Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Every little bit helps. You can always spare “something” if you .we just a little within your income. By adding a “trifle” ev- ery day you will, in time, have a fortune and jn any case Provide/ ~ against misfortune. Bring a “little bit” into this bank every day ——start now. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAKELAND Under Control of U. 8. Government e e ) IF IT'S REAL ESTATE We have it anywhere and in any size tracts, and if it is E INSURANCE You want, see us before you buy. You are needing we can give you the best on earth and treat vou right. Polk County Real Estate & Insurance Co. Office: Room 7, Deen & Bryant Bnilling RO VIBIRIAD I IIOHOT SIS IOFIIOGIGOFOS YOU SHOW WITH PRIDE bath the room you have had us equip in up-to-date style. You don’t show the old fashioned kind at all. If you have been deterred from having yours modernized by the imagined * cipense, have a talk with us. It may nct cost nearly so much a8 you have been led to believe. lakeland Hardware & Plumbing Co. R. L. MARSHALL CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Will furnish plans and specifications or will follow any plans and specifications furnished. BUNGALOWS A SPECIALTY. " Let me show you some Lakeland homes I have built, Live Where You Will Like Your Neighbors We are exercising great care to il jour ROSEDALE lots only to the hest class of people. Thus we give you desirable neighbors in addition to ROSEDALE'S other attratciozs. Wide streets, shade trees, fertile #xtl bullding restrictions, Inside the city, one block ecast from J.ake Mor- wn, & SMITH & STEITZ wd G. C. ROGAN Deen-Bryant Bullding. Whatever you want in rea lestule. w, have it. l *’ ILovely Moonlight Rose of White or Silver Gauze | in the millinery garden is the most beautiful of all. A dream of rose, a lovely ghost of all the bright colored beauties which have preceded her. This 1s the rose of white or silver gauze, made of the fab- ric folded over and wrapped about a rose center in the semblance of a full blown rose. In the illustration a hat (which a French woman would be sure to call “ravishing”) is shown trimmed with a wreath of gauze roses and delicate grasses. The hat is a fine dead-white chip faced with moire in pale silver gray. Besides the wreath of roses, a very full bow of white ribbon partially covers the crown, in the trimming. It is an adorable hat, beautiful in every detail. Nothing could be better for T HE last rose of summer to bloom OF MOUSSELINE DE SOIE. This model is of mousseline de sole, but can be made of any other material. It Is gathered or shirred at the shoul ders and finighed in front with a band of lace and buttons, on each side of which is a wide, graduated frill, bor | dered with heavy lace. The collarette s of fine lace, the cra- vat and girdle are of satin. The| sleeves are finished with odd-turned back frills of the material, edged with | the heavy lace. Fancy Vests in Favor, A number of the smartest suits now | being moade up show fancy vests, “"T the Dry Goods Economist. These are | occaslonally made separately, so thnt\ the suit can be worn with or without | them, but the majority are atuehod] to the coat, and it 1s expected that the | latter style will be made popular than the separate vests. These vests m] made of satin, broadcloth, velvet, | moire, faille, brocade and other mncy‘ silks. Bome of the more elaborate are | beautifully embroldered in the new! Orlental colorings or fn blending colors | 1o match the garment. Lace and the Reticule. Handbags made of lace are a pretty summer possession that will take the fancy of the lover of dalnty d cessories. They are swung from Jong corde and are to be worn with the lingerle frock. Irish and Venize, both real and imitation, compose them, e8| well as black and whi‘e Chantilly, and | filet combined with embroldery Wnllu Have Pockets, | Bporting walsts for tennis, golf, etfl-.| come in white or natural colors, buteh. er's linen, with big pockets, belts apd gollars and cuffs made of plain or striped material. There are, of course, m un.l bp pockets and sk ties. + | crochet buttons and a half-inch fall | touched with water, g o SRR midsummer, or any other season, pro- viding the body of the hat is chosen of a material suited to the time of year in which it is to be worn. Other roses branched into wreaths and bouquets, are made of lightweight ribbons in odd colors. Very high lus- ter in the ribbons makes these ribbon roses unusually effective and attract- ive. They are used on mid-season hats of lace and émbroidery and on the net and lace caps which are worn in- doors and out. Tiny tightly folded roses contin e to grow in favor, worn like a bar pin at the throat, over small bows, ard jabots. They are made of all the mcst popular of the summer colors, blue, pink, green, lavender, pale yellow and white JULIA BOTTOMLEY. | SMART SLEEVE FROM WORTH | Silk Marquisette Gown Has a Long, Tight Cuff of Black Satin. Worth has sent out a very smart sleeve in a black gown. It is full from a low shoulder to within an inch of the elbow, made of the marquisette; and there is a long tight cuff of black satin that extends to the hand, which is touched at the top with a thick satin cord, and is fin- ished at the wrist with two white of black lace. Tae bodice has two gathered scarfs of the marquisette starting from the shoulders, crossing the bust, and fin- ished at an empire walst line in the back with a flat pump bow. held in place by thick satin cords at the edges. A black satin girdle outlines the front of the blouse, and it runs into a nar- row pointed panel for eight inches be- low the waist. This panel is part of the skirt. { PANIERS AN EARLY FANCY | Cannot Be Said to Have Achieved Much Success Despite Its Parlsian Origin and Backing. Numberless are the “robes de style” just now being shown in all the big dressmaking houses, says the Parls correspondent of Dress, and various are the forms they take. Of course the panier dress is one of them, copled exactly from old documents. But one never knows whether early models will be a success until La Parisienne has pronounced her opinion of them. Thus it is pretty safe to predict, in- | stead of the panier dress, a return or | n partial return to the directoire style. The high directoire collar and fancy vest are already seen at fashionable assemblies, worn with the cutaway habit coat and wide cuffs of the period. the directolre hat is worn with this costume, but the directoire hat s not new to us, for we have had it with us all the winter. Tinted Walls, It is far cheaper to tint walls with water or “size colors” than it is to paint them with ofls. Moreover, the colors are lovely and the finish soft. The only difficulty lies in the fact that | tinted walls cannot be washed, Size or fresco colors should never be They may be cleaned with bread crumbs, or Indian meal, but the process is a tedious one. Dry plgments are used for thig tinting. They are generally mixed in glue size that has been dissolved in hot water. They cost about fifty-five cents a pack- age and one package will cover about forty square yards.—Harpe’s Bazar. Crash Motor Coats, The newest coats for motoring are made of heavy plain colored crash, lined with flowered crash, and the trimming of grill work and fabrio-cov- ered buttons. The flower effects in the linings are bold and the coloring brilliant. silk marquisette || § We Won’t Sacrifice Qulxty but we are always studying how to Increase The Quantity We nge the “most now but we are anxious to give more. Phone us and prove it. Snowdrift, 10-pounl pl.ill. 4 cans family size Cream. . 12 pounds best Flour.... Cudahy’s Uncanvassed Hams Octagon Soap, 6 for..... Ground Coffee, per pound. . " 5 gallons Kerosene E. G. Tweedell Akt ON THE ' g Al ‘l WE WILL Gl VE some REAL information on the cost of thé installation of e ity in your home if you will but ask us for an ESTIMATE You can depend on our estimate as being the lowest at which you can obtain a thoroughly first-class piece of work, and tl right materials and fixtures. Prompt work and no “skimping” when the work is done Florida Electric & Macllmery Go. DRANE BUILDING PHONE 46 Job Printing OWING to the enlargement of our newspaper and publishing” business, it has been necessary to move The News Job Office up-stairs wlhere it will be found in Roows 11 and 12, Kentucky Building, in the petent charge of Mr. G. J. Williams. anything that can be printed, if you the best work at the right prices, c Mr. Williams. The News Job Office Rooms 11 and 12 (upstairs) Kentuoky Building.