Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, August 6, 1913, Page 3

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SOCIETY EPHONE NUMBERS—SOCIETY EDITOR. cesesten sssssamecsvetestnsetsante s cseecess scmmecccscsnsstent st “flnomm&mhn ) Boclety Editer by either of the abeve telephonss. foes to the feclety Editor, care Evening Telogram. fanctions, elub mestings, church gatherings and peial interest should be telephoned to this Separt- j they cssur In order that their nows value is pot ae'e B o00ONDOOOOARUNOCYNAROOAND b-R. 8. Gavin ly Soelety of the 11 hold & recep- in the annex of jh on Thursday ev- 'to 11 o’clock. An B has been planned will beserved. Ev- church {is cordial- ary societies, Brother Sweat, who was present, also gave many helpful suggestions. Several of the ladies present expressed themselves in fav- or of the change, and & vote being taken, the majority of those present voted for thie change. It was thoucht best, however, to defer definite organization one 4nd meet the new | Week when another meeting will be . Gavin. held with Mrs. Arendell on Suc- (] ‘cess avenue -and at that time or- ganization will be effected and of. ficers elected. It is hoped that ev- ery member of the Aid Society and mmell, left on | all ladies in Dixieland .interested in l, N. C.,!this matter will be present at Mrs. i nd a few weckl Arendell’s next Tuesday afternoon They were ac- |at 8 ocloek. uron'rnn. Nulh Yawn, who hd aynosville for a l Miss May lonel Wedu Today mmell and ber sis- fmmell and Miss | Dr. Roy McLean Van Wart a few days in The many friends in this city of e way home, and |Miss May Jones wid De greatly in- op in Macon for | terested in the following invitation, | relatives.—Times. | Which has been recetved by some 1 residents of Lakeland: Mr. Jenkin Jones requesis the pleasure of your company at the marriage of his Aaughter, May Llewellyn to Doctor Roy McLean Van Wart on the evening of Wednesday, the sixth of August at six o’clock, at Euch-y.Newl], Bramwell, West Virginia. AMAZES LONDON Poiety meeting of the Aid Society, held m, the matter of peiety into e 'mis- brought before gave a very inter. e work of mission- AL PRODIGY s been amazed by the violin playing of this child, Duol Korek- B only twelve years old. The first critic who heard him called der of God.” 'HY SAFER AN CASH THD lnumo TELBORAN, LAKELAND, FLA,, AUG. 6, 1913. FOR WEAR IN THE COIFFURE Em mmfl 6‘.‘& fges CHOOSING THE VISITING CARD, Many Kinds to Select From, and It Really Becomes Simply a Matter ' of One’s Own Cholce. You drep into a stationer’s and ask | in a casual tone for new visiting cards. The salesman inquires: “What kind, madam?* Hundreds of cards are whirled at you. You are informed that Mrs. Murray:Lothrop never uses old English lettering; you are assured that Mrs. Rutledge-Harmon prefers ber cards to read with three names; those of her husband and herself and of her daughter. Your husband does not wish to usé his middle name in full, but the man across the counter lifts his eyebrows and tells you that initials may have been in style when George Washington was the first gen- tleman of America, but they are not used now by anyone who pretends to know social conventions. When you have decided on the en- tirely correct thing, which is a thin square bit of white pasteboard with your name in full, engraved in block letters, shaded with the address be- neath in the corner, then you will in- stantly wonder it it would not have been wiser to have ordered shaded old English lettering, which has now ta ken the place of plain old English. The public will answer that question by saying that block letters are neater, cleaner and easier to read. ‘What about your husband’s cards? asks the man across the counter, Your first impuise is to wonder why your husband cannot attend to his own cards, but when you are reminded that it 1s in better taste for the cards of the family to correspond in size and lettering you turn to the task with more confidence. You choose an ob- long bit of pasteboard with his name in full preceded by Mr. and followed in the lower corner with his address. You sigh. This task is done for the year, you think. At the moment of re- llef the man across the counter asks whether all of your husband’s cards shall bear the name of his club. Now this 18 the one question for him to de cide. There is also the question of the bill—it is a wise plan to let him de cide on paying that, too—as his share of the bargain, MAKING THE HAT ORIGINAL Many Good Features About Millinery That Is Put Togcther by One's | Own Hands. Never has it been easier to trim your own hat. In the days when it was necessary to adjust a bandeau to wmake and fasten in rolls and rosettes of maline and then to arrange on the top of the hat quantities of compli- cated trimming the task of making & home-made hat was arduous, and the ' results usually impossible. But lot Numerous Ornaments in Order If Wéman Would Follow the Ex- tremes of Fashion. If she would be very well equipped there are many little accessories for her tresses that the modes demlnd. If, for inatance, the hair is worn low, there are certain heavy hairpins of phain real or imitation shell to hold the knot in place. And more elabo rate are the mounted hairpins, with imitation jewels—these, of course, for dress and evening wear. Combs and barrettes of real shell= beautifully marked—ate choscn by the woman who wears her hair high and keeps her tresses smooth and firm in the back by their use. Very effective are the ornaments studded and inset with rhinestones. Soine of the designs are most artistic and the stones beautifully set. To give the effect of those exquisite orna- ments which are set in platinum, the French jewelry designers have used the rhinestones in a silvery metal that has the rhinestone finish, and wonderfully gcod looking the combi nation is. One may have this in bar | \= rettes, those pretty bandeaux, hair pins, and mounted combs. —— o Just 8o Curiosity t» finding out something about somebdody clio that don't coe- oera you and which would make you mighty mad if somebody elee found ft out about you when it didn't eon oarn somebody else Mado from pure cream, thor- oughly sterilized, from finest herds of legall inspected and licensed Milch Cows. Manu- factired under the most mod. ern sclentifically Sold absolutely upon its superior methods, sanitary and hyglenic. q.uallt. It isa't enough to simply order ICE CREAM, learn to say POINSETTA the last few years—this season espe- JOR BALB BY clally—it is an easy enough matter ' for a person with a distinct idea of | the effect she wants to produce to lake rharmacy trim a hat in a satisfactory and pro- fessional way. LAKELAND. Everything today depends on the Jine of the hat itself, in the absence of built-up trimming, so first seiect a becoming ehape. Then, with the ex- quisite feathers, plumes and orna ments of plumetis, the\task is easy. The only dirappointment now in the homemade hat ia that it is no bargaine counter product. It often ocosts as much as that found trimmed in the millinery shop, for good feathers and shapes with the right line cost & pretty penny. However, the woman who wants to be original can beé so at & smaller expense if she trims her own hat than if she purchased a reak ly distinctive hat ready trimmed. NEW SPRING GOWN. ¢ ——————— o ——— 08 0 0 The Best Table in the Land of the Sky .Hotel Gordon Waynesville, N. G. In heart of eity. ilectric lights an” every coavenience. Buths. No mosquitoes. Altitude 8,000 fect. WEEKLY RATES $12.50 UP. SPECIAL FAMILY AND SEPTEM. BER RATES. SEND FOR BOOKLET. Special Prices BELOW WE GIVE A FEW OF 0U2 PRICES WITH MANY OTHER G00DS OF EQUAL QUALITY AND PRICR. QUALITY OF GOODS I THD FIRST THING WE LOOK AFTEB AND THEX THE PRICE TO MEE? YOUR APPROVAL WITR A GUAR ANTER THAT EVERYTHIEG WILL BE AS REFRESENNED. E-DEPARTMENT STORE 1O IS r— AN ~ mfiammaa. -~ time well spent. BATES b BEHESER e amis o141 9w Wl G RETC ST IS N i PR ! a BATES® War Paint is on for Business. Price is the Power. To unload my Summer Stock-— LOW PRICE has the job. Come in and you will decide the ' QOLOIT PP HLH AP SIS D »HONONEOITITOTETIN ORI Lakeland Paving&ConstructionCo. Estimates Cheerfully Furalshed on Paving gand all Kinds of Artificlal Stone Work THESE PRICES FOR CASK ONLY |- 18 pounds Sugar fof.........51.00 ,per b ..., R Paying by checks is not only o "":."' R more convenient than pay- Cottalene, § pound ........... » Snowdrift, 10 pounds ........ LI ing in cash, but itis safer, o e beczuse it-climinates risk of e A A Grouag Coffes, per pound ..... R 1] loss. Your accountsubject awest Corn, 8 £0F oo, 5 Best White Meat, per Id. .... .18 to check--large or small--is |5 sl Rerosene .............. . cordially invited. D AMERICAN STATE BANK >ut on Bouth Florida aveaus. But call us. Wo deliver the goods. 307] West| MalndStreet - F.J. BOFFMAN Pres. Sec.& Tres. Supt, & Gen. Man. V. Pres. & Asst Map WE ARE STILL GIVING AWAY Outfitter The Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothing THE HUB 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 Hatt 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. JOSEPH LeVAY Artificlal_Stone, Brick and Concrete Bullding Material Phone 348-Black J.N.OWS J P. NEWBEGKER De REE SIEAM PRESSING CLUB Cleaning, Pressing and Altecs tion. Ladies Werk o Specialty. Werk, Called for and Delivared. Prompt Servies . Satiafastien Guama- toel. - J. L' SKIPPER President P:E. GHUNN Cashier accordion liberty silk. lace with belt and --I'llm337 T2 3 & - o R b s ".'.,‘. -..u’l D. . CUMBIE & CO. lakelalt "“0- J. M. WELLES : : : : Manager % Keatsky Ave. ~ ‘Phens 857

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