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PAGE EIGHT FL L] ses8i Classified Advertising SPPBBPEEEONGETODEPEPEEEGE D PRRPERY FOR SALE I \\X;;’g’l.‘ED—-House close In. Pl;g;; PARK HILL LOTS FOR SALE ON EASY TERMS—AII streets clayed, cement sidewalks, electric lights, city water, shade trees. See G. C. M. Stephens. 829 e e——— Having purchased and subdivided the Jesse Keen estate of 560 acre: oue-ualf mile west of eity limits, we are now selling in '10 and 26-aers tracts some of the finest truck ané farm lands tn this section ai the right price and terms. For partieu .ars see G. C. Rogan, Room 1 aad 3 Deen & Bryant Bldg. Phone 146, Rogan or S. ———————————————————— FOR SALE—Good 4-room house, and lot, 40x135 feet; 12 bearing or- ange trees in yard, in Northeast Lakeland. Price 1,200. Part cash, balance $10 per month, Address G. J. W., care Telesram or phone 242 Red. e S S e FOR SALE—Clean and up-to-date grocery business, including fresh stock of goods, also furniture and fixtures. Reason for selling party wants to discontinue business. Business in good condition. Ad- dress Box 101, Lakeland, Fla., or call 330 Blue. 2876 R P R %, FOR SALE—Ticket to Terra Haute, Ind., via Cincinnati. Phon. 70 Black. 2095 FOR SALE—$15,000 worth of pre- ferred stock in the Chautauqua Auditorium Association, drawing 8 per cent interest, payable semi- annually. Address J. E. Melton, secretary. 2770 B ——— FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE—6-room house and two lots for vacant property, preferably on South Florida avenue. See A. Biewer, Gilmore Ave. 2016 FOR SALE—One horse, harness, buggy and wagon for $125. Also one horse mower. See me quick. G. P. Quaintance. 2912 FOR SALE—International Harvester auto truck, new; will sell for one- third regular price; also one Edi- son moving picture machine, cheap. Edward Bennett, Kim- brough building. Phone 386 2926 FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for housekeeping. Modern conveni- ences. Close in. 306 East Oak. Phone 75 Blue. 2894 FOR SALE—One of the best Cadillac autos in the eity. Cheap for cash, | Cost $2,350; will sell for $1,100. Box 111, Tampa, Fla. 2920 FOR RENT FOR RENT-—S8ix-room bouse; all modern improvemenis: ten min- utes’ walk of postoffice. Low rent to good tenant. Inquire A, J. Hol- worthy. Phone 277. 2627 FOR RENT-—6-room cottage. Apply Mrs. S. T. Fletcher. 2494 FOR RENT—une sulte in the Ste- phens apartment house. Apply to S. M. Stephens, city. 2383 FOR RENT—Modern rooms and six and house, bath, screens shades, block and half north of school on Florida avenue. Sum- mer rate $17.50. Pillans grocery. 2371 FOR RENT—Three rooms for light housekeeping all con- veniences, 307 S. Fla. Ave. 2846 POLICE CALLS The public is requested to phone all night calls to police after 6 p. m. to Police Department, phone 55. ICE CREAM orders delivered on Sun- day. Prompt delivery. J. M. { Ansley. Phone 214 Red. 2470 et L L FOR THE BEST REAL ESTATE IN- VESTMENT in Tampa suburban lots, see or write L. J. Sloan, Lakeland, Fla. 2641 e ———————— WANTED—Position as colored li- censed chauffeur. Can do light re- pairing. Careful driver. Address J. E. L., care Telegram. 2897 NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Lakeland, Fla., July 10, 1914, All contractors are notified that ion and after Oct. 2, 1914, that no Union bricklayers will be allowed to work on any job where non-union plasterers are working, nor union plasterers be allowed to work with non-union bricklayers. The union will furnish competent and skilled workmen of each sepa- rate trade to do the work if con- tractors are unable to furnish the same. 2820 I HAVE THREE CARB for public service at any and all hours. My machines are Caddilacs and I am therefore fully equipped to give my patrons the best service ob- tainable. Day phone No. 65; night, 313 Black. Fern Rocque- more. 1615 NOTICE The stockholders of the Lakeland Hardware and Plumbing Co. will hold their annual meeting in their office Aug. 4 to transact any busi- ness that may legally come before it. LAKELAND HARDWARE AND PLUMBING CO., 0. S. VanHuss, Sec’y and Treas. 2908 e ———————————————— LOST—Black and white jacket Sun- day afternoon between Lakeland and Lake Hollingsworth. Finder please notify or return same to 412 South Kentucky avenue. 2907 DRr. SAvUEL F. SmitH SPECIALIST EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT EYES ExAMINED GrLASSES FirTED HOURS: 970 12 A. M. 2104 P M, SUITE, BRYANT BUILDING LAKELAND, kLA, % SEHODDIGIDOPEEDIS P £ d misceLLANEOUS [ The Tire ShOp 3 ROSE an? KY. STS. & PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER—Work| % Back of Central Pharmacy 3 done neatly and promptly. Room|& VULCANIZING ; 200, Drane Bldg. Phone 6 1667 ::;: Tires and Inner Tubes, 2 o Inner Tubes a Specialty. 2 FISH, wood and coal. Also agent for ::: All Work Guaranteed. :1 Marvello face preparation. Phone & PETE BIEWER, Mgr. by 258 Red. R. O. Park. 2910 Ceibasod bbb : §M \ i New bungalow of six rooms and complete bath, fireplace, electric ‘*\ wired, two fine lots, 50x140 each overlooking Lake Parker. The \ price is $2,700. Terms $300 cash and the balance in 1, 2, 3 and 4 ears. The Joha F. Cox Realty Co. S o B B do e b B P PR PP bbby 5 THE EVENING TELBGRAM LAK ELAND, FLA, JULY 30, 1914, WANTED-—Furnished suite of two rooms, bed room and sitting room, three blocks of postoffice; must be screened. Apply Box 268, city. 2918 STOLEN—Columbia bicycle, with motorcycle saddle and coaster brake, from front of my residence, corner Tennessee avenue and Lime street, Cecil Mclntyre. 2911 FOR RENT-—Ten-room house, all modern conveniences, on Gilmore and Bay streets. Rental $30. See A Biewer, Gilmore Ave. 2915 KIMBROUGH SUPPLY CO. have just received a solid car of one and two horse wagons. If you want a good wagon at the right price, come and see us. Kimbrough Sup- ply Co. 2917 COMFORTING WORDS Many a Lakeland Household Will Find Them So To have the pains and aches of a bad back removed—to be entirely free from annoying, dangerous urin- ary disorders, is enough to make any kidney sufferer grateful. The fol- lowing advice of one who has suf- fered will prove comforting words to hundreds of Lakeland readers. W. L. Finger, 405 Vermont Ave., Lakeland, says: “T was bothered by having to get up at night, not being able to control the kidney secretions. The secretions were discolored and contained sediment. T noticed sore- ‘ness across my baex, just over my kidneys. I got a supply of Doan's Kidney Pills at Henley and Henley's Drug Store and began taking them. I was surprised how quickly I got re- lief and before long I was cured. I like to tell people about Doan’s Kid- ney Pills.” Price 50c¢, at al] dealers. Don’t sim- ply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Finger had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. Have you tried a can of match- less sauer kraut? 'It's packed in Lalgland. 2918 EAST COAST CANAL FILLING UP WITH SAND Daytona, July 80.—Unless action is taken by the State or the east coast canal is taken over by the na- tional government at once and ef- fective measures taken to keep the canal open, thig ditch for which the State of Florida gave thousands of acres of land, will soon be useless for all practical purposes. The ditch is rapidly filing with sand and boats are already beginning to’experience difficulty in navigating. Captain Huston, of the steamer Emmett Small, of the Canal Packet Line, says that the wash of boats is rapidly causing sand to wash into the ditch, although because of the narrowness and shallowness of the dtch much sand washes besides that caused by navigation. The difficul- ty does not seem to be in any one place, but the complaint is made that the wash is occurring all along the canal from St. Augustine to Daytona. Unless something is done to Keep the canal open it is the opin- ion of Captain Huston that boats will not long be able to navigate the trip from Jacksonville to Daytona. NATIONAL TEACHERS' ASSOCIATION MEETING Savannah, Ga., July 30 tional Association of The Na- Teachers in | colored schools is holding its meet- ing in this city, commencng toiday, and holding over the first two days of August. This is the first time this association has met on the At- antic seaboard, and many teachers in Georgia, Alabama and Florida who have not heretofore been able to at- tend a convention are now in this 'l‘xl)‘. A number of distinguished representatives of the colored race are in attendance, among them being Dr. Booker T. Washington; Dr. 1. T. Kealing of Kansas; Dr. W. T. Ver- non of Mississippi, and Mr. M. C. Mason of Jacksonville, Fla. A num- ber of points of interest are sched- uled to be visited by the teachers. The general subjects for discussion include health conditions in the pub- lic schools, agricultural, high city schools, social uplifts, ete. and LABOR NEWS AND NOTES The request of the Milkers' Union for an increase in pay from $75 a month to $80 per month, with four days off each month instead of two Francisco Central Labor Union. It is believed that no serious objection will be made in the enforcement of the new scale. According to the of Seattle municipal employment office, report the e last year men and 8 women were supplied with po- s s in either the city or State. Becau no fee is charged by the office, 1er to the employer or the applicant. a substantial rease in the number of positions filled in com. p n with 19 is shown. The po- siti ed were for the most part those requiring no skilled labor. vs, has been endorsed by the San) ———— TELLTALE GREAM PUFFS L LD TS LT LL L RLRT L LT LR By AGNES CRAMER. Ever since she was a child and had known the pleasure of standing in front of a baker’s window and allowing her fancy to play about the cream puffs and the pies, the wonderful jelly rolls and the mysteriously named “eclairs” she had regarded the bakery business as one of the most fascinating of all. They called the shops “‘bakeries” in those days and her joy received a check when she was obliged to cope with the strange name ‘“delicatessen,” that was later applied to them. It was a much finer sounding word, and there could be nothing too fine to apply to an occupation that concerned itself with the sweets of existence. She and her brother kept house to- gether in a tiny apartment in a part of Chicago where bakeries were as thick a8 blackberries. And when blackber- rles are very thick you become fas- tidious about them and learn to know the ripe and juicy ones at sight. So she came to be quite a connoisseur in things culinary and knew a creamy eclair at first glance much as a natur- alist knows all about a plant or shrub before he stops to analyze it. It was not that she had a gastro- nomical imagination or was anything of a gourmand. In reality it was more the esthetic phase, the artistic side of these creations that pleased her and she was content with very limited por- tions for herself. But she and her brother really lived on bagged things and what Stevenson once said regard- ing tinned food might be applied to food in bags—“man cannot live by bags alone.” But her brother made no complaint and if “home cooking” was rare with them at least she saw to it that their bagged bread and buns were not too “bakery.” She searched diligently for the shops that offered puffs of a “homey” flavor much as a botanist looks for his favorite specimens. To come upon a delicatessen shop that was just opening gave her as much joy as the flower lover experiences at the sight of the opening violet. She and her brother talked over the differ- ent varieties of cream puffs that she secured and discussed seriously the question as to which shop was most worthy of their patronage. But one evening for his dessert he was presented with a cream puff that, as he remarked, “did not look good to him,” for it had an appearance far below their standard in such delicacies. So he demanded of his sister, who was responsible for this culinary crime: “Why, don't you think they have a kind of homey taste?” she asked, with some embarrassment. “Yes,” he replied, “if by ‘homey’ you mean something flat and pasty.” “You see,” she explained, “the man who keeps the shop where I bought these lost his wife about a year ago and he says that she always made the filling for his cream puffs and that the secret of the filling dled with her. I felt go sorry for him that I could not help buying them even though they did not look quite as nice as some we have had.” “Well,” answered her brother, “I feel sorry for the gentleman myself, but my sympathy does not go so far as to compel me to eat puffs filled with flour paste flavored with vanilla.” The next evening the sister gave him with his dessert of sliced bananas some lady fingers purchased from the bereaved baker, but the brother de- clared that they were unworthy of their name. She showed so much re- sentment of his criticism that he saw she had allowed sentiment to mingle with her culinary judgment and he trembled for his future desserts. For a long time, however, he heard no more of the unhappy baker. His sis- ter continued to offer him impeccable puffs from a wellknown and high- priced delicatessen shop. But one evening after a delicious home-cooked supper she brought out some chocolate eclairs, which, like Pope's monster, vice, were of such hideous mien that to be hated they needed but to be seen. After one mouthful he remarked, sourly: “I think I recognize this par- ticular paste. You have gone back to that detestable delicatessen fellow, the culinary criminal.” “But he's improved,” she declared with warmth. “Your taste is not deli- cate enough to distinguish the change.” “No, it is not,” he answered, “and 1 wish the gentleman would get another wife, one who has some knowledge of puffs—" “I think he has one in view,” she answered shyly. Then she blushed in quite an extraordinary way. - s Sl = Fails to Catch Falling Baby, Patrolman Tuite, on duty in West One Hundred and Thirty-first street, saw a baby climbing on a window sill of the five-story apartment house at 635 West One Hundred and Thirty- first street, and in danger of falling, reports the New York Sun. He was 40 feet away when the child tumbled, and he was still too far away to catch it as it fell. The baby was Leonard Marklin, two years old, son of Edward Mar . Mrs. Marklin saw her husband coming up the street, and went to a rear room to get her pocketbook to have her husband get something from the store. In her absence the bahy climbed on the window sill to see its father, fell, and was killed Mr. and Mrs. Marklin were over- come and had to have the services of @ physician, L L T b a wa sa a L Rk SRR S S SRR STOCK MUST BE REDUCED That Means Prices Reduced Never since the letters B-A-R-G-A-I-N first spelled bargain, has the trade been offered such values, such under- priced Footwear, Head- ‘wear and other wears, Starts SATURDAY, AUG. Ist One Big Week of Attractions SEE BATES ON THE CORNER EETE LSRR AT FERERR LR ELRL R LR SRL S LA LA L SRS E L BT E R Bg§ LR L LD L LT LT L DL T L LS PR L2 2 o S X B 2 T 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 L L D ; If you want your Shirts and Collars’ Laundered the VERY BEST Send them to the Lakelana Steam Laundry Weare better equipped than ever for giving you high class Laundry work. Phone 130 e U'nless You Know Where to Buy IF YOU KNOW The selection will be the best The variety unmatched e Cost of Living Is Great The quality unsurpassed The price the lowest All these you find at our store Just trade with us This settles the question]of living Best Butter, per DIRBEY < 5 s 3iuh/s 605t s bmom: « ob oot sionsise .1.00 Cottolene, 10 pound puu.,,,,mnn_.“”_'.'_!t...,._1_45 Sugar, 17 pounds .. Sttt tst ey sejsensan seen Cottolene, 5 pound palls. .. Snowdrift, 10 pound pails. ........... sensscece soesl BB SORUE BIUY MBI oty i s e 1 1~2bnrelbutnour...............‘...... ssssasvene s B8 12 pounds best P'lour,............,...... .45 Octogon Soap, 6 for......... ertesrem Cevvames® -85 Ground Coftee, per PR L annsassi snn e as 3 § gallons Kerosens. ., SOt s e o s oy e ene om0t E. 6. TWEEDELL —_———————