Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, June 13, 1912, Page 4

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ARl Y o R T - > = P S e . B PAGE FOUR. The Evening Telegram The toliowing questions and au- Published every afterncon from thej ... ... prepared by the Indiana Kentucky Building, Lakeland, FIa&|siuie board of health, and have been widely copied; the school board of Entered in the postoffice at Lake-| .., 1. '\ (', caused them to be 1snd, Florida, as mail mattes of the pasted in the spelling books used in second clase. the graded schools of the city: 1. Where is the fly born? In ma- M. F. HETHERINGTON, EDITOR. |, .rc and filth. e ————————— 2. Where does the fly live? In ev- A. J. HOLWORTHY ery kind of filth. Business and Circulation Mabager.| ; s anything too filthy for the - iy 10 eat? No. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: 4. (a) Where does be go when he ODe year ....-........-$5.00 |leaves the surface closet and the ma- Six months . vevesess 2.50 |[nure pile and the spittoon? Into the Three months 1.86 | kitchen and dining room. Delivered anywhere within the (b) What does he do there? He limits of the City of Lakeland | wulks on the bread, fruit and veget- for 10 ‘cents a week, ables. He wipes his feet on the but- ter and bathes in the milk. ¥rom the same office is issued 4. Does the fly visit the patient THE LAKELAND NEWS sick with typhoid fever, consumption s weekly newspaper giving & Te-|aud cholera infantum? He does— sume of local matters, crop condi-|and he may call on you next. tons, county affairs, etc. Sent 6. Is the fly dangerous? He i suywhere for $1.00 per year. @man's worst pest, and more danger- —_— | ouS than wild beasts or rattlesnakes The ban hus been placed by the v th“ dlSHASC. does the fly carry? mayor of Marianna upon the sgle of | He carries typhoid fever, consump- cider in hat city, analyses taken [tion and summer complaint. ”f‘“"’ proving that there was morc alcohol On 'f‘-‘ wings and llfll':)_‘ l"fl: What in the cider than the State law per- i1s his f'orr1:11 numl."'! Typhoid fly. mits to be sold in drinks in dry coun-| b Pid he ever Kill any one? He ‘ Glled more American soldiers dur ties. Other places may have to fol- .‘“ led el ] s € . ing the Spanis American war than ow the example set by the West ™ . . i SR .| did the bullets of the Spaniards, cwn, us o he average cidey (ke very long to resemble a W Where are the greatest numbe of cases of typhoid fever, consump- {tion and summer complaint? Whers Lere are the most flies, to. Where ure the Where there i Why proty tair specimen of booze, ties? the most filth, i Kill the fly? St Petershurg again comes to the mo=1 in favor of o $200.- which will be de-t 11 front by voting oo hond should we REATTEN | voted 1 tullation of sewer ause he may Kill us, ; and Ly rick streets, St 20 When shail we Kt 1 e (rin < mude o wonderinl growti | Kil him before Le nes kil during the pasy vear, and with jts] me when e s aomg n - | proposed improvements, itowill con={uve pile Kill hime o while b .nj tinue to go forward The epg ctaie, [ | 0. How ? Keep the stihie cand i wan uad dont o allow any i i toduy's Telegram appeads o com- o sy on the premises longe thian | munication from a Telegram reader Love woek, Have all other filth and relative toa library in Lakeland, We agree heartily with the writer in the statement that a librarian should be iu;r!n accumulating on your premives burned at remored or least once a weeok, employed to Keep the reading room | 14 17 your neighbor fail- to com- open at sl hours, and, as the writer | ply with these rules and allows fies . We teel sure that such a |wl'-‘m brecd on his premises to visit you, | s secured at a nominal faorcen your doors and window sumi. The people of Lakeland |'(||I“|‘I\.-r|l them out, as worthy cause | than reading room, where the boys and givls of the cown, as well as the older people and tour-| ists also, might go and read, and the Telegram hopes the matter will be This men taken up and pushed to o snecess- [ Young men in business and in polh-! il conclusion, o ocould he and | stoin no wmore THE DAY OF PRO- 1 GRESSIVE YOUNG MEN | to provide a is a day of younz Priess 1 s particnlarly acday ot pro- | | [ cressive young men. It is the young | wan of progressive ideas of business| and it is the young man who is politicaily pro- gressive who wins out in poiiti A great deal of comment is being made by the State papers abont Hon, Park Trammell's wife's part in Pis campaign, It possible that who wins out in busines-, is just fact AYi 3 An indication of this latter Mr. .|I.Illllllv II's wife is not the only be fonnd in the results of the candidate’'s wife who gave assistance recent campaign in Florida. The and thought to her hushand’s cam- paign. No man can accomplish as much as when aided by a loyal wife Miami Herald, The Star knows several candidate young man nearly everywhere, and won out, At the head of the Park | Pramme 1, who will be the next gov- ernor of Mr. Trammel] is He is now serving the list is around here who had eflicacious hely of the to toss Mps : Flovida and itois Fravomell o bouguets as w0 tribute kind, not out of 35 Nears old fow ], JU U ovear of actour-year term as oat to candidat torney seneral. Previous to that e wives in general. - Ocala Star erved as president of the State Sen- - ate, and before that as mayor of his| CUT THE WEEDS. HDIG oWl Fhomas P West will suceeed Mr % Trammell as attorney seneral M Weowant o respectiully suggest ] oo o 27 years old and he has al- that the weeds be cat, The city has | e ady had six years experience in | WOUHA.ON 118 Birecls AUG S0Mmp PrIvALY the legishature, having served in both parties have weeds in theirv yards ov hatiacs Emmett Wilson will after March 4, represent the Third district of Florida in Congress, is 2% years old. Mr. Wilson is now s ney for the first judicial circuit and he has served five years as assistant ! United States district attorney for the W have an t‘\rl‘lh‘lll'“"“d CTOP| porthern district of Florida, serving this year. Let's harvest it, not nest|, .. of that time as acting district week or tomorrow, n ight now. I \ttorney on vacant lots owned by them There are a hundred ons why the weeds should not be allowed to stand. The reasons have been stated a hundred times before, o it is not necessary to state them again now. Just cut the weeds, who ¢ attor- Cut those weeds John T G, Crawford who has just been elected national committeeman Four BOLD, BAD MAN. | rrom Florida is 26 years old where else, The best part of it is that every one of the young men named in the foregoing belongs to what is known as the Progressive Democracy. The old men are fine old fellows, but youth on the one hand and pro- gressive politics on the other are crowding them out. Seme day other young men, with still more advapced principles, will crowd out these pres- ent young men, then grown old, and 80 the governments of the world will keep pace with the progress of life in every other avenue of human hoje and endeavor. New times demand new measuresand new men. The world advances and in time out- grows the laws that in our fathers' day were best. And doubtless after us some purer scheme will be shaped out by wiser men than we. Made wiser by the steady growth of Truth.—Pensacola Journal. A LIBRARIAN NEEDED AS MUCH AS A LIBRARY. Dear Mr. Editor—Pleaze let me rush into print in the hope that some club will take up the idea | have at heart. Every *whipstitch” (as our grindmothers used to say) somebody suggests the establishmentofalibrary for Lakeland, It is a crying need, but there is already a circulating library, the Episcopal guild has a church li- brary, and a public one also of 500 volumes, and it hus splendid books v, for ine Be- lave Guizot's Frin No no liby oi reference stance, s it used? \Why? i, | d and the ciise there s seen muny libraries st ! ted hecans, books lost, destroyed, wa there never is a librarvian, Itois k. ‘ | Dandreary’s tamons viddie: = When is | o door not o door?” This town Lecds | i Hbrary tor its boys and girvls, Ther are some 700 school ehildren which | of them love zood litoratre ! Think | back and recall the titles of the hooks our children read. Why could not thiz town afford a reading room, library of Gif nothing «lse otfersy do- with a nated volumes, and a librarian, There mu=t bein this big place clderly peo- ple or young folks who wonld be will- for o =mall amount as hook= I we had| o reding room always open to thel! girl, who is ing to serve the custodian of where a for with™ could drop in and read a mag- azine or g book, it seems as l|l(bl|‘.‘|l! piablic bhoy or ot “looking some one to o gol itowonld solve the great question tor! What boys and girls? many shall we do with our| I have an impression the Baptist | chureh has a libravy and there may | But a library onght to by Usually the W, ¢ T U A start the library o be others free to all, or Y. M ¢ THE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAKELAND, FLA., JUNE 13, 1912 ___—-—_——__————-————l-————__—__-—— 'A'FLY CA' SM the same thing exists nearly every- every man for every or shine, morning, candle light. Regu whole octave of fair "Mayor—s8. onts, ('Phone 210-Red.) Clerk and Tax Cotlector, H. L | Swatts. Treasurer and 1 Ao ! Armistead. Assessor, reading room. While in a little town last summer, while waiting for a train, a pleasant little room filled the nicest thing 1 saw. It was nea particularly if his politics was right, | the station and how delighttul it \\..»i fo Rt in that quiet room and read 11 train time 1 have written this with the Kiy Peditor's permission just to have remember that a library is worthl ‘ without a librarian and in the hop i thayt some club will s ao ing room. Carnezie saining fay [V donating Gif the o) ow es enonghy dibravies Soni {of the various ciubs here conld wair the bed rok [ fame and touch the life of our boys a PRO BONO PURLICO \merien wirls | ALFALFA IN FLORIDA. Last week Judge Holvomb to our offic alfalfa which was grown on his lot | the east part of the city. A plot ot ground about ten by forty experiment. The grass cam wel and developed a good sturnd from which two cuttings have dready been made in the last few wooks Pyears agzo he was a deleg to the Bunnellon has within her borders | Democratic national o “bad man, convention at of the Dunnellon Ndvocate hig has the | that body following 1o =ay: Over in the third al eirenit Some of our moest worthy ad- Stafford Caldwell has just n nomi vanced Christian ladies votat St yney " s 2 much concerned over my futur vears old pects and thay 1 1 1 a ~ b oS . P s 1 ¢ od { 1y pro s < \ Stokes \ 1o \ ons place v w State 8§ \ who o i of Escanabiy \lake a 1 s < old ) r ks spi M. Loftin. who served on tra d cohesion comes in and | Teme the Legislature f im- hen h reaches ¥¢ your spirit a county and whe has t been is drawn to the earth and is nominated the third time for county re unti] freed from this mat- | solicitor, is 33 years old ter-—sin—throngh desire to see God| By going over the State carefully, and be one with him. this list of young men could be in- “E. L. RAY, the Bad Man.” creased very greatly in Florida and and in a recent issue | Penver and thy youngest member of | | The { were very fine, and samples exhibited in o Iy confident | perfect {well in this climat d fhas a large plot of grou nted o this forg on his § 18 Arcadia News A M \us ] N \ ks uj dous iy & & ] % & w? And s mu red th hy B g | ried « :x\'.ums_ A s €0 W= | § 10 guess at it wrote it Nasl writing —Ex. I'm going to « poetry and learn to set 1y with books and magazines was quite | e a large sample bunch of | Messrs. Pillans, Eaton, Pugh. | | feet was | ter had| Collector of Light and Water, C D. Clough, Marshal, W, H. Tillis, Night Watchman, F. L. Franklin, Municipal Judge, Gen. J. A. Cox. City Attorney, Epps Tucker, Jr Keeper of Park, Neil McLeod. Members of Council—Morris G Munn, Chairman; W. P. Pillans Vice-Chairman; Mesars, 0 M Eaton, G. E. Southard, R. "l Sci per, W, 11, Puzh, P. B, Hay com- The following standing mittees for the year were appointed Finance and Fire, Messrs, Eaton, Pillans, Haynes, Light and Water, Messrs, Haynes Pillans and Southard Streets, Messrs. Scipper, South- ard. Haynes, Ordinance, Messre, Southard, Pugt and Scipper Sanitary, Scipper. Public Improvement and Cemetery, Messrs, Pugh, Eatou Governor—A. W, Gilchrist, Talla- hassee. | Secretary of State—H, Clay Craw- prepared and the seed sown as an!gord, Tallahassee. i Comptroller—W. V. Knott, Talla- | hassee. Treasurer--J. . Luning, Talla-| hassee. Attorney ral—Park M. Tram- mell, Talla Comn f Agriculture—W. A. McRae > { tion—Wm S. L. A. CLONTS DEALER IN ofice in Clonts’ Building. CITY AND COUNTRY PROPERTY— SOME FINE BARGAINS. (. A store that is prepared to fit slim, fat, or short men. (. A store that runs the entire gamut of correct things and the (. A call will convince you of the truthfullness; of thesabove facts, and will be appreciated; by the owner. Building ° ° al e LA ‘“ONE PRICE TO EVERYBODY" RS _OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. This Store the Mecca of Well Dressed Men (. A store that looks beyond the edge of the money drawer. (@ A store that’s never tempted 1o buy things “a little off” in quality or style because the profit would be larger, @ A store that’s high in qualitv anq style, carrying only high grade mer. chandise-~the best that money can buy and selling it at popular prices. oc~»asion, rain noon or after lar men, stout, prices. GOING AWAY ———————— Before vou leave on that vacation trip Let US SUPPLY Your Traveling Needs Special prices prevail in every depart- ment. Let me show you my linc < ) THE HUB JOS. LeVAY Money is Always Welcome 1t your good We dont want 1t unless s, CHILES

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