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THE EVENING TELEGRAM LAKEL \. - ¥ OUR WEEKLY LIMERICK Prominent in service is General Hardware, Excelled by none, for hard wear and tear. With Head- quarters Here, When you 670 e appear, He'll salute you, try to suit you, and treat you all fair. Our Line of General fardware | Heavy Shelf and Builders | HARDWARE Ranges, Heaters, Oil and Gasolene Stoves, Kitchen Utensils, Anti-Rust Tin, Granite and Knamel Ware, Tubs, Wringers and Boilers, Churns, Ice Cream Freezers, and a host of items too numerous to enum- erate. When you want Hardware, remember there isnot a Hardware want we can’t supply WILSON HARDWARE CO. PEPPR PRI S S TR L Security Abstract & Title Co. Bartow, Florida L L 2 ] R®. B. HUFFAKER, PRES......L. J. CLYATT, SECRETARY FRANK H. THOMPSON, VICE PRESH. W. SMITH, TREASURER ABSTRACTS OF TITLES New and up'to-date plant. Prompt service. Takeland business left with our Vice President at Dickson Bldg will receive prompt and efficient attention. W rempprresweere s e Ly S ST R SR L L R RS LA L AL L R A O $215,084,709 in the United States in » recent year were ascribed TO THE FOLLOWING CAUSES Defecti heating chimneys, flues, fireplaces, and li apparatus; faults of construction and equip- Matches, sparks and explo- siong lgured prominently, followed by incendiarism, electricity and lightning. Nearly One-fourth of all Fires Are ve ting ment. We represent the following reli- \ble companies: Fidelity Underwriters, eapital ...... .. .. 4,750,000 Labeled Philadelphia Underwriters, “UNKNOWN CAUSE!” i R e $4,500,00 oi.nificant and Potent Reasons Jerman American, capital 2,000,000 §pringfield Fire and Marine, capital $2,500,000 ; . mem of Hartford .... 3 Fire Insurance Protection! MANN & DEEN Room 7, Ravmondo Ruilding Your business will have the best at tention if placed with us. ~ AVONDALE SPRINGS ] TENNESSEE R. R. on Avondale P. 0. Rutledge Tenn beautifu in the mountains, with a large variety of he ni h h led by vast for- est trees. and untold quantities of wila flow many wild birds, where a cool breeze is al ———————————————————— Why You Should Be Provided With ,000,000 1 nook 1s ing for a th-o ays to be felt in the many deep and shady gzlens which surround the grounds. and where every ef- | fort is made for the pleasure and comfort of each and every ruest— then come to Avondale Springs, Tenn., on Knoxville & Bristol R. R, 16 mifles from Morristown, Tenn. Rates, $8 per week, or $1 per day by the month. Note the address above. F. J. HOFFMAN, Proprietor heered by the songs of | for mountain and seaside resorts, | where mornings and evenings bring | exhilarating breezes with a snappy chill in them, is the silk sweater-coat. These smart garments are selling freely at flgures which rather take one's breath away. Twenty-flve to thirty dollars each seems a high price for a sweater of any sort. But there {8 no, difficulty in finding people who are quite willing to pay it. Once let fashionables, and thelr imitators, get used to unusual prices and there is not telling the length to which they will go. Besides the sweaters and sweater coats of silk—there are others. Those of wood fiber, which looks like silk, and {s as strong or stronger, are much lower in price, about half as high. Then there are splendid wool sweat- ers in many colors and varieties of design. A sweater-coat and cap to match, like those shown in the picture, what- ever the fabric they are made of, will wHEN the young princeling 18] dressed up in his best attire, fvrf state occasions, such as birthday par- ties, Sunday school, or dress parade, he is garbed in white. And whether his lady mother has made his gar- ments with her own hands or left that pleasant task to those who make a business of it, he looks like all his mates in the democracy of boyhood. The little boy must be clothed in the summertime in washable fabrics. The difficult fcat of teaching him to keep clean {8 a part of his education, ex- actly as essentlal ag teaching him to read. For daily wear he romps in blouses and short pants made in wagh- able colored fabrics, such as ging- ham, linens, crash, madras and other strong weaves. Heavy linens and | piques and certain specially woven cot- ton fabrics in white are required for his dress occasions. These fabrics are so inexpensive and the little its are so e: that itis n task to make shortlived summer wardrobe. But| manufacturers turn out quantities of | clotheg for children, well designed and well made, at a cost of production | so low that it is hardly worth while | to make them at home. | 0 | Sweater-Coats for Outing Wear Correct Dress for the Little Boy | ticle AND, FLA,, AUG. 3, 1914, | J UST the most fashionable garmc:zt[ fortify their wearer against a chill. The cool air, dropping down from frogty mountain tops, and breezes that have traveled from the land of ice- bergs to that of seaside hotels, are the reasons for the existence of sweat- ers. They stand daily use, and manu- facturers are endeavoring to make them attractive, and have, in fact, suc- ceeded in doing some very beautiful knitting. It would not do to get too far away from simplicity, and it is in new ways of knitting that the best of new attractions lie. The sweater for a little girl, shown here, could hardly be plainer. A close- ly knitted border and a pocket et each ride are not purely decorative figures, but they afford all the details of orna- mentation except the border of fancy knitting about the bottom. On sweater coats for grownups there are collars in several styles which add much to their finish. But aside from this they are about the samoe as the model shown in the pic- ture, JULIA BOTTOMLEY. One of their best efforts is shown in the illustration given with this ar- It is a suit of white pique with plain short pants and belted blouse. The blouse opens over a small “V"- shaped vest which allows a bit of dec- oration in the form of a spray of lit- tle flowers and leaves embroidered in white. The sailor collar is finished with scallops edged with buttonhole stitch, instead of a hem. This is about all the decorating that one may ex- pect to find in even the dressiest garb for the small boy. In order that the blouse may set well a few boxplaits run from shoul- der to hem. The loose belt, of the fabric, is slipped through narrow straps, also of the pique. The belt drops toward the front and may be fastened with a buckle or clasp fasten- ers or preferably buttons and button- holes. The sleeves are rather full and scape the wrist and low canvas nps finish the toilet of the young gentleman, and he other better dreseed than himself. He i outfitted in correct style whether he be the son of a millionaire or a duke or just an average man JULIA BOTTOMLEY, will not meet an- | COULD FORGET HIS TIMIDITY Child Was Not Shocked Beyond Power of Speech in Presence of Dread Superintendent. An eccentric city superintendent seated awkwardly at his offlce Wi desk, his head poked forward from his stooping shoulders, his elbows doubled up, his back bent, and his his chair, when two ladies entered, bringing a six-year-old youngster for admission to school. | “The dear child is so timid, Mr. R.,” said the grandmother. “We couldn't think of sending him alone.” you whip little fellows, and he {8 so | timid—so shy and sensitive that—" | She was interrupted by the timid | youngster, who had all this time been | attentively studying the superintend- ent's doubled-up proportions. “Say, stand up, will you,” he said. “I want to see how tall you are."— Lippincott's. §1.75 FORT MYERS THURSDAY, AUGUST 6th SPECIAL TRAIN Will leave at 7.50 A. M. VIA ATLANTIC COAST LINE IFor Information call lon TICKET AGENT, A. C. L. or G KRIRKRIVAND: IR A Tampa, Fla. Rexall “93” Hair “onic [Pulfills every function of a re liable tonic for improving the condition of the hair and scalp, them to tending to restore a healthy state. In two sizes, 50¢ and $1.00 Lake Pnarmacy WHY : Why not get one of those large cement urns to beautify your yard? Why not get the oldest reliable Iu:mt.-nt man to put In your walk? | | Why not get vour brick and blocks lot them, prices are right, so are the | goods (FLORIDA NATIGNAL VAULT CC. . B. YImmerman, Mgr, 508 West Main St. feet twisted round the side rounds of | “Yes, Mr, R,” sald the fond aunty. ! “The boys have been telling him that | | ‘ ‘ | | raGck THREE ?%i%«%%%%%*%ww - The Professions BEPGPRGIDIEIEEEPIIRDEE THE EGYPTIAN SANITARIUM i OF CHRONIC DISEASES Smith-Hardin Bldg., Cor. Main and Florida Ave. Phone 86 Blue Electricity, X-Ray, Light, Heat, Hydrotherapy, Turkish Baths, Phys- ical Culture, Massage, Dietetics, Bte. You can get here what you get in Battle Creek and Hot Springs and save time and expense. PETERSON & OWENS ATTORNEYS AT LAW Dickson Building i S JEREMIAH B. SMITH NOTARY PUBLIC Loans. Tnvestments in Real Estate Haye some interesting snans in eity and suburban property, farms, ete, Better see me at once. Will trade, sell for cash, or on easy terms, Rooms 14, Futch & Gentry Bldg. Lakeland, Fla. Residence phone, 278 Biack. Office phone, 278 Blue. DR. SARAH E. WHEELER OSTEOPATH Annex, Door South of First National Bank Lakeland, Florida Munn J. D. TRAMMELL Attorney-at-Law vVan Huss Bldg. Lakeland, Fla. G D. & H. D. MENDENHALL CONSULTING ENGINEERS Suite 212-215 Drane Building Lakeland, Fla. Phosphate Land Examinations and Plant Designs, arthwork Specialists, Surveys. LOUIS A. FORT ARCHITECT Kibler Hotel, Lakeland, Florida DR. C. C. WILSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Special Attention Given To DISEASES OF WOMEN AND CHILDREN Deen-Bryant Bldg. oms 8, 9, 10, Office Phone 357 Residence Phone 367 Blue DR. W. R. GROOVER PIIYSICIAN AND SURGEON % Rooms 5 and 4, Kentucky Bullding Lakeland, Florida A. X. ERICKSON ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Real Estate Questions Drane Building Edwin Spencer, Jr. ENCER LN aw I D. O. Rogers ERS & § at ne v Attorneys Bryant Bullding Lakeland, Florida Istablished in July, 1900 DR. W. S. IRVIN DENTIST Room 14 and 15 Kentucky Building Phone: Office 180; Residence 84 BLANTON & LAWLER ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Lakeland, Florida W. 8. PRESTON, LAWYER Office Upstairs East of Court House BARTOW, FLA. Examination of Titles and Real Es- tate Law a Specialty DR. H. MERCER RICHARDS PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office: Rooms 5 and 6, Elliston Bldg. Lakeland, Florida Office 3 78; Resid. 301 Blue Phones: FRANK H. THOMPSON NOTARY PUBLIC Dickson Building Office phone 402. Res. 312 Red Special attention to drafting legal papers. Marriage licenses and abstracts furnished