Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, November 8, 1912, Page 6

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Artificial Rose or Orchid, Easily Made, Adds Much to Appcarance of an Evening Gown. ! Make a buge rose of black velvet if | wou need a little extr: touch of smart- | ness for your evenin Or ta gown. | The rose I8 formed of a dozen or! sighteen petals, cut in the graduated sizes pertaining to the natural flower. F elghteen petals, cut in the graduated A foudation easily made of firmly twisted chenile. To make the petals appear crisp, the velvet Instead of belag doubled, as is done in making exotics of thin material, is smoothly pasted on one side of a plece of coarse dlack net. The necessary quantity of mucilage used will stiffen the joined | materials to the desired firmness and zot they will be sufficiently flexible to e easily pressed into proper shape . whenever disarranged. Easier to shape than the rose is the orchid. This, also made of velvet and soarse net, has six long and slender { alive, such as I8 employed in connec- | ton with military loops, is the best | e eud of it the wider ends of the setals may be sccurely fastened. ! This will leave a point protruding Srom the heart of the exotic, but one breast or v quet is worn. Bridge Maxims. A good partner is rather to be chos- en than great hands. Jack of all suits is master of none. A fool and his aces are soon parted. It's a long suit that has no return- ing. Take care of the trumps and tricks will take care of themselves. A little 10-ace is a dangerous Bridge table conversations corrupt “' good manners. A woman is known by the trumps she keeps. The wages of bridge is debt. The proof of the bidding is in the beating. All honor is not without profl in the dummy. Coiffure Modes. Fringes both straight and curled Puffs and curls are arranged from back to front instead of following the Soundation for a velvet orchid, and 0 | jinq of the brow, and the dressing is | done very soltly and with a strong bias in favor of the side parting. Thers are no longer any coils show- inz on the top of the head, but the which may be beautiful concealed un- | ek is covered with pufts so soft and der a catlix group of seven vellow i o ipae they look like waves. IR, A ™ i ey irE- |I-:I(..n | pay day by bri | in this bank. FIRST OF LAK JL LTPALIV e AR SIEuSarit e My Soxiye A i ° 1N AKE them beit You can always afford to put something in the bank. your next pay envelope. NATIONAL BANK SEID VS PRI L 3 K - i =3 Pyl S, - N Ui T T YO "y ~ er acquainted next nging them together Start with ELAND - R. L. M CONTRACTOR 4 LON'T GET TRAPPED INTO POOR PLUMBING merely because it seems cheaper, it i ouly seeming. 1t may be the dear- cstoimestment you ever made. L your family's and your own health are anything to you zeg the best lumbing you caa ertimie on doing that kind for you & Plumding Co ARSHALL AND BUILDER W:ll furnish plans and specifications or will follow any plans and the fower at the ver the corsage bLous thing. outside, t, save tkroaty We are ready to M, L fil\.\__v..' Suis Loed Vamise Nora and Kitly Had Plenty to Talk About. By CLARISSA MACKIE. Jack Northrup turned the wheel and brought the nose of his swift the little motor toat around toward the parrow opening of the bay. Once the little craft rode the big aves easily. “This is great!"” ejaculated Jack, in- haling a deep breath of the fresh salt breeze, A crowded excursion steamer passed him and in response to his shrill siren call saluted with a bass growl. Everybody laughed. | Jack turned and looked after the | steamer. “I wonder if Nora is on ' hoard—she did say that she might come down on the excursion boat; sotals with pointed ends tied at their | gii) persist, but ouly a few strands . .n | may 9 5 3 ) A, y as well finish my run and tps with slender golden threads. An | o¢ hajr are cut upon the forehead. | i i vory' likely that she and Kitty i will have plenty to talk about—they ,won't miss me.” Across the heaving wake left by the steamer darted the motor hoat. The opposite shore grew more distinet for he was nearing Sa islind—an un | iriendly group of rocks and sand like {a bit broken from the mainland. Ilere Jack loved to come and swim in the sheltered cove tn the south . !side of the island and it was usually his goal on short motor trips. This afternoon the island lay a golden spot under the leveling rays of the dropping sun. A few pine trees huddled near the shore, while the rocky center arose to a rugged height of perhaps fifty feet. Once Jack had climbed to the very top of the rock to find that it was a cup-like hollow filled with pine needles wafted from the trees below, “Some night I shall stay up there and watch the stars swing through their courses,” he promised himselt as he stecred toward the entrance to the little cove, Once inside it was only a hundred feet to the curving yellow beach whepre the Cull nosed up the sanc | while Jack tossed an anchor over- | beard as an extra pr on, “If Nora had not mizht I'd . re to | come down toduy right,” he said with a wistful glance up the steep, rocky path that led to the summit, His eyes fell to the sand, and there he saw impressed the print of a small foot—a little, bare foot. Next he saw a small boat lying keel up against the rocky wall. This was drift from the ccean. He walked up to it and made a brief examination. The craft was the very last thing in luxurious ship building—a small, dainty yacht's ten- der, a masterpiece of inlaid wood and polished brass. Her engine was use- less and she had no oars. On her bow rhe bore & name in small brass let- ters, “Blaucine.” “Drift from the ocean,” he repeated, when all at once he remembered the tiny footprint in the sand and he won- dered, staring first at the curve of bare beach, that was washed at both ends by the hungry tide ‘and at the only safe spot on the island—the rocky summit, In a few seconds he was scaling the steep path and when he reached the top so that his eyes could looi. down into the cup-like hollow of thc pin- nacle rock, he almost lost hic hold on the brim, so great was his amaze- ment at what he saw. Curled up on the thick bed of pine needles was a girl fast asleep, the prettiest Jack had ever seen, no. even excepting Nora Smith, with whom he was supposed to be in love. H ' iden- tified her at once as the maker of the footprint on the sand, for not only were there a dainty pair of shoes and stockings pri ‘v placed beside her, but from ber. .. the skirt of her blu. serge sailor frock peeped a bare and rosy foot, Jack gazed in awed delight and wonderment at the long, curved lashes | against her pink check; he wondered | what color were the eyes hidden be- | neath the white lids, | “I wonder!” Jack murmured, when d saw him, Her face lost » sat up and she . specifications furnished. ¥ SUNGALOWS A SPECIALTY. [ Let me show you some Lakcloud Lomes I have built, 1 LAXELAND, Phone 267-Graen. FLORIDA | Q AL ;“ i s : A”‘l( you wish to remt @ “ouse or have o housa you wish to 4 3 Ly 8 If you have & honse to ! op wi I > one; oA . ‘ § + You desire 'f'vx.s ( ;;‘.‘l‘m‘-el;no of § . | :;. u LAY ou close a deal. 6 i [ i 5 ' 2 ¥ ~ . R, LEWIS » i ':. ' R ymondo Bldg, & AR L AND, FLA, NOV. &, 13912, frizhten Jock I found a boat down en il 1. and 1 came up here to sce if 1 wld 1ot ind its owner. It is rather nei! 0 lund here, you know—a bit isky at high tide” He smiled plcas- andy. The girl looked relieved. come here from choice,” plain-d soberly, “You don't mean that you were wasid ashore—shipwrecked?” She nodded. “It happened yester- “I didn’t she ex- dey. s on the yacht Blaucine— she belongs to my father. At dusk last nizht a sudden squall struck us and I washed overboard. I can swim, but it was dark and the waves were ~hoppy. I heard my father ordering a tecat overboard and a couple of sailors rescued me with the aid of the ten- der. We were on the way back to the yacht when a big wave struck us and the tender capsiz.d, throwing all three of us into the water. “I'm ashamed to say the sailors swam off and left me clinging to the boat. | managed to turn it over and climb in, but [ had drifted around so that 1 could not locate the yacht. I could hear the whistle blowing al! night and I screamed and called. Just before dawn the tender floated into quict water and drifted up on the beueh below, “I remzined on the beach until day- light, then beached the boat aud found this place. I was so exhausied that T rell asleep and you have just awakened me.” “Good gracious!” exclaimed Jack. “What an experience you've' been through. Why, you must be plucky to have stood a!l that hardship—and still—be able to tell about it.” “My father has taught me that men and women who go down to the sca in ships must have a due respect for its wilder moods and be prepared to meet them,” she sald quietly. “You must be very hungry,” sug: gested Jack tactfully, “My launch is always provided for emergencies an< I can give you a sandwich and a cup of hot beef tea.” “I am hungry,” she acknowledged “and it is very kind of you.” Jack held up a restraining hand. “If your father told you always to be prepared for emergencies at sea h also told you always to have a holy ing hand for the stranded maringe— eh?” e smiled, " She smiled too and her fi wonderfully swoeet, Kk dizappeared from the rock an went down to the i yself in the girl. wi J Pr » rocky path and stood tuke you to Snug Harbor--ou cotta is there and my sister, Mrs Frame, will take excellent care of you. Of course you will want to comn municate with your father at once.” “lle can be reac by wireless from the near My father is Arthur Debry she said as she sipped the hot beef tea, “Arthur Debrys!” Jack stared—If this girl was Penelope Debrys she was one of the richest girls in the land. He had heard about her. He told her who he was and all about the little island which he had luckily visited that afternoon. It was 80 seldom visited that if he had not arrived she might have starved there unless she had set a signal of distress flying, They started for Snug Harbor tow- ing the Blaucine’s tender. The wind blew up cold and Jack insisted upon putting his coat aronnd her shoulders. 1t thrilled him to see her snuggling under its warmth. Already he was in love with her and there was some- thing in her eyes that seemed to tell that she, too, had found some new emotion. But there was Nora Smith, with whom he was supposed to be in love. Nora was a born flirt and exacted this devotion from all her male friends. But Jack had qualms of conscience— he had been serious about Nora at one time, but Nora was years older than he. Still he might ask Nora. The eyes of Penelope Debrys met iis and she smiled. “Ah, this is my girl—I saved her from the sea—weo belong to each other,” he told himself recklessly. When he led this sirange young woman into the living room of the Sea Shell Mre, Frame started up in surprise. “You poor child,” she eried after they had told the story, “como with me and get into some dry clo- thing while Jack tries to communicate with your father. Jack, there's a teole- sram on the table for you.” message. “Married to Tony Pike this morn- ing. Congratulate us both, Nora Smith.” “Hurray!” velled Jack happily. “She's mine—finding's keeping!” (Copyright, 1912, by the McClure News- paper Syndicate.) — Eiffcl Tower Sinks and Rises. The remarkable discovery has been made that the Eiffel tower sinks over an inch into the ground in certain at- mospherical conditions, rising again later to its normal state. It was known that the towe swayed horizontally to th~ extent ~f several centimeters, and M. Guillaume of the Academy of sclence conceived the idea of streteh a plece of wire from the second story | to the ground. Leaving the wire taui. hie found that twice after storms i had loosened to the extent of an or more. Further inves! have shown that the tower si ral hours before the approsch o ormy weather—in other words, the roe S an a va b l s R s A s S i - ANCE OF LIFE TIME | am going to retire roe active business and ip ordar ta 4, this | am offering my entire stock of Dry Goods, Nottors. ete., ABSOLUTE COST it you want to make $1 do the work of 85, cowe = &y etere and lay in 2 supply of Spring aud Summer Goote Uveryiniay will be slasbed to rock bottow prices, lncludiog LAWAS, LINENS, GINGHAMS, PERCALES, CERAN33ATS fILKS, SATINS, SHOES, HOSE. L * A Come and Sce My line. My Prices Will Astonish You N. A, RIGGINS e S e e —— S S S e i Jack was alone when he read the 2 subscr Y R, SR AN L P TRT ae = g ! - A / Quality but we are always stwlying how to Incicase The Quantity We give the "most now but we are anxious to give : Phone us and prove it. I WY . fre Lhice mere, Beat Butter, per pound . ....conecnnoiecnoiniies im0 CEEO R T TR e A s s R A I R G e L Cottolene, 10 pound pail v 128 Cottolene, 4-pound pails . avio 00 Snowdzift. 10-pounl pails. ....co..iiveriiiiiiiiimnion.e.. 118 4 cans family size Cream. Rpee R 7 cans baby size Cream.................. S A bin i by 12 barvel hest FIOUR. oo\ o ivs wmicavucrininoemsvemess SO0 12 pounds test Flour. . S BN e e de ey e e aa e Picnic Hams, per pound ............. A e | L L Cudahy's Uncanvassed Hams........ e S () Octagon Soap, 6 for. ..... Well Laundered|! LINEN <+ is the pride of the good housewife and the clean cut man or women .Here you have the care that makes you a constart customer. We aim at being the “Laandry that is different” YOUR OWN SPECIAL LAUNDRY. Try Us Today—Just Once. <+-¢ Lakeland Steam Laundry PYaw- Phone 130. West Idain St P e e g A g My v, 7 1 - meh S0 = 5 { or 1he Telegrar: i L e s ¢ S SRS RENRECRAINEES. ST SRR e e b il i W i e

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