Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, June 10, 1913, Page 2

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PAGR TWO. | Hunt For "HUNTS” No Lie on the Can No Lye in the Can Peaches Pears Apricots Cherries Hawauan Pme Apple Pure Food Store W.P,Plllans & Co. PHONE 93 S0¢ HOFHISTIOSIODEISORSDOC Lakeland Paving&ConstructionCo. Artificlal Stone, Brick and Concrete Bulldlng Material Estimates Cheerfully Furnished on Paving and all Kinds of Artificlal Stone Work 307 West Main Street- Phone 348-Black F.J HOFFMAN . N. OMIS J. . NEWBECKER I'res Sec.& Tres. Supt, & Gen. Man. V. Pres. & Asst Mas Plumbmg For a House Com- plete Only $115.00 Consisting of a complete bath r oom, containing one enameled bat tud, one enameled lavatory complete , one closet complete with eak tani and seat, ono 18x30 sink in kitchen and 130 gallon range beller with & Jecessary pipes to complete job and pay nspection fees for §118 Call and talk it over, Hot and cold water to all fixtures. MANN PLUMBING CO, 203 N. Ky. Avo Phonc ZH Bowyer Bldg, PRSI WW@WN' 1 | If you will “tackle our fishing tackle you'll land any fish that tackles yoar balt. Our lines are new and fresh and strong; our reels are not Begorardef s Whenever the thought of hardware eaters your mind, also let in the thought that our store is the place to buy reliable hardware. Tinning and Plumbinga Specialty The Model Hardware Co. —c - IF YOU ARE THINKING OF BUILDING, SEE MARSHALL & SANDERS Who have been building houses in Lakeland for years, sand who never “FELL DOWN" or failed to give satisfaction. ety The many fine residences built by this firm are evidgnces of their abilityto MARSHALL & SANDERS Phone 228 Blue The 0ld Reliable Contractors wnd All classes of buildings contracted for. make good. HECOCOTSTOTHOIOSTHIISIOTILS DEIOCE0HTETOTNIITIOSISTE0S THR EVENING (®LEGRAM, LAKILAND, I‘LI\ ! her that her proposition could not be 1913. "T\'E 10, LOST BIBLE VERSES FOUND Manuscripts Belonging to New Testa: ment Discovered in Egypt Have Additions to St. Mark. \WUNAN 0 THVELS London, England.—Some long miss- | Aunt Mary Is Not a Real Hobo, ing verses of the new testament are| for She Works included in the manuscripts of the gospels discovered in Egypt six,years ago and purchased by Charles L. den Freer of Detroit, Mich., according tol Mrs, Everett jof |\|Aalne A::“wv‘e’::y & Etidy mado lor e Freermany, | lustiasCertainlyi RS A0 i scripts by the Times. A facsimile of Willie—Aids Farmers in the manuscripts has been presented to Their Work. the British museum by the University of Michigan, to which Mr. Freer as signed the task of publication, and, ac: cording to the Times study, there have been found in the gospel of St. Mark several verses which occur in no other known manuscript of the new testament, although they were known to St. Jerome, who quotes part of them. In the Freer manuscript, after the passage in which it is said that Jesus upbraided ‘his disciples for their un- belief, the text continues' as follows: “And they excused themselves, say- ing that this age of lawlessness and unbelief is under Satan, who, through the agency of unclean spirits, suffers not the true power of God to -be ap- prehended. “For the cause, said they unto Christ, reveal now at once thy right. eousness. living. “And Christ sald unto them, the lim-| For fifty years Mary Everett has it of the years of the powers of Sntan' earned her own living, and she does is (not) fulfilled, but it draweth near | today. Sprightly and vigorous as the (the text here as elsewhere Is cor | average woman of sixty, she travele rupt). ! continually, staying but two or three “For the sake of those that have, days in a place. Everybody knows sinned was I given up unto death, | that they may return unto the truth. and sin no more, but may inherit the spiritual and lncorruptlble glory of righteousness in heaven.” A large number of variations in oth er portions of the new testament are also pointed out by the Times in the Freer manuscripts. DOG IS JUDGE IN LAWSUIT Snarls at One Claimant and Bounds Into Other's Lap in New York Court. New York.-—Shep, a collie, was the ' most important witness in the Morri: | sanfa court before Magistrate Marsh in a suit between Mrs. Anna Morris ' sey and Mrs. Freda Maurer. i Shep identified himself as the prop. erty of Mrs. Morrissey to the satisfae. tion of the magistrate, who ordered him turned over to her. Mrs. Maurer, who has had possess- sion of Shep for seven months, was brought into court on a summons {s- | sued on the request of Mrs. Morrissey The animal had been stolen, the com- plainant alleged. Mrs, Maurer said she got the dog frotm some bays and had named him Prince. The magistrate directed that | the two women sit at opposite ends'! Fort Fairfield, Me.—Recently Mrs. Mary Everett celebrated her one hun: dred and first birthday. It is rather difficult to say where “Aunt Mary” will be in a few days, for she has the wanderlust and may be 'way up in Madawaska or down at Mattawam: keag. Mrs. Everett is one of the oddest characters in New England. She was born in St. John, N. B, in 1812, ac cording to the parish register. Her people were well-to-do and she went to school until she was about eigh- teen. Then, she says, there were reli- glous differences in her family and she left home and never went back. Eventually she came to Aroostook county and was married to George Everett, a farmer. He died many years ago. Their one daughter I8 still her, and almost anybody in the coun: try towns of the county is glad to give Mrs. Mary Everett. of a table in the court room and that her shelter. “She is as good as a each call the dog by the name she had Sshow,” they suy. She hus a vast fund p.lwu him. | of funny stories and anccdotes, and “ITere, Prince!” shouted Mrs. Mau. | no end of auips and epigrams, while she can relate many incidents of the ror “Come on. Shep!™ called out M“.! early days of the county with his Morrissey. | torical accuracy, and knows the gen: The dog appeared confused for a ealogy and the scandals of scores of mon ont. Then he enarled at Mrs, | families back to the second and third Maurer and leaped across the table &eneration. into Mrs. Morrissey's lap. In the summer she earns money by Thereupon Magistrate Marsh or | picking ‘ll\p and sorting unfi fsemng dered the collie turncd over to Mrs. | 8pples, the average Arcostock farmer Morrissey. i being too busy with his vast potatc ' plantation to bother with them. In the winter she gathers scraps of silk and stows them in a capacious bag and makes them into quilts, which she sells. She {8 skilled with the needle, which she threads without glasses. But it matters not how cordial her welcome and how comfortable her quarters. she remains in one place only a day or two and then takes to the road with the persistency of the professional hobo. She trudges along | the road until a farmer's team comes along and gives her a lift. Of late | years it is raid she declines to ride WOMAN A HOSPITAL STARTLE Seeks to Sell Her Body to Institution and Use the Money for Fine Clothes. Cincinnati, O.—A woman, plainly but rather well dressed. sat patiently ; an hour in the receiving ward of the i Cincinnat! hospital and when her turn finally came she startled the receiving clerk, Mr. Walihu, by saying that she | wished to sell her body to buy fine clothes. The woman said: G “My name is Eleanore Muchmou| :myrtnlng b&t = ::nt]omo:fle. as fl:{“ and I've simply come here to sell my ! :v'he:; A8 ha ToNID XOTY A0 e body. Aunt Mary has been oftered a good “You don't want us to kill you?t” & N tha aatonished C16rk sasped: home several times, but she says, “Not e " t.” She says she may settle down Oh, no.” replied Miss Muchmore, | J° o “but 1 want new clothes badly, and I t:elk:;??'y when she gets old and thought 1 might be able to sell my body to some doctor in this instiuti- ! Sl e e tion. to be delivered after my natural CORSET DlSPLAYS ARE HlT death.” Miss Muchmore seemed greatly dis- New Ulm (Minn.) Woman Ask Menr appointed when it was explained to chants to Discontinue Them In Windows. New Ulm, Minn—The Current GIVE ALL WOMEN BALLOT News club of this city, a woman's | organization, has mailed letters to the entertained New Law In Norway Will Add 200,000 dry gcods merchants of the city pro- Names to the Voting testing against the practice of expos- List. ing corsets in the store windows to the gaze of men and boys. The letter Christiania. — Woman suffragists | 88Ys: N throughout Norway are rejolcing to-| ~The Current News club has for day over the unanimous report of the 20me time felt that the window dis- constitution committee of the Storth- Plays of corsets have had a harmful tng favoring the proposed mew elec- influence on young people. It is toral law, giving the franchise to DOticeable that the people who look women on the same terms as it is &t these exhibits are the men and granted to men. boys, the women to wishing to stop The measure, which will add about | in the street to examine them.” 200,000 women to the total number Business men who replied called at- of Norweglan voters, will almost cer tention to more important reforms tainly be passed, it is said, by the that might be undertaken. Radical majority in the Storthing. ' Women of this country have, since 1907, possessed municipal and limited general suffrage. The new bill prob- ably will reduce the age limit from twenty-five to twenty-one. Millionaire and Never Knew It. Tron River, Mich.—Michael Ryan, who died 20 years ago here, where he was known as “Mickey,” was sev- eral times over a millionaire, but nev- er knew it. “Mickey” onwed 160 acres of wild land and died in the be- lef that he was poor. The Republie Iron and Steel company has options on the tract and the explorations have revealed a body of ore equal to or larger than the famous Mastodon tract. Woman Falls on Carving Knife. Woodsdale, O.—-NIrs. Maria Santa fell down stairs with a carving knifs in her hand. The blade entered her forehead and came out at the base of the brain. killing her instantly. P W S S This is the most complete hardwar store in this community. We supply 1 needs and requirements of everybody. And we are determined that every cug, tomer who enters our store shall be com-? pletely satisfied or we refund their mone The best thing about us however, is o’ prices. We buy in car load lots—take iy smallest possible profit on each article v sell-- and depend on our volume of sal for what proft we make. We invite yof to call and inspect our stock and prices 9 1 The J ackson - —-HIQE L T Solte " Meals An Endless Variety Of the Best Brands HAMS--With that rict., spicy flavor, BACON--That streax of lean and streak of fatkir¢ SAUSAGE S--Most any kind to your liking. Potted Meats Canned Meats Pickled Meats A different kind for every day in the mcfl*' Best Butter, per pound..-......... AN Sugar, 17 pounds ...... S e l.°°| Cottolene, 10 pound pails. ... .... s o e 1 Cottolene, ¢-pound pails........... ... .. it -W! Snowdrift, 10-pound pails......... ..........e....s 1 Scuumnny size Cream. . ‘s i ”l 18 harmd bt Bt ... Ceraenteetets sesusnens 8'1°I Octagon Soap, § for ........ Coanen T -"| tround Ceffes, per pound ... .. R R Y 6 gallons Kerosene ........... L ; 4"' E. 6. TWEEDELL SOTIITOTIITGITOOIN0 S Auditing Accounting Systema“ D. M. WOODWARD “‘ B A TAMPA

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