘ihe night no longer held any happiness for her. : | Mr, untelle shuddered slightly, but | lin the swing of the next waliz she | ; speedily forgot all but her own proud position as a leader of society, the wite of a prominent statesman and | a2 reigning beauty. But suddenly, while the mandolins dripped their sweet mu- | ! zic most tenderly, she started, paled I quickly, and tremblcd on her partner’s | arm. There—in the misty corner of | { the room--she seemed to see a face | shoe had known in the long ago—a face shustly and wan—touchcd with crim- con and stumped with the mark of {death. She closed her eycs—opened | them again, but it was still there— | menncing—aceusing—mhorrible! There was a sudden commotion; for Mrs, Santelle had fainted. Quickly she was carried to another room, and | Iter husband came to her, She awoke | to find him leaning over the divan where she lay. “It i8 you,” she said, with a forced smile. “There is nothing serious the | matter—I tainted—that was all. It was the heat of the room. “Please ieave me—I require noth- | ivg.” Alone with her own thoughts she dreamed the old dream over again, So ! long she had trted to forget, to put | the worldly magk of pride over all' those tender, sad duys, and yet, here a little indisposition had brought tl\e; haunting terror bhack 1o her again, | Well, if it must be, she would review | the dream; the dreain of those days | when she was youung, poor and ame! bitious. Her beauty hud then scemed | to her a power beyond price, and she | had determined to aim for nothing ' lower than the highest. And then that | } The fome of M3t Schaffaor & Marx Clothes handsome young \West Pointer had | come into her life. She—yes, she; L loved him, though ghe told herself! JOSEPH LeVAY she must stifle her love, And yet she | * o m—AREE: 2 | had smiled upon him. One day he sald: & SR QB OO MY HOBEOBEODD BPOHIABPELBLLP O B0 10 “I can bear it no longer. You know | | o\ Ero) 22 ! The philosophy of clothes s lots to dn with the philosophy of |1 . Clothes philosophy teaches onc v.. todress well. In a few, words i: this: “Look good: you'll ifeel: gcc.., you'll make good.” Read our advertisements. Ti will teach you how to ilive, how to dress, how to prosper---and W} to buy your clothes, ’ oLl L g g 1Lk s Can you give up not eat of the fruit of hope and de- though she knew she loved him well. ‘When she learned that he had shot In the morning, wearing a heavy vell, she went to look upon his dead She would never forget that awful herself, buried those old-time mem- ories, gratified all her ambitions, ev- erything save love? Why had she dreamed tonight? Was it the look on her daughter’s face that had brought about the coming of the dream? Would Stella, too, live to repent? She went out into the ballroom again, radiant and beautiful as be fore. She waved her questioners aside with her fan. “Thank you, it was nothing. Only fatigue, faintness, due to the heat.” But wien Stella said sofily: “How glad I am that you are better, moth- All Refrigerators Are Not Alike. You Want to Get the Right Kind—the Kind That Insures Proper AIR CIRCULATION. ] : i don’t understand,” he explained, “how | er,” she bent over her and whispered: serious a case mine is! Why, I've| “I have been thinking things over, consulted some of the best specialists | dear, and bave changed my mind. You in the country!” can tell Mr. Howard, my child, that Aunt Melissa made such a nuisance | he ean have you, if he has set his of herself about the peppermints that | heart upon you and you on him. There after dinner that night, Arrowsmith | are other snd greater forms of happi ate two to get rid of her. ness in this old world than can be won “There!” cried Aunt Melissa half an | by the possession of mere money. And hour later, when she caught Arrow- f wealth is but a poor substitute for the smith laughing. “You feel better, don't ' loss of true love. Greet him for me, you?” dear, and be happy.” “Just at the moment,” replied her . A glorious radiance shone upon the nephew, severely, “I have no paln. girl's face. Her mother, turning to Sometimes I have an interval—" leave the hall, looked back and emiled “You keep on with those pep’mints!™ faintly. The vision of death no longer insisted his aunt. “They’ll cure you! haunted her, for she fclt as though sne And eat what Henrietta cajis human had made, in some measure, atone food!” ment for the past. TINNERS AND 'PLUMBERS Whether or not it was time for his —_— 5 dyspepsia to stop, anyhow the family The proudest moment 'n the aver * lhe 0de| “ard flre 2 | will never know, but the fact remains age man's life was when he was about sg4: 302 Iu,u Arrowsmith’s dyspepsia was seven years old and had a speaking ; g quickly cured. But Arrowsmith bas acquaintance with a peliceman. | never forgiven his Aunt Melissa for depriving him of his one topic of con versation.—Chicago Daily Newa, . - We sell the White Clad Refrigerator vent Vegetable Odors from Making Your Butter and Milk “Taste.” We Sell Only the Best in Eardware. i | .E . Subscribefor- [HETELEGRAM

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