Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, September 20, 1913, Page 8

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.Miscellaneous. | ®acw FIGHT 4HF FVENING vHLEGRAM, LAKELAND, FLA., SEPT. 20, H'lf‘u‘ | .FOR SALE., FOR SALE—Fine building 1lot in: Orange Park, facing Lake Morton, $1,250. The Joha F. Cox Ralty Co. 1183 FOR SALE—The best residence on Park Hill at a sacrifice price, on eacy terms. The John F. Cox Realty Co. 1182 FOR SALE CHEAP—Three tickets to Kansas City, Mo., via Birming- ham and Memphis, Frisco route. Box 287. 1201 fOR SALE—Rambler machine tour- ing car, 1912 model; good as new. Cheap for cash. Can be seen at my garage. H. D. Bassett. 1197 FOR SALE—One or two good horses, perfectly healthy, good condi- tion . D. H. Sloan. 1209 .FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for light housekeeping. No children desired. Apply 401 North Flor- ida. 1134 FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for light housekeeping. Apply 105 E. Peachtree St. 1204 FOR RENT-—Large store room in brick building under Glenada ho- tel. See D. H. Sloan or W. D. McRae. 1207 {TRAWBERRY PLANTS—Mission- ary, Klondyke and Excelsior plants now ready. $2.25 per 1,000, $10 for 5,000. Safe ar-| rival guaranteed. Cash with or- | der, please. S. M. Godbey, Wal. do, Fla. FOR BEST HARNESS, saddles and all horse furnishings see Mec- Glashan. 1186 Classified Advertising LOST—His job because he did not have the proper commercial training. Do not let it happen to you. Cet in touch with the L. B. C. and prepare yourself not only to get a job but to hold one. Bookkeeping, ,shorthand type- writing, penmanship and tele- graphy. 1171 DUFFY'’S DEAD SHOT CHILL AND FEVER TONIC—2 to 6 doses guaranteed to break up any case of chill and fever, or lagrippe Taken as a tonic, it will build up the system, improve the appetite and make life worth living. For sale at all drug stores 26c a bot- tle. Manufactured by G. E. Scott, Lakeland, Fla. 968 WANTED TO RENT-—Good house close in; 5 rooms or more. . F. Crutchfield, Lake Pharmacy. 1205 FOR COUNCILMAN The many friends and supporters of N. A. Riggins, residing in Ward three announce him as a can- didate for Councilman to fill out the unexpired term of R. E. Scipper, in special election Sept. 23 next. 111¢ WANTED(— Your safety razor blades to resharpen. Made bet ter than new. 2b6c¢, 36c and 60c¢ dozen. Lakeland Furniture & Hardware Co. 146 MCGLASHEN—He fixes harness and does it right. 1186 NOTICE All occupants of premises are here- by notified to provide garbage cans and to use same according to ordi- nance No. 153, City of Lakeland. $5 fine for failure to comply with above. G. A. RHOADES, JR., 1202 4t Sanitary Inspector. NOTICE It you want a first class mechanic to build your residence or to do other carpenter work and one that has had years of experience and is a hustler and can do your work at the mini- mum cost, drop a postal to A. M. Hobbs, Box 627, City. 1184 “Nonsense!" cheered i3 daughter. “A mcuth up amoug the pines with Aunt Ca will soon drive now I am going to pay you back.” Lucla was as good as her word. She did not realize that the removal of alsng With bsence of the a st {8 fosh wiai ¥e 1| social restrictions, e+ B Fortune and soc'al matrimonial fetters, were elements in Standing Brought Love and |the vast courage and ambition that began to come into her life in a prac tical way. - Years previous Mr. Forsythe had K given his widowed sister a small home | at Wareham and had secured a per | § Paoze 180 manent pension to her. This was now | . thelr refuge. Lucia found it to be 8 | ° : TR very humble home, indeed, but com-, R fortable, cleanly kept, and, what made : _Ti . up for all other deficiencies, they were he fitlTe Due wl;lcomed with true, heartsome love. | than hurt. When Page car;ie:lmh:; Luela had arranged in the city to do | to g grassy plot, Luclamn]a; szd S tions. the weeping ¢ ; some {llustrating for two publica care for by to soothe ber | Happiness. By GEORGE ELMER COBB. Daniel Forsythe considered himself one of the most fortunate men in the world whea he became a partrer with Roger Bell. He was getting old, his new business cares would be light, and Bell was a money maker. Besides that, young Denzil Bell and Lucla Forsythe were engaged. It was true that young Bell was by Do means the man the old business| , yyusie house, too, had agreed o rescuer hovered near veteran would generally have select-| pyy per gomething for arranging | with gentle words. “Oh, dear th!; ed for a son-in-law. The scion of the | gonos wo ghe began her new life With | page! You was &0 good, 80 gran Bells was idle, without ambition, fickle and a spendthrift, As to Lucia, she had failed to find one ideal among the fashionable young men with whom she was brought in contact in the so- clal swim. She had arrived at a mar- rlageable age, however, and the princi- pal anxiety of her father was to see her “settle down,” as he expressed it. Bhe sighed a trifle, and then in her great love for her father she decided quite an encouraging income. Her | jump in and get all wet and muls;e'tli“ work did not take up all her time, and | yp just for a bad. n:_m:.:ht_v llttlevlth;’.t she became immensely Interested In | She was so grateiul, 80 hnpp).w E the children of the poor factory Work: | ghe gelzed his hand bhr‘}, dre Je ers of the town. close to that of l,v‘xclu, :x!r;d :{mss%d ;l:sa ] declare, papa,” she said, one day | both, and held them the e ‘ about six months after their arrival in | together that Lucia nlushod' and Pasl: Wareham, “I believe I never kpew | looked embarrassed. It awoke I..\;ct what real happiness was until BOW. | to a quick comprehension of tlmlnsct ! Think of it, this grand air and exX-| that she had found her fdeal at a:] t to maki ifice of hersel ercise have made you twenty years| It nerved Mr. Page to speak out what, e younger, the bank is willing to pay | had been in Lis heart for some time. Then, rudely, unexpectedly, came vou well for a few hours of your time \Miss Forsythe” he sald, 28 theyv the darkest day In the life of old Dan-| 4y a4viser, I am earning a nice littls | walled elowly homeward, “anybody | lel Forsythe. With a crash the great' yup ang oh! these dear little child: | would be pardoned for the common | S v vl Totudie W Co. Wb/ by, Mr. Page has selected those ' belici thit you are a princess in dis- | ¥ 1 tin AU GE G Pame e fon who seem to have the musical and art | guise, and really I was led to believe ! oot involvgd. The Bells, how- instinct, and Saturdays I have four | that you were the great heiress they ever, were notorious for having ever lifferent free classes, You should se¢ | gaid. But I have learned that your, R LB .| work here Is real soul labor. I have; creditors were settled with the Bells | some of their crawings. I am really A o wonldly wealth flew as high as ever. Mrs. Bell had & | proud of them, aud there is not one b /5 Y by e elad position bere | fortune of her own, and on that the [of my music scholars who would not | wm"m':-v 2t inaibate. TAb/mo share | tamily could drift along very pleas-|give up a whole hoiiday to pracuc 1t “AM‘, w i Ard on such a dreary, mellow eve- | antly. The first thing shallow, mean- | op the piano.” spirited Denzil Bell did was to Lreak The Mr. Page she had alluded to EIR | with such earnest words the engagement with Lucia. She had | had come into Lucia's life quite proi- #o \ 2 man, Lucla Forsythe expected it, and was devoutly glad | inently of late. He had charze of & GBOI R e . 20 | could not say him nay that it had come about. ,school supported by the manufactur A e R “We are paupers!” mourned her|ing plants at the edze of the towi (Convr N father. “And now the engagement is | The work vwas purely phi opic R R i broken. It crushes me fo think of | It was profound admiration for the NOILE INDIANS STILL LIVE | you, Lucia. I had so counted on your | way in which he had won the iutercs ——— I trip abroad to finish up your art and | and love of his poor pupils, that bid pomajess T in the Floridas Re- | musie. Now—" caused Lucia herself to long to be of fuses to Acsept Favors From the “Now, dear papa,” cried Lucia, al-| assistance in co-operating to raise the | Shiwa it most joyously, "I am free to have my | Social and cducationz! status of the SR own way, to really live, to be of some forlorn little ones. | It s difficult to realize that this| { Lucla would never forget to her | homeless gt of a people still | actual use in the world. Yes, art and | dying day onc golden afternoon When i peiqiys aiter noorly two conturies of | music are very dear to me, but thanke | 8She was strolling by the riverside ©gisqorer he troditional pride which to your great gooduess, I know a good | With Harold Page, discussing new g hod th of the! deal worth knowing of both. I am go-| plans for the benefit of their mutval | gqp) = & ‘ian Her | ing to try to share those treasures, to | Work. Suddenly iarold had sprung g4 v from the | impart my knowledge to the world at ! from her side. Then she saw 8 out, would ac-| large.” little girl playing in a boat ti €S8 mcttull,\'l “Even if the crash had not come,” | the shore near the mill dam had I':\Illi 1 Siteous due, and | declared her father, “it would not|en into the water. .Just in time Nr. win who have won thelr' have meant much to me, for I am|Page made a plunge that rescued the | confiqonce, or throuzh others aligning gragually breaking down in health.” fmperiled child from sure death. | pntost str_::gglfi:! i - ewd FOUND HER IDRALE2e E Long Lifeof Linen good |sundry wert © what yor ar leeking 14, e sre givian. Try @ comr—— Lakoland Steam Laundry West Main b ‘ who drops in at the mission stgy times of bad hunting and g crops will hardly admit that the I dians are needy. “Injun no hy now,” he will answer to your hospity, ble question throwing back his proyy ! melancholy head as if gazing inty thyy remote past with which—who knogy —he may be mentally contrastiig y, present moment. They ask for nothing except by of purchase and it would be unpy, cedented for a Seminole to “jumnp by account.” It is not difficult to seq y the mission needed the store. Besigy | the advantage of location and the cloy er contact with the Indians in genenl| the mission can also, through ty agency, help the Indians in gener)) without seeming to dispense charlty Dr. Golden has steadily kept the priey| of skins and furs up and of provisiony| down. The store is thus run at somy loss in dollars and cents, but of great gain in the efliciency and scopc of thy mission’s relief work. The doctor and his assistants of thy landing, moreover, kept open hous for the Seminoles at all times dip | pensing a simple, cordial hospitality frankly accepted by the glade peopls, whose appreciation, as well as sens of reciprocity, is shown by their cus tom of bringing “gift offerings” of their best to these good neighbors whe | with kindness and truth, are gradua} ly wiping the stains from the white man’s name. Out-Standing Ears. Out-standing ears on au adult e be corrected omly by an operation Ask your family physician to dirent you to a gond surgeon who does thiy kind of work. If the operation leavet a scar it will be back of the car and should be very slight. m———— When Glasses Stick. When two glass tumblers or dishe ptich together so that there s dange | of brouking in getting them apamy put coui water in the inner one and nold the ourer one in warm water, aod they will separate at onea W.S.PECK & CO. URS is a truly wonderful showing of — | Men’s and Young Men’s FASHIONS. The new, smart Peck Models are originally The fabrics are rich and handsome, “PECK all wool and are guarante time a Peck Suit or Overcoat fails 10 prove sa cheerfully replace it with a new ope, We particularly suggest your seop making your Fall Selection ~ Bailey Clo N e — Deen and Bryant Bull AUTUMN and distinctively styled. CLOTHES ar ed to give perfect satisfaction, If at any tisfactory, we will Isn’t that fair treatment? 12 our models before thing | = Company — ding

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