Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, May 29, 1912, Page 2

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¢ p— lieves in letting Bill grow up inde, dent and develop his own character, that's what he says. Oh, ves, Bill | takes a bath real often. I didn't say he didn’t. “Oh, say, mother, do T have to wear | them silk stockings and pumps? 1 hope Rill won't be anywhere amundi when I start to the party. 1 don't! ! care if Aunt Julia did give 'em to me, I'd rather she’d given me some . Dressing for leggings or a pair of ice skates. I've | #ot to go to see Aunt Julia next Sat- | “Oh, say, mother, I don't want 'em (urday! Say, mother. it's awful mean manicured,” protested the boy who ' the way my Saturdays go. Bill and | Wwas going to a party. “Shiny nails { me—I mean 1 and Bill—ain't that | are awful gissy. Why, Bill's never | right? Well, then, us—we was going | had his nails polished, and he said to | to finish the aeroplane and make an- me just yesterday that he'd never | other model all by ourselves, and now | heard of anybody having to take a ]H’ I've got to go to Aunt Julia’s I don't bath every day except me. I've asked : know when I'll have time for any- every boy in this block and there | thing. ain't a single fellow who has to take “No, I haven't written to grandpa & bath more'n once a week. Now I've | yet. Of course not. With all them got to take an extra one this after- ! parties and calls on Aunt Julia T don't noon on account of Maybelle's party! | have a minute to write letters. 1 Gee! T don't want to go to her old | guess if grandpa knew how my time | baby doll party. | was spoilt he wouldn't expect me to ! “Say, mother, have I got to go? | write to thank him for that jackknife. Well, I think it's mean having parties | Bill says it's a pretty good knife and on Saturday. I wish I was lame, so | he's going to get a man he knows to I couldn't dance, and then no girl | sharpen it for me. The man used to would want me to her party. I don't, be his father's hired man when they see why the girls are always having | kept a horse, before Bill was born, and parties, { he's such an old friend of the family “You say you're going to give me ; that he'll do it for nothing. So even one to return all this hospertality! if you don't think Bill is a good com- Oh, say. mother, please don't. Idon't panion for me, you can see what a| see what I've done that you're going ' valuable friend he is. to give me a party. If you only won't ' do it I'll be more careful about my | “Oh, say, mother, I hate that sissy English and I'll clean my nails and tle! Can't I wear my old dark blue scrub my tecth every morning with- | one? No, I aln't chewing gum. I just out your reminding me, I will, hon- ! happened to have a little in my mouth, est. Why, if Bill knew I was going | but I wasn't chewing it. I never chew to have a party he'd guy me terrible. | it since you told me not to the last time. But I've got a little on hand | glossy, smooth THE EVENING 'STRIVE FOR HARMONY | | | ! THEREIN 1S THE WHOLE SECRET OF SUCCESSFUL COIFFURE. | Once Having Ascertained the Style That Suits the Face, Refuse to Be Led to Follow Any Caprice of Fashion, style never plays freaks with hair. Her coiffure should Le personal, not a whim of fashion. She should study her type under skillfu vice or by means of a triple mirror, until she knows what ararngement suits the color and nature of her hair and the contour and expression of her face, The cholce once made, hold to it though the rest of the girls are flatten- ing down their tresses or puffing them out to suit the last caprice in head: gear. Go to hairdressers if you can afford it; they keep the hair in such good condition, but insist on their fol- lowing the general lines you have adopted as your individual coiffure. It is not easy to give advice as to hairdressing, but in a general way re- member that black or very dark hair does not look well fluffy or disordered, while the least suspicion of kink should be tabooed. . It should be , and {? waved at all adopt a broad, loose wave and moder- ate puffing, Light hair or red hair is apt to look thin and dull if very smooth, and wav- ing or fluffiness is usually extremely becoming to the fair-haired type of beauty, “There’s no use training me up for | that I thought I ought to use up, so soclety, ‘cause I'm going to be a gold | I just put it in my mouth once in a miner. Bill knows about a mine out | while, in Nome or Nevada that's awful rich.| “Lemme comb my halr myself, There's old nuggets as big as foot- ' mother. I can part it straight. Say, falls and he and me—I mean I and did you hear that? That's Bill's him—are going out there as soon as | whistle. Lemme go to the window we're 16. There was one fellow who ' and holler down that it's all off with went out when he was only 15 going | the aeroplane work today, for I've got on 16, and now he's a millionaire, to go to a party, “Well, anyway, if I do have to goto; “Say, mother, what do you taink? college first before I'm a miner, I'll | Bill's all dolled up in a lot of new be a athlete. No soclety for me, moth. | clothes and he's going to Maybelle's er, 80 I don't see why I can't cut out party himself. Wouldn't that freeze parties and dancing school. i you?"—Chicago Daily News. “That brown stuff on my hands? Oh, | e that’s the mahogany stain Bill and me | Most Effective Way. are going to put on my model aero-| “I certainly am sincerely indebted plane. T was just trying it. Ain't it a ' to you for winning my case.” swell color? Of course, it won't come “By no means. I represented your rnfl' easy or it wouldn't be any good, | opponent.” Bill was coming over this afternoon “Just s0."—Filegende Blaetter, to work on the aeroplane. He'll be awful gore when he finds out that you made me go to a party. BIll hasn't got any mother. She died when he was a kid a few days old. Of course, it was an awful sad loss to Bill, but heis real brave about it. He says his father wouldn't know {f he didn't take a bath for a month. The Regult. “Did the plumber I sent you do your work?" *“No; he ‘did’ me.” PR s S e e Success in Constancy. The secrecy of success is constancy His father be-!to purpose.—Disraeli, Do not tie the halr up into tight 1it- tle wads or draw it back from the face and neck to the straining point. This ruins the halr itself and hardens the softest. Equally bad—indeed worse, for it is unrefined as well as ugly—is volumi- nous hairdressing. Nothing is such bad style as a heavy braid with hair, 1f overblessed by nature, adopt a colf- fure hair ararngement that under-em- phasizes the amount of hair; if the hair is bought, save your purse and your reputation for good taste. A girl with small face, delicate features and slight figure looks ridiculous with massed tresses. The secret of becoming hairdress. ing is that it harmonizes with one's face and figure. If she Is massive of form and features, she looks almost a caricature with curly lovelocks that are fetching on a plquant face, while the simple parting and Greek kmot that is charming on a girl of regular features and oval contour is unbecom- ing on one of heavy cheek bones and Pug nose, —— Seldom, A man seldom has the courage of is_wife’s_ convictions, h . THAT HOUSE IS MINE, FEELING IS A FEELING THAT CANNOT BE DEFINED, BUT BUST BE ACTUALL) ORDER TO BE FULLY A By our plans we malke it possible and casy for come, or the average earning capacity, to ow casy way that it in no way works WE WILL BUY YOU A HOME n his ow a havdship on him, FOR $1,000.00 Yo $2,000.00 per $3,000.00 $4,000.00 £5,000,00 intc Write For L:terature " EXPERIENCED IN PPRECIATED. any man with an ordinary in- n home, and in such an t pay only $8.30 month on each $1,000.00 with 5 rest per annum, payable monthly. Tabulated Illustration of a $1,000 Loan Made on Contracts that are from Six to Twelve Months Old Purchase Price of each Contract $6.00 Amount deposited as dues . .. Amount deducted for expenses . ... .. Amount of loan made by the Company Amount of advance credit on loan . $72. 18, Balance due Co., payable as per following tabl | Balance due on loan ' Interes t S per cent Principal vearly at Ye each year on yearly ba'ance $8.30 per month P 00 00 ..$1,000.00 54.00 e $ 946.00 arly total princi- Monthly total princie al and interest pal and interest 15t 2nd 3rd ath sth 6th 7th th gth 6 Months $946.00 846.40 746.80 647.20 547.60 44800 34840 248 8o 140.20 49 60 | $90.60 99.60 99.60 90.60 90 6o 09.60 09 60 06 60 099 60 40.60 | | | | ! : Total Int. $:48.00 9°: years Princ. $046.00 $ $12.24 11.83 141 11.00 10.58 10.17 9.7§ 9.34 807 8.68 | | | | | | { | 1194 0o Tota! Principal and Int. N NOTE THE TOTALS. If your payments on a $1.000.00 loan w With a saving of 20 cents a day y With a saving of 35 cents a da Why pay rent> Why pay a m The loan with accrued interest, further interest. We allow 4 per cent interest We help you save your mo ou can meet the contract requir uch higher rate of interest on n may be paid in full or in part ney. help you make more out of yo! yourself, and loan you money at a lower rate and on better t where. We are a “HOME" company and will appreciate vous WRITE FOR FULL DETAILED INFORMATION. § THE GUARANTEE INVESTMEN INCORPORATED UNDER THE STATE LAWS © HOME OFFICE. THIRD 11 00R CURRY kU1 IIN TAMPA— - R A W WML ™A T 1% R * T, ¢ For Information call on B. I.SW, ATTS, Local Agent, ere equated, it would be $10.48 per month. ements. y you can pay back a $1.000.00 loan. ote or mortgage elsewhere? at any time, thus stopping on the monthly advance deposits. after the third month. ur money than you can make s than you can get else- ness. T & LOAN CO. LORIDA ORIDA T e erm . VELEGRAM LAF ELAND, FLA, MAY The woman who woull be in good | small box ir her hand, unm‘ind‘ful of her | the shadows which were beginning to 29, 1912, Rin Muriel sat in the twilight, with a steal into the room. If one could have peeped inside the box one would have seen a cameo ring of a peculiar style. She was thinking of the one who had given it to her eleven years ago. Just then a light tap at her door aroused her from her reverie, and she sprang to her feet. The box fell from her hand and rolled under the table. “Oh. it's you, Miss Fuller!” she ex- claimed, opening the door. “Yes, it's I,” laughed a young voice, and a girl of about 20 came into the room. “And why are you sitting in the dark?” | “I didn’t realize it was so late,” ex- plained Muriel, as she turned on the light. She stooped to pick up the box, but it had opened and the ring had fallen out. “That's a peculiar ring,” she said, “and a beautiful one.” Murtol's face erimsened. “Yes, it has a strange setting,” she replied. “I've had it a long time. A very dear friend gave it to me.” “Would you mind telling me about it?" said the girl, softly, and she slipped her arms about the other's neck Lois Fuller was a niece of Muriel's | j and he probably never gives a thought landlady, and during the last year had frequently visited her aunt. Muriel had seen quite a lot of the girl, for nearly every evening during her stay she had come up to Muriel’'s room. Lois was expectant, and at last the other broke the silence. “I've never told any one before,” ghe said, “but perhaps it may do me good to confide in you. I was very young when I first met Philip Browning.” Here Lois gave a little start, but Muriel did not notice it. “He was an artist and came to our village the summer I was 17. He was a constant visitor at our home during his stay in town, and as he was far superior to any young man I had ever seen, it was not long before 1 grew to admire him. “Before he returned to the city in| the autumn he told me that he loved li" There was no happler girl in the world than T when he put this ring on my finger. He sald that it wag an heirloom and showed me an- other ring which was exactly like it, only a little emaller. “This he wore on his watch chain. His parents had died when he was a child, and the rings had been left for him. This one was his mother's be. trothal ring, and his father used to wear the other ring, as he himself was doing, on his watch chain. “The days after this were very bright until Philip was obliged to re- | turn home. At first I was lonely, but T trled to comfort myself with the thought that we would not be sep. arated very long, for the following June we were to be married. 1 grew auite happy again as T made my plans for our new home, but in a few weeks my happiness turned into sor- row. My father was suddenly taken ill with pneumonia and in less than a fortnight T was left alone. This was a severe blow to me, for 1 loved my father very dearly, Now 1 only had Philllp left | “Up to that time he had written me long, loving letters, and it was a cruel thock to me the month following my father’s death to pick up a paper and read of his marriage.” When Muriel had finished, Lols was looking very thoughtful. “Are you sure that there wasn't some mis. take?”" ghe sald. “Oh, no,” answered Murfel, “there wasn't any mistake. T only hope he fs happy—without doubt he fs, to the girl he used to know so long ago.” | pathy and then, after a little while, | ! juncture Lois came up to her room, Lols murmured a few words of sym- she left Muriel alone, One evening. about two weeks after- ward, a feeling which Muriel could not define compelled her to again look at | the cameo ring. After a little while she slipped it on her finger. At this her eyves sparkling and her cheeks flushed with excitement “Auntie has gone out” ghe said, “and 1 have a caller downstairs—a cousin of mine. 1 want you to meet him. You'll come down, won't yon?" As they entered the living room, made bright and cozy by a glowing open fire, Muriel started as a tall, familiar figure stepped toward them. Philip Browning! Could it be pos- eible? Yes, it was he and no other who took her trembling hands in his. It took her only a few minutes to | find out that there had been a mistake | | after all. It was Philip's brother who | had married. and it was through an | error of the paper that Philip's name ! | was used. He told her how pained he was | when he received the letter unopened, | and how he had written after that i several times, only to have every let- | ter returned to him in the same way. At last he had been forced to believe that she cared for him no longer. 1t was then that he had gone abroaa, and he had returned home only two months ago. “I owe my good fortune in findine rou to Lois,” he said, and he lookeq around gratefully, but his cousin hag slipped from the room. Among the Browning's possessions there is nothing they prize more than the cameo rings. WANTED | 00 LADIES te enter Packing House Market Contest. Would you like 10 3..... an 86-piece dinner set of fine Chinaware Free. This is the M. Ladies’ Contest. No minors or single people can enter, T ) Set is on exhibition at Packing House Market. With eveyy . ckase amounting to five cents or more from this market wil] b en a voting coupon—5c¢ purchase gets 5 votes, 10¢ purchase 10 votes, etc. Always secure these votes with your purchase save them for yourself or your frierds. Watch this space f ther particulars. Contest will begin Saturday, May 25 ang 60 days. Call at market and register your names and get in race, PACKING HOUSE MARKET Smith-Harden Bldg.) R. P. BROOKS —DEALER IN- Staple and Fancy Groceries, Hay, Grain and Feedstuffs PHONE 119 Cowdery Building WITH WO00D'S MEAT MARKET 10 1bs. Bucket Snowdrift Lard. 4 1bs. Bucket Snowdrift Lard . 1-2 bbl Flour in Wood . 24 1b. Sack Flour..... 12 1b.Sack Flour ..... 7 Cans Small Cream. ........ 3 Cans Extra Large Cream.. 3 Cans Tomatoes ......, 1 1b, Cracker Boy Coffee................... 11b. Best Butter ... Stafolife, per Sack. .. Hay No. 1, per 100 1bs, Chicken Feed, per Sack. Oats, per Sack ...... Shorts, per 8ack .................. 4 Job Printin @i : O\VING to the enlargement of our newspaper and publishing business, 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. S. L. A, CLONTS DEALER IN Real [state uiice in Clonts’ Building. CITY AND COUNTRY PROPERTY— SOME FINE BARGAINS. W. Fiske Johnson REAL ESTATE Loars Negotiated Buys and Sells Real Estate. Oran; ¢ Grove Property a Specialty. ROOM 7. RAYMONDO BUILDING | B | R Wanted a New Sensation. ) 1 Bald One—I would give &n¥:ii™® Wwith a cloth moistened in turp for your splendid head of hair. W ° whea it is dry you will have a surface | One—v d you, really? Bald Of upcn which you can draw your de Yes, 1 “’u‘.ld.lflie xb go to the D37 sign with a lead pencil as easily as | ghon just once and teel that | on paper, says Suburban Life. The !g D my money's worth.—Ne¥w older the turpentine the better. ! ledns Picayune. E To Preszre Clina for Drawing, It you wipe over a plece of «

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