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MAKES A QUICK NEED FOR THE MEDICINE THAT’S . KING’S TAKE THIS RELIABLE REMEDY FOR COUGHS AND COLDS WHOOPING COUGH AND ALL BRONCHIAL AFFECTIONS PROMPT USE WILL OFTEN PREVENT PNEUMONIA AND LUNG TROUBLE PRICE 500 and $1.00 SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY ALL DRUGGISTS A DOLLAR WILL DO THE WORK OF TWO. We Don’'t Talk Cheap Groceries BUT WE DO TALK VALUES Our volume of business enablesjus to buy Quality At Its Lowest Price Hence a dollar will buy more of us than elsewhere. Try it and Ssce, 7 cans baby size cream.............ciienniiiiiniint s 3 cans Challenge milk 12-pound bag flour. .. 24-pound bag flour ......... 1-2 barrel Iug flour Oats, per bag.. Sy Y Corn, per bag ............ . ) Rex Brand Hams, no paper to my t‘or, per pound Picnic Hams, per 1b........ Breakfast aBeon, per 1b.............coiiiiiiiiiiiia, 10-pound pail Sea Foam Lard.- . 10-pound pail Snow Drift Lard..... 10-pound pail Cottoleme ........:ovovvveivenninn Lo, i cans family size cream..... T Y S Vi 25 Shorts, per bag Scratch feed Wheat SUNSHINE BISCUITS From the Bakery with a Thousand Windows CROCHPEMAE ..o v ovnsimommensmosmsssqwssesesss S0 Dessert Wafer ..........ccmvuvnnnn.. Csvsaas VAL e ve s 28¢c Veavinque Stick ....c...omeiiiiimeiiennnniii.. 108 mdflc RHARSE WAEEE o o« csissmonsmomivnsssomessishrsvessave 208 Clover Leaf ....... RN N SEPPEUNNC RN eR || PRIDBERES . .o s vcvmannnettososssssesdosvanssavessviv I GO0 LI o« oo s e oo 60066 660l s 4Mb's 8 60 sino 0w §ie . 28¢c Austin’s Dog Biscuit......... Takhoma Soda Biscuit | W.P. PILLANS & Co.| 4 The Pure Food Store Ask the Inspector # ¢ The Telegram IS Up-To-Now NEW DISCOVERY | Mistake to Neglect This Ornamenta- YHE EVENING TELEGRAM LAKELAND, FLA. APRIL 13, 1912. RAIMENT FOR THE TOT WAKES NEAT LITLE PRESENT 3 NO EASY MATTER PROPERLY TC DRESS SMALL BOY, Mothers Desire Is Not Easy to Give—Some Pretty Tub Suits in Colors. That little tot whose trousers are only about as long as your hand is an important personage when it comes to fitting him out with raiment. There i3 all the difference in the world in the appearance he makes when he is just cut down and sewed up and when he is suitably and pic- turesquely dressed. Not only are his little clothes care- fully finished, but they often have some magic touch of handwork which quite places them in the out-of-the- usual class. Every mother wants her boy or girl to take a prominent mace in this claes. Johnny Smith may look all right ln his made-by-the-dozen suits and so | eriticism due him—but the mother with alert taste just can’'t bear her own child to look like any mnice boy you see In the streets. He simply must bear that extra touch, which is g0 hard to give to a boy, where as with a little girl it can be done easily. Just row the more small children look like quaint little men the better. They are perfect pictures in summer with their pretty little tub sults In colors. The little man {llustrated has boy- ish trousers, open at the knees, with sallor collar and tle, big broad belt and pipings in a different material. Sometimes the sult s made In striped or corded white with collar and trim- mings of solid color. Sometimes the order is reversed. The belt gives the style to the suit. A Russian blouse effect is obtained in another suit. The kimono yoke is cross stitched in a design out on the Widely Belted Sult, — e shoulder. A tiny bit of cross stitching runs down the front of the yoke and the yoke is buttoned on with crochet | buttons and loops. This suit in pink and white, blue and white and brown and white is most individual and attractive. | FALSE HAIR REQUIRES CARE tion Which Just Now Is Consid- ered Indispensable. | False hair, as well as the real, needs care., The psyche switch, and trans- formation, should be brushed as care- fully as the real hair and as often. The best way to do it is to place a towel on the lap or table and spreading the “plece” on it, brush with a rubber- backed bristle brush, first one side and then the other. This removes all tangles and does not tear the hair as does a comb. Without natural oils “bought” hair soon grows lusterless. It should be brushed frequently with brilllantine. Put a few drops in the palm of the hand, then rub the brush over it. Be sure to get a brilliantine that is not greasy. There are several makes that give luster, yet do not leave the hair sticky. Also hair can be washed In thick soapsuds made trom pure white soap. Only the lather should be used, and then rinse in sev- eral waters. Dry between chamols cloths or press almost dry in the bands. Then hang in a current of air, and when dry shake and brush until flufty. Occasional washing with gaso- line is considered good for false hair. Do not use ammonia or borax on false hair, as this will discolor it. From a Ralncoat. Do not consign the wornout raincoat to the waste bag. One can make many little things which would demand too much of the expensive oiled silk, and the waterproof cloth is of lighter welight than oilcloth, which one would probably purchase. An apron with a bib can be made for wash day or when you give the baby a bath. A large enveloping cap for the hair will pro- tect from water when windows are being cleaned. Strips of an old silk raincoat can be worked into bags to Carry next year's bathing suit, and the pleces may be easily made over into bathing caps or little utility cases dear to the suitcase of travelers. One wom- an has made large covers to be tied over clothes baskets when holding freshly laundered goods ironed away from home. That Distinctive Touch Which All 1 | long as he is clean maybe there is no | Lucky Scent Sachet Is Pretty Trifie to Mark Remembrances and Friendship. Scent sachets things that can be made moments from almest any small rem- f silk or satin, and it is almost ss too many of re saleable little ar- wnsively pre- pared tor bazars, and also, they make u=efnl little prescnts for unimportant occasions, The novel sachet shown in our! sketeh is carried out in pale blue satin | ud edzed with a dark blue silk cord arranged in three little loops at either <ide at the bose, and again at the top. It is cut out in two pieces of material of the shape shown in the diagram on the right, and well stuffed with cotton wool plentifully sprinkled with some sweet-smelling sachet powder. The silk cord sewn at the edge cov- ers the seam, and a second piece of cord 18 sewn on in front of the sachet to indicate the shape of a horse-shoe. A glance at the illustration will ex- plain this. The nails are worked in silk of a color to match the cord, and | the words “good luck,” are embroider- ed in the center of the shoe in pale pink silk. USEFUL HAT AND TIE SETS Made en Suite, These Will Be Found to Help Out the Toilet in In- numerable Ways. If you are a pretty girl, filled with the ambition to be always smartly garbed and have not an overplus of money, you can help out your ward-‘ robe wonderfully by means of hat and | tie sets, First of all, provide yourself with one of the new small frames of turban or bonnet shape—whichever most becomes you—and cover it with taupe or black velvet as elither of those tones will accord with any shade which you miay desire to put with them, Then make several bands of precisely the length to fit about the crown of the hat and hook them under bows of broad ribbon. The band may be of fur, of feathers, of a single long plume, of embroidered net or velvet or of silk of worsted flowers, but it should fit the crown so perfectly that | it can be whisked off in a minute's | time and replaced with another of a | different sort. i Matching neckties are made of the same materials, but in two ways. A | favorite model consists of a band | twice the width of the one fitting the ! hat, and secured under the left ear with a long-ended and short-looped bow of reversible ribbon velvet, An- other model consists of a wide band shaped precisely like a stock. This' closing in the back, fits the throat closely, and is trimmed with a four- inch-wide plaited frill of ribbon or taf- feta matching the bow of the hat band. Veiling Novelties. New white Shetland veils with overshot designs in black lines, forming large diamond patterns, will bave a strong position in spring lines, says the Dry Goods Economist. Magpie Shetlands, in white, with iarge black scroll de- signs, are another new effect which promises well, In Tuxedo veilings the latest novelty is diag- onal chenille Mnes forming dia- monds or squares, this work being sometimes over a fllet and agaln over a hexagon mesh, For the Boudoir. With all her robes intimes—which is a fashionable word for wrapper— my lady wears distracting slippers matched by silk stockings, which, of course, match the negligee in color. When the tailored street costume of serge or worsted mixture is removed indoors, the smart buttoned boots are removed also and special boudolr | slippers are donned. Just now it is the fad to wear white or flesh colored stockings with even one’s street boots and these stockings may be retained with the pretty boudoir slippers. 1If black hose are worn with street boots | they must be changed for light colored | or white ones in the boudoir. For the Traveler. I A convenient trunk cover for those contemplating a journey, or for the woman who is forced to live in a' hotel, is made of strong cretonne or denim. Cut it to exactly fit the trunk, having the top one inch larger tham the trunk’s 1id all the way around, and the ends and sides cut long enough to ! allow a two-inch hem around the bot- , tom. i are among those | in spare * thn youbuy hardware-no matter what it is--you want the best, don’t you? & I I‘ ¥ That brings you Z here, forthe least < skillful buyer i : can come here and be sure that : what he buys is good because--we make itl good, Customers are coming to us in constantly increasing numbers. It will pay yvou to get acquainted with u.-- pay in quality in service and in money saved. R——@ The Jackson & Wilson Co. Lakeland, Florida Job Printing — WING to the newspaper and publishing business, enlargement of our it has been necessary to move The News Job Office up-stairs where it will be found in Rooms 11 and 12, Kentucky Building, in the com- petent charge of Mr. G. J. Williams. For anything that can be printed, if you want the best work at the right prices, call on Mr. Williams. The News Job Office Rooms 11 and 12 (upstairs) Kentucky Building. We Give You Fits In Ladies’ and Men's Shoes Give Repairing neatly. made to order. us trial. quick and cheaply done. Your Feet. BIFANO BROS. o str e 210 South Florida, Cowdery Rlock +