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|on]y a splash of whité below theé ears. This movement may be in keeping DECOLLETAGE IS LESS MORE COVERING GIVEN THE UP- { adopted in a wholesale way in July; PER PART OF THE FIGURE. | it may be the period of the long body | line, the girdle at the hips, the wrist- | length, tight sleeves and the univer | sal use of colored velvets in deep, | rich tones. brightened by lavish han- dling of colored jets to imitate jewels. Whatever the reason, it is the strict- {1y new note to watch develop. That employment of the fabric straight up The ekirt and the decolletage are 4, the collarbone without the inter- the principal points of divergence from ' vantion of a thin material is sure to the styles of the last 15 years, and it { g4y out. Already the separate blouse will be interesting to watch the fur-| ¢ aoloreq chiffon to go with a skirt ther development of this fashion. EV-| o¢ ¢16th looks out of tune with the erywhere one sces strong evidence | poywest faghions. ‘It one wears a suit | that bodices are growing less trans-| jnq10a4 of a one-piece frock the blouse parent and the fashion for ccver{ns chosen for it must give the superficial | the ‘upper part of the figure With}gapnearance of a continuation of th®! opaque material is progressing. Prob- | gyire. | ably by the springtime the use of tulle 1t is this fashion that has suggested | and chiffon will be greatly reduced. | to women to give the preference in | The Paris designers forestalled this | ¢heir winter clothes to the street frock | when they showed in their wartime | o cloth worn under a fur coat or dol- | openings the bodices of cloth or velvet l man or long cloth cape. for day wear that extended from a line { ¢ome more and more difficult to man- below the wajst to the neck, leaving age a separate blouse with a el_qm: 2 : : Lake Pharmacy g PHONE 42 § | | DO OROPOIOIOBOBODOBC IPPPPPPPPPPPEPOPEED BB First Class Work That Change, and the Style of the Skirt, Are the Principal Differ ences in the Prevailing Fash- ions—Blouse Styles. DEOHOEO B0 QIO FOEOEQ OIVELI0TVIVIOIGIOIOFOFOBOF SPECIAL SALE Rexall Goods THIS WEEK See Display. All Rexall Goods Guaranteed JIM SING . Chinese Laundry =~ Guaronteed % : Work Called for and Delivered H T‘: I have been a resident of IFlorida for 20 years, and am %“i © well known to many prominent gentlemen, all of whom & © will recommend me as doing First Class Work at Reason- j?' : able Drices JIM SING B = 218 Pine Street Phone 257 B St bbb SEODITAS ARG DD PR EGg PR ddda B. S EATER CONTRACTCR AND BUILDER laving had twenty-one years’ experience in building and contracting in Lakeland and vicinity, I feel competent to render the best services in this line. If comtemplating building, will be pleased to furnish estimates and all infor- 3 4 iMMm: e e "= “Save Ten Dollars” By having your;Fall Clothes made to your INDIVIDUAL Measure by us Suits or Overcoats Soft Hats and Derbies Large variety of Shapes and Shad- ings, Trimmed with Contrast Bands — the Season's latest Conceptions L e L D L L N $5 Styles 3$ Quality | i B ENG! ISHWONTFN NI N Hatters and Tailors Futch & Gentry Bldg,, LAKELAN!l). FLA. It has be-! : s mation. All work guaranteed. i Phone 169. J. B. STREATER. §| PP PP ST T PR TYVTrTT.Y ENTE g ! THE EVEbleG TELEGRAM LAKELAND, FLA. JAN. 15, 1915. skirt that is cut off at the waist line | proper. When the suit is for every-day usage ani to serve the most informal pur-’ poszes then the wash blouse of white muslin with a cc no matter how, ditien; much mental wais than the orna- or silk or sat- (v £0 T Turquoise blue silk frock with a silver lace petticoat, and with straps and frills of blue tulle over the shoulders, In, although one may be compelled to also have a fanciful affair on hand in case of a luncheon or a tea to which one wears this coat and skirt. If one wants to simulate a frock by adding a self-toned blo to a skirt when the ccat is off, one might do well to consider the claims of that new style of cloth jumper that is slipped over a soft silk lining with long sleeves, blouse is easily accomplished by utilizing a piece of the skirt ma- terial and binding it with braid or silk or velvet ribbon Its juncture vith the sop der a by Another type of Blonse that deceives onninto thinking i ocks iy wrink! W v wrinkled, slor of the skirt It tens down the front with covered ¥ ¢ cithor turns up at the hem in imitotion of a middy blouse, or ios is finished at the haek to carry out the tailored idea Broadcloth and Satin. roadeloth and satin are much com- h which flat bow bined. For mstance, there will b kirt of bro with a bhodi stin, - Plaid broadeloth is also u But it s A in dull deep colors These color ave employed in the s T ipes, are in- linitely more g the vivid, I karish cctors v NN A By GEORGE ELMER COBB. “Going to get married, eh?” “Yes, Uncle Harold—io Miss Ina Walron.” “H'm! I guessed that much. In fact, her father, (he judge, has just left me after an hour's confereace over this very subject: Now, that sweet little lady, «s you well know, to say you are go- ing to objuct to our wunion!" chal- !lenged Ned Davies with mingled in- v dignation and amazement Y “Don’t take fire so readily, young man,’ advised Mr. Wade with hi quaint accustomed smile, “or I'll dis- charge you, and thea where are your dreams of b’ 5 T i i | smiled Ned | n't much real busin ekt pt through your old unele, b inqutred Mr. Wade. | “Well, I'm right u, boy, and I'il :l-u\'e you guite s » “or pro vided you ¢ 1 First a , this macriage , what for?” ounrg lover ve want tion to proposition.’ “Ten year ago [ w | without a dollar. 1 worked hard, m a loyal hearted old miner who helped me oui and « back with a medest fortune. 1 botter sia 1 shall el h a five tho sand-dellur nest The the Golconda range. letter to the kind old friend who was €0 helpful to me. Then it's up to you | to make good.” | Thus it was that Ned Davies found i himseif a new arrival at the little bor- der mining town of Hopeton at the twilight end of a rare Idaho day. In- side the pocket of his outing shirt was ,un money upon which he relied to win fortune and Tna. It was urou th friend of his uncie, & Vucior Vi o, that Ned relied for an lutreduciion ietter to the o'l to the business world of the hills. A great disappointment faced bhim. bowever, right at the outset. He found that the ald residence of Doctor Wilman bad been burned down, and r that stands up, | is the appropriate ad- | | i | Turquoise Blue and Sitver Gown. | cated. | i | | ! i i | i ] [} A Thrilling Spectacle Met His View. when he inquired of a neighbor re- garding him he was toid that the doc tor had left liopeton three years ago and was believed dead. “There 1s a half-breed Indian, Ze- rata we call him, who used to be a | servant of the doctor,” Ned was ad- vised. “He returned to the old place about a year afier it burned down. He does odd jobs about the town now and sleeps in the stable on the old Wilman place. You'll find uim there most any time. Maybe he can tell you if the doctor is dead or alive.” Ned went over to the stable indi- Its door was open. Seated on a stool mending an old garment was a dusky-hued, sclemn-faced half-breed. There was character in his statuesque face, and as he lifted his eves they penetrated like clectric sparks. “I was looking for Doctor Wilman,” said Ned. “I have a letter for him.” The half-breed drooped his head slightly. He j d ross the great frowning mounicin to the north. “Dead.” he suid “many moons s “T am sorry,” chserved eIt | was from aa ol ¢ 1 of his that [ came—Mr, ilarol! Wade™ He was fairly sturtled at the effect of these words ipon 7% v The lat ter gave a quick inaul gleam came into his oy “Ioknew haa,” be spe and his coarse gutturul voice trembled. “ie was my frien ou are of his family re are .«p!m;»: unyielding. did Investment opportunities out on | that he arrived at the truth I'll give you a | before his uncle had saved the life | He never | / { e will find for you. “I am hi My Wilman would el new that recd o . “He will seek, He will tell you, then.” Ned comprelivnded that the speaker teld some t memory of his | uncle uxious to be helpful to him. Cast on lis own resources and research he devoted the en- suing week to sceking scme mining invesiment. It began to strike him as strange, but every turn he seemed to come across the Indian. Zerata s uncbirasive, but he had become a positive shadow on all the move- menis of Ned. One day Ned met in Hopeton a blusier typleal mining prospector named b ter had e had some cap mine to sell and he visit it. Ned did not like the appearance of Bu but it was a country of rough men plausible way of his holdings. They set out upon their journey, about four days' travel from Hopeton. It was the second night of their comping out when Ned awoke with a start at the sound of a pistol shot. He aroused to see Burke on his feet and a swift savage form disappearing. “Quick! follow!" shouted Burke. “You have been robbed!" Ned placed his hand at his bosom. The package of money was gone and Zerata had taken it, for Zerata, it was plain to discern, was the fleeing in- truder, The amazed Ned put after his com- panfon. Occasionally he heard shots ahead. There was bright moonlight, and after losing track of fugitive and pursuer Ned finally came to the edge of a valley. Aloft a thrilling spectacle met his view Upon a projecting rock, hundreds of feet above him, two men were strug- 2ling, Burke and Zerata. DBoth had d were circling about seek- intage after o, In some way the lat ito invest. He had a invited Ned to i In soeme way murdero’s a lunge at his adversary, Burke stury bled, rolled to the edge of the rock nd slid over frantic hands ed for savi Clute! old of lov nded began a stran It proceeded from His arms he chanted so 1 song, gazing mercilessl, his vietim, wio slid, slipped inch by inch, and t he final catastrophe. With a curdling shriek Burke went down, down, dashed to pieces on rocks far down the yawning abyss! The horrified Ned gained the side of Zerata to find him grim, resolute, It was by 2 slow process Years of the son of the half-breed. forgot it. Later in a cowardly way Burke had killed the son. Retribution had come at =3t Zerata had followed Ned and Burke, knowing that the latter was plotting to sell the former a “salted” mine. He had determined to save the money from the clutches of the swindler. “I was away when you left Hope ton,” related Zerata. “I heard who was with oy T v eMaw van g manl seid & The grateful fellow kept his word Ned Davies “made good,” and a tunny bride was waiting for him back home. He tried to influence his shadow to s ed of the fact that Ned | wnd the man talked in a very | o O POF Let’s be Boo Tell folks that you BEST TOWN, THI‘E B BEST COUNTRY \ BELIEVE IT TOO! IT'S SO! Become a Customer of tl_1e ware Store and you will M 340 ADAPTED FOR SEWING-ROOM Stitch-in-Time” Board Will Be Found or Practical Use and a Pretty $OPCITOEOTODE | garment or a hat that goes by that | name and has been suggested by that * | country. It is like being touched by | the mantle of courage. h ; the‘ The most amusing touch anen! i ) 11 high collar that the American woman A dainty and ds_-carallve stllt‘;flglnd |is taking up is the fact that she has time” board is a thing that shou 1n decided to leave a deep V-shaped a place in every hume_. and it is also wedge of her chest exposed beneath a useful article to give as a small it. She saunters in the street in the present. Boards of this klffd can be 1ct:»ldem weather with her coat cut made in a great n:unbo}' of different down almost to the top of her corset, shapes and forms, and in our sketch showing a flicker of bare skin be- m be seen a particularly }wal and tween, and her neck enveloped in a ornamental board for hanging upon fur stock that is warm enough to do the wall at some convenient spot duty in the Russian trenches ! where the articles it contains may be The new also have hizh | ready to hand whenever they are re- boned collars and the coats reach to ! quired the ears. Some have the (hrw»unre] For making it, cut out a diamond- collars that rise high and turn back ! ghaped picce of stiff cardboard, meas- on themselves in a straight line; oth | uring six and a half incnes each way. ers have the consulate collar, \\l\u‘hi ard is smoothly covered on both goes stra acros back of the | sides with pale gray watered silk, the neck, also high and turned over and { materfal being cut out in two pieces, | made of some brightly colored Stiff{gtretched tightly across and sewn to- silk thickly incrusted with gold or! gether at the cdges, which are after- | silver arabesques. wards finished off with a pale pink | The smartest outside collar is of | sflk cord, arranged in three little fur as wide as it is possible to wear | Joops on either e and again at the | it. It is made like a clown’s ruff in| that it rises to the chin and does not Decoration. l blouses | e neck under the chin, It| fastens at the left front with a rosette | of velvet ribbon, or with braid but- ! tons and 100 | High black velvet dog collars are again in style with ho are cut in a deep ¢ front. Clever won ! the street under a coat not be a barc tween the ¢ and the coat c | The usual rolling collar starche | white muslin that extends in a plice effact to the bust has had its day. ice opening in use these on £0 there will of neck be- expanse { return with him, but the snagows of the great ranges were overpower With Zerata. There e had loved and lost his own, there h mained op BRIEF MONMECNTS OF DRZA Easy to Imagine Long Periods Elaps- ing During Naps of Short | Duration. { Both Bismarck and Pepys found that noise euhanced the value of a night's rest. Bismarck confided in his old age to an interviewer that he could “never sleep in Berlin at night when it is quiet but as soon as the noises begins about four o'clock in the morn- ing I can sleep a little and get my rest for the day." Pepys record ield | top and bottom. A flat oblong cushlon.l covered with pale pink silk and edged , Wwith a fine claret-colored silk cord car- ried into three little loops at each cor- | POBROFS T & & L ™o 1 his diary on Sep- ,» that he slept at Well- and still remember it that in all uy life I never did pass a night with more epicurism of sleep: there being $ b » now and then a noise of people that O waked 1 it was a very @ y lmin_: night, and then I was a little & | king and 2 r anott [d 7] n ¢ B Twain " e s 3 F'% pearin of he | 2. kA : i Beautfy Let us tell —— ———. + Lake!and Pavicg an & A \e i « in 8t, their ancestors, QPQERIODBS Fresh Apalachicola Oysters 50c qt; pt. 25c | ——————— Try our Home-made Pearut Rritde and ¢ 1915 Locking Forvard §915 ters for the Coming live in the EST STAT* ard THE ON THE GLORZE. 4 Booster for the Hardware Co. . Phone ]\? del . C. E. TODD, M. .. MAIN ST. and FLORIDA AVE. 2950 0FRI0SCIEEHF PRUBOFIPIPOTOIC | mosses 'S OBOBODOBIOTOSUGIBOEO u Want Fresh Cle Ve are at your service for anjt! cerricg by an Up-to date Greeen orders glven prempt 2 Littie it will cost. : e ———————— d Construction ¢ KELLEYS EAA Plymouth R Better now than e Year! livest Hard- surely be ner {8 made separately and sey, in the center of the board. Tp, per edge of the cushion is le; ¢ so that a small pair of scissory g be slipped behind it in the wmangg; lustrated. On either side of this cushion, y reels of cotton, one black, the g white, are suspended with loops narrow pale pink ribbon. At the er point a small pocket is sewp i) little frill at the edge, in whigy thimble may find a place, and 3 loop of pale pink ribbon, with 3} at the top, is attached to either of the board by which it may b pended from a nail in the wa] ‘GATOR KILL:D 30 PERSy #’te- Terrorizing Two Villages rus Beast Was Finally Cap tured by Whites With other white con 2 into the lurge ilf of Pan » for <t alligators ¢ a dist we came to | . and dn t 1 found the inhalit dared to go v 1! no one ventiied broad daylight, to cr the narrow canoes the natives to carry | etebics from thel The cause of t ered, was an al! VoL month bank, and out of their canoes and the two villags numbered 250 gouls After a series of fiuiile we ended in capturing t a baited hook—an en which was fastencd | creature was close on 2 He was so old that were grow betwes scales, and he presented the ance of a tree trunk that bl togs a long time submerged. He estimated, more than one years old.—Paul Drevy, in t World Ma gazine. RIES L) is 7k our {awn, 5 you how, e D. LAIF BOTH "MATING Ph0t0g1 e et . . : 'High'slass .bre\..’,ing H & TENNY L9 Cuass P s 4 Elliston Bui ding < Wiite s i e { PEONE 226, Promp 1., il i he F HoL KELL: Y.