Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, July 3, 1914, Page 8

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i o R 1 PAGE EIGHT SMART COATEE BLOUSE ' LATEST NOVELTY THAT HAS' BEEN BROUGHT OUT. In Design It Resembles a Modifled Bolero Jacket—Really Clever Com- bination, and s Bound to 4 Be Popular. ‘When the king avd queen of Eng- land were in Paris all the streets and avenues took on a gala appearance. The sun was royally generous to | this royal meeting, as it has been throughout every hour of each day of their majesties’ visit, and on all sides the advent of warm weather was her- alded by lovely gowns and suits that shone as a veritable rainbow of bril- | liant colors. An interested spectator in the grand- stand wore the extremely smart coatee blouse that I have sketched for today. This style of blouse, that rather re- sembles a modified bolero jacket, is | quite the latest novelty, and it is bound to find favor in the eye of those who dislike the appearance of a blouse | and skirt on the street without a | Jacket, for both were cleverly combined in the general effect of this design. In this case the blouse was of geor- gette crepe, a delightful new material for dainty waists, and it was made on | exceptionally good lines. Except in front, where it ran off, curving up to the bust, the lower edge ' was even all round, and hung over and below the belt about two inches, then, Blouse Model of the New Georgette Crepe. at & high waist line, a cording ter- minated in a scroll at either end held In & line of gathering about the sides and across the back. The back of the blouse was slightly gathered to a square shallow shoulder yoke, with a similar cording. Long sleeves, pret- tily finished with double-ruffled cuffs, were set into straight extended arm- holes. A flaring mediei collar of fine white batiste finished the neck and 1s run under by a narrow tie of the waist material outlining the edges of the blouse fronts and crossed under the bust, hooking in place beneath. Nar- row lapels with a square cutout border and an. outline of French knots lent the necessary finish at either side. As the front of the blouse was very open to its lower edze, hung free over the girdle, it was nee y to wear a little net of batiste s underneath, and this ey was shirred about the top and bloused over merely a gash girdle whose below the coatlike Lillian E. Young, Btar. ends hung out blouse in back.— in the Washington TO KEEP HANUS IN CONDITION | Important, After Cleansing, to Rub Lather Well In Until It Is Absorbed, te AL Use a soap rich in oil and contain- ing no alkali to crack and harden the | skin. Castile soap is good, but there | are other good soaps that are just as suitable. After the hands have been cleansed and thoroughly lather made from the soap should be rubbed into the hands and wrists. Con- tinue the rubbing until all the lather has been absorbed or there is very lit- tle to wipe away. The oil feeds the skin, keeps it soft and prevents the ghriveled appearance and are kept for long periods in hot water. Hands thus treated are soft and white, It is important to remember that the lather which is rubbed in is not the lather with which the hands are cleansed, but a fresh lather, made aft- er the cleansing has been completed. Draped Skirts. Feminine fashions are really femi- nine just now; we've grown tired of trying to look mannish, and have turned to frills and drapings with relief. The skirts are somewhat long- yet the rt- er their er than for some time past, draped ones give an effect of s ness, though this is from the ma of thelr looping rather than from actual cut. One can have her skirt draped anyhow just now, looped front or back as one prefers the Oriental or the brand new bustle effect. blouse and jacket | guimpe | rinsed, a ' feeling | which comes especially to hands that | | American Fence Also a car of pitch pine fence post. (GIRDLES ARE LEGION CHOICE OF DESIGN IS LEFT TO THE INDIVIDUAL. Many Are So Voluminous That They | Might Almost Be Termed Bodices— Worn With Every Kind of Gown. A girdle leads this year as excit- ing a life as a Dumas novel, and it is surprising to see how many ad- ventures it runs through in the course of a trip up Fifth avenue, writes a cor- respondent. In one window you see a gown whose skirt, composed of flounces of lace, is topped by taffeta | up high under the armholes, and in this way dismissing any anxiety about a bodice. In the next you see a lin- gerie gown whose girdle is divided in the center by a cord, which division | results in a half-bodice and a whole | peplum, Going down a few doors you find a suit of white serge whose bolero jack- | et is extended into ends which cross !'in front and meet behind with jaunti- | est effect of a real girdle. Right be- hind it there is a white crepe gown whose bustle drapery of Roman striped silk is effected frankly by ty- . ing the ends of the silk material in front in such a way that its loops fall | over the hips. There is a strong tendency toward , the girdle which extends both above | and below the hips in picoted scallops, . and there is an even more pronounced ! impulse toward the taffeta tunic fall- ing from a ceinture expanded into full- est use of a bodice. Everywhere—i lingerie frock and girdle is pre-eminent. stance, achieve distinction, perhaps, ed suit and aing gown, the merely through the agency of a deep | Roman striped girdle, and there come the smartest ceintures of black moire with ruching both above and below. Nor does this item of the toilet re- fuse the role of waistcoat. Sometimes, indeed, the belt has two jaunty little points and a double row of buttons which puts the suit at once into a | waistcoat mood. In evening gewns this once restrict- ed area has expanded both above and below, until, as in the case of one evening gown seen recently, it tight- ly swathed the hips and made the two deep flounces of the skirt seem like a mere postseript to the original thought. With such license as this it is easy to dwell upon the prospect of a day when we shall say: “What kind of a skirt and sleeves am 1 going to wear with my silk girdle?” | | | | \ Just received a 'WILSON|| | HARDWARE .CO. | E@@Il@@@lifilll@l@%l@fi@@@ panniers joined to a girdle reaching | Blouses, for in- | with all its possibilities. he question of bigger profits. THE EVENING TELEGRAM LAKELAND, FLA., JULY 3, 1914, e | The color scheme s white and vivie blue on a black ground; the sash, tied In a loose knot at the back, Is of vivid blue charmeuse. The material is striped taffeta, Boudoir Telephone. Women of fashion who can afford to be luxurious like to have a tele- phone in the boudoir, but since it s an inartistic bit of mechanism in spite | of its usefulness, some people prefer to hide it when it is not in use. The dalinty china ladies in voluminous silk | skirts may be utilized as telephone ex- tinguishers if the skirts are long enough, and they may also shade an electric light bulb in their translucent folds. Frilly Headgear. The little morning caps are agaln | forming part of the trousseau of a smart woman. They, too, are exact copies of those worn in that brilliant eighteenthk century and which used to frame the face so prettily with their dainty charm. Some of these are sim- ply made of a gathered frill with a ! little fulness over the forehead, which is adorned with a wreath of silk roses. | Conservation On the Farm Practically every farm in this count would show a nice profit if the above ex- pressed idea ould be and was carried out - problems of today are many. Good fences and Yots of them go a long toward solving Then why not get in line and buy your fence from | home people, who treat you right and ap- preciate your business. solid car load of | Tounging around and engaging him T hVONDr\LE SPR”\GS TENNESSEE R. R. Station Avondale P. 0. Rutlegg “& | ! | NEEDLESS WASTING OF TIMEi Man Who Heedlessly Interrupts Busy Worker May Properly Be Termed a Thief. There are in this great world of | peculiar contradictions many men who would never filch another man’s prop- erty, but have no moral scruples It you are looking for a beautiful nook in the mountains large variety of health-giving mineral springs. surrounded 1 est trees. and untold quantities of wila flowers. cheered by tj many wild birds, where a cool breeze is always to be felt ip . deep and shady giens which surround the grounds. and where against stealing his time. | fort is made for the pleasure and comfort of each and i bl To the busy worker time is a valu- | {hon come to Auburndale Springs. Tenn. Note the address ahav, g e i o B F. J. HOFFMAN, Proprietor RIRERRARINONE (A o The Loss by Fire in the U, Needless interruption of their work | During a Reeent Vi therefore steals from them dollars and cents, Who steals another man’s time, by in conversation foreign to the work in hand—often foreign to any work! that concerns either of them—is self- | branded as more than a “time thiet.” | He is stamped as a man whose own time is without value; a drone who has come idly buzzing into a hive of workers. When a young man needlessly dis-; tracts the attention of his fellow | workers when those fellow workers ' are “ears over” in work that must be | done he steals time, not only from the fellow workers, but from his em- | ployer as well. That time is being paid for by his employer. i Furthermore he is stealing from his | Amounted to Almost One-Half the Cy 0t All New Bulilding I]'.fl Constructed During the Entire’1 Twelve Month We represent the following reli* fellow workers a measurable amount | yple companies: Sa of their efficiency by hampering them Fidelity Underwriters, When Buying or Bullding s | in turning out their work. cap gl o 4,7501000 (or} And it reacts upon himself. His ! Phlladelplua Underwnterl. Provide the Means hflt employer, observing, says: “This‘ 500000 young man not only frivols instead of oapital ...... ...... “ trying to keep busy, but interferes | (terman Amencan capital 2,000,000 with the work of others. I cannot af- |$pringfield Fire a.nd Marme For Rehmldmglm- ford to keep him in my employ. Heis| capital stealing from me—doubly stealing!"” M A N N & D E F If a young man is not a worker with Room 7, Raymondo Building those whose time he steals, but mere- ly an idle visitor, he is an industrial porch climber, none the less a tima b thief. td “Go to the ant, thou sluggard,” but | =" to observe his industry—not to dis P AR, tract his attention from work.—Suc: ai GG oforde cess Talks to Young Men. Security Abstract & Title Co. Could Not Collect From Widow. . Bartow, Florida Grogan (the grouch)—I don't like to mention it, Mrs. Conley, but your The great farm |l :;;::‘lmnd owed me tin dollars whin he ¢ R. B, HUFFAKER, PRES......L. J. CLYATT, SECRETABYn The Widow—Shure, it's nace to|4 FRANK H. THOMPSON, VICE PRES H. W. SMITH, TREASURER 42 have something to ra)xmq;hu‘ him by. | § 'eb‘ —Puck. & 8 : ABSTRACTS OF TITLES . Growing Discouraged. .‘g,' J % “Remember that you must answer |% New and up'to-date plant. Prompt service. i to posterity.” é : : Vi esiden Dickson Bldg will “Yes," vaplied Senator Sorghum, | € Lakeland business left with our Vice President at g ?,} “But if posterity is going to be any receive prompt and efficient attention. it promp harder to answer to than my present PR constituency, I might as we!l give up.” ""Ww&b‘i ‘*“E@lllllllll GGG GO ¢ Going Out of Buginess OUT OF THE CREDIT BUSINESS We will celebrate the 4th by opening up a Cut Price Cash Grocery and in Future will Sell for CASH ONLY. If you are interested in BUYING FOR LESS call on us on or after July 4th. Let us show you that WE CUT THF PRICE (3 Below We Quote a Few of Our Prices: Flour, plain, per barrel... ., ... $5.25i Coffee, White Hous, per pound. ;.o v 35¢ Flour, plain, per barrel . ..$275 ] Coffee, Our Hobby, per pound...... 30¢ Ilour, plain, 24 1b. sacks 750' Coffee, Our Hobby, 5 pound tins. ..$1.35 Flour, plain, r21b. sack... ... s 40¢ ) \ofiee, loose ground, per peund. .. ..25¢ Flour, self r half barrel . $3 15 | Coffee, green, per pound ... .. 18¢ Ilour, self rising, 24 Ib. sack... l'et Cream, baby size, 6 cans..... ..25¢ Flour, self rising, 12 1b. sack... Pet Cream, tall, 3 cans... ... ...... 25¢ Meal i er pound Tomatoes, 2 pound cans 8¢, 2 cans...15¢ Sugar, 20 pounds. .. ... ... $1.00| Corn, good grade, per can... ... ..... 9¢ Bacon, per pe ”n,l : ..16¢ | Salmon, one pound, tall ... .10¢ Swiit's lm‘mm H ms, per pound .21¢ | Salmon, Argo... ... 18¢ Compound ’l ard, per pound .. ..10¢ | Corned and Roas st ].ur peficandii.ia 20¢ it Lard, ten pound pail....$1.15 Mothers Oats, per pke 9‘C Lard, four pound pail ..45¢ | ke D'& Rt L j PEr DO U 7¢ SOTR AR PO i 5 4 A Rice, best Jap, per puuud ..... 5¢ All 25¢ Catsups. .. .23¢ C Rice, good JAH- per pound 3. 1-2¢ | All fifteen cents Catsups .., ... ..... 13¢ ‘AJ Clover Hill Butter, per pound ... ..35¢ | All ten cent Catsups. . ..[0¢ 5’ Renovated Butter, per pound.., ....28¢ | Al 25¢c Jams and Preserves ... ...... 20¢ fi' Qctagon Soap, 6 bars 23¢, 13 for 50c, Lemon Cling Peaches, per can... ...20¢ G‘j 8 B S R R S $1.00 | Kerosene oil 13¢ gallon, 5 gallons. ...60¢ @q | ; ‘ 4 | Ii ’ North Side, Corner Pine Street and Tennessee Avenue PHONE 12 LAKELAND, FLA G e S T

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