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. TEI.EPHONE NUMBERS—SOCIETY EDITGR : Gice Number ........ o SRR LR e | # Reside: nce Number ... ... el e s ted to the Society Editor es of social functions, club sired, 2 A ok B AR Bl .27CIAL NOTICE—Notices for the Social Department can be com- | written notices to the Society Editor, care Evening Telegram. items of social interest should be telephoned to this depart- by either of the above telepnones. meetings, church gatherings and LOST COIN. SR -t five 1 ever had five-spot 1 lost, by dad Lave squared a pressing spending that coin yet. . memory of it clinzs. (e bought so many things time 1 spend a sou ¢ what that five could do. jander twenty bones . dozen no-count loans? . pothing in the end con didn’t get to pend DR +4L LITTLE REALM OF HOME. roud, it is not wide < cmpire mid the tide aftic and the mueil s, trial and toil, Jaee of modest girth, 4 wreen spot of the carth is oer it and above i honey-dews of love, where mothers rear A4 bt in some future ye wmto that grown-up land, ing back to touch her v~ do that leave us quite 11 vale beyond the light, 1 n their phantom guise s unto Paradise. .‘1 i, but, ah how sweet iope and courage meet, nee of each other's illg, (2 in of stubborn wills, ¢ bearing each his share oubles and of care, oys and triumphs won +alm with brighter sun Im of home, where grow i that delight us so, sanhoods that take their 1ilding of the race, thoods that have their part o-mic urge and heart o of truer life iing care and grueling The Bentztown Bard. L] . . Mrs. Elliston : Auto Tour. morning s * Mroand Mrs, Fampa Tribune we J. J. Ellis- this morning in W mascot automobile for Ky., and other points, it intention to make a tour able length, . L] . man’s Club Will Hold Meeting Tomorrow Afternoon. coman’s Club will hold its weting tomorrow afternoon k with Mrs, Guy Wilson, ue of her mother, Mrs. E. ¢ Ker, 302 South Kentucky A full attendance is urged anding committees wil] be 1 and work planned for the .02nd or Child, Which? * Ada Patterson. r sed their chance for life and re-| mained on the sinking Titanic, choos- 1 filg to dig with their husbands. Both thiese women were mothers, One re- | fased to enter a lifeboat without her Lhusband. The other, having placed her seven-month’s old child in the arms of the little one's aunt, delib- climbed out of the Imlm.n'j and back upon the ship to die with | hier husband. | crately We have drifted into the habit of | fassuming that were the choice| | to be made, every woman would make the paramount sacrifice for her hild; but the women, one old, one| vounz, who deliberately made the op- jposite choice, w hilg the ocean ll\\'\’i fnew 1o be two miles deep beneath ! m was risinz to gather them into | chilling embrace | women disturbs our | stilli to] i think of these cocksarencess, | If experience teaches her that lite i a chilly, thorny path the instinet] to oot those thorns from the child's | path little il her love and care to protect it | om the cold will make her a wom- an warrior fighiing desperately for that it may be a shield and to enwrap the one her own life for the child’s. If Jife's teachings | have been gentler, it the path has| heen strewn so thick with rose It «I\-‘ri that the thorns are seldom felt, or their presence merely guessed, and the air has been warmed and per- fumed by luxury, the mother who has learned no harsh lessons will not re- gard the world as an enemy to her child. The answer will depend groatly upon the husband. He is a relic of the cave man, and it the idea of be- ing master of the woman who is hig lite companion survives in him, there {i5 no doubt what her would be, The slave would try 1o o If he were a friend and kind, unselfish, there would be | bettle in her heart, and doubt of its choice wpe comrade, loyal, issue. Greatly, too, the choice will pend upon the woman's nature, the aracter of all those tributary streams that have united in her. |If she is of a line of women who, when the poetry of courtship and the ardor of the honeymoon has passed gave all their affection and tenderness in ut- ter absorption to their children, by the law of probability we may expect lier to express that tendency toward complete absorption in motherhood. Talk of environment as we will, be- lieve in its power as we do, we know that heredity is a mighty undercur- rent in our lives. Beneath the smil- ing surface of our existence we feel its drag. As the mothers of the fam- ily have been for many generations, so the child Is fairly sure to be. Yet there are women of another sort—good mothers, good housewives, good friends—yet whose dominant affection is that for their mate. Such a woman does not lack the materna! instinet, but she has the genius for that transcendent friendship which is lasting wifehood. In her the wife is never swallowed up in the other. For such a woman the man by whose side she walks e | sudden grip of catas-|tbrough life is the greatest being be- pon @ woman's soul, and between life with t be? neath Deity. Yet despite all this we cannot be deuth with her husband |sure what manner of wife a man has until they face together a crisis. An “ave the time or curios-|azed man told me that he had been 0 speculate about the |married izhts of women, themselves with 'Ad" or the tiger?™ twenty years when he have | crossed the plains to California with the | his wife, and that after they reached Ran Francisco he wanted to be intro- he riddle of Stock-|duced to her. In the lightning flashes " has been given There he answer, ity of opinion, 4 successor. sweet placidness fuancy of the face character of the[faces whose of fate we see briefly and clearly ners have continued | guessed features had been dim | in the light of every day. We read hearts whose riddle we had not| ¢ s When a Woman's an Optimist. The woman who believes she can 5 them, or that most | Make a man think her drug store com- Ol Came to the minds of 24 that two women had plexion is the real thing may be ex- pected to believe the man is telling the truth when he says she is the only one he ever loved.—Chicago Rgcord- Herald. CTHE EVENING TELEGRAM LAKI'.AND, FLA., MAY 29, 1912, The photograph shows the model of a tashionable Parisian dressmak- er attired in the extreme fashion ot the much talked-ot harem dr picture was snapped at the race track near Paris and ereated a great deal This extreme of a much-talked-of harem skirt is the near est approach to trousers that has yet been devised by French dressmakers. of amusement, SIMPLE GOWN With mauve stripes, brightencd by a cluster of cherries at the walst. Leghorn hat, edged with corntiower blue velvet and trimmed with corn- flowers and popples. Dainty Glove Protector. Among the frilly things that glirls are making this season are tubes of white satin to slip inside th- muft to protect white gloves from s/!/!ng. Take a strip of satin or heav; mes- saline, 15 inches long and 12 !nches deep, fold it over and sew in a seam to make a six-inch tube. Sev French seam to avold ravelins 1sh the ends with a narrow be Fin- this case inside the muft. 7Tt frilly ends improve the looks of '+ muff, while gloves last much longer 0 Pro- tected. :[ Coats Without Padding | Tailors are using less and l¢== pad- | ding in the mew coats, an nough these are never entirely innoent of | the bullding out required to [revent wrinkles in the goods, they aiw Very cleverly cut to sugzes' '-:m‘h squareness, and are sor s fast- ened (as is the tenden now) from neck to hem with a t 'and | closely set line of buttons, ®ith a tiny turned down collar or imitation coliar in embroidery. in & and | frills of chiffon or chiffon and crcamy lace. It is the work of a minute 1o 8lip | pipe with some remnant of any pretty Surely Extreme of Harem Skirt Is Represented Here| | This SATIN AND TAFFETA MANTLES Decided Vogue Is Apparent for These Tailor-Made and Attractive Garments. To replace the milnr made for after- noon and visiting wear, there will be I a great vogue in long, soft satin and taffeta mantles. These are quite straight and for the most part unlined and, when not expressed in black, are carrled out in strict harmony with the gowns, Large square revers, allied to equal- e square shaped collars, figure on an appreciable number of models. And by way of hreaking the monotony of an all'black scheme the revers are oftentimes faced with some color, such a8 bishop s purple, peony or a Pekin silk is | y. But always are these contrasts veiled in black chiffon. That scems for the moment to be a hard and fast decree, Fringe also plays its part, and the mantles in their entirety are being regarded by a large fraternity of wom- en as a veritable boon for filling the anxious hour pending the definite ac- ceptance of the proposed fresh modes and styles. The Waist Line, An indication of present fashions 1s that the walst line will in many cases be Indicated by a narrow belt of the old-fashioned sort which one has ceased to assoclate in one’s mind with smart dressing. In very many of the newest gowns the walst is emphasized and !a its normal place. Asa rule,thebelt corresponds with the other trimmings of the gown, but this is not insisted upon, and sometimes it bas no connection with it at all, but belongs wholly to the must abused re- glon of the fancy belt. Thus a striped gown has its narrow belt of folded brocade tissue, and an afternoon frock which was carried out in pompadour sllk emphasized its possession of a walst by clrciing it with a band of stiff, straight ribbon. Broom Holder. A drain pipe may be put to a rather novel purpose In the shape of a holder for brooms, garden tools, etc. Deco- rated drain pipes make excellent um- brella and fern stands for the hall, but when used for the purpose shown need only be decorated in a very simple way, and a good plan of doing this is to entirely cover the exterior of the wall paper, which may be very easily fastened round the sides with It will then look by no means ull\.Lh' 1y, and may be placed In the corner of | the kitchen or in some other suita spot. Tennis Costume. The white serge skirt in tion with one of the many types of loose-skirted blouses for tennis. With college colors are also seen. I r S A PAGE THRER LE A Two Davs Sale in which a whirlwind harvest of bargains in EMBROI MONDAY, TUESDAY, DERIES MAY 27th. MAY 28th. Our Ladies’ Ready-to-Wear some great bavgains in lingerie dresses. made up in the very latest styles. We also have a complete line of gingham dresses, trimmed with lace and embroidery—just the thing for house and street wear. U.G.BATES Department Store Department will make your heart glad, and your moncy last longer. We have GG GG SIS OIEAEIE OGN GIRIEG If good work is what you are look- ing for, you cap get it at Lakeland Steam Laundry, Compare our work with others, and you will find it in the lead. We are just as anxious to please you as you are to be pleased. TRY US. Phone 130. THE LAKELAND STEAM LAUNDRY R. W. WEAVER, PROP. *Phone 130 Exercise Your Right to criticize wherever you find anything in this store’s service that does not please you. We welcome criticism just as we appreciate praise Wc Aim To Make This DrysGoods [Store as nearly perfect as a human institu tion can be. And we shall be glad 2nd grateful for your help with any ™ ' s P - e suggestions that will help towardthat result yu 1 S| 3 is much used is. ith it i1s worn a siriped coat of blue and white, orange and wh!!e‘ red and white, or green and white. Combinations of the various i - A, ST W e e