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P ."3‘}0‘“'43".;%!*& D Lake Mirror Hotel MRS. H. M. COWLES, Prop. Under New Minagement. Refurnishedand thoroughly renovated, and evey vthing Clean, Comf(nmble and First-class. Dining Room Service Unexcelied. Rates Reasonable, Your Patronage Cordially z Invited, . proven by our six it i¢ P in Lakeland. s success ne made oi Cement. ) ||ll'NlTIlllIAlVl|IIJ C0. ELEQ 0R0OOEDSOSOSOIOBON Your Feetiwill be Pleased I you bring them to us to be fitted correct. ly with a pair of our Shoes. Send in the children and we will take care of their shoe wants in a proper manner. Just received a shipment of the latest - Baby Dolls in Patents, Satins and Kids We have put in a shoe shine stand for the convenience of our customers. Visit our Shoe Repairing Depariment And be convinced that better Shoe Repair- ing is impossible. We will open your eyes ' with our Latest Machinery and the Neat- | tess and Quickness of our work. .Work §3§1! called for and delivered. DUTTON-HARRIS COMPANY 123 Kentucky Ave. FOOTFITTERS Phone 358 Blue Office Phone 348 B.ack, Beutify vour Lawn, Let us tell you how, Little it will cost. lakeland PavingZand Construction Company 27 to 216 Main St. LAKELAND, FLA. MO0 Keep the Quality Up” has been our watchword You can’t whistle away the fact, the oze great big point that in- dicates this Store’s Betterness Ouality In Merchandise A Step Ahead in Quality-- A Step Behind in Price BATES STORE Every piece of WOOL GOODS in STOCK ABSOLUTELY NEW MWWMW” WWWWW@ 2 l & L @ $HEEEIIIIPIVLIIO0000004 [ ¢ of the National Steel mmd concrete Burial ! Vault o lw YARN | o f all discrip- ilding b lnctlr;ng 2 oA :: . ¢ t, Presse ric! ; eL ‘I‘:L\:lk Pier Blocks, 3; LIGHT AND HEAVY HAULING q 4 inch Drain Tile, 6, 7 HOUSEHOLD MOVING A dSIc'uc Fost; Infact, any- SPECIALTY HORSES AND MULES FOR HIRE Phones: Office 109; Res., 57 Green BB B G B AD B BOFOBOB TP O RO ST RS SOBTO BT O & OBHOE O ONE B SRBOSCHILES CHPTBBOI0D 01 OIS mowm@g . Res. Phone 153 Blue &; WSSO FOINPO SO OFO SO OROEFIPOHBIPOSOHOFOSOHOPOPOI0 IR0 OO OB PO DOIRHO @RS NGO & Qi@ & OO0 T THE EVENIN N O ONE disputes the supremacy of ,top of the boot. the American-made shoe, its shapeliness and style have won it an undisputed place as the most excel- lent of all footwear. There is no country, not even France, that has won such results. The progressiveness and originality of American makers of footwear have been encouraged by a receptive pub- lie, which has been educated to the point of being exacting. Women, especially, demand so much in the matter of style in their shoes that those who lead in manufacturing have placed before them this season what might be called confections in foot- Wear. The shoes of today are distinguished by little odd touches of style in meth- ods of cutting the leather, and in com- binations of leather with cloth and the adoption of two colors in the com- position of the shoe. Three pairs of high boots are shown here which illustrate these individual touches and set forth the kind of shoes that are correct for present wear. As Fashion has decreed very short skirts for the street, women are likely to grow more and more partic- ular as to the appearance of their feet. A pretty boot, called the Ritz, is made with a patent leather vamp and gray or fawn-colored cloth top. The front {s stayed with tan leather, and at the back the patent leather ex- i tends in a shaped stay almost to the picture given here. about the face, which marks it as unusual and a welcome varlety to | the woman to whom frills are unbe- | coming. In keeping with the present modes there is a ruffle at the back across the | nape of the neck. The cap is attrac- tively put together with triangles of | lace at each si satin ribbon ornamented with tiny chiffon roses to match the satin in | color. The cap pictured here is made of | a shadow lace flouncing eighteen | inches wide. Only a half yard of the lace is required to make it in the small | size shown. A lace twenty-two to twenty-four inches wide is needed for larger heads. A uired is the same a ghat the cap is made of a square of h'l'he ¢rill is made at the bordered edge of the lace by stitching on a plece of bias silk tape three inches from the edge. A plece of flat elas- NG TELEGRAM, LARELAND FLA., OCT. 29, 1914, Correct Footwear ! Boudoir Cap of ‘Shadow Lace PRETTY new model in a boudolr | tic cord about eight inches long is or breakfast cap is shown in the | run in the casing to form the ruffle. It has no frills | bordered with narrow lmgprlpl g de, and pretty bows of | and turned back. | with a little chiffon rose in place of & The length of lace re-| bons are all available if rose color the width, so | proves unbecoming. Special Feature Makes It More Useful Than the Ordinary One We Are Accustomed To. A wall pocket of a very pretty and quite a new design may be seen in the accompanying illustration, and a special feature about it is that any let- that it may contain cannot well slip out of place. about twelve inches in length and This card is covered on both back Fawn-colored quar- ters are the most popular in style for | dressy street wear. The Spanish heel I sufficient material being left over on of leather harmonizes with the re- | both sides to form the pockets. Dia- | mainder of the boot in character. The | 8ram B on the left explains this, the beots with fawn or gray tops are worn ' dotted line indicating the peint at with all the fashionable colors in | which the material is sewn together street gowns. | at the edge of the card; and C shows A smart boot with cloth top cut to | the shape of the piece of satin that 18 look like a gai‘er 18 made in fawn | turned over and sewn down at the color with black. It is fastened with | lower edge and forms one of the small pearl buttons and provided with | pockets. These pockets are, by the leather Spanish heel. Exquisite finish ! ! way, finished off at the openings with in stitching 1s a part of all the new | a pink and white silk cord, which is shoes. carried into three loops in the center, A model called the French boot re- | and the whole thing is outlined with sembles the Ritz, but is higher and | more of the same silk cord carried laces up the front. It has a short | into two loops at each of the lower vamp of patent leather and leather | corners. The upper corners are orna- Louis heel. The lacing edges are | mented with little bows of pale pink faced back with a strip of the patent | ribbon, and a long loop of ribbon is leather, making a showy and elegant | provided for suspending this decora- design. tive little article from the wall. A good, sensible boot, made for | The design which appears upon durability, is shown with slight exten- | €ach of the pockets consists of a pale elon sole and Cuban heel. It {s smart | Pink blossom, with a yellow center, in cut and plain in finish, with stay | and nine leaves embroidered in vari- at the back extending to within an ! ous shades of green. Diagram A gives inch of the top. Vici kid, calf, and | this design very clearly in outline, other leathers make this all-leather | 8nd it can quite easily be worked model a reliable investment. For all | from our illustration. kinds of weather and all kinds of roads it is the best choice. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. | Device Assures Devotee That Pencll Wil Always Be at Hand When It Is Required. Many women, usually pocketlesa, go fishing for a “bridge pencil” like a | terrified bridegroom after & missing ring. Mostly, too, the elusive little things are made' so perfectly round and smooth that rolling under tables seems to be their principal asset. But behold the solution! The fashionable bridge player now wears her pencil much as an elderly woman -carries about with her, for the time being, unworn nose-pinchers. The pencil is attached to a silken cord or a little gold chain, which, in turn, is attached to a gold and sometimes jeweled pin, the pin in turn being attached to my lady's bodice over her heart. The lit- tle pencil sometimes has a ring upon its end, to which the cord or chain is attached, and the pin sometimes has a hook upon it, to which the lit- tle ring on the pencil can be hung. The arrangement is really quite as convenfent as though my lady had adopted a vest pocket for the occa- slon, and there is no necessity for stay-splitting stoops under the table after the truant, There are over fifty thousand girls in the secondary schools of Japan studying English as a part of their | & course. The Thought of .The remaining edges are gathered into a strip of bias tape 15 inches long. The two triangles are each seven and a half inches long at the base and | four inches high. A narrow edging | of val lace is stitched along the sides of each as a finish. Rose-colored satin | was used in this cap to make them. The bases of the triangles are sewed to the edges of the cap at each side The points are tacked down to hold them in place. At the front a bow of satin ribbon, Phone 408 City Hall just across & knot at the center, is sewed between | the points of the triangles. At each side the termination of the neck ruffie is decorated with a small flat rosette of satin ribbon a half inch in width. Blue, pink, lavender and figured rib- who never “"FELL DOW. Altogether this is one of the pret tiest of boudoir caps and may be made so easily and with so little outlay that anyone who likes may induige in this little luxury. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. 20SEOPIIVDIPLLVOTIVOEEIIO90 HANDY LITTLE WALL POCKET ters, visiting cards, invitations, etc., and front with cream-colored satin, | - | eeeeees long after the price is forgotten and s o= DRIVES PAIN AWAY= Is quickly absorbed—good for sores, neuralgia, stiff joints, rheumatism, etc. 25¢ at druggists, For sale in Lakeland by Henley A good size in which to make it is | & Henley. eight in height, and for the founda- ' S oo o oo IOB0 B BB B foperd D tion a piece of stifft cardboard of those dimensions must be procured. | Fresh Apalachicola Oysters 50c qt; pt. 250 Try our Home made Peanut Brittle and Chocolate Fudge H. O. DENNY Elliston Building. PHONE 226. Prompt Del. HARNESS HEADQUARTERS * The place to get harness is at harness headquarters. We have ev- erything needed to ride or drive a horse and of good quality at rcason- able prices. From the heaviest team harness to the lightest buggy har- ness this is headyuarters. Special attention to repair werk of all kinds. McGLASHAN [T'S the right kind of work and service that please people. WE can please the most exacting. Isn’t it reasonable to sup- pose YOU too will find sat- isfaction here? LAKELAND DRY_ GLEANING PLANT G. C. WILLIAMSON, 'Prop. PHONE 405 WECLEAN ABSOLUTELY RUB-MY-TISM Will cure your Rheumatism Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts and Burns, Old Sores, Stings of Insects Etc. Antiseptic Anodyre, used in- ternally and externally.® Price 25c. DRUG STORE When you want the best in Pure Drugs and Toilet Articles £ 22 % G0 10 THE WOODS ¢ Quality remains Phone 408 the street from US mmm TF YOU ARE THINKING Of BUILDING. SEE MARSHALL & SANDERS The OId Reliable Contractors ‘Who have been building houses in Lakeland for years, and * or failed to give satisfaction. All clssses of buildings contracted for. The many fine residences built by this firm are evidgnces of their abilityto make good. MARSHALL & SANDERS Phone 228 Blue 9000000000000 000000000000