Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, July 2, 1912, Page 3

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Sapddbiidbbbid ce Number .. g?mence Number ... . spiceted to the fi;fi written notices to the Notices of s0 other items of pent as 8 L’;;‘fi‘.l'u. SYMPATHY. hal [y of the helpless, .nd of the weak, pie music ‘e tender speak. where roses than many Know; that travel never go that enters (o cope with wrong; i thing song, rant comrade = hearts and sad; tothat scatters vs murk and mad. pan chorus mto the stars ges . prison bars. o ght dancing w1 into hearts of grief; i ~rrenath and reason For Divine belief. Exchange. . % SHE MADE HOME HAPPY. tome happy! These few s 1 oread Lurchyard, written on a . the simple words story of the unknown mn litted high its head “d to one the worll own; vy arave with mos, more than his who vd happy!" Through ~ad years L and never stopped hands hor upon no longer dim it ghe left he- o soldier's to my Youth's Com- 2iss Godley. N ozave a delight- t at Orange hall wtive guest, Miss tarted at 9:30, d Mr. Hannah the wee smal’ hours tripped the light s'rains of splendid rated with ferns and made a very , for such a tion. ey vlock delicious re- s $ ‘ream and -~ake “tioyed Mrs. Bardin's ‘ ses Grace God- * Groover, Nel- E n Graham, Mary L .. o 0UTwne, Effie Nelms, \ . Irma Trammell, Marshall, Fannie Lowery, Miss Moody, of Plant ‘4nnah, Virgin McRae, k. RN, McKinney, 1. Cecil Pillans, . Rosroe Skipper, Eu- uis Mayes, Clyde Hetherington, Alexander, Al- Killan Bates Las issued in- PATty which she will 25t in honor of her » Miss Mary Conrad. are looking for- “asant evening with © Loztegs er:ErHOIE NUMBERS—SOCIETY ee oo een | EDITOR. PECIAL NOTICE—Notices for the Spcial Department can be com- ga Society Editor by either of the above telephones Society Editor, care Evening Telegram. cial functions, club meetings, church gatherings and social interest should be telephoned to this depart- oon as they occur in order that their news value is not O PPPPESSEIPbid e iibe Mrs. Holland Entertained Ladies Aid Society. The Ladies’ Aid society of the First LI'resbyterian church held an intercst- ing meeting yesterday afternoon witl, Mrs. J. M. Holland at her home on fouth Kentueky avenue. Various matters of business came Pefore the ladies, the work being vory generally discussed, At the elos Mrs. Holland served Hious refreshments, ¢! the mecting Those present were Mrs. John Ed- wards, Mrso 1o A Walker, Mrs. A 1. McLeod, Mrs. Trimble, Mrs. Wood, Mrs, Castle, Mrs, 1. D, Bryan, Mrs I'rush and Nirs: Holland. wble that the ladies will not meet any r.ore during the summer, postponing the meetings It is nrob- until cooler weather, . Ll L Reading Circle Met With Mrs. Darracott. A very pleasant meeting was held sesterday afternoon when the Read- ing Circle of the Methodist Mission- ary Society met with Mrs. Darracott About fifteen members were pres- ent, and all enjoyed the study of the rew book, “The Gospel in Latin Lands.” Italy was the country un- der discussion and the members all learned much of interest in regard to the people, their customs, etc Mrs Arendell and Mrs, F. J. Mcbhonald were the readers, After the reading, Mrs. Darracott, assisted by Miss Fannie Blankenship and Mrs. Arendell, served delicious refreshments . L] . The Stories Mother Told. (Bdna G awley. Not long since there was a glorious home-coming of vight grown-up «hi! dren. The tfast-failing mother =e* smiling in the midst, and for hei amusement the eight rontributed their reminiscences of - childhoodd days. Each one had a poen, or a story lezrned long years betore, and the common question during the e days of close communion was alway “Do you remembor? Story telling, to that cizht, was i delight for which all cuickly dropped To sit on braided mat at grandma’s tec!, o bang on the arms of mother's rovker ond listen - ah, the breathlessnes ot it And the finis of e 1 was always the signal for a simn! taneous, | another! A\ senior came foom high school one cvening, a few weeks since, who was in great perplexity He was re-! auired to prepare himself to tell six stories. Three he knew were to b feund in the Bible didn’t just Krow how to find out where. These three vere “David and Jonathan, “Es- thes,” and “Ruth.” The others were, “The House That Jack Built, The Three Bears,” and the “Little Redl Hen.” Not onc of these could h» 11— claimed never to have heari any of them! Tell stories, tucn, tell them ofter all kinds, for who knows just whe the sudden recollection of them, in the years to come, shall be a very present help in time of trouble. The same senior revealed the fact tha he was required to read at least one bcok by an American author. e ¢ want to read just one,” he said, “will you tell me what to read? 1 concentrated my whole soul o1 tte problem, and deliberately replied. “If you are to read only one book Ly an American author, ever, I ad- vise you to read Webster's diction- ary.” Now, who had sinned, this lad or Lis parents, that he was born blind® Tell stories! Tell them the best you can, but tell them apyway ——————— Proved Harmlessness of Comets, Twice during the nineteenth cen- tury the earth plunged directly through the tail of a comet—in 1819 and again fn 1861. Once it was immersed to a depth of 200,000 miles. The more imaginative astronomers thought they detected a peculiar glow in the at- mosphere, but nothinz more. THE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAK LLAND. L\, JULY 2, (912 MEMORANDUM PAD IS GOOD Will Be Found of Much Value in the Kitchen and Here Is Easy Way to Make It. Perhaps in no room in the house is & memoraadum pad more necessary than in ¢t kitchen, and the one shown in the acvompanying sketch has been specially designed for utilizing old half sheets of note paper. The materials with which it can be made are almost a matter of cholce, IMODIFYING THE PANIER | MANY VERSIONS OF THE LATEST STYLE TO BE SEEN. Parisian Idea Has Not Been Received With Full Favor in the United States, Though the Sugges- tion Is Followed. Versions of the panier are getting more numerous every day, but with few exceptions women seem a little shy of using the fulness at the hips, where, indeed. it {s only becoming to the slimmest and most youthful fig- ures. Occasionally one finds a shop gown which is definitely of the plc- turesque sort, with genuine hip bunches and a flavor of Watteau in all the touches of the creation; but such charming frivolities, which are copied faithfully by the private makers for ultra-smart wearers, are kept entirely for out-of-town use, as they should be. The panier drapery of the most popu- lar sort carries out the idea with a very low puffing, this fulness being always below the knees and offering no ob- stacle to long, graceful lines. A tunic of this sort is shown with the gown, and if one wants to have a little fling with the panier idea here is the chance for it. The putling of the tunic is of the most conservative spe- PAGe THRER BATES FOR Bargains L 4 > All This Week Shoe Sale Wash Goods Sale Ladies’ Ready-to - Wear cles, and the style gives very smart < and art serge or equally well i in height and six inches in width, and a piece of 8t cardboard of these di- | | mensions art linen would do should be procured and | smoothly covered with the n:.nlvl'ml: | that L been selected { ! At the top and hottom bands of | | broad elastic are sewn across, and un- | (der these bands o large number of | shects of notepaper may be slippml| and held in their places, and when the uppermost one has heen used, it can be pulled from under the elastie in a moment without disturbing the re- moining sheets underneath. The pad is edzed all round with cord carried into three little loops at each corner DIVIDING LINE OF FASHION Marked Difference in Opposing Ideas as to What Shall Be Given Permanent Favor. This, briefly, is the burning ques: tlon of the hour: Shall we take serl ously to the elghteenth century re- vival with its panlers, fichus and pointed bodices, or shall we continue to admire the flowing draperles dis- playing an obviously corsetless con- dition and a rather dowdy and exceed- ingly expensive simplicity? Simplicity is hardly the word for the statuesque complexities of drapery which some of the best people insist on hanging on their bones to grace every occasion indoors or out of them. They talk of nothing but pro- portion, line and harmony, and, to practice what they preach, turn them- selves into living pictures for the ben- efit of the spectator All this is thanks to the designs of | artists who have chosen silks and sating instead of paint and canvas Their "as a method of expression ‘» clientele shudders at the rigid un- alntability of the tailor-made, and| opportunity for the use of two fabrics With the panier gowns a figured ma terfal is often put under plain, the pattern showing through the goods, o1 elso the scheme is reversed, with the dregs of the plain and the tunic o | the figured. Here tho dress is of o figured voile in a pale shide of gray, lace in the same color trimming it of fectively., The model is adapted to lingerie materials of soft fall, to mu lin, swisg, soft-finished linen, ete Is into a living picture schemeo on every provocation ! SMALL COATS TO BE WORN, Fanciful Little Garments in Many Materials Are a Feature of the Season. The wost dilicult part of the fitting of an overdrapery ic in keeping the ides straight and <lim in ontline. The | MARY DEAN lit skirt is now accomplished with B an over-effect There i: every indication that the <hort, fanciful little coat in silk of one kind or another ix to be an important | ftem of the summer outfit this year.| The eton, the bolero and a host of | models more or less related to these two old friends are already in evl- dence, the less closely related coatees showing a leaning toward abbreviated mantle or dolman lines, in keeping with the ubiquitous taffetas and their boulllonees, ruching and quillings. On the whole, these little wraps are plcturesque and piquant. Perhaps some of them are a trifle too odd, but that depends a great deal upon the woman who wears them WILL KEEP GOWN IN SHAPE Inexpensive and Satisfactory Frame That Any One May Put To- gether at Home. Cut a plece of heavy cardboard 17 inches long and elght inches wide and shape one side of it like a coat hanger Now punch a small hole in the center one inch from the top, and tie a picce of ribbon or tape through it to muke a loop to hang it on. In the lower edge make two hole: six inches apart and elther insert large safety pins or sew In hooks ' hang the ekirt or your gowns to. This makes an inexpensive and very satisfactory frame to hang your : mer lingerie or linen frocks and wais!s upon, keeping them fresh for a lon time after they have been ironed These hangers may be padded with raw cotton and covered with fanc: | silk or flowered siikoline. A delica! sachet powder sprinkled over the cot- ton adds greatly to thelr attractive: ness and perfumes the gown as we!ll. Cysios Fncs The mesh bag is still very popular. | Ruchings of old gold taffeta trim many of the new gowns The dead white hat is unlikely to be seen again this season Cotton corduroys are among the fa- vorite washing fa € Little black taffeta roats appear with gowns of contra-ting color. New Ruffles. Many new ruffles have appeared '1:is spring. Foremost as a novelty is & soft taffeta in shot colorings, edged 2! ' 18 seen in many new designs. The culrass effect on evening gowns |~ Little frocks of «pring muslins will be smart and pret immer wear. | Flowerlike orna with bands | of velvet are still g around with a broad frayed-out ruc: of the silk, and another has a taf<'s center and a soft marabout edzing The neck ruche—or ruf’ slar for neck- | goes quite closely around wear. charming in ostrich feather Accordion plaitine is zmong the pos- slightly curled, and the n eibilities for the r's coming fashions able colors are black and wii’ or gray—the latter mixed «° or in some pale self t A neck ruffle of with triple ends finishe is effective when throwr thoulders, and the bro marabout mounted on =0 | not only becoming but of ! With the lingeri~ « bags of lace or line fe used. Taffeta wraps, trimmed with roching of the same material, are very popular Avoid wearing a light with a lity. | dressed. {thelr homes to tra s¢5 the hand- shown that the | will be largely to re | dark gown, if you would really be well ¥ou Sale In size, it is nine inches '3 W < > Something 'Doing Every Day. Good time to buy Honest Merchandise at a Very Low Price. < ) 4 BATES I S S R R If good work is what you are look- ing for, you ean 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. Thone 130. ik ULy THE LAKELAND STEAM LAUNDRY R. W. WEAVER, PROP. *Phone 130 SOPOBOIOPRE0 2BOTOI0E0LOTOBROHD POSOHOPO: We Alw.ys PLEASE Our Patrons We keep everything to be found in an up-to-date book store, and will be pleased to wait on you. Lakeland Souvenirs, the Latest Books, and All the Popular Maga- zines. LakelandBookStore CHOPOLOLGITHOTOLOFOFOFOIN Novel Fly Trap. Whereln Duty ls Irksome. In some parts of Mexico the natives Duty is only irksome to him who bang the nests of luge spiders In | eraves some selfish enjoyment or bens 5 and other in- | efit for himself. Let the man who is i ieness of his sects chafing nunder th e — e, duty look to h he will find s wearine ‘veds, not from Hedgehog Immune to Toxins, that his we 1‘.‘Ir : t fro b e the duty ! but f Lis selfish de- Investigation scientists has - o it —James Alled sire to escay | the toxins pa AN e Sensitive. ntist—We must ki nerva o Course of Wisdom. Der " ‘. tient M"- gy e 1 : : that too Patient—Then 1 will go Ascertain cleatiy t is wrong with | ot of the r I'm too tenderheart- \ kuow any means {" Wit “ lfl n\";" " ‘m te hose means.—Rus- :er it o i ) i i

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