Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, November 16, 1914, Page 3

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B. STREATER NTRACTOR AND BUILDER ng had t.wentyfle years’ experience tracting in Lakeland and vicinity, I feel competent er the best services in this line. If comtemplating b, will be pleased to furnish estimates and all infor- All work guaranteed. . J. B. STREATER. in building F60040000000000000000000 04 Us Be Your Grocers? CEDITVLD handle only fresh, clean ds and we keep a full line resh Meats, Including bteaks, Roasts, Chops, Breakfast Bacon, Brains, Chickens, etc, Vegetables are We Keep Fresh Fruit, aiso ng in Can Goods that you may suggest Specialty. ing Vegetables, Soups, etc. buy your goods where You can get the most for the money. place is the grocery of G. TWEEDELL _PHONE 59 et Us Supply Your Needs s Orange Clippers Spruce Pine Picking Ladders THE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAKELAND, FLA., NOV. 16, 1914, ISTYLES SUIT YOUNG GIRLS ' die ‘Not for Many Seasons Have Design- ers Put Out So Many Attroctive Features for Them. For a long time styles have not been so well suited to young girls as they are at the present moment. The scant, slashed skirt really had no place in the wardrobe of the young girl, and neither had many other features of the fashions of the past few days. But the full skirt, with or without the long tunic, is admirably suited to slim, youthful angles. The long coat, belted at the hips, is also be- coming to girlhood. The Russian blouse styles, which can be well evolved at present for the young girl, @re very good. And the big, flat hat is infinitely more becoming to the childish face than the severe, albeit smart, hat of the last tew years. Some of the new serge frocks for 8chool wear are especlally interesting for small girls under twelve. They are made with walst and skirt in one, the fabric cut in long lines and made without a belt. The waist is cut away under the arms and forms straps over the shoulders and in front and back is cut in a Y-shaped line. Under this serge frock, which is fre- quently bound with wide black silk braid, is worn a smart little linen shirt, with long sleeves ending in cuffs turned back and linked with white pearl buttons and a turned- down collar likewise linked. The fashionable coat, that buttons straight across the throat, with a rolling collar which in the case of a young girl’s coat can be made of velvet, is decidedly suitable for a youngster. It is warm, comfortable and becoming. SMART SUITS ARE IN PLAID Made Up in Various Different Designs, Usually With the Green Predominating, Among the smartest of suits are those of plaid in which green pre- dominates, One such model shows & comparatively short coat belted in vain to stem the tide of plaits which have overrun the front of the coat from the frontward plaiting of the skirt. Another example of this fad is fur. nished by a suit of green and blue plaid velour whose coat hanging in redundant folds from a tiny yoke and whose pocket-like belt placed only in front suggest inevitably Monsieur Poiret—whose inspiration in this case ! was said to be the garb of the mes- senger boys of Paris. Very often a skirt of plaid—green | predominating—wil have a jacket of plain material. One very smart suit treated in this way possessed a coat whose collar of green plaid—like that of the skirt—inerged into the Capuchin hood that is now being so largely ex- ploited. Speaking of plaids, one of the new materialg yielding to this tendency is a Yaffeta whose design is worked out in velvet ribbing. This is said to be a direct descendant of a fabric used a hundred years ago and is exploited by several of the leading stores. MADE UP IN JAPANESE SiLK: One of the Prettiest Designs for a Lampshade—Use Care in Selec- tion of Colors. A simple lampshade is the subject of the accompanying sketch. It is easy to make, and is carried out in thin red Japanese sjlk. It is cut out in two pleces, and the upper portion is gathered into a tiny frill at the edge, NEW STREET COSTUME | GARMENT HAS THE APPEARANCE ; OF A LONG COAT. Not Suitable, Perhaps, for All Cli- mates, It Is Undeniably Handsome and Has Been Given a Warm Welcome. The popularity of the one-piece frock has led to the making of a street costume that looks like a long coat. It is a strange garment, almost medi- eval in its simplicity, but it does not appeal to the woman who lives in & very cold climate; it is not quite warm enough for the street and it is too warm for the house. For autumn and spring in the north, as well as in those climates which are moderately genial from Christmas until Easter, the garment will prob- ably be most acceptable. It is ad- mirable for temperate days. The model {s also used for one-plece frocks of thin material, and they are so comfortable that one is apt to be spoiled forever by them. Both Jenny and Cheruit sent to America in September, this style of garment; at first, the women looked askance at it, and then approvingly. One design shows a pointed yoke at the shoulders, but excepting this break in the line, the garment falls in one piece to the hem, fastened in front and belted in with sealskin to match the round collar and broad cuffs. Beneath this slip is an unbound lin- ing of black satin which is about an inch shorter than the outer skirt and is finished with a knife plaiting. This lining shows when the outer skirt is left unfastened, which, by the way, is one of the vagaries of the season. Another frock, made on the same plan, has a belt at the hips of broad black silk braid and an arabesque of black soutache outlining the hem and the side of the front. Ever so much ‘soutache is used this winter in straight lines as in scroll design, on satin, as well as serge and velours de laine. There are so many women who like the exaggerated flare just below the ‘Muff, Collar and Toque in Stt.w -~ ' knees with its sharp comparlson to the partially narrow skirt below, that _ one of ultra-fashionable coat suits, de- ' signed by Callot, who must be differ- ' ent from every one else, has gained much approval over heré as the sea- son goes on, and the young woman who detests the other type of suit . should cast her eye on this. The top of the coat is cut like a sacque with straight lines under arms, New Arrivals Hecker’s Old Homestead Flap- Jack, Prepared Buckwheat, Cream farina, and Cream Datmeal. Roxane Graham, Whole-Wheat, Cake Flour, and Selfrising Flour. Richelieu Pancake and Buckwheat Flours and Oatmeal. My Line is a‘s Fine as any in Town. My Store Clean, San- itary, Free from Rats and Roaches. FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES DAILY Yours to Serve in Groceries, Feed, Seed and Fertilizer. D. B. Dickson SEPPPPPEFPEFIOSPHEEHHESOHHOOEDDIHOFFLIULE S PSS LBEL4 s, Bl “Don’t fzil to see us” before having your Electrical work done. We can save you money.and give you better “ stuff’’ than you have been getting, and for a litt'e less money. T. L. CARDWELL, Electrical Contractor EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL PHONE 233 West Main,Street and New York Avenue BEGBDE BB GG 3 KELLEY'S BARRED Plymouth Rocks BOTH MATINGS Better now than ever before High class breeding birds at reasonable prices. Fgge from high|class pens for hatching. “ % Write me before ordering else where, H. L. KELLEY, Griffin, Fla Don't Talk War, | But Talk Business, aand Boost Your Town and from this frill the silk is arranged gloping up in front and dropping down in loose folds downward. To the edge considerably at the back. To the lower of this portion a full flounce of nllk,I edge of this s attached a circular pep- Cement Coated Box Nails ry’s Orange Plows American Field Fence Cyclone Ornamental Fence ' Everything usually carried in an up-to-date Hardware Store ILSON ARDWARE CO. i{s sewn, and this flounce is pinked out and cut into curves at the :awer edge. This shade could, of course, be car- ried out on the same lines in other in pale pink or gold, or any warm color, but such colors as blue or green ghould be avoided as they are not suitable for lampshades, for though they might look pretty in the daytime, light shining through them at night would produce a very bad effect upon the rosiest of complexions. Merry Widow Styles. When the Merry Widow styles were here a few years ago, everybody liked them—which is something that cannot be said about the styles of today. So any suggestion that Merry Widow st\:les are returning is welcome. Tt.xe M'erry Widow hat is really here again —a big cartwheel hat in black veilvet, with almost no trimming to detract E from its simple but becoming shape. gathered into a little frill at the top, ; colors, and it would look very pretty i gown.—Vogue. . lum flaring from the figure as though it were wired. Probably it is. Up and - dowy the front, pround the sloping hip liné ptid the extended hem go rows of soutachd, These, with a half dozen large buttons c‘;‘nstltute all the trimming on the suit. 1@ Bkirt 18 entirely plain. 2 , All the coats of the season have long small sleeves put into the regu-' lation armhole, which is often outlined ! with braid, or a satin cord, or a piping of the material. One of the new ideas of the autumn, shown in the illustration, is to have the muff, collar and hat match. In the sketch the set is made of dyed squirrel edged with chiffon, and trimmed with blue roses. The neck plece forms a square collar in the back. (Copyright, McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) ! Black Net or Tulle Roses. ! The black rose is being used quite , extensively for trimming, especially | on white dresses. The rose has been , borrowed from the prevailing vogue | for black, so popular is every detail of woman’s dress. On a charming | gown of white net was seen a black | net rose, which made an effective dec- | oration. Quite the newest thing from | Paris is the rose of black tulle, orna- , mented with cut steel. The cut steel is usually in the form of tiny steel beads that edge every petal and encir- | cle the center of the flower. | eivie————————— l The Wide Skirt. ! The wide skirt is unquestionably . the new thing, and yet many of the new models have narrow skirts topped by the famMiar tunic. Callot, especial- ly, shows models of this kind. One noticed, at the openings, the absence of anything resembling a bustle; the | sole exception was a bustle-like puff of black tulle on a Premet evening 'I'HE HUB is still selling Hart Schaffner & Marx i good Clothing, and it is the best clothing ever brought to v your city. Now, Old Men and Young Men, come around and see what you can buy for $15 and $18 to $25 Have just received a new shipment of Arrow Shirts, Neckwear and Onyx Hose Will appreciate showing them to everybody JOS. The Hub =% This Store is the Home of] tiart Schaffner and Marx Good Clothing

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