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| o -~ DR W s i ST N codlisii Fiog 5 o FAGE FOUR The Evening Ielegram Published every afternoon from the Kentucky Buildiag, Lakeland, Fla. Entered in the postoffice at Lake- iand, Florida, as mail mattes of the second class. M. F. HETHERINGTON, EDITOR. A. J. HOLWORTHY Business and Circulation Manager. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ODe year ....-.o.oe00.$5.00 S5ix months ....... 5 . 2.50 fbree monthé ... ..... 1.26 Delivered anywhere within the :imits of the City of Lakeland for 10 cents a week, rrom the samwe office 18 issued THE LAKELAND NEWS o weekly pewspaper glving a Te- sume of local matters, crop condi- , county affairs, etc. Sent auywhere for $1.00 per year. discussing erecting an auditorinm in Tempa. and one con- tributor to the debate sugests that Tampa will not need an auditorium for ten years yet Meanwhile actual work on lLakeland's handsome audi- torium is progressing rapidly. Lake- Jund is not as big as Tampa, but its) mighty active, They're Milten! Frank Walpole reads him into ob- Frank says, he conscientious and Poor cadmly but fwvion, crooly, because as t his honest, irde friends.” A great many people will look at the matter from a dif- terent viewpoint, however, and will be rather inclined o reward Mr, Mil- ton for the fairness he inced in o giving wishes of tually up v torg spirit of the wiay o pressed che people, They may i retuse anks personal crie Milton. take azainst My, Fhe average voter we % but it’s a tact docs not know how 1o mark hi especially viake the statement, lot in casting his vote, Are nany nanes on it i the case the prin Complivate the ballot =till instructing him to mark a tirst and sccond choice, and he will be still further at sea, Ye!, this like the only way in which the ob- noxious second primary can be elim- inated. Perbaps the people can be educated up to the intricacies of the primary after awhile, wien there always in ary cloctions, tarther by s looks The newspaper boys have been try- ing to marry off young Edwin Rus- sell, who recently succeeded his late lamented tather as editor of the Rrooksville Argus. Several of them have published paragraphs to the ef- fect that he is soon to marry a beau- tiful Gainesville girl, Now comes Ed- win, with painful blushes, and de- clares the repory, like that of Mark Twain's death, is greatly exaggerat- ed: that his brother may be contem- plating such a step, but that as far is concerned all the girls still sin the and now that you've been trot- in the Hmelisht, they 1 get Edwin, ere the ides of next De- | ax e e running - This is leap ted out You, cember When things do not suit he generally drops oftice and irfernal outra to denounce it as such through your paper. Burn ‘em up!™ If the editor a citizen into the printing “IUs an It is your duty says to the editor: ex- | seriously 1o el tof THE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAKELAND, FLA., JUNE 14, 1912, per sex, she nevertheless interspersed =0 much of the pure and beautiful, the true and the good, and the lofty and inspiring, into her work, that no woman writer of the age was freer from expressed animosities than she. —Miami Herald. SOME VACATION SUGGESTIONS. (By Ruth Cameron.) The season of vacation and travel is close at haand. In a week or two the annual hunt for pleasure will be fairly under way. May I, then, offer a few heterogenecus suggestions tc the vacationer und the traveler? First, don't draw advance drafts on your vacation account—in other words don't get exceptiomally tire:d because you are about to have a rest. There is nothing more dangerous '0 the success of any trip than that. Don't expect too much. Then all your surprises will be pleasant ones. If you want to look as well when you arrive at the way station or at your journey's end, as when you start out, wear very plain things. A tailored suit and a silk shirtwaist is the ideal traveiing rig for a woman. It may be persona] preference, but it seems to me that a woman ‘Whoe is traveling never looks quite <o well as in a dark blue suit with a blue silk blouse Be thinking more of the people you are going to meet than of the person they are to meet, and you will be very likely to please e ready to make friends- for after all, these new are as viaduable a part of our vacation treas- personalties though, to g crawl over handy. There's a baby tin the sugar bowl or any eatables that are in this house who muach Every time I leave the spittoon and crawl into Annoys me very and whije ruche or turnover collar, . | | Fusband and children. that baby's mouth it cries and spits me ont, Of a few tuberculosis germs in its mouth, but it doesn’t seem like that would hurt the baby, It seems to me like people don't Enow what is good to eat, At least the people in this house don't. Why, they throw away 21l the good things. course 1 leave acts upon this advice and the per- sons who are “burned up” resent the burning, does the citizen stand back of the editor? Not on your life, He has business around the corner. Peo- ple are mightily tickled to have a newspaper “jump on” somebody, but when the newspaper has a little item that rubs their fur the wrong way, they're up and coming. Think of these things the next time you want a newspaper to “burn ‘em up,”’ 20 and burn ‘em up vourself, and TRIBUTE TO MAR- GARET E. SANGSTER Margaret | ris dead. A woman who won me, fortune and! a people’s love by the power of her pen, hg ed into the great be yond, i behind her or impress w hw 1 \ nitor . n voted r osea, t won . has - [ ally of the youn most unusual and ¢ un ' anding, and all over o in- i ay *opure young b dmirers and read and the future ers of America’s citizens, on ose lives her cheerfulness and op- m have left an indelible imprint ver tolerant of the slightest de- from mor criticism of the teaten paths of honor or virtue for A Viation The woman across the way is los- ing all her ies They're all coming OVer {0 our honse She won't give them anything to cat S|he covers up her garbage pail. has tigh: screens on all her doo d s ter- 1or to flies in genera are such happy, hoarty while the children in this house are always cross. They never get any afternocon nap The thes won't let them. children youngsters, There's a very greae deal ot illness in this house. Two of the bovs have walaria and the father is never well I heard the mother say to the woman across the way, 1 really do not | sumed by the said J. J. Blli= is oty Enow what to do for all this sickness. | F. A l‘-;fihilo retiring fro: Supt. of Public Instruction—Wm it drives me distracted” What do| Dissolution to take g M. Holloway. Tallahassee. 0“8 IS Alw Il‘om yvou .think that woman said? Why, | this 6th day of June. 1 Railroad Commissioners—R. Hul- I “Swat the fly,” of cour At which : 5. 4. El S ;‘“{ 11; Roy "1 Ilr;“:: \"‘“ “\ Y 1 ' The b haw l €2 s TRt litch, RRoyal unn - G Yon :-,“) l;,\l‘;l-z‘:‘...i” R L Fo A DARIITE. fo patary Al commun “ your good will comes with it. We don't want it 3 y o s sh to Tallah: 3 satish < T AKELAND'S ACTIV. At \? :’l fox; Lg? n. e oughly satisfed with what you buy here ITY RLMARKABLE M“" Fses ! He ed a S I. A CI_ o house in N oot and ONTS L | WHEN WE SELL YOU Ll Monday and 1 ot with the county boa atior We acknowleds» u g call Tuesday morning from Mr Cox and from him we learn | land is almost on a bocm ! buildings and residences woing up than ever before in her his- tory. Mr. Cox says the activizy in real estate in that section is remark- able for the summet season.—Bar:ow Record. public BEAUTIFUL THINGS. ((y Walt Mason.) i The Gtcautiful things are ¢he things we do; they are not the things | wo wear, as we shall find when the] journey’s through, and the roll call’s! read up there. We'ro illustrating the | latest styles, with raiment that beats the band; but the beautiful things are the kindly smiles that go with the helping hand. We burden our- selves with gleaming gems, tha: neighbors may stop and stare; but the beautiful things are the diadems of stars that the righteous wear : There are beautiful things in the | poor man’'s cot, though empty the| hearth and cold, if love and service | are in each thought that husband and wife may hold. There are beau- | tiful things in the lowest slum where | wandering outcasts grope, when down to its depths they see you com. with message of help and hope. The beautiful things that we mortals buy | ard flash in the crowded street will all be junk when we come to die, | and march to the judgment seat When everything's weighed on that ! fateful day, the lightest thing will be | gold. There are beautiful 'hinl.’r: within reach today. but they are no: | bonght or -old. WOMAN'S FUTURE. i The woman of the fiture as 1 s b will devote herself to the ]nn‘% time which there cuniary rewad, Tulfill all Jjob tor is no pe- She will marrey and | home dutivs toward | She will hav. perhaps three or four hours of leis- her ure as anything we see or bring| gre daily. She will devote this tim Lome but not too ready. Especially | yeither 1o private work nor privat t be not too ready with your confi- ' plogsures, but do the interests of the i dences, Remember that the gsuard | community she will work for th. | Frowth of summer friendship is apti;chool board and the health depart- to wither as rapidly as it grew ment. She wil] study the milk sap P ply oo her town and investigate ih THE HOUSE FLY AS A witer supply. The civie organiz CARRIER OF DISEASE ' tions tor the care of ueglocied, - - %H‘mh' and delinguent ohildeen wi Iam a thy, o onot very old ‘”l"{h:nv:r.lll_v tall into her hands Ju Degust deawrning where to tind “"“‘:m she first taught housckeeping hest things 1o et My favorite the man of the cave she will now | g places are in the spittoon in the sit=1 teach it to the man of the world, On timg room and the uncovered '.::n'!mu-‘lm' the inhern characteristics ol wom canoon the back poreh. OF course | ey, o characteristic not posses.od b some Hies would be bothered il'l("ll‘\'“..“v is the ability to make life iy Laving to go ont of doors to get to! able and therefore happy. This abi! that can. But it doesn’t worry me. iy may be applied just as sucees I the house where Dlive there aren't fyyily to the lite of the community } any soreens, so bocan dly from the o thy lite of the individual Wi 1 parly can to the =pittoon in per-|jiom Hard in “The Women of To-| Teet safety. | often stop on the way, | morrow." NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO SELL MINOR'S LAND. Notice is hereby given that on the 17th day of June, A, D. 1912, 1 will apply to Honorable W. 8. Preston, county judge in and for Polk county, State of Florida, at his office in Bar- tow, in said county, for an order an- thorizing me as guardian of Mary Hurst, Jessie L. Hurst, Beulah May Hurst, Annie H. Hurst and Donuld , Hurst, the minor heirs of the estate of Susan M. Hurst, to sell at private Fhey put them in the garbage pail by the following property bl ity Attorney, Epps Tucker, Jr siden vortiiae » Al at1i 4 e s Keeper of Park, Neil McLeod. Fam endeavoring to show them What {0 1o snid estate, to-wit: Twelve y 2 i s " e R s : Members of Council—-Morris G i good things are, however, for 1 get | 4o off of the east side of the sont! e Oul G R O S i) ; \hnw Clairman; W. P. Pillans, ny teet all sticky in the garbage cany | wect 194 of the northeast 1-4 of - ¢ 2 : = » > w Vice-Chairman; Messrs, 0. M and then go and wipe them on the gy 190 and beginning & he at. | > bread, About a hundred of my com-| 5 Jinks east from s f “‘_ “‘ G ]‘; ‘\"“”‘m“:' :" | rave lng ee S panions are doing the same thing, Uoomer of the sonthwest | | il"l : :.l'.ll “%h' 2 l,‘ ! A i * | e llowing standing com- | really believe that the people are be-| the northeast 1-1 of | . . inning o lke it. for they neved | gy 19, and running thetoe no .“m ;“I Sk ”hl .‘l‘" “;’N 1”"]“' i Speclal pl'lCCS prevall 1n every dfi‘[\l”' ; " d Y inance and Fire, Messrs, Eaton i trouble us any more. We Wipe 0ur| 10 chains, east 10 chains, south 10| % : feet on the bread in peace and quiet. | pains and west 10 chains, to t .~§p|1 l”“ “;‘!":\., t Messrs, H | ment- Let me ShOW )'Ou my hnC 1 heard the woman aaross the way place of beginning, containing L o B s Bl M 3 : é 5 X ; j Pillans and Southard. | say that she believed flies had some- | aopos: all in township 21 =0 a Q g ( ) gt ¢ bo® 5 g Streets, Messrs. Scipper, Southe thing to do with the man in this| pange 26 east. said lands beloneing 4. H 3. 2 it aynes. house having consumption, 1 won- |ty the estate of the said Susan e s der it he got it from the bread Ot nance; slestrs, SOuthard, \PUgs Hurst, deceased, to be best interests of said minor heirs This 17th day of May, 1912, JOHN 1. HURST, Guardian NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION. sold for the M Notice is hereby given firm of Ellis & Barhite dealers, composed of 1. ) F A Barhite mutual con That the tinue the business of said deals and cor his property That and owing by said that the al estate is hereby (dis ontstanding te be due *lm rehea be a wolf Hood® for a cine his tale was cut sho Black Sheep Not Wanted, Australian wool ve l\ocn officially warned by growers h h \bzmv ber of commerce not ¢ ed from black or gray 0 tike the greatest care in ting rams from flocks as free as possible from black hairs; to slaughter all black and gra; lambs. g Swatts. Armistead. D. Clough, {and Scipper. Scipper. hassee. ford, Tallahassee. Comptroller—W. V. Knott, Talla- hassee. Treasurer—J. . Luning, Talla-| hassee. A ‘Real tstate.t;m_ e AT S O e SR, 3 v This Store the Mecca of ell Dressed Men @ A store that looks beyond the edge of the money drawer. N : @ A store that's never tempted ¢ buy things “a little off” in qualit, il or style because the profit would be larcer, (. A store that’s high in qualitv 1nq style, carrying only high grade mer. chandise--the best that money can hyy and selling it at popular prices. @ A store that is prepared to fit every man for every oc~asion, rain or shine, morning, noon or after candle light. Regular men, stout, slim, fat, or short men. (@ A store that runs the entire gamut of correct things and the whole octave of fair prices. (. A call will convince you of the truthfullness’of the:above facts, and will be appreciated by the owner. E. F. Bailey ‘““ONE PRICE TO EVERYBODY" MR e ) et vy Deen- Sryant Building OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. Mayor—S. L. A Clonts. ! ('Phonz 310-Red ) | Clerk and Tax Cotlector, H. L Treasurer and Assessor, A. . GOING AWAY Before vou leave on that vacation trip Collector of Light and Water, C Marshal, W. H. Tillis. Night Watchman, F. L. Franklin. Municipal Judge, Gen. J. A. Cox. THE HUB JOS. LeVAY Sanitary, Messrs., Pugh, Eatou Public Improvement and Cemetery, essrs. Pillans, Eaton, Pugh. Governor—A. W. Gilchrist, Talla. Secretary of State—H. Clay Craw- | Attorney-General—Park M. Tr1m-| ell, Tallahassee. l Commissioner of Agriculture—W | McRae, } Talla DEALER IN ¥ the sale o- ve do not consider thecomplete satisfaction suceess. In shor t unless vou are satisfied we = ofice in Clonts’ Building, Sacih -