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THE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAKFLAND, FLA, JAN. 10, PAGE 'THREE R 1913, 'MADE FROid BANDS OF FUR Collarettes That Have Become the | velvet. TLLEPHONE NUMBERS—SOCIETY EDITOR R - ... 138 e NOTICE—Notices for the S:cial Degartment can be com: icated to the Society Editor by either of the above telcphones “itten notices to the Society Editor, care Evening Telegram. ] « of social functions, elub meetings, church gatherings and g " ems of social interest should be telephoned to this depart- & out 25 soun as they oceur in order that their news value is mot % “‘ §?~W@Wimma @ : CIAL > ooccosesscs Secssssves > ONTENTMENT. and interest, the Woodmen Circle \0:"[” e presented Mrs. R. E. Scipper, the re- 4ll to us that | tiring guardian, with a handsome has a hoard of | brooch and signet ring, which came as a great surprise to her and which ¢he values most highly. {or at o woars costly furs, Lmselves from the lee cream and cake were served, ciosing a very pleasant session in- 1 ¢ drives down the [ deed. ny our door in al : | Savannah Man Weds L langh and love, | Tort Meade Girl. e are light and outl I Miks (lelon | who | E of Fort frequently visited Mrs, k. O, Flood in this | wis wedded Wednesday at her in Meade to Mr. K. M. Colley, of Savannah. Of the affair may win the ' (4. Fort Meade Leader has the fol- world outside and ! lowing: Dl 1ived Dishong, i Monde, has ber nity rise to fame, ' cily; clse may higher | jom, sSister, For, | Colley, of Ravannuah, Ga., ar- codoat the very front | in the city and on amiles of his fel- | Wednesday afternodn at 4:30 o’clock | was united in marriage 1o Miss Hel- 1 our humble home ! Tuesday en Dishong at the bride's home, Rev. Rage Are of What Seems Some- what Queer Combination. } Smart Parisicnnes are wearing col larettes of fur combined with lace or These are wonderfully pret- { ty and add just the correct touch to & gown or coat suit. ; to encircle the throat and too small to use for any other purpose, are lined with white satin. Pleated frills of lace are then stitched by hand on both the top and bottom of the fur band. Three hooks and eyes join the collarette at the side and a bow or rosette of lace, with ends Short strips of fur, just long enough | fastening. Strips of fur one or two inches in width can be used effectively to bor- A lovely combination is ermine and sapphire-blue velvet. Stitch the nar- row strips of white fur to the band of velvet and border it with knife-pleat- ' ed frills of velvet or tulle. Use white satin to line the collarette and finish the closing with a flat bow of velvet. Perhaps you have a strip of mink three inches in width. If so, stitch it to a band of seal-brown satin. Make two pleated frills of the satin and | stitch them to the top and bottom of | the collar portion. When the hooks and eyes have been attached to the ends, finish the closing with a pleated bow of satin caught through the cen-! ter with a buckle of pearl, cut steel or jet. Many women possess a worn set of furs which can be cut into strips and | utilized in this manner. Small hats with puffed crowns of velvet and nar- row brims of fur are lovely when fash- foned to match the collarettes. Any woman would be delighted with a gift of a stunning collarette. SMART CRAVATS AND STOCKS old Fashion, Which Has Much to Rec: | ommend It, Will Be Welcomed Back to Favor. One rejoices to see that again we are to wear cravats and stocks ot‘ 4 love and content- || 1. | Moon pertorming the ceremony The wedding was a surprise to many folded black silk and satin, with small turned-down stock collars of white ! eight or ten inches long, conceals the der a center strip of velvet or fur.' A Happy New Year " Almost the Limit, A minister in the middle west has described a bachelor as “a parasitical dodder, a solitary satellite around his own ego, and a sluggish human of ex- uberant egotism. Keeping Them Off. “Do you consider such a marriage To All Our Patrons We appreciate your past business and dur- ing 1913 will be better able than ever to serve you. U. G. BATES 7:15 p. m. Lutheran Church. Cor. E. Orange ana So. Tennessee Sunday schoe! 10:00 a. m, Catholiz Chuen Rev. A. B. Fox, Pastor. Services are held on second and MY LINE INCLUDES Newspapers Magazines Stationery lawn showing narrowly at the top. |88 that of a man so confirmed & |gouprth Sundays, fan only a few friends of the family [vere present Mr. Colley is a transfer clerk in 8} [ the Union station at Savannah. He (i else hus the joys we T young man of most pleasing ad- oy the day is done and | He is not entirely unknown fher he was a vigitor to For Meade a year ago ap which time he Miss Dishong. The friendship ripened into love and culminated in the wedding yesterday. The bride is accomplished daugh- fur of Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Dishong. ! She is well known in the city, being (rder of Eastern Star :ul*v ol the mosy lovely of Fort Meade Heli No Meeting Last Night. Lgirls, HMer many friends sincerely P pter No. 26, Order of the | regreq that her marriage will - re- was 1o hold a meeting | wove her from their midst. Mr. Col- . install officers, but, | ley showed his ood judgment in tak- wrum, this work was . meeting being held . Lus our babies two, ody olse has the smiles dress, hts W as ~ 4 happiness all our own, | w1 innocence, love and | ret | matter at all to us| Dody else may own varth X LI ine for his bride one of Fort Meade's fairest fowers The happy pair left last night for their home at Savannah with the beartiest conzratulations of friends. that their wedded | M | | Cluh Meets Aiternoon, Inh of Lakeland is ‘rnoon at the studio This is a practice v the club members PThe Leader wishe lite will be franght with hum)im-ssl and pre HEALTH AND BEAUTY | : A calm mind invariably shows itself [ in the youthful fuce of its owner, and there is no surer preventive of wrin- ; kles ; never be any undue | pressure on the throat, egpecially for | full blooded persons. Anytbing Lhfli; retards the circulation in the large ar- | tery that carries the blood to the head shl;v-ld be avoided. Dress the throat | loose eno to allow free movement | of the | . o [ A New York skin specialist says: | sperity | t Officers. business weeting ot = of the Firsy Baptist morninz. and 4 Sunday attendance fiivers was with en- clected were: am Emerson. A. C. Wright. Driscoll. Ernest Roeretary - wd Adams, Pat Flanazan Lakeland and iz urch. Great things nd j; is hoped thai luh will add tilding of the Sunda) PAT FLANAGAN, Press Reportetr Gl : nd Woodmen Circle - w570 New Officers. . ‘wen of the World and | n Uircle held a joint in- | ‘rvice Jast night at the = tall, which was auend-I 2¢ audience. The Wood- | their officers first, aft- | "he new officers of the Cir- | stalled. They are as fol- Mrs. H. M. Hebb. Grdian—Mrs. R, E. Seip- T Mrs. May Williams. Mrs. R. R. Snowden. tin—Mrs. Maggie McMullen. | L. L. Wadford. > | -Mrs. Katherine Wadford | '“ers—Mrs. Kulp, Mrs. Ml‘-“ Mrs M--Mrs. J. C. Coleman. | 7 Degree Team—Mrs. G. T. . 'an—Dr. B. H. Maynard. i U behalt of her untiring work s distant; in other words, look at | ples 1t is a danger sigoal. Use a halr | Place the fingers firmly on the -ellnl “Had 1 to eloose between the cook | and the apotheeary as colaborer, T} think I would not hesitate for a mo- ment to yoke myse!f with the former." He goes on to say that “the hoard | kills more than the sword " Many peopie eat not only the wrong foods.‘ but too wuch of them i Regrlar b 2 with hot water be- fore hodtime is said by one of the world's most famous oculists to be the most stimulating treatment (hat can be given the eves, He also recom- i mends for tired eyes that have been v strained by close application to work to look out the window at a view that some distant point for ten minutes, g0 a8 to entirely change the focus ot the eyes. When the hair begins to thin around the back of the neck and on the tem- tonic and massagze the scalp every day. Don't rub the fingers over tlmK scalp like mad and rub off what batr {8 inclined to stay. or the new that is trving to grow—that is not massage. | and with a rotary motion work all | over the head. moving the scalp with | every rotation of the fingers. It is necessary to keep the scalp falrly | loose if you want the halr te grow. Novel Buckles. ' Slipper buckles for this winter are very large and very brilllant. One design seen in a smart shoe shop had the appearance of standing upright in the slipper Instead of lying flat. Cut steel buckles are especially in de-' Severe as it is, this is the most be- coming form of neckwear possible, and if the lawn turnover is not starched (but the laundress will® stiffen it it she gets the chance) the severity is by no means too great. The finishing touches ot the cravat, too. help to re- move the touch of sternness. Neat | and small the bow may be--but with what pointed ends, and with how much dash in its crisp lines! A very | smart notion is to have the bow at| the base of the throat made of nar- row ribbon, three-quarters of an inch | wide. This enables the bow to havs the requisite spring in its lines, and also to be small, where ribbon of the same width as that around the neck 18 altogether too flowing. For the lit- | fit marriage. drunkard as Jaggs to a circus per former, a fitting one?” “A perfectly She's a snake charmer.” il FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH. Corner Florida avenue and Bay St. ‘I'he Rev. William Dudley Nowlin, tle lawn turnovers, plain hemstitching is the ideal adornment, though a nor- row edging of crochet is permissible, or a little white embroidery. Small pin-in bows in spotted foulards or soft satin are also much worn just now PRETTY COAT FOR WINTER | [ | i | | | The Indian blanket coat is the lat- est for the lady's wear for winter &ports, espeoially coming in handy for skating. Its length reaches only & little below the knees. The material is of a soft wool of various colore on a tan background with markings ol’) brown and dull green. The hat is of | tan felt and trimmed with green wings to suggest the Indian h(nd~“ dress. Novel Coin Purse. An attractive novelty in jewelry is the tiny coin purse of perforated me al which holds dimes and nickels. mand, and, of course, may be bought | It is strung on a fine neck chain or separate from the slippers, either ia | shoe shops or jewelry counters, I worn at the end of a narrow black silk ribbon u. D., vastor. Sunday school 9:45 a. m. H. C stevens, superintendent Preaching Sunday at 11 a. m. and i1 p. m. Weekly prayermeeting Wednesday vening at 7:30. Woman's Missionary and Ald So- irty Monday 3:30 p. m Baptist Young People's 615 p. m Re enlar montaly business meeting fr<t Wednesday at 7:30 p. m Meeting East Lakeland Mission. Sunday school at 2 p. m. Attton, superintendent ting Thursday at 7 p. m. E. A FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. (Tennessee Ave., Detween Main and | Lemon Streets.) Rev. W. S. Patterson, Pastor. Sunday Services—3Sunday school, 9:45; preaching, 11 a and 7 p. m. Wednesday m., Prayer mecting P —— Florida’s GREATEST You will find assembled here the greatest = strling and heavily plated silverware, brilliant sories, and the latest novelty— Prayer | M. E. Church. South I. C. Jenkins, Pastor. sunaay schuol ¥:46 a. Morning ssrmon 11:60 a, m pworth Leagite 6:00 p. 1 Kvening serviec T 00 Prayer-meeting Wednesday 7:0¢ o m CHRISTIAN CHURCH Sunday 8chool at 10 a. m. Preaching service at 11 a. m. and 7p m Christian Endcavor m, . Prayer Meeting, Wednesday even- ing at 7 p. m. EPISCOPAL (ALL SAINTS) CHURCH. Weaeddell minister in Society at + Rev. charge. I Services-—11 a, m. and 5 p. m cvery Sunday, except third Sunday School -10 a. Sunday. | Lakeland Branch of the Woman - | Auxiliary meets on the Monday fol- lowing the fir<t Sunday of each month, at 3 p. 0f come one of the piembers, as may o m [/very ., | b2 amumonnecd. All Saints Gunild meets on Tuesday {after the third Sanday, in the Guild [!n‘l. at 3 p. om, CUMBERLAND PRESBY- at the residence ! . Post Cards Cigars Come and sce me before pur chasing elsewhere. Your patronage appreciated. Miss Ruby Daniel News Stand Loooy of Edisonia Theater. ARCHER The Second-Hand Man Cook Stoves, Heaters, On burner Oil Stove, Beds from $2 or up, Dressers $4 up, Chairg 5S0c¢ np, Rockers $1.50 up, Office Desk, Settec, Buffet, Sideboard, Sewing Machine, Rattan Cot, a new 30-30 Rifle-——Mari lin takedown- -and other articles | numerous to mention chased all of Dr. and office fixtures I*our- to0 Just pur- Revis' houschold at| PAGE TWO. TERIAN CHURCH. Sunday school every Sunday morn- Second - Hand {210 West Main Street, Lakeland, Fla. Jewelry Store rray of rarve and beautiful jewels, splendid time pieces, cut glass, brass and nickle chaffing dishes and acces- ' Toilet sets and individual toile; articles, desk sets and coniniences, a new and unique novelty closely resembling old ivory, can be enzraved and colored or filled in, in any color. 1 am especially equipped to handle mail orders; all goods so shipped are positively guaranteed to be as represented, or they : - cheerfully taken buck, exchanged or money refunded. When you watch needs rejairing, don’t forget that we make a specialty of such work. CcOoOlL Phone 173 E & HULL 112 Kentucky Avenue, Lakeland