Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Phone 233 ARDWELL & FEIGLEY ELECTRICAL and SHEET METAL WORKERS We will wire your house or do any @ 1 work intheelectrical line you mayhave ELECTRIC SIGNS &"5 'We will make you a new ice box, tank ] or anything in the sheet metal line W All repairing solicited. Ask our { satisfied customers. “{CARDWELL & FEIGLEY Phone 233 Phone 233 Rear Gentral Pharmacy on E. Rose St. AvLl3IN L3I3HS e e s, s me——————————————————————————— —————————— v _ Ring off extravagence; ring in economy. Then you will find FREEDOM, The man is not afree man whois worried about the future. " Are YOU one of this kind? . Bank your money and be independent. We offer YOU the servicesand safety of ‘OUR bank. First National Bank OF LAKELAND ng Lifeof Linen aleng with good laundry werk s what you are lesking for and at'® ot what wear giving. Try ma ngeland Steam Laundry Phone 130 West Main . And As You TURN From the Ruins Toward Your Own Home, Then, IF Never Before, Should You Realize ¢ The Benefits 'i‘ We Represent The Following of g Reliable Companies. A Fire Insurancc Policy, Pdellty Undervriters, Capital .___| e ke e I e e ) Germas American, Capital ... 2,000,000 And Resolve To Phlladelphia Underwriters, Capltal_. 4,750,000 Springfeld F. & M, Capital..____ 2,000,000 Insure Your Property! ———————s s MANN & DEEN Room 7, Raymondo Bldg. THE EVENING TELEGRAMN, Lak ELAND, FLA,, JULY 7, 1913. o~ eX( I had not even the | How would ith take this change SREA T jof fortune? Edith? Their lives had Woman Shows Ambitious Hus- drifted so widely apart during the band That Only Llfe Love past ten yeurs that he scarcely knew, i or understood her. She had cared and Death Count. (little for luxury or sociul distinction, I " yet how changed was the fair, seli- By HARRIET M. ABBOTT. “And you still deny that the god | poised woman who bore his name, . from that young girl who had strolled of luck is today the greatest power in the business world, Cartell? I'm with him on moeonlit evenings, bhe- amazed at you.” | neath the old elms, so long ago! | Ah, well! She had still her small “Look over this great city. You see 1nhr-1_'|tance.' for vho had squzfudvrod nothing which was nct his own. He at every hand wen whose prosperity 5 2 deponds o thotmanest Luva ok ita had fully intended to run down to whpeel N: l'em hot clatming that | Harport last week and see how she brains and moral force are no longer A fesitnERoni b (Clenemeddnvon of account, but I insist that they rare- | ly get the showing they demand.” sible then, and now. There was a rustle in the doorway, “Yet, there's everything in the point ] of view, Jennings,” was the reply, | awe-stricken whis- ith, my wife! And ought of her.” BT T and against the dark portiere a wom- an’s slender fisure was outlined, in ; ¥ i | bold relief. The sensitive profile ;’;":;ea lzlcokw' :ohl:"s:l: :;"e‘bus;‘h‘:: | quivered, and a low voice, vibrant Yy dog! 7 | With feeling, murmured: “James, wresting still other bones from the | less fortunate, to settle down and | g enjoy the sweets of conquest, of what | L‘;O)g{l,l‘:;e :;‘ ;‘:zit;’fi'(:;a::tre' 'advantage is their conquest? Now, | and worn you look, though! success in life means something far N th s e boen suah 5 sad—a | deeper than that which {s brought ' i i | 9 § e ;:?“: Th(frslc{ :;‘ olt“:\l_{i‘m [;g:runlzfg :::. The man Winced as at a touch upon sult;~ bu: bv‘hind e ha Ausu | a wound, but the low voice continued: & i1 L) ) ‘ou. is ornin; ally a good aim and steady hand.” ) \] o ,m? toll i‘l:)u Tpdfi tml W'li “Granted, but—suppose we take, as | L1°Te Was a terrible accident. < ! example, a man who has to all appear- | ances, never known defeat. What of | our old classmate, Wenwright? Wen- wright, the lucky, as we used to call | him, even in college.” | James, 1 simply had to come, and so I am glad, oh, How white who had been stopping at the next cottage, was drowned before my very eyes. He was on his wedding trip, and the little bride, poor girl! is fran- h i tic. But, James, the shock and pity A% D JARUIEA BRiee ORRUR Gy it all made me see even more Wenwright for winning Edith Sils- | = I little bee? He glanced thoughtfully from the | Slearly heneyen orata ol thesé vindow: th TSEL St i the world has to give us but oo LICDI G OTarty ¥ BECM | 4 ree things, life and love and death.” ing irrelevance: “How I wish you | Her voice trembled, but with a ges- h:\"ddbe’eln fin town wh;enl “fn“'r”::,t"turo both winning and tender, she g‘h nbns‘ .’l'mous s[]wec ]'t a8 .mon * ' held out her hands. “Is it too late UMEYIOTS B0 CoeEnita pose Raafa for us, even now, dear? You are an chance darling of Fortune, let me tell you! His two terms in congress have developed all his latent power as a speaker, and in vigorous, polished sen- tences, he gave, that night, so vivid a picture of his early days that you could fairly see the chrysalis of the awkward Vermont lad, from which emerged our present Navoleon of embitious man, but have you not yet satisfied your pride” [I'm not.a senti- mentalist, but arcu't we losing some- thing that is the best and sweetest part of existence? Nothing counts, you see, but the:: three facts, life, love and death.” “And Death is swallowed up in vie- tory,” repeated the man, in a hushed flpnnc;v, ’ll‘l}nt S a '\]\:"(..k"-v-y‘}d Pixp:(}.,s. SRAnStoRs. lsll;)n'.’ NG SN RITERLRLD (‘; But the heart of the woman still o . sought expression. “1 have been lone- “Indeed!" Jennings drew in his hac Hie ly, so lonely, James. If I had had a breath sharply. “And if he is Napo- Jeon. what, then, of Josephine?" " child--" She turncd her head to hide T il Ui the tears. Loungan M IR A SRRl The man caught her in his arms. His companion hesitated. “Unlike “But. Edith, listen!" her husband, she is not in the public | ) & g o b eye; or, at least, not more so than apparent ejort iiter a long silence; 18 unzvoidable. She Is no social devo- "1 am a ruined man. You have not tee. but her name is often connected heard, but everything 1 own is swept with philanthropic movements. On 8&way.” : | the rare occasion when | have seen | “A ruined man?"' she echoed, in per- her, I have thought her as unassum- | Plexity. “There can be no ruin save ing as in_the days. when, the_good old In dishonor, and you are not dishon. professor’s daughter, she dfspensed . ored: 1"“"“!)‘\ Hh(; r:.nsndmh;;r:‘c;‘a:i her hospitality in the white house be- 8nd like a h(v.unn o a shipwrecke hind the elms.” | mariner the light of her trust flashed A vision rose before them of that fts message of hope to the spirit of fair young girl, and Jennings impuls- t.h? man before her : tvely exclaimed: “To think of the in- | N0, rang his answer, thrilling with spiration she might have been to al "'h“ '""""'[f’fl power of rvuw::(chned most any man! Yet, such is the irony coOurage. “Defeated, but not dishon: of Fate, that she is doomed to wholly lofl'd' merge her identity.” A look of almost maternal joy and “Who knows?" was the sober ques- yearning was on the woman's face, as tion. “'Tis a ticklish thing to cir- ®he softly rejoined: “Then nothing cumscribe a woman's influence, even #e€ms lost. All that is best remains, fn fancy. * You never saw Wenwright 4nd at last, oh, my dear! we know how in just the light | did, Jennings, There | Much we need each other. Failure 18 a very defiance of daring In the Means so little, when it can bring even man, that appeals to me, and at the A Sreater joy than success. same time he has a curious respon. | 1he hearer's glance kindled in re siveness. How can you tell what the | 8Ponse to her own. ‘Edith, how often fine alchemy of his wife’s nature may | have I heard your father quote the do, even for the strong mind of a Na. | llnes: ‘What is our failure here but poieon'p Rut, hark! the newsboys are | 8 trlumph’'s evidence!" Never have I calling ‘Extras’ on the street below. | realized before how truly you are his Suppose we stroll along and discover | d8ughter in spirit, as in flesh. the cause of the excitement.” They stepped to a window, and rals- It was but a few hours later, when, | ID& the curtain, looked out. “See,” not three miles away, Hon. James | 8he cried, in joyous exultation, “a new Wenwright hurriedly fitted his latch- | 48y I8 dawning. The night is gone, key in the door, and entered his home | 82d the east is full of promlse.” on the avenue. But the man looked not toward the The cool, spacious library, with its | ®88t, but Into the clear eyes of the soft light, had an air of peaceful se- | Woman, for in their light he saw not clusion. A faint breeze gently stirred | Obly the evidence but the way. < the curtains, and the heat and bustle | (Copyright, by Dadly Story Pub. Co.) of the city seemed remote and forgot- ten, vet the burden of the hour was A ol!',?’:l?:::“ °:p n:‘:ut'l')?'::z;unmn creases rapidly, and, as a rule, the quiet room he shuddered at the mir- observatories located on the mountain rored reflection of his haggard face. t une bl Could that set, aray countenance, tops are rather uncomfortable places i of residence, as discovered by the ;‘;ho‘g:l,] and nervous lips, be indeed sclentific gentlemen who have had A8 1t t0) ward offia blow, he.theew the experience of a winter on the q A ‘mountain top. It is evident that or- out a hand, and recoiled instinctively, dinary lightning rods are entirely in- he spoke with as his fingers touched an fcy, pol- adequate to carry off the enormous {shed surface. What was that? Ah ¥ t A ¥ PS the f or- the statute! the Winged Vietory | discharges of the mountain thunder gstorms. There are several observa- | torles at Mont Blane, and at one of it at | them, that of Janssen, there have a Winged Victory here, ' been a number of bombardments, dur- 5 ’ ¥ ing which the interior of the place The muscles around Wenwright's | wag filled with ribbon-like sheets of mouth twitched in an fironical sem-| gjoctricity and balls of fire which sar- | blance of humor, and with the Sl b 2 : donic smile that was, in truth, but an : Fovet o ni Dol ol o pulit inarticulate moan, he muttered: “Con. &re high and thick, but they are just fronted by Victory, and tonight! The a8 good looking as those she keeps for world has a grim fancy for contrast,” @ Sunny days, and often, to add another Had his dauntless ambition leading A bit of color, she carries a red or pur- him to risk more and more, in order Ple silk umbrella, It kecps the rain to quaff deeper draughts from the Off just as well as a black one and it golden cup, lured him to destruction? | Just makes you feel better. It is won- He had never “set sall to fear.” had derful what a becoming hat and gay poised on its pedestal, in all the white | arrogance of beauty and pride. Wh { place had within his walls? PAGE SEVEN men who fravel will have nome of it, preferring to carry the wet cake of personally preferred toilet soap in a rubber lined receptacle in the traveling bag. A new soap tablet, however, will be likely to appeal to the fastidious traveler, because of its convenience and the attractive way it is put up. Fifty of these tablets are packed like bonbons in a pretty little box less than three inches square. A pair of nickel tweezers are tucked in the box for extracting the tablets— again like bonbons—and the tablets themselves, though firm in composi- tion, dissolve easily in the water, And the entire package costs no more than the ordinary cake of good toilet soap, PLEASE THE CHILDREN ENJOYABLE PARTIES THAT MAY BE EASILY ARRANGED. Much Liked Affair Has Toys as Its Chief Motif—Brown Paper and Fairy Entertainments Never Grow Stale, Many hostesses are harassed by the at the beach when a young doctor,|thought of having to provide “some- thing quite new''—something which, i without being excossively elaborate and provide a pleasant surprise for both young and old. For children and grown-ups a toy party is a very enjoyable affair. Each guest Is asked to bring with them a toy. It may be homemade or bought, but anyway the cost must not exceed a sum fixed by the hostess. The toys are all arranged on a table and each guest votes for the most original and the most unoriginal —barring always their own contribu- tion. The donors of the two respec- tive toys receiving most votes each gets a prize, and the whole of the toys are sent to a hospital or some poor children in the name of ‘the whole party. A brown paper party is also good fun. The guests all wear costumes contrived from brown paper. With a little skill some wonderfully good dresses can be arranged. Brer rab- bit, Eskimo, red Indian, prairie girl, cowboy—there are a few of the most obvious suggestions. For children a fairy party s very attractive. The room should be clear- ed of ordinary furniture and trans- formed into a fairy palace. Some painted cardboard, tree branches, tin- sel, flowers and twinkling lights skill- fully arranged will effect a most real- istic transformation. Special Prices BELOW WE GIVE A FEW OF 0UR PRICES WITH MANY OTHER GOODS OF EQUAL QUALITY AND PRICE. QUALITY OF GOODS IS THE FIRST THING WE LOOK AFTER AND THEN THE PRICE TO MEET YOUR APPROVAL WITH A GUAR- ANTEE THAT EVERYTHING WILL BE AS REPRESENNED. THESE PRICES FOR CASH ONLY. 18 pounds Sugar for...... ... 8100 Eest Butter, per Ib, ......... 40 Cottolene, 10 pound can Cottolere, & pound ...... snowdrift, 10 pounds ........ 5 Snowdrift, 5 pounds .. ........ 40 6 cans Baby Size Cream.... 23 Octagon Soap, 6 for.......... 26 Ground Coffce, per pound ..... .2i Sweet Corn, 3 fOF .. ..o vives 4i Best White Meat, per tb. .... .. 5 gal. Kerosene ............. (D) Csmpound Lard, per 1b, ...... ¢ Feed Stuff s our specialty. We are .ut on 3outh Florida avenue. But ‘all ue. We deliver the goods D. H. CUMBIE & C0. Phone 337 Lakeland i Our Dlsplay of watches, lockets, chains, rings The Invitations should be sent out brooches, etc., is noticeable for its in the names of the fairies, and the little guests should come as fairles of every clime, and—if liked—characters of well known fairy-tales, In similar way it is possible to give a witch party in a magic cave or a l perfect taste as well as self-evident good quality, The Jewelry Dutch party in a Dutch interior, while [ we handle is the kind that comtin- forethought will suggest other ideas equally attractive and easy to carry through successfully. ues to give satisfaction no matter kow long it is worn. If you dAesire When presents are given at a chil-| 1o give sometihng of permanent valie dren’s party the following novel idea will be found an attractive method of distribution: Cut a cake into slices and on the outside of each slice fast- en a present with the name of the Intended recipient on a little flag stuck in the top of each plece. Place the slices In position again and tie the cake around with a broad ribbon ta keep it in shape ——— BRYCE IN LETTER OF REGREY Former Ambassador Writes to Wash- Ington Friends of Love for Amenr lcan People. Washington.—James Bryce, former ambassador from Great Britaln just before leaving American soil, sent back from San Francisco a letter of appreciation and affection to the American people. The letter, made public here, was In reply to one from residents of Washington expressing It referred to regret at his leaving. believed in victory, never in defeat; ‘ umbrella can do toward chasing away but growing bolder, intoxicated with | the blues on a stormy day. succees, he, too. had been at lagt ou!-I witted, and tonight he beheld himaelerOAP TABLETS FOR TOURISTS —a ruined man. Who could have foretold that sud- | New Preparation That Is Likely tol den drop in B. & R.? Not he! But, Appeal to Traveler of Fastidious | it came—too late to tlose out, and | Tastes, ‘ now—the end. How the hours drag- | | ged! Tomorrow, all his little world would know that he, Wenwright, the lucky, had forfeited hfs clafni fo the titie, had gone down, like many an- other. But, a look like that of a dreamer | rudely awakened, swept over the man's face, as, raleing his head, he Somehow soap powder has never taken the fancy of fastidous folk. It is not especially pleasant to use and it never smells like anything but | the washroom of a railway station or department store, It, moreover, has a way of sprinkling itself around every- | Where except on the hands in & messy | and disagreeable way, and dainty wo- James Bryce, bis well-known interest in the plans | for the beautification of the national capital. I am glad to think that an Englishman who loves the United States and its people,” the former en- voy wrote, “Is not debarred by an official position from taking in all | your projects for the artistic devel- our case will supply it, . C. Stevens A Gombination of the Old-Fashioned Honesty with MODERN METHODS AND SCIENCE produces Ice Cream that is the acme of perfection. Poinsetta Is the combination. Made In PURE cream, sterilized, made by the latest ma- thinery, and under the most perfect sanitory conditions Buy it from your local dealer by the dish, pint or quart. #3R SALE BY . LAKE PHARMACY LAKELAND. Our Own Business. Whilst I do what is fit for me Gmll sbstain from what is unfit, my aeigh dor and I shall often agree n ows means and work together for a time to one end. Hut whenever I find my dominion over myself is not suficlend for me and undertake the direction ef Mm also, T overstep the truth and come into false relations to hims Ralph Waldo Emerson. Apparentty, It appears to be necessary for e opment of the national capital an in. | P€OPI® 0 €0 & great deal of scolding: terest as keen as any that your own and to engage pretty continuously citizens could tuke. ! strong-arm work for the purpose gotilng what s thelre