Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, October 29, 1913, Page 8

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—— e e e L e -t € W 0 0 P (0.l B < e s B ™ i 8 o v kD | ¢ L @ o - PAGR ©IGHY s —— AR R Preserve L Your Hair posed of Tn thls way and this finlshes the hat except for the small flat bow band at the right side. The home milliner who knows how to sew neatly may undertake this hat. 1t is one of the few crape hats which can be trusted to other than profes- sional makers. Mourning millinery is considered difficult to make even by By purchasi-g a bo tic of REXALL HAIR TONIC. Ercdicates dandrutfand niakes the hair grow. A Full line of Toilet Accessories LARE PilARMACY. Bryan's Drug Store been trained in the possibilities of crape achieve marvelous results with it. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. Beauty's Hour Book. l When you rise in the morning run to the-window, which should have been open all night, and take 20 deep, full breaths. | Practice simple all-around exercises | for five minutes. | Take either a warm or cold sponge bath, or both, If you do not react well after a cold | plunge, omit it in the future, as it is not for you. Go downstairs and 20 minutes be- | fore your breakfast drink two glasses { of hot water; not so warm that it | made of the silk and sewed to thej___.__._. professionals, But specialists who have | fashioned district of New { 500000000000000C0VOOC0000C TRENDS FEPEVER| By HAROLD CARTER. Blair cccupied a studio in an old- York, at the very top of the lodging-house where rooms could be obtained with- | out board for sums varying from two to seven dollars weekly. Blair liked the ?lucc hecause it was sclitary, and had “stipulated that his rcom was not to be cleaned. There he established himself with ninety-five dollars and the paraphernalia of his trade. He calculated that the money would last him just long enough for the | completion of his great stained glass window for the Church of the Annun- ciation. The agreement was for pay- ment upon delivery, and Blair knew that his first commi::ion would lead to many others. He had eight weeks in which to complete the work, and he had spent two sketching and pac- ing the floor, smoking innumerable cigarettes while his ideas took form PRETTY TURBAN SUITABLE FOR YOUTHFUL FACE ESIGNED for the daughter in ) mourning, or for other youthful taces, this simple turban is a splendid -sxample of fitness in millinery. Mourning silk—that is, silk in a #pecial weave having a rich but dull surface—makes the band about the head. It is laid in a triple fold over a support of buckramette. The baret- ta crown is not so easy to manage as one might imagine. First a support- ing crown of crinoline is shaped and sewed to the brim support. Over this & thin silk is placed, cut and shaped to follow the crinoline, exactly. On the foundation band of buckram- #tte a covering of thin silk i first placed. Over this at its upper edge a bias fold of crape is stretched. At the under edge a similar fold of silk is placed and over this the triple fold of mourning silk, The smart crown of crape has final- scalds .the mouth nor so cool that it /i his mind. nauseates. I He could not fix the image of the lat a light breakfast, refraining langel. His ideas, shadowy at first, from meat. bad gradually crystallized into a wo- Take a short walk for a mile or |man’s face that he had never seen. more, walking along briskly with chest | Sometimes he would wander through thrown up and out and head held |the streets looking for her, but he erect. never found her. Work. However, even without this he could Twenty minutes before lunch dflnk'produce a satisfactory piece of work. two glasses of hot water. He knew that and worked hard. His Eat a simple lunch, un}:ntentlonal frown'h whn‘:xlhe met other roomers on the stairs soon g;e:rtkfor iR taught them to leave him alone. He i had the reputation of being a crank. i That was what Mrs. Jamcs, the land- MANY NMFFECTS {lady, told Miss Lucy Dexter. “I'm sorry that | must give you the room next to his, my dear,” she said 8tyles Change In This as in All Other (o the girl, “but as you can't pay Matters Connected With Fem- more than two that's the only one Inine Apparel. I can let you have at the price. = ‘;There‘s only his room and yours on The white corset cover, run with |the top floor, but I guess Le won't baby ribbon, does not show through | annoy you, if you don't miud his the sheer flne blouses of the day. | frown.” Such ribbon-run lingerie is no long- ' put pelia did mind his frown—ter- er considered good taste when visible. | riply. She had not been long in New It is replaced by the lace or tucked York, where she supported herself net brassiere on which wide satin rib- |as a stenographer in a law office. bons are mounted frankly as a trim- | ghe was horiesick and unhappy, and ming,, | she had no friends at all. Some of these sheer blouses have , piair geowled dreadfully when he slips of flesh-colored chiffon beneath, | ., ;g to realize that the room next which give a suggestively transparent |\, s was taken, and by a woman. effect without actual transparency. | i ) Lingerie waists of fine batiste with | embroidery trimmings are worn over slips of flesh-tinted chiffon with love- | ly effect. L Organdie is a new blouse fabrie, also, but it is used without the stiff dressing that used to make the mate- | rial stand out crisply. i Embroidery is added as bandings and motifs, or in the shape of collars and cuffs, on blouses of tucked white material. | Dainty lingerie models have crossed fichus of net and fine embroidery drapeéd over the bust. In the Nursery. There is a distinct knack in the method of lifting and holding the | { baby. | . Both hands should be used, for in- | stance, in lowering the baby from the |1ap to the bath. For the greatest com- | ifort, one hand should support the - . - - !sort of angel aiter ail thought so too. iy to be placed. It is a little higher baby’s back, while his head rests ‘' the back of the shape also. than the supporting crown of crinpline Upon the lower arm or wrist. and is indented about the outer edge.| The legs and lower part of the The crape must be tacked to the foun- child's body are lifted with the other lation with invisible stitches, as other- hand. ‘ wise it will not stay in place. The Before putting the baby into the erown is made of a circular piece of bath wash the child’s face and head | 'so that no soapy water can get into with the raw edge turned under and pjg eyes or mouth. 1 Blind-stitched into a narrow hem. Not every mother has the art of The extra fulness of crape is laid making her lap comfortable. When tn irregular folds at any place on the dressing the baby it is best to sit in band where it becomes necessary to 's Jow rocking chair without arms, | dispose of it. This depends upon the 'with one foot upon a stool in order to shape of the crown. It will be seen 'deepen the hollow in which the child | that the crape s almost plain across jjes : ! the tront, but has considerable ful-| 1f g child's feet grow tired in warm | mess at the right side and apparently ' weather they shauld be rubbed with | Bess at the left. | salt and batkad in cold water. A hot | The crape lies almost plain across bath and a daily massage is also bene- | The | ficial. ; femmed edge is tacked to the upper | PR CCE PR wdge of the band with its fulness dis- Fancy Hatpins, Soft leather cut into strips and hatpins is a bit of work that any girl 'evenly placed the work is beautiful. | Old-fashioned hatpins can be nicely !covered with knotted silk and cord to match a hat, ! "BENEFIT IN ALL-OVER SCRUB “You Don't Understand.” ! farme into er, but ed her tate him tie never looked at Mi:s De huried by, and as tiwe presence only seemed to the more. Delia’s sywpatheticc beart was touched by Blair’s appearance. She thought he did not have enough to cat. She did not know that it was overwork and worry that caused him to get thinner and more haggard-look- ing as the weeks went by. In fact half the allotted time had gone and the masterpiece was hardly begun. Gradually a thought came into | Delia’s head. She would help him, Jespite himself. He need never know who it was that watched over him, woven together into fancy covers for | but, lonely herself, she wovld help others as lonely. She formed a very | can do, and if knotted, interwoven and | jaring plan. She had come to knew the routine of Blair's daily life. Every evening at six o'clock he would lock his door and go out to the cheap restaurant where he ate his supper. his meals he cooked in bis studio, but The rest of | prices, the old stone walls that their wra rleh, etevllzed eream f-cin cows {nepected nnd passed v *he City Pura Food Depart eu Manufactired under the most modern and perfoct onditions ALL ingredients ‘nat &6 to make our cream LA T5 ba the standard of pur- s 8 Cus- ‘ty and quality. There ¢ifference in “Frazen legin tO say terds” and POINSPTTIA lee “ream. Try it. Mon Lake Pharmacy LAKELANT". Really More Effective in Restoring the ‘5 e became used to her presence he not know how time was passing un- ‘s tread two she lost | in it, and h upon lhul so busily did she work that she didl til the sound of Bla flights down startled her. her balance, tried to r toppled down with a cr pieces of glass. | Panie-stricken, she picked herself up | and fled, leaving the broom and dus- | ter behind. She ran into her room | and locked the door, and waited in an agony of suspense to hear Biair enter his room. She heard the door close, heard a loud exciamation, heard tie door fly | open. And there came a haxamering | at her own. Delia waited. breathless, silent. Jie would not go away. He| rapped louder. In terror sprang | to her feet and opened. Blair was standing outside, red with anger. In! his hands he held the breom and dus- ter, “Are these yours?’ he dcmanded. “Yes, I see they are, and ! have to thank you for making a bear's garden of my studio and destroying the work of weeks,” he exclaimed, in tones that Delia had never heard addressed to her before, “]—I wanted to help you,” the girl stammered. ‘[ thought—" But how could she tell him what she had thought—that he was as lone- ly as she, that he had no one to care | for him. The tears came into her eyes, and finding it impossible to re- strain then she put her handkerchief to her face and sobbed. Already dishevelled by her long work in the studio, she felt that her hair was loosening, and, putting her hand to her head to make it secure, only succeeded in letting the whole auburn mass tumble about her shoul- ders. There was a long silence. Delia dared not look up, but she dared not g0 back into her rvoom, for she felt that her crime was too deep not to need requital. : Suddenly she felt two hands on her | shoulders. Mr., Blair had actually done that; he dared to round o that the light from the hall window fell upon her face. “You are wonderful!’ he exclaimed. | “Mr, Blair!" said Delia indignant- ly. i “Wonderful! You are my angel!’!’ | “How dare you say that to me!” cried Delia, and then it was Blair's turn to be apologetic. “You don't understand. I don’t mean that sort of angel,” he explained. “The angel that 1 was trying to do in glass when .you so happily de- stroyed 1y efforts. Now you must sit to me. I have still time to do | my picture.” | And when he had expicined they; felt, themselves to e fast iviends for | ever, But long before the great window | had been completed and brought Blair | the first of his many triumphs, he had decided thai Delia was to be that Aund Delia | i (Copyright, 1012, by W. G. Chapman.) NEW ENGLAND’S REAL BEAUTY Wild Rosgs in Profusion During the Summer Months Have a Charm That All Enjoy. e | Nothing in rural New ingland isi finer than the outburst of wild roses | which begins about the middle of June and in some places lasts until the end of Septerber. The wild rose | bushes are frequenily found cluster- ing along the old stone walls which ! were formerly in great abundance and now are mere and inore rarely found dividing the hillside or seashore pasture lets or corn fields or orchards. 1f there was ony one product which New I'ngiland generous- | ly and even lavishly oitered its mas- | ters when they first begen to clear | its wilderness, it was the materials for stone walls. They were impar- tially distributed under aud over the | soil. The stones were ¢! every size ! and shape; there were huge ones for the lower courses and graduated minor ones to pile on top. In many places they could be made «. hle thickness, with hollows to fiil in with superflui- ties. That often failed to exhaust the supply. It is odd that they were not used more for building houses, even as they found their place in lining deep wells where hung specimens of the old oaken bucket. Of late years, especially along the seashore, archi- tects having cust their eyes on-them and seen in them artistic possibilities, the farmers have been glad to sell at rather high, certainly . FOR SALE—Dixieland lots, some swing her (- | FOR SALE OR TRADE—2 1-2 acres | accomplished it a girl is willing to | feed the fingers two or even three at growing | Classified [ dvertisin el S e N A § 3 R SALE...I W4 i Brne ) ® Florida | NICE FURNISHED and ung rooms. Modern convesienc erything new. 404 South see Ave. OR RE! fOR SALE--Horse, young, raised. Samuel F. Smith, M. D. 1342 FOR RENT--Furnished roog private bath. Apply 101 Florida or phone 43 Red bargains. Sarmiuel F. Smith, M. D. 1343 FOR SALE QUICK—Cottage on S. Virginia avenue, between Main and Lemon streets; 5 rooms and bath, 2 fireplaces, nice lot, good location, close in. Now paying 8 per cent on $3,000. Don’t be slow. | Yours for $2,600. A. J. Moore, Cut Price Store. 1278 .lVliSCe"ane FOR RENT—Three-room on South Lake Hollin Price $3.50 per month. Fiske Johnson. fOR SALE—A pair of horses. Apply} to 920 Rose street or telephone FOR RENT—Furnished rq light housekeeping with conveniences. 502 N. K 341 Black. 5 : i 13"?: Ave. Phone 317 Black. T | 0 FOR SALE ‘ WANTED House of four rooms. Front and to purchase from owner trac rear porches, Lot 50x137; nineteen|land near station, 100 to 50 young trees. $1,100. The John F.|Address P. O. Box 45, Lakel Cox Realty Co. 1334 FOR SALE—QUICK; 24 CITY LOTS ANY or all parts of harness 50x200 EACH; FINE LAND; ALL| to crupper at McGlashan' FOR $2,000. THE JOHN F. COX REALTY CO. 1338 | Having purchased and s g e s — |the Jesse Keen estate of b| “TORSE Turnishings and mule Jew: one-half mile west of eity 1354 |are now selling in 10 and i 35 tracts some of the finest t farm lands in this section rigat price and terms. For lars gee G. C. Rogan, Room Deen & Bryant Bldg. Phon elry at McGlashan's FOR SALE—House of 6 rooms, city water, fireplace, let 30x110; near school house, $1,000. The John F. Cox Realty Co. 1357 FOR SALE—Two-seated “Litt'.” automobile. Address Box 41, city. 1322 ————————————————————————————————— — SICK harness made whole McGlashan, the harness WANTED -Competent lady] rapher rdesires position. this office. with new house of 5 rooms, fire place, front and rear porches; fine chicken farm. Price $1,750, The John F. Cox Realty Co. 1335 1 \il GRIND Graham or whol = e e Boue dBllyc o0 GaN DIy FOR SAI One Maxwell 22 h, D R auto in 200d shape. Can be sonn!‘ 5 i at motor shop no West Main St. 1381 IEARN TELEGRAPH] Positions guaranteed to uateg 2t not less than month. Steady employme: promotion. Terms reasonal See or write W. D. POR SALE—5-room house, just be- ing completed; bungalow; all mod- ern conveniences; bath. city water | and lights; cheap, and on easy payment plan. Waring & Ed- HOLLA Mgr. Lakeland Business wards. 1322 ar S R WANT TO BUY FOR CASIH DIRT house and grounds in desir| Delivered everywhere. { of Lakeland. Give lowest ¢ PLOWING { and accurate description Cultivating of groves. Phone 354} letter. Owners only.. A Green. J. Nielsen Lange. 1344/ BEAUTY IN SHAPELY FINGERS Though They Require Constant Care the Effect Is Worth ‘All the Trouble Necessary. The work of restoring the fingers to their normal state may be better times a day, althouh once a day, if treatment is faithfully adhered to, will make a decided improvement that can be easily noticed as she pro- ceeds. i A very simple method is to hold the finger tips in warm ofl for about ten minutes at a time and them rub them about vigorously as if washing the hands; press the oil in and about the cuticle, so that all the surround- ing flesh will be thoroughly fed. Should agnails appear after the nails start to grow out properly, clip off only what is absolutely necessary, as clipping too deep is likely to cause a thick growth which is not easily | gotten rid of without first having | sore fingers. After clipping wrap a | bit of cotton about an orangewood stick, dip it in peroxide, then rub over the clipped cuticle; when dry press s Sy ST AN ATTRACTIVE SHIY New Stors New Goa ancestors or the original owners of {the supper hour was unvarying. AS |the Jand had created at such cost of | the cuticle is sore enough to be| lame backs and sweaty foreheads. FRESH, CLEAN STOCK € AND FANCY GROCER LIVING PRICE a little cold cream over the spot. If | troublesome it may be touched lght- Skin Than the Usual Tub Bath, A help in restoring the skin after a strenuous week or two or month of outing is the daily all-over scrub. It is not necessary to get into a big tub filled with water and lle in it any length of time. Much better is it to take the thorough soaping and rubbing at night, then removing every particle of soap with a spray, first tepid, then cold. her at all. And one | evening a i d for event hap- | pened. Blair leit his door unlocked That was Delia's opportunity. He vould not return for an hour, and one can do a great deal in an hour. Soft- | ceased to notic ir ly she crep armed with a brocm nd a duster. ©She was going to tidy his room for A : When she tad entered she looked five-minute syl it comes from the to the body. |In the slightest draught. The morning bath may be only & +h in water with the ' chairs. chill barely taken off, and as cold &s | rubbish-heap of faucet for the spray- ing. A healthy tingle follows such & | know that all these bath, with renewed vitality and a glow | glass were the unpieced portions of of skin that shows How beneficial it ia. ‘I:,r wll;::fll V«ul‘:\‘ co'd bath is best; for ,the majority the water should be tepld | placed them in orderiy array | or Moo BOAEs Suct 5 1 Sotle'ghonsu x‘he v\.alllun in orderiy array against round her in nt. She saw the bed, w! . sign of linen, in one corner; in another a little gas stove and a table, with a couple o}‘ And th loor was a perfect oken glass and paints and varnishes. She did not fragments of the great window ™ First she sorted out the cans and Then glass fragments she gathered the All the while she was listening in- |ond and the third lead down to the Eet sty pocket style. tently for a step on the stairs; yet'tfailure of the fourth. s togetner and put ! Hot baths should only be takem BY | them in & heap upon the floor. Then, ‘advice of a physician; they are ener YALERE a0 buuo Lamuttade, batdAes Se. taking her duster, she mounted a|So the doctor says. And the doctor | of the late Paris race track xnml ing conducive to a habit of taking cold ‘C:;l;:' ;rleflv\l‘)aifin to wipe the cobwebs | has noted that whereas the first gen- | that the appearance is suggested of The disappearance of them has caused | 1y with colodion. Iodine is also very | a considerable loss in the pictures- | good, but, as it stains the skin, it 18 Flour, 24 1bs. .....- queness of many localities. Around | not used quite so frequently as the py,. Self Rising, 24 them, clusiered the wild rose bushes, | first mel}tlonq[ll lotions. quever. as Fancy Head Rice, per Ib and the delicate pink blossoms looked | it speedily relieves the pain, if on® . " v .00 paoon, side like exotic butterfiies. Wild roses do | i8 careful to put on only a drop or - -d Bacon, side not stand picking well: they | two it would mot show very much, New Smok-d Dacom, auickly drop their petals or fade away | and wears away in a day or two, be- Snowdrift, 10 Ib pails. .- when put into vases; but if not in- | cause the hands are washed fre-Cottolene, 10 1b pails. . terfered with they keep up a sweet | quently. !G Baby Size Cream .... succession of blossoms, and often one | ——— {6 Packages Pearline may see the jewcled humming-bird | Two Stockings. | Dried Fruit, Peaches, A7 1 posing over them, perfectly motion- | The mode for double stockings 18 Prunes, per 1b. .....- Full line of canned © less, apparently, thoungh his wings are f having a steady growth. The upper buzzing like a dynamo, then darting stocking is of white, transparent and | din¢ off like a coal of fire. 18 laced with a black cord from the in. | §00d8 &t correspon ————— ‘ step to the knee on the outside of the| In addition to the a » Not Suited to White People, {leg. Under it is worn another stock- |, Jine of staple dry =0 Colonization offers serious problems . ing of a brilllant hue, to match some : ete for the advocates of a “white Austra- color note in the toilet. b lia.” North Queensland is within that | - | Phone 331 Biae. Co boundary of 20 degrees north and Place for Pockets. to the WHITE store and south of the equator in which white | Latest fashion advices grant women | ... men may live. But they cannot take | pockets of all sorts, sizes and variety i their wives there and found families. | of placing. So oddly draped are some Delivery to any part of H. J. MAT Cor. E. Palmetto St. and eration of whites does well, the'sec- ' pockets over each bip in true trouser

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