Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, August 17, 1914, Page 7

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R “RUST” RED MRS H IN FAVOR WITH DEBUTANTE. RS Are That It Accords Natural Shade of Hair s With Almost Any Costume. cest of reds, is the favor- | hats for the debutante, as the peachy tints of her and enhances the bright- yes. Moreover, “rust” ac- ny natural shade of hair— ! short of being rakish and are wonder- | tully swagger on g petite girl, who | carries herself jauntily, : ‘ Then thero is the Niniche, e ph of the sundown shape, which is mere- | ly a circular flat Crown—smoothl ‘ ered with velvet—mounted on a head band or “halo” The shovel or d‘ pressed effect is obtained by foreing | the sides against the ears b, sz\H: of ribbon streamers that crussrxh:* top of the crown and tie at the n.xm; of the neck or narrow into g bri(;le that hooks under the chin, The debutante who must make her | own rust red hat, may have something very smart indeed and, what 1s most essential, something very becoming, if she will remember not to ) copy any shape ase | ¥ cov- attempt to with a stiff brim or any costume, Of course ho need not consider cost, lliner can cover smoothly pok “right” and which are hen decorated solely with unfortunately, plenty of some of the very sweet- B e to economize and these, p difficult toque, will make elvet hats in the Deslys g a crown of velvet, which above a bowl-shaped brim e really smart, should be h rust-dyed fox, but which pelt band of any other ding that the hair is long. ismooth fur does not make brim band. Equally easy d"” to make for herself is Bhanter, wholly of rust vel- a flat round crown drawn ght band. These stop just FOR BEST ASS FLORIDA ACHINER BBt ot get one of those large ns to beautify your yard? ot get the oldest reliable an to put in your walk? Dt get vour brick and blocks prices are right, go are the NATIONAL VAULT CC. H. B. Zlmmerman, Mgr. ¥ 508 West Main St. an Talk to Practically ¢ People in the Town OUGH THIS PAPER L YARNELL AND HEAVY HAULING DUSEHOLD MOVING A SPECIALTY S AND MULES FOR HIRE Office 109; Res., 57 Green. Laundered the nd them to the S Y “weare better equipped s Laundry work. he Titian tone—and goes st velvet toque in one of | m shapes, which only : hery aigrette in matching | to be introduced this | S HPDDEPDIFEHBDDD S PEPPPDEEEOGGSDIPE PRI i Phone 46 THE ELECTRIC STORE 307 E. Main St. Pocket Flashlights Batteries SEr US LARGEST STOCK AND f you want your Shirts and Collars akelana Steam Laundry very sharply d avoid trimming of fur on the 1 the aigrette or the i and if she has a s garnishing is su; and to € uses a hand she should omit ther fanta ! pped bow, other uous, f | Living bodies are usually fo in a definite place, Th(\Almcmm found in milk are indeed & mixed collection. The fact that cer-! taln organisms are frequently found in milk does not necessarily mean that they originate in the udder, but rather directs the search toward the | focus of infection from which they find their way into the secretion o‘f1 the mammary gland. It is known, says the J 1al of the American Medical Association, that while the ! colon group is frequently found fin' water and milk, {ts natural habitat is the intestinal tract of warm-blooded animals. i BUARS T e | » both great and small, | i | YOUR ORTMENT LLECTRIC Y COMPANY oo oo Dol oo BB rodng 2B B BPPIEOPPPPEBIPEPD For Babies. heat. After shaving. After bath, Asaface powder. As | a foot powder. Really indispensa- ble. In sifter top cans, Atdrug- gists, 15 cents. For prickly 4 the 'For Sale in Lakeland by HENLEY & HENLEY Are You Getting Satisfactory Results with your KODAK Come in and let us explain the successful way to make good pictures. Your summer's trip will be pleasantly remembere d by the use of a good kodak. “The Red Cross Pharmacy” “The Kodak Store” CORNER’ **ON THE ete tment 1SS0I “Cranes”’ Stationery MpsvesadBBpissan s | comp n VERY BEST TR, RELETY s Ior than ever Phone 130 RIS TN | able?” THE EVENING TELEGRAM LAKE LAND, FLA,, AUG. 17, 1914. PAGE SEVEN WITH EARSBY'S HELP By F. W. SULLIVAN. | (Copyright.) “Now, Dick, isn't this simply ador- demanded Eloise, tightening the reins over the unkempt back of Earsby. “The situation has its merits, I'll admit,” T replied, glancing happily at the radiant girl. We were seated side by side in the | little two-wheeled vehicle known as a donkey-cart. 1 tried earnestly to dis- | entangle the leaping landscape to dis- cover our whereabouts, “And you have tried to convince me that an automobile is the only means of seeing the country,” she remarked scornfully. “It's the only means of seeing it in ! one place,” I jerked out. “If those trees would only stay put for a minute I might enjoy it more.’ The padded board that passed for a seat back struck me sharply beneath the shoulder-blades, for the three- hundredth time. “Ob, it's all in getting used to ft, Dick,” was the patronizing reply. “Same as a broncho,” 1 hazarded. foiling the seat back triumphantly by leaning forward. Floise did not deign | to answer this flippancy. We had left Northampton shor(l,\" after luncheon to drive along the road that circles the bay on the south shore , of Long Island. After two weeks of pleading, interspersed with glorious rides in my humble roadster, I had finally agreed to become Eloise's guest for the afternoon behind Earsby, on one condition—that the duke should be left behind. This in itself was regarded by con- servative observers as a triumph in ftself, seeing that the duke—a real one, at that—had been the girl's con- stant companion of late during most ' " of the hours between sunrise and mid- night. His Grace of Twizdale was not a half bad sart in his way, but, I often asked myself, how could he love Our Lady of Joys as | did, who had been to school with her in pinafores and hoped vainly for so long? “Where are we now?" 1 asked. “On our way home, my fine humor- fst,” replied Eloise a triflo icily. *“I suppose you are glad.” “Only because you have an engage- ment with the duke at half-past three,” I replied, “and ought to be on time. You reminded me of the fact yourself before we started out.” Eloise colored a trifle and I cursed my bluntness, “The duke dryly. “He wasn't pickled when we left,” 1 suggested, “but you can't tell what he has been doiug since.” “Please confine yvour witty ohserva- tions to the landscape, Richard,” warned Eloise stiffly. | “Slow down your mule and I will,” I retorted with an equal amount of spirit. The conversation langulshed after this, and the afternoon appeared about to become a failure. We approached a little grove and I gurreptitiously looked at my watch, | 1t was just three o'clock, and I judged ! we would not disappoint the duke | | she sald will keep,” resigned myself with a twinge of bit erness. As we entered the cool greenness of the little arbor, Earsby dropped from | his racking canter to a walk, and In the very center of the shade stopped short, pulling at the reins to loosen their tension “Get up!” sharply. The brute twitched his ears turned his head so as to observe us with a kind of asinine insolence. His expression far from compll mentary that I took it as a personal commanded Elolse and was 80 affront. | “Here, let me have the reins” I commanded, and took them from Eloise Knotting the ends, I belabored tha animal with considerable energy and | Earsby turned his head to | precision, the front, whisked his tail and glew a fily that was resting on his seventh rib After that demonstration manship I paused “Perhaps a switch will do the bu ness better,” suggested El¢ and I f ,‘ ! you and nmedi ot out and cut rom | ¢ S .: ¢ Again 1 attacked “Then you expected him to stop ree Again i ( ( ¢ s f but only succeed. | When We reac hed here this after g t noon?" I eried ane with joy »d tn raising a cloud of dust . 'd’i \ B SO eat sleh of come| Why, Richard Parsons!” sha ex Vit and sommeheed o inibblas the| Calmed r The idea of \ guch a t ss at the side of the road ol s . 4 a it ok | And we let it go at that nee | was oAt g | ion tc tinguish ideas hen I w at a while, we started to ¥ ‘ a lefgurely manner | “Maternal Instinct.” nlintered pli red disregard r m the chosa tc | tion | field, I | of marks-, cheeks flushed with her exertions. “Come here and help me. The idea of a great big man like you sitlihgl there and watching me work! I don't | believe you care whether 1 ever get | back to town or not.” “Sure I don't,” 1 sald easily, filling my pipe. “But calm yourself, maybe | the duke will come and rescue you.” “What do you mean?” “Well, it's this way, Eloise. I have heard Twizdale call enough people ‘blithering ahsses’ to gather he knows how they act. With that knowledge he will probably come and rescue you from this one.” “Which one?” she hausted with pulling. “Both,” T sald. “Don't be partial. Come on, sit down beside me, and | we'll cool off.” With a final exasperated tug Eloise gave up the ghost of a chance she had with Earsby and followed my sugges- L gasped, ex- It was really a divine little nook for a tetea-tete. Suddenly Eloise laughed As long as we are here, let's have a jolly little picnic all by ourselves,” she said. “Isn't it delicious in this green grotto? Dick, up between the trees you can see the clouds float- ing by. Isn't the blue beyond the | green lovely? And over there in the See the men haying in the Look sun?" I grunted responses indifferently as though I owned the place and had brought her along to see it, 1 couldn’t trust myself to say anything else. Flolse knew that 1 loved her, but she also knew and recognized that | wealth and soclal position were indis- !pnnsuhl«‘ requisites in the man she | married. “What's the matter, Dicky?" cried i she. “You're not yourself at all.” I made what I now recognize as a gallant attempt to flounder through a few of my well-known witticisms, but the only smile I could raise was a pitving one. Eloise told me I was going off horribly-—a bally English expression, I belleve—and 1 admitted it with a groan. Then 1 cursed my- sell for an fmbecile and trembled for fear she would divine what the matter was, I knew I should soon make a fool of myself, and in desperation heaved BEGOBBBEEIERBDDB. * oo Mayes Grocery Company WHOLESALE GROCERS “A BUSINESS WITHOUT BOOKS” We find that low prices and long time wiil not go hard in hand. and on May Ist we will instal our new system of low prices for Strictly Cash. We heve sayed the people of Lakeland and Polk County thiousands o! dollars in the past. and our new system will still reduce the cost of living. and also reduce our expenses and enabte us to put the knife in still deeper. We carry a full line groceries. feed. grain, hay. crate material. and Wilson & Toomers' Ideal Fertilizersalways on hand Mayes Grocery Lompan 211 West Mein St., Lakeland, Fla. LT T e PG BEBBES oy g Mg oo | & “CONSULT US” Frep 1 §' For figures on wiring your house. We "‘%" will save you money. Look out for the rainy season. Let us put gutter around your house and protect it from decay. ’ : T. L. CARDWELL, ~ Electric and Sheet Metal Contracts o Phone 233. Rear Wilson Hdwe Co. $1e3r @i TR PEPBIPIDEDE BODBPBFIIEEDOG &8 rocks at Earsby in a last flickering | endeavor to get him on the move But he, adamant animal, proceeded according to the numerical strength of grass tufts and no faster. For a considerable tlme there was silence while Elolse Hummed. “I certainly do admire those men I over there,"” she sald at last warmly. “Yes? Why?" I inquired affably, to keep up the conversation “Oh, I don't know,” she replied, half yawning. “I just do.” Now anything that Eloise admires comes at once under my very personal serutiny. Consequently with feelings compounded of the emotions of Ga boriau and Doyle, I proceaded to dis- cover why she admired those men The first clue was this: They were in a hayfleld, making hay. Their pitehforks glinted dazzlingly In the sunlight, which fact brought me to my second postulate, namely, that the sun was shining. Proceeding logical- | 1y, T achleved the following: | That the men were making | while the sun shone. With a sudden feeling that I had left part of me #oating round in the air somewhere, I looked at Kloise. She was smiling at me divinely and her eyes were gweeter with love than a honeysuckle s with honey Then I made a fool of myself as 1 had feared all tha time I would; but never was a fool wonderfully | confirmed in his folly! “By Jove! It's five o'clock!" 1 ex- claimed after a few seconds, pulling out my watch. “If we can't get your | celestial creature to ambulate we will have to walk." At this Eloise gave a little scream and, springing to her feet, ran down to the dusty roadway. “He's gone!"” she cried in a despair- | ing voice. “Oh, why didn't I think ?"* “Think what?” I demanded fero- ciously of my future wife, “About darling Earsby. He always leaves here at a quarter to five sharp You see— oh dear, what have I done? —early in the summer, when I rarely gaw any one, I used to drive out here with him and read in this little grove for a couple of hours. He nibbled the grass, and I read and thought about hay | more ntal talk SOt move a ther to a certal of i er child, a survival of w perpetuation of the § t K fe mother intellig xiet its care t t of pers rif to pr the best ' direc ré rced by kn £ AT avor, and these are h x r’’ to far too many whe L3 er T re Ara A r i 3 knowledge aning of $000060000000 000 H MM EE SRS RPSHFTEDD PO EEBEGIDIEdDbIES M "® YOU ARE THINKING OF BUILDING SEH MARSHALL & SANDERS The 0Id Reliable Contractors Who have been building houses in Lakeland for years, and who never "FELL DOWN" or failed to give satisfaction. All classes of buildings contracted for. The many fine residences buily by this firm are evidgnces of their ability to make good. MARSHALL & SANDERS Phone 228 Blue FRpgpd ek dirdidd 23 o0 h e bg B o frrfechr B B Brfrfecdr oy Dl B o B RO 1SS B0 BB BB G B BB Bd G B @ B eIt W. K McRae ; 2 b BB DB B g fridrdg B 5 & £ W. K Jackson o JACKSON & McRAE i REAL ESTATE ' £ Large Listing--Always Some Bargains DGR DBEOBEDEEDHDBEEDEDDEEEEPDDEY - Pure Country Butter * MADE IN CLYDE, N. CAROLINA | {227 Thekind Dr.J.Y.Por- §8}1 :j ter, State Health Officer, Qfé ~ Only 4OC Ib. W. P. Pillans & Co. Phone 93-94 Pure Food Store \ b R RUB-MY-TISIA 15; Fix [m .Sho’u Garage Will cure your Rheumatism P o b gia, Headaches, ramps VULCANIZING 4 Colic, Sprains, Br $ "Hvea and THASE a8 4 Burns, Old Sores, ¢ b ‘“w : SO Etc. Antiseptic Anodyne,1 § .'\.':_,v Fans S j!l W o r 1 and 3 > ally ’r1 > b ternally and externaily. Price PETE BIEWER, Mgr.

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