Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, November 14, 1914, Page 7

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e ¢ fl SHIELD that cough \\ ¥ hang on. Stop it \ before it goes too far Get GE-RAR.DY LUNG BALSAM | for coughs and colds, Ji bronehitis,eroup,whoop- i ing cough, lung and J} throat troubles, At yourdruggists in250 bottles. Acceptno substitute, broven by our six ks in Lakeland. he National Steel concrete Burial Vault ocks of all discrip- tions. t, Pressed Brick, k, Pier Blocks, 3 Drain Tile, 6, 7 ench Post; in fact made of Cement. TIONALVADLT €0 ARNELL D HEAVY HAULING ! Dining Room Service Unexcelled. HOLD MOVING A [PECIALTY D MULES ¥OR HIRE i 109; Res., 57 Green o FOR SALE IN LAKELAND BY HENLEY AND HENLEY MRS. H. M. COWLES, Prop. Under New Management. Refurnishedand thorough!y renovated, and everything Clean, Comfortable and First-class. g Rates Reasonable. Your Patronage Cordially Invited. BB et 1030 BA0N L g u Want Fresh Clean i : i 'MIRRORS’ HIGH VALUE ;PROPERLV PLACED, THEY ARE EXTREMELY DECORATIVE. Also Add to Size of Room, In That They Do Away With the Appear ance of Apartment Being Crowded. | Mirrors immediately open before the j eye vistas of space. The room is re- ; flected until it seems twice as large ; 88 it i8. Not only is the cramped feel- ing counteracted, but there really is | mose space to work with, for no mat- i ter how much we have to put into the { Toom, it still does not look crowded, i writes Ethel Davis Seal, in the Buf- falo Express. ‘ Mirrors also catch and transmit the % light. So true is thie that you can al- most make one window do the work of two if you install a mirror on the | opposite wall. You will get double the l light, anyway. | | Nowadays decorators hold that you cannot use too many mirrors—that you never have enough; that aside from their uses they have a decided artistic value. i So let us have mirrors! We may have them in panels between our win- _ dows, if the spaces are about window width. They should be eet into mold- ings, be of window height and reach { down to the floor so as to reflect the chiffonier. This position of a mirror seemingly enlarges the room and re- flects the general light of the room. Mirrors can be set into the panels of a door or into the frame. Or they can be laid in panels on the wall sur- rounding the door opening. This gives an excellent effect, if the position of | the door itself is eomewhat formal. If | it does not occupy an attractive space, {or is not attractively placed in the | space, this should not be attempted. To have large mirrors paneled into right-angled walls is distinctive in the ‘ RICH EVENING W NOV. 14, 1914, “Save Ten Dollars” By having your Fall Clothes made to your INDIVIDUAL Measure by us Suits or Overcoats Soft'g Hats and Derbies No More No Less Large variety of Shapes and Shad- ings, Trimmed with Contrast Bands — the Season’s latest Conceptions | Especially adapted for evening wear, | this graceful cape is fashioned of em- broidered mousseline with collar and straps of French blue satin and: extreme. ried out in the sketch. A desk table is | You will see this idea car- | trimmed with bands of fur. l $ ROCERIES?| are at your service for anything ried by an Up-to-date Grocery one orders glven prompt attention J.REDDICK . turday-j- UCE URNIPS FRESH TOMATOES CUKES CELERY CABBAGE CRANBERRIES H FISH EF PORK PORK SAUSAGE SAUSAGE VEAL WESTERN MUTTON > Big Pure Eood Store AND MARKET ONE 93-279 Edmonson & Miller cwer Prices on Ford Cars flective August 1st, 1914 to Augustist, P15 and guaranteed against any reduction ring that time. All cars fully equipped 0. b. Detroit, v €4 Runabout. .. ... ...$440 Touring Car ........490 Town Car... ... ...690 Buyers to Share in Profits retail buyers of new Ford cars from ugus.t Ist, 1914 to August Ist, 1915 will lare in the profits of the company to the tent of $40 v $60 per car, on each car ¢y buy, PROVIDED: we sell and de- €T 300,000 new Ford cars during that pe- riod, Ask up for particulars FORD MOTOR COMPANY Lakeland Auto and Supply Co. POLK COUNTY AGENTS. placed below one mirror, a taffeta up- | holstered sofa beneath the other. Egg- | and-dart moldings frame the mirrors, which nobly fulfill their double duty of lighting and enlarging. Never put one large mirror directly | opposite another. In this way you ob- | tain the disquieting effect of seeing many, many rooms at once. This is | disconcerting when you are reasonably i sure you're in only one. But if it's | your room, you might get the habit. lAnd to see one thing" multiplied a i great many times is a failing which is i not always understood. BASQUED BLOUSE IS POPULAR Economical Garment Because It Can Be Used to Advantage in So Many Ways. One of the newest innovattons s the i basqued blouse, of which the first mod- els were seen a short time ago. They created comparatively little com- { ment when they appeared, for the full ! significance of solitary models is hard- . ly appreciated at first—but they mark ! an epoch in the blouse world of which i the true value is yet to be seen. Moreover, they hold one great ad- vantage which their designers certain- i ly did not consider during their evolu- | | tion. A basqued blouse can be worn wlth! success over a last season's skirt and | . produce the effect of an entirely up-to- | date creation! Thec longer the basque | the smarter the blouse—and, inci-, | dentally, the longer the basque the | more it conceals the skirt, which s | | another thing to be considered! A new | | model shows a basqued blouse of | | printed chiffon, with vest and sleeves ' of fine net and a sash which carries ' out in charmeuse the color of the flow- | ers on the chiffon. The basque is long i and is edged with fashion’s new fancy —monkey fur—which is having a veri- table furore as an edging, hideous though it may be in reality. Monkey fur is sparse, hairy and gen- 'erally everything a fur ought not to be; but as a kind of fringe it achieves its solitary success, and as a fringe it is being consequently used, though we shall doubtless see it as many other forms of trimming. All the new blouses, whether basqued or not, are very loose—vague is the French word used to describe them, and it certainly does. They are folded, almost shape- less garments of lace, chiffon or net, the shawl and the kimono sleeve hang- ing over the shoulder as it they might fall oft at any moment, and the belt a mockery from the point of view of utility. e Hoslery. With boots boasting colored tops, it is the thing to match the stockings to the tone FOR CARE OF THE EYEBROW Tiny Brushes and a Cake of India Ink | Look Like Small Chil- dren’s Toys. $5 Styles $3 Quality The other day two shoppers stood looking into the window of a smart shop that deals in children’s furnish- ings as well as in those for grown-ups. In the window was a display of fasci-| nating bottles of perfume and toflet' water, little bronze burners of incense and other charming toilet accessories. | Among the things spread forth were, | ENGLISH WOOLEN MILLS Hatters and Tailors some tiny boxes, not more than two inches long, each clasping under a lit- tle blue stone, and each containing a tiny brush, amber backed, and a tiny comb of tortoise shell or its imitation. Then there was a little cake of some- thing black, wrapped around in silver. “They bave lovely things here for : children—toys, I mean,” said one of the shoppers. “Look at those cunning little brush and comb sets for dolls.” The other shopper nodded and the two women passed on. In reality the dainty little brushes and combs that had attracted their at- tention were for the eyebrows, and the black was coloring to deepen the line over the eyes. Nowadays the care of the eyebrow is deemed important, and even if the little cake of black does not appeal to you the tiny brush and comb must make you envious. Futch & Gentry Bldg., LAKELAND, FLA. R. A. BLUMBERG SAM B. SCHER Attention! Some good things in Ladies’ Coat Suits Not the latest Fads, but see the Quality, then listen at the prices, $12.00 to $35.00, to close out at $7 00 to 3] 2.00 With a little alterations you have a good Suit. - Glad to show you. HATS IN BLACK AND WHITEi Most Favored Colors Just Now, and With the Right Trimming Are Really Charming. Although much latitude in the way of color is permitted in millinery, black- and-white is most favored for the fall. There may be a dash of color some- where about them, but just at first at 3, any rate the predilection is for the all- black or the black-and-white hat. It would be difficult to explain justi why the new hats have such a differ-, ent appearance from those of last year, but that they have is obvious.! For one thing, all hats that are worth '* considering are extremely well mnds‘ 3 and therefore present a nicety of fln-i ish that strikes the eye at a glance. Then all trimmings—and there is not QP OP TR to be an overabundance—are poised ' 80 that they affect a direct line, even: to the plumes that droop gracefully at their tips, and this goes toward ac-, centuating the certain “fixed” appear- ance which in gowns we characterize as tailoring. it Mayes Grocery Company i: WHOLESALE GROCERS | W Charmeuse ls Tenacious. | A great deal of taffeta and much soft moire have Leen worn, but there is a tepacity in charmeuse which . | causes it to retal. its favor through ’ " many changes of fashion. Women | < : who dress have to acknowledge that |, there is a distinction between what is| & smart and what 18 fashionable. ’I‘-f-| feta or moire would be smart, but‘: charmeuse would be decidedly fash-| fonable. Prudence and fashion m'§§ | ® & @ @ “A Business Without Books” find that low prices ard long time will not go haud in hand, and on May 1st we installed our NEW SYSTEM OF LOW.PRICES FOR STRICTLY CASH. We have saved the people of Lakeland and Polk County thousands of dollars in the past, and our new system will still reduce the cost of living, and also reduce our expenses, and enable us to put the knife in still deeper. We carry a full line of Groceries, Feed, Grain, Hay, Crate Material, and Wilson & Toomer’s. IDEAL EERTILIZERS always on hand. t Mayes Grocery Company 211 West Main Street. LAKELAND, FLA. both combined in the steely blue char- I meuse, which is now so much in fashion, and a darker tone, which is akin to the crow's wing. An inter- | mixture of black and white char- | meuse has also done good service all the season through. To Polish Pearl Ornaments. Pearl ornaments may be elegantly | polished by first rubbing with olive oil to remove the dirty appearance | then applying any red nail polish. | This latter gives a burnished appear- { ance, and with a little fast rubbing the pearl takes on a brilliant glow. l o B BB By 20 B DB EESSFEE R R R E T S0t s 000l 9P 9P $ETPPIAFSG ¥ PETOFITIPPIIE SPHDDBEOEDOPPIOIDP SIS DESPIP

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