Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, May 16, 1912, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT. THE EVENING TELEGRAM L\K milch cows. FISH! FISH! 218 North . Kentucky avenye phone 262 Red. Yaun's Fisp y,, ket. - FOR S LE- - Tv. " ‘my | PhODO 6. 5-3-t¢. P | roax warrsn $700 or $800 { !ror two years. security is improved l l'arm mile and half from & i rake ce. Address Loan, L. | vele; 5-15-2p. In: . ¥ el FC . W. Greene’s 5. -tf. 2-g 1ann crless shotgun, ' tk— 'arn ure ‘125 i mg_n-powu I1'p one 89. ifie 1w, $25 grade. 1= bttt . C. Gar N. ' :nnessee Ave., ved +roms for ©ar ark. * St. (Tv ) story yellow Srs. FC. . e} OUSE . mes. 5-ti FOLBA E— che;' vacluced, ¢ 185 oa 'ltis;lb u:::" l:,: incluced, § . oak st:fc*. t-ostl SH: .2 Fr..akli1 St. fall §4; 1 safe, $3; }.l.(a ama. ; +00 r-nge, 1s new, $23; 6 din- kela 0 L dry ‘ag c- airs, ost $1.50; 1 tapesty nts erquirt,’ ° ; 51 ore (e 2vend L] h :'7'1' S RENNE 11100 ot Sale —He se, ‘#agon ana har- :r'“ 'u:;‘ \;,_a:' :; 1068, App.7 to ' F. Brush, urzvlv;lt; o S Hox +26. -18- g ool 2 Bos' Sc oes and Oxfords are oy il dc-f he b st a: 3hest wearing shoes hat can be bought, o fortem r—F ¢ Thi rp b ild- rers. E. F. Bailey, 1d agent. el nd : ce ea da a now occuvied . tey ws ( eD. 1. 8!an. t @ bargein: Smith ter; new. Can be 5-1 -tf.. FO.SA ce, upstairs. ‘rem 1 t ns 3-190.k. by 7 S| O, all 4154 For quick service try the ¢ K restaurant and 5 cent lunch roun; ters, 107 North Florida aveny. coffee at all hours. ten acres ind ‘osto am flice L S E— 18¢, 0.7 grat ; (@ both gooc as N Hot 4-10.¢ FOR RENT—One furnishe; Toom Gentleman preferred.. Furth.r par. ticulars apply to 310 West |, street. 3 S. L. A, CLONTS DEALER IN Real [state uilee in Clonts’ Building, CITY AND COUNTRY PROPERTY-. SOME FINE BARGAINS, W. Fiske Johnson REAL ESTATE Loars Negotiated na v suit, springs hl4 £ suits, springs hén in Tam ‘afe, tl 2 on ¢ worl . U eda L twe in the e e - ro mi +delive «d fro 'R SAL outfit ring. we., € han's € R REN m Flo n‘on N uts ¢ d to ney yw akel: E—4 pew: *nist enue ik s i E— rth 800, ‘avel d ro 5-1: 6p. een t N¢ ;‘e‘: ?d' FO: SA fce six room house 5-1.tf,| @ (1efo block, orange and | rape ruit . 2 blocks from Lake- bug y he se.| ynq \igh .choo . Price $1,800, Ad- Ste. n L an-| ress >wne. P. 1. 5G6, city. 3-29-tf. S14t%| For FIRE, ACCIDENT, PLATE-|Buys and Sells Real Estate. Orug ooms to GLASS, and STEAM BOILER IN-| "o o ut chil-|SURANCE, see D. H. SLOAN, room 9, ¢ GT0ve Property & Specialty. urni ged inle with Saturday, May 18th. S e b S 8 e s ipid development of melon |bas brought about the organization growing and trucking in the Gaines-Jor a new railroad icing station pro- ville district of Florida, with the in-|ject at High Springs to succeed the cidental heavy increase in refriger-| present there, which has ator traflic over the meet the require- branch of the Atlantic Coast Line[ments of the Fruit Growers' Express and the Florida Southern railroads, sinee the first of March. business west coast [Leen unable to SHEATS’ REPLY 0 Holloway’s Campaign Committee An advertisement in The State press of the “Holloway Campaign Committee” calls my attention to the fact that whoever that may be Rev. J. Edgar Wilson, in a communication in his church paper, suggests that Methodists vote for Methodist candidates when they are as fit for the position as their opponents, 1 fail to see why this “Holloway Campaign Committee should praise or blame me for Mr. Wilson's opinion. 1 knew nothing of this opinion un- til I saw it in their advertisement How do they know Mr. Wilson meant to advise Methodists to vote for me? | am by no means the only Methodist running for a State or County office. olonhe (NP If he was thinking of the office of State Superintendent of Public In- struction at all, he may have had in mind my honoraole competitor, A. M. €. Russell, a Methodist minister, an educator of repute, a man known throughout the State as worthy of both of his high callings. But since my friend and worthy competitor has been called to a high- er field than any the voters ofl Florida could have placed him in, if Mr. Wilson's advice to the Methodists is to vote for me, 1 think it is good Mv!n-v. and 1 am not so selfish as to wish the Methodists to monopolize the privilege. 1 think the Baptists, Presbyterians, the Episcopalians, the Roman Catholics, the Jews, the Lutherans, the Christians, the members of other religious bodies that are striving, according to their consciences, to make the world better, and, in fact, every good man in the State should take this advice.- 1 will not try to compete with Mr. Holloway for the votes of the other kind of men Somehow, 1 feel the good class of men will vote for me and rebuke the kind of campaign Mr. Holloway waged eight years ago, as well as his present attempt, in his desperation, to drag the sacred garments of the church into the scum of politics. But 1 make no more claim to a vote because 1 am a Methodist than because 1 am a Mason, a Knight of Pythias, a Woodman of the World, a member of the Fraternal Union of America, or of any other fraternities. 1 have not and do not now appea] to any church or to any order to wh 1do Scat h 1 belong to vote for me on account of such relation alone, but poal to the Democrats of Florida to investigate my record and quali- The office to i=pire has no relation to any church or any order, but it is for the office 1 seek, and to vote upon that alone mportant to all the people of Florida, and, if elected. 1 will act v and for the best interests of all othing more to say on this church question Woman Called On to Save Flags. Mrs. Amelia Fowler has been called on to help in preserving the 150 flags captured in battle by the United States navy. These flags are kept at the naval academy, and were falling to pleces, when Mrs. Fowler was In- vited to Annapolis to make an investi- gation of their condition, and suggest the best means of preserving them. Mrs. Fowler estimates that it will cost in the neighborhood of $30,000 to pre- serve the flags, She would back the flags with fine Trish linen, sewing them by expert needlewomen, with fine silk thread. The material will cost §1.500, and the work will require the services of 100 women 200 days. Mrs, Fowler fs an expert authority on the nuaking and preservation of flags \ Electricity fer Gotthard Railway. Work is to begin shortly on the electrification of the St. Gotthard railway and the first plece of line to be electrified will be that between Erstfeld and Alrolo. The cost of elec. trification of the Gotthard line is put at £2,700,000, from which, however, the sum of roughly £220,000 must be deducted for new rolling stock neces- sitated not because of electrification but by Increase of trafic. The three new power stations which must be bullt, one In Amsteg, one in Go schenen and one, the largest, on the Ritom lake, near Plotta, will cost £854,800; the necessary electric In- stallations in the machinery houses, etc., another £305200, while a con- siderable sum is allowed for unfore seen contingencies.—Exporters Re- view. Bank Note Was Object Lesson. The most uncoaventional design for a bank note was undoubtedly George Crulkshank's “Bank Note Not to Be Imitated,” published In 1818, It was Ilndpired by the sight of sev. eral women dangling from the gal lows outside Newgate for uttering forged £1 notes. The deslgn includ- ed a lavish arrangement of fetters and suspended figures, and there wa such a demand for coples that Crui shank had to sit up all night to etch a duplicate plate. He had the satig. faction also of knowing that no man Or woman was ever after hanged for the offense, for his plate Io act that put a stop to the punish by death for forgery —— . To the Teacher. A teacher who can arouse a feeling ! for one single good action, for one | single good poem, accomplishes more | "ban he who fills our memory with TOWS on rows ot Ichssified with n Iwhat 1s the res naturai t Jects, °and 1o of all thess | cept what we know as wel | them, that the human figure l nently and peculiarly 1s n image and likeress ot Gog [ ! SOOSOOVOLVUIVOOCOLOVOOHOTLHOOOLO e SOV DISOS i ruatt.f 1Sc th Flor- | Raymondo “uild'ag. Residence phone JUGOC FOTH FOLR FCROORCICRIMHIHO I S0 CROFAD CHROM FORHOROROBOROBOBOHOBIROBORORCHS FHR0L TAH AV 6-6.|165 Green 4-6-tt. ROOM 7. RAYMONDO BUILDING Opportunity before announced we are going to close \) A out our entire line of Men’s Suits. Our reason: we haven’t room to carry the line and do our other lines justice. Schloss Bros. famous stits and all will go into this sale. All - brand new and up-to-date. Look at these prices and then look at the suits. (M $25.00 Suitswill close out at 22.50 Suits will close out at 20.00 Suits will close out at L 4 $19.50 16.50 15.00 > 16.00 Suits will close out at 12.50 Suits will close out at 12.00 750 > @ Now is your grand opportunity. These rices are below cost and a big Stock to select from. Come ag once and see them. We must have the room atonce. Sale on these sait starts SATURDAY, MAY 18TH, and continues until they are clo whether you buy or not. sed out. Your calls appreciated Yours for business,

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