Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, March 3, 1914, Page 6

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At this Period use all Safe- guards for Comfort and Well Being The best and most practicable of these is ice"OUR ICE. It preserves your food, conserves your health, increases your pleasure, does .you At good in ways too numerous to mention—and all for a very little 3 3y money. o Instead of decreasing your taking of ice on the cool days which j‘; will be occasionally sandwiched between the warm ones, resolve gl right now that every day is a full ice day for you. And stick to that COUPON BOOK of ours. It is your consistent, per* ¥ I Lakeland Ice Company Phone 26 a2 I S A S S e LOST Your bezt opportunity to save real, GOLD money, on anything in the shoe line unless " WATCH Our store, we sell the best ‘‘shoes’’ at cost SEE What bargains your friend found at our Big Shoe Sale. Kimbrough & Rutherford “*Em Sho Sellin’, Fellos”’ B e ~ oy e S — e Lot ad Ll o 2 2 1T 1 e MAYES GROCERY C0. ' “Reduce the cost of living,” our motto for nineteen fourteen P OPD e Will sell staple groceries, hay, feed,{Wilson-Toomer Fertilizers, all kinds of sh nning crates and baskets, and ¢d poraoes, etc., at reduced L N 3 %2 PidebebSIPEEE PPPIO DEIESEPRPFIFPEIOEIE LEPINS | i § | Mayes Grocery Co. LAKELAND, FLORIDA SUPOPTPIFOFOP PP POIY 0 HOBO ORISR O OF0 MOS0 2 2h5 ‘ o -— 7 .8 OPH) JSTEIPLBI ALY ST vO- & ” THE UNIVERSAL CAR > Now is your time j To Buy an Automobile { We have in stock twenty ) touring cars, with six more touring and six roadsters on side tracks. Ford Touring cars. $610.50; Road- $560.50, delivered anywhere sters, in Polk county. LAKELAND AUTOMOBILE AND SUPPLY CO. 14 Lakeland, Fla. " On the contrary, new varieties, with | E popularity of little fancy waist- coats doesn’t seem to be waning. new decorations, are making their ap- | pearance every day. There is a con- | tinuous performance going on in rib-| bon departments where the gorgeous materials at hand inspire the design- ers of dress accessories. A gay vest of velvet brocaded rib- bon is shown here, lined with plaiil satin. There is a plaited girdle of messaline which extends about the waist and holds the little vest in place. This vest and girdle, by the way, is often worn as an ornament with a lace or net waist. It is a sepa- rate garment and need not be re- moved with the coat or jacket worn over ft. Handsome rhinestone, cut steel or jet buttons are often added to the ribbon waistcoat. Altogether it is a | very brilliant little affair of much ele- | A A A A A A A A A A A A A AAAAAAAAL AP S RIBBONS ON ALL OF THE LATEST LINGERIE DESIGNS HOSE whose business it is to think up pretty designs in lingerie, ap- pear to have no mental pictures of garments in which ribbons are left out. All the lacy and dainty made undermuslins shown for spring are constructed to carry ribbons, not alone for decoration, but for fastening and holding the garments in place. For simple decoration, bows of all gorts with and without ends of baby ribbon and of wider ribbons, are made separately and pinned on with small safety pins. Narrow ribbon rosettes and bows are sewed to place with a few easily removed stitches. They are not supposed to need laundering as often as the body of the garment and are therefore removable. A new design for a nightgown is shown here, having a yoke made of alternating rows of Val lace and Swiss embroidery in narrow insertions. Tt is set onto the body of the gown with a band of embroidery. "The fulness in the body of the gown is laid in very narrow tucks at the front and there is a panel of wide embroidery at each side set in with embroidery insertion. The same wide embroidery appears on the top of the bell sleeves. The neck and sleeves are finished with a Val edging an inch and a half wide. A ribbon bow appears on each sleeve, at the end of each panel and at the neck. That one at the neck is made by the ends of ribbon run in a beading to adjust the gown to the figure. Nainsook or lawnsdale cambric or longcloth are the fabrics used for these gowns. Seams are felled and as a rule laces and insertions stitched together on the sewing machine. Gowns made by Land are far more expensive and in reality are more ele- gant. But the sewing machine saves much time and ey ht. B es, the made by I hine or hand. JULIA BOTTOMLEY., Renovating Black Gloves. Ink mixed with the white of an egg BVENING TELEGRAM, LAKELAND, FLA., MARCH 3, 1914. Ribbon Vests and Velvet Girdles . cessful toilette gance. Every one likes such furbe lows. The girdle of wide velvet ribbon hardly needs description. This one is finished with a simple, flower-like bow. And the more this finishing bow looks like or suggests a big, rich flower, the more it meets with the ap- proval of the lady of fashion. It is worn at the front or near the front of the bodice. The bow takes the place of those large velvet flowers which were and are so much liked as a fin- ish to the dress. Sashes and girdles, it seems, are to reign another season. The styles de- mand them. If a woman excels in the management of her waist line—she is sure to be called stylish. We are just learning how important it is to give attention to this detail and how great- ly we may vary the dressing of the waist effectively. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. TO GIVE EFFECT TO CLOTHES So Much Depends on the Carriage of the Wearer as to Whether She ‘.00ks Her Best. I am sure every normal girl wants to look dainty and pretty, only she doesn’t always know how to go about it. First and foremost let her stand straight. Stooping is a habit that one neede great will power to overcome. There is a dangerous tendency to- ward stooping shoulders in the pres- ent limp picturesque elothes now in fashion, but don't give way to it. Indulge in the baggy effects and Magyar and kimono styles, but don't stoop. Simply let them fall inte natural, easy lines. A crumpled collar, a guimpe that is so small that it gapes in the back just between the hooks, a button missing where its absence is revealed, a plain pin where there should be a little sil- ver or gilt s pin, all these are ca- lamities when one siarts off in a hur- ry and then is suddenly conscious of them. Of what use is it to have a dainty blouse if you stoop so that it wrinkles and sags. or to have a handsome gown if you stand so badly that its graceful lines are iled. You've scn the girl who has a gen- erous dress allowance, yet somehow cannot manage to look well dressed. We've all seen her. She exists every- where. She wears her clothes badly in the first place, and she has not the slightest realization of the value of little things which go to make a suc Her ribbons are crumpled, her fril- lings are soiled, her collar is not neat- ly pinned down in the back, but insists upon riding up under her coat, so that it soon loses its pristine freshness.— Exchange. The Tricorne. Three-cornered toques never go quite out of fashion. They are too be- coming. Not to all, however. A face like Jove, an eye like Mars, a nose like a distant mountain range, do not go well with the coquettish sugges- tion of such a form of headgear. It suits a saucy face, a mutinously defi- ant expression such as youth wears in some of its gayest moments. The lat- W. K. Jackson-ssestes-W. K. Mche i Owner and Manufac- Real turers’ Agent Ectay Brokerage--Real Estate TELL US WHAT YOU HAVE T SELL WE WILL TRY TO FIND A BUYIR TELL US WHAT YOU WANT T¢ BUY; WE WILL TRY TO FIND A SELLER Rooms 6 and 7, DEEN & BRYANT Building » the iton, ¢ Lakeland | e rlhe Cost of Living is Greats. Unless You Know Where to Buy IF YOU KNOWr 0 The selection will be the best 44 The variety unmatched ablic ¢ The quality unsurpassed The'price the lowest All these you find at our store Just trade with us I A. Large This settles the question of living EMBl ; ce o antee ULAR Best Butter, per pound. .c..oceceroecsces coessascons 40 obtal Sugar, 17 POUNAd ...cceverocscneccs conscnns o L) Cottolene, 10 pound DAL s o oo siuenccocoasnssentrnslidh Cottolene, 5 pound pails.. v 000 4 pounds Snowdrift Lard. . ..cocvveenne covstinnnnanns .60 sanle8d .26 Snowdrift, 10 pound Palls. .....ecevve senrianee o 6 cans baby 2126 CTeAM. . ..ovveisoncre sovsssnnsarans o2D 1-2 barrel best Flour......... Seivsisoiniviin®i0y tresesssans 12 pounds best Flour........ Vebbs b e be e By .80 Octogon Soap, 6 for........ Ground Coffee, per pound....ccvveaee 5 gallons Kerosene.......... E. 6. TWEEDELL m— unt “era it cessassee sestresseenen fp i Room 17 Kentucky Bldg. Phone: Office, 102; Residence, ! W. FISKE JOHNSON:“l REAL ESTATE AND LOANS CITY AND SUBURBAN PROPERTY A SPECIALTY LAKELAND, FLA. st It you want te buy property we have it for sale; if you ws! o sell property we have customers, or can get them for you. Ma out vour list and see me today. | \ CHEEEI04000000 00008 000000 est edition of the tricorne has the point in the center, set on quite with a white feather rising high above the point. The hair is pushed down ' under it and appears in curls all round the face. i To Protect Arms. To prevent my arms from being | burned which I reach into the oven to ' baste meats or move baking dishes, I wear an arm protector. This is a long | narrow bag made of an old piece of heavy bedticking large and long enough to slip on the hand and arm ) easily, up past the elbow. It is of more than one thickness, and is some. | will make old black gloves look like new. what larger at the hand.—Kaunsas City Star. | straight, material black velvet of felt, | Alonza Logan . E Tawnsend LOGAN & TOWNSEND BUILDING CONTRACTORS We Furnish Surety Bonds On All Contracts‘der [ lfl If you want a careful, consistent. and re liable estimate on the construction of YOU' Fire building, SEE US IMMEDIATELY. : TELEPHONE 66 Futch & Gentry Bldfla

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