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g FAGE FOUR The Evening Telegram Published every afternoon from the Kentucky Buiid.ag, Lakeland, Fla. Entered in the postoffice at Lake- tand, Florida, as mail matter of the second «lass. THE PURE FOOD BABY. Let al] the young mothers join Don’t Worry clubs. Let the lines of anxiety in their alabaster brows be smoothed awazy. For their guidance there is now a Precedent, a Pattern, an Example, a Just-What-to-Do baby |—an infant combination of light- };ETHERINGTON, EDITOR. | licuse and experiment station to warn and to instruct, It is Dr. Wiley's baby—Dr. Harvey [w. Wiley, the terror of food-sophis- ticators, wooden-nutmeg turners and drug-adulterators. True, Dr. Wiley M. F A. J. HOLWORTHY Business and Circulation Manager. sUBSC RlPTlO\ RATES: One year . s... $5.00 fli\t-tl a bachelor for more than sixty Six x:mmn;” vei.v... 2,50 [Yeurs and has not until now had a Three monll;i A 1Y bebyl, but never mind. He'll show Delivered anywhere within the ‘em! Young \'\'ile,\', limits of the City of Lakeland [* 1-2 pounds, will be b_lough! up 1.n for 10 cents a week, the strictest tenets of the dietetic faith. The lips that touch benzoate From the same office i8 issued |of soda will never touch his, Em- THE LAKELAND NEWS belmed milk will have no chance to & weekly newspaper giving & re-|sip his vitality. His clothing will sume of local matters, crop condi-|rut constrict his agile limbs As for tious, county affairs, etc. Semt|[fresh air, he will live with the snow -nyw.herc for $1.00 per year. ’hil'ds and laugh in the rain with the ducks-——unless, of cour ohjects. | The Pure Food Buby is a fact of national importance. Daily bulletins ot his progress will not be too fre- aquent, Child-lore experts with pen- cils and note-books will hang upon his earliest utterance. Photography will record his development. Mother logicians, each incontrovertibly prov- ing that her own particular baby is the choicest flower of babyhood, will e, Mrs, Wiley they gave Frank Clark the anyway. Well, scare of his life, Cromwel] Gibbons has tranzferred his race for governor to Cuba. Poor Wilbur Wright has taken his last flight. May it prove a success- tul one, with a happy landing. When Uncle Sam's orces land over in Cuba, the people over there can “"‘““"”h-" \‘:“:’: ';"l\"‘“ perhaps— i e : xcept the Wiley Baby.” Jir troubles to the mairnes, |* ) ) il Master Wiley is welcome, In world too much absorbed with poli- The editors of the Tampa Tribube |y 4ng trade ana baseball and lhlngs and the Ocala Star are indulging in |, that, he reminds us of basic and a little polite sarcasm directed at}.e,ppayy essentia] things. We con- one another. gratulate him that he is not to he PRI rusped by carelessly placed pins or Some of those candidates whose {menaced by dirty milk-bottles, We announced |hiope he gets eg sured,” “there’s many asily through teothing Frequent and good accounts of him vill cheer the community. - New York World. glaring advertisements that their election are now realizing that a slip,” ete, was THE BEST METHOD. Showing that all voters know ex- actly what they're doing, the most active Wils an in the State was ;s o ) Bt nn.mn; o '(‘l man Most of the methods of “breaking decte ation: ommitteeman, A : 3 SIRLIEE G UL A ; " hens from setting are cruel, and vhile a bateh of Underwood dele- tive the innocent hens who are not te be blamed for their instinet, The Lindest way is the following: When Florida clections are over Tor af g, 'y to stop the inclina- few bt WO biB Y ion, place the hen in a nice, clean sational conventions 1o nterest us |y i grass and all the this month, and then we launch intod o cut fine she will eat. The meat the delirious joys of a presidential immediantely inereases the egg nour- campaign. Always something doing | johment, and while the hen is hav- in this good, old land of the frec and{jpg o peally good time she is fast home of the brave. preparing herself to commence laay- ing eggs. It will take but two or gates were also elected, is necess weeks, there are fresh Now maybe some of these Under-| three days before she forgets all wood newspapers will cheer up and|about setting, having other affairs quit chewing the rag about Wilson |to attend to, delegates plotting to steal the State. — . % RBlamed if it don’t seem that just to AXIOMS OF A RAIL- be on the Underwood side makes a wan feel bad and grouchy. A ROAD PRESIDENT. It's just as well to lay the blamg for the Titanic disaster on Capt. Smith as on some of the live ones He went down with his ship and is Leyond the reach of praise or blame (By 0. L. Dickeson.) The clock is the young man's worst enemy. Friends ave all right for the young fellow who is just petting his start, He might have sneaked into a lite- | hut he must not lean on them too boat and occupied ihe place of some | Livd. woman left behind to die but he Always look at the sunlight and didn't forget the shadows Memories of | AR what might have been do very little We wouldn't have started that | &ood, story of Park Trammell kissing his Be more than worthy of wife every time he left her, even it [You hold; you'll then he it were only to go down town, if we {the place higher up. had thought his example would have 15 been followed by a considerable number of other politicians, who might hope to equal his success by imitating him in this respect, We love women too much to encourage their being very by the average politician, the job worthy of HAD LARGEST VOTE. In looking over the published elec- tion returns, we see that Hon, W, V. Knott received the greatest nume her of votes of any candidate h'"l { Ay office in the State of Flovid: 5 ix well known, Mr. Knott resigned {th oflice of State treasurer, where | e had served most efficiently for { nine years, to aceept the oflice of | State compttroller, tendered him upon the death of the lamented Mr. "It is no longer possible to pick ‘,.“w"' o ”m"A Ll TR .lw. up A newspaper and plan one's n'ip.‘"r" the recent primary. At that time from the published schodules” ro- {there were three candidates declared marks Rditor for the oflice of comptroller, cach of Hetherington in the | : Lakeland Telogram. “There are onls | hom gracetully withdrew as soon 4 percolated through their re-| two or three newspapers in the State | e which publish any kind of schednles ‘i""“““l brains whom they had to And although the va- | run against responsible duties Kissed frequently ADVERTISING RAIL- ROAD SCHEDULES The Times-Union comments as follows on an editorial parngraph recently printed in this paper: as it Iu most instances one has not time to write to a distant city and secur | folders of various railroads; must be taken quickly.’ gram is disposed to think that rail roads should be compelled to adver tige their schedules, and vet it would vied and new otlice of his| the '”Pl i “‘.::Id the few weeks inter- The Tele- ‘ en his appointment and {the primaries kept Mr. Knott from fluiug but very little in the interest his campaign, the true worth of be an easy matter to have them \\‘.'” ::lL Y '”"l. ,‘”L it A X S i nott r . sfe . wad printed in the majority of the papers e l‘ was suficiently well an o preciates ' 4 t {n the State and appreciated throughou no Just place the publish- ' Sy a fine lad of [r¢stless spirits among us that it is! THE EVENING TELEGRAM LAK ELAND, FLA., MAY 30, 1912, NEEDS OF THE SOUTH (Continued from Page 1.) (Continued from Page 1.) press this fact upon our own people. This will be doubly effective, or if we can bring evervbody in the Southeast to a full realization of ity The committee has throughout the entire country and! in foreign lands. To a..-mnplis'h thigwhi;..\ AR most effectively we should .sln\'e m‘ fieiolt aro make our development at home s"‘xar» marked and so progressive as to v command attention and convince the for the loading high, to their best interest to stay and we should see to it that facts as to our progress and oppor- tunities are made known. Local or- ganizations and local newspapers can be most helpful in this. In many | cases effective personal work may be | possible, If a Southeastern farmer has an idea that he can improve his here, the | rational government in and terminals. It was also discovered that thou- sands of tons of Florida products— such as naval stores, phosphate, cot- £ ton, «tc., ure now being hauled condition by moving to the so-called throush. Tacksonvilla: (o anothar “corn belt” to grow corn, he should State for export because Jackson- have the knowledge impressed upon ville nhias not the terminals and fa- bim that the record corn crops of the world have not been grown in the *“‘corn belt,” but in the Soulh-i ecast and on land costing less per acre, and that corn grown in rhe’ Southeast has taken the prize of ! g, are good le tors quality in competition with the | <ome men have magnetic force, som:: most successful farmers of the *“corn | nien. wirhout knowing why or how, Lelt” and other parts of the coun- leaders. Oratory does not try. If he has an idea that hel rily mean cfficiency, and in should go to Texas to raise cattle o, many instances the individual who te Kansas to raise hogs, he should | Ly yuture is equipped for oratory know that there is no part of the | yelies upon the tension of the vocal United States in which beef and|chords thar set the air to vibrating. pork can be produced more cheaply i cilities for handling the freight. ORATORY L men and when the vibrations cease to than in the Southeast and that the!ivavel and the emotion aroused for experts of the United States Agricul-| the moment has subsided, the per- tural department who have studied the matter and conducted elaborate feeding experiments are of the opin- I do not mean by this to discour- ion that an increasing proportion (’f‘;lgv the orator, because if he the meat supply of the United States | that gift, and knowledge, character, tor home consumption and for ex-| devotion to a cause, and other qual- manent effect of the oratory is not to be tound. port must come from our section.” | jtics of leadership, he is full. Mr. Finley strongly urged the nh-m;‘.quimu-d to affect his bretnren, | velopment of the manufacturing pos-'whether in church or State, or sibilities of the South along lill"hl}lrrozul»-r than that, in the affairs of calenlated to supply the ultimate ! ()0 world. Ex-Speaker John G consumer of the South with goods | Cannon ot southern manufacture, e as- serted that an effort should be made | to attract to the South immigration of a character that would build upi the country, and develop its re- sources, and he recommended imme- ! diate action to take advantages of | the opportunities to be opened to! the South by the Panama canal, The speaker paid a tribute to the memory of Samuel Spencer, former president of the Southern Railway and in conclusion said: “Taking into account all of the advantages of the Southeast and the THE ASTOR FORTUNE. Could Eat It in Five Minutes. jout said or rather that didn’t figure out, Astor's fortune, dren of the United States, supremely ridiculous to the whole forces working for its development, | ;) and paper test on an editor's T do not believe that any section mathematical break, and find it can look forward to a brighter fue would bhe, instead of $1,700, some ture, G0 or T0, or N0 cents or 50, accord- o PG} ————— ing to how much under a hundred | millions the Astor But LIVE TO ACHIEVE. estate s Our suee in lite depends on what we stand for and advocate The | girestion xhould come to us all: Haye |50 08 Weal'h to be g perpetual cre- we done the best aror of product or other benefits. the bigger we could for the world, and have we done our tull The popnlation of the United duty to mankind? 1t is not the, YAtes could st down to a light amount of money we may accumulate | HCleon and cat the Astor fortune poverty. All their lives they have Hwn\ say a hundred million people strugled to make one more dollar m,'!' ide not 1o cat it all up just as add to what they already have, yot ; uuickly Tack alter it is all over and they pass from | Robinson. = this earth they have not been misesd | [the natural income of it, just and no particular act of theirs can he | VA reason always has to figure the use of normal capita] and productive agencies. Say the as you could mention they pointed to as one intended to make the world better. But the senerons, whole-souled man whose heart beges | 107 in sympathy for his fellow man i ever ready to do something for income available use s an average of 4 per cent Say, if you please, Soper cent Well, at that there would be an an- nual income of £5 000 000 And ]h]’ | would give eve ry one of the hundre || million people an it is ers and never misses an opportaniy to help some one, is the person w appreciated and really cour something We must not forger th things in this world do not cony go ! Y011 us while Wl | month [to buy a neome of 3 nickel car lor S ocents | 4 year a Yes, less than abour fare half months’ pro- postage stamp cession has moved by and he is lopy | 1488 than a mill of income a week behind. Things in this life ar, pot | #bout ten weeks | gether a copper penny once a cent five inc nmn we sit down and wait, g one who does so will find the two-cent meome to get m- worth much except what we work 1o, ourselves. God has placed us on carth endowed with certain tal not all the same, it is true, but we should make the best of what we {have. We never know how mu b we {can do for the world until we go oyt and make an honest effort this a | Just WOULDN'T LET | THIS NEGRO WORK Green Brown, a negro log sawyer employed by Messrs Long & Living- | stone at their mill on Long's lake, | - -— while at his work in the woods Tues- | WAS HE WORTH IT? [day morning. saw a large snake| IR | across the road a vards from | Exch few r of a newspaper on the same scale | ¢ St 10f. the ‘people to cast ! honesty as the merchant or farm-| 'V'¢ V0les for him than for any er, and the railroads and “v\\'Sp.’l[N‘lK‘ ; " m"‘? Hurrah for Will Knott would etchange Florida’s future sgovernor' T: transportation for s they did befors ded to single out that barter T " cot lahassee Democrat advertising spac ators ded Wisher and v ouncil of Pensacola has e pu 1o wrter when transacted by tahen the necessary action to prevent the editor and the railroad man. The | the location of saloons in the neigh- leg ture could easily remedy the lorhood of the new station to be N d the public would be buiit by the Lonisvilly and Noshvi The Mulberry Herald gives < his|where he Was sawing down a tree | Wit of interesting history i | He dropped his tools, went ang killeq So limited were th, ?lthe snake. then started back 1o ravel in Florida forty !work, and. to his great surprise tat the member of 1l found between him and his N from Monroe county 1 cub bear welghing twents pgorigiae s e The bear started o ge to Tall got the “big and killed the I raight tack to the mill. o a logs in that vicinity no more — Ocala Star EXTRA SESSION LEGISLATIRE ways and means to secure the nec- essary docks and terminals for that been at work for nine months and has gath- ¢red together much valuable data on ir advantages 1o thei thu- : '”.U f“l‘dmds" ‘.wd (,. h.(lruen l the subject. siastic exploitation, we shall have One of the first things that they them spreading the knowledge {learned was that the charges made and discharging of warehousing of the a part of the through for transportation, and if these or the service poor, the business seeks other ports; thus the terminal charges or service can make or ruin a port—this being the | reason for the policy adopted by the requiring the port city to control its own docks | § | Population of the United States The newspaper editor who figured but divided up among the men, women and chil- would {have given each nearly $1,700, looks world, for cverybody will put a pen- that isnt the only ervor that people Who think Tike that fall into. There's question of the economic ir this world that makes us success- | U0 O exXistence in five or ten min- fel, but it is how well the money |70 MTer that, what? Just noth- that has been accumulated has been | 115 Nevey nin ured. Some men are very rich in Take a zveat fortune in another property, yvet poor in the suceess of | WY and use it without imnwdiav.-‘ life; theirs have really been lives of | fostruction. say it's a hundred mil- resolve to use | the | | i FOR SALE City, Suburban and Country Properije, Homes, Groves, Farms at Real Valyes Flood & Hendrix, Owneg Vacation!llme &IIII Kodaks You Ca n't En]oy Your g 8 Vacation Without a Kodak You will always have PICTURES to remind you of those happy days. Baby pictures taken now will be a great pleasure ten years from now. CENTRAL PHARMACY Quick Service Phon 25 DOUBLY DAINTY is the sight of a pretty gir] buylng a box of our confectionery. The ginl and the candy match each other per- fectly in daintiness and sweetnem Such a scene may often be seen here for our candies appeal to those of dainty taste, It's surprising thy you have not yet tried them. i | This Is No Place For Me! These people have hought a Weslern -Lleclrve Fan Wherever there’s a Western Ele ctric fan flies are con- spicuous by their absence. In the dining room, kitchen, restaurant or store « Western Electric fan effectively rids you of these little pests. For the store=a ceiling fan outside the entrance is better than a screen door. haffords an unobstructed view of the interior and at the same time effectively keeps out the flies. | | An 8-inch desk fan on the table will give you a meal in comfort. This type costs only 's of a cent an hour to run. Every fan has a felt covered base. Can be used on the table, mantel, book case, without scratching. Come in to-day and let us show you the new fans we've just received. Florida Elgctnc & Machinery Company T, 1. Woons, MANAGER Always_ In The Lead A ELIMINATE " DISTANCE Phone Your Order Don’t try your temper o* Patience, simply go t° your telephone and call 62, and you will be con- nected with our Special Order Department. What- ever your particular de- tire may be, we'll take care of it with satisfac tory goods and satisfac- tory service. > R — HENLEY & HENLEY THE WHITE DRuG STORE - e That's What Wwe Aim To Be Always in the lead, when it comes to fresh, pure, | full-strength drugs, tol- PATNTPRTNT TN let articles, sundries, and 2 all drug store merchan- & = = £ - at our 8tore for our service is pleasing in every way. 2 * * & * b4 . 14 £ + * * + - » » when you deal ! dise. You'll be satisfied $ ¥ $ H B t < i Lttt th A A R L XX TS S N PerL e T ‘&