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ing , Gown of Embroidered Ivory Satin Richly Adorned [-:vem | | | | 1 | ? A ~own of embroidered ivory satin with chiffun corsage and tunic of | . velvet. The girdle Is laced with broad velvet ribbon ending in el T — S . { . L the French Chalk. Mzrket for Broken Glass. Fu' ot chalk 1s eepeclally good for Brokea glass has a market. Some | b: idery that s too frag ' of it s ground in fiue, powder-like | wished with soap and wa | particles and used for various pur- | ter. 7 taln should be made quite i poses. At other times it is remelted | bot & . s, iviled thickly over the | and made into new gluss ohjects, erbre oty which 1s then rolled up | R oare! t the chalk is Inside. | What Puzzles Ye Editor, i llow al In & dark place for | An Ashdow: nerchant hus a two s week or two, and then shake out cent pieee wlich he claims to have gl the cha This will leave the 'carried in his punts for tvwonty-seven embr v oquite fresch fyearg. A twe-eent picee twonty-ceven At {years old 13 nethi to bhrag of; He Was Literary. money vwon't s bt what we are | he iwade his - Murireesboro | interesiod iu 1s pants dast i (Ark) Messenzer, ! Brown seems to be very | marked a visitor to the hold to the negro mald, pile of magazines lying “Vys. ma'am,” replled el Have Enjoyed Long .ife. : aed el “yag, ma'am, he | Living in the Isle of Jight s & literary, He jes' natally | nes all sier dis year bouse. | . % Home Companlon, family of three brothers and two sis-| ters who are all In receipt of the old- | age pension, and whose combined | | mges total X7 years. The veteran of | ‘dam's Satisfaction, the family is Mrs. Ann MHarris of | Cowes, agrd eighty-four; the “baby” | of the family is Mr. Robert Butt of | nlled w ;t‘.x sutlsfaction as he re- [ Niton, who has seen only seventy- tv\o} mitked. “Whatever else may hap- | summers ; B, there never will be a shortage | ~ e ply of pariy embiems.” ! Adan was surveying the aniwale | Be wae called upon to name. Ha‘ Changing Hucs. “You are in love with a blonde,” re | marked the fortune teiler, “but after | heware of a bhrunette £.ond Power te Overcome. iourne: s just oozes | L-eonsc mwr\ hfv out oung drumny e ) e e Bl who—" *No " remarked the | \Ddlrf'l » wornan "—~The ! Di mk "fiblt !' KODAKS and SUPPLIES | DEVELOPING LUABLE HOME TREATMENT and PRINTING MICH QUALITY 1OW PRICLY PROMPTE JURINE treatment for the Tadbe PHOTO l\?‘ t can be used with ab- 5 lence. It destroys all de- 'V, beer or other al- lants. Thousands have uzed it and have been " ‘0 lives ¢i sobriety and use- an be given secretly. Costs ; per box. If you fail to & A 5 from ORRINE after a; : T money will be refunded. (+-.. " hooklet telling all about UPHOLS’!’ER.NG AND MATTRESS MAKING. 0!d Mattresses made over; cushijons of all kind made to order. Drop me | postal card. . Arthur A Douglas | 415 S. Ohio Street. You Can’t Be Too Careful when you buy paint. Buying impurities may bring down the tirst cost but in a short time they are sure to prove expensive. Adulterated paint cracks and ‘ales off long before good white lead paint shows any sizns of wear. Be sure that Your painter uses Alfantic Waite Lead (Duteh Bey Painter Trade-Mark) Iosist on his using pure linseed oil. Then you'll know you're getting a 9uality job—most economical because 't wears 3o long and affords real paint Protection. 1 | H Come to us for JOur paiot supplies and Ak for our Painting Powts -tmmn' color -:bmu and -ll lheJackson&W Ison Company i tional purpe 'ing washed in oatmeal water | some good catmeal and bofl | { liquld to wash with night an ' | every dav. | the lotion wlill be enhanced. :\\'Ill be ersured. a rule should never be cut, and should | on no account he torn or picked off, . The less it is | meddled with, otter than in the way | i recommended, the better, ! rounding it. | the left side, Is not only permiss HAND REQUIRES CARE NO DETAIL OF THE TOILET MORE IMPORTANT. Even Where Niture Has Denled Eeauty Much May Be Accom- plished by the Persistent Use of the Proper Lotions. A pretty bund, well kept, with pails brilliuntly pe greater or shed and trimmed, {5 ent to a woman than 13 by careful treatment. There |s7 I the most priceless jewel. Even a com- L’ wce band can be made ai.ractive ' fore the girl to whom Nature has de- ' ieied taper fingers and an altogether model hand can take heart of grace. and so improve on the commonplace that her hands and nails may excite admiration and envy, If the skin of the hands is rough, ft can scen be softened by the applica tion of well-cl n creams or lotions and the use ol soft water for allu re being token to mrhly every tioe lecting to do i + bords ther haud is to get the skin soft and the fing.rs pliable Hands that are and rough are often btenefited by be-, + Take in wa- | s firet thing fo do in treating the inclined to be red ter for an hour, strain it, and nse the morn- This wash must be ma. » fresh If toilet borax is : the oatmeal, the whitening « ing. "o keep the hands white, some wom: tallow, Five or ten mitutes given to the [toilet of the nails every day and an fextra 20 minutes every week will keep them in good order, To keop the finger nails clean the i nuil-brush and soap and warm water should be used daily, and every time th.» hands are washed the free edge of searf skin, which, if not attended to, i apt to grow upward over the nuils, should be gently loosened and prossed back in a neatly rounded form, by wlich the occurrence of ericks, hanionails, ete, about the roots of the nails will be prevented, and a grac ful ¢ play of a crescen like space of white This scarf-skin as as 18 com nonly ne Very often tinger nails are disflgured by dark coffec-colored rims that lie between the nail and the flesh sur fluld, for it mars the beauty of the nalls. FOR SLIM FIGURES Smartness of the Beited TailorMade. ' For the slim-figured and fairly tall | woman the belted coat is certainly one of the smartest and most becom- | ing aspects of the tailor-made cos tume 'ded to | ‘ect of v sleep | !in gloves smeared Inside with melted form and the dis- | This rim should be re.! moved at once with a strong cleansing {charge. So if you can be numbered | among these fortunate folks you can | quite safely have your new costume | made In the style you so much ad- mire, the sketch here providing all | the necessary guldance as to detail | A slight opening of the gkirt, too, at but also pinuant, always presumi that your footwear be of immaculate shaping and smartness Veil Renewed. rat 7:380 {7:30 p. m. THE FVB‘\"NG TELEGRAM, LAKELAND, FLA, MARCH 12, 1913. r.“y"c i Y Qur E A :cessorics being the most complcte ever brought to the city. ster Comes rch 23rd -« 4 baauiful line of New Goods. er Offerings in Dres »2 our Children's Dresses-=just received a shipment. You’d Better GET READY s Materials and ATES i b y ‘ 1p. m One Chance for Him. ? Christian Endeavor Soclety at * | , i) in the Church of England 2y p m. bad in his fan ily a domestic-—-a wome ALL SAINTS CHURCH. Corner of Lemon Street and Massa-| chusetts Avenue. 1. Weddell. minister in v, ). sorvices at 11 a. m. and 5 p. m. | Sundays except the third in the Other services as appointed. mth, LIXIELAND AND MYRTLE STREET METHODIST CHURCHES. Dixieland Chureh — Services-- 1st and 3d Sabbaths, 11 am; 2d and 4th Sabbaths, 7:30 p. m. Sabbath School—3 p. m. Prayer Service—Thursday nlght An Itallan university professor | women—because women are so sed at 7:30 elaims to have found radium in ordl ' gom friends.”—"The Unknown Wom-- Wit aary dew. an.” hv Anne Warwink Myrtle Street Church— Rervices—Ist and 3d Sabbaths, 7:30 p. m.; 2d and 4th Sabbaths, 11 ‘&, m. Sunday School—3 p. m. Prayer Services-—Tuesday night W. H. STEINMEYER, Pastor. | CUMBERLAND PRESBY- TERIAN CAURCH Sunday school every Sunday worn ing at 9:45. Everybody cordially in- | ted FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH (Tennessee Ave., Between Main an¢ Lemon Streets.) Rev. W. S. Patterson, Pastor. Sunday Services—Sunday scho! 45; preaching, 11 am. m., and 30 p. m. Wednesday—Prayer 19: 1: meeting at FIRST METHODIST CHURCH. (South Kentucky Ave.) Rev. Isaac C. Jenkins, pasor. Temporary residence, 911 South Florida avenue. Office at church tHours, 11:30 to 12:30. Sunday Services Sunday school, 9:45 a. m Preaching, 11:00 a. m. Epworth League, 6:30 p. m Preaching, 7:30 p. m Week Day Services— Woman's Missionary Monday afternoon Prayer meeting, Wednesday even- ing, 7:30. Teachers’ meeting Friday evening. A cordial invitation to everybody to all services. Soclety, Eust Lakeland Mission. Sunday school a1 3 p.m. E A | Milton, superintendent. Prayer moeeting Thursday at 7 p. m Lutheran Church Cor. E. Orange ana So. Tennessce | Surdae schoel 10:00 a m Services are held on secoud ane - AL If the stiffness is out of your veil | *"Tth Sundays. and it is still good, wrap it around L pasteboard roll, stretching full mdxh 2nd steam. Let it dry on the roll md it will be as good as new. CHRISTIAN CHURCH Sunday 8chool at 10 a. m Preaching service at 11 . m. and | Prayer Meeting, Wednesday even Lg 8t 7 p. m. Corner Florida avenue and Bey :it The Rev. n., Sunday school 9:45 » Preaching Sunday at 11 a. m. auc :16 p. m Weekly prayermeeting Wednesday vening at 7:3¢. Woman's Mlissionary anl Ald So i clety Monday 3:30 p. m Baptist Young People's at6:16 p m Regnular monthly business meeting Arst Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. (e ¥//; e}'éfiz/ an—a stiict koman Catholie, who wae [ always 1alking 2hort the impossibil. ity of lireties getting to heavems o 5 1 *Why," said the muster, “do youw -FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH [ think, Mary, ‘hat 1 will not get to heaven?" “Weli,” sald one, “If you unt of your i® ac | do, it wiill be on Willlaw Dudley Nowlin | gonsavable ignorunce. vastor. m The Mocker, “l u:'erstand you are on the outs with Rinks, Dubbleigh,” sald Jorrocks, “I am that!” returned Dubbleigh, with fervor. 0 wmore Vlinks for me. Last ! Supday when my new car lay in the il“'l‘h 1| asked Binks to see if he couldn't tind somecbody or something i to pull it ont, and the blistering idiot offcird me a corkscerew."—Harper's, Weekly Meeting —e camg From Recent Books. “It takes but very delicate shadinge | to mark evolution in the friendship o New Source of Radium, . @ik o QQJP \ . Wflifi o «e’l ‘or 07 '1.3:?"'.19’1"!*’ [ ip sur A’E‘é’lf?/‘ Clothes Buying a good, new suit of clothes and overcoat is not an expense; it is an INVESTMENT. WHY? Because, good clothes cost but little more than poor clothes, fand wear much longer and look well ALL THE TIME. Then it PAYS you; you’'ll get the better positioniand BFTTER PAY, if you “look the part” better. : We do no “Monkey Business” in our store. Wefcarry only GOOD STUFF, sell it to everybody at the SAME PRICE, and that price is as low as the best quality can be sold for. The Hub JOSEPH LeVAY