Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, July 11, 1914, Page 2

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PAGE TWO § G. C. Barton, G.C.Rogan, W.T mmon & dresident Vice Tre Secre v 2 President P & - & - H & - - o> - - “ - - » & o E a @ & b 4 L3 K & & POLK COUNTY DEVELOPMENT (. A New and Uniqu € Bond a ser i S120,000 of Partici- lan 1ng "HUGH LARMON General Sales Manager Lakeland, Florida. = Si— Combination Pneumatic Sweeper. THIS Swiftly-Sweeping, Easy-Running DUNTLEY Sweeper cleans without raising dust, and at the same time picks up pins, lint, ravelings, etc., in ONE OPERATION. Its ease makes sweeping a simple task quickly finished. [t reaches even the most difficult places, and eliminates the necessity of moving and lifting all heavy furniture. ~ The Great Labor Saver of the Home—Every home, large or small, can e relief from Broom drudgery and protection from ger of flying , Duntley is the Pio Has the com i int, the d: e N neer of Pneumatic Sweepers— tion of the Pneumatic Suction Nozzle and revolving B Very easily operated and absolutely guar anteed. In buying a Vacuum Cleaner, why not give the “Duntley’’ a trial in your home at our expense? Write today for full particulars " J. B. STREATER Contractor and Builder Having haq twenty-one years' experience in building and con tracting in Lakeland and vicinity, I feel competent to render the best service in this line, If contemplating building, will be pleased to furnish estimates and all information, All work guaranteed. Phone 169 J. B. STREATER L L s L e e e R e TR R R RS S SR S T X JUST LOOK AT THIS Hart, Schaffner & Marx Suits Selling as Low as $16.00, $18.00 & $20.00 that were originally $20.00, $25.00 and $27.50. Mohair Suits as low as $9.60 to $12.80 now. All our Im- ported Straw Hats cut way down in price. Don’t miss this Suit and Pants Sale as it is your only chance to get a good thing for a song. i | JOS. LeVAY The Hub The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothing FEEEDEEONPBEEEDEEEPER BEBDEEDHEEDEETEEHDEPODIEHO a5 L L] THE UNDERSTANDING By BLANCHE G. ROBBINS, be room was strangely familiar to er, yet she knew she had never be- re seen even the | her as singularly | maseul In the | dim light of the {log fire of the grate she could | see the dark green | walls, hung with pictures done in in gepia and dull gray tones. ¢ The bookcases were filled with books, richly bound She was struck with the simplicity of the furni gs. Suddenly the fire flickered into life, and the picture hanging over the fire- place caught her attention. It was ob- apshot, enlarged but ex- ure of a woman, her ped distinctly on her beautiful face. She sat before an open fire, the firelight radiating the laugh- ter in her At her knee stood a small boy, his bright eyes revealing the love of his own little soul as he smiled respons- ively. Suddenly she roused herself; she had been dreaming. She was not pre- paring an answer for the man wal!l;lg outside in the darkness. Denny Brown had asked her to marry him and she had promised her answer to- night. They had been running swiftly, smoothly through the exhilarating alr of the suburbs in Denny’s car. Sud- denly something had gone wrong. It had happened at the very moment when she should have been answering Denny. Ha had brought her to this bunga-; low, asking permission for her to| wait there. He had telephoned to a nelghboring; garage for a man. They were now re- pairing the machine. In a few mo. ments he would return for her. How strongly at this monent all Denny could give her appealed to her! She was 8o tired—so nervously tired of her own life. But the other man! Somehow Denny had guessed that the other man had been something to her. For tonight he had told her, quietly, that the other man had failed again. Unconsciously, she had been waliting for “the other man” to win success. A man's step gounded on the veran- da—Denny had come for her and her answer was not ready. She heard the click of the telephone receiver in the hall. A man's volce—not Denny's— called Woodstock, N. H., on the long- distance. It was Phil Berkley—the other man! She was waliting in his bungalow—to- night of all nights, but she had to listen. “Hello, that you Mater?” “ " “Oh, I'm—I'm all right. “Yes—a bit blue tonight, how did you know?’ “ " “T hate to tell you, mamsy; but it's another failure.” “ " “No, I'm going to try again. Third time’s trying, you know.” “You're so comforting, Mamsy, yes I'll succeed—some day.” “ " “l wouldn't care so much if it weren't for you and—that little girl” “Yes, she's waiting for me.” “ " “Yes, there's just the understanding between us. Yet I trust her to wait. Sometimes I think I dreamed it all.” “Good-night, dearest—" In a moment the man would ring off. She must either hide or run. By the light of the flame she saw a door leading from the room to the ve- randa. Rising quickly, she stepped softly across the room and out onto the ve- randa. Stumbling over the low ste ran breathlessly across the d toward the lights shi the road. Pausing within the she ghrubbery, she called &0 ny!” The man left the machine quickly to the lawn “Denny, won't you take me | now? } the garage. “Tired of w: more than tw far to we (hp tre “Yes, yes; { interrupted; —the lights.” “Nnt T Send the 1 I “the trol j | BWer—y ir ety o " “Hush, Denny! 1 ought to have ltoM you. I can't marry you. I'm j walting for t ther man e prom | ised not an | rhere’ i —the just an i T | Ing.” nar Svndicata THE EVENING TELEGRAM LAKELAND, FLA,, JULY 11, 1914 must have’ (Copyright, 1914, by the SW‘llure Newspe- DOCTORS NO LUXURY THERE Costs Only 60 Cents to Have Physhk cian of Prague, Austria, Make a Call. The doctor’s bill is not such a thing to dread in Austria as in some parts a report from United Consul Frank Deedmeyer, star foned at Prague, shows. The City of Prague with a popula- tion in city and suburbs of about 600, 000, has only about £00 physicians, or one for every 7,500 persons. A doctor charges for a daytime call in a middle- | class family only 80 cents, or 10 cents | more than if the patient calls on him ‘ in his office. For a night call the doc- | tor receives $1.20 to $2, according to | the distance. Only professors attached | to the clinics of the two local univer- | | sitles charge more, receiving $2 to $4 i for a house call and $2 for an office visit. As in this country, the physi| ! cians, except those of the homeopath- ic school, do not supply medical rem- edies. “At most of the hospitals under the control of the Roman Catholic associ ation,” continues Mr. Deedmeyer, “treatment and care are entirely free. Nurses at h tals are paid 80 cents a day for t! st year, with an an- nual incre: per month; at sanitariur rom $6 to $8 per week; at private houses, from 80 cents to 3 per day, board being always included for all nurses. “About 100 dentists practise in this city. The average charges are: Draw- ' ing one tooth, 40 cents; cement filling, | 80 cents to $1; amalgam filling, 80 cents to $2; gold filling, $3 to $4; bridgework, $10 to $20. ‘ “The annual incomes of these pro- fessional men are estimated as fol- lows: Head professor in charge of | clinics, salary paid by the govern-| ment, $1,440 to $1,600, and $5,000 to ¢ f $11,000 from private practise; other | . professors at clinics, salary paid by | & & AT 3 Lo 3 it et 81000 anditron pfl.ii ' YOU ARE THINKING OF BUILDING, 8k | vate practise, $4,000 to $10,000; gen- | & eral medical practitioner, not attached : /"ARSHA LL & SA NDERS to any clinic, $3,000 to $3,500; the av-| # | erags income of a dentist is $5,000.” § The Olid Rellable Contractors - . . . » Who have been building houses in Lakeland for yearn - Cem"“"d'y af Lamaue M’"; it § who neyer “FELL DOWN" or Sile ANCATAON EoYeHOng ar All classes of buildings contracted for, | wae born one hundred years ago near | & id Ballt by this id 4 § | Louisville, Ky. After being admitted z residences bulit by thls firm are evi gnces of tneijr an [ to the bar in 1843 he began the prac- | ¢ Dake good. | tise of law in Dayton, Ohio. A year | later he was elected to the legltslar | /"4 RSHA LL & SANDFRS ture. In 1559 he moved to Texas, ed where he remained until the outbreak : Phone 228 BIUC of the Civil war. Returning to Ohfo | he volunteered in the federal army and was appointed colonel of a regi- ment of volunteers. He was severely wounded in the battle of Stone river, and resigned his commission, return- ing to Ohio, where in 1863 he was sacted lieutenant governor, with John Brough as governor. The death of | the latter in 1865 gave the guberna- torfal chalr to Mr. Anderson. He dled in Paducah, Ky., in 1895. PARTY FAVORS WORTH WHILE | Really Useful and Pleasing Trifles May Be Devised for Both Men and Women. A few of the really useful favors which may be provided for a smal) party are well worth constdering. ered with pale-toned Japanese crepe ! whether made at home or made to or- der. Then there are the work bags in | Bulgarfan colors that can be made of | the blue and red wide ribbons which | have recently gone out of fashion for sashes and girdles, but which are the | prettiest materials imaginable for| “fancy” things. Any girl will gladly welcome a favor | in the shape of a narrow-stemmed, tall [ Chinese vase in blue and white or blue, | red, green and black, for it makes an ideal receptacle for hat pins when not | needed for the single fresh flower which should be on every daintily- { equipped dressing table, It is also a good idea to give single teacups and saucers in orfental ware, because nearly every girl 18 now col | lecting a harlequin set | The men will like the latest thing in oriental neckwear, the brown and white tles of Tanryoka crepe de chine | which can be home-made from the pat- tern procured by b 18 one shop spec- imen. 1If it is too much bother to ke these tles, the party hostess may rds in plain and sub- A E ribbon. These guards are exceptionally good-looking | | and sme ment Missing. | s all gorts of athletic ied Farmer Corntossel, | physical cul- I could sium where scythe with- | 10 cut | | | t to break the the evenings.— ! & For the girls there are the daintiest | possible card cases of pasteboard cov- | % and decorated with a hand-painted | , flower design, that cost very little | | & | d | Mrs. La { was down in bed for t | womanly troubles, y doctor told my husband he ‘ B BB DB o e G 1 G Bo MO B B & We have sa and Polk Cou the past, and = reduce the cos our ex knife in still deeper. We carry a full 1 @ @ @ @ @ o » $ grain, & Toomers'ld 2 $ 3 o b o & o - SAVES DAUGHTER Advice of Mother no Doubt Pre. vents Daughter’s Untimely End, — Ready, Ky.—* anything for nearl ura Bratch 1 was not able to do Y SIX months,” writes er, of this place, *“and hree months, I cannot tell my head, and” with nervousness and Our famil could not do me any good, and h fo give it up. We tried anoher dechs but he did not help mrel.ed s At last, my mother a Cardui, the woman's l':m\;.as no use éorl was Ing seemed to do me any :otogg eaifelvenf bottles, and ;3\5(1)%% alls)}je‘ 4K Of my work and my own 1 think Cardui i Lhe “;or!g. My weight hag j -...':]df 1 1ook the picture of health, ou suffer from any of the ail y m Ff?”?m o women, get 2 bonlé of‘Cafthxsi foday. Delay is dangerous, g}q\;;’ll‘glelp ydou. for it has ma ousands / { in the past 50 yeagf. T Atall druggists, tonic, | thought nearly dead and ncreased, ” Write to: Chat dvisory Dept., Instructions on y 'numemlcr'»s “There’s None So Gof IN ICED BOTTLES ANYWHERE wooxForTHE Gheso-Crfy pe CHERO.COLA BOTTLING(® Mayes Grocery Compa WHOLESALE GROCERS “A BUSINESS WITHOUT BOOKS We find that low prices and long tim will not go hand in hand, and on May Is we will instal our new system of lo prices for Strictly Cash. ved the people of Lakelar nty thousands of dollarsi our new system will sti t of living, and also redu penses and enable us to put th hay, crate material, and Wilson! ealFertilizers always on har Mayes Grocery Compar 211 West Mazin St., Lakeland, Fla you how I suffered with ! dvised me to fake | S the best medicine in | ide uy nd "he 18] or he BOTTLED BY lof LAKELAND, FL4 — —— ol failed to give satisfacti i » » The many i ine groceries, feel Special I | Saturda) “Tango Creat Brazil Nuts,” chocolate covered. ¢ Latest creati® Only thirty-ef cents pef pound package. Lake Pharmé %_—/ E

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