Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
4} We do not “work you” on the price when you buy clothes from us. We want your trade for life and we go after it with just two things: QUALITY and VALUE. You ¢ n’t go out of OUR store with a suit of clothes that does not fit you as it should; we wouldn’t let you. You can’t get poor stuff from us at any price; WE DON'T KEEP IT. l Oulfitter The Hart Schalfner & Marx Clothing JOS. LeVAY Lagsiaeup el Lot L fegl Dhell el L 2 el TN TaT DO -0 X w o o T o e sy ¢ Lakeland Paving&ConstructionCo, Artificlal Stone, Brick and Concrete Building Material Estimates Cheerfully Furnished on Paving and all Kinds of Artificial Stone Work , JO7 West Mé&in Street- Phone 348-Black EEJUOFFAAD N DM ) P, NEWBECKER ¢ Pres.Sec.& Tres. Supt, & Gen. Man. V. Pres & Asst Man &”{"v‘.mflu-:‘louflt‘om:i:uuv.\— s DE0FDHORCITSACCHISGON IORCRE LAKELA L WORKS We are ready to do you Sheet Metal Work in Lakeland. Cornice Skylights, Ventila- tion, Slate Tile Composition and Metal Roofings, Awnings, Furnaces and anything in the sheet metal line. Ask us about Galvanized Tanks. Skogs in Smith-H B i - N Phore 279 ardin Bldg MET Wfim Phone 257 PROPERTYIOWNERS ATTENTION Called to a remedy for leaky roofs. We are agents for the E€arer Celebrated System ¢f roofs that do mot leak and that stay tight-— cuaranteed 1 years. We also repalrieaky roofs. Iz you are im the warket for Brick, Lime or Cemont, give us a call aad save mouey Estimates turnished for concrete Goastruction of any kind IMANN PLUMBING & CONSTRUCTION CO. 4t O I CHE DM O Y SO0 # L A A Y D B St L o GO L. g I 7017 ARE THINKING OF BUILDING, SEE WRSHALL & SANDERS "he OIc Reliable Contractors Wi »cn building houses in Lakeland for years who o+ v "FELL DOWN’ or failed to give satisi{cnioa’. i 'A]l classeg of buildings contracted for, The many fine residences built by this firm are evidgnces of their ability to make good. MARSHALL & SANDERS Phone 228 Blue B ] THE EVENING A ITBLKLGRAM ! COYOTES nriaLY EXTINCT Scalps Causina Extermination of Animal. [ | Cottonwoed TFalls, Kan.—According ! to stock raiscrs and farmers of this { county the cuyote seems to be fast be- | coming extinet. The fencing up of | the big pasture districts in this and | neighboring counties, where practical- | i ly every acre is now stocked with cat | ! tle, has robhed the coyote of his once free and open range. nT SUITS eIl VAN VATH 1AL ROHEESET e N Closed Ranges and Bountles on STRIKINGLY PRETTY EFFECTS IN, SEPARATE BLOUSES aueis pelleve Costume From Appearance of Severity—Loose Lines Are Imper ative If One Would Follow Caprice of Fashlon. Those summer blouses of lacy fab- ric mounted over fiesh tinted net or chiffon to Increase the effect of trans- Because of his depredations om jarency are almost shockingly sheer, < young and helpless domestic stock & 5pd the decollette cut of many of the | bounty has been set on his head and \cqaists, designed for wear with tailored | he has long been a fugitive, hunted gireot suits, is siso rather shocking and killed by every farmer. The boun- o old-fashioned propriety which be- ty of a dollar which {8 pald by the 'jjaves that a shirtwaist intended for | county for every coyote scalp turned ' general utility wear should be rather {in probably more than any other pymple and withal a very modest and i cause Is responsible for the decreasing | ypostentatious little garment. But no wolt population. one can say that the new blouses are ’ Tn order to get the reward many | pot pretty. Never has the separate i farmers, and especlally the farmer | waist heen as becoming as it s at boys, not only trap and kill coyotes | ¢nis moment, and one of these new { whenever the opportunity comes, but | 1,46 or net blouses, chic With its touch jhave made a practice of hunting the ' o¢ parigian cachet, enlivens a simple| | coyotes’ dens and robbing them of , thefr young. For the scalp of a baby | wolt, though only & few weeks old :and innocent of any wrongdoing, is ‘ the same In the eyes of the law as ! would be that of a veteran chicken killer, | oOnly a tew years ago the county ! ' money pald out in this county alone . for coyotes ran as high as $300 or $400 annually. Now, it is sald, the "number will hardly reach 100 a year. The bringing In of a dozen or more ' scalps by one farmer, which was once .80 common, no longer ocenrs. , The greater part of these bounties are collected in the spring months before the mother wolf has left her den with her family. So persistently have the farmers carried on the war fare of extermination that the coyotes i which rear their families in safety | ' must be cunning indeed. Though this i may seem cruel, yet from long expe- ! rlence the farmers have found that in a stock-raising country the coyote has no place. Were they left to mul- tiply even for a few years so great - would their numbers become as to be & scourge to the country. LAUDS AN AMERICAN SCHOLAR Temps Devotes Its Leading Editorlal | to the Visit of Harvard Unl- ‘ versity President. and severe tailored coa and skirt sult considerably. Washable nets tucked in groups of minute pintucks, embroidered nets, lace and net combinations and all- over laces in fine Val. and shadow patterns, are used for these trans- parent blouses, and the dainty cami- sole—an old-faghioned term revived— which goes under the blouse, i3 an im- portant part of its prettiness. The | camisole may be of sheer white net | or of chiffon. Sometimes, when the blouse i8 of chiffon, the camisole is of lace, but flash colored chiffon or net {8 used under the majority of i | Par{s.—The Temps devotes its prin- | cipal editorial to the visit of Dr. Ab- bott Lawrence Lowell, president of | Harvard university, describing him as leaders of “one of the American Linen With Striped Collar, these blouses, so that the filmy outer fabric appears to be clinging to the bare flesh of shoulders and arms. Very loose lines are insisted upon by Fashion in all blouses now. only does the blouse hang in full, graceful folds from long shoulders, but it also hangs over the girdle at the waistline. Net is pintucked, and chiffon Is laid in half-inch or quarter inch tucks to emphasize this effect of fullness, and some of the most fetching blouses are ot white chiffon tucked all the way across in evenly speced, quarterdinch tucks. Some { times a band of pastel colored ribbon passes under the tucked chiffon and Dr. Abbott Lawrence Lowell. thought whose presence among us will | Not | P 713 A “DARK HORSE” (Zut By BELLE MANIATES. | e————————————— | “Thornton, I won't take ‘no’ for an m._:;er this time. You can stay over a couple of weeks now just as well as not. There is a good golf links, boat- ing, an1 I have three pretty daugh- o i t refuse such al | I certainly can't T b ‘lurllng inducements,” lauglhted Thorn- I “and I trust, wout be trespassing too much _on | your hospitality and the good nature | o your houshold by accepting an im- promptu {nvitation.” The hourehold is an unconventional one, and delights in opening doors wide when a friend knocks,” replied the elder man, taking down the tele- phone. “Hello! This you, Madge? Mr. | Thornton is in town—you have often heard me speak of him. I have per- suaded bim to remain over and pay us & visit. Yes, he'll come home with me tonight” After the transaction of some business which had brought Roger Thoraton, the son of an old college friend of Mr. Darnley’s, to the | city, they took @ suburban train to the latter's country home. “The house looks rather forbid- ding,” observed Mr. Darnley, a8 they came up the graveled road, “but the girls detest lights in summer. 1 pre- sume they are back in the garden. Sit down here on the porch and I will gather them up. Rogers heard & light footfall be- ! hind him. Then two soft arms en- circled his neck, a velvety cheek was laid against his own, and a beautiful voice murmured tenderly: “What made you so late, dear?” Roger sat like a man dazed, ! stunned by the touch of lips and | cheek. After a throbbing silence he | half whispered: | “I beg your pardon!” | There was a horrified exclamation, a swift withdrawal of arms, and the | sound of vanishing skirts. | In a distant part of the house he | heard echoes of mirthful laughter. . Presently Darnley came out of the | house. | “After prowling all over the | grounds, I found the girls in the din. ing-room preparing a chafing dish ! luncheon for us Come in and meet | them.” | In the dining-room Roger was pre- sented to the three girls. In vain he ! looked into the roguish faces seeking | some tell-tale token. But not a sign of confusion or enlightenment did he | receive. | “T must tell you a good joke, Thorn- ton,” laughed Darnley. “The girls | supposed it was your father I was to bring home with me!” “Indeed! And was I also supposed to be my father when I sat out on the | porch just now?' he asked, mean- | ingly. There was a trio of laughing voices and knowing glunces. “No. You were thought to be me,” | explained Darnley. “See if you can , guess which one made the embar | rassing error.” | “There is but one way In which I can decide that matter,” replied Rog- | er, gravely. | “How?" demanded the trio. “l must closc my eyes, and each one of you can in turn come up be hind he and repeat the error! Then, ‘ I might decide.” ' This was positively and laughing- ly declined. After a merry evening, Mr. Darnley, I d ownen oF | still further tighten the bonds of mu- tual esteem and ardent sympathy be- tween France and the United States.” | The Temps points out that the advent of Dr. Lowell in Harvard coincided | with the reaction In favor of French methods. Previously German meth- ods had reigned exclusively in Amer fcan universities. LUCKY HORSESHOE | HNurls It at Son-in-Law, Misses, th' Another Man and ls Arrested. 8t. Louis.—A good luck horseshoe which Wilkam H. King of No. 5023 Bulwer avenue carried with him in ! his wagon for years caused him to be fined $5 and costs in the Dayton Street police court. Being unable to pay his fine, he was sent to the work- house. It happened this way: Two years ago Charles Willlams of No. 908 Brooklyn street married King’s daughter, and four months later they separated. Williams had never vis ited his wife to see their baby, which was born after he left home. King, driving a dump cart the oth- er day, met Willlams, driving an ash cart, and they had an argument on the support of the baby. King threw & hatchet and some other articles in his cart at Williams, and, having only the good luck horseshoe left, he tried that. He missed Willlams, but hit anoth. er man in the wagon with him. Wil. llams and his companion were pum. meling King with their fists when g | policeman appeared and arrested | them. Willlams was also flned §5 | and costs, which he could not pay. King elso asked for a warrant for wife abandonment against him. Jailed as a “Common Scold.” Atlantic City, N. J—Charged by her peighbors with belng a “common scold,” Mre. Annle Chacano wag brought before Recorder Keefer here. | over the net or lace camisole beneath, Roger retired, unable to decide which long gloves which the manufacturers .trom wrist to shoulder and cover all the fringed ends of the ribbon emerg: | ing at the front of the blouse through :’;m:hg:en‘t"fa““"“l young women he | buttonholed slashes in the ehiffon, gut the most charming. The next where the ribbon s ti day and evening found him still un- soft bow. ed in & small, declded, and also In the dark as to Sometimes when the blouse 18 made ' Who had bestowed upon him the fleet- of chiffon or other very sheer mate.| 5. cbrace. rial, broad ribbon in some delicate 5 On the third evening of his visit, color is run under the hem, the farie I‘,overldge, a niece of Mr fringed ends emerging where the| L '"/¢Y'® arrived to pay a visit. She tronts cross at the bust. | Was a type aitogether different from {her light-hearted 1 hter-loving MARY DEAN. |coualnu. M~ New Kind of Glove, IRBy one or two gkilltul moves, 14 0t pesaibls %0 &9 it o it oger drew her apart from the gay afternoon wearing & frock with b no lcnmt"tl:d and sought a secluded retreat kind of short sleave and not wear the | "D: ;‘:f f:;i,eg‘h 1d, suddent Ao »" he said, suddenly, | “I had a very strange experience the nre}nl:ight of my arrival here.” “That was before I came.” ed Made, illiin “Mr Darnlay left me on the porch | while he went in search of his fame wears a white or light gown, in which :lhye' ‘(;:-k:}éif II “;::tteiv:here fflon. B S8, 0 soft arms case the long expanse of white k! the arm 1s not a declded contmt:db?xl: about my neck, a cheek latd against Wwhen one wears a gown of any orar | o, d 3 llEht kiss, and the most nary color, and espectally of black,f P{autiful voice I ever heard Bay: the white or buff aleeve is 460 eomplo.: What made yoy £0 late, dear?” When uous for beauty, | I spoke, she fleq, Marie, from the Yot what s one going to do if one tn. | """, OM°M I 53w you, T knew it eista upon wearing this pew tiny | must have been you who eame to me sleeve? The public should be thankful | there fn the dariness and taught me that there has been a glove immeds. | " L, IO7® Might bet™ ately made to wear with it op we! Ut" she suid, her volce trem- should no doubt see women wE “You know 1 dig goln not come une a;os:xd with bare arms swinging :m: ulu;:w:ndays m,e e of thelr frocks, like prizefighters, | e still 1t was you—in & s~le, will you have inveated to meet the occasion. These are 35 buttons {n length, and | even longer, and they are wrinkled the arm. The effect is not pretty unless one \drenm. perhaps. but, M: Rich Ribbons, | ot make the dram 00+:» troe? The characteristics of the new rip. ' ym&fi%‘ love me?” - ll\onl are richness of coloring ang very | turneq t‘ little, 711 langh, she arge, bold patterns. Large destgns, | b 0 Mm, anc Lo heid ber t ;)ox;ples n!‘xd crc'hids and roses are typ. | ?«;:m!'.. e(f?e'culn ;.;5 vbee.our r!b!;o;:s dark floral | . S‘GPéaysll::r Eald, el otly, 1 especially In favor, | gy Ore your arrival, and Molre brocaded ri | Sole out that Linking . f:rl:fib:;)ns' with floral | meet el ii‘il? g.m& e 1es, £00, Will ba | for ot nd reproach him used for millinery, e , ‘08 80 lJate. Whep | found my stal \ Wash Slik Walst, | 8nd begged them to k . Cool and comfortable ars the ge) They werg lovely not to betray me, | rate walsts of white wagy silk, but every time 1 Bueconsor t§ TRANSFE; Draying ang Hauly, Prompt ang Ry, Gu 4radte — Phoue 57 Gleeyn Waynesville, § In bear; ot oy, te Ars every eouvenlenu‘ wosquitoes. Altitug, | WEEKLY Ratggy, SPECIAL FAMILY jy BER R\ SEND FOR BT(EZ —_— CHORIORBICO00 000, bfl&nflmmmww ihe Proty mmtm*mm, -—-‘\ BX. 6AMUNL 1 BPECIALN Rye, Ear, Now y; fupbues lclentiicy ) “hewe: Ofioy, 144 Bryant Bldg, Ly 4 W. R GIOCVB‘,‘ AN aND: 20ome o RLg 4 ki *EHITBIC Lakelnsa, Il a DR K LN 28. C. 0, WILLu2 - DENTI# ix{ppor Bulldiag, 0w Phune §i: depideuce Phom LAKELAND, I.— LT agnd ‘v v Trwws 14 ard 16 Kany Yomes DMes L Lo PHYBICIAN AND U #pecial Attention Gré » Women and Chs deen-Bryant Bldg,, Su'4 Phone 367 BLANTON & LAWLE- . ATTORNEYSAT Lakeland - ! IR, EARAT 1 T FelZ s IR TN, 7: leomn £, 6 sad 7, BT Lakelacd, Fi Jikeg Phone 276 Bl imuge >aong 176 3 DR. C. C. W PHYSICIAN AND Special Attention (It of Women and Lfi‘v Deen-Bryant Bidg., ™' Phone 357 " Lawyer, rosm 7. Brysat ¥ 2home ¥ Laksiard, 1t AREMIAH B. SWIT No’rlARY PUBL ‘wang, Investments 4ave some interestiis «ad suburban Propér Setter ses me at 0¥ wll for eash or on &' Room 14, Futch & ¥ Lakelsnd, I “—————_/ . 3 ¥l —Aftorseet! ‘ xeor ¥ Stuart BlfE egcrey & 10 —Lewren- maymonde £ «7qland, proveey v - oris A P = “THE ARCY nasssdd w 5 PRESTY Des Opatalrs F5' T | BARTOW @xaminatton of *0* patate Lo 0 ams B80T Was alone with you, | : e c:;::}ou;t of what I had dongoct s roBLIC #TEM 8 » Marle” he replieq, ryan Reon ? Conrieht, vy Datty Story pun, Gay | S ml“. -4y Story F #3000 35 He sent her fo jall and sald if she veri. | Leavy cord of white is the finish Bied the storles of Ler accusers he | the low-cul over would banish Ler from the city, ' e R O 0 D O RO