Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, January 2, 1913, Page 6

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We are going to give our customers a treat for the holiday season. Com- mencing Monday, December 16, we are going to dispose of all our $14 and $15 suits for $9.00. Mind This Is No Sale. Dont forget to ask for your Christmas Souvenirs. N. B.--All our75¢c and 81 Ties to go at 50c. The Hub JOSEPH LeVAY 118 Kentucky Avenue Lakeland CBOROHOSO CHOH RO OROBORORORCIOK A Snap For Quick Sale, 80 Acres § As fine land as there is in Florida, one and a half mile from station; 60 a res under good wire fence; 30 acres cultivated; 12° large bearing orange trees, 200 grapefruit trees, budded, 4 years old; 30 acres § fine pine timber; 10 acres choice hammock land cov- ered with oak: 10 acres good muck land. The first man with $2,500 cash gets this bargain, $. another $2,000 to be paid in one, two and three years. Act quick as this will not last, Call o1 write THE ALEX. HOLLY REALYY CO., Lakeland, Fla Where Can You Get Them? 4 Here at this drug store. If the doctor says you need a certain instrument or appliance come right to this store— we have it. 1| Red Cross Pharmacy Phone 89 ¥ Quick Delivery e — SOFOIRFOHOFOPODOHOTOFOIFISO P Wishing you all a Happy New Year, we are still ready to receive vyour orders. Pure Food Store W. P. Pillans & @. PHONE 93 ture That Is a Strain on the Pocket Book. Never within recollection have we taced more cheerfully the prospect of warmer clothes, for furs are so at- tractive this season that we welcome cold weather. Ermine cloaks trimmed with narrow lines of skunk or bear | prove quite singularly seductive, while ; among the less hardy type of , wrap much significant emphasis is laid on a mingling of broche velvet, mousse- line de sole and fur. Several very sensational efforts, have been launched in fur ltm:t:.' but so far the Parisienne does mot seem to favor the merely fur. trimmed muff, brobdingnagian affairs in costly wkins appealing to them as more lux- uriously impressive. Among the nov- elties is a deep cape of pelerine of fur, with one long stole end to be flung over the shoulder at will. A potably strong feeling also ob tans for flat, square or round collars of fur as a permanent equipment to habillee costume coats, while anything resembling a Directoire cut exacts the up and down collar, opening in front, an adjunct that works out with par ticular success in such pelts as er mine, sable and broadtail Colors In Parls, ~ .. Bubdued shades of every kind seent' first favorites for morning and after noon gowns, with just a lighter tint discreetly introdaced in the (trim. mings. Among the leading colors, many of them are lght, such as beige and gray, antique red, and brick red; next to these comes a darker ‘series, including claret, rust tint, mahogany, navy blue. IF YOU CAN'T GO TO SLEEP Counting, Reading and Special Diet Are Suggested as Helpful for the Wooer of Slumber. A sufferer from insomala retails & number of counsels he has received, of which the first comes from the poet M. Leconte, who says: “Open your window wide. Lie with your head as low as possible and you will sleep like & post.” “Accustom yourself to take an hour or two's rest in a deck chair after every meal” writes another. “Take down from your shelves some old-fash- foned novel of which you have an af- fectionate remembtance as one of the joys of your youth and read it while you are on your deck chair. The more you are wearied by it the better you will sleep. The secret of a good night is not to tire yourself out in the eve- ning, but to idle away the time. “An important point, though a diff- cult one, is to avold any dread of in- somnia. Personally 1 derive benefit from calculating the multiples of two or three as far as I can go. Or else | ‘count elephants;’ one elephant and one elephant make two elephants, two elephants and one elephant makes three elephants; three elephants and one elephant, and so on. : “Finally, knock off your black cof- fee, even your morning cup on rising, and take no meat in the evening. For lunch eat nothing but fruit, and for dinner a vegetable soup, vermicelll, mashed potatoes, and one or two bis- cuits, “If in spite of all this sleep refuses to come try reading. But don't read anything lively or Interesting. In my own case it s very rare that insomnia does not succumb to two or three pages of Plato’s ‘Phaedo.’ “An eminent doctor of Lyons says much the same thing. Another sug- gests: ‘Count slowly from one up- wards. It is very rare one gets up to 200 without going to sleep. It is on record, however, that one victim got up to 16,987, and then it was time to get up!"” Very Much So. “I daresay that grumpy old million- aire did not leave one jolful recollec tion behind him when he died.” “Oh, yes, he did He left a merry widow." “I'm with the people!” exclaimed the balloonist, as the rope broke and he fell into the grand stand. | THE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAK ELAND, FLA., JAN. 2, 1913, | FURS ELABZ2ATE AND RICH MAKES AN ACCEPTABLE GIFT. Look! Look! ; Season's Styles Call for an Expendl Case for Doilies Need Not Be Expen- sive, but Will Show the Work of ! Loving Hands. One could not make a more accept- able gift to an engaged or married girl friend than a dolley like the one fllustrated. Purchase some crepe paper or cre tonne of a pretty pattern, and about two and one-half yards of one and one- baif inch wide ribbon to match, and cut out two pleces of thick cardboard about two inches across. Cover one side of cardboard with paste, lay the crepe paper over it, and stretch it quite tight across. Cut it away all around, leaving about an inch for turning over. Paste the other side of cardboard and press the edge of crcpe paper on it. Then cut out & round of white paper, rath- er smaller than the cardboard, and | * place it so that it covers the edges | ° of the crepe paper. Before allowing the paste to stiffen, slip one end of the ribbon (which has pretiously ben cut in four equal lengths) be- tween the white paper and the card- board, and press firmly. other end of ritbon exactly opposite. Repeat instructions on second plece of cardboard, then press both ander weights. The ribbons in bows at each side. If you use cretonne the lining of | X each circle should be cream sateen and the cretonne is sewed to the |3 sateen, not pasted as the paper is, VOGUE -OF THE SiIIRTWAIST Original and Becoming Designs Mark the Work, Which 8hows Excel- lence of Designers. The shirt which is worn with the tallor-made of today {8 very smart, very original and very becoming, and lovely designs have been evolved, even | in the face of the fact that the two- plece suit, consisting of a gown with coat to match, is stil*immensely pop- ular, Among the materials which are utl lized for these shirts fashion does not discard the homeliest ingredients, For instance, there is Berlin wool, which is masquerading is a manner which Is entirely different to the role it used to play in the days when our grandmothers spent hour after hour at their embroidery frames evolving gaily hued parrots and cabbage roses, for the decoration of walnut wood chairs and sofas. The ground work of a shirt treated in this fashion is of tulle—fine, clear and soft—and this is covered with an frregular and slightly conventional work design made of darned work for which the white Berlin wool in ques- ton i8 used. The darning is, howev- er, very close and very neat, the out- lines being sharp and clear cut. A very striking contrast is afforded by a tiny turned-down collar of black charmeuse, a similar bit of the mate- rial forming the cuff, while there is besides a small vest of mousseline de sole set in narrow plaits, and the front is punctuated by a serried row of cut jet buttons. Another and even more beautiful shirt was carried out in white chiffon, with a motif all over it worked in rich bright gold thread. Don’t Suffer! Place an- |3 SKIPPER ELECTED BANK PRESIDEy The following is an editorial no- an earnest o tice from the Lakeland Evening Tele ity, He is an able ¢, . gram of Dec. 20, 1912: qualified 0 guide th, ;. " ™ At a special meeting of the board servatively ang safely, ., © ® of directors of the American State suflclent progressiven,.. . bank, held last night, J. L. Skipper i1 growth and the leg; was chosen as president of that in- sion of its business. stitution, vice R. L. Mayes resigned.| The American siay. ;. Mr. Mayes has made a splendid ex- its doors in October o () ecutive officer for this young but though the third banking thriving institution, but finds the ' established in Lakelqy pressure of personal business so great ing a fair share of the s‘n.; q that he s compelled to give up the Perity of the city, ang u‘n‘do, p position, in justice both to himself wanagement, with ¢} g and the dank, and his resigmation ' city, will undoubteq)y . was therefore reluctantly accepted. | hecome an importan: f:.i t ,,i The selection of Mr. Skipper to'community’s financiy) 1., kead the affairs of this institution is ' vertisement,) e e Another shipment of those delicious Peanut Butter Kisses have . nved. When wanting something ip candies don’t forget them. S§c Sack. t its success 4y Cess ang Urog LW H. O. DENNY | PHONE 226 ¥ 900 L ............. Lakeland Artificial Stonc Wors Near Electric Light Plant MAKES RED CEMENT PRESSED BRRICK CALL AND SEE THEM. CAN SAVE YOU MoagY Crushed Rock, Sand and Cement for Sa:¢ BUILDING BLOCKS OF ALL DESCRIPTION® 18 and 18 inch Drain Tile for Sidewalk, @ate Posts, Fiwe . Mounds, Eto, Good Stock on Hand WE Deliver Free of Cha-e H. B. ZINAMERMAN. Proprietor. ““The Home For Savings” Through the Door of a Bank Many a yourg man has wen his way upward in the business world. The habit of saving in a representative institution---as well as the belpfui as- sistance which this bank renders it- patrons---demands consideration. The doors of this bank are open to as- sist every worthy enterprise of indi- vidual or corporation. I THE AMERICAN STATE BANM OF LAKELAND We Pay 4 Per Cent Interest Smith For All hinds of ——— e—————————— “1 had been troubled, a little, for nearly 7 years,” wiltes Mrs. L. Fincher, in a letter from Peavy, Ala, “but | was not taken down, until March, when | went 0 bed and had to have a doctor. He did all he could for me, but I gotno better. I hurt all over, and | could not rest. At last, I tried Cardui, and 000 I began to improve. Now I am la very good health, and able 10 do all my housework.” TAKE The ARDU | Woman Tonic You may wonder why Cardul is 80 successful, afler other remedies have failed, The answer Is that Cardul Ig successful, because it is composed of sclentific ingredients, that act curatively on the womanly system. It is a medicing for women, and for women only. It builds, strengthens, and restores weak and ailing women, to health and happiness, It you suffer like Mrs. Fincher did, take Cardl It will surely do for you, what it did for her. At all druggists, Wrile &s: Ladies’ Advisory Dest., Chattansagn Mediciae Ce., u&-ummumug-‘., mw'-m'l‘l § REAL ESTATE Sec Us For ROSEDALE and PARK MILLLols Deen & Bryant Building Lakeland. Fla. g = A SOUARE DEAL It you wish to rent & house or have a house you wish to rent; It you have a house to sell or wish to purchase one; It, 1n tact, you desire to buy or seil anything in the line of real estate, this 1s my specialty. See me before you close a de!. Full information given cheerfully ang freely. N. K. LEWIS Room 1, Raymondo Bldg. ’O‘.O"O"N')1"')'i'"J~W)‘l>i‘)li"')’!'.rd»fl‘)'i'f)‘wz

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