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Start that checking acconnr and save yourself the risk, annoyance and inconvenience of carrying oney about and of paying bills, ete., with cash. The check book 18 sure to bring the enocomy that doesn't piuch and will relieve you of many wo.ries. Your account is respectfully so- licited. R g What is There Here Y u Need There mus: besome- thing i n our great assortment of hard- ware that you need. No matter what it is--come 10 our store. Pick out what you want and you will be surprised to find such good articies at at such low prices. to piease -- We please th. hzid our best customers ac are hardest to sat those { Siy. No matter what you need in hardware, it will repay you 10 call and inspect our stock be- fore making a purchase. Wilson Hardware Co Pi\l)ne '(l Opposite Depot P e { {VENING TnlFGRAM, LAK ELAND, FLA., SEPT. 19, 1913. PAGE . GAVER | numberless newer weaves that swell WITH SLASHED SKlRT; IDEA THAT MAKES FOR GREATER COMFORT IN WALKING. ‘ Slight Opening and Draped Fullness From the Front Give Alsc the Ef- fect of More Volume—Illus- tration Shows Result. ; Two rival modes are being shown in which the prevailing movement toward greater comfort in narrow skirts {8 emphasized, says the Kan- sas City Star. One is in slashing the skirt at the feet and the other is in the pannierlike draperies and tunics which, although they do not add to the actual width at the foot, produce an appearance of amplitude by the extra width below the waist. A very good example of these two ! treatments is demonstrated in the | accompanying sketch, which repre- sents a new model developed in crepe de chine. All of the soft, pliable silks of | medium weight and color are being used for afternoon street and tea dresses, and there is nothing nicer than crepe de chine, which retains its hold on popular fancy despite the the list. Oyster white is the color of this costume, and though the skirt is real- ly quite narrow at the feet the slash allows ample room for walking, and the draped fullness from the front glves the effect of more volume, The skirt opens directly down the front and {8 trimmed part way with wee emerald buttons. It is mounted to the waist with even gathers, and has some unstitched plaits lald in | Calling Costume of Oyster White Crepe de Chine | place in front w are swung down- ward and draped toward the biack ! where the panel train, hung from un- | | der the tunic. falis over and con- | ceals the catching up of the ma- | | terial. The tunic skirt is made on cut I away lines, running down in a round ‘; ed coat-tail in back It is faced with a sixinch bins fold of self-materia | piped on the vape. Above the ! | narrow crushed girdle of emerald } gatin, and covering the lower fronts | of the blouse, arc two triangular bibs buttoning together at the center and | { piped around the cdee giving the effect of a continui® of the bias fold facings on 1l cutaway tunic | In back of these n o the emerald gatin that yirdle ar ra A o I e-quar ter I Cro! aud whi Black Curtains, Black transg talr e ju coni hut they should be very trai ot to cast a dingy shadow over the room | When ¢ nbers the expense | | of constuntly washing and renewing | | white curtains the new black vogus in city life ' idea guggests a welcon And the black curtain point d'esprit 18 not of necessity a dingy affair. One sprigged all ovér with little blossoms and bordered with sprigs of the flower was seen. An | other curtain showed a the tlnx«-l rosebuds | which was rea a third, was an and lly beautiful been dest 144] for a gown, not s prigged ep border in the most | Other girls wear them, and nice girls, | argue the question. ! mind. of filet net or | sprigging of | old lS:nzlh of Georglan net that had Lo, SHE LIKED GAY PLUMAGE R By JULIA MAXWELL. 3 NNEBINIBIDDIL NI s | W % PRER TR Essic Adams liked gay plumage. Her New York aunt, whom she was visit- | ing, did not approve of anything that | would autract attention. That was why she objected to Essie’'s wearing a brand new bonnet with the dazezling 3el]u feather. ild ut‘m vou wouldn't wear that hat, Ess md Aunt Linda Mallow. “It looks ‘fast.’’ Essie bit her lip in disappointment, put away the gorgeous thing of shim- mering yellow and donned a plain black-an-blue straw which her aunt had selected for her on her last visit to the city a year before. “That looks more Jike you, my dear, Young girls are apt to be misunder- stood when the wear conspicuous L : jut, Auntie, I do love bright things. too, I'm sure.” Aunt Linda was not digposed to Desides, the elec- tric was waiting for them at the curb, The last few days o her New York vigit Kssie spent with a girl friend. And when she passed through the gate at the Grand Central station bound for the train that was to take her to her home in an upstate town, she was wearing the hat with the inviting yel- low feather. For Aunt Linda was not along, and her chum, who came to the station with her, adored the hat, Essie was a gregarious young wom- an. In the small town where she lived it was a habit for people to be neigh- borly. So when the middle-aged man in the parlor car seat across the aisle offered her a magazine, she accepted it with a smile and & nod of the yellow feather. When she entered the dining car for luncheon and the dining car conductor placed her opposite the same man, she was not displeased. He was a well-groomed, interesting look- fng man. And Bssie liked men. When the stranger suggested that she order lunch for both of them, Essie didn't Luncheon for one was always Of course, she realized be horvified at deadly stupid. that Aunt Linda would r:hu,v ceeding, but Aunt Linda was old-fashioned. It w QnImnoi HH\ in the ranily that 1 was ent ditiident, (oo reserved. She nearly o popalar as her sisters, wi ol were of nore sociakle mien, However, never o breath of seandal had attaclied to Linda's nume, and there were some of the family that--well, that's quite another matter, lmele enjoyed the luncheon, and J. P. McCORQUODALE The Florida Avenue Grocer PHONE RED - —290 Respectfully asks his friends and the publ generally to give him a call when |needing Fresh Meats, Groceries, Vegetables, Etc. HE WILL TREAT YOU RIGHT AND WILL GUARANTEE SAT1SFACTION R T P D N T T TS DA A 290 | Lakeland Seed Company 218 FLORIDA AVENUE Fresh Garden Seeds, Bird and Sunflower Seeds, Pop-Corn for Popping, Millet and Rye Incubators, Chick Food, Shelis, Grits, Cop- peras, Charcoal, Tobacco Dust, Sulphur Powder Tilghman's Condition Powder L ——— WHY SAFER THAN CASH Paying by checks is not only more convenient than pay- ing in cash, but it is safer, bec: use it climinates risk of loss. Your account subject to check--large or small--is cordially invited, though she cndeavored in the usual way to pay the check, her protesta- tions were quickly swept away. As the man piloted her back to her chair in the parlor car, she was conscious of & certain guilty feeling, but she put it from her. llow could a girl be expect- ‘ed to do anything else? She was only human, and she 'lked to talk to peo- | ple. She couldn’t play any kind of a game hy herself. There are many | young girls like Kssie, It was only twenty minutes until Kssie’s homo town would be reached. She was rather sorry. She was having such a good time I'd like to see you again,” man, meaningly. “Oh, thank you,” laughed the girl. “I've enjoyed meeting you."” | “But you don't live far from Buffalo, | and haven't you some friends there | that you could tell your parents you were going 1o visit—while you really came down to spend a few days with me? we could go Here's my card. said the and be That's my office ad | dress. Write me when you can get | away.” ! | [esie was dumfounded. All the color had gone out of her face. She telt sick to the very depths of her. She stmply couldn’t speak. The card | dropped from her nerveless fingers. nger did not understand But the stra | His eyes glittered strangely, while the | mark of the teast wa ry line of his face. “You're a tle kiddo,” :lv» id. “and there jen't anything | wouldn't do ,or you. Do you think you could come down to seo mo in a few days? rlf voice, but still it was ne own I ©» volce ol “ who | had every deal her “Oh, oh, you herrible thing, you! [—I - you'vi: made a mistake, Oh, hate you, hate you! [ never want to gee you again, never!” When calm came, lssie was in hm own room at liome -alone. She was | | glad she was alone. All the joy had ! gone out of her vacation. tainted, a8 if she bogs of mud and | clean, | walking through | sltme And, sobbing, the girl wondered, are all men like that, or, was it the yellow feather? It had not yet occurred to her that young girls who accept fa vors of strange men on trains are very apt to be misunderstood and—insulted. | That was one thing that Aunt Linda had {nrgonfln to tell her. Testing the Upper Alr. By means of bailoons the upper air bas been tested to a height of nea.rly but given a d graceiul desizl of red aund blue (lo“: 19 miles in this cour my by the we.lh ers, interspersed with i." « trails of | er observers. Duri recent re- gree? markable fiight the .m'ruma'lu used j — recorded a temperaturs 704 de grees pelow zerc L of 1214 - been used Set orth er B LV st - tha t X the earth bag the 1 K ro rap oliks > nate g | idly as the insirune scend, hut at car times become 8 r 1 know a nice little place where undisturbed. | ced from under She felt un- | had been | AMERICAN STATE BANK J. L SKIPPER P.E. 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