Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, September 22, 1914, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ORNAMENTS OF WORTH | RIGHT THINGS TO BE WORN TO SUIT THE OCCASION. THE EVENING TELEGRAM LAKELAND, FLA., SEPT. ornaments is steadily making Tt way into favor. Under a strong light spun | glass aizrettes are most effective, espe- i | | | | Adornments Must Be Fitting if They ' Are to Be Effective—Ideas for the Coiffure That Should Be Kept in the Memory. “All the girls are wearing hair orna- ments this summer,” announced Mar- jorie. *“How do you think I would look in something of that kind?” “Some coiffure ornaments are very attractive and in good taste,” answered Marie, “and I am certain well-selected ones will improve any one's appear- ance if worn at the right times.” “Won't you suggest some I might like to wear?” pleaded Marjorie. “Why, ves,” was the reply. “I have in mind several seasonable novelties which might suit you. For instance, there are shell pins, with hinged tops with gems that may be turned in dif- ferent directions to suit the coiffure, ; cially when of white combined with emerald green, sapphire, blue, ruby red or golden yellow. “Some glass tlaras show a design in flowers and leaves attached to a skele- ton latticing in silver or gold. Rose- buds with their foliage are favorites, | but so are white wild daisies and any of the smaller field blooms. “Clusterg of oak or mistletoe leaves | are used with good effect in glass tiaras, and, in fact, any sort of foliage that is not overlarge may correctly be used, excepting, of course, the straw- berry leaves sacred to the English duchess, “Coiffure ornaments and tiaras in amber or in amber colored glass are stunning looking on a brunette beauty, and for blondes there are fetching ef- fects in all-jet or in jet combined with paste, pearls or _opals.” Don't forget that bright colors should not be worn by those who are inclined to be stout. Don’t wear tightly-fitting taflored and simulated caps of strings of pearls | trocks it you are thin and tall. with tiny chin straps of pearls to match to wear in the evenings. “Narrow bandeaux of rhinestones that widen out into a barette in the Don'’t rub the eyes too roughly with , the towel after washing. They are | Hable to get inflamed it you do. Don’t cut your eyelashes with the back and which are matched by the | idea of making them grow. You will high spans in combs set with rhine- 40 them lasting harm instead. stones are very pretty. “There are also caps formed of strings of jewels set wide apart, with two straight feathers up the front, thelr quills outlined with gems. “Square-topped pins, inlaid with gold, matching gold-topped side combs and a high open-work back comb, with a filigree design in the gold, are all shown, as are also hairpins with fili- gree gold tops, shaped like a ball, the center filled with compressed sachet balls and thin bands of gold ending in gold tassels to wear across the front of the hair, the tassels hanging back of the ears like simulated earrings. “Glass as a material for coiffure Don’t forget that vaseline is simply splendid for thickening and darken- ing the eyebrows and eyelashes. Don’t dress your hair too low over the brows. Thin and scanty eye brows are largely caused through this. Don’t lean your elbows on the table. If you make a habit of doing this the skin of the elbows will become scaly and hard. Don't give up walking in the hot weather. Remember that a certain amount of exercise is necessary every day if you want to keep well. Don't forget that glycerin and cucumber have a very softening effect upon the skin, rubbed into the skin regularly every night. KELLEY'S BARRED Plymouth Rocks BOTH MATINGS Better now than ever before. High class breeding birds at reasonable prices. Fgge from high class pens for hatching. Write me before ordering else- where, L= [ & T “’x"i“ SESPEGEDEOOBE PP EIEEEH PP Ru Rl Sl LTt BT T T T T TR NY DANGER!! Y OU are in no danger if you bought A BB P B T S B B B B2 K it at BrfriGurdubgedo we can i Wood’s, the New Drug Store Phone 408 and see how quick “"deliver the goods.” The New Drug Store LRDBIBDRBP PR PDEEF DBDPDBIIS Brefedrgd H. L. KELLEY, Griffin, Fla é 2 M«a»«ww,‘ PIALIIIEIEIINS SHIOIILEPILINTIIIOLIII, School Shoes (. We are Headquarters for Gorls and Boys for School BB HOEIHHDIO PP PPPPDPDDDDGPPPIPP DD PDBD (. We have the exclusive Agency for the BOY SCOUTS and a full line of depend- able SHOES for Girls DUTTON-HARRIS Co. FOOT FITTERS BBIDDBBBEIIDGVDBOBPHDBED 3 | | | “I think,” said Phyllis to her hus- band as they were packing their trunks preparatory to taking their an- nual vacation trip, “that I shall ask Sue to take care of the chickens while I am gone. I know that she will be glad to do that much for me and—" “Well, inasmuch as she lives next door and has only to cross the yard to feed them and seeing that she will probably get about a dozen and a half eggs a day from them, I don’t think that you are putting her regard ! to a very severe test,” replied Phyllis’ husband. “I wonder, John Billingsby, why it is that packing always seems to have such a disagreeable effect upon you,” commented Phyllis, as she watched him staring helplessly at a bunch of neckties from which he was vainly. trying to choose the best to put in his trunk. “You never seem to be able to pack a trunk without unpacklng| your bad temper at the same time. You know very well that Sue doesn’t like chickens; she says that their habit of always eating makes her nerv- i ous, and as for the eggs, she would ; rather buy them at the store than get | them at the cost.of caring for the | chickens.” “And have you thought whom you | would inflict that Angora kitten . upon?” questioned her husband. ! “Oh, that's all settled,” declared | Phyllis, trilumphantly. “Ruth Comford ! 18 going to take the kitten. You know ! she adores cats, but her husband has an antipathy for them and won't let her have one, but he has consented to allow her to borrow mine while we are gone and Ruth is as happy as it she had come into the possession of a for- tune and has promised me to treat it as her own. Ruth is really devoted to me and I think that it she hated cats she would be just as conscien- tious in her care of my kitten, simply out of pure friendship.” “Pure friendship!” echoed Bfllings- by, as he folded and unfolded, then folded again a white flannel outing “Just Getting Acquainted.” coat that he had bought in a moment of reckless determination to make this trip the gayest one in his experience. ! “I'll be willing to wager this coat that Sue will be so sitck of her chickens and Ruth so disgusted with that cat's ely ways that they will be heartily glad to see you back. It's a pity peo- ple cannot go away on vacations with- , out unloading all their responsiblities and possessions on their friends and neighbors. By the way, where did you send our Kirmanshaw rug? That's ‘ worth more than a bushel of chickens and kittens.” “Oh, the rug iIs over at the Stevens’; they were delighted to have it.” The next day the Billingsbys went ! on their way. At the end of three | Weeks they returned with a thick coat of tan on their faces, and a very thin layer of bills in their purses, and in | their hearts the deepest of thankful- | ness to be back. | Mrs. Billingsby’s first act was to 80 | { over to Sue’s to get the key to the | chicken coop. “Oh, are you back so soon?” said | Sue with badly concealed consterna— tion and disappointment in her face. “I had just got the chickens used to my ways and in another week I know I could have done wonders.” She yielded up the key unwillingly and Mrs. Billingsby felt that her re- turn was anything but welcome. She ; sadly betook herself to the Comtordl home, where more consternation awaited her, “Why, it seems as if you had just gone!” declared Ruth, with no attempt to hide her dismay. “Kitty and I were just getting acquainted, and she 18 80 used to her new basket that I am sure she will be quite unhappy it you take her away at once.” The vacant place on the flocr of the Shaw’s living room where the loaned Trug was removed was anrcther re- proach. By the time Mrs. Billingsby | reached her own home the gladness had faded tm}n her face. “They all seemed sorry to have me back,” she’confessed, “and they made me feel like a cruel impostor when I asked for the return of my own be- longings.” “It is curious,” commented Billings- | by, “how a warm and pure friendship | for a person—for a very nice persoa 3 | ! might say—can be supplanted by an impersonal affection for a chicken, or | & Kitten, or a rug. But at least you have put your friends to the test and know the depth of their regard.”—Chi- cago Daily News. 29 1914, Do You Know This Step? The girl who can dance THE CASTLE POLKA will not be a wall flower The Castle Polka is Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Castle’s latest creation; and it wiil sweep the country this fall and winter, just as the “Hesitation” did last season. . Let Mr. and Mrs. Castle teach you—in your own home —how to dance it. They give you personal lessons in two pages of pictures and text In the October Issue of The Ladies’ Home Journal You can learn it in an hour or two in your own home, just as if you were in Castle House, where all fashionable New York society will dance it. Fifteen Cents the Copy, of All News Agents Or, $1.50 a Year ('2 issues) by Mail, Ordered Through ©:r Subscription Agents or Direct Our Sales Agent is The Lakeland Book Store THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY Independence Square, Philadelphia Pennsylvania Idea for Those Who Continue to Use the Somewhat Old-Fashioned Hlluminant. ;“Keep the Quality Up” not, as a rule, an article of a very &! ornamental nature, and in our sketch we show something of a much prettier | kind that can be prepared without any \D great amount of labor, |8 In making it, in the first place, a i;' ring must be cut out in stiff cardboard, .:. and for the shape and size a glass | ring can be used as a pattern. The ? You can’t whistle away the fact, d i . Beptphorse ool i 2 the one great big point that in- forel design shown Bas been worked | dicates this Store’s Betterness Ouality o & is turned over at the edges o( the card | '3 and lightly stitched together under-‘ neath, so that it may be easily re- A,olg{,g,d.g}o(g,q‘gw BB O CHE OHCH S IHBAOHBABHF 3 H A Step Ahead in Quality--- A Step Behind in Price BAT[S STORE Every piece of WOOL GOODS in STOCK ABSOLUTELY NEW moved when it is necessary to wash it. At the outer edge, the ring is fin- ished oft with a fine gold silk cord. The right hand sketch {llustrates the ring placed in position upon the | candle-stick. Other colors in which this ring | might be effectively carried out are | cream colored silk with leaves worked | in various shades of green and plle’ pink cord or claret-colored silk, green leaves and gold cord. Pretty candle rings can also be made of thick plain white cardboard, and then a pretty floral design can be ! painted upon them with water colors, ' -»ci l MAKES PRETTY CANDLE RING QoD M@.mmfi»am&mmwwwmwm oo A —— r_.»t-<.~.~4>~u¢=1~o~c»:n-so»|-s»‘.-lun-inl-v‘.z In Merchandise;

Other pages from this issue: