Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, July 19, 1912, Page 4

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tAGE FOUR The Evening Telegram | Published every safternoon from the Kentucky Buiiding, Lakeland, l-’la. tosy hnl«-wd in lhe poawflue at Lake-l ignd, Florida, as mail mattes of the: secoud class. | drdtin Sl et s 1 EVENING TELEGRAM, YLORIDA'S CONSUMPTION OF FOREIGN CANNED GOODS. it bus been said that, according to ion, Florida cousumes more canry :00ds than any other State in the Union. Perhaps this is not altegether true, but the truth re- rains that a vast quantity is con- sumed in the State, and more sadly iz it true that less than one-tenth of popud per cent of that consumption is ., M. F. HETHERINGTON, EDITOR. 4§37 A SRR A. J. HOLWORTHY T | Suginess and Circulation Manager. ;... o0, SUBS(.‘RIPTIO.\' RATES: W One year....»........<$5.00 SiXx mONthS +...ev..ovnss 2,50 : Three months 1.26 Delivered anywheie within the limits of the City of Lakeland for 10 cents a week, e i ome— From the same office is issued ' THE LAKELAND NEWS f a weekly newspaper giving & Te- sume of local matters, crop condi- uons, county affairs, etc. Senmt anywhere for $1.00 per year. e i, They're already naming babies for | Woodrow Wilson and Thomas R. i Marshall, which looks like these gentlemen have practically ‘“‘ar- r.ved.” The country at large is really not very much interested in the death of the New York gambler who was shot { down by five unknown men in front of a hotel in that city, presumatly because he was about to give testi- rrony that would convict the police dcpartment of partnership in the gembling businees, and of furnish- irg immunity to the gamblers for a share of the proceeds. But the weath- er is warm, there is a lull in the riatter of exciting news, and the news agencies must play up something. A fcul murder in New York, the meth- ods employed in which would make a Kentucky mountaineer blush, is not sufficiently unusual to rise to the dig- rity of news. And us for police graft- ing, that unfortunztely all too cemmon, in any city of any conge- quence to be considered worthy of much newspaper space. Of course, the publicity given the corruption in the police department may result in a housecleaning in New York, and couge some decree of reform even in is Qher citios. ture hooks. The homes were quaint one-story affairs with sloping roofs, Tampa is planning for an ‘.]m‘i““';}ml wooden window shmlursl and il TREuT oD o0 Honds 10 diit axe doors, and the people were quainter :‘l""l of $1,700.000. Cities used 1o than the houses. In Voendam the le afraid of such zigantic fisures; Lat the develcpment which it ma possible, and the advertising which sach enterprise gives, proves the in- | vestment a sane one. St Augustine Record. The modern grocery store today in any large city is largely a display of attractively labeled canned products. Little attention is paid by the mer- chant to keeping a stock of fresk vegetables and fruits, excepting at sporadic intervals, when a particular thing is “in season™ in the imme- diate locality. From a Florida standpoint this subject could be discused from two standpoints—the needlessness of this consumption when the fresh article can be had in any month in the year; or, the necessity for manufacturing the vast quantity of canned goods used, at home. Svery vegetzble and fruit found in cans in our stores grows with a lav- ish abundance in this State. The bar- ries and smaller fruits also grow lux- uriantly in our soils. It the canning of fruits and veg- etables is profitable in places distant from the source of supply, after the payment of carriage charges, and with the deduction from price tbat must be made to equalize the freight rate to meet competition in distant States, why should it not be far more profitable here?—Jacksonville Me- tropolis. ORLANDO LADY'S DESCRIPTION OF EUROPEAN TRAVELS. Mrs. Lula Haynes Lawrence, an Or- lando woman of literary attainments, is now touring Europe and among other things she has the following to say in a letter to the Orlando Re- rorter-Star: “We went a day's trip across the Zuider Zee and North Sea to the is- lands Markam and Voeendam which are exactly they were three Londred years aind here we saw the Holland of cards and pic- of post wore dark winged white aps, but the Markam women were gay in color. The body of their dress was red brocaded stuff. women (calico for everyday and silk on Sun- day), set ina light fitting black jack- et with white sleeves, the skirt is black, with a top part of plaid. They dresses and wide DRUID HILL'S NAME [ WAS WELL CHOSEN. | Visitors to Atlanta are struck with the fact that there is one part of that city which literally lives up to it name. There are no peachtrees on Peachtree street; there is no ivy to speak of on Ivy; there is no game in Hunter street and no spring of eter- na] youth on Ponce de Leon; but in Druid Hills there does exist, as it exists in few places elsewhere in G(»orgia, the one thing which ine\'it-l ably suggests itself in connection with that picturesque name. In that section the primeval forests are pre- served. It is like the poet says: “The murmuring pines stand like Druids of old.” When the men who built Druid Hills or rather developed it, notably Fcrrest and George Adair, decided on that unusual name they decided likewise that it should live up to the name. They have left it the most beautifully-wooded hill section in all Georgia. Riding along one of the newly-built, forest-paved roads, with the forest primeval on each side, it is hard to believe that beneath the ground in that sylvan scene are wa- ter mains and gas pipes and all the other appurtenances that . proclaim it a part of a modern city.—Columbus (Ga.) Index. ENVY. (By Ruth Cameron.) How much of the happiness in this world is built on the very ugly foun- dation of other people's envy! That is a very disturbing and dis- Leartening thought which comes to me whenever I have occasion to real- ize how largely the value we place an things is determined, not by their intrinsic beauty or utility, but rather by their rarity. Luxuries would not be luxuries if everyone could have them. “*Automo- biles are so common nowadays,” says one of the rich folks who was among the fist to own a car, “that there iz no fun in having one. Why, every plumber and two-penny clerk has his Il i o sell mine." | proportion of I think 1 shall large pleasure in ownin Laving something that other could not have machine, You see, hix | Cacar consisted in people Would the woman who declaves she leves her diamonds because of their fire and sparkle continue to love them il a gigantic diamond mine were dis- covered and diamonds became inex- l 1 LAKEL.AND, FLA., JULY 19, 1912, Midsummer Clearance Sale of Seasonable =—— =) MILLINERY = Come and Save Money. Prices Tell the Tale Our HATS. FANCY WORK. 100for ................ T8¢ Tan Linen Center Piece. $200 for ..............$1.38 (f LT 59c $3.00 for ....... ; ..$1.98 ooRdor: 35¢ $5.00 for ...... .$3.50 Library Table Covers. $8.00 for ----- ceeeee. .. 8498 100ifer 8¢ $1000 for .............$5.98 White Linen Huck Towels. Children's Hats Half Price. 78¢c for - ...l .50¢ Silk Dress Patterns. $125 for ... ... .. $100 $1.25 yard for Stamped Walsts $1.00 yard for . $100for .......... 8¢ Swiss Embroidery Dress Patterns. Piillow Tops. $2.25 yard for .......... $1.78 78c¢ for . 59¢ $1.75 yard for ... ...... $1.19 50c for . 35¢ $2.00 yard for .......... $1.59 Reductlon on all fanc‘ work, low cords, ete. See our table or 9¢ Hats. Reduction on all fancy neckwear. All 40c Ribbon for .29¢ MISS NUNA PATION pensive and correspondingly mon? Indeed wouldnt. She would forget all about that fire and sparkle which she declared was so com- she CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE. A young wife was in tears, a few | PACKING HOUSE MARKE If Pellagra is tie contagions or in-| oo 0o around the waist like | Surpassingly beautiful, and would mornings ago, when her mother pe 9 o are le e : ra 9 y oo vhioh o ' ‘hen as o 4 | o ‘l““u!h.fl O I,' d to be-f o around bustle, and wooden [ Wit some other gem which common e b 'fbkod bhchlibehy (he:phone 279 R. p. BROOKS Fla A\C &:Mfl?fl lieve it is, g r precaution should shoes. The eap I8 three fold, a tight people could not afford. The fact [matter she replied that her husband he exercised in allowing patients in-{ |0 i with an over cap of that it had less intrinsic bheautv|Was out late the night before and| DA'LY MENU “octed with it to expose themselves| ... .. =~ Wallia o an | Would probably mean nothing to her, [ had been to a drinking party, *“What | . : i e menehiT Db e e ier | and over all, another cap ! 5 Bing o hor Altek s bl Beef Cuts—Florida. Pound. | Pork Cuts, Kansas City. 2 ’ o the general public. In Lake Helen, o idered red that fits the head A plain girl longs with all of her|Mmakes you think he had been to n‘loin stenk 15¢]Cl 0 last Monday, a woman died from thig| o 1o lven babies in arms wear | MCATU 1o be pretty, and thinks shoe | drinking party?” asked the mothorw.‘,' bote st ai& g t\ o . discase, who on the Saturday before oo e he boys Wearing would be perectly happy if she might [ “He came home,” sobbed the young|. bunt- f,k' ],b," Bl W peddling - vegetables in the |, ,o .o iy like the girls till they | " E00d to look at. Suppose a fairy wiTe, “wearing a phonograph horn for l" : lt 's e: l:‘ Mutton Cuts. « ‘ neighborhood. Orlando Sentinel. are vight vears old. The only way | S0Umother should appear to her and [@ hat™" - Kansas City Star. ]“',‘"” but" S Al b : 12¢1 Cliops, plain S L 3 . ) # i Bayivi, | JOIN PORBE ¢ sosavsisvarnannns 15¢ A g ) Ratisat 4 ; 1o tell them apart being the embroid- | 0¥+ 1 will '"-""A you very pretty, Prime rib roast 12 Chops, Frenc i S \‘-x.u! |<-n|||{->t.s h:nu. come to .lhc cred cirele on the cap. which the and at the same time, fince von tell If It's Only a Small Thing. Piiih Foiat AR RELE S ];‘ Leg Motropolis ,”‘r information regarding boy has and the girl has not. The | Me beauty is such a desivable thine.| It 1s an excellent thing for every R ‘“ A e 0 _ IShoulder i the nature ol. lh.-. bubonic }Il:lfill1‘. Mo woR very wide trousers of vels Ll make every other plain girl in 1 :bod}' to learn to do something well, \_‘0‘ ‘rm:[ 15¢ [ Stew thoush one inquirer candidly stated | o e eown, a sloveless jacket | VOrld pretty, too.” Do you think the | S R SRR P AR $¢1 ttam, boiled thit as soonas people ave told that ol rod hnlllnnwl to the shin, :lll(l’ lizht plain girl would be { 7 “"1 R SHOIE U ben s e O Ham, sm it ostarts with v cold and s accom-| 0 : \ 1 shooes | Y00 think she'd be delighted at Beef Cutts—Kansas City. Pound. | ; ¢ y . Ty skull caps, with wooden sho L 4 Bacon, sl vied with carbuncles and boils, ev- which they leave outslde the door od tortune which had come to oin steak ...l 20 Pacon, w! 1 cevellow intewn who sneezes willf o e { er sisters through her? T bone steak ................ S0t l“. k saus ; b sure he's got it Miami Metrop=| wppe houses e inmaculately | he be disappointed at the god- | ¥ bone steak ............. ... 20¢ ] peet and por G olis. dean and very much ornamented, | Bother’s catholicity ot giving? 1 “m TR YT BRI :“"””l steak ..., 25 E : "lenve it t e b roast 5 xtr say colored plates and gayer pictures | V0V I 0 your knowledse o YN e et A bel S AL R i% NEW BAPTIST PAPER. Wlaced thickly upon the wall takine | Pa10Te to decide which North Kentucky Ave. and Oak St. 1oin roast ............. . . .. 250 Geors 4 - L | ihe place of wall paper. The brasses,| ! doubt it there s oany morive | Pork Cuts—Florida. Pound. | Fox River ! T'he Baptist ”!'.I'.l]fl has made its and nearly all their Kitehen fueni- | WRCD is belind more of our thous e T. I McINTOSH. PROPRIETOR. ‘hops ...... 20c],, R vppearance at Milton and is pub- ture is of this, shines like gold, and and words and wots than this desive | —_— {Roast ..... 18¢ Mgonreld oy lished by the Rev. 00T, M w A g : iggeaedh shlte B B | dimenttc \-~}~:: 'i< also :‘alil:l.'"|ul' Hnl \‘n':;:l‘l"”:n- and the floors and tables are scoured | ' m”)' Wine other people. to have | Modern improvements, hot and cold | ” o 1 g0¢ | Fimentto vho is also e Y * Santa Rosa ), o ciowy whiteness, They sleep in | S0mething which other peo want ¢ Shoulder 15¢ | Small crea . i g % i ) eness I sleep in an g W ing ate Wo ac Star and is moderator of the Santa e made in the wall i small clos- | 20 cannot have, in wtoto | ‘bl . ”iV RIS WRIEC 1 ey 1N(‘\\ .............. 12¢| Dixie chees Rosa Association. The Herald 18 at- | vin i hildoens st 1‘\. “. .“ .l.‘ Lohject of othier hoonl room. $£2 per Jday. Specia] rates """l ........ 2 ixie «! tractively gotten up and promises that of the father and mothor, gev- It stg ad a week. RS e GIVE US A TRIAL ‘o be both ureful and entertaining| . t Noan o e ol L | : a 5 — A T T . 1 . ‘ oepPIng closets anr 1 ks | and will no doubt soon bave a ; e fian Mie. 8 w F- k J h reem, tor t house has rarel ot kLI i cirenlation in Florida. The Times “ ¢ it et function. 1t spurs t tat i IS e 0 “SO" Union has received the second num I rooma The people are fv intel. | man in his stragzie for that Lor of the Herald and extends a wel- A P At R oF BObIe it L L] ; 1 come and conzratulations to | 1 po Y s, s Ene But its com ness is o ) :{‘ il i tish, and one spoke French as well, | TO my mind it is one of 1 k i = ! —DEALER IN ! Jacksonville Tinu i 3 1 3 bl tt would be a very marvelons and most ijgnoble pass R . s . ; [ WSO N o o i 0 Loars Negotiated Staple and Fa rics. fla). ‘ IS STILL RUNNING {ing anything but good American, bus Io ted to things ncy roce v / 1 ko ‘nl l.‘u;“ ‘m,»'“ [«:‘ ~‘. n)‘w plasue f e rule. rather than the exception, | for the actual happiness Bnyl and Sells Real Estate. 0ran| ral" and reedstu' S avani, the MHorida Fast Coast ~ {cut of them and give with them, rat 2 Over-the-Sea railway is discontinned Never stigmatize a man wit or than for their rarity or 1 et b siced p“ONE "9 C de 1l R Amrroe Never stigmatize a man with a vo- |17 Thal 4 ry Ru fm' the pr;.‘ 1\]‘- Ocala Banner, racious appetite ple® 1f you |l van excite with them N " t was hardly to e s od that | ‘o adva 8 3 3 taal0f My dearest idoals, . “ - the Democratic conv. would “]‘ L e M VREUON U WA ;I.fi.“ "n";‘ o 2 | ROOM 7. RAYMONDO BUILDING WITH WO00D'S MEAT MARKET . ould § yjoxus te im he's a toad. A toad| !t With me? Or perhaps you or hove such an effect upon editor | g 0 ) Ha | 3 of the game wil] eat sov-1 " e rare souls who 16 lbs. S 4 Banner . UBAL ... .iococommonsesoscsccnnsssssom o efame e & times more than the ! C“mrsr lA”N”RY 10 1bs. Bucket Snowdrift Lard. ... ? s & { f weight be co red. A i — 4 1bs. Bucket Snowdrift Lard e » Banner editor J { et Snow form the l!.um\r.u.x(m_. 1.\\1 rt s beet known (o devour Siftvfis SOLD SCHOOL BONDS s 1-2 bb! Flour in W, drift Lard .. ... sessans 3 tiie Over-Sea railroad is in exooll e et . 24 1 MBI WOOR <. ovcivenssncacanass condition and has not been dis o R i : ltas ocunty ) X 12 lb'siaik HIORE. . oncannsne shusaans A ' tinued by any means. . fsn tetiat md while the ¢ Wl“ open next Monday- v R Flour ..o L; It is true the report of t ebmhmisin 1 \ Siri '1 x‘ y . ¢ Cams £ -all Crenm L I8 Lic S t Don't make a| S 1000 house, which was ¢ { 3 Cans L > e as existin: in Havana, and 1 ' So % M H S ira alge Cream ‘v' plague as existin;, in la ad ‘ and aaN et bond iss has al-' @t 106 aSSaChuset!s; 3 Carc ~ smatce reason of the quarantine, there, bas ¢ to Jeave the Eable—and ) shed and o anied, 1 1““ B Cfi oy caused a falling off in passenger tiaf- |, p N " 1 1 v K i 0)' ofee..... b At * % B « the foo Palm Beach hoel honses 1 - . fic. That f r off has caused the | e o : 1Avenue9 near COl'nel' Of 11t “atlutter.......... RTT Sesssasies : e water and Targ - now temporary withd-awal of one passen- rected. P s ‘”: train, but the Over-Sea railroad German Agriculture. possible to go <Rose street. hm:l‘ll't‘m‘t;v: ting business regularly ' Agriculture supports nearly 19,000, | St. Petersbure, after it was starte al B est from the mainland.—! 000 ?t the inhabitants of the Germam |aithough there wis a logal delay rald. lemr.n about the money 's‘M w‘Nfi Pronrlet“r‘ Stafolite. per Sack. ... . Hay. best. per 100 1bs.. Chicken Feed. per Sack. . Oats, per Saek .........c..0000

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