Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, January 9, 1914, Page 9

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Alonza Logan J F. Townsend LOGAN & TOWNSEND BUILDING CONTRACTORS S Wngrfiish Surety Bonds On All Contracts \ If you want a careful, consistent. and re: liab stimate on the construction of your building, Stk US INMEDIATELY. TELEPHONE 66 Futch & Gentry Bldg T L CARLETON SAN!TARY P! UMEING /TINNING cnd SHEET METAL WORKS P EVEMNUG TELMGKAM, LAKELAND, FLA., JAN. 9, 1914, That our Drip Coffee can’t be equaled is proven by our daily in: crease of customers 'who demand the best. ¥ 5¢ PER CUP Ne\{er testes bitter for it's made fresh every few hours Have you tricd our Hae Coffee. served pipino hot withi pure Jersey cream and wafers 5CTS > ) S i : ¥ “ined Cross Pharmae Gas Flttlng. Sewer Wo: k. Driven fi | The upper photograph shows six high-powered automobiles loaded with 33,000 rounds of ammunition which were Ph 269 WQ“s and Purr ps el Bl B s | rushed with all dispatch to the rebel ranks when they captured the city of Vieteria from the fode s, and below one ’ % | are the cannons and machine guns which, together with a large drove of horses, w wazon load of rifles and am PP h\o' 'N'- ' AVE ard Vain ST. PHONf 340 9 munition and camp equipment, were captured by the rebels when they put tie Hueria < 1o flight 1«%«3#3@»%»«%»«&%»« v UK. ' o A A A A A A AN AP A AN AAA A AAAAAAA. - v pattern for the trimmig which suows e 8 _AKELAND Q@ '-L'oalDA 'y PI-ACE FOR THE BOOKS a bit of a brownish r'n';'( through it.| ORI RN FCROCRO | They have mor: character than the AROHOROROROBORCRC! S RCHSHORRCRO T QO 00 DD IO ; o | NO HOUSE COMPLETE WITHOUT| 348 BPEBEBDPPIPSPEPPIDEEOEEE i i . " PROVISION FOR THEM. | Lol it L st il DR R R et FEED-STORF Let your New Year’s Resnlu tion be to continue buying " Your Feed, Flour and Fer- tilizer from the store that makes this line a specialty Quality and price right. Cicme to see us . on Rose St. East of Light and Water Plant 'll\he lakeland Feed and { to Do Double Duty, Is Shown— | Cretonne-Covered Shelves Will | Be Found Useful. * §' ! Practical Idea, Which Can Be Made By ETHEL DAVIS SEAL. i One can imagine a house wlthautl pictures more readily than one can, imagine even a single room without“ books. Books stand for culture and; education in our lives, for beauty and decoration in our homes; and the two facts are inseparable, in that the | J books, together with their keeping places, are a sure index to their own- | er's character. | And you can't fool the public about your books, either. Books have a way R Phone 275 W C OWENS.Mgr Terms Cash ’ ke’m«&w«&*mfln@ww ; { s L L I TN TR R R ! of telling tales—other than the stories they hold. People know whether they are loved books or not; they know if ‘they are books for show or delight— | both from what the books tell them, 1and where the books are. 'and painted to match the woodwork; | Judgment approved it. The cushion is l'of hair and is three inches thick. It l hair costs more than one cares to | PPPPPEIRESEHDBDBBIDHOBBHHE PHPBGDOBHOHEOOHIBG T The first illustration shows a prac- ”0 M 4 itlcal suggestion for a keeping place @ for books, and which does double duty B INTENSE EXCITEM ENT fi: as a seat as well. This idea could be & | carried out for the living room, hall or Tk :; |bedroom. It can be made of boards o GREAT RUSH AT THE or a large packing box of just the right proportions might answer, if one's T -i1Great Forced: spend, upholsterer’s cotton would be comfortable and serviceable, Sometimes bookshelves can be made out of faulty boards and covered entirely with cretonne, as shown in the second drawing. The ends and, if Out Sale ¢ Tremendous Reductions on Every- at§ thing in Wesring Apparel for Men md. Bovs - - - - necessary, the top are covered plainly | QT with the material, tacked on by means | ) of upholsterer’s tacks. Curtains to PL match are then hung at the front. 3 &le Lasts For Ten And so, if you don't love books Or enough to have a lot lying around loose, and are too old to learn (!}, train your children to, and you will soon be sure to find a call to concoct all sorts of attractive little keeplng" places for books—and here are quite | a number of ideas right to your hand. —New York Press, ' BEDROOM DESK MOST USEFUL | Days Only Wil The Goods Are Going Fast < Some Remarkably Handsome Designs, Though Expensive, Are Offered to Prospective Buyers. The bedroom desk fittings have al- ways been more or less of a prob- lem, as the usual brass sets seem a little heavy for a dainty pink or blue chintz hung boudoir. This year [O8bicter The et Schetier & Varx Clothing | | [\ | K o OS. i e u LeVAY there are ivory colored sets of en-| | ameled wood which have a latticed | really lovely. | half an orange and lie flat on the desk 'ALL IN THE ARRANGEMENT plain white sets, and yet add rather than detract from the daintiness of the room. Silver which matches eith- er the striped dresser silver or the engraved patterns can be matched for | the desk fittings. Complete sets with blotter, clock and all the many useful and useless articles possibly run as high as $176. The new clocks are They are shaped like with the curved part up and holding the face of the clock. One does in- stinctively look down when writing. and it save time instead of making a conscious effort to look at a clock. But aside from that they are quite an addition to the pretty desk fix- tures. Dancing Frock. Smocking trims one of the season’s most dainty dancing school frocks for the very small gi. The plain under- skirt is attached to a skeleton lining and over it hangs the tunic, shorter in the front than in the back, to give the fashionable silhouette, says the Philadelphia North American. The full- ness at the back and over the shoul- der is held in with smocking, and the twisted silk cord encircles the waist and is loosely knotted in the back. Soft silk, chiffon or muslin is equally pretty for this little model. No Need for Heavily Built Woman to | Have Any Fear of the Tunic Style. Already the tunics are so well man- | aged that heavily built women can ! wear them. The fullness is pushed away from the front toward the sides | and back and there is a sharp hins} line formed by the hem across the fig- | ure; beneath this, the skirt is draped over the knees or cut full and caught into the front seams in such a man- ! ner that the contrast between the up- per and lower skirt is not too great. | By the way, there is a good ar-| rangement in draping a lower skirt so [ that it will have the necessary full- | ness below the tunic and yet it will | not increase the fullness around thoi waist by means of pleats; the skirt | fs made quite long in front and is then pleated across the figure, just above the knees, in a three-inch line. This draws the hem up in the middle and ! provides that drapery immediately be- low the tunic which every skirt must have. The top of this skirt is cut entirely plain and it therefore hugs the hips closely, which is a good trick under a full tunic, provided the tunic is opaque. BOWLER MODEL HAT A quaint little bowler model in pure white felt. Resting on the brim at one side is a beautiful dull pink rose. Even Skirt. In measuring the length of a skirt, put on and use a yardstick. Measur- ing from the floor, mark around the hips with a light line of chalk at the top of the stiok. Take from the yard the number of inches you wish it to come from the floor, and, measuring the skirt directly down from the chalk, mark on all sides the number of inches you have chosen, you will easily ob- tain an even skirt length. i o > A TASTE From aglass that’s dainty is far more appetising than from a glass that “jars your nerves” The Cut Glass sold here from a thin to a heavy tumbler or from a butter dish to a salad bowl has the hall marks of best qualily on it at sight, H. C. STEVEN JEWELER LAKELAND, FLA. 18 1bs. Sugar ... .... SR e Ve $1.00 10 lbs Snowdrift ........ R e .. 1.1% 4 1bs Snowdrift ........ SR e s e 45 10/ IBRACOBLOLENG: < v« v vb/vsis nvoiisn wvswoninisiieaia s 1.25 4 1bs Cottoline ........ SRy R .50 ...Compound Lard ............. Rl T T .10 12 1bs Best Flour .............. i SR G .40 24 1bs Rest Flour ..... ey ST e Bt .85 12108 BEES. B, FIONE . cciivvvis vivoissnnnpesses .45 24 lbs Best S. R. Flour T e .90 1 1b White House Coffee .. .. .... ......covvvinnen .36 1 1b Caraga or Cracker Boy...... ...... Rty e el 1 1b Coffee and Chickory ......... R LN (O .25 ...0ood Loose Coffee ,.......o000 vovivnreiainnnns .20 \ 2 lbs Best Tomatoes, 3 for ....... ....... T e B T R L e e m VAL R e Vies e iey 7 6 Cans Cream....... Se s advaees S N ‘98 2 Cans Baxter's or B. L. Corn. , ............... . .25 8 Soap or Washing Powder....... ................ .25 1 Peck Irish Potatoes for......... ...... .35 10 1bs Meal or Grits (Hudnut’s).... .......... ..... .38 These prices are spot cash delivered to any part of the city, everything guaranteed first class and exactly as repre- sented. These are just a few of the prices which I am of- fering; everything else In proportion. If you want good goods at the right prices together with good delivery, give me a trial. PHONES 119 and 284. e or L. B. WEEKS 'F YOU ARE .THINKING OF BUILDING, SEE MARSHALL & SANDERS The 0Id Reliable Contractors Who bave been building houses in Lakeland for years, acd who never “FELL DOWN" or failed to give satisfaction. All classes of buildings contracted for. The many fine residences built by this firm are evidgnces of their ability to make good. MARSHALL & SANDERS Phone 228 Blue "THE PHOENIX Christmas. Call again during 1914, bring a friend. L. E. PEACOCK. The PHOENIX BARBER La'«elm.d‘s leading Barber Shop wish you alla Merry i thaak you for 1913 patronage. MANAGER HOP

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