Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, April 26, 1913, Page 3

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Attractive Gown of Blue Charmeuse for Young (‘nrl' Bat.es’ Great St.ock Reducing Sale Starts April 26th Headquarters for Good Merchandise At Big CUT PRICE COME AND S EFE B ATES ASK ABOUT FREB TICKETS TO THE AUDITORIUM R SHIRTWAISTS AND SHOES Easily Fashioned From Simple | used for a covering. Materials a Useful and Pretty gimp and brass-headed tacks. Article of Furniture. —_— his Is a useful and pretty plece miture for any room. Two boxes based at the grocery store will the purpose. These boxes are be jeined with stout screws, and & Youthful Figures. ek the length of the two boxes, and A ng » ronnded end is to be se- Naturally the successful styles that fastened o the back of each |bAve been launched in women's fash- as shown in the {llustration. |‘°” bave been represented in chil- | dren's styles. The separate coats Ia the shoe box two shelves are ! fast, and to the shirtwalst . have reflected some of the noticeable features and the wise mother Jds the one who can modify and simplify the youth and figure of her little daugh- ter. The smartest coats are made in serge, whipcords, velvets, heavy cord- ed silks and broadcloths, Nearly all show sashes of satin or wide belts. | Buttons are used to trim them, and | all the novelties that have appeared in buttons for mother’s dress are re- produced in smaller sise for lttle | daughter. Oval forms predominate. Enamel, bone, wood and glass buttons afford important decorative notes for little coats. Brald gives a jaunty, military touch In straight lines across the front and forms epaulets on the shoulders. The silk mobair and soutache braids are Ikt a cover should be arranged on ' favored =7e*= % Bulgarlan embroldery in wool or e — e~ 8 A Big Day | hinges, the Fashions of the Elders Represented In Modified Degres to Sult E have decided .not to have a mid summer sale this year, but to have special sale days. Saturday, April 26 will be the first of these days. Below are some prices which will interest everyone: 12 yards Swandard Ginghams for Zic Brown Linen per yard ic Valenciennes Lace per yard 15c Lawns and Batistes per yard 3¢ Ratine All White and Linen Skirts at Actual Cost. 15c Baby Irish Embroidery Flouncing $2 grade $1.28 Zcand 35¢ Rmbroidery 17¢ Fancy Umbrellas at Half Price. Cut Prices on all Skirts Furguson & McKenny’s famous 75c Shirts, the only one of its kind in the country, this day only 20 per cent discount on all Felt Hats Suits for men about closedout. Wil sell this day % price It will pay you to attend these sale days, We areshowing the greatest line of shoes in the county. All standard brands. We appreciate your calls. show you. Murrell & Sharp Let us ot | STYLES IN CHILDREN'S COATS | \ | e— g0 that 1t may be raised from ©08rsé threads in the vivid reds, e front. Denim or cretonne may be blues, greens and yellows is very ef- Finish with fective. It appears on many of the expensive models; but there is no reason for its being confined to theue, as any needlewoman should be able to work a conventional design. Poor Bairn! Which did baby resemble the m' —its father or mother? Its parents were, to put it charitably, not very: . i W prepossessing, nor was the baby; so, From one to settle the matter, they finally re- solved to refer it to arbitration. VEILING M! “I'll ask old Farmet B—— to step ; UST BE PLENTIFUL in and see baby,” sald its proud fa-| Without a Liberal Supply of Materialedges of the veil at the ther. “He never spoke a flattering word in his life, and we may trust his verdict {mplicitly.” — So Farmer B—— was called in, and,| It is poor economy to buy too scant after pinching the baby to see what it | measure when purchasing face vell looked like wheu crying, he wrinkled ing. A smartly adjusted veil can his forehead. never have a skimpy effect, as when “Well,” he began, while the parents ' the back of veiling is straining at the listened eagerly, “it's the will 0’ edges of the vell pin, or when thers dence, no doubt, but it's hard 'is not sufficient material left at the on the nipper, for all that. It has & ends to be tucked from view. Wide lJook of both of you—poor balm{"== | veiling and plenty of it must be used London Tit-Bits. on even & small hat. An excellent idea is to have elastic cording run Cling to O!d-Time Toys. through the meshes of the vell at the The eternal feminine of the juvenfle | top, being so measured as to fit firmly variety still concentrates its affeo- |.t the base of the crown. This meth- tions on dolls as gifts, with the result | od avoids the pinning of the veil to that no other toy is sold so largely at ‘the hat brim, which is never a very It ls Impossible to Get the Proper Effect. Gown of blue charmeuse with lace vest and square neck. The dra B8 * | ekirt reveals an underskirt with three folds. holiday times. Boys, say the dealers, scatter their affections on various military toys, tin soldiers, trumpets secure way of fastening it and is dif- ficult to do if the hat brim is stiff, and is apt to leave pin marks in any and bugles being their favorites. The ' boy’s voice, it seems, is still for war, while few little girls have becomie so “advanced” as to despise the make oelieve baby. SMART TAILOR MADE SUIT Puts and Calls. *I think,” said young Mrs, Torkins, doubtfully, “that I understand what is meant by ‘puts and calls,’” “Oh, you do!” rejoined her husband. “Yes. A person with a tip puts some money in a broker's hands and after a while somebody calls and gets t. Time to Be Silent. Especlally when there is excite ment rife in a community hold yous ‘ongue. The time is ripe for scam fal; every one talks, equally every one repeais, and the simplest remark is distorted out of all semblance of truth, He Never Drank Any Panther Julcs “A goud many years ago,” said the ! Arkansas citizen, who was chowing | the tourist from the north around the i R neighborhood, *‘.iere was a wildeat | | 3 distillery up that ‘ere rocky holler” ) “What sort of—ah! -product,” io- quired the visitor, “was obtained from ke distillation of wildcate? End of Golden Nugget Day. Men bave found a mass of mative copper weighing 420 tons and they bave discovered a chunk of pure sil ver weighing one and one-half tone, but the largest nugget of gold that has yet been seen weighed only 190 pounds. And gold seekers are inform- od that larger finds in the future are | s | Angels on a Needies Polnt. I ' ¥his was a favorite topic of debate | among the scholiasts and doctors of | the Christian church from the earliest | time. It was particularly to the fore during the period of futile and quib- bling argument which marked the decline of scholasticism, say {rom 1300 % 1460 A. D. Mot Needed. %Mt There wasa't & partisle ' pon, cerise of light ia the room!” [Standing of Con- | testants in Piano Co_n_t_est H] 5% ITTEE gfi Williame iss Lillie May Mcintire....34,375 Marshall C H. Tedd Dixieland Methodist church..11,17% 130 1] Luela Knight ........ Katien Thelma Manp Mrs. B. L. Cowdery ....... ..79,268 P. P. Lindsley . . |Fencing Now On Hand We cau supply your wamt I8 American wire fencing as long as i€ lests. You had better speak quick or it will be gone, You know that American wire is heavy. It s & wrapped fence and no concern 1® America can beat the quality. Hot Wea—t_fiar Is when the women folks suftat from cooking on a wood stove. We have bought and have oo hand @ solid car of insurance gasoline stoves. burner to a four burner event. The fulness should be 1y gasoline range like the one you see distributed around the crown and th: at the nape of the neck with a vell pin or barette. The ends are th drawn strAight up to the back of brim and invisibly tucked under the elastic at the crown. When the vell Joses its freshness and begins to sag at the chin twist this portion round and round and tuck it under its own !anrneo; this will give trimness to the otherwise untidy appearance. { WAYS OF FINDING PARTNERS Some New and Original (deas Whieh Intending Hostesses May Find of Real Value, InsuranceGasolineRange | P — ' A correspondent kindly tells of. these ways to find partners: “One girl had conundrums written on cards and given to the girls; the ! answers to these were handed to the | gentlemen and they were numbered | corresponding with the numbers omn the girls’ cards; they were told to find who their partners were. An-| other girl had the girls’ names writ- | ten backward on cards and handed | them to the gentlemen and told them ! to make out who their partners were. | Another girl had a small plece cut out of the card; the pleces were given to the girls and the other portions of the cards were given to the gentlemen | Besides the Insurance Gasoline we ;:u: '.:e!h'l‘zflzhtold !: look f°l‘d:h0 carry the National Oil stove and the rl who held the card corresponding | pertection Oil stove and plenty of with theirs. Another put the girls’ names on cards and they were put in aay sise ovens—glass front aud plain envelopes and sealed and hid in dif- ferent places in the parlor.” T the combinations, corset covers, pet- — ticoats, gowns, etc., in colored batiste | Next to a gas/line or oll store for |to match the costumes with which {gummer we carsy the Lorain range. | they are to be worn, Or else to harmo- qyig gtove is asbestos lined and, like | nize with the decorations of the bou- ! ! dolr, particularly In the case of gowns i the Great Majestic range that we car- {and petticoats. The trimmings are ry, holds all the heat inside. It ! usually lace of the shadow or val vari- 8ets on legs, making It easy to swesd I ety. Cluny, baby Irish and venise are wnder. ’noed on gowns and petticoats. This fad will probably continue until hot weather arrives, at which time there is pothing better than white, In Pastel Shades, It has become quite a fad to have Summer Living-Room Ruge. Rugs are a problem, summer oFf; winter, but particularly in the summer we long instinctively to get rid of those with a deep velvety surface. One of the best summer rugs made of wool, appropriate on that account for all seasons, is the homespun rug. The weave is flat, without a nap, and the §} colors are very soft and cool-looking. | ineu rugs cost from three to thml | dollars and a half a yard, according. /to the color and quality.—Harper's (enm—————— ‘ Hang Up Blouses. | To keep blouses fresh and unrum- pled screw five hooks into a plece of| broomhandle about two feet lotg. Op- posite the middle hook fix a large screw-eye through which the bar may be hung from a small pulley attached i to the cupboard or wardrobe celling. Put the blouzes on clothes hangers, s o s e Lakeland Hardware —— & Plumbing Co.

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