Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, January 11, 1913, Page 9

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TGN 1s Are a Nuisance to DESIGN FOR SILK STOCKINGS | Oriental Characters Are the Latest to Be Used by Those Who Like Embroidery. Girls who are fond of needlework will want to embroider themselves two or more pairs of silk stockings in the now fashionable Oriental de- signs. Select a good grade of silk stock- ing woven with thread silk, black or any color you desire; then with a sharp-pointed piece of tailor's chalk outline a design representing some cu- | rious Chinese or Japanese symbol, lettering or number. These can be found in any Oriental | shop or on a Chinese laundry check. Boi . on your face? j is there an r lower limbs -.ble when you re at night? Medicine is an gned espe- \se, containing wwen and other combined with prings prompt and and 1t a4 blood medicine, 4l you are 1ook=- s wh rore to-day and get & . you take it if you “you can get your They are not difficult to sketch, being for the most part broad lines crossing A each other in a curious manner. v U0 the botue. These should be slightly padded price. * — with very soft darning cotton, so that SR the center will be raised above the outer edge. The embroidery {s then done in fine floss silk, using brilliant red, green, yellow, purple and blue, All colors rich in tone are effective, and occasionally threads of silver and gold can be introduced in the embroidery. Care must be taken when applying the work to colored stockings that the colors used in the embroidery harmo- i CRAME HANDBAG IS LIKED with Evening Wear They ly Voiost Charming Addl- tlon to the Toilette. goveloped & new mania ve o > handbags, and for eve : macrame g wear these f"l"'“e“‘,l_‘hch"mg‘: nize with that of the stocking itself. ition to the toflette. °| °‘l“‘ Any color or combination of colors "¢ the bag is carried out In IVOIY | ooy pg used on black. 4 poplin, or some other stout acrame lace completely the whole, and being finished | op fringe at the base. These upon as fully worthy gold and silver form part of the women, who are clever ore and naturally fond kind, find it & very sim- Tiny beads and small flowers are lovely when worked in rich Oriental | colors. For example, a spray of wis-! taria is charming on violet silk stock- ings. Cherry blossoms on white or’ green, iris on blue or yellow, and the ! flaming poppy on black, When working, an easy way to keep thel stocking taut so the embroidery | { thi will lie smooth is to slip a china egg| to evolve the b“h:'h“:" or very smooth darning egg into the | Jother type of b'!“" ch 18] iocking, then hold the silk tightly ol tirely covered wit l'é’"" over that as you would for ordinary | 4 beadwork, ::1 r:;’h’ .l.:dnl‘:l o;ctzn darning. The embroidery will then | esigns, 8 v vhe g 4 «il( o girl's industry wheni be perfectly smooth when worn. fr Pancipated from the routine of hoo! work. colore the rering th 3 deel me uots which peme. Many l Tinting Lace. A weak solution of permanganate of ! ! potash will tint laces that deep shade Bead Trimmings. i of ecru so much used at present. Many of the smartest evening gOWNS, [t must be carefully dissolved, oth- wrimmed with bead plaques. The| erwige it will produce stains which ads are so closely set together that! are impossible to remove. re {3 10 £pace between them. They | Test the dye with a small piece of wrought upon canvas in the old: | muslin before dipping the lace. If the boned mat and screen designs. | color is too deep, dilute the solution pese show baskets of flowers and ! yntil the required hue is obtained. 4s unreallooking in thelr strange|! Never allow the lace to remain in ploring the dye; simply dip in and out again. The peasant fashions are much “'l Tea or a solution of coffee is excel- prue, and the suspenders are deco- lent to tint laces. The latter pro- ted with beads and embroidery. ! duces the fashionable string color. e —— THi. EVENING TELEGRAM, LAKILAND, FLA, A RESPONSIVE CHORD By NORA NAHL. “Whai did he ever see in her?”| The question fell from the lips of l' girl of twenty, fully conscious of the budding beauty of young womanhood | and all it meant of power. “She hasn't apparently one redeeming fea- ture; why, she is positively gawky.” The woman addressed, an attractive matron of about 35, turned a cmi-§ cal gaze after the figure of the little woman disappearing down the street, ' and a knowing smile curled her lps.! “I will tell you,” she said. | “About five years ago Arthur Smith was engaged to the most beautiful girl | in our set; you are too young to re-! member just how beautiful she was— at any rate, she completely conquered Arthur—he had eyes for no one else | when she was near. At every func-| tion he was her devoted slave—every wish was anticipated and gntlned——i nothing was too good for her—no task | too difficult to perform that would add | to her comfort and happiness. “When the Spanish-American war broke out, Ann Reynolds, now Mrs. Smith, had been studying for two, years to be a trained nurse. She had one supreme gift--the giit of tender- ness, and Nellie, in a woman this is | not to be despiscd. All women do not possess it. Ann's brother and Ar- ! thur happened to be {njured about the same time and were placed on beds ' side by side in the same southern hos- | pital. On account of her training and her brother's illness, Ann Rey-i nolds volunteered to go as a nurse to this hospital. and endeavor to save | not only her brother's life, but to do | what she could to save the lives of others who had become i1l in the gov-' ernment service | “About this time Arthur had writ-| ten an appealing letter home, or, rath- | er, had asked that it be written, as he was too ill to do more than ex- press a wish, ashivg that his swect heart come to Lim (they had been engaged just before he left for the ease, but usually the ones we love do not consider such things as this when a life {8 concerned; at least, I am generous enough to think that most women would not. Well, to make a long story short, Arthur's bedside. 1t afterward came out— somehow these things always do— and thereby marring her beauty. south). as he feared he had contract: | ed a dangerous and contagious dis- | sweetheart refused flatly to go to his | that she feared contracting the lever, 1913 JAN 1L e et e e = For Nesatness in Clothing. London has adopted a French indus- | scutheaast quarter It s thas | west quarter of section 26, town- ship 31, south, range 25 east, in Poik county, Florida, east 5.71 chs., north 2.10 chs, w«-stl 5.71 chs., south 2.10 chs. to point of beginning, be and they are hereby required to appear to said bill on or before the 3rd day of try which aims at neatness. of the “stoppeur.” The word refers to the art of mending clothes. In Parls the “stoppeur” is well and favorably known. Supposing a gentleman tears his coat or burns a hole with his cigas- ette in his trousers, the garment fis convered to the “stoppeur,” who in some mysterious way reconstructs the ! material. In some way they seem to ' weave in the stuff, I | part ——— insane Asyiums, The great Gree! rhyvsic voted much attention 1o i some of their us had de y, and icipated procepts a i modern discoveries, but no lunatic asy. | lum appears to have existed in ane tiquity In the first period of the monastic life a refuge is said to have been opened for the insane at Jerusa lem, but this appears to have be:n & solitary Instance, arising from exk gencies of a single class, and it may be said that no lunatic asylum ex fsted In Christian Europe until abou$ | the time of the fifteenth century. STATE OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR POLK COUNTY-—William T. lyers vs. Peter Parsous ct al-— Bill to remove clond and quiet title It appearing from the affidavit oy R. I llutfaker, solicitor ler con planant, filed in said exuse and! sworn to by said solicitor | residence of Peter Parsons, | fie defendants, named in the complaint, is unkeown, and the | tac bill that thy e ot Bl that 1 o revidence or residences and nae or names of the other defend- | ants, the heirs, devisees, grentees or under Heny i U= per- other Liimants ek d Knows that the cased, lso there (e is no of Florida up- service of a wotld hind said defendants; senin State (B hem o suh- CRIE that the said defendant, Peter Par aver the age of twenty-one yeur i ordered that the cotendant Peter Parsans be, ana 1 he required to appear to the bilk of complaint filed in said [ s onor before the 6th day of Flary, 1913, the same being the ride-day of said conrt for said maonth, (RIS is therefore Loreby “When Ann arrived at the hospital and found that the patient in the bed The most beautiful bead trimmings, Lace trimmings to match the ma- o those that represent the arabesque terial of the frock are much used this igns on black chiffon, crepe de geason. hine, net or taffeta. | With two or three simple colors Among the smartest evening gowns aven an amateur can produce good re- v those showing heavily beaded gyits, nics over a foundation of chiffon. We Won't Sacrifice Quality but we are always studying how to Increase The Quantity We give the “most now but we are anxious to give more. Phone us and prove it. Bt Butter, per pound ... eeomeeee vere 40 REU, 16 pounds ... cvevvrrrmeeeemeiiemeneeeeeeeens 308 Cttolene, 10 pound pails. .. e ..oemeevescssesseesmeremes 188 Cottlene, d-pound pails. .. .. ... e n Snowdrifs, 10-pounl pails. . cmevvimencdiisiiimimenes 1.18 ceeses seetren §eum baby sisg Croam........ccvnccoenereecicmemese BB 12 barrel Best FIONE. ... ..0eeem .o mernnrenseomsemen 800 12 ounds best FIOUE. . o . oevvricnimeieeicomenee 48 Pictic Hams, per pound w. o....0vvv.eereeneeeememees 4818 Cadaby's Uncanvassed Hams. . —....comeeeeeerssnemens 10 oi: Soap, 6 for.... ..... T : Ciemesccc@msEmessesssest@morsesssces o E. G. Tweedell "% “ablisheq 1850 fanges, Grapefruit, and Vegetables next to her brother was from the same city as she, they saild she work- ed untiringly with him night after night with an Intensity that probably saved his life—at least, the doctors gave her the credit—and won out with glowing words of praise from them all. When it was all over, how- ever, and he was on the high road to health, she succumbed under strain, and lay for weeks hovering be tween life and death, “During her {llness Arthur wrote & short note to his flancee, releasing her | from her engagement, and when he re | turned home, which did not happen for many weeks afterward, he an nounced his engagement to the little woman who had risked a very pre | cious and useful life to save that of | One of his old | a perfect stranger. triends sald afterward that In an nouncing the news to him he had made the remark that those few weeks in the hospital had taught hin: the most valuable lesson in his life that beauty of facc and form, whil pleasing to the eye, possessions, and that as he watche the devoted and scif sacrificing littl woman moving froni one to the othe of the sufferers, piviug her servic willingly and with n grace and sweet ness that brightened the whole plac deeper, nobler and more transcendent ly beautiful In the world than mer physical beauty, and one which woul expect to meet in this world.’"” her cheek, and the serious look thu mgt hers from the brown eyes told | her that the recountal had touched & | responsive chord in her nature. Telling the Bees. The custom of “telling the bees” s often referred to by those Interest: in curious happenings. In some par's| of England it has always been the habit to inform the bees whenever there is a death in the family, par ticularly when it is that of the mas- ter or mistress. Some one raps upon the board sur“\ porting the hives and says: “Mour with us. Master (or mistress) of the | house 18 dead.” It is thought that if this duty "‘ neglected the bees will die, : nd man cld servants are fond of tclling how | the bees pine away whe:. rn ~ne| thinks to give then the sac .. ¢ —Ave Maria, Carries Him Back. “l never drink coffee with ecrea.. in 18" “Why not?" “It always makes me homesick.” “1 don’t underatand.” “I.was born on the banks of the Mis- : Reference, souri river” s o 3. StANTON & Co. wrdm W™ > cup of t ialty WHOLESALE PRODUCE Memphis, TenR. | ju anout the color of the stream I lund to sport in when a boy.” the | were but flectin: bringing hope and sunshine to man: a homesick and desgairing man, he had realized that there was something last until death ,and he finished by saying: ‘And so I lost my heart, or rather, gave it into keeping of the no blest woman [ had ever met, or ever | The speaker finished the story !n | a low, soft voice, and as she glanced | over at the beautiful young girl oppo- | site, she noticed a tear trickling dowu | ze. | otherwise the allegations of said hill will be taken as confessed by defendant on the succeeding of said court thereafter; parties claiming interests Henry Schmidt, deceased, ter ag heirs, devisees, grantees o otherwise, in the following de- ¢ vibed property, to-wit: Begin 9.50 ; !~ mnorth and 571 cast of sl day all riily thit vider First. L Fall. Seventh. | d R | in Lakeland. n the 191 | of a bit of cloth (‘\']‘(’"{‘E‘):‘P ::;:::,or said month, otherwise the allega- o tions of said bill will be taken as confessed as to said defendants on | M- the suceceding rule day of said court | vited. thereafter. | It is further ordered that this or- dcr be published Telegram, a newspaper published in szid county, as to the Peter Parsons, for eight tive weeks, and as to the leirs, de- visees, grantees or other claimants under Henry Schmidt, deceased, for twelve consecutive weeks. Given under my hand and seal, this Sth day of November, 1912, Clerk Circuit Court, Polk County, JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF THE! (g1, Ten Good Reasons Why You Should Own a Lot in Park Hill Because it is in the Best Town in South Florida. Second. Because it is as HIGH if not HIGHER than any point in Lakeland. Third. Because it has One Mile of Granolithic Side Walks. Fourth. Because it has High Class Building Restrictions. Fifth. Because 4 Beautiful Lakes canbe seen from its Summit. Sixth. Because Shade Trees will be planted on all streets this G. C. Rogan or §. M. STEPHENS PAGE NINE corner of southwest of the ’ the south- run thence February, the same being the rule day Lakeland Lodge No. 91, r. & A M. Regular communications heid 2 second and 4th Mondays at 7:.0 p. Visiting brethren cordially io- J. L. LOVE, W. M. J. F. WILSON, Sec) Lakeland Chapter, R. A. M. No 29 meets the first Thursday night i each month in Masonic Hall. Visii- ing companions welcomed. C. G. Arendell, Sec’y.; J. F. Wilson, H. P in the Lakeland defendani, consecu- Palm Chapter, ¢). 1. 8. meets every second and fourth Thursday nighte of each month at 7:30 p. m. Mrs Flora Keen, W. N., Lucie F. B A. B. FERGUSON, Eaton, Secy. Lakeland camp No. 78, W. 0. W, meets every second and fourtk Thurs- day night. Woodmen Circle first ved third Thursdays, W. J. Estridge, Council Commander, Mrs. Sallie S¢ip- «r Guadian of Circle. K. OF P. Regular meeting every Tuesday at 7:30 at Odd Fellows Hall, Visit- members always welcome. . D. BRYAN. Chancellor Commander ACKSON, Secretary Grand Order of Eaglec Meets every Wednesday nizht 1 add Fellows hall, W. Row'and. W B Hicks, seeretary. POST 33, G. A. R. Mects the first Saturday in every 10 2. wm. at the home of Florida. ng L N . As pure, sweet and dunty as [ the name implics, made tiom selected wheat; scientiheally handled, producing a tlour that retains ALL the thavor and nu- tciousness so bountifully sup- plied by nature. “There isnone etler—it costs no more—why { president; month at . s, pive b an ampa J. M. Sparling on Kentucky avenue. ::.acl‘;'"g,l",m;\"':.‘;\i':.\,:,l,'“:;tfifm"“" | A ¢ SHAFFER, Commander I R TALLEY, Adjutant. “YOUR GROCER BAS IT" Elnora Rebekah Lodge No. 4 meets every second and fourth Mon- day nights at 1. 0. 0. F. hall. Visit- ing brothers and sisters cordially in- i vited. MRS. JULIA FRENCH, N. G. MRS. T. . ROBERTSON, Sec Lake Lodge No. 2, 1.0 0. F, meets Friday nights at 7:30, at I 0. 0. ., hall. Visiting brothers are cordially invited. T K. M. SMAILES, Sec. T. K. ROBERTSON, N. G Because all Streets will be Graded. Eighth. Because it is the most attractive Residential Section Ninth. Because Lotscan be sold on REASONABLE Terms. Tenth. Be-ause if you don’t, you will wish you had, if you do, will always be glad. _.-—=-'See= Deen- Bryant Building

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