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THE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAK ELAND, " 3 3 isten! Big Cut in Maz- da Lamp Prices 15. 20 and 25 Watt were 50c now 40: 40 Watt were 35¢ now......... 45¢ 60 Watt were 75¢, noW......... 60c 100 Watt were $1.10, now...... 80c i50 Watt were $1.60, now. .. $1.35 950 Watt were $2.60, now. .. $2.25 By Mazda lamps and reduce your light bill. For sale by Jorida [Iectnc & Machinery Co. DRANE BUILDING ONE 46 | | ‘WWO*CWW@“MWWW — —————— e ——— # LOOK # WE HAVE PUT IN A NEW LINE OF ICE CREAM WHICH WE GET FROM TAMPA. GIVE US A CALL LAKE PHARMACY A R L u Rl et Tat Mot Yot Sut ud B0 Sl o PHONE 226 Fresh Ovysters, Fruits, Candes, Nuts and all Confections PROMPT DELIVERY H. O. DENNY OPIPOPOPOPC PO s D OPOS 0P L FOROEOROHOHOIIFOSOPOSO S 0 For LYV LYo Tar Tat Tl o We have in our employ, Mr. S. Miller, who is an expert in hisline. Let him figure with you on your Sheet Metaland Tin Work Do all kind of Roofing, For Gravel, Slate, Tile, Tin. Make or repair any- thing in SheetIron or Tin, A carload of the Famods Strawberry Cup, the kind that fits the Refrigerator Boxes. A tull line of Sash, Doors, Builders’ Hardware, all at prices which will make it to your i1 terest to let us have a share of your trade. | heJackson ilson Co. fall, Woll, of conrse 1 oean change it | if you say =0 [ “No u=c trying to please that bunceh, ordering chocolate and then claming it was mini lemonade! Gee, this sort of a job is ficrce and wearin® on a girl! “Look there, quick! Just coming in! That's Daisy Duberry, and she draws $500 a week for doing a half hour stunt on the st Think of it! She doesn’t Jook so much, but | wish to gooduess 1 knew where she buys her complexion. Isn't it a peach? 1'm erazy about that hat she's got on, and I'm going to fix my hair like hers before I'm a day older “Oh, look at that! Kitty nabbed her! ‘Spose she thinks she’ll get ), FLA,, FEB. 4, 1913 ONE WITH A FUZZY HAT By GEORGIA HORN. “Land sakes! There he comes again, Susie! Why, you know—the one with the fuzzy hat an’ the plait in his overcoat. He sure has got his eye on you! Yestid'y when | come up to the table to take his order instead of you he was so upset he ordered rasp- berry sundae instead of his usual chocolate soda. An’ raspberries out for months! Go on— none of us will interfere—you wait on him! “Mebbe he's a millionaire. That would be fine for Susie. Nobody can act more like a lady than she can, only she's got her hair too light. I'm 80 glad mine is a nachurl blond. Lilly, see that old lady just coming in? The one who looks as though she was go- ing to die in a minute or two, and bought her clothes in the remnant basement? Well, you listen to me— that's old Mrs. White-Jones, and she has a million relatives waiting to get their hands on her bank account, and she's tough as a nut. Travels all over the world alone at her age and never looseng up a penny “Y'ought-a seen her nephew in here with her the other day. He helped her out of the electric just as careful as though he was afraid she might | accidently sink through the pavement. ‘Auntle, dear. says he, ‘try a riffle parfait with nuts—you'll like it!’ ‘Young man, says she, ‘piffle parfaits are 25 cents a piece, and as long as I'm paying the bill 1 guess you'll get along on a ten cent drink! Extrava- gance is the curse of the age!' And then I'll bet she drove downtown and bought a bushel of diamonds. “Two v'nilla sodas and one mint lemonade? Yes'm. No'm; there ain't no strawberries now. Why, 1 don't | know—I expect they get tired growing this time of year. “See that party in the blue suit and feathers? She's mad because | can't pick strawberries off'n the chandelier for her. I'bet it hasn't been very long that she had enough noney to come into a swell shop like this here one is. “Yes'm, you ordered chocolate, Beg pardon you said so distinetiy. 1 didn't hear you mention mint lemonade at tickets or something, an’ I've always waited on Miss Duberry whenever she's been in! I'm going to tell Kitty what I think of her! Jealous thing! | Not that I care for the tip she al- | ways gives—it's just the principle of the thing! “Think you're smart don't you, Kit?' I'll pay you back for jumping my cus- tomers—she is, too! Miss Duberry is a p'rticular friend of mine, I'd have | you know. | “Yes, sir; 1 was just on my way to wait on that farthest table. Nobody | sems to pay attention to the new cus- | tomers unless it's me. Not that I} want to name any names, but there's no use expecting Kitty to wait on any one else, as long as Miss Duberry is in here. “Guess that’ll hold Kit for awhile The old man's cross, and he won't do a thing to her, “Two maple sundaes and two hot chocolates? Yes'm. “Get next to my parties In the cor- | v the way, for days it the ends are QOVTOTOOOI ner, girls. They made their hats at | home and they've got on rings enough | to light the shop if they were hung | up high. What do you make of that? | They must be somebody. Nobody but big guns can be so contrarylike, The others don't dare, “What? Hot chocolate? Beg par don, ma'am, I'm vurry careful to get my orders correctly, and what you said was two maple sundaes and twe chocolate ice cream sodas. Nothing was sald about hot chocolate at all But, of course, we aim to please, aud I'll change it for you if you insist! “Gee! I wish women woul! change their minds so! They neve know what they order! Here, Josi you take these hot chocolates to those two vinegar cruets with the awful hats and the rings over there—1'v got to fix my hair. “It's about time for that young mu: with the lovely eyes to drop in for his tea. I think he must be English and sometimes younger sons get to be dukes and things, you know Where's my vanity case? Well, I lik« your nerve, Susie! [— “Yes, sir, I'm attending to business I didn’'t know you objected to a girl's sitting down just a minute when she's worked till she's ready to drop! “I'd like to hit him, I would! Al ways snooping around for f ar we're not earning our pay! Gee! The life r ! we are leadin’ 18 a hard ome for a girl."—Chicago Daily News, Where Her Shoes Were. Dorothy, aged five, was having trouble assembling her clothes on u-ldu. “Why, where are your shoes, | Dorothy ?” asked mamma. “I don't know, mummie,” the five yearold gravely replied. “But I saw them walking around with Margaret | In them last night after I had gone | to bed."—Indlanapolls News. | monntain-ash berries. | ni absolute necessity this winter, and ; with & gown In a very desirable man- | | of entertainment. WATCHSTAND EASY TO HAKEI Of Velvet, With Foundation of Stiff Cardboard, It Is an Ornament for | the Dressing Table. This is a simple and prectical watchstand, that is very easy to make. For the foundation a plece of cardboard should be cut out in the ' shape shown by diagram A In the f-' lustration, and in the upper part of that side which is to form the front of the stand, a large dress hook should be securely sewn on, but prior to do- | ! ing this, holes should be made in the cardboard for the thread to pass The cardboard is scored across with & sharp penknife, at the point indicat- ed by the dotted line in diagram A, | and then smoothly covered on both sides with velvet and trimmed at the edge with a fine silk cord. A small slit must be cut in the ma- terial for the hook to pass through, and for appearance sake, that por- tion of 1he hook which {8 visible may be bocod round and round with nar- row ril bon, chosen of a color to match ! the velvet. Inside the stand a piece of some of the same narrow ribbon 18 gown (o prevent it opening too far, ard e gs illustrated by diagram B, which 1w g side view of the stand. <o clearly shows the na- (e article, Hnt further teh PAGE 3EVEM —— FOHOBOFOFOFOHPOIOIOLOBOTHH0 $OIOSIIISOIOIOHOSUINI0I040 Are_ You_ Satisfied With Where You fat? For nice meals, good homecooking and pleasant rooms, apply to MRS. HENRY BACON 211 South Tennessee Ave.—Miss Browning's Home | Are You Going to Build? If so, or if you need lumber or building material of any kind, or for any purpose, let us figure with you. In mill .work, doors, sash, blinds, etc., we are the leaders. ARE YOU GOING TO PAINT? We can save you money on your paint bill and guarantee sat- isfaction. Our paint department is in charge of Mr. W. 8 Arnold, a very competent man, and we can furnish the matertal and do the w ork for rou in a way that will make you glad. Give us a chance at your work. BuildersLumber & Supply Company E. H. & E. 0. GARLAND, PROPRIETORS, Foot of Main Street. Phone 28. Corsacr Ornament of Sufficient Im- o < . portance to Make or Mar the Cos- plaleF Il N L WO QIO DO mncvo.um. pibadit o Touber, Turpentine, Cut-over woman who ecollected the fas- little compact bunches of lnst year 18 now hesitating , them and the large single ™ elnu [N Tt low " me ! tiny bunches of roses, forget- s and pansies have been re- 1 with single blosroms of velvet gilk or clusters of one variety. | he modish woman, when choosing | 11 flowers to tuck In her stole or bod- i, always bears in mind that it | st be In season. At present she | > | wears two or threo china asters, a sin- | ¢lo chrysanthemum or a bunch of! These resem- | g of gleaming rubies ble a eluster | aeainst a suit of gray, black or blue | velvet. The touch of vivid color is many costumes depend entirely on the corsage bouquet for this. English violets give a lovely touch to gray and prune-colored gowns. They can be excellent imitations of the flowers, or made of narrow ribbon | combined with green leaves. One . clver woman uses the real leaves with ' rihbon flowers, which wilt slightly | and give an excellent idea of the nat- ural flowers. | Maidenhair fern 18 being combined | with the corsage bouquet now. It softens any vivid color and blends ner. The real fern can be pnurved, burned off, thus forcing the sap up into the leaves. Asparagus fern fs : also a good addition to a silk flower. | Lilles of velvet, orchids of silk and | velvet roses in any of the swirled or | ;vml«-d forms vie with the small clus- | or flowers that are massed in bunches ‘ for a color effect, i Graceful Coats. One of the most gracetul forms ta- ' ken by the fur coat of the moment is ! that in which the garment ts made ven or eight inches too long. The evtra length is then caught up In a «eries of festoons down each side- | cam. This is distinctly due to the ' pannier idea. Tt has the advantage of not making the figure too much Uk« *he fashionable pegtop. A typlical coat of the moment In tail- | less ermine has a Watteau plait of | ‘he fur at the back held down In | plaits between the shoulders. The fulness is again caught in at the level of the knees by a broad band of lace, fringed with ermine tails, which draws the Watteau plait out to its fullest and | holds it tightly in to the figure. Charming Velvet Coats. i Cutaway coats of velvet are alto- gether charming. They reach to the ankles behind, are worn over a draped satin skirt, tight at the ankles, bord- : ered and trimmed with fur. Coats will | certainly be worn longer as we ap | proach the new year. The shorter | coats come to the knees. Supple ma- | terials accompany velvet, but the | coats are of rough materials. Velour | de laine heads the fashion. Every ope nlwnld possess a fur coat, which can be slipped off on entering the house Wool embroidery figures on dresses and coats alike as | a heading to fur. At the back ocoats | are cut very high in the neok, the | lhouldc seams belng curved to rest ! on the neck. [~ F\)R SAI b Lands, Choice Colinization Practs ai Low Prices, Kerida Homes and Groves on High Rotling 14 Situated on Beautiful Lakes, Paying Straw- peary and Trucking Farms, Weguarantee all property just Ior reliable information see & Alfield LAKELAND, FLORDM. wnd, as reprasented by us Ohfinger Opposite New Depot, List Your Property Today And be ready for the New Year’s rush. If you don’t find me in my office, mail me description, price and terms. I'll do the rest. Loans negotiated. W. FISKE JOHNSON REAL ESTATE > RCOM 17, KENTUCKY BUILDING, LAKELAND, FLORIDA )0 LAKELAND MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS, i Located on East Lake Morton, Johp Edmunds. Proy.. Solicits the Orders of All Rz viring Anything in This Line. New Life of Tombstones on Hand. POPOHEE0FOIOEOFOTOPOPOMD omm Lakeland Artificial Stone Works MAIN STREET, Near Citrus Exchange Phone 330 Red MAKES RED CEMENT PRESSED B CALL AND SEE THEM. CAN SAVE YOU IOI‘:YICK Crushed Rock. Sand and Cement for Sale BUILDING BLOCKS OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS 12 and 18 inch Drain Tile for Sidewalk, Gate Posts, Flower Mounds, Ete. Good Stock on Hand WE Deliver Free of Charge H. B. ZIAMERMAN. Proprietor. Subscribe for The Telegram