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3 - A NEGI.IGEE OFFERED. jesigned Express- el ARE THE ] | 1 RETURN TO LARGE HAT| HOT WEATHER BROUGHT DOWN- FALL OF SMALL MILLINERY. to the Hot | wide-Brimmed Tuscan and Leghorn le Fabrics ployed. jarm days when no loftier ambi- by lolling about the lovely thin iffon jackets be y and a joy for xpressly for this ely needs these expects to look ool at the same seem simple home at little oesn't matter in ears what one may be a meass oyl Coat of Flow on. lingerie, but it be white. Crepe nicest kind of a you are making purpose. How- Jacket portion 18 pf our attention flowered chif- pretty negligee portion is cut hono sleves and e sleeves are dged ruffling of lace ruffling is mtire wrap, and utstanding med- is cut away ross the back, the knees. blue satin is waist and then ont, where it is ibow that hooks can be made by using some dimities, mulls too, are dainty xpensive. Shaped Now Most Favored by Parisiennes—May Be Worn at Various Angles. Many clever persons who consid- ered themselves dress experts de- clared in no uncertain voice that the small hat would remain in fashion all through the summer and autumn; that the big picture hat was dead! This is of course pure nonsense, writes a Paris correspondent. The Parisiennes may at times adopt fash- fons which appear eccentric and ex- traordinary, but it rarely happens that they adopt a fashion which is unsuit- able. The little close-fitting hat as originally concelved was a smart little affair, eminently suitable for winter wear. It came down closely on the head. It permitted enormous fur stoles and collars to be worn with comfort; it clung to the hair in a gale of wind. In short it was thoroughly suitable wear, and eclectic Parisiennes must One of the New Watteau Hats In Leg- horn Straw. not be blamed if the close-fitting hat was made ridiculous by ignorant per- sons who did not know how to make it and by others who did not know how to wear it. With the return of summer has come tho inevitable return of the wide- brimmed picture hat. been a summer season in which wide- brimmed tuscan and leghorn hats were more fashionable. And now that black velvet strings are so fashionable these hats present a delightfully picturesque outline; they are—very many of them | —almost exactly like the lovely hats depicted by Winterhalter in his paint ing of the Empress Eugenie and her attendant ladies. And side by side with these wide-brimmed hats we find the quaint Watteau shapes which seem like a flat plateau and which are raised to an extraordinary height at the back, In the sketch you will find & beautd ful model of & Watteau hat. The orige inal model was made of fine tuscan with a wide band of black velvet rib bon passed over the flat .crown, and at the back, where the brim turned up very sharply, there was a large cluster of sllver gray marabout feathers, These flat Watteau hats can be worn thrown back a little to' sbow the hair in front or they can be raised high at the back and tilted forward to shade the face. They are quaint and original in outline, but with sum- mer gowns of lace or fine muslin M will have a huge success. There has not ' THR EVENING THLBGRAM, LAK BEAUTIFUL EVENING GOWN uln" ANBTNES s : for all kinds of jewelry, from polished Model of white silk veiled with bmu:k chiffon and applique and white 8ilk and Linen, Bilk coats with linen skirts are pop- ular in Paris. These jackets are often of figured silks. The weave of the lin- en used is open and soft and is known by the name of crash. The coat is one of those little basque effects reaching the top of the hips. Only the youthful figure should attempt this type of costume. Colored Crepes for Hats. Colored crepes are used principally | as a covering or facing applied flatly | on the straw, or as neat little bands, bows and wings. all the fashionable colors. Latest Dresses Packed Easlly. The one person who most heartily rejoices at the vogue for diaphanous | materials and almost-nothing blouses is not the man who sells these cost- ly things—for most of them are cost- ly—but the woman who has to pack & week-end suit case. Where one stiff shirt waist and a frilly blouse for dressler occasions used to go, now she can stow away several of the thin crape blouses and at least two of the dressy lace or net ones. to the woman when she comes to packing much in little. The collars are cut on absolutely straight lines, so that they don't crush like the shaped ones of other years always did. Whisper to Engaged G|rl A little bride who lives in the out skirts of the city and who has to rise early, has in her trousseau several caps of linen lawn and lace, and it is a dainty little white-capped woman who pours the coffee at the morning meal. Her husband declares that she is prettier in her little breakfast cap than in her “dress-up” hat. The cap allows her to comb her hair, arrange it in & loose knot and slip the cap over it. It is but little expense and requires but little time to make. Be- sidcs, it protects her bair from the steam of cooking and from dust.— / New York Tribune. ET WISE” How Many Words Can You Make From D _FURNITURE AND HARDWARE COMPANY List Stands: L. Crews H. Austin harpnack 725 356 80 pur Kitchen With Pure Spun Aluminum Ware, d to Last 15 Years. lime is TRUNK TIME. nd Furniture & Hardwar your boys and girls. We Have Them' e Co.) | | I l WINKLE BR | e o These crepes are in ; The flat collars are another boon FLAND, FLA., JULY 26, 1913, ACELET NEW FAD| | Decicledly Pretty Are These Small Shells Set With Gems—Other Jewelry in Fashion, PAGE THREE fifi@fi@@@ ! The girl who possesses one of the new lucky winkle bracelets should consider herscif fortunate, for they | lare truly pretty. They are made of | little gold winkle shells held together by slender chains, and inside each shell there is an opal, pearl, turquoise or some other gem. 'I'he opal looks Ispeclally pretty, because it has the | semblance of an iridescent dewdrop, and even the “grain” shows. Coral {s fashionable now and is ueed DEPARTMENT STORE & h War Paint is on for Business. S EHEHE] Ca Price is the Power. pear-shaped eardrops to carved pleces set in brooches and bangles, A pretty bracelet seen n the e other day was made of gold’ set’ with turee carved pink corai roses, two small ones and one large one, Another new form of jewelry which should not be forgotten is the butter- fly kind. It is made of real butter- flies’ wings of the brilliant Brazilian varieties set behind rock crystal. A pretty uecklet is made of narrow bars about three-quarters of an inch in length, of bright blue butterflies’ wings attached by silver chains. Whole butterflies are treated in this way and are used as brooches. ST e e O L5 To unload my Summer Stock.~ LOW PRICE has the job. Come in and you will decide the. time well spent. DRAPE WITH LONG CURTAINS mlllfi@ll @@@'l@@{flfl w ]> _-| @ [T] 10 I e Novel 8cheme by Which Two smll ' Bedroom Windows M ! Made Mmetlw. The muatnuon deals with two small windows, sometimes to be found in & bedroom and quite fre- quently in a dining-room. For this scheme two pairs of long curtains are : required. The bouflante design of the drapery gives width and importance to the unsatisfying dimensions of the WE AR[ SII ll those beautiful suits and pants--also Palm Beach suits--at less than cost, as we want to get ready for our fall line. We want all the room we can get, as we have bought an enormous stock of Hart Schaffner & Marx cloth- ing=--also other goods. Our straw hats and other furnishings reduced in price. Now is the time to get bargains by calling around to see us. Outfitter The Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothing JOSEPH LeVAY A Pretty Effeos. offending casements and also lends a softness to the outline which is much to be desired. For a dining-room the ! scheme could, of course, be supple- | mented by outer curtains of material it preferred, Specml Prices BELOW WE GIVE A FEW OF 0U2 PRICES WITH MANY OTHER G00DS OF EQUAL QUALITY AND PRICE. QUALITY OF GOODS IS THI FIRST THING WE LOOK AFTER AND THEN THE PRICE TO MEE? YOUR APPROVAL WITH A GUAR ANTEE THAT EVERYTHING WILL BE AS REPRESENNED. THESE PRICES FOR CASH ONLY 18 pounds Bugar for Best Butter, per Ib. Cottolene, 10 pound can Cottolene, § pound suowdrift, 10 pounds Smowdrift, 6 pounds ¢ cans Baby Eiz: Cream Octagon Soap, ¢ for Groungd Coffee, per pound Sweet Corn, 8 for Best White Meat, per Ib. § gal. Kerosene Compound Lard, per Ib, ...... Feed Stuff is our specialty. We are out on Bouth Florida avenus. Bu! eall us. We deliver the goods. D. H. CUMBIE & CO. Phone 337 Lakeland o e s s We make children’s hair : cutting a specialty. We : are familiar with all the HOLOLTADPITITATITHIITSOFOITTITSOPOSOHTECHOHID latest styles. Bring us De R[[ SI[AM PR[SS'NG fiCI.UB Pressing and Alteration. Ladies Werk & Bpecialty. Work l JESSEE——— Lakeland Paving&Construction Co. Artificlal Stone, Brick and Concrete Bullding Material Estimates Cheertully Furnished on Paving and all Kinds of Artificlal Stone Work 307 West| Main1Street- Phone 348-Black F.J HOFFMAN J.N. DWIS J. P. NEWBECKER Pres Sec.& Tres. Snpt &fien Man. V. Pres. & Asst Man Lakelandhasone of of the largest barber shops in the State “THE PHOENIX L. E. PEACOCK Proprietor W SOSULLSOHLHLODIDSOSRCDANT Cleaning, Called for and Delivered. Prompt Servies . Satisfastien Guarsa-