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R L83 8IX. THE EVENING TELEGRAM, OUR FALL LINE | Of Hart Schaffner and Marx Clothing has just arrived. Also Bonar Hats, Kneeland Shoes and the Arrow Brand Shirts . —— L R S T L TR SEC R L Our Ties this Fall in Velvet will surprisc you, as they are the grandest that have ever been in South Florida. Come in and look over our Boys’ Clothingalso i | | | |0utfitter The Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothing E 'he Hub JOS. LeVAY E | Lakeland Pav: ng&’fionstrfigt'fi;mfi | Artificial Stone, Brick and Concrete Building Material Estimates Cheerfully Furnished on Paving | and all Kinds of Artificial Stone Work 307 West Main Street- Phone 348-Black ¢ £ HOFFMAN N DMIS J. P. NEWBECKER + Pres.Sec.& Tres. Supt, & Gen. Man. V. Pres & Asst Man ° Rl gl A= FOP P ET S ITSOS R AET c‘(.u 0 CHORCHOOOHTRCRORC OO L mmn-mmmm | LAKELAND SHEET METAL WORKS We are ready to do you Sheet Metal Work in Lakeland. Cornice Skylights, Ventila- tion, Slate Tile Composition and Metal Roofirgs, Awnings, Furnaces and anything in the sheet metal line. Ask us about Galvanized Tanks, Shops in Smith-Hardin Bldg Pnone 279 10CH0HCH HCHOOHOOHCHOBOHOBOHCHOHOHOROUOUCHOUONORS | ECHOCBOBOHC HONOHCR I HORRORMO WEROH I - i C. A. MANN Phone 257 | PROPERTYIOWNERS ATTENTION Cziled to a remedy for leaky roofs #e are agents tur Lbs Eunre, C.lebrated System ¢f roofs that dv met leak and tha: stay (3!, giaranteed 1 years. We also repalrieaky roofs. I: you aiv .3 rarket for Brick, Lime or Cemont, give us & caii aid save wi ey Extimates furnlshed for concrete ecustruccion of asy kimd. ‘MANN PLUMBING & CONSTRUCTION €O. 4T ADOOSOPOSTROFOH STINGD ) €0 On e s 7 LGS A SO RATOOHOAT ST S0 HSHRe [F YOU ARE THINKING OF BUILDING, SEE MARSHALL & SANDERS The 0ld Reliable Contractors i Who have been building houses in Lakeland for years, and who neyer "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 abilityto make good. MARSHALL & SANDERS Phone 228 Blue [alsl v istale P fletalutatatatalotalatetalatalvtv e e ot e te, o S -t | brown rocks of the range. ' may have looked on some bright Eden | morning. | ing come upr | lence, ! least warning of hi , leap into the pool m The rush of the current as it swirled | sway gently, | SW‘!"‘?! e _m.....&.].,.. Ti*e halice of Courage Being ih Story of Certain Persons Who 3 It and Conquered A Romance of Colorado BY CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY JAuthor q{ ‘The Ring and the Man," way,” “As |h- Snuh Fly Upwi ‘ Ilustrations by Ellsworth Yol.ng (Copyright, 1911, by W. G. Chapman.) (Continued from Page 2.) of purity and of innocence brightened the sod and shed a white luster upon | the green of the grass and moss and pines, reflecting lizht to the gray So Eve A few steps forward and this nymph of the woods, this naiad of the mountains, jlunged into the clear, cold waters of the pool—a water sprite and her fountain! CHAPTER V., The Bear, the Man and the Flood. The water was deep enough to re- ceive her dive and the pool was long | enough to enable her to swim a few | strokes. The first chill of the icy wa- ter was soon lost in the vigorous mo- tions in which she indulged, but no more human foru, hovwever hardy and | inured, could long endure that frigid bath. Reluctantly, yet with the knowl- edge that she niust go, after one more sweeping dive and a few mugnificent wping her white shoulders ¢ shalking her face clear irom the S of crystal, faced the :hot Tt was no longer untenanted, she was no lonzer alone. What she saw si her beyond e clothes, lookir artled an in given her her nothing having the now gazing at hor ovil, vicious cyes, cevaetous desire and earn: with a glint of s ,as if ho did not knew quite wi llull-:n of the whin unwonted apparvition (l DS denly at him out of the water, this strange invader of the domain of which he was sole master paraniount, stood a great, frightful lookirg grizzly bear, Horribilis, indced. He was an ¢ Ursus «d monarch of the i mountains, reddish brown in color | ori inally, but now a hoary dirty | BT, His body was massive and burly, his legs short, dark colored and fmmensely powerful, His broad square head moved restlessly, His fanged mouth opened and a low hoarse growl came from the red cavern of his throat. te was an old and terrible monster who had tasted the blood of man and who would not hesitate to attack without provocation, anything at opce so harmle and so whitely invitir as the girl in the pool. The giri forgot the chill of the water in the horrer of that moment. Alone, | naled, dof , lost in the moun- tains, with (*c¢ most powertul, san- guinary ot wious | of the continent i ront of I conld neith fi Ty t!d only wait his 1toa 1Te snulied at her | cloth ni and od with one fore foc « for a second {or two growiing deeply, evidently, she thought with almost ~uun 'ln' nan keen o percention, preparing to i seize u| on her. about her causcld her to otherwise she stood: motionless and apprehensive, awfully expectant. She had made no sound, and save for that low growl the great beast had beon‘- equally silent. There was an awful | fixity in the gaze she turned upon him and he wavered under it. Tt annoyed him. It bespoke a little of the dom- inance of the human. But she was too surprised, perately frightened to put forth the full power of mind over matter. There was piteous appeal in her gaze. The bear realized this and mastered her | - sufficiently. She did not know whether she was In the water or in the air: there were but two points upon which her com- sclousness was focussed in the vast ellipse of her imagination. Another moment or two and all coherency of thought would be gone. The grizzly still unsettled and uneasy before her awful glance, but not deterred by it, turned its great head sideways a lt- tle to pe the direct immobile it his sharp clawed foot and lurched forward. Sce which all this happened. That huge threater lieave of the great body toward bher reiieved the tension, She found vorce at last. Although it was absolutely futile, she realized as she released lips framed the \ for God's sake.” “Help! Although she knew she cried but to the blenk walls of the canon, the drooping pines, the rushing river, the distant heaven, the appeal went forth accompanieu by the mightiest con- Juration krown to man “For God's sake, help!™ How dare jc nity so plead, LAR ELAND, and lord | monstrous, | cially | too unnerved, too des- | d a minute elapsed in | “H’PT. 20, 1913. FLA. e - e nother bleeds, nnmhvr dies? Wh (m .wer could come out of | that silent sky? Sometimes the L ord | speaks with the loud voice of men’s MP&!-’G W DG SN B W s B “Help! Fer God's Sake!” fashioning, instead of in that still i | whisper which is his own, and the & sound of which we fail to catch be-| | cause of our own ignoble babble. The answer to her prayer came with a roar in her nervous [rightened ear like a clap of thunder. Ere the ' | first echo of it died away, it was suc- S another, echoing, rolling, reverberat- ing among the rocks in ever diminish- ing but long drawn out peals. On the inctant the bear rose to his feet, swayed slightly and struck as at | an imaginary enemy with his weighty paws. A hoarse, frightful guttering roar burst from his red slavering jaws, then he lurched side ways and foll forward, fighting the air madly for & moment, and lay still. With staring eyes that miszed no Getail, she saw that the b been shot in the and st three times and that he wa ently dead. The revulsion that ca over her was boewilderi i again, this tinie not from the thr i of the water, but with sicl The tension zuddenly ta strung, the bow of ! quivered helplessly: the life almost fell into the & And then a1 and more aj terror swpt fired th unon Die tion of her s to the white chill water. ment was gre could be Fi! voured, that that she should i Y0 nodesty was ur irable, St the hunter had not cor 10 sul lower in the water for a 1 to hide in its crystal elar ized as she did how frig she was. Yet, although I | where she was and perished with cold | she could not go out on the bank to | dress, and it would avail her little, che saw swiltly, since the huge mon- ster had fallen a dead heap on her clothes (To Be Continued.) FALL AND INTER =C atalogue T TR G LIRS ] Wilt Be Ready About ;-& SEPTEMBER 15}’ Write for a copy. It shows the Iat ] est styles for the coming secason. ‘!’.; New Fall Goods are beginning to ar- (‘ H rive. Do your shopping in Tampa. Railroad fare refun.ded in accord- ance with the rules of the MERCHANTS' TRANSPORTATION ASSOCIATION PR %Maas ‘Brothers,{ Shapping Centerof South %ndy Tampa- Florida s Ay YA L e ————————— .| BackwardinSchool. is frequently caused by defectivc | eyesight makes the child wuervous {and incapable of concentration o [ mind. It's an injustice ts the ehi' | that you do not "ave an expert make | CAACTL T T L ORI R T AT S G N P LT T TS G - PRI TR ISR, | W SN AE DG ST D TUINKT T TMIES Tad BT 3 s W A SR A5 A SR TR AV SRR - S T M2 T8 & R YR e 4 <& examinat d prescribe for the | | trouble ud personal care " siven to ¢ ! ' | Dr. H.E. Lough Opticlan Optometeris 711 Frauklin Street | TANPA FLORIDA ceeded by another and ano'her and mm;‘ A Few Fancy Good.s 25¢ 35¢ 35¢ 20c 35¢ 15¢ 30c¢ 25c¢ 30c¢ 25¢ Kippered Herring Plym Pudding Boned Chicken Dill Pickles per dozen i ernz Mince Meat * Apple Butter Sliced Pineapple Inported Sardines it Mushrooms b Cod Roe Lyles Golden Syrup 25¢ Crab Meat 25¢ W.P. PILLANS “Florlda Avenue Grocer” “Pure Food Store” Phone 93 % 15 and LUCK IN CHOOSING GLASSES having your eyes tested. Have |t done by us and it will be done There will be nothing *“‘chancey” about it, thoroughly and accurateiv. Buying glasses any other way s like taking medicine in the dark It ’ dangerous. s | N VLB & H UL (L taeta asl Optemetsists Phome 172 o} Boo s something you do2't waur to urust to, Never buy them w.inout I ' o % 5301 Efifl?lSfl@D! . Lunch Be e donike ‘)an Etc ¢ SUPRLY ¥ URAWANTS LAKELAND BOOK STORE Benford & Steitz YOU HNOW WHERE ' T8 BUY, o=~ QUESTIN OF LIVING ) The The selection will be the best variety unmatched The quality unsurpassed The price the lowest All these you find at our store Just trade with ys This settles the question of living Best Butter, per pound. ......... R Wugar, 17 pounds . 1.00 Cottolene, 10 pound pails. . . ,'35 Cottolene, 4-poung B Favaa -55 t pounds Snowdrift Lard suowdrift, 10pound pail, * cans family size (reay % caus baby size Creay el i P 1-2 barre] best Flour ‘2 pounds best Flo ur Octagon Soap, 6 for s Ground Coffee, per pound § gallons Kerosene