Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, November 28, 1911, Page 2

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i | f A AR e e A Al e o rAGE TWO 0000000000000 0Q0 =} 2 © CHURCH CALENDAR. g o V00C00C0V00000000 Presbyterian Church. Rev. W. P. Chalmers, pastor, Sunday school 9:43 a. m. Morning sermon 11:00 a m, Evening sermon at 7:00 p.om, Yo R0 in co-opera- tlon with other societivs at the Cum- oerland Presbyterian, Prayermecting, Wednesday, 7 130, Christian Church, Geo. WV, Weimer, Pastor. Sunday school v:45 a. m. Preaching, 11:00 a. m. Y. P. S. (. E. co-operates with at Cumberliaag P'res- ieties ‘llh"l' SO wterian church. Evening sermon, 7:30 a. m. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH. Corner Florida avenue and Bay St. The Rev. William Dudley Nowlin, D. D., pastor. Sunday school 9:45 a. m. H. C, Stevens, superintendent. Preaching Sunday at 11 a. m. and 135" 0 ‘m. Werkly prayermeeting Wednesday evening at 7:50, Woman's Mi ciety Monday Baptizt Young at G:15 poom Regular monthly business meeting first Weoednesday at 7:30 p. m, East Lakeland Mission. Sunday school at & p, m. K, A, Milton, superintendent, Prayer- mecting 'l and Aid So- fonary 20op.om. People’s Meeting huarsday at 7 p. m, Episcepal Church. Rev, J. 1t Weddell, rector., Kach excepting only third Sotdiy of cach month. the B o e e e o e i S s Sund. - hiosl every Sunday at 10 a,. m, Service 11:00 a. m. Ever Frayer 5:00 p,om, - E o uch. South, W, '. i {; Pastor, Sune oty s ohool 9045 aoom, Mo mon 1100 a, m, Fpw beatne GRO0 o poom. Eveni T:00 p.om. Prayermecting - Wednesday 8:00 p. m. Lutheran Church. Rev. 1. J. Matbias, Pastor. Sunday school 10:00 a. m, Preaching service 11:00 a. m., and T:00 p. m., second and fourth Sun- days. Catholic Church, Rev. A, I, Fox, Pastor, Services are held on second and fourth Sundays at 9:00 a, m. Cumberland Presbyterian. Without pastor, Sunday school at the regular hour Y. P. S C.E at 6:30 p. m, " THE LIONS ARE COMING. There are some wonderful llons with the John H. Sparks shows that will exhibit here in a few days. They are not only of amazing size and beauty, but they have been trained to do some of the most thrilling acts ever presented to an audience. Herr Fritz Brunner, the world’s greatest llon tamer, was born and raised in the junglc of equatorial Africa, and from childhood was accustomed to Dear the roars of the man-eating kings of the forest that prewled about his cabin at night. His father once captured some lion cubs which he trained to ald him in his hunting expeditions. Thus reared the boy naturally became a llon tamer and hunter. Selecting some cubs of the | largest specles known, he reared them and educated them to perform feats that would fllustrate the amaz- fog strength and agility of these beasts. During the performance of the | Sparks shows a g cup of these mon- ! ster animals will turned loose in a ! great steel enclosure in full view of the audience. Herr Brunner will en- ter this enclosure, unarmed, and put these llons through some astonishing performances. It is the most thrilling act of the kind ever seen and will aever be forgotten by the beholder. Like every other act and feature presented with the Sparks shows it Is far away from and superior to any- thing of the kind ever seen before. ! There are numerous other trained animal acts in which tigers, leopards, bhyenas, tremendous elephants, ete., will obey the commands of thelr fear less masters THE FLORID\ ORANGE. A sometings nme uninviting | looking zlebe but filled almost to: burstir with 1l conceatrited os- sence of the «ni Vs, fewelad rain- drops, balmy aiss a1l siowing, zold- en sunshin “Lard of Flow- ers.” Disregard the mere “Drink the Juice Ambrosia indecd for the ing, healthful, tonic for the appearanc yon will find it a food truly “Fit Gods.” Delicious, refresh- invigorating jaded nerves, . and a! { would tell Helen that he supposed he | Art had not eaten more | town. The Honeymooners “What are you doing here?" de manded the girl who had just bought six initial handkerchiefs. “One short week ago you bade us all farewell and went away to stay a month in the country!” “That's all right,” said the girl wko was looking at lavender bordered hand- kerchiefs. “I was there a month all in one week! 1 came home because I had to do so to retain my sanity! Yet when the Horans and the Worleys ask- ed me over to visit them at the cottage they had taken together for the season, I thought 1 was going to have the time of my life!” “Well, didn’t you?” “l did!” emphatjcally said the girl who was buying lavender bordered handkerchlefs, “And may the fates preserve me from having it again! It was all my own fault and I should have known better! Any person bright enough to be let run at large should have more sense than to tackle one bride and groom—and to think of any human being having the Iron- plated nerve and reckless daring to attempt to breathe the same atmos- phere with two pairs of newly married people makes me absolutely dis- gusted! “I resolved not to make a nuisance of myself when 1 descended on the dovecote,” explained the girl with her eye on the lavender colored handker- chiefs. “I planned to slip off for long walks by myself and to develop a fond- ness for solitary rowing bouts on the lake and to discover dozens of letters that 1 simply had to go away by myself to write. | was going to give those people plenty of time to coo without the dark cloud of my presence embar rassing them! 1 needn't have wor- ried, for they did not pay any more attention to me than they would if I had been composed of mist. “What 1 found that I simply could not endure was not any excess sentl- mentality but excess golicitude on the part of the brides. Now, I've known Art Worley all my life, ever since we used to puil each other's hair and steal cookies together, and of all the dare- devil, reckicss boys I ever knew, he was the worst, lle was always get- ting drenched in rainstorms, upset in lakes, sunstruck and mangled in accl- dents, and as his mother was one of those comfortable, placid women with a divine faith in the nine lives of cats and boys she never pald any atten- tion to his mishaps. He grew up as tough as a hickory and able to thrive on a diet of nalls, “That is why Grace's conduct first took away my breath and then in- furfated me. ‘Darling,’ she would say anxiously to Art at the breakfast ta- ble, pausing suddenly as the awful thought smote her. 'l forgot to lay out your heavier underwear for you, and there's quite a chill wind today! 1 Just know you'll take your death of cold! Promise me that you'll change at once—I should never forgive myself if you got cold in your head through my horrid carelessness!’ “And Art Worley, before my very eyes, would gaze at her fatuously and frown a trifle with worry and then would agree that his precious health demanded the next heaviest weight. He would shiver a trifle, too, and say that the wind did feel cold. “That would start Helen. ‘Harry,’ she would murmur to her husband, ‘do vou feel the cold, too? Now, don't be foolishly brave and say no when you're really suffering! You know you sald last night that you had a pain in your shoulder! 1 just knew you shouldn't Iave brought in those great heavy armfuls of stovewood! You tax your strength too much!’ “Yet this same Harry Horan took all the athletic honors at college. He re- sembles a giant of prehistoric days in size. Yet Harry, instead of howling in derision, would look serlously and was foolish and that he must be more careful! “Then Grace would capture me as I started for a walk and would pour her troubles into my ear. It seemed that than two spoonfuls of his breakfast food that morning, and did I think he was going to be ill? “Then | would brutally say that Art Worley looked as solid and tough and lasting as the big oak tree out in front she would indignantly retort that I had no heart and didn’t appreciate the real delicacy of his constitution. “When 1 escaped from her Helen would approach and weel. on my shoul- der and demand to be told if I thought Harry would stop loving her because i the coffee had been so weak at break- fast, due to her criminal neglect. She felt that she had failed as a wife and she could not bear to think of her ; own frightful shortcomings a moment ! longer. | “After 1 had endured this sort of thing for onc whole week I threw all my clothes helter-skelter into my trunk and caught the next train back to 1 really felt that immediate es- cape was the only thing that could save my mind from giving away ut- terly. “That's why I'm buying lavender handkerchiefs that will fade in the first wash—I want to do esomething | foolish 1 yself to counteract the fool- | ishness of others during that long | week!” THE EVENING TELEGRAM LAK ELAND, FLA., NOV. 28, 1911 _—_—_——m Lakeland's UP-TO-DATE Haberdasher | DIRECTIONS FOR MAKING SERV- ICEABLE SLEEPING SOCKS. | Comfort of the Smaller Members' of the Household Especially | Served by These Useful | Little Articles. About three-ounce four-ply wool nnd a bone hook, about No. 12. ‘ Work 53 chain stitches, turn. Row I.—A treble in the fourth from | hook and ! in each of the other 4% stitches—31 trebles in all, the turning | chain counting as one treble. ; Rows 2 and 3.—*, turn with 2 chain, ' a treble in back thread of each stitch of previous row. Repeat from °. Row 4.—Work a tricot loop through the back thread of each stitch of previous row, work back as usual. Seventeen more rows of plain tri- cot. i Do not break off, but with a fresh | plece of wool work plain tricot across the 17 middle stitches. Seventeen more rows upon this. Decrease each of the next two rows by taking two stitches together on each side the toe. Work off all the 13 stitches like ! double crochet, then work a single crochet or chain stitch into the end | stitch of each row back to the long | rows. Cast off the wool, and secure | on the wrong side of the work. Recommence from where the wool was left, and work a double crochet | into each stitch right round to the | other end of the long row, ®, turn with one chain, and work a double erochet into the back thread of each | stitch of the previous row, back to | the starting point, repeat from * till | there are five ribs. Decrease each of | the next four rows (two ribs) by taking two stitches together twice on ecach side of the toe, plice the two sides of the foot together, and join |y K on the with single crochet Wrong .ld:'( : < T o OSTEOPATH PHYSICIAN ' Notions, ete, Everything, in fact, in the way of winn Note.-—In working doubie crochets o We have not gpace to enumerate our 1 ¥ o B § | ur many an maryelo on tricot, take the same thread as for | Rooms S, 6 and 17, Bryant Building b R ey md. & ! any i ‘;]l |“”\- ; 8, say, q See, § ' Y satist tricot; and when working along the |2 Lakrtaxn, Frowvia i i Vb b el second side of the front, take the tri- | cot thread beneath the single crochet. Join the leg elther bLy single cro- chet or by sewing. For the top: Row 1.—With the wrong side of the sock outwards, work two trebles with a chain between them into one of the chain stitches at the top of the work, | ®, pass two, two treble with a chain between in the next, and repeat from ¢ all round, join. Row 2.—Two trebles with a chaln between them under each chain lmch of previous row. Row 3.—*, four trebles with a chlin between (-nrh. under the nearest chain, a double crochet under the next, repeat from *, join round. Rows 4 and 5.—Two more rows like last, but working the trebles upon the double crochets, and a double crochet in the middle of the group of trebles. Last Row.—Three chain, one double crochet in every third stitch, join round and fasten off. Make a chain and tassels of double | —- wool and thread through the third row of trebles, or tie round the ankle, as preferred. Fashion Hints, Surah silk and soft-finished taffeta are again meeting with popular fa- C vor. These silks have unusual wear- Ing qualities, and are at the same time J light in weight and particularly .'uhpt able to the season’s styles. Silk serge ‘ Is also a popular fabrie, while voiles | end henrietta cloth are much in evi- | dence for semi-dressy one-piece gowns. i Printed chiffon combined with soft messalines are used for some of the handsome new models of a distinctly dressy type. Brilliant colors and un- usually rich bejeweled trimmings will be quite the vogue throughout the en- tire winter. Dull, burnt ghades and quiet effects have apparently had their day, and no gown iIs considered quite perfect without at least an overdrap ery or an underlay of some one of the | J. gorgeous strong colors associated with | the coronation festivities.—Harper's | Bazar. i HOW TO KEEP ORANGES. After purchasing a box of lizlitl have it delivered as soon as possible, cach orange taken from the box. the tissue wrap removed, and the oranges examined. Discard oranges ing decay, carefully dry the sound oranges with a soft cotton cloth, and place them where the temperature is as mnearly uniform as possible— laying them either on the floor or on a shelf. with the fruits close to- gether but not actually touching Fruit so treated will keep perfectl \‘ sound for weeks. | show- | |cROCHET AND TRIcOT.® 'Phone: JINO. S. EDWARDS 703{"3‘(&..,0":' PR PSR IO GHO We L= B Bl w Qe CHQDO PSODQDOF O DODOIO O = 2010 Q0 00P0s S & & Tibh DRANE BUILDING | The Professions | DR. R R SULLI PHYSICIAN and Gynecology Duilding LAKELAXND, entucky FLA. ' DR. W. R, GROOVER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Rooms 3 and 4 Kenwucky Building LagrLAND, FLORIDA, Dr. Sarah E Wheeler | DR. SAMUEL F. SMITH SPECIALIST Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Glasses Scientifically Prescribed Residence 22, Office 141, Bryant Bldg, DENTIST Established in July, 1 Rooms 14 and 15 Kentucky Building Residence 84 Phones: Office 180; Attorney-at-Waw Office in Munn Lakeland, DR. W. S. IRVIN | R T R TR e = O OIOIQTQIOIQIOIIIOIQIOIQIOIOO & - Are Headquarters FOR MEN’S FURNISHINGS, STET- SON HATS, WALK-OVERand HAN- AN SHOES, SAVOY SHIRTS TAILOR-MADE SUITS GUARANTEED FIT AND STYLE Made by STORRS SCHAFER & CO. D000 0 b o WOODS & CO. PHONE 298. LAKELAND, 113 = Ry — —fi. Our Mid-Season VAN, | Is Now In Full Blast And Money Saving Prices prevail in every department your opportunity to buy Dry Goeds, Skirts, Sweaters, Shoes, ! { SRR e | Dress Goods, Silks Clothing, Hats, Extra Pants, by Sale Lasts Fifteen Days. Don't Let This Opportuniny I’ass You By J. W. CHILES Fla. 900 | Building, Bryant Block, Lakeland, Fla. JNO. S. EDWARDS LAKELAND, FLORIDA, TUCKER & TUCKER Pet Cream, small, 6 for ... ... ... ... ... ... . 25 —Lawyers— : : Raymondo Bldg, Pet Cream, e oo SEPTSRNCTI Lakeland, Florida Van Camp Cream, small, 6 for ...... SRRy R. B. HUFFAKER, a8 Camp Cream, large, 3 for ... ... ... —Attorney-at-Law— i New Florida Syrup, qt. bottle ... ... ... ... ... 2 |Roor 7 Stuart Bidg. Bartow, Fla. l% Hickers' and Mothers' Oatmeal, .. ... ... ... 10 —— - :% % Heckers' prepared buckwheat... ... ... ... 10c and 2 M. TRAMMELL, | New Seeded Raisi ; ; pressnn § § o aisins, currants and Citron fof fruit Offices, Dryant Building 3 &: Lakeland, Fla. 212 Large 15 oz. bottle Olives . . . TS ) ROGERS & BLANTON % 6: Large 14 oz. bottle stuffed Olives ... ... ... . Lawyers. B 3 Bottled Pure Honey ...... ... ... ... Attorney-at-Law. ; § Office in Munn Building i Yours to please, LAKELAND, FLORIDA. b4 & B. Streater C. F. Kennedy '3 D B D I C KSO N STREATER & KENNEDY S Contractors and Builders. Cheerfully Furnished. Let ug talk with you + your building large or small Telephone 169, or 104 Blue. L. M. Fatch. J. H. J.W.ELLIS «~Real Estate Ageat... City and Country Property; proved and Unimproved Groves a Specialty: WE HAVE SOME OF THE FINEST TRUCK LAND IN FLORIDA Room 1, Raymondo Building. Phone 309. 'Phone 319 Fine Salt Mackerel a. .« Mullet ... ... ... ... l Nice Assortment of fresh Vegetables, fruits and nuts e e about LIVIVQIVIODIOIOIOD IO DIOTOTOIOFOI DD ¢ '+ Lakeland Artificial Stone Works Near Electric Light Plant MAKES RED CEMENT PRESSED BRI( O Gentry. Im-i CALL AND SEE THEM. CAN SAVE YOU MONEY g orange| 3 Crushed Rock, Sand and Cement for SaI¢ : BUILDING BLOCKS OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS : : 12 ard 18 inch Drain Tile for Sidewalk, Gate Posts. I 4 Mounds, Ete. Good Stock on Hand WE Deliver ¢ H. B, ZIAMERMAN. Prolmetor e FHRIOIDI0 MIOTHIR TGS TOSOSO OO f,» e e

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