Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, June 2, 1914, Page 8

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“W.K. Jackson JACKSON & McRAE REAL ESTATE ChRedr oo B o I PEDEIED0E B BEIEEE \ SRS PEIPEIBPHIEIPIEIIEIIDED GRAPEFRUIT hisses FREE! DRANE BUILDING bbb BB DBBELSSSS P IIPSSSSSHESEDY WATER THE EARTH TO suit conditions. WNo better irigation in existence. Addrese LAKELAND, FLORIDA Large Listing--Always Some Bargains B ESSI LR LR TIN 1 Have you ever had a GRAPEFRUIT KISS? No, because it is an absolutely new product, never on the market before. It is a delightful confection and will please reads this notice is cordially invited to sample this delightful candy without cost Ask for a Grapefruit Sundae THE(SILVER PALACE WWW B ——————————————————————————————— e I Ll L e ] +"“CIMBROUGH & SKINNER IRRIGATION CO. J. W. Kim- brough, of Lakeland, Floridd has the management of the State of Florida, Cuba, Bahama Isl nds, Alipines, West Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas. Any one interested in Irrigation can obtain information by writing him or the company. They are now prepared to fill all orders promptly. Kimbrough and Skinner Irrigation Co., R BroBocp oo o B i B B B BB B oo o oo BB EEEIEPIPEIDEEPIDEEE BDDDDEIIIPPPIIPIPIBBEL B A Reward is offered to any person in Lakeland who has not heard of The Brighten-Up F Call at 213 S. Kentucky Ave. Get acquainted and inspect our line of Paints, Varnishes, tain Goods, Etc. oo el o o BB 0lks Cur- oy MidSummer SALE COMMENCING URSDAY MAY Zist 1l money. Tiie Hub The Home of we will cut all our Suits, Pants and Straw Hats down 20 per cent off of our prices. This is for CASH ONLY as we have got to have the Hart Shaffner & Marx clothingincluded in this sale. Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothing JOS. LeVAY By 8. H. COLE. The dust cloud down the winding Out of it pro- hilly road came nearer. ceeded now and then the strident honking of a motor horn. Then it reached the end of the driveway, swung in between the stone gate- posts, and, the dust thinning out you. Call at Mi“er Bros, “The Silver somewhat, Bar- Palace,” and receive a sample ab'solutely hara Westoott tree. Every man, woman and child who saw the low, raking lines of a familiar roadcar. Bob Wescott, her younger brother, his chair tilted back and his feet cocked up on the veranda’s stone rail- ing, looked up from the book he was reading. “Well, well, here we are again!” he observed, his keen eyes on the ap- proaching car. “Getting pretty fre- quent, isn't it, Bab? I never thought he was your sort, though.” “He {sn't,” sald the girl, with a sudden tightening of lips. “Too blamed dignifidd and all that sort of thing,” Bob went on. “Imag- ine ever calling him ‘Herm,’ Bab!" “Little danger of that,” said she tartly. Bartlett's attentions of late had been assuming a gravity and a frequency that could have but one meaning. Bar bara wrinkled those pretty brows of hers harder as the motor swung up to the veranda steps. “Not intruding, Miss Barbara, trust?” he said. “Oh, no. I'm glad you came.” She held out her hand. Bartlett had a way of taking one’'s hand that was deference itself. “Then you haven’t any engagement for the afternoon?” he inquired. “None whatever,” sald she. “It's such a perfect day,” sald he, “I thought perhaps you'd like to take a little turn in the car—say out Red- fileld way. We could have a cup of tea at the Peach Tree inn." Barbara made a little grimace. “I'm awfully tired of the Peach Tree and all the other places like it They're so fearfully, fearfully proper.” Bartlett looked a little surprised at the outburst, but he sald nothing. “I'll tell you what I wish you would do,” she rattled on. “Take me down to Oak Grove park, will you? I dare you to do {t!” Bartlett debated mentally. “In the car?” he asked. £ “Car?” sald she. “Of course not. On the trolley. We'll eat peanuts all the way down.” She could hardly keep from chuck. ling; Bartlett seemed so distressed. “We couldn’t get back until nine or 80,” he demurred. “Who cares? If you're afraid, never mind. I'll go alone. Only, my heart is set on going to Oak Grove park this afternoon.” “Of course I'll go,” he interrupted. “What time can we get a car?” “Quarter past the hour in the square. I'll be ready in a minute.” Oak Grove park is a noisy, garish place. There are the usual hair-rals- ing amusements, the usual crowd of venders and fakers, and more or less hard-working pleasure-seekers. Barbara glanced at her escort out of the cornér of her eye. He remind- ed her of some stately cavalier going to a dog fight. Bartlett followed meekly wherever she led him. He bought the tickets and was just as stately upside Qown on the loops as he was anywhere else. Barbara, watching him, saw he was trying, in his own stiff way, to enter into the spirit of the occasion. What it must cost him she could well imag- fne. And when he suggested, as they finished the last of the amusements, that they do them all over again, she relented. “No, take me home, now,” she sald, rather shortly. They alighted at the square. 1 He crowd and they turned into the quiet road that led up to her father's big estate. The girl was very quiet. not speak until they were well down the road and quite alone. “I'm a little cat,” she burst out self- accusingly, “Huh?" sald Bartlett, stopping short in his tracks. “You're nothing of the sort. You're a jolly, democratic little girl that can do a3 the Romans do when you happen to be with the Romans.” “Don’t!" she beggea. “You're the one that's fine. I know what it meant to you te go through what you did this afternoon. I did it just to shock you, and I ate the peanuts to shock you, and rode the thrillers to shock you, and screamed at the top of my voice to shock you. And you were so nice about it all, so—" “Why, say!"” he {nterrupted her. | “Hold on! You're all wrong. I had the time of my life. Honestly I did.” “And I thought you were so digni- i fled—so awfully, terribly dignified!” said she. “Am I dignified?” he demanded. | “You're something better than that, she declared ‘ “What's that?" he asked. | “Human,” saild she ‘ “Little girl—" he began } “It's coming," sang the girl’'s heart, I “I shan't let h dignity stand in the way of my happiness—now!" (Copyright, 1914, by the McClura News per Syndicate.) - ) i O L - B4 “When you swallow Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar- Honcy you can feel it heal, It sootizes ard smoothes the raw spots’’ —says Graony Metcalfe. Low Round Trip elbowed a way for her through the! She did | whole-souled, | That's Granny’s way of saying % after o] an tho most loarned say It L dedeclabg FROM JACKSONVILY; g d i ds - - $37.75 Chicago = = o« $43.50 BT ety IR B’ Sloa - - Hl@ ST « 5615 Lo Dr. Bell’ Colerado Spriags - 58.60 Dalat] S oS K E, Dell s Sak Lake Gity - 1@ Veser - o o B b PINE-TAR-HONEY Folomai™® 1 110600 Montreal = = = 8545 p,.,,\ 25 Cents, —— B0 Cents, —— $1.00 hs..uAl. sl m.s. Lmdi-c Fio gfi B::'..D‘ g o rancaco » - 89.50 Buflalo = - « - 4740 Ciy, ok o Snbee 182076 Nagn Fall o S4TA) Ny B < L Fannn tes to other points in Colorado, Califor; YoU sota, lld‘:;::-;.. chne Great Lakes and Mountay cc low rates other points in the State, For gale bv Henley & Henley. Tickots on salo daily, until September 30, anz VARIABLE ROUTE_TO p; ‘P LAKE, COLORADO sp |© NEW OUTING HAT or e e Libecal i overe | B = TO THE NORTH AND NOR | P N " . b through traine daily; choice of * routes. .‘ Three daily trains to the south Orleans. U::l:nllod ining car i Rock ballast. Nodust. Nodirt. | trated booklets of summer tourist r ing car reservations and other infon| H. C. B} Floriat] foofrfede @i g Do d “CONSULT US” For figures on wiring your house. will save you money. Look out for rainy season. Let us put gutter arg your house and protect it from decay| ¢ ! J PP R Model of black and white checked ::gla’: straw with crown and brim of : T_ L. CARDWELL, Electric and Sheet Metal Con Rear Wilson Hdwe (| To Set Colors. 2 Now is the time when the “fore- handed” woman is getting some of her summer sewing done. Before making E up the colored wash materials she Bl shrinks them and “sets” the colors, [ ###&&dds Green and lavender materials will re- tain their coloring, unhurt by laundry work, if they are soaked at first fif- teen minutes in about two gallons of cold water, to which half a cupful of strong vinegar hus been added. Sait- ed water, or water to which a little turpentiné has been added, will set pinks and blues. Colored silk stock- ings may be successfully washed by following the same rules, @ Phone 233. oSt B " '® YOU ARE THINKING OF BUILDIN MARSHALL & SAND The 0id Reliable Contractor Wuo have been building houses in Lakeland for who never "FELL DOWN" or failed to give satish All classes of buildings contracted for. T:§ resiaences built by this hrm are evidguces of ti make good. MARSHALL & SAND Phone 228 Blue Bwad 0 f g bbb B BB DB GG FRdid i H age g Sauerkraut in the future will be not only good but cheap. Denmark is able to raise cabbages co-operatively for American dining tables. LR s ol B o ot Bowling probably was an especially interesting game when our revered an- cestors played it with the skulls and shin bones of their enemies. I RS RBBREHE S S PPPERRPEEPPR PG DDIDBBP DI GBBOC J. F. Welch Licens Lakeland Auction H: 509 North Kentucky Avenue Auctions every Monday between 10 and 12 a. m. ing to dispose of any surplus articles at auction such Pursuit of literature has its draw- \ backs when it begins to spoll the , shape of one's rosy finger tips where one hits the type-writer keys. SOME DONT’S For Stomach and Liver @ @ & o N Sufferers & horses, wagons, stoves, or other articles, notify au Don't take medicine for your Stomach ail- | % Will call and talk the matter over with you. We b ments morning, noon and ‘night, as usually 1&, change. When you are contemplating overhauling your hor decorating and paper hanging. such medicines only give temporary relief and simply digest the food that happens to ' be in the Stomach. . Don't permit a surgical operation. There is always serious danger in operations and in many cases of Stomach, Liver and In- testinal Ailments the knife can be avoided if the right remedy is taken in time, Don'’t go around with a foul smelling breath ' ¢, caused by a disordered Stomach and Liver, to the discomfort of those you come in cone | ~ tact with, { If you are a Stomach Sufferer don't think you cannot be helped, probably worse cases than yours have been restored by Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy. | Most stomach ailments are mainly caused by a catarrhal condition. Mayr’s ~Wonderful Stomach Remedy not only removes the ca- tarrhal mucous but allays the chronic in- | flammation and assists in rendering the entire alimentary and intestinal tract antiseptic, and this is the secret of its marvelous success, Don't suffer constant pain and agony and allow your stomach ailments to physically un- | dermine your health. No matter how severe your case may be or how long you have suf- fered—one dose of Mayr's Wonderful Stom- | ach Remedy should convince you that you can be restored to health again. ~ Mayr's Won- derful Stomach Remedy has been taken and is highly recommended by Members of Con- gress, Justice of the Supreme Court, Educa- tors, Lawyers, Merchants, Bankers, Doctors, Druggists, Nurses, Manufacturers, Priests, }{u}i;lers, Farmers and people in all walks of 1e, | Send for FREE valuable booklet on Stom- & We Auction off anything SPPPEGOPRPDPBBDIPIY SPDDBESDPPR PP Db s e If you want your Shirts and Collars B Laundered the VERY BES™ Send them to the Lakelana Steam La Weare better equipped than ever for givi: class Laundry work. b Ph b Ailme : Whicing Se, Chicago, i~ S 184136 4 For sale in Lakeland by & R A RN S TR T DNV Henley = -~ - i TETFIEETrra e 15 i G. H. Alfielc Oftice Phone B. H [2C. A, Jone Home Phone 39 Blue 347 Black Home'l ' ORAFTS Why Our Sidewalks Are th Machine mixed, Lake Weir Sar Best Flint Rock and Lehigh Ce: Best Pressed Brick $11.00 De! oldz furniture made new, asses of cabiret work. sterms reasonable, !:;-\1‘1 West Main S Cement, Sand and Rock Fo‘r \ 307 to 315 Main Street - . I

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