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S e e e ¥AGE TWO THAE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAK©! Bates, The Ladies’ Store | ¥ [ New SPRING GOODS GLAD TO SHOW YOU RATINE 2 By GEORGE MUNSON, RAYE, RICE CLOTH, CAMEO CREPE, Dorotny, wearlng a sweater and COMET RATINE, INDIA CRAEPE, ;;‘ rubber-soled shoes, with her fair hair BROCADE SILK, RATINE. 2 loosi‘ely* io‘iled about t(l)le &apze:;l}:le‘r N #§ | neck, sat in a cave upon the or NEW THINGS IN SHIRT WAISTS lg at Blue Harbor, reading a newspaper. AND SKIRTS. HOUSE DRESSES 98C E To be more accurate, she was reading AND UP. %|a two-column article upon the front F h 22 g@ of a newspaper, and it wa: head- i ishi O ed “No News of Dorothy Lamont.” Selling Out All Man Furnishings § M0 Meve so ity Losae Boc Shirts dor.. s 39¢ O oy L TR 39¢ :’ : Sr‘m‘{l‘l.“td tf]or 280 (Caps 10T v s dibi's 19¢ $1.00° Shirts for...... 75 2 »"‘Ifizw“n‘k‘mm;; s0c Caps for ........ 39¢ S1.50 Shirts for i R 15c Collars for iihan 10¢ $2.00 Shirts for .. : ¥ 25¢ Neckties for ..... I9c 8200 Shirts ifon .. ir : g goc INeckties: for - ivva 30¢ 3t t a little, PR BOX OB F RS r2c Same reduction on all b 1 § BECSBN o 19c | Underwear. ",‘ g WASH GLOVES, i Stoo for L5 ., "' . & s00¢ and b5 fonli 39¢ | $r.s0 for 3 @ \rowuzs' FOR HONEST MERCHAN. LI““ ‘ o b T s\ 3y 11 3 r Sf ) it to che PENBLPIPIEE | : upon — T 12 ) -T-T” " 2 ana e ruptey otherwise, fo Pmm_ulm‘rmm.rmw r Ul‘ Oll] i Mol ’ & | pushing Lamont hard, and B{him at hi ¥ ? If only they'd give me a chance to ¢ | fall in love with Harold,” sobbed Dor- othy. Put she had only seen him once, £ All our $3.00 and $3. 50 ¢ Hats going at $2.00 Those Shoes still going at $1.50 that were $3.50, $4.00 and $5.00. 3 ; Our Spring Styles of Hart$ Schaffner and Marx Clothing are in and greally reduced in price. Boys’ Suits and Pants are way down in prices. Now is your time to get Fresh goods very cheap. 3 HOBTHOROIDRIIPOR | The Hub The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothing 7 fi!‘ JOS. 3 LeVAY ' IHI UNIVERS \l A Now is your time To Buy an Automobile We have in stock twenty touring cars, with six more touring and six roadsters on side tracks. Ford Touring cars, $610.50; Road- $560.50, delivered anywhere in Polk county. LAKELAND AUTOMOBILE AND SUPPLY CO. sters, Lakeland, Fla. Telegram 10c a lveef " | high tide. Dorothy screamed again and and she didn't even remember what he lobked like, except that he was not quite a monster, “No, he isn’t a monster,” Dorothy tearfully admitted. As a matter of fact, Harold Curtis had fallen desper- ately in love with Dorothy at first sight. But her mother was indiscreet, and the hint of a marriage had been enough to set the spotled girl in fm- mediate opposition. And she had taken the bit between her teeth and simply run away. She had dreamed, as all girls dream, of a possible lovér. But there would The Water Was Swirling About Her Knees. be no “financial interests” or “affilia- tions” when the right man came along, Dorothy would marry him for love and for nothing else. She was dreaming of him now as she lay in the little cave, half asleep, until a splash and a trickle of mosture into her shoe caused her to leap up with a scream. The tide was lapping against the mouth of the cave! She looked out in horror. Dorothy could not swim, and the freshening wind was sending huge rollers break- ing into the mouth of the cave, which would, she knew, be entirely filled at again. She lost her presence of mind completely, for there was no refuge, and in half an hour she would be looking death in the eyes. The minutes rolled by. Now she was crouching, pressing her hands against the roof, and the water was swirling about her knees. Suddenly a black speck appeared round the dis- tant rocks. It was a boat! Dorothy shouted, and she saw the speck grow larger and turn inward. There was a man in it, and he was pulling hard to- ward her. Fresently, with a few quick strokes, he sent the boat gliding against the cave. “Jump in!” he said. Dorothy stepped in and sank down exhausted in the bottom of the boat. Now that the danger was over she felt ready to faint from relaxation aft- er the nervous tension. She must have fainted, in fact, “or the next thing she knew the boat had grounded and the young fisherman had lifted her in his arms and was ving her ashore. This w liating situation. Dorothy felt alr her down “That was a narrow escs ipe you had, miss,” he said, in the quaint intong ation of the New Er 1 countryman. “Best not go on the rocks agen until you know St. - You're staying | at Mrs. Jor [ “Ye red Dorothy resentfully. “Then I'll jest take you there,” said the young fisherman. Dorothy heard his <mr\ and duly |listened to motherly scoldings. Her spi vas chastened, came clear to her. She I * | not to avoid a marriage which we¢ ing forced upon her, hut to be popular he She must wr | turther amazewment when he set | sible, * |:md she felt thorou 1ghly disgusted with herself. This young man apparently regarded her only as a wilfu] girl— A., FEB. 11, 1914, her, Dorothy Lamont, who was being | g sought for all over the country. Worse than that, the papers, which had been filled for days with the tale of her ' flight, suddenly ceased to “feature” the news. ’ Then came a blow which fairly | crushed Dorothy’s spirits. It was the | report of an interview with her father, | and contained these words: “I do not believe that my daughter | has come to any harm, and I am sure she has gone away of her free will. | [ shall, therefore, make no further ef- | fort to find her. When she is ready to | come home she may do so, and she will find me still her father. But until then I shall cease to interest myselt in her whereabouts.” Dorothy read that on the beach, and she burst into bitter tears. The enormity of her behavior suddenly bh | . |7 | she exclaimed, staring at' “0, what a fool “Harold!” him in consternation. I was!” and her anger began to rise swiftly. “But you—how dared you take such a mean advantage of me?” she de manded hotly. i “Forgive me, Dorothy,” he pleaded humbly. “I learned that you were here and telegraphed to your father yesterday. I've loved you all the time,f Dorothy, and wanted you mighty bad; ; and now I've got you I'm going to, keep you, because I saved your life, and it's going to be mine.” And Dorothy thought this renon-' able. (Copyright, 1914, by W. G. Chapman.) FOODS HARMFUL TO CHILDREN Among the Numerous Errors Made In the Nursery Indiscriminate Eat- Ing Must Be Reckoned. “The indiscriminate eating of indi- gestible food, such as many adults eat, is a practice to be condemned. Fried food of any kind, with the ex- ception of steak or chops, i8 harmful to the child, because the fat with which it is fried i8 cooked into the food and surrounds the particles of which it is made up, so that the di- gestive juices cannot act upon them. Most children are allowed too many sweets. Remember that, even though they are given a restricted amount of candy, cake, and desserts, they will get enough sugar in some form, in the course of a week, to supply all their needs. This restriction of sweets ought not to be a hardship if the child is fond of fruit. Instead of giving a plece of cake or candy between meals, or even for dessert, an apple, pear, or peach will pleaes him just as well, and will be beneflcial instead of harm- ful. For some years mothers have held the erroneous idea that raw fruits are difficult to digest. This is not true if the fruit is neither green nor over-ripe. If the child has not suffi- l l cient teeth with which to chew it the fruit should be given in mashed or| .__ scraped form so that no hard particles | will be swallowed. ! “Indiscriminate eating i8 not the only error in a child’s diet. The over- careful mother occasionally goes to the other extreme in endeavoring to plan a healthful diet for her child. | For instance, she does not allow any- thing but milk and cereals throughout the second year, for fear that solid food cannot be digested. This lack of | solid food really does harm, because when the second year of life is reachw ed the child is much more like the' adult than during the first year, and | food which approaches the adult diet should be begun. It is at this time| that the mother most needs the Qiet ' list to guide her.”—Woman’s Home Companion. | ———————— | Famous Library to Be Sold. f In order to straighten its financlall affairs the vestry of the Marien. | Kirche, in Halle, has decided to sell its famous librnry This library con- sists of 26,000 volumes and conmms also the most complete collection otw manuscripts in the handwriting of Martin Luther and his co-reformers. It also possesses the only original | death mask of Luther. Most of the' books are on theology and a few of | them are said to be worth as much as 25,000. In spite of tempting offers from the outside, it has been decided to offer the entire library at a com- paratively low price to the city of Halle in order to keep it, if at al] pos- | ‘at home.” 1 e it Antique Watches Sell. A sale of seventeenth contury. | watches and miniatures realized about $10,000 at Christie’s, in London. - Pawsey paid $525 for a miniature of a general of Cromwell's time, by S. Cooper, dated 1649, and $866 for a miniature of a gentleman, by J. Hos- kins, 1769, Hohnes gave $972 for an early sev- enteenth century watch, by C. Peirag with a silver dia] engraved with the; heads of cherubs, birds, squirrels and foliage; the watch is in & crystal case with silvergilt borders. Then she tore herself away e e e PR e e n l"’ rvor aee IV THE MARK, Leos irons Copper, Zinc or oo fing Work, call the t ial‘a’" i ET METAL WORggs any 312 S '1!1 Florida Ave. e & ) P, CARTIN Cfixsio t Loty roof. Our Motio i co F 0 Work Guarantecs O ;'j A BT OEOED D RO OIIED B0 Gflice Phone 34 Res. Phone L H D Res. Phone G. H. = giflsgggs-!gsi-"'gfi EEBER., N QTEE . ) COLSTREC {3 UV oW lUv 211 Main St. ORI ORI 3 it nf e T TS SRR 5523 s LR U NEB RLE T SO unm. tsre of Good Tastn IT FITS & OUR DO} CUT IT OUT ::{‘1 Carry it in your Pocket Ee? Come In Any Tie3 You're Always & Thm ‘on OUR WEEKLY RECIPE Welcome Corn Oysters—Get a can of corn and put it through the meat-chop- 1 per or get the grated corn. Add two TRY THESE: ,f beaten eggs, a teaspoonful sugar, telf one tablespoonful salt, one pint of o flour, }one~ha1f pint mlll.(. two tagle- Sunshine CraCkefi' spoonfuls butter. a little pepper. . ol Mix corn, flour, milk, salt. pepper 101 Kinds & and sugar and beat well together; then add butter melted and eggs beaten light. Drop in spoonfuls in hot lard and cook about three min- utes. (Cabbage Salad with Pimentos— Shred cabbage, and mix with mayon- naise; pile lightly on a dish; put halved English walnuts over, and around the edge put strips of pimen- toes. They are Fresh and ' % Also ask about our 3 n Csnned Fruit Sam Prices are Rig W. P. PILLANS & C(: Pure Food Store Phone! _m dl Double your show:s _window’s bright-* nessat no increase? in light bill No matter how excellent your window displays are,— —no matter how alluring the values offered may be,— —no matter how much time, thought and money has bee: spent to produce an unusual display,— —if you do not light it properly, it will fail to attract the atte it should, Brilliant window lighting from #idden lamps will compe! atter tion to any display, — —it will increase the pulling-power of the best-dressed windo X-Ra¥ Reflectors are the most potwerful reflectors made They are one-piece pure silver to light windows. nitely. They take the light usually wasted on the ceiling, sidewalk anc of the window and throw all on the goods. They make your windows 47 merchandise stand out more prominently than any on the street. plated glass reflectors designed expre They are the only silvered reflectors which last i Let us d ; g Let emonstrate them in your own windows Wouldn't you like to see this lighting in one of your windows’ won t cost you a cent and it won’t obligate you in any way, to allow install a few in your window to show you how we can double its brig —d double its attractiveness,—doub/e itsvalue to you,—and all withou ing your light bill, Ask for a copy of the free book “‘Show Window Searchlights.’® Telephone us when we may make this important demonstration. T. L. Cardwell | LAKELAND, FLA.