Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, August 1, 1912, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAK ELAND, FLA, AUG. 1, 1912. —— {forbid the use of injunctions to pro- teet property against a secondary wycott and the use of juries in (-o".l In the rural parts of Schleswig-Hol- The Evening Telegram TFT TALKS OF ISSUES {tempt proceedings brought to enforce in other parts of Germany. They say g Published every sfternoon from the Kcentucky Buildiag, Lakeland, Fla. OBILE tail a5y iocrees or orders. The rec “ntered in the postofice at Lake- wand, Florida, 2s mail mattes of thel second class, \. J. HCLWORTHY nd ( Manager, reulation SULSCRUPTION RATE My \ PR A e Wil imits ty of Lakeland for 10 ceuts a week, LAKELAND Titk «kly newspaper giving 2 re sime of local matters, crop condi- ticns, county afiairs, ete. Sent atywhere for $1.60 per year, DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For President—\Woodrow Wilson. For Vice President—Thomas C. Marshall. Presidential Electors—Jefferson B. Browne, J. Fred DeBerry, Charles E. Jones, W. Chipley Jones, Leland J. Henderson, H. C, Sparkman. Congressman, State at Large— Claude L'’Engle. Congressman, First District—S, M. Sparkman. Congressman, Second District — Frank Clark. Congressman, Third Distri~t—Em- mett Wilson. Governor—Park Trammell. Attorney General—Thos. F. West. Secretary of State—H. C. Craw- ford. Commissioner of Agriculture—W. .A McRae. Treasurer—J. C. Luning, Comptroller-—\. V. Knott. Superintendent of Public Instruc- W. N. She: ts, R. 1. Rose. J.C. R, l<“lsl<*;', tion State Chemist- Adjutant Generat “Doubles”™ of Thomas R, Marshall are becoming almost as numerous as “original Woodrow Wilson men.” The longer one conducts a newspa- per the more assured does he become that people have absolutely no sense ol humor ~when the joke is on them. Eugene Grace is a close rival in the public eye of Woodrow Wilson, Roosevelt and other celebrities. When ke wiggled his toe the other day the matter was considered of sufficient importance to put on the wire, A matter which we are glad to see M. W, HETIERINGTON, EDITOR. | (Continued from Page | | « | labelled the opoesition by the leader of former isions he revolution and which Republican defeat will t. Such misfortune will heavily on the wage carner. il business pa- Republicans who have lett their par- !. i | " conclud- s for none of iay we not hope that he will sce ¢ . 2 : refuses hat his real interest is, will under- : % : f he purposs tand the allowness of attacks | % P, : of making a chan nd cultivating upon existing institations and de £ : { popul hat i chan: ' I oy ol ene- iis ; > : . someth ' d changes B \ & & . take plate g ¢ area I Lad heard cfliciaily | 2 X i ood to the Zreites ve b i tion at Chicago from | 2 il Heve that m &8 | tiie o Elithu Root, of R iom the bezl 3 10 now and thay i o | [ the notifica- | the progress )y conti 10 the | A | tar Tuture; that it is reasonable pro- | I aceent it he began, “as an ap- | ¢ g 3 H i plee eress that experience has shown t val of what 1 have done ander jts || 3 e . 1o really useful and belptul, und nd as oan expiession of con- | | 3 i L | trom which there is no reaction to dee that in a second administra- i ! S something worse. It is =aid that 1 publie well, The the over which your chairman presided with such just and hand, fmade a crisis in the party's life, A | taction sought to force the party to violate a valuable and time-honored national tradition by entrusting the power of the presidency for mor> than two terms to one man, and that man, one whose recently avowed po- litical views would have committed the party to radical proposals in- volving dangerous changes .in our present constitutional form of repre- sentative government and our inde- pendent judiciary. This occasion is appropriate for the expression of pro- found gratitude at the victory for the right won at Chicago. By that vic- tory the Republican party was saved for future usefulness.” After reviewing the legislative enactments of the Republican party the president launched into a bitter attack upon ‘“‘those responsible for the popular unrest” of the present day. {tion I wil] serve t an issue not in the campaign, It seems to me it is the suprem irsttes presented 1o convention 15800, Hi even Oune of the new sleeping cars brought out from England in sections and put together at the Central Workshops has now been placed in service on he Singapore Mail from Kuala Lumpur. The car contains eight separate sleeping rooms on either side of a central passage. The rooms are shut off from the passage by doors, thus insuring privacy, and are very com- fortably fitted up. Each contains two berths, with spring mattresses, cne above the oher, a large half-length looking glass, a shut-up washstand which, by an ingenious contrivance, can be converted into a writing ta- ble; a folding stool and stepladder for the upper berth. The rooms are brilliantly lighted by three small sleeping rooms on either side of 2 electric lamps and one big one, and well ventilated by two windows with wire gauze screens and blinds, as well as by a ventilator over the large electric lamp and one big one, and bed are switches for the lights and electric bell pushes which communi cate with a number board in the cor ridor. The sides of the rooms aml ridor are paneled with Lnglish 1k, while the bed rails are polished brass. In addition to the bedrooms, each contains lavatories and a bathroom, with shower bath and cup- hoerd with athers' clothes, “Started by sensational journalism and unjust and unprincipled muck- raking,” he said, “demagogues have seized the opportunity to inflame the public mind that they might turn peculiar conditions to their own ad- vantagze." In the formation of new partics the president said, these men ction of un- | have promised the satis (rest by the application of a panacea. I the ultimate analysis, 1 fear, the equal opportunity which those seek who proclaim the so-called so ol justico, involves a foreed divisgion and that means Social- lis, 1 venture to say there is no national administration which reore real steps of progress have ©cen tiken than in the present one. B an for the millenium, a condition in v hich the rich are to be made reason- ably poor and the poor reasonably rich by law. we are chasing a phan- tom; we are holding out to those whose unrest we fear, a prospect and a dream, a vision of the impossible. “I do not say that the two gentle- men who now lead, one the Demo- cratic party and the other the former Lo property Consular Report in USED RIPE TOMATOES ON HUBBY'S FACE TO GET EVEN. Atlanta, Aug. 1.-—When the po- lice answered shrieks for help and rushed into the home of Dr. J. T. Gordon, 18 Larkin street, yesterday ternoon, they thought themselves in the presence of a frightful and Lloody tragedy. Dr. Gordon was extended on a sofa. His face was covered with a red all of de- | thy qrotesque waterproof curtain ford being given due attention is the dis- | Republicans who have left their par- crimination on the part of the rail-[ty, in their attacks upon existing road companies in making low rates |conditions, and in their attempts to only from Jacksonville to points in |satisty the popular unrest by prom- liquid that resembled blood, and his head was in a terrible condition. It was wet and red all over and large the north instead of throughout the State. It one wishes to take advan- tage of the low rates, it is necessary to pay full fare to and fro in tha State, which is almost equal to the cost of a reduced ticket through sev- eral States. The Tampa Board of Trade has taken action in the mat- ter, and with Powell behind the movement we expect to see something drop. We were just going to write that publishers arc foolish who call at tention to typorraphical errors oc curring in their own papers, but at that moment our eye chanced to fall on a paragraph in the Tampa Tri- bune, explaining how the antics of the Mergenthaler had rendered one of its editorials ridiculous. No matter how caretully a publication is edited and prepared, these annoying errors will creep into the best of them. Still, when you consider that the average man cannot write a two-word adver- tising card show window without mis-spelling one or both of the words, and that there are more for his errors in the average single typewrit- ten sheet than in any issue of an en tire newspaper, we are admit that the marks the hurried work of ne Wspaper people is little short of marvelous When one rem n an ordinary newspaper column there ar 10,000 picces of type. that ther seven wrong positions each 1 11 may be pur in, and chances L column t ke errors, besides mill ins «f «1 es for trans positions, 1. t be And this do the sentence “To transposition make €.276¢ the pori) ford lierald will n too critical s not take into acconnt possihle n < that heeot constrained to | vorrectness which | cliunks of what looked like raw flesh were mingled with the hair. His wife, with her clothing awry. and bruises on her face, was in an- cther corner of the room. But there had been no murder. Dr. Gordon had struck her in the face, she said, and to revenge herself she had massaged his face with ripe tomatoes. hSe had used a whole peck of them, vigorous ly, angrily. She had smeared them in his eyves and smashed them over kis head, and stuffed them up his nose, and in his mouth unti] he near- 1v died from suffocation. “If we hadn't come soon | she would have put salt and vinega» him and eaten him alive” the police sergeant ires of remedies, are consciously em- bracing Socialism. The truth is that they do not offer any definite legis- lation or policy by which the happy conditions they promise are to be brought about, but if their promises mean anything, they lead directly to- ward the appropriation of what be- longs to one man, to another “The truth my ftriends, both i these who have left the Republican party under the ingpiration of thei present and our old oppo- nents, the Democrats, under their L candidate, in a direction they do not definitely know, toward an end they can not definitely de- seribe. with but one chief and clea ehject and that is of acquiring pow- e for their party by popular suppor: through the promise of a change for the better, “Those gentlemen is, leader, are going Liess on said FLORIDA GOOD ROADS. propose to re- T form the government whose present defects, if any, are due to the fail- ure of the people to devote as much time as js necessary to their political duties, by requiring a politica] ac- tivity by the people three times that which thus far the people have been {willing to assume. “But The zeal with which our promi- nent citizens have taken up the good rcads question within the past year or two has resulted in widespread ad- vertisement of Florida, From every part of the country the press commented on the fact. interes its readers in the progress now bei vs the 8t hs nas after we have changed all » governmental machinery =o as to Petershurg Inde- pendent. { The following from the Allentows | (Pa.) Democrat speaks for itself: { permit instantancous expression of people in constitutional amend- L ments, i statutes and in all o h r “The good roads movement as public uigents, what then? struck Florida and it is likely 1l Votes are not bread, constitution- | the legislature will adopt a law U amendme are not work, refer- | which will result in a system of ex- ms do not pay rent or furnish 1t roads for that commonwenit! ouscs, recalls do not furnish cloth- + is a zood roads association nitiatives do not supply em- ite, and to that organizatio or relieve inequalities of {more than to any other agenc s of opportunity. We still [1ess the D mocrat excepts the aci 1o have set before us the defi- tion tl by th bring on completeequal- ¢ Florida nion, is and to abolish | fact that Florid likely r evil for humanity. W stem of rood roads built ten for them in vain te supervision that will com; | The 1 lent discussed at some | favorably with those of any length the recall of judges and ju-' commonwealth. wm———— . .- - - e ‘ Quick Delivery y place is a pipe, or two pipes, Lree pipes off, according to the £ could smoke ter dis- | s' barks; 1 v would be {or n ipes one Clocks Pun by Fan Motors, by currents of air been used as 1 One, by | Paris, 1 | eld co i . ed one in 19835 In [a me t \ is | | we ) rrent of a ay o whic! pped by a self- | act 1o o« the weignt nears the | g to; ( | Al oY l and ¢ who 1 ovor cowd be induced to prefcvouce. On being asked which he wou!d prefer to have a bigger boy take irom him, he answered: “The one that ‘ne boy took.” ENDORSED AT HOME. Such Proof as This Should Convince Any Lakeland Citizen. The public endorsement of a local citizen is the best proof that can be produced. None better, none strong- er can be had. When a man comes forward and testifies to his fellow- citizens, addresses his friends and reighbors, you may be sure he is thoroughly convinced or he would not do so. Telling one’s experience when it is for the public good is an act of kindness that should be appre- ciated, The following statement giv- en by a resident of Lakeland, adds one more to the many cases of Hom» Endorsement which are being pub- lithed about Doan's Kidney Pills. Read it. O. D. Bryant, prop. of Bryant House, Ribbon & N. Pills, a remedy of merit, and do not hesitate to give them my endorsement. [ have taken this remedy for backache and pains through my Kkidneys and it has acted just as represented. Doan's Kidney Pills restored my kidneys to a nor- ral condition and toned up my en- tire system.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents, Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, =ole agents for the Unit- od States Rememboee the name take no other. Doan’s - and Of all the attentions you can show or the presents you can buy nothing is more appreciated than a box of nice candy now and then. Our Candics Taste Good and;Are in Good Taste This is about all the argument teeded for the young fellow, but re- wember this.. After she is yours such things are appreciated even :more than before. She knows that you think more of her, of course, but still she likes to be told and she likes to be shown even better. Naturally | she can't tell you this but try her just once with a box of our candy and see !how much it means. Why not? Tire Troubtes Ended Have Your Tizes Filled Wity RUBBERIN Rubberine guarantees you against wunci, rim cuts and leaky valves. | 7 The method of fillingi: mechanicaily copvecs tube is filled while on the rim. It is injecteq 11- through the valve stem, at a temperature that g e the inner tube, and when once cool is a substanc. sistency and elasticity not unlike a good class o light—s0 light that the little added weight is no: and so resilient that one cannot tell when rigino whether its tires are filled with rubberine or air It is thought by many that the rebound is no as when using air-filled tires, consequently there is | on the springs, the car rides easier and life is addeq in general, making automobiling a pleasure as it me of tire trouble, It eliminates uneasiness, blowouts, loss of temper. bro engagements, pumping, heavy repair bills, 75 per cent auto 1 ble, relieves your wheel of any attention until your casing i worn out. Will increase life in your casing 100 iver cent, 'fi,,-f’ berine is a perfect substitute for air, having all the advan.oe and none of the disadvantages of air-filled tires. Y The only plant of this kind in operation at the yrecy: time in South Florida, is located in the Peacock buildin: & further information desired can be obtained, by callin son or writing : The South Florida Punctureless Tire (o. LAKELAND, FLORIDA H r I A M S, sl w75 7 A Y T SN R 7 B T ST M R C—— i esg to the car ans the eng YOUR DOLLARS WilL DO DOUBLE DUTY At our great SUIT SALE. A ten dollar bill takes any suit in the house, consisting of Priestlv Mohairs, Serges and Cassimers. Sale limited to stock. GIVE YOUR MONEY A CHANCE — AT THE HUB JOS. LeVAY L. B. WEEKS| Norris, Atlanta, Candies Red Cross Pharmacy PHONE 89 f —DEALER IN— Staple and Fancy Groceries, Ha. Grain and Feedstuffs PHONE 119 Cowdery Build WITH W00D'S MEAT MARKET 10 Ibs. Bucket Snowdrift Lard. . 4 1bs. Bucket Snowdrift Lard .. 1-2 bbl Flour in Wood ....... 24 1b. Sack Flour. .. ..., 121 L AT a Large Cream............... LOMRONE v acker Boy Coffee ast Catler ...... olig, per Sack.......... Fay. best. per 10 Ihs.. ... .. Chicken Feed, per Sack...... Oats, per Sack .......... Shorts, per Sack ... .

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