Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, April 17, 1912, Page 2

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)

4 '? - sy 3 ST AR RSN R B TR TR RN . B e e e s e e e R oo e e e e e o e e e s pan PAGE TWO.. THE EVENING TELEGRAM LAKFE LAND, FLA., APRIL 17, 1912, (By Associated Press.) Mexico CHy, April 16, |most of the other military personages | of the two revolutions have permitted | | | [their personalities, views and daily lmovements to become subject matter }lur the pencils and 1ype writers ol {the correspondents with consider- able frecdom, the most interesting Uigure of them all at the present | COOIESE PIACE |- = o e i e townis-oursoda fountain. When you are tired and hot you tion as woll as of that of a year 2go, Orozeo is a lean, angular man whose personality is redolent of the camp and the hills and not at all oi the council chamber of state nor ot ‘lllt' drawing roem. Outside his own I]:::rlirulur cirele there are not many fighting head of the present revolu- Pascual Orozco, the Fighting Head of Mexican Revolution amount was allowed has been re- Wiile ported to have done much to wean him away from the Madero interests. It is probable that a feeling that fie himself “made” Madero, and that hie has not been pleased with his own Pandiwork, is responsibie for his present revolutionary activity, He has evidently come to the concluzion that his own ideas on important sub- jeets are about as sound as anybody else’s and he has thus far kept him- scif in a relation to the revelution where his ideas will have to be con- sidered in the event of a sueccessful oitcome \ He has developed rapidly 3s a fac- tor in Mexican revolutionary politics and it is the very possibility that Lis ‘!l'\('l ak ypment is yet incomplete that particularly his personality (. E.D.Fenton’s Place, located on Lake Parker, one mile from Lake- land, has recently been purchased by C. A. Mann, of Kansas City, and is known as the Parker Lake Golf Place, and sub- divided into lots of 100x200 feet, can always find some- thing sparkhng, deli- sious, refreshing and satis- fying here, The many varie- ties of our soft drinks ena- bles you to get just what you want— Something That Goes Right to the Spot There are many ways and many ingredients for making soda water and other summer drinks, but we use orly the best methods and the besi zoods. QUICK DELIVERY Red Cross Pharmacy PHONE 89 Why Not Smoke the BEST A. H. T. BLUNTS ol For Sale at All Stands S.L. A, CLONTS DEALER IN Real [state CITY AND COUNTRY PROPERTY— SOME FINE BARGAINS. uffice in Clonts’ Building. Youthful Juror Summoned. The most youthful juror ever sume moned in an Irish court is a little six- vear-old lad who, the other morning ttended the recorder's court in Bel- ‘ast, with his mother, for the purpose Jf answering his name, and asking to be excused from serving in such an onerous capacity. ———— e Use for Grasshoppers. | A concern in Buenos Ayres, Aml-' tina, is about to install machinery to be used in a factory for producing fer- “llising materials. It is proposed to utilize grasshoppers and thelr em.l thus converting a destroyer of the N crop into fertilizing material—Sciea-' tific American. ] . tm ol who know even how old he is. IUis a moral cortainty that he can “hog- tie” a steer quickly and artstically, (hat he can throw a diamond hitch lon a pack animal and that when he speaks he is in the habit or receiving respectful attention, For a Mexican he is a large man, A life in thedeserts and mountains of the north has tanned him with a parchment finish and has queathed him the loose figure that looks a good deal better on horseback than on the ground. His hair and mustache are black and the latter droops from un- restrained habit. IHis photographs show him slightly stooped and look- ing straight at the camera as if more interested in it than in the results of the snap-shots. What he thinks, what he intends te do become apparent chiefly in his actions. Not that he has the reputa- tion of being morose or silent, for his men scem to think him an ideal lead- er; but he has never courted public- ity in any of his campaigns been fighting in the Madero revolu- tion last ycar several months before the reporters foundout what his name ind began putting him in the news, The capture of Juarcz carly in May, 1911, less than a year ago, brought him into public view, Presi- dent Madero has been busy and con- spicuous with his organization of a provisional government whose rami- fications extended all the way from Washington to the interior of his own country; but Orozco had been doing most of the fighting. Twice since then Orozeo has been in Mexico City., He came first to personally escort President Madero to the palace on the day of his in- auguration in September. He came again quictly last February on per- scnal business with the government In a period of a little over a year Pascual Orozeo has removed himself from his rather humble station of be- ing (e trusty man given the responsibility of conveying a pack-train of valuable ore through the mountains to Chihuahua city, to was a position where he expests to make or unmake presidents, body knows there are no heraldi- symbols of Spanish nobility any- where up the Orozeo family tree, Men who use to know him in Chihuahua when, with a revolver and ritle, he took charge of his own pack train and delivered ore through a country where his main business was to watch out for and keep off bandits in Chihuahua, say that in those days he had difficulty in reading anything that was not set in clear type. But | he prospered in a material way and |+ | was far from being poor when he teok up the revolutionary cause, His | claim against the Madero govern- ment for personal services and ex- pense incurred by himself and father, who is now a colonel under his com- mand, amounted to $50,000 in gold The assertion that only half that WOODROW WILSO ambition, Woodrow Wilson wrote ganic majorities which make very awkward indeed. He had | who conld be | So far as any- | e —— . [New York Globe.) Rack In 1894, long before he became infected with personal political Monthly, that his enemies do not apparently care to quote. For example, there is one on Waiter Bagelot in which the following passage occurs: Morcover, there is a decper lack in Bagchot. He has no sympathy with the voiceless body of the people, with the “mass of unknown men.” government to be a work which is possible only to the in- structed few. He would have the masses served, and serv- ed with devotion, but he would not like to see them at- tempt to serve themselves. le has not the stout fiber and the unquestioning faith in the right and capacity of inor- of the heroic boldness necessary for faith in wholesale political aptitude and capacity. " He takes democracy in detail in his thought, and to take it in detail makes it look Woodrow Wilson is accused of being a “Federalist.” It is charged that his present sympathy with democratic ideas is a pretense. He is accused of the meanness of changing his convictions in the hope of getting office. 1t is doubtful whether American political history, full as it is of reck- loss slander, furnishes an instance of character assassination mere con- tomptible than that of which Weedrew Wilsen has been the victim. He has made his revolu- tion so substantial an affair that it i~ hard to believe that he, himself, fwill be obliterated, even though tho interesting fronting on Boul- . evard, Golf Grounds and Park. € Lots in this plat arc fro $250.00 up. First come; first served. This addition is ro stricted to $1,500.00 houses. This is located on Parker [ak, one of the largest lakes in this vicinity. € For further infor mation, inquire of Room 1, Raymond [LLIS & BARHITE :-; Feomgllbo e e SRS T T T movement may be suppressed. e i a young man with an undoubted tability for leadership, and with the (taste of authority he has enjoyed it is not likely that he will permit him- self to be retired to private life even jli' he should be persnaded to vnm»? ‘promise with the government upon | [ political differences. | Members of the opposition party | i‘in the Mexican congress have started i i:n movement to abolish the office of vice-president, their main object be- |ing to abolish Pino Suarez, whom [they do not like. This opposition | includes some of the people who | !made Madero president and it is like- | [l ttint tho effort to change the con- ‘MQDMODWOOWOOOOCOC@C&('OWWWQ stitution will § I you are looking for something good strife, | But there is another aspect of the case, canse Already Words Enough. Every war brings evisy many new words an| = considerable WE HAVE IT 1710 Swift denlored 1h f We want you to be a stead customer at our FOUNTAIN ¢ | W. FiskeJohus Try some of our POPULAR DRINKS and SUNDAES. We have !R[AI rS]A - - absolute confidence that it will please you beyond your expectations |the president died or was suddenly “vri-:nvfi the office have not yet been! heard from and may prove a very jeffective source of support to the Ma- ! dero government in saving Pino Suarez to the administration, As in some other countries the student element of Mexico is allotted rwore or less importance of a political character, Their views are publish- ed in the newspapers as, sometimes, are the reports of their riots and other manifestations, They are a select body of young men from whose number will be picked the congress- imen and cabinet officers of a later | day. The office was created at the time the New York financial inter- ests furnished money for the nation- | alization of the Mexican railwiys, there not having been previously a | The idea was to 4 give an immediate succession at the “u-;ul of the government in the eveng vice-presidency, Loars Negotiated Quick Service Puoxg 25 9 S0000000000000000000000000 (Buys and Sells Real Estate. 0r T R w0 e RSN 5? ¢ Grove Property a Specidliy. Come and See Our Spring Style | PATRICIAN SHOES ROOM 7. RAYMONDO BUILDI {Upholstering and Mattress' Maki OLD MATTRESSES mad FURNITURE REPAiRE! | CUSHIONS of all kin! lorder. { CARPETS ad RUGS (lllid: also matting, ot ’ MIRRORS resilverad o E! In regards to work: * Mr. W. P. Pillins of 1.\ #, knew me for about 14 For Lacie: Se: miess Pump .....Patent and Velvet Y Clough Shoe Company W. M. CLOUGH, *'The Shoe Man" They are now busy supporting the | “vonstitutional government,” wel- ceoming home Tformer President de la | Barra and in many other ways, no all being entirely consistent; but Lamong other things they have formed [ military corps for home guard duty. A cadet from Chapultepec is in com- -—e TSR — - .].md(;_ I Iil.‘ ];Iup 11 P : or p ) ted, No tand. On one of the principal resi- Never. But Beware of the Sheriff. o i L e avenue, 2 Arthar A Boug dence streets every evening they m be seen in the midst of military [evolutions and setting up drills, Running is one of the disagreeable features of this performance, *For- ward!” shouts the officer and the corps breaks into a run to the end ot the block with a quick “right about™ and back. They arrive at the arting point breathless and, as one ! Nothing succeeds like a failure, ju- No man ever cexsed to learn be diciously managed.—Exchange cause he knew it all. ,man, reach for their coatsleeves, ex- act handkerchiefs and, alternately jnlv\minu their feet, carefully brush [the dust from theimmaculate “shine” which, above all else, must be main- | tained inviolate, Then they resume | mixed discussions of bull-rings and polities, business. Anything you buy in our store is protected by a guarantee that it is the best article of its kind possible to make. And our prices are no more than you pay for inferior goods. It will pay you to call an dsee us vefore making any hardware pur- ) chases for farm or home. The Jackson & Wilson; Company LAKELAND, FLA, N'S OLD BELIEFS, essays, published in the Atlantic He conceives the work of the democrat. He has none

Other pages from this issue: