Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE FOUR The Evening Telegram Published every aternoon from the Kentucky Build\ag, Lakeland, Fla Entered in the postofiice at fand, Florids, as mall matter of second class. > SHOULD EMULATE MIAMI'S EXAMPLE. The Dade County Medical Associa- tion will endeavor to have the City Lake- | Council pass an ordinance to estab- the|lish a board of health, for the good of the community and the welfare of the citizens, and with that end in view will present to the Council some suggestions for the establishment of : A J. HOLWORTHY the board of health. In discussing, last night, the plans Susiness and Circulation MARASSE |, "\, oy yyicians, Dr. E. K. Jaudon e | said that there are many sources of SUBSCRIPTION RATES: disease which are now unwatched, One year vevecesseesee 8600 |and which may some day be the cause M. F. HOTHERINGTON, EDITOR. fiz mODtES ....co--oees 380 |of an epidemic of some dread disease. o o Three mODthE ...-ceect 136 | He thinks that, as the wise genersl e Delivered snywhere within the |y times of peace should prepare for i Iimits of the City of war, so in time of health, the city should prepare for sickness. - Dr. Jaudon believes that the de- From the same office 18 issued | ooriment of heslth and sanitation THE LAKELAND NEWS should be under one head, and have % i o weckly newspaper EIVIDE & T€|gome one in authority with power to i sume of local matters, crop condi-] gy, everyone obey the health laws tions, county affairs, otc. Sent|., the State and city.—Miami Her- snywhere for $1.00 per year. ald. for 10 cents & week, Lakeland will use a million bricks FLORIDA’S LEADING REPUBLIC- AN TALKS OF PARTY SITUATION. in paving. The number has the mag- ic ring of progresn.-—Orllndo Repor- er-Star. Mr. W. R. 0'Neal, Republican nom- inee for governor, was asked recently to dope out a victory for Taft. Lean- dency to hurry things up. That $16 | ing back in his swivel chair, and a day hotel rate makes the average smiling wanly, but smiling, he de- delegate feel like moving. Jivered himself of this logic: IV I It Harry Floyd could talk like he can write, he could be the boy ora- tor that would take the Baltimore his convention off its feet. the sinews of war. B The salvation of the Democ! i \ party is in the hands of a few 3 ! at Baltimore. It is a question as to pal i whether these men will allow party : and principles to outweigh greed for | Was asked. their own personal aggrandizement. i Florida's delegation voted 11 to 1 in favor of Parker, Frank Mayes sticking gallantly to the progressives adopted The vote of the delegation, however, does net correctly reflect the senti- ment of the people of Florida. i The suffragettes are budding in Florida. They're a different class of Pt women from the window-breakin i bunch over Lunnon way, and are al- together so sensible and lovely tnat we'd favor giving them the ballot or anything else they might like to play with. o Delegates at Chicago show a ten- rty.” Democratic party will — DRINKING WATER AT MEALS. —— simplest little facts of lite. e ———— The Telegram has not agitated the one's meals. cstablishment of & local board of oo e pressing need of it, or because there is at present or in prospect anything alarming as regards the community’s health. We have the most healthful very impressive reasons for it. precaution looking to the preserva- tion of this desirable condition. Man in Atlanta found a $500 dia- mond in a grapefruit he was eating for breakfast. Of course, it was a Florida grapefruit, and, in the ab- sence of evidence to the contrary, we are reasonably certain it wasa Lake- land grapefruit. Every grapefruit days. and his conclusion is that it, though it may not be located in important function of reported. It contains the essence of good health—the most desirable gem f of all. stirring up all sorts of tumults. the latest information is not to Mrs. Grover Cleveland has brought her children back from Europe.|water at your meals. Just where they have been attending|hat you want and forget about it school for the purpose of learning the | pxen, continental languages, and will com- plete their education in this coun- try. This is commendable and pa- triotic on the part of Mrs. Cleveland; at the same time there is certainly no sacrifice of advantages. Many American children, including the dis- tinguished father of the young Cleve- lands, have managed to make a pret- ty fair mark without ever going to th Europe at all. if a kid gets all the | training and polish the institutions of th on this side of the pond can give, he kerd cortainly ought to be well equipped be led to the slaughter house 1t is contended by however, that in the learning in Burope there is a thor- TAMPA COWS INFECTED ing Tampa with milk the cattle e present administration. Over cse have been killed. From some, higher v Tribune. in the newspaper is doing for vou? | vitizens Where, as too often there is your ad doing its work sil- Such men ha ently, but surely, and if you have 1aken the pains to make it attractive, | work will be all the more success- | This is repeated over and over | interests, and speak well of its arain, and is no doubt what inspired some writer to czll newspaper adver- teing a silent drummer.—Esch place its ful eS8 men. ficurish.—Exch. «The people who have hitherto financed Mr. Roosevelt's canvasses, knowing there is not a possibility of election, will not come up with It is too short a time for the successful organization ratic |of a new party, 8o that the ordinary men | politician will not forsake the old “How about the Democrats?” he “It s clearly evident,” said Mr. 0'Neal, “that the progressive element of the Democratic party will not en- dorse the platform which will be by the Baltimore convention as shown by the selection of Judge Farker as temporary chairman. The progressives of the west and middle west will oppose whomsoever the nominate, which will leave all of the conser- ] vative element suporting Mr. Taft.” There are always two sides to the There is this matter of drinking water at It has been regarded as a miserable habit! The school text- health because there was immediate|, . o00n it that way and they give used to be taught—drink at your meals if you feel like it; drink all cou want; it is good for you; helps city In the United States, and the :“muo; - e““(,a‘:ne s opm“:e way to keep it so is to take every doctrine—never drink at your meals, and not for an hour afterward, and that idea has prevailed and is a part of our wise school knowledge these Now comes Prof. Hawk of the Uni- versity of lllinois, who has been studying the subject for seven years, water drinking at meals helps digestion. principally by utilizing the protein grown in this vicinity has a gem Inf¢,q which is regarded as the most digestion exactly the tangible shape of the find | qryey the fluids help digest the fats and throttle the bacteria that range along the alimentary canal and keep anybody scare you about drinking drink WITH TUBERCULOSIS. Weeding from dairy herds supply- fected with tuberculosis is proving one of the greatest undertakings of ws have been condemned and many alone there are thirty-five to many herds have been decimated by \stigutions of the loss of a dozen or more.— Tampa ¢ no local patriot- | pure diamond wort and are traitors to their home | Stand up for your own town point out its advantages, praise i Do this, and ninety times out of a hundred the town will THE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAK ELAND, FLA., JUNE 26, 1912, OF VOTERS IN UNITED STATES. (From Harper's Weekly.) A pew census report about the male voters of the country Says that there are 26,999,151 men in the United States who are old enough to vote. Of these, 3,611,278 are for- eign-born whites not paturalized, so that the voting strength of the coun- try is & little more than. 23,000,000. Less than fitteen million votes were cast in the last presidential election. Nearly 49 per cent of our present pale inhabitants of voting age are na tive whites of native parentage. Over nale inhabitants of voting age are na- tive whites of foreign-born whites naturalized. Nine million males of voting age ive in cities of more than 21,000 in- babitants. Of these, only 22 per cent are native-born of native parentage, but 45 per cent are native-born of foreign or mixed parentage. Here in New York there are nearly a million and a half males of voting age, of whom not much more than one-third are native-born, and only 229,362 native-born of mative parentage. WONDERFUL RESOURCES, NUMBER Florida's wonderful resources are becoming more widely kmown and capital continues to flow into the State to be invested in her fertile lands. The State is now baving its greatest prosperity and this pros- perity will continue, her rich lands will be taken over and developed by new money and new settlers. There are plenty of trucking lands in the State worth a thousand dollars an acre; there are already such lands in cultivation paying the operators big per cents on such acre values. No other State affords such opportuni- ties to the man of moderate means.— DeLand Record. CELERY A CURE FOR RHEUMATISM. Celery is the latest cure for rheu- matism. It is asserted that the dis- ease is impossible if the vegetable be freely eaten. The fact that it is so generally put on the table raw pre- vents its therapeutic powers from bing known. The celery should be cut fnto bits, boiled in water until hot and the water drank by the patient. Put new milk, with a little flour and nutmeg into a saucepan Wwith the boiled celery, serve warm with pleces of toast, eat it with potatoes and the painful ailment wil] soon yield. Such is the declaration of a physi- cian who has again and again tried the experiment with uniform success. —Manatee Record. BEEHIVES AND INCUBATORS. (Harper's Weekly.) Although not many people own an incubator, it is rare for a person liv- ing in the country not to have facil- ities for the swarming of bees and the making of honey. A successful agriculturalist has shown by recent experiments that a bee hive may serve the purpose of an incubator. He made this discovery by observing that the proper temperature of incu- bators is exactly equal to that which the queen bee maintains in the in- terior of the hive. Why not give the bees a chance to do two things at once—hatch eggs and also pursue their ordinary vocation? In order to do this he arranged a species of quadrangular cage, or box, over the bottom of which he deposited a cloth This he put over the hive in the man- ner of a roof arranged just over the chamber where the bees were busiest. Then he put two dozen eggs over the cloth, protecting them from contac: with the air by flannel wrapping, and let matters take their course. After the normal incubator time for hatch- ing had elapsed he found he had hatched eighteen chickens from twen- ty-four eggs. The cxperiment was re- peated with equal success, and then he arranged each bee hive with a cage. He finds that, on the aver- age, he succeeds better with a hun- dred eggs hatched in this manner than with the connivance of a dozen hens. FELL FORTY FEET—LIVES, Falling forty feet to a cement side- walk and sustaining no more serious injuries than a broken arm and leg was the feat accomplished by David Lowe, a negro workman employed in the construction of the German- Lutheran church building on West Chase street yesterday morning. At the time of the accident the negro was being hoisted up to the top of the building when the rope broke and he foll to the pavement below, which was, as stated, forty feet. The other workmen and people who witnessed the fall fully expected to see him killed outright when the rope broke and it is considered almost a miracle that he was not.—Pensacola Journal. INFORMATION. The Tribune suggests changing the name of the Coliseum to “Rough House.” More people would know how to pronounce the latter name.— Lakeland Telegram. The word Coliseum, brother Tel., is an abuse of an Indian sentence, with abbreviations and divisions cut out and should be given as follows: A New Yorker had occasion to tele- phone from one suburb to another while visiting in a western city. Up- It the operator, “It's in the city limits.” but why he should have used a lower case I8 too much for us, but, what's the use? The thing is all over any- way.——Fort Myers Press. ———— General Horace Porter was giving an illustration of every day diplo- macy after having compared it with world diplomacy. **We will say, for instance,” he observed, “‘that our ev- cryday wiseacre is introduced to a man from lowa. He talks corn with While president of the Lake Shore railroad, the late John Newell was so opposed to granting passes that he frequently refused to issue them to railway officials, and when he did he limited such transportation to cer- tain trains. On one occasion he pre- pared a parcel of exchange passes and sent them out as usual. Across the end of the one he forwarded to Pres- ident Caldwell was printed in red So|him. He meets a man from Boston o ink t Y i let |and talks beans. Should he happen o h:‘: “:‘:ds'.. \\n\\'l.tzoml mf 1_"“"‘"‘ to be thrown in the combined com- fiig ‘ii'_r ‘," ;:: “(,ml :.m; (ms.p«-rm- pany of a man from liwa and of al oo, ‘n. r‘: ‘lh '\..“,::NI,I o HEL) * o NIC » man from Boston he would discuss| e = sl 9 President Newell arrived. Across the succotash. ‘ R e face, in the bold handwriting of President Caldwell were the words A NEW INDUSTRY. in red ink, “Not good on passenger Hilliard is introducing something IS, rew in the line of farm products. l The Hilliard Enterprise savs: These —_— — in- | two most important products of the Hilliard district are receiving a great deal of attention at this time. There is planned now by ong of the grow- ers a seed field to comprise about MY LINE INCLUDES 150 one | fifty acres to be devoted to the cul- News a tivation of onions for seed. A\ part p pers and | ¢f this field will be devoted to the M . growing of onion sets. Femandina agaz"les News-Record. | w8y - . i t Stationery | WHO GREW THIS GRAPEFRUIT? | cnghness characterizing the courses of instruction which does not pre- Some communities prosper and P C vail to the same extent in American | others decline, and asa rule the pros- An Atlanta, Ga.. spe savs: | OSt ards colleges and universities perity of the one and the decay of When J. Clarence * \u- i - the other is due not so much to nat- 2 a grapefruit . . | | Did yon ever think what your ad |ural causes as to the make-up of the|in the din i +! C‘gars hap- | hotel e found a i When you close your store in o the ‘|n\|\<. people run down the place in|ray inside C a and s e evening and go home to your family | which they live, fight every effory to At first he thousht S ‘;'.“w ORI s 1‘\‘10!‘\' pur- : 13 >, not thinki abent your | improve it, grumble at its merch stone that had got into 1t spoon vl . % 5 all. then it is that the|and say and do a lot of other foc some mistake. Upon e :r,x;]'dmsmg cisewhere. Your \_.":;'A paper is being pored over in hun- and wrong things about their ow :\} s mouth, however., he saw that it il dreds of homes—the homes from |town, while they glorify other towns|was a glistening jow: \ jeweler patronagc llpprcci;\h\d‘ 4 which vour trade is drawn And | there is bound to be less of prosper- | whom he consulted pr n i Mr. Sanchen is connected v Irish-American bar |ie on a vacation Both of them ord breakfast. He three spoonfuls when he f gem. Miss Ruby Daniel News Stand Lobby of Edisonia Theater. busi- -nine Loin roast Prime rib roast .... Plain roast ...... Roll roast start. $15 PACKING HOUSE MARKE Phone 279 R. P. BROOKS Fla. Ave & Main DAILY MENU Stew Stew, choice Beef Cutts—Kansas City. Loin steak T bone steak 7 bone steak Round steak T O R M Extras Lolnroast .......co000nvnes 33 Georgia pea! ‘l?zrk Cuts—Florida. Pound. | Fox River butter RIS C PN LN A CeR N e 20¢| prookfield butter BRORBL oo oicanasisnasascysss 18¢ HEM .ooscisnvnnsssnssnseny 20¢ Pimentto cheese BANRIORE o oy ia v e 15¢ | Small cream chees: L S E P R e 12c | Dixie cheese .. GIVE US A TRIAL. M | P R L s Always In The Lead That's What We Aim To Be Always in the lead, when it comes to fresh, pure, full-strength drugs toi- let articles, sundries, and all drug store merchan- dise. You'll be satisfied when you deal at our store for our eervice I8 pleasing in every way. <« Wherever You Go On Your Vacation You will want to go clothed correctly, See us before you Correctness and {low cost commend these clothes. $20 E. F. BAILEY - d $25 . " king what the charge was, he “C'ol me soo um,” but some galoot, who [ ©* #* (4 , ; : : c\'l?ienlly thought he w::‘ emart— | Va8 told 50 cents. “Fifty cents! For [Bef‘ Cutsl-(—flm(h. h‘?} Perk Cuts, Kanans City. I3 ety ersganighy b oo R L LR ol ottt NIRRT Ll : it would look better to remove the York you can call hell up for 50| bo:z u:(e:“.. """"" “‘ Roast ......... 3 W ok o L 7 bone Bteak ............00n 2¢ “me” and substitute the letter “i" galh Possibly,” cooly answered BORLMME . 12 | Mutton Cuts. Doz .| Chops, plain .. .| Chops, French .. AJLAR s vishies v .| Shoulder .| Stew Ham, boiled, Ham, smoked, sliced "| Bacon, sliced . | Pacon, whele strip Al pork sausage . | Beef and pork sausis — ELlMlNATE DISTANCE Phone Your Order Al it [ patience, your telephon® 62, and you ® nected with Order Depart ever your part gire may be, ¥¢ care of it with 88 ':'” tory goods azd vt tory service. e wrne v KENLEY & HENLEY THE WHITE DRUG; STORE L T it e |