Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, August 19, 1912, Page 8

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— { ; B 2 PAGE 8. GENERAI, TEAM WORK —Furn! ‘ure and plano moving. Ca!'! Phone %9 W, E" Tyler 1-22-tf Fwo full sets Alzor bo fur hoys vived at the Dook TR e 5 %;“ T-24-t1 ?', £ < BOARDERS WANTED - - Geod | A .3 !board. Everything new md clean. | YOIt SALE-—5 passenger tour]ngl 504 North Florida, Mrs. 1. Alder- wo fiae condition, or will cx-i““" $-9-1mo. wroo for part payment on Lake-| —_—— ord real estate. Address Box ..36!}[:'1\““ PLUMRING AND | Kcland. 8-10-tf | CONSTRUCTION CO VOR SALE- -horse power boiler Will build your house, Go tin work, £ Zo-horse power air lift, which|dc your plumbing, run witer and so ps 350 gallons of water per min-| forth, roof your housc with galvan : ized fron, tiv, pitch, ruberoid or tile . Apply to W, K. McRae. 6-19-tt @Ol SALL- 214 e ns a call. Phone 110, 209 Ke miles Doty B a. timber, 20 a. fenced, | (1KY Ave 118184 (00 bearing fruit trees; 17 a. in cul- o vation of which 8 a. is fine trucking ; % room house ,zood water, sarns and packing house. Must be «ld at once Address X, Y., care of “legaram. 8-13-22 3 | If the very decorative possibilities | E .fi [ot the parasol have been overlooked , €54 | of late, the warm weatber has made | the fact clear that a parasol adds the | | last note of distinction to a dress, Ev- | | ery one interested in dress comments | upon the varled designs of this sum- | mer's parascls and upon the amusing way in which each one agrees with | the shape of the hat that is worn. | When feathers tower above 20 acres, D rom e PARASOL MATCI'IES THE HAT' That Is, in the Lnut Designs It | Agrees With the Millinery Ac. ! companying It. 2 | 1-ROOM the LAY i ”’”"\_" crown of the chapeau the parasol | At and A”""" F=rpom £oLiage { carried has an obliging cupola crown, | deoon time, So wen oer month. | and it the millinery 1s of a spreading A\ arge vooms, 1. W SJALLY. ;character then when the parasol is CROOM FURNISULE (HOUSK for | oDened it Is seen that it is Japanese- 1lke in its flat aspect. Lace posed upon chiffon or veiled with tulle 1s a combination of mate- rlals of acknowledged elegance for the sunshade, and it not infrequently hap- bens that a trall of mousseline flow- ' ers {3 posed Inside the parasol, per- chance to coincide with the trimming of the hat or with the flowers that decorato the gown. Ot freak handles there are always & © chieap, See Ohlinger & Alfield. FOR RENT S-aere truck farm, v th good S-room cottage, known as $15 per month or $150 1 in W. F. nanzon S-0-tf FOR RENT - 1o-acre truck farm, 21, miles south of Lakelund, known s Dr. Whipp's place. 2 acres irrigat- ld place Tuly advance. See . $200 to July, 1913, or $20 per | certaln number, and one of the quaint. ponth in advance. See W, Fiske| est Is the cuckoo clock. Press a thinsou. §-9-tf slprI:‘nand the go‘ol:s of ktho cuckoo SRiR CARE S cloc open and the cuckoo appears ,’:“nl.( ‘l'tlu.\l - One num'»lf: d m(.b:n. 2 the {hnplhold. He is a silent bird, Phone 214 Blue. Apply 310 West| g0 niy trick begins and ends with: cmon. the Iittle performance already de' FOR RENT Two {urnished rooms | seribed. o1 light housckeeping, Eleetric dghts and bath. Mrs R . Colbert, Sawing On Braid. 310 South Missouri. 8-17-3 Braid should be sewed on by taking | a long stitch on the back and a vory! FOR RENT-- tiny stitch on the right side directly' Oue good oftice room etilier furnished or unfurn.shed, In{ through the brald and down again.; “ts Urune hulldiug. Apply to H. J.[Be careful to hold the material| Drane 6-29-tf | smoothly over the finger. Keep the 7-22-tt| brald straight and firm and turn all corners sharply. You will find when] using soutache SOR RENT--Office rooms in the i that you can work! saith Hardin building. See J. F. Loy 7-6-tt| gtralght more easily If you use an embroidery frame. '—t‘ | MISCELLANEOUS Best num;n;ery Vat lo;lest prices in o v=*aland Book Store ! -24-tt Placing Holes for Buttons. When buttoning or unbuttoning a garment, forcing the buttons across the width of the hcle will soon tear out the latter. For this reason but- tons with only two holes are better than those with four and should be placed so that their holes will be on 2 line with the length of the button- Lole. Some women place buttons with e amme tio to Bailey's for straw hats, and shirts. Great bargains for the next widays. S-16-tf. Biggest line girls’ and boys' and caildren’s books ever shown in Lake- aad just received. Lakeland Book 3tore. T-24-tt Bring us your pictures to frame, Lakeland Book Store T-24-tf WANTED two cuildren be sewed through, thus making them 1ast longer than it all four were used. Clever Idea. Putting hooks on the lower side ot the upper or usual side is a clever idea, as when the dress is ironed on “hook marke” show, as often happens when hooks and eyves are put on in the old-fashioned way. Try the “new | tashloned” way—it works splendidly Lady, 1o teach miuisic and clementaery aroneh Address, giving term nd | ', { [ — i N-lienp ! Riche: of Ma‘ay Peninsula, iine voth Waterman Ideal! Ope of 1.0 hes' countries {n the 1 . - g | : N 3 arker Lacky Curve Fountain| world is that s of ! Mulay feus at all times Lakeland ook | peninsula Known 95 the Poederated tore 24-tf, States . inces are 1 un- i der the nutive chiefs or ali oo straw huts and Man- sultane, 1 )} assisted by a Rritish ol « tin mines of shirts. Any straw hat in stock one dollar. Prices reatly re-| these small more valuable " U on Manhattan shirts. Bailey’ than =t gold mines, for they pro- No16-tf o duce nearly halt the world's supply of oy . . N . and the resul an overflowin READ -Carver's ad in this issne, | 1R and the recul bk bk ) treasury for ihe tes Vast forests of Lber trees ave tremely profitable cvotwe in and select some of also proving ex- risp new books il | for boys, giris und ‘pildren before the lot is picked over e A big shipmient just received lLake- Has 152 Living Descendants. and ook Store 7.94-tf: lenry Smallwood, aged %1 former 1y employed as a chairmaker of High FIRE, WCCTDENT, PLATE-' Wycombe, has 152 deseendanis living, ANS TR ROILE'Y™ N includiy~ ninety-*hree great grandel il IURANCIL sec D ML SLOAN, Peacock ' dren ana seven sroat-gr andehil ywildin Phone 242 4-6-t¢ dren. He has a brother aged 92, and sister aged 80, A son, a grandson, LOST Botwe Mr. Bassett imd andson and a great areate Mo Wil home, a black handbaz, | g » all named Henry —lone niaining sator puirse, which i ined 375 also two trunk Keys | R embroidercd Jinen hand- The Useless Rat. hand l Finder will receive liberal Plague or no plague, it ? Qouth good thing to exterminate rats, which returning to 113 South | g5 4ecs good and more harm than ak Miss Lucile Ben- | mogt any other animal in the world.— 8-19-tf | New York Tribune. rohief cward by scntucky wett avenue i colors which was , sary to make free use of shot all more rapldly and keep the braid| four holes so that only two holes need | & vent or dress opening and eyes on is always 8 | able for the Boudoir—Can Be Made as Elaborate as Desired, The decorative little article shown ! i In the accompanying sketch is quite ! simple to make and can be carried out ‘, 'In the size for containing just three | . Portraits, or it can be made on the | i same lines in a larger size for hold- ing perhaps half a dezen photographs. THE EVENINJ TELEGRAN LAKZEL! TO HOLD VALUED PORTRAITS| | Decorative Articles Eminently Sult-: Stout cardboard or thin wood should be used for the foundation, plece of silk chosen of a color to harmonize with the wall paper upon which the holder is to hang. Then a band of silk, lined with soft silk and : upon which some pretty floral design has been worked, is sewn across the lower part so that it forms a shallow H pocket into which the tmay be slipped in the manner illus. trated, The holder is trimmed at the edge ' I with a silk cord and further orna-' photographs mented at each corner little loops of ribbon. with three nail in the wall | For the holder from which our! sketch was made, pale yellow silk | | was used, and the flowers on the pocket | I consisted of white blossoms and green | leaves. The silk cord round the edge was pale green and white and the ribbons apple green, a combination of | at once pleasing and effective, t ABOUT THE PLAITED SKIRT Soft Satin Is Perhaps the Best Ma. terial of Which This Popular Garment Can Be Made, Then there is a type of plaited skirt which I have scen In soft satin, a ma- terlal that takes the plaiting process very successfully. This was in a bright, deep shade of blue, and the plaits were all caught in at the foot beneath a broad band of black taffeta which was considerably under two yards in circumference. In a dress of this shape the difficulty is to prevent all those plaits from ballooring up and out as the wearer moves or sits about, and It would be Imperatively neces- round the bottom. and | ' smoothly covered with some pretty | Attached to the, top 18 a long loop of ribbon by which | the article may be suspended from a | This is the dark side of the shield | of fashion—shot being singularly dis- agreeable to a walker, as they strike agalnst the ankles at every step. How- ever, pride must bear pain, and those who llke the plaited skirt must put up with these little drawbacks. The : taflors also are using plaits, though more sparingly. They are turning out a skirt that has a tablier back and front with two deep plaits on either side, and there is another that has a group of flat wide plaits at the back only, starting from about the height of the knees; so you see, il you want to return to the wide skirt, there is nothing to prevent you; the mode of the moment permits every vagary, —Baltimore American. NEWPORT BONNET | i | | The latest sutemer 1y 1y built for the Nev en, is in the sl: bonnet to be worn at and garden parties excuse simply for hee tidy. The one in the picture is of a lace crown, white pl trasting velvet 1 can beauty shade Style for Wee Gir For very special wen™ one ¢ fashionable schemes this eur wee girls of three an ri sented by the pretty Iittle hic ed coats of pure whit l ed satin, decoration of ar ever with the exec: tle pearl-white fichu fon folded over it old-world ¢ hind in a X These fichus for the little pe vear, and one >s them wlth the tiny frocke of embroidered lawn and muslin for the : veriest bahies, j pe of a g litila for mode witt all sympathize with you” London Daily Mail AND, FLA., AUG. 19, 1912, THE LAST CALL ON HATS & SHIRTS | Beginning Saturday, August 17th, | will sell any Straw Hat in my store fo: $1.00 Regular prices on these hats were from $2.00 to 53 - mermm—es e S L Shirts Going, too All $3.50 Manhattan Shirts reduced to . . All 2.00 Shirts reducedto . . . All 1.30 Shirts reducedto . . . . All 1.00 Shirts reducedto . . . . . 70 All 75c¢ Shirts reduced to et e A3 All 50c Shirts reduced to e R N Come early before they are all picked over. Must vhave room for incoming Fall Stock. E. F. BAILEY Lutheran Churci Cor. E. Orange an Rev. I1. J. Mutt Tennessce Ave Sunday school (o Preaching serv i ¢ 17:00 pom. & 'dln Oriental Politeness. In China when a subscriber rings up the exchange, the operator may be ex- pected to ask: “\What number does the honorable son of the moon and stars desire?’ “Hohi, two-three.” 8i- lence. Then the exchange resumes: “Will the honorable person sraclously forgive the inadequacy of the insignifi cant service, and permit (his humble slave of the wire to inform him that the never-to-besufficiently-censured Une is husy?” i | i i wd Catholic Churc: Rev. A, B, Fox, Pas'or The Rev. William Dudley \m\lm.;rn‘l:;)":‘;n bl . D., vastor Sunday school 9:45 a. m Stevens, superintendent. Preaching Sunday at 11 & m and 7:15 p. m. Weekly prayermeeting Wednesday evening at 7.30 | { Woman's Missionary anl Ai¢ So- | jch‘t\' Monday 3:30 p. m. i Baptist Young Peoples at 6:15 p. m Regular monthly business mwnn” frst Wednesday at 7:30 p m FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH. Corner Florida avenue and Bay st ). Deserving of Sympathy. ! “I am the mother of 21 children,” declared a woman at Tower Bridge po- lice court, who was alleged to be an habitual drunkard, “and | have always made my children's clothes, mended thelr boots, and cut their hair.” “We remarked the magistrate Mr. Cecil Chapman.— H € M. E. Church. § I. C. Jenkins, P sunday s hm.. $:40 1 Morninz Epwort Evening sory ! Prayer-meeti s SIeeling'D m Useful Instrument in Farm House. Every farm house should have a harness needle {n it. One of the many uses to which the needle can be put is to sew rips in shoes that may save an extra trip to the cobbler's.—Home De- partment, Nat' azine. - Christian Chu Geo. W. Welme:r, tu] Sunday school “ 4 Communien 10 4 Preaching, 1100 o b £ A ather socletivs Syterian church Evening serm East Lakeland Mission. Sunday school at 3 p.m. E. A Milton, superintendent. Prayer- meeting Thursday at T p. m it Presbyterian Church To Mend Sheet Music. Cut a plece of manila paper, the slze of the sheel of music. as yow Rev. R. A, Ward, acting pastor — would for a picture mat. paste this | Sunday wl 9:45 2. m ALL SAINTS' }:PN over the o of vour worn sheet of Mor: germon 11:00 a2 n Sunday scho . P To b B Lmeets at 6 p o m o3 dn ‘ Pray. Wednesday, 7 ! It's so easy to ruin vour eyes ing a pair of misfit spectaclcs l‘low much are youi eyes worth to you’ Money would not be any temptat: DR COLE has made a special study of the ¢ refraction for twenty-five years an. He will be at Cole & Hull's Jewelry * TueSday; August 20th From 7 a.m. to 5 COLE & HULL 112 KENTUCKY AVENUE, OpPosITE PArRk, LAKELAND. FLOR fit you perfectly, & g : :

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