Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, October 3, 1913, Page 2

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) ! ] | S_ "7 "< |7iTHE EVENING Rc=> Women who Appreciate Quality™—— v/ TRFSTED IN FUSNITLRE FOR THE HOUSE - ca————— Why shouldn’t the ledy of the house buy furniture herself? If youneed any- thing in furniture for the home, come here and look over our attractive stock. You can “SHOP” in this store as well as any other, and you'll ecjoy it just as much. You'll be surprised how much there is to see; how many work-saving_things you will find displayed here. | Meare than that, you'l]l be surprised to find that our prices sre lower than yeu can find anywhere else. When You Need Anything in the Line »f Furniture, Come FHcie Standirg in Word Contest Final Count: Mrs, M. L Melntosch, firsts Mes, ¢, W, Love, seeond; Mrs. A- T, Miber, third; Mrs. W. H. Austin, fourth. | LAELIND FORITUZE & SARDIATE GO, “Yes, con, thatis a good haircut, 1 have my work done there. 1 will have mother (o take Wary to have her hair bobbed lhey make a a specialty ot cutting children’s hair, The PHOENIX BARBER SHOP is the largost in Polk County L. E. PEACOCK. .. MANAGER Long Lifeof Linen tiong %ita geod laundry weork {s what you are losking tor anf 350 {3 jusd what wo are giving Try o Lakelana Steai;r Laundry Weet Maix Thoxe 188 CAMEOS | Brooches, pendants, scarf pins, bar pins—a full lire of the above goods just selected from a large stock. Every stone fine, clean cut, the work of artisans. Call and look them over. We are al- ways glad to show our goods. H. C. STE Jeweler . - VENS Lakeland, Fla. | W K. .léckson-Assomatea-w.K. McRae | Owner and Manufac- Real turers’ Agent .Estate ‘ | she had not so loved Ne TELECRAM, LAK ELAND, FLA,, oCT. 3, 19138, ]é’z;;r;g‘;h Story of “The ? P _2&}“!1&‘{? 3% by W I Thapmen '*-\‘_: . hUmC or bufldmg. ;QIJ il Ly ber, | That brings you here, for we ! Mufl'figffi?fi"?n;;ufififi s e oir, 10 make a point of carrying noth- : e e i Kootk ing but ihe best builder’s ha:d- o, (80 dhekarit a0 conalvae Allms s, iore was w.re that 2dds not only to tie i iR besuts of a bu:lding, but to its R B e o scllirg value as we l. “ adoration for the other rose in each Which cotipale | o breast like the surging tide of & mighty sea, and like that tide upon the shore it broke upon conventions, {deas, ideals and obligations intangi- ble to the naked eye, but as real as _ those iron coasts that have withstood the waves' assaults since the world's morning. The man had shaped his life upon a mistake. He believed absolutely in the unquestioned devotion of a wom- , an to whom he had been forced to mete out death in an unprecedented and terrible manner. His unwilling- ness to derogate by his own conduct from the standard of devotion which | he belleved had inhabited his wife's ¢ besom, made it impossible for him to | allow the real love that had come into | his heart for this new woman to have free course; honor, pride and self-re- | spect scourged him just in proportion to his passion for Knid Maitland. The mere he loved her, the more ashamed he was. Dy a curious com- bination of circumstanc Enid Mait- land knew the trath; she Lknew that from oue point of view the woman had been entirely unworthy the reverence in which her husband held her mem- had fought so desperatcly 80 hard not to give wuay titled her to Enid Maitland’ wion and de- manded her highest consideration as well. Chance, or Providence, had pul\ her in possession of this woman's se- | cret. It was as if she had been caught | inadvertently eavesdropping. She | could not in honor make use of what she had overheard, as ft were; she' could not blacken the other woman's memory, she could not enlighten this man at the expense of his dead wife's | reputation. Although she longed for him as much as he longed for her, although her love for him amazed her by its depth and intensity, even to bring her happiness, comwmensurate with her feeling, she could not betray her dead sister, The impests of honor, how hard they are to sustain when they conflict with love and longing. Enid M nd was naturzlly not a little thrown off her balance by the situation and the power t hers., What ste could not do herselt she could net allow anyone else to do The obligation upon her must be ex- tended to others Wt ight to tle wot i ) s he must bo silenced, , the only other being privy to the truth, too. Cne thi at least arc sea of trouble fa a tan was done with Armstro had no could scarcely give a thouvght to any otLer human being, she was done with Armstreng. A singular situation! Armstrong had loved another woman, o had New- bold; and the latter had even married this otler woman, yet she was quite willing to forgive Newbold, she made every excuse for him € none for Arn:strong. She was an eminently sane, just person, yet as she thought of the situation her anger against Armstrong grew hotter hotter. It was a salety valve to her feelings, al- though she did not re: it. After all, Armstrorg's actions rendered her a cortidn service; if she could get over the oljection in her soul, if she . e %afsce $j rank of it and Conquered ) Ag@.omancc Z \bbl%,r ‘o Kg_yrus 'To.wnge'} Author of “TheRind an3 thethan " SR\ m/‘f;f-T(egg'anera,flon,‘ i moThe Better tan, tearts and . o o the Bighway, - As I F[y EP_&’PJ:"' n‘\‘\a‘_’ e ‘ tions 'S_‘Usmovt‘a\‘f‘?cuflg_. righd o Certain Persens 31 ) N ard e Sparks ance h & law than ntf which bids huinunity enjoy. It was | flattering to her mind. In his case, | ft was otherwise; he had no con-| sclousness that he was a victim of‘ misplaced trust, of misinterpreted ac-'! tion. He thought the woman for . whom he was putting away happiness was almost as worthy, if infinitely less ’ desirable, as the woman whom he now loved. Every sting of outrage, every feel: ing of chame, every fear of disloyalty, scourged him. She could glory in it; bhe was ashamed, humiliated, broken. She heard him savagely walking up and down the other room, restlessly impelled by the same Erinyes which of old scourged Orestes; the violator of tte laws of moral being drove him on. These malign Eumenides heldf n- him in their hands. He was bound and | g’ helpless, rage as he might in one woment, pray ag he did in another, no plete hardware Hght came into the whirling d:u‘km-.s's“ bCSt bul]dlng t()OlS"’a" mOdC'f' of his torn, tempest tossed, driven | i b D soul. The irresistible impalse and the | a“_l) pr;CLd. immovable body the P zled over were ex Whilst he 1 the new wom. loved the al § | ; " | whils 1 :’ vod a t R her the ope thing the other absolutely was signifis | i cant | P an, whilst o'd, ory. krew thot his wite had not loved Lim at all, that her wiole Leart Y€t ' had been given to another man, that "°F what Newbhold had mist N for 4 pase sionate desive for Lis society hocause eed he knew that he was .»,}vnd: there wus no satiztaction in life for Maitland ha the wile away from him, due to a NO I.'v is fear lest without his protcciion she by that divine should be unable to vesict the appeal another nw | of the other which her heart| WO can exper n we | : | seconded so poweriully It it wore| 8re to be made i S imace, | i phc ne 7! to the obl mar pred { A ¢ S the s} devotion, ed m’::..‘l L T problem in a mo The man rav It was not €o sim howover. The fiaced, stor, | fact that Newhold ¢ o il Le to “d b . ory, the fiact that this other \\mmn“" ”-» his eyes clo o ; had tried | hands towurd God, his heart ericd BYH. out under the lacerations of the blows inflicted upon it. No flagellant of old ever trembled beneath the hody lash as he under the spiritual punishment, ' Tflnm@m ) AIRY (o, N\ TAMPA . Everything IN BUILDERS’ It is most important to select the best hardware for that new . The sash and door locks, . | hinges, etc., are a very small part of a building, but will re- pay many times for the cost and trouble of proper selection. We are prepared to name interesting prices on the com- building from the humble cot- - tage to the iargest office build: AN Yes, Sirl We also sell the Hardware Compar® !did so the futility of such a proposi- !'had gone down together in the dark He prayed that he might die at the same moment that he longed to live. He grappled blindly for solutions of the problem that would leave him with untarnished honor and undiminished self respect and fidelity, and yet give him this woman, and in vain, He strove to find a way to reconcile the past with the present, realizing as he tion. One or the other must be su- preme, he must inexorably ho!d to his fdeas and his ideals, or he must inev- itably take the woman, How frightful was the battla that raged within Lis bosom! in his despair he tiought that he would have been glud if he and she waters before-all this came upon hi The floods of w emptied ther Lim, Oh ;)1‘,,- ! 4 (\\ ‘ ; AN SALE BY fPECIAL FAMILY AND X I g e e IPTIRT IR BEK Ri /18 ; And then he kaew ti d v ¢ ik Tt 1IN SEND FOR BOOKLE i e 1 il [ {“.(.‘ l ‘.(ai inh\.) v seen Ler, Lo he had 1 ., P TR e and be He 1 and in a ¢ ¢ woman who loved | fessed it boldly was none to cay ere was a ho had cone , there woman 1 been ¢ who stood between 1 “ - years. The world knew not! ¥ : nothing; they could go out tegetlier; e Clty property, groves and ok he could take Ler, she would come, On (I, tarms, a.ter October 1. - the impulse he turned and ran to the 1 o~ T s ) door and beat upon it. Her voice bade e Bgmg a headq“ane" for nortl him enter, and ke came in. tourists and homeseekers want Her heart yearned to him. She was shocked, appalled at the torture she saw upon h's face, upon the rac from its soc been I1more w “I give up,” honor and respect to me? I waut you. I have put the past bel nd. You love me, and I, I am yours with every d. “What are T T R I R SO A TS TR rich, sterlized Ppure, trcaa cows inspected and passed cream by the City Pure Food Depart meut. Manufactured under the most modera and perfect conditions. ALL {ingredients that go to make our tream MUST be the standard of pur- Sonieti ity and quality. There is & Sometimes a 5 “. difference in ‘“Frozen Cus- W aynesville, N. G. learn to say it In hear 11 wisctric | @ tards” and POINSETTIA lce BEes 0 S o Cream. Try 't. i — »” lae siuewsik that Is made by w it CEMENT {8 the walk that the weatber will not effect. uth 3., war for any style of :‘? Crposite Depct & v_“- tl( ] H_J i Buccessor to W K. McRas TRANSFER LINE, reving and Huuilng of &1 W Promer and ReaBonably Servie g Guaranteed er : . 10 Household Moving a Specialtj “hone 67 Green Lakeis: 4 The Best Table int Land of ithe Sky =~ | Hotel Gordon AT every coavenlence L nosquitoe®, Altitud WEEXTY RATES 8125 Spocitizes rent rooms and dwellings, it will owners to list them with hix, as “lj as groves and farms. o __ The finest hotel site here, and !¢ idence lots and homes offered 2t ‘= RIGHT PRICES and terms to ¢ buyers, 3" He expects to stay here, ¢ guarantecs FAITHFUL SRRV Lakeland | L Florida = | ‘ iber of Lot Brokerage--Real Estate 811 4ty a0 ohlantion, Ehe COTM 9+ ol T Yot ths et vaich: | PO S SRR T . Ste had < * of late fall eete In, have up 1a+ only to £l to Newbold o+ 1 tuose veeded walks, repair your cel TELL US WHAT YOU HAVE TO n£LL, il eyl B . ber 8 80d make other o e M. G. WILLARD WE WILL TRY TO FIND A BUYLk LA ;1:: i i) p\q\:\] 1y “Besld be done with CEMENT 17 Kentucky Bldg., Phone 102 bold ¥ heart in. I i in Inp Raa . Lakel : TELL US WHAT YOU WANT To BUY; ste: o ‘o 'x}::‘: ':,»,ep- figures—we'rs glag u eland, Fla. + WE WILL TRY TO FIND A SELLER n o : v e - e 1 g 1 x _aKkeiancd Artifici | Bome h 3 Rcoms 6 and 7, DEEN & RRYANT Building j e - = e T L) Spongglosuperoet 1 _‘_., SYCne “ OTkS who have been there sre nev: (Continued on 3ame again. There lves alvwa thelr hearts e regret for the land lhave ieft behingd.” Yaze H. B. Ziminerman, Prop.

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