Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, September 12, 1914, Page 3

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#¥"OUR WEEKLY LIMERICK There once was a builder, by the name of St. Clair, Who was honest, and used the best Builders’ Hardware. deals at dur Store Bere we scll it lore, e the assor'ment is nd prices are fair. Y THE EVENING TELEGRAM LAK ELAND, FLA.,, SEPT. 12, 1914, Carefully Dressed High Coiffure | 'EASILY MADE UTILITY BOX Useful and Attractive Article for the Bureau May Be Put Together for a Few Cents, The material required to make a ' ! utility box for the bureau i as fol- ! lows: Six oblong pill boxes, ten cents; ! ' two yards of ribbon, three-quarter | , inch, ten cents; one yard broad ribbon, | 15 cents. Total 35 cents. ! i Remove the drawers from each pill 1 7 box. Arrange the outside cover sec- | tions in three rows of two each, as in ! illustration. Paste these boxes to- gether in this position. Take the nar- row ribbon and cover the four sides of each drawer by pasting. Sew on thn‘I short side of one of the drawers a but- | ton, on another a hook and so on, as in illustration. These can serve as handles as well as labels for the con- tents of each drawer. Slide the draw- | . - o o e ~ - e ~ = When Everybody Eats Florida Citrus Fruits ers into place. Take the broad ribbon and, starting at the bottom, wrap it around the outside of the cabinet, past- ing it at the bottom. Cut a piece of pa~ per the exact size of the bottom and | plate it over the ribbon, thus hiding neatly the seaming place of the ribbon.| Finish by making a rose, rosette op bow of the remaining ribbon and tack it on the top. Useless Clothes. According to the united opinion of doctors and race experts we eat too much, and it might be wisely added that nearly every woman buys too many clothes. Each woman will deny| this assertion with emphasis, because she remembers the frequent occasions for which she had nothing to wear., She has bought too much, however, when she has two useless suits or frocks hanging in the closet. | Half the secret of ill buying is t.hq random method adopted. One sees a! thing in the shop and buys it inde-! pendent of its immediate usefulness in the wardrobe. Fashion in. materials changes almost as quickly as fashion in silhouette, and the thing bought! merely because it might serve at some time rarely finds its place in the scheme of good dressing. the Demand will Exceed the Supply Citrus fruits are becoming necessities instead of luxuries. The people of the United States are learning their many merits and uses. Where formerly they were regarded solely as breakfast fruits, now they are eaten at other meals and used AT R e of the many items needed by ‘the professional contractor or the “amateur builder, lass of Hardware, and you can epend on the reliability of the ILSON §ARDWARE CO. Lower Prices on Ford Cars Effective August 1st, 1914 to Augustist, 1915 and guaranteed against any reduction during that time. All cars fully equipped f 0. b. Detroit. Runabout Touring Car Town Car... Buyers to Share in Profits All retail buyers of new Ford cars from August 1st, 1914 to August 1st, 1915 will share in the profits of the company to the extent of $40 to $60 per car, on each car they buy, FROVIDED: we sell and de- liver 300,000 new Ford cars during that pe- riod. Ask us for particulars FORD MOTOR COMPANY Laketland Auto and Supp'y Co POLK COUNTY AGENTS. ChEr S il urity bstra;:t and Title Co. Bartow, Florida . HUFFAKER, Pres. L. J CLYATT, Secretary NK H. THOMPSON, Vic-Pres. H. W. SmiTH, Treasurer ABSTRACTS OF TITLES ew and up-to-date Plaat. -Prompt Service feland business left with our Vice President at Dickson ding will receive prompt and efficient attention. OHO 20K 5 . B. STREATER ONTRACTOR AND BUILDER aving had twenty-one years’ experience in building contracting in Lakeland and vicinity, 1 feel competent ender the best services in this line. If comtemplating ding, will be pleased to furnish estimates and all infor- lion. All work guaranteed. : one 169. J. B. STREATER. Ra e a s ity el T F SEVERAL new high coiffures there are a noteworthy number in which the halr is waved in the even, Marcel wave, and parted either in the middle or to one side. In others the mass of the hair, after being waved, 18 brought to the top of the head and piled in a coll directly back of the forehead. A third style shows a part at each side with the hair at the top of the head drawn back to the crown, where it joins the back hair to form a small Psyche knot. In the eoiffure shown in the picture, the hair is waved all around the head. The front portion is parted off and combed forward to be out of the way, while the back hair is brought to the top of the crown and arranged in a short French twist. When this has been pinned to place with short wire hairpins it forms a foundation to which the front hair is afterward fastened. The front hair s parted and combed down on each side, just above the temple. It 8 turned back and combed off the face from the temple to the ear.- It is broughkt up to the knot with the ends curled into a puff. The Corset Cover for development, either from lack of flesh or other causes, must be helped out by some device. Any number of cor- sets, corset walsts and bust forms are on the market, to supply the deficien- cies of the too slender woman. For present styles the fitted corset- | cover or fitted waist, with inside ruf- fles, 18 the most satisfactory garment which the thin woman can adopt. These waists are cut to fit a normal figure. The walist, therefore, is made too large across the bust. To fill this extra room ruffles of fine muslin are sewed to the under arm seams and arm’s eye. These ruffles are made by stitching tape or bands of the fabric to a long piece of cambric muslin, or nainsook to form casings. Tapes are run through these casings. Tha ruf- fle .is made as full as the figure re- quires and the tapes are drawn up and tied at the center of the ruffle. ‘When it becomes necessary to laun- der a waist of this kind the tapes are untied, and the fullness of the ruf- fle eased along them. They are starched with very thin starch and ironed flat, so that laundering pre- serves the bust form. Waists of this kind are made to fasten either in front | or back. Those fastening in front are pro- i vided with buttons and button holes. { An excellent model, which fastens in | the back, does not require either but- ' tons or button holes. The back pieces are sloped down in a “V” shape and !flnlnhed with tapes which tle around the waist. That is, the back pleces FIGURE which is deficient in bust puft is pinned beside the twist. This arrangement gives the effect of three pufts across the top of ths| crown when viewed from the front. Both sides are arranged in the same manner. The hair is drawn loosely back to give a soft appearance about the face and to allow the waves to retain their position. Any short locks about the forehead are trimmed off in a light, even fringe and curled slightly. They are to be arranged in short curls at each side of the part, or combed across the fore- | head, according to their becoming- ness to the wearer. The middle part is suited to very youthful faces and those past middle life, but the woman iu her prime should experiment before adopting it. A side part is more piquant and im- parts a youthful look. With the return of wide-brimmed hats we are likely to have the return of puffs. They are always admired and for the woman who must resort to false hair they are the lightest and most convenient substitute for natural locks. the Thin Woman tied in front. The most convenient way to make a shapely waist of this kind 1s to buy a ready-made corset cover or brassiere and supply it with rufles. This will | glve the wearer a normal figure. There is no economy in making a plain un- dergarment of this kind at home, be- cause the ready-made brassiere sells 80 cheaply. But there is economy in placing the ruffle, for the simple rea- son that the work required doubles the price of the walst in the shops. Perhaps the greatest advantage de- rived from a waist such as is pictured here is the fact that it may be worn as a substitute for a corset. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. Colored Handkerchiefs. The snow-white handkerchief is ousted for the moment; not for every hour of the day, but for morning wea? especially, and then it 18 that fancies in colors have the lead. These col- ored handkerchiefs are not of violent coloring as they were some time since. Instead, they are soft and gentle in | tone, some being.quiet even to the | point of dullness. Quiet grays and browns, yellows and greems, purple tones and dull reds all come with the morning handkerchief, which may be of lawn or, more fanciful still, of the finest ninon. Those of ninon are most- | 1y in fine stripes with a narrow border of the main coloring; but,the lawn mouchoir is more often plain in its quiet coloring with a quarter or halfs inch hemstitched border of white. | cross and overlap, and the tapes are | l! freely in cookery and confections. All this means a great deal for Florida, which grows the finest citrus fruits of the world. The production of her superior oranges and grape- fruit can hardly keep pace with the inevitable increase in demand due to the above causes. Buckeye Nurseries Catalog— A Citrus Handbook All the problems that arise in the culture of oranges and grapefruit are fully covered in this book. It tells how to select a location for the grove and describes the operations necessary to bring trees into profit- able bearing. Everything is based on practical given. experience—there are no theories in the advice No matter what citrus fruits you are growing or intend to plant, this book will bg of service to you. It has been written to helE alike the man with the grove and the man w O €X- pects to have one. Every person interested in the citrus industry of Florida is welcome toa copy of this book, printed at great expense. Write today for one—edition is limited. BUCKEYE NURSERIES | 1038 CITIZENS BANK BUILDING TAMPA, FLORIDA | SRR Hois o The: Best Straw Hats in the House Going 4t 51 00 While they last L B oo b o ae Let us Save Thie Hub See our Swell Line of Ties and Shirts you Money On Your Next Suit JOS. LeVAY The Home of tlart Schaffner Marx Clothing

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