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THE EVENING TELEGRAM LAKELAND, FLA., DECEMBER, 30, 1911 Sllvcrware and Cut filass SO0V VO0VI0IVOVVIOA E carry a full line of Clocks, Watches, Watch Chains, Fobs, Stick Pins, Beauty Pins, Brooches, Knives, Forks, Spoons: in fact everything that can be found in an Up- w-date Jewelry Establishment. orWatches & Are Guaranteed Timekeepers 5 D e S e e e ) DOSOOO OO The 0id Stand S enjoved @ splendid Christmas trade for which re very thankful to our patrons and the rally,. We take occasion to thus express i~ and to wish all a Happy and Prosperous v Year, i 5 b & i Lakeland Book Store 45 Seconds from the New Depot.” % THE MODERN BAKERY.u koery that Bread and machinery, which means no sweat in o~ made by hand. We guarantee to use <L of roods in our bread and cakes, in town makes f 0 203 for prompt delivery. Barhite Brothers Lakeland it 2 3000000000 HOOOV00GOVVAOVOOVVOOOOVOOOOGD We Carry a Full Line of Uandies, Nuts, Oranges, Ap- . Mles, Bananas and Other Fruits Also a Complete Stock of ligars, Tobaccos, Post Cards TRGO00GOOOMOVNOOT OO0 0IV00! i Oysters in Season ~ We lnvite Your fresn and Fine Patronage HIOID000FOV00000000 HO0OGGGOOTOIOG00 _jH O.DENNY Cowdery Building COSGOOOOD P OOOQOOOOOVOO0 OO DO Q0 b All of Our Christmas Stock At Cost THIS WEEK ONLY stk HE CENTRAL PHARMACY HONE 25 OUR I’RIC[S H. C. STEVEN D D e e D e L L ARE Rlfilfl DOCOOH0E Lakeland, Florida J MAKE CONTRASTS IN LINING Fur Sets of One Kind Are Matched With Another, in the Latest ldea of Fashion, Many of the fur sets these days are lined with a different fur, satin of a color that is sharply con trasted with that of the fur. 'This lin- ing i3 made as conspicuous as pos- sible by having the ends tlaring out in the muff, or even by having the | edges turned back intc deep cufis and | having the scart trimmed with the lining fur or satin as the case may he One novel set is of seal lined with civet, The brightly deep enffts on the two ends ol the wdlf, and is revealed again where the ¥ stall seart is tied into a bowinot. Whiie Lroadeloth ! o unusmal and very effective vition The muff has a it New York shop, dcentral portion and wide centrat | ¢ ds, lined with the broadeloth, and | L down one side of the stole is a pl.nlwl vetion of the cloth The sable bordering on a long coat | of Persian lamb is run up over the ! shoulders from the cloging, and ex- tends down around over the right side in tront, on a separate scarl section | of the Persian, which ends in a tassel A beautiiul coat of broadtail has ' two capes of the fur, the upper one being only shoulder width and almost I hidden by an Immense white foxskin. A smart suit of white corduro | bordered with skunk, and cuffs, Coat Cullnn in Many Styles, The new models of coat collars do for several of them are made with t} c8 to the waist line, but is conslderably narrower than the old style. Large round collars are also meeting with success. Hoods and hood effects are popular Some of the coats have the made so as to have an adjustable hood which can be used to cover the head when desired forms a sailor collar. Double collars, consisting of a deep | cape collar coming over the shoulders | and a small turndown collar, usually or another material, coats. New Vogue for Pearls. It is quite the rule now to see rows | of pearls appearing from inside the | collar. Formerly, when pearls were used, they were worn outside the high | collar, but now a new style is in force, and they are worn next to the neck itself, and partly allowed to hang over the front of the collar. This fashion seems to have come into vogue because of the well known ‘uqulsnn luster, should be worn next to the skin. Good Hint. Those who keep up a regular corre- | spendence with several friends will H find it a good plan to keep envelopes addres: to each of them in some conveni and to .sm\ ne er cuttings and notes of < 1terest each par T p When the time comes to write the letter it will be found that the task is rractically ac ircvv.’mi hed place, into these | Fortune in Burro's Kick. Once, in Colorado, a miner who had | been kicked in the stomach by his bur- | ro found, when he began to dust off his breeches, that it was gold dust from soft quartz adhering to ‘em— and bhe was made. or withj arked tar torm: ! and sealskin ave seen inoa oset disy .q_\-ul" fim's and has bits of | the dark fur as trimming on pockets not show the regulation sailor offect, | new shaped sailor, which almost reach- | collars | When unbuttoned it | are seen on huxne; fact thai pearls, in order to keep their | !The Gidl He Forgot Henshaw laughed when he asked Elizabeth Blake to accept Wharton, whom &he had never met, as her par- ticular escort at the theater party which Henshaw was planning to give the following week. “I'll be delighted,” said Elizabeth. “But what's the joke?" | “Jim Wharton's the joke,” replied |Hensh.m “I don't suppose he ever { took a girl anywhere in his life. He I boards where I do.” The night of the party Jim's cos- tume was certainly irreproachable, and but for a certain shyness, which troubled him more than it did any one else, his manners were irréproachable, Elizabeth was the most taciul of her sex, so, when she found that her attempts at conversation seemed merely to startle and embarrass her escort, she alked most of the time to Henshaw and Pauline Curtis, who were her neighbors on the other side. Being thus left to himself, Jim was| free to enjoy the play, | AR | 1 minutes after the | d fallen on the final act be- beth, who had beea busily ms, looked Jim and discove ered that there was no such person anywhere to be seen, She gave a lit- tle gurele of mingled surprise and amuscment. Henshaw turned toward her at the sound, and when he saw | the vacant chair he, too, laughed. “You followed instructions too well, Elizabeth™ he said. 1 didn't mean for you to obliterate yourself so ene tire! 1t he conld go beating it oft; alone like that." : Not until Jim, still chuckling to him-| self in retrospective enjoyment of the, play, took out his watch and began to wind it, which was his first step in llu-] process of going to bed, was he as-| sailed by an unpleasant and al too familiar sensation. Ne recognized it. | “I've lost something,” he sald to! himsell, bezinning to feel about in his pockets. He knit his brows and tried to think. 1t couldn’t have been his| ticket to the play, for he had been; there and come home again. “Great| play " Lo soliloguized. 1 don't know | when I've onioyved anything so mnch, 1 wonder if T o ! shraek no he Tt was curtain fore | collecting a clew. “Why, asked, thou »ocertainly went togethi lash, it all eame [ ooverwhelmine tlood, W hw» Tom returned and stopped in i von his way to his own, ho | ‘ disheveled, zon the side in his hand P turned a d the intruder, said Tom, dise I undertake to of you dejected i itti of the be Ope o ‘o “Nice man yon are'™ engtedly. “Any time | ranke a social butterfly | againt™ [ Wharton groaned. “Say.” he asked, “what does a fellow do when lhln;:s like this happen?” Tom started for lh(- door, smother ing a vell of delizht lln\ don’t hap. | pen” he gaid, thnHm-Iv as he disap- | peared About & o'clock the next morning | Menghaw was awakened by a knock ! on his door. When the door was | opened slightly Wharton's dejected | conntenance appes '«d in the crack. I “Tom,” he said, “I've hardly slept I've just got to do some out n wlnk thing." Tom reached for a p||lnu and lhrnw 30 and do “But if you | 1t at the long, sad face ji' then,” he shouted hother me again, I'll— " The door closed on the uncomplet: ed sentence, i If Wharton conid have seen Elizas | heth's mirthful countenance that eve. ning when she read his name on the card which the maid handed her he would have been tempted to dlve‘ l'adlnm: out of the window. When, <he entered the room in which he was| walting for her, however, she was un- I ¢miling enough. ! | “Good evening, Mr. Wharton,” she said, with ecold politeness. “Won't! vou have a chair.” | | “A chair? repeated Jim, looking! | about wildly. “I—I—don’t belleve I} need one, thank you. That is, 1 rant stay but a minute. Miss Blake. 1| wanted Tom to come with me to tell | vou what a fool T am. He knew I'd | do something awful. He hadn't any | husiness to make me go last night.!| | Miss Blake, T don't know what mi cay,” he went on, cheerlessly ""; !there’s anythinz I can do to square| myself, I'd be glad to do it. T know there isn’t any excuse for a bonehead | like me.” [ Jim was pallid with misery by this| time. “I know von can't forgive me | and T dom’t ask it. T just came to say | that T wish you'd get somebody to kick | me around the block. 1 can’t apolo- zize, for there's no apology that T can make. The only thing 1 can say fr»l"i myself, is that you're the firet, 1 may | say, the only girl, 1 ever forgot.” | It was not until Elizabeth had| dropped upon the piano stoo! and with | her head resting on the piano hndl very nearly gone into hysterics that Jim realized his blunder. Then be, too, laughed. Elizabeth’s picture now decorates { the back of Jim's watch, and under- neath, placed there at her request, :’r:l._tlo words: “The first and only | PAGE SEVEN I R (%] ME PROVE IT What? That 1 am selling Men's Suits for = al5, actually worth $22.50 to $30.00. Look all %) round. then come to my shep and LOOK. CB You'll be the judge. You' 11 wonder how I do it. ¢ Lakeland’s Leading Clothing Store THE HUB JOS. LeVAY Proprietor. 530G SIS OIGIGISISIBIIG G < MONEY TALKS TWEEDELL’S WE CHALLENGE COMPARISON BOTH AS REGARDS QUALITY ANL PRICE OF OUR GOODS. Sugar, 14 pounds Swift's Premium Hams, per poand Best Butter, per pound, Picnic Hams, per pound Mothers’ Oats, per package Heckers' Whole Wheat Flour, per bag Heckers' Graham Flour, per bag ... ... ... ... ... ... Heckers’ Rye Flour, per bag.. 12 pound bag best Flour 24 pound bag, Fat Mackerel, each .... Irish Potatoes, per peck .. Baby Size Cream, 6 for ........ ... amily size Cream, 3 for ...... .. CALL 59 AND WE WILL BE (-LAD Tf) ShRVE YOU E. G. TWEEDELL .. 25¢ .. 26¢c When You Want A Buggy A Wagon A Set of Harness A Lap Robe An Automcbile Robe or anything required for riding or driving, see M’GLASHAN The Hustling Harness and Buggy Man Two Stores 1909-111 South Florida We wish all our Customers and Friends d Happy and Prosperous New Year And trust that during the coming year we may be favored with your trade A Completé Line of LADIES’ 16-BUTTON KID GLOVES When desiring anything to be found in an Up-to-Date Dry Goods Store. With the Compliments of the Season. we are, Yours for business,