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home for you and me, one of these days. We won't waste time and money listening to a lot of mushy trash. We'll take a right royal spin on the river, . dear. Bracing air, the invigorating | skate glides—they are worth all the PAUL BARNES’ CHARM —_—te—— stufty, idealistic nonsense of your By MILDR“’mg::ou"! GOOD- Gjever ‘high priestess of the soul shop,’ # : | believe me!"” And Jerome looked so strong, so noble, so intensely humanly perfect that Ada began to think that there “Paul Barnes i8 so ethereal—that is his charm,” lisped Miss Minerva Ir win, apropos of the man she expected to marry. Her close friend, Ada Warner, looked impressed. Not so, blunt, plain- spoken Jerome Haight, her fiance. He was a great, honest bea: of a fellow. Haight had been obliged to work his own way in the world. Practical common-sense was his basis. He bad little patience with the constant aes- thetic pose of Miss Irwin, and was glad when she was gone. | “She is so cultured, so refined, isn't she, now, Jerome?" spoke Ada, with a rather longing and mildly envious sigh as the visitor departed. “Is that what you call it*" asked | Jerome with a smile. “Why, her ‘high attainments,’ as she lisps them, | was a force and meaning to his self- | , reliant ways, that promised something | better of a future than the asure- | tinted, pearl-tipped pictures painted | by the impressible Miss Irwin. following evening. out on the river, it seemed. Laughter, on, shrugged her dainty shoulders at . “the common herd” and went home. 'pure white and lustrous black, and in | Her escort, Barnes, shivered. It hurt . | his sensitive feelings to see people ' to remain inordinately smart. enjoying themselves in this crude gkerch presents a clever use of black and white in a coat and skirt cos- Ala., remembering money is refund- WAY. “Wait—wait!" spoke Jerome, half an hour later, as amid the rare ex- t ! more interesting than the amazing| Certainly it was a jovial, inspiring | way in which apparently opposing scene to participate in, that of the materials are placed together with re- All the village was sults that leave no question as to their success. exercise, health—the atmosphere was reckless abandon are the strongest ' | pungent with their influence. Miss , contrasts brought into pleasing prox- | Irwin appeared for a moment to 100K | imity. l this season the combination bids fair cr; THE BEVENING TALEGRAM, LAKELAND, FLA., NOV. 25, 1914, contrast IN corors HAS A CURE FOR PELLAGRA Parrie Nicholas, Laurel, Miss., writes: ‘“‘Seems to me if I had not :obtained your remedg ,would not have lived much longer. I am _glad you discovered this won- derful_remedy that will cure Pella- a. When I began taking Baughn’'s ellagra Remedy m{ weight was 60 odd suunds; now it is 9 OPPOSING MATERIALS ASSOCIAT- ED WITH MUCH SUCCESS. White and Black in Combination Is One of the Smartest and Most Pleasing—I!lustration Gives an Idea of the Effect. s 90-odd. would like to have this published and sent to sufferers of Pellagra. This is_published at her request. If you suffer from Pellagra or know fr lanyanca zh'? ntmeu !rolg: Ft']elllsg::. t is your duty to consu e ~ sol.xircerul Baughn, who has fought an conquere: right lnq the Pellagra Belt of Ala- And colors—with what | bama. The symptoms—hands red like i<unburn, skin peeling off; sore "‘mouth, the lips, throat and tongue 2 flaming red with much mucous and choking: indigestion, and nausea; either diarrhoea or constipation. / There is hope if you have Pella- you can be cured by Baughn's The Pellagra Remedy. Get a big free +book on Pellagra. Address American { Componding Co., Box 2025, Jasper. Nothing that concerns fashion is There is no contrast so striking as These long, ume. full-skirted coats €d in any case where the rerg;gg fails to cure. when I did I/ the dreaded malady ! don’t appeal much to me. I don't see much else but the ardor of a faddist in her new affiliation.” “Oh. Jerome' remember she is my friend.” “And you are worth ten of her,” insisted Jerome convincedly. “Don't let her spoil you, dear. Ever since 1 heard of her she’s been running after hilaration of the sport, Ada dashed away from him with a gay trilling laugh of deflance. . the quick challenge. of sport. Ada was away like a sprite. | She managed to get a fair start in ad- | vance of Jerome, and glided along this and that new cult. Now she 18 | recklessly. devoted to—what do you call it>—that | “Stop! Turn quick!” shot out ‘soul shop.’” { Jerome. “A danger sign, Ada!” and ' “You shock me!” protested Ada. “There is a select little group in the city who have organized a new spirit- ual congress. They meet, discuss the | higher ethereality, and really some of I and then a crash. She fell as a break their literature is inspiring.” | in the ice tripped her up. Then, half | “But for what end?” challenged the | engulfed in the chilling flood, her head [ critical Jerome. “Where lies the util- | struck a projecting spur of ice. | ity? Do they raise the helpless? feed Just in time, but not until Ada was | the poor? Ah, no. They comprise & | half submerged, Jerome reached her mutual admiration society. I will ad- | side, lifted her while his skates were mit the lady devotees look filmy and | fairly dancing over the swaying sur- delicate in their affected oriental cos- face, and bore her out of the perfl' , his shout was a thrill as he noted ! what had happened. Heedless of the sign Ada had swung past it. There was a warning crackle are extremely stylish, following the, lines of the redingote and polonaise, while showing the military influence | so noticeable in most of the present- | o o, s ; buttons as a fastening. “Now, catch me if you can!” was day clothes. | In this case the coat is of oyster They had skated beyond the center, ypjie proadcloth with white fur col- ar and cuffs. The fronts are cut ! short at the waist line (slightly em- pire) and cross each other at an angle with a close line of cloth covered ball Below the wvaist the skirt portion of the coat is ' {cut out, leaving a panel-like opening ' broken at the hipline by a loosely knotted sash of self-material, either ; yend of which is started just over the + hips, between the stitching together of the skirt and body of the coat. The skirt is of black velvet, very | SANITARY FRESSING GLUB CLEANING, PRESSING. REPAIRING and DYEING. Ladies Work a Specialty. Satisfaction Guaranteed. GIVE US A TRIAL Kibler Hotel Basement. Phone No. 393 WATSON & GILLESPIE, Proprietors PR PPRPRBPPEIRPDROPPEEHRTD Lake Mirror Hotel § MRS. H. M. COWLES, P:op. Under New Management. tumes. I acknowledge that they’ve got poor Barnes so refined down that he manicures his finger nails four times a day. That wavy blond mustache of his is a dream. The new flowing cut to his overcoat suggests a French exquisite of the French monarchy. He dawdles his time away, though, and he isn’t much of a man.” Ada was quite incensed and pouty at all this, but her emotions subsided as her flance parted from her in his heartsome, honest way.» Certainly he was a lover to be proud of! There was no pretence about Jerome Haight. He had experienced hard knocks in his young career, and tey had mada him practical, a rising, dependable | i ‘ He Became a Droné and Acted Bored. man of business. There was not his | superior in athletics in the village, he ! was straight as an arrow, strong as & | lion. He was truthful, self-reliant. Miss Irwin was indeed spoiling Ada. | There was no doubt that in joining ! tne ¢ult her lover had improved so far as an ability for petty drawling high | art ideas was concerned. He had grown immaculate in his dress. To pick a flower, he would have been horrified to vulgarly snip it from tho“ stem without a napkin or a handker- | chief to protect the tips of his spot- less lemon colored gloves. He never smiled. To laugh outright would have disturbed his aesthetic ideas for hours. He became a drone and acted bored. “A balanced serenity,” was the way Miss Irwin described the tired, blase pose of her inestimable suitor. “And, oh! he has such poetical ideas! He that menaced. showed on Ada's forehead. She lay limp and senseless. overcoat. ,are agreed. But they differ widely as “Darling, speak!"” he “breathed in ' love and alarm, but a dark bruise With a jerk Jerome tore off hll] He wrapped Ada within it. | Then with the strength and vigor that | was not born of the “balanced seren- ity” of the “soul shop,” he darted away like an arrow. Ada’s hurt was slight, but the doc- | tor summoned at the Warner home told Mrs. Warner: | “It she had not been brought to shelter and warmed as speedily: as she was, the cruel cold might have done something severe for her.” “And if T had been with Mr. Barnes, five miles from a house, what would have become of me!” Ada whispered penitently to Jerome. “Yes,” responded her lover with a smile, “I can fancy our delicately bal- anced friend carrying you to safety!"” “Oh, Jerome! can you ever forgive me for ever trying to ‘refine’ you through a course of lectures at that dreadful ‘soul shop? pleaded Ada, two evenings later. “Why, what has happened now?” in- quired Jerome. “Paul Barnes has eloped with the high priestess of the cult,” was the stunning announcement. (Copyright, 1914, by W. G, Chapman.) URGES USE OF GOAT'S MILK English Society Points Out Its Manl- fold Advantages Over the Product of the Cow. That many diseases are spread by milk is a fact on which physicians to how the milk shall be' made pure. ! Of course the ideal method is to in- | sure the cleanliness of the dairy) farms, the health of the cows and the ! sanitary condition of the pails, cans . and bottles in which the milk is) placed. But this is both difficult and expensive, Many physiclans urge the pasteuri- zation of the milk, that is to say, its heating to 140 degrees F., and its be- ing kept at that temperature for half an hour. Others say that thisWestroys the food value of the milk and it is better to run the risk of septic sore throat, tonsilitis, scarlet fever, typhoid fever and diphtheria than to drink milk that is valueless as food. Another suggestion comes from an eminent English physician, Dr. Walter Edmunds of London, who urges that cows’ milk be discarded in favor of goats’. Writing to the Lancet, he says: “Goats practically never have tuber- cle, therefore their milk can be given without pasteurizing; further, it can be obtained fresh and clean. I once caught in a test tube milk from the teat of a goat being milked by a boy; the test tube wzs placed in an ircuba- gave me a bunch of violets last even- ing with a deliciously apt sentiment! ‘They seemed to kiss with a hundred fairy delicate lips, their beauty spoke like a song.'” At which Jerome gritted his teeth and almost snarled, and commented in an undertone: “Rot!” Twice Ada asked her lover to accom- pany her to the city and attend one of the readings at the “soul shop.” The high priestess of the cult was to preside. She was descrided to Jerome as same rare princess of light, beauty and brains; but he resisted the mag- netic influence. “I understand that she collects two dollars a head in advance at these sesthetic seances,” he advised Ada. “Barnes inherited his money; I have to earn mine. I'm saving it for a little tor and remained sterile. Goats are | small and cleanly animals, and can be kept in health even in the center of a large town; their milk is said to be better for infants than cows' milk be- cause the curd is finer.” The Goat society of England cale'u- lates that for every 24 cents spent on the keep of a goat it returns one quart of milk. American Scholarship. It American scholarship is not tn place it is in power. If it does not carry the eléction today, it determines the policy of tomorrow. Calm, pa- tient, confident, heroic in our busy material life, it perpetually vindicates the truth that the things which are unseen are eternal.—George Willlam | L= FO Curtis, | hot even have to be considered. We Refurnishedand thoroughly renovated, and everything Clean, Comfortable and First-class. | Dining Room Service Unexcelled. | Rates Reasonable. » Your Patronag: Cordially Tavited. B PRSP Rgndrdds 3 | i You Are Not Getting Full | Value Out of Your Paper i Unless You Read the I ADVERTISEMENTS Charming Effect In Black and White. simply made, with a few evenly n-' ranged folds of fullness around the belt. By topping it with a brocaded I or oddly embroidered girdle a fas- cinating glimpse of the same will show just under the slanting waist- line of the coat. And in these little things, as well as the big ones, each new model is distinctive; the commonplace does The Dplace to get harness 12 at have to look back over the past ten |barness headquarters. years to actually realize how differ- |erything needed to ride or drive a, horse and of good quality at rcason- able prices. From the heaviest team har- Special attention to repair work of all kinds. ent this year is from others in mat- ters of dress.—Washington Star. harness to the lightest buggy ness this is headquarters. Foolish Celebrant. E. L. H. Hohenthal, associate of the National Sons of Temperance, was talking in Manchester about Chrllo-i mas. “The wise,” he sald, “celebrate’ Christmas temperately. Their Christ- c ! mas drink is tea or coffee, milk or; ¢! i ey lemonade. l “The wise are not like Blanc, who was asked, the morning after Christ- ' mas: | *“‘Well, Blano, how was Hi Roller’s Christmas dinner? “‘The best I ever drank’ was the ml,‘n 1 that cough hang on. Stop it before it goes too far. L ~*—> Heed the warning. Get IS OUR MLITO Which is proven by our six years success in Lakeland. Maker of the National Steel LUNG BALSAM reinforced concrete Burial for coughs snd colds, Vault St bronehitis.cro Building Blocks of all discrip- ing eough, lu and tions. throat troubles. At " yourdruggists in25¢ botties. Acceptno substitute. and 8-ft Fench Post: in fact anything made of Cement. BY HENLEY AND HENLEY We have ev- ! Red Cement, Pressed Brick, White Brick, Pier Blocks, 3 and 4 inch Drain Tile, 6, 7 SALE m_LKN'f) FLORIDA NATIONAL VAULT G0, HUSBAND RESCUED ' DESPAIRING WIFE After Four Years of Discouraging| ! had gotien so weak 1 could notstaad, » and I gave up in despair. | Conditions, Mrs. Bullock Gave AeB oy St s el i UpinDespair. Husband Cardui, the woman’s tonic, and I com- Gane % Bostnn menced taking it. From the very firsg dose, 1 could tell it was helping me, | can now walk two miles without kg tiring me, and am doing all my work.” 1 you are all run down from womanly troubles, don’t give tp.in despalr. Try Cardui, the woman’stonic. It has helped more than a million women, in its 50 Catron, Ky.—In an interesting letter from this place, Mrs. Bettie Bullock writes as follows: *I suffered for four years, with womanly troubles, and during this time, 1 could only sit up for a little . while, and could not walk anywhere at|years of continuous success, and should | "all. At times, | would have severe pains | surely help you, t00. Your druggist has Ilnmylettlklc. sold Cardul for years. He knows whag' it will do. Ask him. He will recome mend it. Begin taking Cardui today, Write to: Chattanooga Medicine Advisory Dept., Chattanooga, Tenn., %‘ ) Instructions en your case and 64- book, me Treatment for Women," sent in 'h“‘. wIappet. e ‘The doctor was called in, and his treat- ment relieved me for a while, but I was soon confined to m bed again, After that, nothing seemed to do me any good. ;;E'O%O‘S'QE‘D‘WWWEOM‘!OMQ‘S’Q D G g Phone 46 THE ELECTRIC STORE f : 307 E. Main St. O3 SR w . Dealers in 3 Reliable Material and Workmanship 2 g Florida Electric and Machinery Co. 3 PO O OHBTRIOMO RO OISO RO 2O 1202 The Lgkeland : Steam Laundry | fas 22 0 Ll 4 Dt e IS THE iSamtarz” FRPPPReee 2 LAUNDRY § SBDPPPIdid No disease germs can live in Clothing that are sent to us, and we are Careful in the Laundrying, not to Damage S the Garment. If you send your Clothing to US, it will not only Look Clean and Pure, but IT WILL BE SO. 3 Our wagons cover the entire City. If you have a package you are anxious to get to the Laundry before the wagon comes around, Phone us, and let us show you how ¢ soon the Boy will be there for it. 3 PHONE 130 CHS 0PN OO0 20 : ii A NEW FIRM, But Not 'a NEW MAN 4 THE Lakeland Electrical Supply Company will be open for business in about ten days, with an up-to- date line of Lightiig Fixtures, Electric Irons, Percula- tors and other useful things of the very highest quality. All work will be personally supervised by an expert Electrician. Lakeland Electrical Supply Co. C. B. LOCKE. MGR. hadaaasatl s st el L TR RIS ! PH. FISCHER & SO ESTABLISHED SINCE 1394 _Equipped with Modern Electrical Ma- chinery we are able to do your Repairing at Short Notice. We use Best Material and Guarantee all Work at Satisfactory Prices. = Also a fine line of RATTL a R BELTS. POCKET BOOKS, St Hong mor e Work Called for and Delivered We pay Parcel Post charges one way, on amounting to $1.00 or over I:‘l;ll_: FISCHER & SON e any Work 111 SO. FLA, ONE 40 b A