Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, August 8, 1912, Page 4

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FAGE FOUR The Evening ]e[egramlxdw THEY VIEW SUNDAY TRADE IN SANFORD. Published every afternoon from the Kentucky Buiiding, Lakeland, Fla. " P e “ (lil\' iZntered in the postoffice at Lake- iend, Florida, as mail mattes of the scond class. Discussing the matter o1 coo: drink stands remaining (nwn on Sun- the Sanford Herald says: lie Orlando Citizen remarks that even it Winter Garden does want cold drinks on Sunday, Orlando does not and wil] not have them. 1 believe this matter should be left to the va- 4. ¥. HETHERINGTON, EDITOR. zood roads. If Orlando does not want a cold drink or a newspaper on Sunday let them go without. ford does want them and may have them and there are num- Orlando people bere on Sunday to get them. is no harm in the proprietor of a news stand staying at his place of business a tew hours on Sunday if he s0 chooses. His clerks can have the trom the same oftice i8 issued day off, but the proprietor should be 1iHE LAKELAND NEWS allowed to open up for the mail, just & weekly newspaper giving 2 re-{as the postoflice does and let the man A J. HOLWORTHY fusiness and Circulation Manager. SUBSC l{IPTIO\ RATES: One year .. .- $5.00 Six months ..., . 2.50 Three months ... 1.26 pelivered anywhete within the jitits of the City of Lakeland for 10 cents a week, bers of gume of locul matters, crop condi-{vho wants to read on Sunday get cens, county afiairs, ete. Sebt|his paper or u cizar or a cold drink. enywhere for $1.00 per year, 1: is rather diflicult in this age to at- —_— | tempt to force the old Blue Laws on DEMOCRATIC TICKET. the people. | do not favor the store e staying open all day on Sunday and having a crowd congregate to dis- cuss baseball, election and Kindred subjects, but 1 do believe it is all right for the stationery store and the cold drink store to remain open a short period in the morning and aft- ernoon. There are other things more For President—\Woodrow Wilson. For Vice President--Thomas C. Marshall, Presidential Electors—Jefferson B, Browne, J. Fred DeBerrv, Charles E. Jones, W. Chipley Jomes, Leland J. Henderson, H. C, Sparkman. Congressman, State at Large—|..n,ry1 on Sundays than buying Claude L’Engle. newspapers, cigars and cold drinks. Congressman, First Distzict—S.] o¢ 4py rate Orlando can close with- M. Sparkman. out interfering with Sanford. We Congressman, Second District —| rien feel sorry for our sister city, Frank Clark. Congressman, Third Distri~t—Em- mett Wilson, Governor—Park Trammell. “They can't have brick roads, or Attorney General—Thos. F. West. a ball team, or a steamboat, or get a Secretary of State—H. C. Craw-| .14 qrink or read a newspaper on ford, Sunday. All that is left to the few Commissioner of Agriculture—W. full blooded people of Orlando is to - McRae, take a car and come to Sanford, Treasurer--J. C. Luning. where there are real people walk- Comptroller—W. V. Knott. ing on the streets, drinking real ice Superintendent of Public Instruc- water and reading real newspapers tion==W, Ny shictta, and doing other real American stunts State Chemlst—R, E. Rose. without fear of being arrested and Adjutant Gencral—J. C. R. Foster. | i, oy o church against their will as they are forced to do in Orlando. The THE CONSTITUTIONAL next thing we hear about Orlande AMENDMENTS. | wiil be that the people down there are being forced to read Orlando pa- Of the three constitutional amend- ers.” ments to be voted on at the general assembly, two are of state-wide im- portance, while one affects Duval county only. So far as we can judge from our present lights, all the While there is a universal cry over amendments should carry. the country of the high cost of living Of great importance to the people [and while we are seeking some easy is the amendment looking to the|way out of the difficulty, very few adoption in this State of the initia- | pay attention to the trifling amounts tive and referendum. This is a step [spent in silly ways. It scems to be in the direction of the rule of the|the little things that count. people, the ideal form of government. A series of articles in the Satur- We believe this principle should be|dey Evening Post tells in most gra- voted in as a part of the State's or- |phic details how the present genera- ganic law. tion fritters away the income which Of equu] importance, perhaps, is|a past generation would have con- the amendment authorizing the is- |sidered an affluence, and from which suance of bonds by special tax school |Jour grandfathers would have saved districts, The absence of any pro-|and invested a competence, vision for the legal issuance of such | A nickel is but a trifle and a dime bonds is hampering the progress of | hardly worth noticing. our sclool interests, and it is very [the constant stream of nickels which imper t that such provision should | yields the great dividend of the trac- be voted, tion companies. It is the multiplic- The ameadment relating to an ad- |ity of nickels dropping into the boot- ditional Circuit judge for Duval [ biack's till which allows him to get county is not of special interest to but if the people prefer living there —well, what are you going to do about it? THE REAL 008’1‘ OF LIVING. rious sections just as lly,nmm-r of | County. Ssan-Jcur local last week regarding the Sanford [tWo women jailed here for beg=i who come [Pe no pity for the poor, There | Poverty be made a crime.” But it i8] profession. a banking account and invest in the tHE EVENNG TELEGRAM, LAK®TAND, FLA., Aug. S, 1912, - o living.” WE NEED THE BATTLE. But they ave not willing. Conse- e juently toe present pace aust b You have heard the story of the iwept up no matter how many pri- | ondep-hearted weman who, seeing cate privations or home heartaches nay ensue. The pace is set; either keep up ml witlin @ cocoon the strugzle that the Lutterfly was making to free itself, thouzht to help by Dbreaking the ‘it and be a “good fellow™ while you | pchis and letting the delicate crea- last —or go slower and be lmppivr,’m“. loose; but the butterfly was so but get the highball laugh and the | @k it could not lift itself, too un- contemptuous giggle. —Palm Beach developed to care for itself, and it died before the eyes of its rescuer SRR It needed the battle. The Ocala Banner, after copying So frequently the object of hel and sympathy is injured by ill-ad- vised assistance. A too-solicitous mother gives the baby no chance to its muscles as it would if few ng on the streets, adds: There scems to why should Bro, Har- ris extends his sympathies in the wrong direction. When these wom- en were released upon agreement to leave town, they went to the depot, and from a wallet extracted a rol! gy Lim on K Strect of bills, among which was a fifty dol- | ;... 1 ilure is frequently the result. lar bill, and bought tickets to Way-{ « 1 14.0d daughter is protected from o1 Ga. That's poverty with a the “drugdery™ of housework, her vengeance! It really did seem too . 00< are kept white and soft so that bad to jail the girl, whom it is be- they may never have the unshapely lieved was not the daughter of the |0 and ealloused places that moth- elder one, but a stoolpigeon taken | . jave and in consequence the gir! along by her for effect. Our sheriff | poc1s discontented and unhappy, when disliked very much to place in jail | {yrown into a life that demands the this capture because of their sex, woman who has but he declares he intends hereafter to jail every unworthy beggar ply- ing his or her vocation on the streets and he wil] be upheld by the people in so doing.—Inverness Chronicle. develom permitted to bumns. A father, sen free from the ¢ characterized b's furnizhes mone: and receive a anxious to seo his that hezinnings, influence to ‘ruggles ow i experience of the dene lier share untold damage A child with the toothache can be Kept wailing for hours by the cuddling of a loving mother, when the pain might be for- gotten by a romp with the family watchdog. Condolence administerel with tender pity might better be re- placed sometime by the galvanic en- couragement of “it might be worse— many an invalid has forsaken his ill- ness, when called upon to do some- ue. thing for others, “worse off.” The friendship of the ancients was [ e all need the battle and blessed very exacting. In modern times we |indeed is the man or woman who should look a long while for such |comes out of the fray with clearer mutual regard as that of Damon and | yigsion and greater sweetness.——Mi- Pythias. ami Metropolis. Friendship in our crowded days cevers a wider area, but as in the case of all extencive development it has lost intensively. . Instead of friendships we have vis- iting lists. Not those whom we love, but those whom we would propitiate we invite to dinner. Those who would propitiate us invite us in turn and permit us to eat their food and air our views, We live, alas! in the suburbs of s2ch other's hearts. The man without friends can ac- complish very little in this world. Depending on his own strength alone his mightiest endeavors are as noth- ing. At harvest time he gathers nothing but leaves. But the man with friends—strong friends, true friends and loyal friends --who have confidence in his integ- rity and ability to do things, has great power. \When he leads they will follow him, and all working to- gether unitedly bring victory. This {3 the reason why some men achieve great success with moderate abilities, while their more brilliant competi- | tors fall short. fre This is true in every business and It does not matter s much whether a man has enemics o0 = b Croam PR 1T net as that he has true friends wio will stand by him and never d him. To have loyal friends is worth wli Best Whit To have triend: TO HVE FRIENDS, *“The only way to have a friend is t» be one.”-—Emerson. There is reason for a suspicion, it not more than a suspicion, that the art of friendship is dying out among There are other staple crops that made money for the growers last year and they will be followed up this year with good results. After the celery crop was off last spring to be followed by corn and tomatoes the hay crop came in for an inning and it is safe to assert that at no point in the State was more good hay stored away for winter use than in the Sanford section, Long Hours of Miners. Fourteen hours was considered a day’s work for miners during the early part of the last century, Haymond Bros. Successors to Moody & Connor, 220 South Florida Ave 1hs, sugar for Pest Hams, per 1b et b faost Compound Lard, per Ib 1 Aeat (hy the siae) 128 else. Who ean e thie State as a whole, but as the peo- fonly real, stable and honest propo- [ pended on is to gain snecess in i Pearline, per box ) ple of Duval apparently want the [sition— real estate. 3 To have triae friends you must | ot ' measure, the voters should help them The money continually wasted infone, the quality of loyalty yvou 5 e ot e pass it. trifles would make many payments | depends on the quality vou wiv Vlasa Syrap, per gal Al It is a fact worthy of remark that fon propertics bound to enhance in| pensacola Journal no matter how unobjectionable an {value, 1t is s0 casy to be careless - - et Plour, per half b amendment may be, or even if it be |about entively meritoriors, it is difli it to a suflicient numbor of | voles to insure its passaze, The aver- cive once it s chanzed to smaller coins’ And it seems soocasy are voter hesitates to assis in | ik sox whe rondpa wsed to either making any change in the constitu- [ lave the home-tade ones or housht tio e coems to have an inborn | the 1oe¢ Kind. The aver poyoune it and declines to tinker [ man of today pays more a with it s ig a condition that, on | Lis garters and s than his d the who s by no means objection- | pa paid for shees and stecKin bl A whol some and profound re- | the whole family; no doubt of that spect for the State’s fundamental | And where the fond lover of other law ansurs well for the character of days escorted his sw that =t te's citizenship fida has feinzing school and liv 211 the way lome, Neverthe- prosressed much the young man of e more than a gquarter of a | today must engage an auto and spei century since the present constitu- | his two weeks' salary on one oven tion was adopted, a ing's joy ride! amendments are ned And then we talk of the hizh (ost new order of conditic Indeed, it [of living! It is the desire of ¢ is contended by many, vith ex-lone to live a little better thav cellen ment, that an entirely cichibor 1 makes much of new instrnment is demanded by 1 ost. If the neishbor has moeat t char d «on ms brounzht alont by mes a week he must have it the State’s rapid development the s 1 oo nished one of the few in X &1 v Florida products w T s (0 hir ted on the norihern peaple will ' Florida is an is the nickel and the dime; so nlt for feasy to wonder where the dollar zoes to bhuy 15 A to the NOTI(‘E The undersizned reprosents o ritts and Meal, per sack £2.00| the best nuggerios in the com Will be glad to quete pric | t. por ¥ \d vd ornamental trees, <hy towerine plant ! | R - - - ~ o P RICTRRITTTIN tur C.odies Norris [% Candies k| Are hept ' bresh = i |4 ’ R i‘ | hal frigeretor ; Week Ciie - by TN more | and a vie- | in a busy household. | Often too a lavizh sympathy does' i | | 0 AUTOMOBILE owwtnc{ Tire Troubles Ended rim cuts and leaky valves. The method of filling's mechanically correst. It is injected nto 11, through the valve stem, at a teraperature that dees not o the inner tube, and when cnce cool is a substance in 1 sistency and elasticity not unlike a good class of rubl:; light—so light that the little added weight is not no:: and so resilient that one cannot tell when riding in whether its tires are filled with rubberine or air. It is thought by many that the rebound is not 2 as when using air-filled tires, consequently there is less on the springs, the car rides easier and life is added to the in general, making lutomobllmg a pleasure as it means the ¢1d tube is filled while on the rim. of tire trouble. It eliminates uneasiness, blowouts, loss of temper. br engagements, pumping, heavy repair bills, 75 per cent auto tro:. ble, relieves your wheel of any attention until your ms‘n': is worn out Will increasz life in your casing 100 per cen: berine' is a perfect substitute for air, having all the advantases Have Your Tires Filled With RUBBERINE Rubberine guarantees you against punctures, and none of the disadvantages of air-filled tires. The only plant of this kind in operation at the pr time in South Florida, is located in the Peacock building further information desired can be obtained. by callmn in TR ey son or writing — —— _—-—-——\ TR SIS The South florida Punctureless Tire Co. LAKELAND, FLORIDA Boy’s Blouses Boy’s and Girl’s Rompers \ LARGE LINE AT { 8 ‘ Staple and Fancy Grocerics, | Grain and Feedstuifs PHONE 119 —DEALER IN-—- WITH WO00D'S MEAT Cowdery A ) BT MARKLT — car Rul Metronol dom in the pooerer nor 1 "¢ been removed, ond abo t vow there s one continuous umob- s barsts of str waterw from the oct to, which i te mere of @ tle f. The locks have been dug ) publicit) n for comfort: th '.,‘ around to let the large dredges mscrflv(rv would be a Iwn‘nn of 1t} up the canal. ) & \ 2 FELIE 2sl e uick Delivery ¢ O long_continued serial of “high “lw e i a2 Shorts, per Sack en Feed. per Sack. per Sack .....

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