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WILL SING FOR YOU! 1l the other world-famous sing- have a VICTROLA, clusive agents for the Victor ing Machines. $15,00 and up. y Payments. LAND BOOK STORE We have installed a large Double Glass Sanitary Delicatessen Re- frigerator. It freezes butter and keeps vegetables cool and fresh. Absolutely FLY-PROOF. We T0M Berlin to the Schorfhelde, jaxe. Its length is seven miles, and its from the most magnificent Of greatest breadth about three-quarters the imperial palaces, filled With : of 3 mile, On the opposita shore, in- a company of “Bpfficedeme";flnltely the more picturesque of the brilliancy and distinction, 10 | tyo, its banks rise steeply to a height b Optometrists Phone 173 csure To Show Goods” 12 BAND gocs o1t to the man who Las MONEY IN Money in the bank enables you to carry out your Benford & Steitz E&HULL ' g agents forthe celebrated it & Co’s line of Wedding In- s, Letter |Heads, Business ing Cards. We Invite you d|see our samples. E & HULL oy fp tae Barf T Sy Laxeland, Fla. Wosires you a welcome ‘. others to join youput in an enterprise. Try to 3 Your Banking With Us ADVISE YOU on business matters, an LAKELAND i) «d National Bank l@eal without some MONEY OF YOUR OWN; it with SOME MONEY that is ours; you time, [ 4 and Steam Laundry West Majn 0. ,Fire Insurance S EE— NN & DEEN 7, Raymondo Bldg. I | the woodland silence and simplicity of | ‘Hubertusstock—no transition could be ! more complete. Within little more ! than an hour a special train carried ' the newly wedded Prince Ernest Au-' gust of Cumberland and Princess Vic- i toria Louise, the only daughter of the kaiser, to the modest hunting box.I from which raids are made upon the largest and best stocked hunting ground of the Hohenzollerns. It stands in a pleasant glade in the | midst of a tract of oaks, which are by no means common in this part of Ger- many, for the sandy soil, as a rule, af- fords nourishment to nothing lees hardy than Scottish firs and birches. But here, as is testified by the undula tion of the landscape, and the granite drift blocks, which lie about in all di- rections, we are in the midst of one of those terminal moraines that the gla- i | clers of the ice age piled up with the ¥ Life of Linen| lnundry work fs what you are lesking fer and spoils of the arctic regions, and the earth is coneequently richer than it is elsewhere on this dried up seabed. How the Site Was Chosen. It was on a day in the year 1849 that Frederic Willlam IV, granduncle | things, however, are said of all the | of the present emperor, rested in this ' deeper lakes In this part of Germany, glade after a tiring day’'s shooting, of a couple of hundred feet, and are densely clothed with trees, which in- deed encircle the lake without @ break. From the southern extremity, for ll distance of about three miles, the wood 18 exclusively composed of thcklyl’ planted beeches of great height, Thelr foliage meets overhead, and to walk among their straight boles in the gloaming is like passing among the columns of a Gothic cathedral. The northern remainder of the easters shore is lese thickly planted with & mixture of beech, birch and Scottish fir, one of the most beautitul or arbori cultural combinations. “The Wehrbellin,” as it is called, 18 the center of rich legendary, historical and natural associations, It is still sald by the villagers in the neightorhood that the lake suddenly appeared where dry land had formerly been, and that a capital city was engulfed in its surging waters. It i whispered that fisher men’s nets have been torn by coming ' into contact with the battlements and turrets of the sunken ramparts. These and the Wehrbellin is exceptionally HUBERTUSSTOCK LODGE and, struck by the beauty of the scene, plunged his stick into the ground, de- claring that on that spot a house -must be built for him. The structure which arose at his command is in the style of the simpler Swise chalets, For the most part it is composed of wood, and & plainly carved balcony runs round the upper of its two floors. In its di- mensions it {8 not more imposing than an ordinary suburban villa, and all its appointments are of the simplest de- scription. Hundreds of antlers hang on the walls, both within and without, and the other principal interior mural decorations are framed prints and photographs, most of which have some connection with the chase. The furniture is plain and substan- tial, like that of a yeoman farmer. Even the room in which the emperor sleeps during his annual autumnal vis- its s hardly big enough to admit the simple bedstead, washstand, and dress- ing table, and the chief members of the suites he brings with him are, of than their master. A corridor connects the chalet with a lurger wing, where are the kitchen, the servants’ rooms and the stabling. When the suite is at all numerous some of its members sleep at two for- esters’ houses, one of which is close to | the chalet, while the other occupies a magnificent site on the shores of the lovely Wherbellin lake, about a mile distant. There is no inclosure or gar- den worthy of the name to shut the chalet off from the outside world. Only a notice nailed to the posts warns the wanderer that come of the paths In its vicinity are “forbidden.” But when the court is not in residence he has free access to the “hunting Schlose,” and may, for a small fee, inspect all f{ts apartments except the bedrooms of the emperor and empress. Outside the chalet, on the spot where Frederic William IV, made his thrust at the ground, rises a “bild- stock” (picture stick) or shrine, on which is painted the vision of St. Hu- bertus, who, the legend tells, was brought into the paths of piety when hunting on a sacred feast day by see- ing a stag with a golden cross be tween its antlers. It is from this shrine that the Schloss takes its name. In the Midst of Dense Forest. Those who wish to be alone could find no more undisturbed retreat than the Schorfheide. To the west of Hu- bertusstock one can walk in a bee line for ten miles without once emerging from the forest, without seeing a sin- gle human habitation, and without, un- less by rare accident, meeting a soul. On the other hand, the woods are swarming with game, and one cannot go far without encountering a herd of deer, of which some three thousand head are stocked in this vast preserve, The animals are but little moiested, and are dependent upon the keepers for their food in winter. A walk of less than a mile to the east brings one to Lake Wehrbellin, which is the true charm of Hubertus- stock. In proportion and contour this lovely sheet of water is not unlike Windermere. It, too, is a “winding” profound. Indeed, the few natives of Its shores declare that in places it is unfathomable, REFUGE' FOR THE SCHOLAR In the Classics, Writer Asserts, One May Commune With the High Thoughts of the Past. I advocate the classics they constitute a retreat, in which the spirit may commune with the high thoughts of the past. Modern literature is modern; it concerns it- self with actual life, with our distrac- tions, our trivialities, our romance, because our getting on in the world, with all | our coarser appetites; but in the re- mote classics, in that cool, tranquil, distant world, we can surrender our- selves to contemplation, to medita tion, to the high influences that al- ways stoop to the soul's call. This remoteness of the classics af- fects me as my remembrance of graclous figures in my childhood. The people there seem to have a nobler aspect, a more goodly presence, larg. er sympathies, a wiser and a kinder attitude. We do not apply the les- sons we learned from them directly to life, but we know that somehow the most valuable lessons in our lives came from them. We cannot say just what we learned, but we possess & memory of quietness, or ripeness, of wisdom of life, and we feel that to them is due whatever gain we have made in grace and moral stature. Greek literature has a llke effect upon us.—The Atlantic. e Her Idea of Teeth. It was a couple of days before ex- amination time in the schools and the teacher was drilling the youngsters in reviewing subjects preliminary to the tests. The subject under consid- eration was physiology. “What are the various kinds teeth?” she asked. One of the little girls raised her hand and shook it vigorously, every evidence that she was certain of the question. “Well, what are they?” “Baby teeth, teeth and false-teeth.” + "“And you know that wasn't right at all,” the little girl told her big sister after. “They were incisors, incuspl dors and some others.” Modest Wants of Sane Citizens. It is a remarkable fact that the vast majority of men look forward through the years of their greatest activity, not to a winter home in Florida or gouthern California, or at Cairo, Cannes, or Nice, nor to & summer home in the Adirondacks, in the ‘White mountains, among the peaks of the Rockies or the pines of the Sier- ras, or somewhere along the New England coast. hut, rather, to a forty- acre farm on the outskirts, easily ac- cessible to a market, where they might crowd the accumulated experi- ence and wisdom of a lifetime into the intelligent management of @ chicken yard invite inspe:tion by the ladies of our city. Cleanliness, high~grade goods and courteous treatment we assure you Pure Food Store W.P,Plllans & Co. PHONE 93 UNICN GARAGE.. © . P.D. LOGAN, Prop. Al Makes ¢f Automobilesand Self Starters and Lighting Systems Correctly Repaired. Tires, Inner Tubes and Full Line of Supplies on Hand. Your Patronage Solicited.ii . fione 65 W. Mam St. Lakeland L T T " J. P. McCCORQUODALE The Florida Avenue Grocer 290—— PHONE RED Respectfully asks his friends and the publ generally to give him a call when needing Fresh Meats, Groceries, Vegetables, Etc. & ; HE WILL TREAT YOU RIGHT AND WILL GUARANTEE SATISFACTION 290 ANOTHER DROP IN MAZDA LAMP 25 watt Mazda 40 ol (1} 60 60 - 100 - 150 *“ i $1.30 250 * ¢ $2.00 \_N;e_ carry & stock of lamps at the following places and ad our shop: LAKE PHARMACY HENLEY & RENLEY JACKSON & WILSON Cardwell ano Feigley Electrical and Sheet Metal Workers » PHONE 233 . 35¢ 35¢ 45¢ 600 80c¢ unskirted skirted IF YOU ARE THINKING OF |BUILDING, SEE MARSHALL & SANDERS The 0I1d Rellable Contractors ' Who have been building houses in Lakeland for years, and who never "FELL DOWN" or failed to give satisfaction. All classes of buildings contracted for. The many fine residences built by this firm are evidgnces'of their abilityte make good. MARSHALL & SANDERS Phone 228 Blue C. A. MANN Phione 257 = PRCDERTY OWNERS ATTENTION — Called to a remedy for leaky roofs. We are agents for the Carer Celebrated System c¢f roofs that do not leak and that stay tight— guaranteed ! years. We also repalrieaky roofs If you are in the market for Brick, Lime or Cemont, give us a call and save moaey, Estimates furnished for concrete ecozstructioa of any kiad MANN PLUMBING;& CONSTRUCTION €O.