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THE EVENING TELEGRAM, LA! ELAND, FLA., OCT. 8, 1913 rAGR ABver T A —b—. - A—————— s b~ . ' e e e oo, e o atiie u Wi, pelileg o> guol bocaoese ue ]l.“ been so long withdrawn from hue A man eociety, but to see her with this c ;man who flashed instautly into his The Chalice || |z i omm armimos o The Floridh Avenue Grocer of Courage Newbeld turned to the woman to oo whom indeed h:; had addressed his 290 PHONE R:D i question in the first place, and there 1 was soimething in Lis movement which Respectfully asks his friends and the pub) bespoke a galling almost contemptuous , i A \ obliviousness (o the presence of the generally to give him a call when needing | A other man which was indeed hard for | Baing the Story of Certain Persons Whe 3 . £ K Draak of It and Conquered him to bear, '§ Fresh Meats, Grocenes, Vege‘ab]es. Etc. ‘\, ARomanceofCoIorado Hate begets hate. He was quite | conscious of Armstrong’'s antagonism, ~ \ which was entirely undisguised and HE WILL TREAT YOU RIGHT AND | CYRUS TOWNSEND open and which was growing greater WILL GUARANTEE SATISFACTION ‘. RA with every passing moment. The %hrd Th-Rm. and the Man, " score against Newbold was running up Regeneration,” *"The W Man,"" “Hearts and the Hi h in the mind of his visitor. Anh-Spnh Fly Upw “ADb,” coolly said the owner of the lllutn!un by Ellsworth Y“" cabin to the first of his two guests, "I “I do remember you did mention that | I k l d S d C lnp y nume the first day you spent here. a e an ee o an (Copyright, i1, by W. G. Chapman.) Is ke a—a friend of yours?" “Not now,” answered Enid Maitland, 1 218 FLOR IDA AVENUE (Continued from Page 2 She too was in a strange state of i e T pceunt of the dilem- 1 Fresh Garden Sceds, Bird and Sunflower ma in which she found bherself in- flumination to Armstrong, “who W vVolved. She was dowennined ot w | Seeds, Pop-Corn tor Popping, Millet and Rye !\'o\\‘lm‘:\i \;.x‘l\ i}. ;1:‘ d.x;"l\. ;“l“ \z)'h(l; New IJ‘UE‘d ‘\wu d not recognize An‘u- ’! InCUba'OfSy Ch i(k FOOd’ Shel’s' Grits. COD' . e e Rl o R ‘l?.“.\”ii'?.'s"i-‘~ifi‘,f'..,‘Z“’Ii‘.i" Wl peras. Charcoal, Tobacco Dust, it always proves the hardest in the end—practice some self denial and istence of those letters and she did not intend that he should be enlight- | ened so far as®she could prevent it. But she was keen enough to see that the first recognition would be in-' evitable; she even admitted the fact that Armstrong would probably pre- cipitate it himself. Well, no human soul, not even their writer, knew that WHY SAFER she had destroyed them, she had de- termined to do so at the first conveni- ent opportunity. Before that, however, THAN CASH she intended to show them not to New- bold but to Armstrong, to disclose his perfidy, to convict him of the false- hood he had told her and to justify Paying by checks is not ov‘ly Tilghman’s Condition Powder im‘t. Newbold was ignorant of the ex- become a depositor in this institu- tion. Your present energy, vigor, ete., will not last forever—establish a fund that will offset your physical decline as you grow older—open an account here and add to it regulariy. It will earn 4 per cent interest. i herself even in his eyes for the action she had taken. H Mingled with all these quick reflec- more convenlent than pay. i tions was a deadly fear. She was . . . | ] Qs [qni(-k to perceive the hatred Arm- lng n CaSh, bu‘ “ 1S saferv WG strong bore on the one hand because & P & | of the old love affair, the long cher- bCCiUSC 1t Cllmmates l‘lSk Of “You Coward!" She Cried. ished grudge breaking into sudden i 2 iife: on [Uhb, othat alis woatizad! ATt loss. Your account subject than he. There was doubtless no oth- her own failure to come to Arm | er man in the mountains. He had ex- strong’s hands and her love for New- | oy - pected to find him when he approach- bold, which she neither could nor haad to ChCCk large or sma" is “led the hut and was ready for him, any desire to conceal, and the cumula- H H ! To the fire of his ancient hatred and tion of these passionate antagonisms Cordla"y inv"ed' ! jealousy was added a new fuel that would only make him the more des- 5 3 | increased its heat and flame. This perate. y 3 | an had come between Armstrong and Whether Newbold f d t Arm- 5| W ]I Y H Ip I h man g hether Newbold found ou rm 1 Ou e lS the woman he loved before and had strong's connection with his past love, : got away unscathed; evidently ho had there was sufficlent provocation in the j come between him and this new wo- present to evoke all the oppugnation J L SKIPPER P E GHUNN I M f Y ? {man he loved. Well, he should be and resentment of his nature. Enid President Cashier Ce an O OUI'S | made to suffer for it this time and by felt as she might if the puncheons of | Armstrong's own hands. The in- the floor had been sticks 3 of dynamite stant Newbold had entered the room with active detonations in every heel -— g Armstrong had thirsted {o leap upon that pressed them; f the slightest Our effort is to give every user of OUR ICE the best service that bim, and he meant to do it. One or movement on the part of any ono the other of them, he swore in his would bring about an explosion. “can be given to any merchant's patrons. heart, should never leave that room The tensity of the sitvation was be- $ alive, "wildering to her. It Lad come upon , It requires your co'operation, We want you to report promptly to But Newbold should have his chance. her with such startling force; the un- P H O N E 2 -3-3 . Armstrong was as brave, as fearless, expected arrival of Armstrong, of all us any want of attention or courtesy on the part of our drivers; as intrepid, as any man on earth. the men on earth the one who ought I any delny in delivery; any thing that prevents you from getting the There was much that was admirable mnot to be there, and then the equally fn his character; he would not take gtartling arrival of Newbold, of whom service that you think is due you. any man at a disadvantage in an en- perhups the same might have been counter such as he proposed. He said. If Newbold had only gone on, . s would not hesitate to rob a man of his {f he had not come back, if she had T‘hl’h‘me us direct—don’t make the comp]m“ to anfimdy else wife if he could, and he would not been rescued by her uncle or old Kirk- until we know about them—and then you won't have to make shrink from any deceit necessary to by—But “ifs" were idle, she had to ¢ gain his purpose with a woman, for face the present situation to which J them again. When you use OUR ICE you are entitled to good ser: good or evil, but he had his own ideas ghe was utterly unequal. . : A of honor, he would not shoot an cn-' She had entirely repudiated Arm- vice—and with your help. we will give it to you. emy in the back for instance. strong. that was one sure point; she Singular perversion, this, to which knew how guilty he had been toward some minds are liable! To take from Nebold’s wife, that was another; she a man his wife by subtle and under- realized how he had deceived her, Lakeland Ice Company hand methods, to rob him of that that was the third. These eliminated which makes life dear and sweet— the man from her affections, but it is there was nothing dishonorable in one thing to thrust a man out of your Phone 26 that! But to take his life, a thing of heart and another to thrust him out infinitely less moment, by the same of your life; he was still there. And Made to Order bv | process—that was not to be thought by no means the sport of blind fate jof. In Armstrong's code it was right, Armstrong intended to have something Uit was imyperative, to confront a man, to say s to the course of events, to ' with the truth and take the consequen- use his own powers to determine the 1 ces; but toconfront a woman with a lie issue. { and tuke her body and soul, if so be she Of but one thing beside her hatred might be gained, was equally admir- for Armstic was Enid Maitland .'l.b- Electrical and Sheet Meal Workers able. And there are other souls than solutely certain: she would never dis- Armstrong’s in which this moral in- elose to the man she loved the fact consisiency and obliquity about men that the woman, the memory of whose PHONE 233 and women has lodgment! supposed paession he cherished, had Armsirong confronted Newbold been unfaithful to him in heart if ,/ THL UNIVERSAL CAR therefore, lustful of battles; he yearn- not in deed. Nothing could wrest that ed to leap upon him, his fingers itched gecret from her. She had been in- R to grasp him, then trembled slightly as fected by Newbold's quixotic ideas, ! | 9 N l Y H he rubbed them nervously against his the contagion of his perversion of com- eg ect our ome thumbs; his face protruded a little, his mon sense had fastened itself upon | TO PROTECT, eyes narrowed. her. She would not have heen human From Loss by Destruction “My name is Armstrong,’ he said, either i had not experienced a FROM FIRE determined to precipitate the issue thrill of pride and joy at the possibil- without further delay and flinging the ity that in some way, of which she yet ~ You Can’t Expect With This Defect viords at the other in a tone of hec- swore she would not be the instrument - THE PEACE toring dellance which, however blind or otherwise, the facts might be ® - Weich You Desire A mcdern Atlas—it carries the world (n its back! The strong, powerful Fcrd has been brought within the rezch of a new world of pcssible purchasers by a new and marked redictionin price— made possible by an unprecedented production. strange to say, did not seem to effect disclosed which would enable Newbold Newbold in any perceptible degree. to claim her openly and honorably with- The name was an illumination to out hesitation before or remorse aft- him, though not at all in the way the er, as his wife. This fascinating flash speaker had fancied; the recollection of expectant, hopeful feeling she of it was the one fact concerning her thought unwortuy of her and strove that rankled in the solitary’s mind. to fight it down, but with manifest im- He had often wanted to ask Enid Mait- possibility. land what she had meant by that It has taken time to set these things chance allusion to Armstrong which down; to speak or to write is a slow she had made in the beginning of the process, and the ratio between outward ' ¢, acquaintance, but he h expressions and inward I8 as great as | Peace comes On’y WIth a know’edge 0’ hflv’n! At first ke bad no right to qu that between rrn and sound. Ques- donc zhngs rlgm," her; there cc tions and answers between these three | their affectc when folio as thrust and parry. 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