Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, January 30, 1913, Page 6

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D000 CPVSVPVVVP0VPVVVOVLPPIIIOD 14 £ 1B B 4 L2TLI PSP ILISS D money fo play with OU require money if you are .0 get all the enjoyment possible our of life. Only a bank account will help you to that pleasure. A very small sum will open zn account at THIS bank. 15T NATIONAL BANK of Lakeland @Lnong Life of Linen along with good laundry work is what you are looking for and tlat is just what we are giviag. Try us. Lakeland :S:te;n Laundry Phone 130. West Main 8t. For that reason it Will Py Yo! To Insure prevent the home from burning down It is the Source whence comes the means for the BUILDING OF IT UP I represent reliable companies. | am dealing ; ininsurance only. That is my sole business. Y. L. MANN Successor to the Johnson Agency Room 7, Ravmondo Bldg. Phone 30 THE BEST IS NONE T00 GOOD-~ 22 HAROURT D, GRAVED BY , CORRECT" MANUFACTIRING ENGRAVERS LOVISVILLE, KY,U.S.A. WE ARE/ THEIR EXCLUSIVE: AGENTS FOR THEIR EXCLUSIVE LINE: Full line of Dennison's Gift Dressings; also Gibson Art Co's Eugraved Specialties, Holiday and Fancy Goods, 1oys, Etc. LAKELAND BOOK STORE, R. L. MARSHALL CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Wil tucmish plans and specifications or will follow any plans and specifications furnished. SUNGALOWS A SPECIALTY. Let & ehow you some Lakeiond homes I have bailt LAKELLZ3, Phone 267-Green. FLORIDA i* | roof to bough and scampering across 3 OHOBOBOHOEOIOFDCOEDHOCATOFOIAT VIO IICOFMOF | e hadn’t staved in the country this| An Ounce of PQ[V[NIION§ Is worth a pound of cure. g While Fire Insurance can't & QEOPOHCITICBUSOIOITO0I0I 0P @ WHEN WE FURNISH YOU @& AAD PLENTY OF TIME By CHARLES PLEINS, | NOT IN MANY SEASONS HAVE: DESIGNS BEEN SURPASSED. | “Don’t waste any pity on us for be- | Unto-Date Styles Call for l’arncti ing up here in the woods at this sca- | son of the year,” wrote the girl toi her best friend in town, who had been sympathizing with her by letter. “We are having a perfect time, and | Il'm beginning to find out what leisure | is—at least 1 should be finding out if I weren't busy every minute. That sounds contradictory, I know, but the truth is that I am reveling in the kind of leisure that gives me oceans | of time to do all the things that I've alw; been wanting to do. “Just fancy the delight of having four solid hours of reading every night and then being in bed at 10:30! You see, we have an ‘early dinner and the evening begins promptly at 6, and mother and I sit with our needle- work in hand while Brother Will reads us chapter after chapter. Don't you wish you had a chance to get ac | guainted with Little Nell, Colonel | Newcome and Maggie Tulliver again? “While mother is working on her | silk quilt in the mornings I take an | hour or two for magazines and mod- | ern novels and I've actually found | that T have a taste for poetry. { “You mustn’t think, however, that| reading furnishes our only amu:"*-i ment. We have a great deal of other | ntertainment. The Dbird banquet | h we have set outside our dininz| room window is a constant source of | interest. We have a piece of salt pork | tied to a cedar by and every morn- as we eat our eggs and bacon a! k ard white woodpecker with a dash of scarlet in his topknot comes his beak into this brand| food, which appears just, He is usually followed | by two bhluejays that, not being adept at pecking, content themselves with| the crumbs which mother keeps un- der the cedar tree for them. “We feed the squirrels also. They! flash back and forth in front of our| windows all day long, jumping from| the snowy lawn with their tails high! in the air, like graceful red plumes.| Brother Will declares that mother and | 1 are pauperizing these little neigh-| bors of ours, but we insist that our, donations will not interfere with their | self-reliance. “But the recreation that Brother' Will and I enjoy most is mother's talk! Think of it, in all the years' that I've been her daughter I mever! realized until this autumn what a| brilliant talker mother is. Until now we have always been too busy with| the every-day affairs of life to con- verse about anything more important than clothes, housekeeping. entertain: ing, lists of guests and all the other never ending details of existence. If antumn 1 might never have known Iwhat a wealth of reminiscence and anecdote is stored up in mother’s memory. She remembers the stirring days of the Civil war, she passed through the great Chicago fire and she pioneered in Alaska before the gold rush. Brother Will and T have heard some thrilling storics these aft. erncons when the snow or rain has kept up close to the wood fire. “You mustn't think of us as entirely i cut off from the ountside world. Every once in a while we see some one from the village. It was only night before te Brother Wiil and T had a heat- | reument as to whether it was the | hired man from the nearest farmhouse | or the village clerk who is said to be ‘waiting on’ the farmer's daughter. “This morning Brother Will called me from my book to look out of the window to see how congested the traf- fic was on the highway with the rural i free delivery man’s cart and a wagon load of hogs, both in =ight at once. “So, you see, life iz far from dull. “Brother Will has just interrupted my writing to tell me that his morn: ing mail has decided him to move into town early next week. “Of course I've enjoyed every mine ute of this long autumn here, but now that I know I shall be back in the midst of things so soon I can hardly wait. Why, I haven't even decided on |8 winter suilt yet and as for a hat, , or, dear! I suppose the shops - 2 | crowded to distraction with Christiu. 3 buyers, but I shall not mind that the least. I shall enjoy mingling and mixing with my kind. | “The country is all right, but— | od well, it seems a century since I've | been to the theater.”—Chicago Daily Nows. Had Forgotten About Excuse. Bobbie and little Willie had been glven orders by mother not to go swimming alone. Once in a while, however, they indulged in their secret pleasure without telling their fond mother, One day they were returning from & swim and both had entirely forgot ten ahout the necessary excuse. Lib tle Willie bravely entered the house, but Bobbie prudently turned the cor ner and walted outside on the cellar door. The first question mother put to little Willle took the little one un- aware. “Where have you been, Wil lie? asked mother sternly. Willle hesitated. looked at thn door longing ly and finally replied “Wait till 1 go and ask Bob."—National Monthly. — ey Handicapping a Winner. “You say you cbject to your wife's ' Interest in suffrage for financial rea- | sons?” “Yes,” replied Mr. Flimgilt. “I¢ fn. | terferes with her bridge playing.” { last that a man went by with a lan Neatness and the Highest Form of Well-Grocmed Appearance— Hair Coiled Close. All the new coiffures are charming from at least one point of view. They are dressed with a view to giving thelr wearers a well-groomed appear ance. Little fluffiness and absolutely no frowsiness is hinted at in the close, compact and graceful models display- ed by the designers of coiffures. In the majority of them the hair is coiled and pinned close to the head. l.oose waves and ringlets appear, but they shine with brushing. Any hint of untidiness {8 not tolerated. All is wrought out with very evident care. in fact, to be fashionable these days one must be wiiling to care for every | ietail of the toilet. l | The pretty coiffure pictured here shows three coils made of loosely braided hair, pinned across the back of the head and extending to the nape of the neck. A little fringe about the face {8 curled into ringlets, These aro flattened at the sides and pinned with invisible wire pins. There are a few loose curls over the forehead. The hair is parted at the side and is quite plain on the crown of the head. When a middle part is used the bair is waved more. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. EVERY DESCRIVPTION OF BELT From Severe Plainness to the Utmost Elaboration This Ornamentation ls Noticed Now. Belts are back. By belts one means every sort of belt, sash, or girdle. Pos- sibly this universal wearing of some kind cf sash or belt may be reminis- cent of the Directoire period, when the dandy of that epoch made a very no- point of his sash, usually of | v type, but always extreme- Iy ornamental, Many of the sashes of satin and vel- ither embroidered at the end stitch in two tones of silk »d with deep silk of bullion ! inze, in fact, plays a’very rt in the ornamentation nd seems for the present | to have taken the place of the once favor tassel. To wear with the cutaway coats that are now so modish comes the waist. coat belt, which is really part of the cont itself. Often enough this high belt, which is about five inches in depth, is of brocaded satin of con- trasting tones to the skirt, To finish some of the newest gowns in cloth appears the folded velvet belt, finishing at the left side with one long pointed end. Three small buckles of plaited taffeta, fixed respectively at the end of the belt and half-way down the skirt are distinguishing features of this belt and give.the little touch of novelty that {s always welcome. Many of the long ends that fall from the waist to the hem of the skirt are used for fixing the new draperies in place and are invariably caught down ::::‘er by a fancy buckle or a knot of The new draperies seem to demand t: ends of the sash at the front in order to use them for the purpose just mentioned. . It appears as though no gown now- :fdayl hll cAompleto without some form sash. A square of embroid finishes the sash end. s —_— Suede Collar Set, In every color, but particularly ta gray and in vivid scarlet, collar, cuft and belt sets are being produced. The material used is suede and the collar and cuffs are of the old world round head pattern. The collar turns down and the cuffs turn up, while the belt is straight and excessively neat. To be worn with the country tweed or serge suit the new sets are admirably adapted. _— Bright Colored Berries. Clumps of berries in gold or silver, velvet or satin, the two latter mate- rlals being used in cases where bright or rich colors are required, are fash- lonable for millinery, and where a young girl is concerned, the bright, glowing tones of a cluster of rowan berries, poised in a hat of dark colk ored velvet, are more than becom- conspienou oi the belt 'lu We Won’t Sacrifice Quaj but we are always studying how 1, Increase The Quantiry We give the “wost now but we are o i more. Phone us and prove i Best Butter, per pound . ... Sugar, 1€ pounds Cottolene, 10 pound pails. .. ... w. Cottolene. 4-pound pails ........ Snowdrift, 10-nounl pails . ... 3 cans family size Cream........... 8 cans baby size Cream. ... 1.2 barrel best Flonr. ... 12 pounds best Flour....... ....... Picnic Hams, per pound ... ~........ Cudahy's Uncanvassed Hams........ccoom....... Octagon Soap, 6 for......... Ground Coffee, per pound....... 5 gallons Kerosehe .. com..ocmeomeccn. E. G. Tweedel SMOKE INMAN’S 5c. CIGAR | The best Union M ade cigar in town. They have stood the test. & [} X Sebring, Florid: The Town of Beautiful Location The Town of Progress The Town of Opportunity Inquire About It At Room 1, Reymondo Bldg, Lakelsad i C. D. M°CAIN, MANAGER. Telephone 309. [ WHITE STAR_ MARK G. P. CLEMMONS Manager Corner Florida & Maif D. A. HENDERSON Proprietor Phone 279 The anitary Marke Florida and Western Meats of All Kinds Fresh Vegetables 4% Mother’s Bresd

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