Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, September 25, 1912, Page 6

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THE EVENING TELEGE '\, 1 LORGOA e fwant to corredct [The | tion | | [ ment is eluim 8 i TOMORROW may be too late. Have money in the bank when misfortune or old age overtakes you. Start an ac- count here today=- adollar will do it. FIRST NATIOWAL BN OF LAKELAND Trder Coutrol of U. 8. Government | IF 1S | EAL ESTATE s hefore vou huy, SIZ¢ Lracts, ¢ URAN n 5344 A B right, Polk Cornly feal ¥siaie & i Office: 1 You are and treat von toem 7, Deen & ) ADVISE | Stout all you tonsii | ¢ BATRARNOL IR R L. MARSHALL CONTRACTOR AND!IBUILDER Wil furaish plane and specificaii s or will follow eny plans and specifications furnished. BUNGALOWS A SPECIALTY. Let nc ¢how you some Lakeloud homes I have built, LAXELANS, Phone 267-Green FLORID* I & sden-Powell had in mind, | with the tiny | long. | place, but it is more than perverse and obstinate where it does not be- | long. | smaller than she | does it ma i built woman’s waist measures 20 inches? | counts, T 3 [ ITARY KOR EV EN SEMI-MILITARY. The American Boy Scout Movemer: ' of America Not of English Origin and Is Not Military. i movement w. W wWrong impression that has obtained quite a foothold published many In justice 1o newspaper indi ' fitary organiz: Have ope il this v articles, the oy Scouts is a semi-mi The lahor opposed the n ons movenent for j e ) Unon investization Hoy Scont or “ountry d 1o be pnglis ui that wa nature s enoi icicnt shonld aris lrnes: had Wi wil that but R. oy He started English idea. The moy - t met with the approval and roe- ceived the oficial help of the thd men 1 ywe got th idea that the Boy Scont movement wis military el But Ernest Thompson-Seton vis il General Baden-Powell, and two worked their id harmony, Mr rted a Boy tien in Ameri that was The Hearst Sconts zed as the Boy orfu Thompson-Seton an nization of hoys known as 0 1= ofi Indians. 1t was B with- Hearst Scont out a military bent. W was the first to start the movement in America i navy it was in a8 over and Thompson-Se new Seout organiz ron-mili ereor \mer- pub i Hencesthe fon of 1y mind, o miversal who o do no Americar litary orgn being Yod iy I Americ D N COMMON Woman Must Sensibly Adapt Herself to Increasing Lines of Her Figure. 01 course it goes without s that it is the fai woman who has the most troubles, This much-ha ed woni . must learn that flesh h ot 1. She cannot push it aside, because that only makes it the | more prominent in & place whero it t not to he I\ is a place for all flesh, but all flesh must be kept in it< place. De sure to | remember this when you start to re- duce your figure, Don’t try to move your abdomen up and then compress it In a place where it does not be. The flesh i1s adaptable in its ng “Then, above all else, every stout woman must stop thinking tha an wear a corset two or three slzes needs by measurement. What earthly difference ke whether a large, well- % or| 1t is how she looks in her | corset, and how she feels in it, that Le *ll you that tho fat v better in a corset | » large tor her, where down into it her three Inches s her fat up wo! m her fat can than in a o two or too small which pr and out until it app sightly bulges and rule to follow is to wear a corset in ' a size three inches smuller tha Live Where You Will Like Your Neighbors arve cxercising erca: ROSEDALE lots « *lass of pecple. T | corset size 2 see, to the stout woman"—Woman's - w, Wwe w ROSEDAI LS Wide strocts, <had sall, bulldlug restri Ry, one bl wh. o'k €ast from Jake dre 1 measures and correctly we I am referring, stband of ¥ if your wais you can safe an you Home Companion. JustiSable. handed to look ind*gnant! SMITH & STEITZ amd G. C. ROGAN Deen-Bryans “LRte e ~s have it | you want swear if Nautical Dlninctwns. “How do you uI the di leokin® into the tain Cleet. “If sk refreshmen:s and yacht 17 it carries plenty of ca she's victuals, | she's a saliboat | poverty Always Some Remedy. Dr. Woods Hutchlinson says that is 8 disease. Well, there is the gold cure.—Judse . army trained | the | i CORSETS | However, there reals | actual | AND, FLA. LAST GiiiL COTTAGER PIOTS IN SENTIMENT “I am rioting in \mlmtm out here,” wrote the last girl cottager at the! AMichigan resort. “The woods and I Lave things il to ourselves now and are having the time of our lives. hey stand silent in the October <unshine. But it is a silence of a dif- terent quality from that of the sum- | —it is breathless, eager. That is | 5 \ze, since what they are waiting «ur is desolation to them—the touch frost, the i whirl of the winds. e is a go'’en quality to the very the refiection of the yellow of the the Indian orange and red of the vellowing brown of ning into splashes of | and streaks of lumi we *hoe oa ty erim Jnze. like bronze as certain of the oak y by some roadside, ¢ scme clearing, the eye falls on cenflagration running close to the dwarf sumach, Jle living flame. The 1 rusty and the wild hed. The ground is If covercl Ly a patterned carpet ronl the trees above. Slashing through iis riot of tones is somet€ing that itters with an uncanny, rippling trilliance in the soft, steady rays of the sun—it is the inland lake, which was commonplace enough when just blue or gray in the summer. Now it | is a sheet of quicksilver pricked by diamond points. “All through the woods is a rustling d scurrying and chattering, for the iirrels are getting ready for winter | making a great uproar about it. i Max, the collie, passes his days in hysterical chases, covering the ground in the splendid, long leans that only | 1 collie can manage, but always the little red-brown squirrel flashes up a stin xlt rici of time and barks in answer to the sgust and defeat be- ich is a denred s calow and drag g w the tree dly into the hl handy human ! The crov birds = | tree 1y ers' tappi conple about thre {lot of n { feather sing in on or un is hottest on the 1w crickets still chirp en Katydi ¢ from bending The cri s ereep iuto the bungalow on the logs for the fireplace and chirp from the corners of the roon “Some morning, when it Is particu. larly golden and still, on your throw- ing open the doors the world will be filled with a tremendous chatter of birds-—not of a few, but apparently of all the birds on earth, all talking at once. Rushing out, you find a doz- en trees inky with blackbirds, gather- ing for their migration, For two or three days this din keeps up and oc- casionally the thousands will move up to another set of trees with a sweep through the alr like waves. Then of a sudden they are gone. You did not seo them on their grand flight—nobody ever does catch them at it. They sim. | vly were and now are not, so far as | you are concerned “FEvery day the leaves drop faster and the paths and walks are hidden | under the The ground s speckled \\\((h resinous pine cones and beech- nuts and A sharper frost than neual pinch last geraniums in vour garden ui 1t night the cold creeps up through the living-room and you edge towurd the blazing fireplace. “After the ! tretch of quiet, hining, vs of Indian sum- ner yo © ono evening as you lraw the « and =h out the last glimpse n drop- , trees into the | ke that th 1is rising. It comes | 1st and ha; i imperious. All night lie acorns brs the roof ltke bul- ts and there is no wild scamper of quirrels or raccocns above your head ! nothing but a steady fall of some- | +hing crisp and whispering and mys. Teious. { “In the yellow 5 th and the ing vou find as you trv | 1o walk @ hat relentiess cold | nd whipy » lake into white ps that only a few leaves still cling » the naked trees, The bungalow, | e gro the paths are buried co®n leaves. There is an edge in ‘he alr that is brutal and you harry wck Indoors, for vou ! fer another year. *hie barren wer Winter is in Adcpting the Idea. The fastidious pickpocket, caught in the act, objected to the handcuffs the policeman was snapping around | wrists. “Officer,” he complained, “those are | ov antiquated. Can't you fit me out «ith a pair of the ‘No Metal Can Touch You' kind™ i There is nothing in the world 3 w.omoke.... A.H.T CIGARS A. H. T. CIGAR (0, Lakeland, Florida - X-X-N-N-N-X-R-R-X-N- NN R -The Professions- 20000000000000 0} DR. SAMUEL F. SMITH. SPECIALIST Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat wlasses Scientifically Prescribed Phone: Oftice 141, Residence 2% Bryaut Bldg lakeland Fla Private S chool We will open tor e ‘Fall Term in 2 Tontop Lake Morton, inda September v1h Pupils ! rimarn grades, ble. OR. W. 8. IRVIN DENTIST Latablished in July, 1900 Coume 14 and 25 Kentucky balidiz s Otliv+ 180; Residenice 84 DR. N, L. BRYAN, DENTIST. coms 8 and ¥, Deen & Bryaut Buiid- ing. Phone. 339, nee Phone 500 Red LAKELAND, FLA aenest arye! ald K. |)~!,. .\00"['( TAN Flor ULLl\ A Lakeland, R R --PHYS seigl attentiva piven and Cynecology R. B. KUFFAEER. st' "'l!' n t AW 1 Bar Mas ¢ wary Sluml M. TRANMMELL, Attorney-at-Law. Offices, Bryant Buildinp Lakeland, Fla. BLANTON & ROGERS. Lawyers. Bryant Block, 'Phone 81§ Lakelaud, Fla. ? fig 2\;1‘ Miles Sale o A If vou wi! Sell, Buy or i Harrell. Johnson & Co. NEXT T0 X WE HAMMER 0 SAl TUCKEI & ‘I‘UCU.K —Lawyers— Raymonco Bldg Fiorids mollnd 1NO. l EDWAI.DI Attorney-at-Law. Office in Munn Buildiug. LAKELAND, FLORIDA. I §. Streater C. F. Kennegy | STREATER & KENNEDY Contractors and Builders. Gstimates Cheerfully Furnished Let ug talk with yon about your building large or small ’l‘elephone 169, or 104 Blue. &. D. & H. D. MENDENHALL Civil Engineers and Architects » Drane Bidg AND, FLA. - land examination «xamiration, reporte Blueprirting. r- I\ VIOLIN INSTRUCTIONS Private Lessons. Violins for Sal¢ PROF. MURPHY. Jowa Avenue. Near East Orance Phone 11 Black !O’Nelll

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