Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, April 7, 1914, Page 3

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N for the Easter bride to choose sther she will be wedded in a ation™ gown or allow her fancy | after the new modes and de- Tom accepted customs in her O g i, e Is something attractive in —ought of generations of brides n regulation trained princess of white satin, more or less (fated with lace and embroidery, ore or lees modified to resemble assing: fashions. Her gown is F<, above the influence of every \hase, however beautiful, which | pressn#s from year to year. '/ no on®' will deny the bride the g6 of ‘& gown modeled accord- the last word in fashions. Two EOWNDS are pictured here which the ‘regulation gown as devel- .or the present season, and a modeled distinctly on this sea- 1, ;aodes, bride with the veil wears a -Alned: princess gown of white y It 18 made of satin, lace, and ! ... A8 ® concession to the fash- .. today, the skirt part is slight- , ed, falling in irregular folds 10 hips and caught up in the .0 & series of plaits near the “line. conforms, however, ) M!lflll’ to the normal lines ‘md chiffon over satin is %'th & rpound neck. The neck ¢'¢ 48 outlined with pearl beads “ 1all pémdant pearl ornaments. ad b & very high-necked guimpe of The sleeves are full at the t fitted below the elbow, where © slightly wrinkled, like a long- Vo fpill 'of lace like that in the “"Mls |oye? the hand almost to i T0 ngEP PLAYTHINGS way With Litter, and May Be ;. Idered @an Ornament to the Apartment. this plan most successtul for the ehildren’s toys, living as & small house, writes a con- -~ to #he Modern Priscilla. I four boxes of equal size (dry y\Jarge enough for two . wardrobe effect when | the other endwise. | ! | A convenient corner and ' 2 A ’l"ao“y | toys. The upper box Bed with canvas through- ‘Bottom, it provided three > the small house. The 4 ce 18 very effective, i€ the cretonne is matched ; &:,* 1 the welrd strains of “‘Hitchy- £he other two boxes were * glielved in these. The whole ) with cretonne. In i yuclosed by a loosely . arts the children were ‘8 curtain meeting the oW and having a draw string P b for linen or any of that it is hard to find er hangings, or with the pnper; m. b Of 'm‘y hating music, tnose . \-w may have merely the advance guard of the St. .nee. Sale of the species 18 likely to figes ine. @oadly than the female if | \it*’ps with their threats of skin- .- #hes and freakish folderols “Ir way.: | t -'s that the tango is dying out ~urfty abroad seem to be fully a8 not a single princess has pith her royal spouse for | ‘week. | ys that “the cold stor- | #ays that frozen eggs | no eggs at all ex tion in a nutshell.” glove. . They are very long, | The train is long and square. Such | 'a gown requires a heavy satin to pro- duce the right effect. The tulle vell forms the crown of a cap, which is edged with a trill of | very handsome old lace. The cap is made over a circle of wire which holds it in place. There are full clus- ters of orange blossoms at each side, and the veil falls to the edge of the train, as it should. This bride carrled a bridal bou- quet of white roses and lilies of the valley and wore a short strand of small pearls about her neck at the base of the high collar. There {8 no gain- saying the beauty and effectiveness ot this costume. It is the apex of style and cannot go out of fashion. The bridal dress shown on the stand- ing figure is distinctly in the mode, with little thought to what has gone before. It is a very gorgeous and somewhat oriental-looking costume of embroidered crepe de chine and lace. The skirt is arranged in draped folds at each side, with an overskirt in the “minaret’ style made of lace. There is a low underbodice of net and a very wide crushed. girdle of the crepe de chine. Over all {8 a small lace coat with kimono sleeves apd opening at the bust line. There is a hint of a Medici collar at the back. The handsome bride wears long gloves and instead of a bouquet car- ries a chiffon and ribbon muff. There is not a single concession to the regu- lation wedding gown except in the train and the color. This i8 an ivory instead of a cream white. Neither bride wears jewelry, ex- embroidery. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. vartenaar Biotters. sive. From a large 10 cent desk blot- ter cut smaller blotters, say 6 by 3 inches. Paste upon each of these smaller blotters a small calendar leaf. When finished, you will have twelve small calendars, each labeled with one of the months. Then the pack is ar- ranged in order from January to De. cember and tled with a broad red rib- bon. Slip a twig or so of holly or mistletoe under the bow.. BLOOD | POISON | V>N actually millions and millions of gorms thet grow from one or two that got under the skin and Into the blood. | | DR. BELL'S Antiseptic Salve applied right away would have killed those few erms and kept these miilions from being born, '0 have & 35¢c. box of this salva ready for emer- ask for Dr. Heii's Antseptic Salve. “Tell It By The Boll” D o o o o For sale by Henley & Henley. ¢ ¢ ¢ : uldbemorepncin.‘ cept for strands of pearls, The train | *vhere 300 pounds of lint cotton is on the crepe de chine gown 18 covered I produced the leaves, burs, roots with really wonderful and beautiful | and SHOULD PRESERVE STALKS AND STRAW Should Not Be Burned As They Contain Much Humus and Plant Food Mauy times have we called at- ,tention to the folly of burning ismlks and straw, and we expect to do so many times in the fu- ture; for we believe the fact can- not be too strongly impressed that these materials are rich in humus and plant food, and that to burn theme is equivalent to burn- ing barn and yard manures or even commercial fertilizers. It is idle to say that the habit of burning trash, straw and stalks on cultivated land is not common; we know better. Takc a trip between now and the first jof April anywhere through the South tAlantic and Gulf States, and almost every other farm as the bright February and March days come on, will be marked by columns of blue smoke that de- note the ‘cleaning up” of the land, preparatory to planting. Long windrows of corn and cotton stalks and grass have been drag- ged together preparatory to |l>urning. leaving the earth almost |as bare as a floor. Let's figure a little on what we lose by such practices. Chemists Lave found by analysis that’ THE EVENING TELEGRAM. LAKELAND. FLA, APRIL IN ICED BOTTLES ANYWHERE —— 1140 PAGE THREE Every bottle bubbles over with real restfulness to body and mind— A delightful flavor all its own. 5¢ BOTTLED BY CHERO-COLA BOTTLING CO. LAKELAND, FLORIDA much needed, and valuable in increas- needed, and which, if plowed un- der, would be valuable in increas- ing yields as the nitrogen de- stroyed. In other words, such & farmer loses almost $200 a year by such practices; but, to bhe conservative, let us cut it in two, and say $r100. We don’t know how many readers this hits—not many, we Lope. But the fact remains that we are using fire too carelessly and generally on our farms. A far better practice is to plow un- der early everything smaller than actual logs. When our lands are crying for Lumus and plant food, what shall we call the man who burns the cquivalent of several tons of cot- tonseed meal? Surely not a farm- er.—The Progressive Farmer, table matter-—humus—so A WONDER PLANT That is a natural fertilizer fac- tory working on full time, day and night, storing the costliest piant food we have to buy, nitro- gen, into the soil, saving the far- mer the middle men’s profit from factory to the field. There is no cost in putting it out, besides| furnishing a large amount 0(' vegetable matter for turning un- tder and making the much need- ¢ humus, thereby larely increas-| ing the production capacity of the It is recommended for this purpose by the United States de- stems contain about 23! pounds of nitrogen, worth at cur-! rent retail prices, $4.60. Nitrogen is by far the most expensive fer-: tilizing element we have to buy A rather well-known but usetul 1tt. | And it also is the element of value But it will do even more. It will tle gift s that of a calendar blotter. | that is lost when the material is'fatten your stock—the mare and, It is quickly made and very inexpen- hurned. I(‘.»rnstnlk. corn has been grown there will|< w and the whole sow f Again, take the case of]| . Where 40 bushels of ! be about 16 pounds of nitrogen | in the stalks and fodder. This too, worth $3.20 is lost when the stalks are burned. Summarizing a bit, let us see how much the two-horse farmer, for instance, the man with 20 acres each of cotton and corn, loses when he burns the stalks and trash off his entire 40 acres. We will assume that he makes 200 pounds of lint and 20 bushels of corn to the acre—a fine aver age for the stalk-burning type of farmer. Burning his cotton stalks, leaves and burs, he would lose a traction more than $60 from the 20 acres; while from his 20 acres of corn, burning the stalks and| fodder, the loss would amount to $32. To this $92 loss of nitrogen |Western meat <old in our State imust be added the loss of vege- Certainly this county partment of agriculture, the state acpartment of agriculture, the ex- periment stations, and the ferti- lizer people, all farm papers, all writers on soil building. If this| was its only claim for usefulness| it should command our attention. cclt, the horse and mule, the cow | and the whole cow family, thej amily, | producing the finest beef, mak-! ing the milk vessels of the Jt‘rscyl swell almost to bursting with the richest milk, making the finest of tter, and will cause large hogs irom little pigs to grow. It will fill the corn crib fuller and leave it there longer by tak- ing the place of corn as a feed; will fill the dairy with milk and hutter ,and the babies that drink the milk and eat the butter grow fat and rosv If fed with mrn«‘ hoth ground up together—it will make a superior ground feed; if cracked a most excellent chicken feed. With such a wonderful | plant at our command nitmqvnl <hould not be purchased for mak- ing field crops, nor a pound of with its! The POPULAR POLISHES Elack, Tan and "White IOC D Tree F. F. DALLEY Co,, LTD. BUFFALO, I'. Y. HAMILTON, ONT. All calers small towns should ‘'be able jsupply meat for home consum | tion, yet to our shame Western l.eef is now being sold by our butchers, mayhap some of the Yo same cattle we sold Western cat- tlemen last summer. Many fields will rest this year and grow up in noxious weeds. Briars, maiden cane, persimmon sprouts, etc., that will have to be cut, raked and burned another year. This wonderful plant should be planted on every farm, supple-| mented by a crop of oats, or rye, loot of available land on the farm, jalong cross fences, and a fore- renner to all crops It is not sub- ject to any plant disease. And the name of this plant? SAVINGS 104 Times-Union ASSOCIATION " now being organized in Lakeland will help you save money to help you build homes, and will then lend you enough more to complete them, and will then allow you to repay in small - monthly installments, “which will in- —— | for winter grazing. It will smother many noxious weeds and grasses, and cover those unsightly stumps with beautiful green. It should be planted on every A CONFESSION Hopes Her Statement, Made Public, will Help Other Woren. Hines, Ala.—“l must coniess”, says Mrs. Eula Mae Keid, of this place, “that Cardui, the woman’s tonic, has done me a great deal of good. Before 1 commenced using Cardui, | would spit up everything | ate. [hada, tired, sleepy feeling all the time, and was irregular. I could hardly drag around, and would have sevese headaches con- tinuously. Since taling Cardui, I Lave entirely quit spminsup what | eat. Everything seems to digest all right, and I have gained 10 pounds in weight.” If you are a victim of any of the numer- ous ills so common o your sex, it is wrong to suffer. For half a century, Cardui has been re- lieving just such ilis, as is proven by the thousands of letters, similar to the above, which pour into our office, year by year. Cardui is successful because it is com- posed of ingredients which actspecifically on the womanly constitution, and helps build the weakened organs back to heaith and strength, Cardui has helped others, and will help , 1oo. Get a bottle today. You won’t regretit. Your druggist sells it. Write to : Chattanooga Medicine Co., Ladies’ Ad- visory Dept., y Chattanooga, Tenn., for Special In- structions on your case and 63-page book, '"Home Treatment for Women," sent in piain wrapper, NC 120 = LR clude reasonable fnterest, so there s never any demand for large payments that cannot be met, and no danger of losing.. You may become Investors—saving and ae- cumulating money-—by means of its RUNNING STOCK, on which you need pay only $1.25 on each $100 siare per month, and recelve ¢ per cent dividends, compounded semi-annually, till, in 53-4 years you draw out $100 cash (unless you withdraw sooner), or If you take ten shares you will draw out $1,000/cash. Reing a stockholder In the company, vou take part in all members® meetings, and with the other stockholders elect officers and direct- ors, who can manage the concern honestly and successfully. ) *AID UP stockholders are Investors who pay for one or more $100 shares when the any becomes fully incorporated, and re- m-l_ 8 per coent dividends, pald semi-annual - Iy in cash at the comp: ofifce, with no bother, risk nor ex to title, security or - regularity of payments. K rmore, these investors have the great satisfaction of knowing their money goes to help those need- ing homes, to get them by paying small amounts monthly, as can be done “through no other agency Any of these members may apply for a loan as soon as he commences paying on his stock, and will be granted a loan for the amount needed if his application and secur- | ity are satisfactory to the Board of Directors. He then bhecomes need not continue may draw out whi or dividends, and monthly dues of $1 When put into op LOAN ving « ha stockholder, and m other stock, but heen paid in cash epay his loan in S per share, on, all officers and di- rectors, and all paid up, running and loan stockholders, co-operate together to help each other in just what each i3 working for, and to build up the town with go home-owning people. And, bee these very things, the members of Se concerns are known proverbially as the most enthusi- astic boosters of their own institutions—be cause they are helping others as well as themselves— their fellows and the'r city. If the outsider can be real happy where these exist, it must be simply because “ignorance Is bliss." For these reasons there should be at least one representative of this institution In every family in Lakeland and vicinity- Besides, it they apply, charter members, or those sub- scribing before it goes into operation, will be entitled to all loans made during the first six months, Any one may learn all about the methods and operation of these concerns by applying to the undersigned, or he will give you the name of subscribers you may know who will be glad to tell you M.G. WILLARD 17 Ky. Bldg., Phone 102 Lakeland. Patterns That have fit, style comfort, simplicity The Book Ntore Renford & Steitz NS FASY-OPENING-Box ™

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