Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, October 8, 1912, Page 5

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e s . & 1onigh - 0f MTs, day In Case Of Fire Chatauqud ¢ at 8 o'clock at the ¢ avenue watet | Reading Circle Peacock, 406 South i the world's series are received at the beginning at 1 e e ———————————— e THE EVENIN3 TELEGRAMN, LARFLAND, Py o0, 8, LAKELAND BOOSTERS ABROAD. (Tampa Tribune.) A party of Lakeland people, com- posed of Oscar M. Eaton, O. H. Ea- ton, Mrs. M. Bulloch, Miss Bulloch, H C. Bulloch, Jr., were in the city yesterday. They made the trip over in Oscar Eaton's car. 0. M. Eaton is one of the leading citizens of Lakeland, and, by the way, is a can- didate for mayor at the city elec- tion which is to be held there with- in a few days. Mr. Eaton states that he has two opponents, and both o° them are good men, and he feels tbat the race is going to be an in- teresting one, but he thinks that he :{OI 03’. KOLL These who have made 90 per cen! o+ abeve in scholarship and who Pave been perfect in deportment. Punctuality, titled to have their names placed on the following honor roll: GRADE XIL Loui¢ Layton. Elsie Norton. Loring Bracken. Ivan Jackson. William Emerson. GRADE XI Lloyd Hooks. Helen Conibear. Esther Heath, Gladys Wilson. = % GRADE X. Tunnoe Bryant. Ned Skipper. Mary Groover. Mary McKay. GRADE IX, William Nowljn, Paul Jennings. Ellie Kibler. Jessio Tillis. Anna Shepherd. GRADE VIII. Virginia Lufsey, Anne Jones. James Boulware. v':. L X D8er and attendance are en- ¢ \'r Powell's ingurance csitated the move, but he! \lutthias has returned . looking after the in- L.utheran church in | .. beil and two children < «vening from Miami parents, Mr. and Mrs. i Dixieland. . M. . visit of some weeks < old home at Baxley, .. V. Williams and courned Saturday aft- )i, riends for the pasi Powedl is up rrom Tan.- hold goods, he having family there a few days busi- ' ¢ his family leave Lake- ! it regret. D MeClaunna was up from He is in the groc- | Ly . there, and is doing tie says Mulberry is a | town, but he thinks | zand people of Lakeland, lived for five years. [ cornporth, who arrived ago from Oukland, it ten acres of the old woek v | on North Florida ave- woved there with the where he spent ! Bennett have | where they have | after the removal | srowing LnE dtrus o da s are cotertain quite a crowd Hevel of a commen scold and Sunday truck and ruits. He will keep v's doings through the Evening Tele- making prep- Thursday evenina | school newdbers, friends of strangers will be | crecting and mingl | I time lumrl‘.lhl. following; he has a hold - lon a great many people, his spectac- No. 26, Order ”"‘v lar character would do that, if I meet in regular \ wothing else, but it is my candid be- Masonic hall, on *]fr‘r that he will he third in the race; at 7150 p.om. .\S'fl:l‘ belief is growing stronger with after the t is urged that all meeting sent as there is much brouzht up worthy matron, 'V 1. . EATON, ] 22 Ueies it Tohr Secretary + has bought the “rent partner, W, I Elite Cafe, and the business of thiz raut alone in the 1son has been quite perating this restau- 1 excecdingly agreeable ne Lomt teee AND CHILDRENS’ THEATRE . \STLE, OR THE TICAL JOKE Hollowing will amonnt to little in the jrace ition of the Republicans of the coun- ytry from the lofty station of ex-pres- | tie [T've seen that the contest will be be- | tween Taft and Wilson, and that Roosevelt i« really not be connted in it | ‘N 040044 | -......loul will win. He spoke interestingly of the progress and prosperity of Lake- land, which, ‘he says, is fast be- coming one of the best towns in Florida. Hon. . J. Drane, of Luakelund, State senator-elect of Polk county, and one of the most prominent citi- i 2ens in Florida, was in Tampa yes- terday transacting business and greeting his many admirers. - Mr. Drane is very enthusiastic over the phenomenal growth and prosperity of his charming little city and de- [ etares it to be the most potential in | Tond town in Florida { Cterday, Taylor was in the city yes- from Lakceland, where he is in business. He reports Lakeland being on a boom, and say. {that the present municipal campaign | While it is heated, does not interfere with business in the least. Ie is do- irg well and makes weekly trips to Tampa. coming 'BULL MOOSE ROOSEVELT WON'T BE IN IT. 'St. Cloud Editor Returns from North [ and Sees Only Taft and Wilson. Oct, 7 servations made during three weeks in Boston, New York and Washington, Capt. Moses Fol- “mm, editor of the St. Cloud Tribune, tjust returned home, is of the opin- ion that Roosevelt will be third in the presidential roee | “The general opinion seems to be,” | said Capt. Folson, “that Roosevelt's From his ob- a sojourn of | Kissimmece, | He has fallen in the estima- icent and leader of his party to the He's abus- § ing everybody, Taft and Wilgon and the entire outfit in hoth the old par srace ! who has been honored as ITe will have a con ,and this fiom one Roosevelt has omes with poor thoughtful people everywhere that AJESTI THEATRE 0G000000G000DDR VAUDEVILLE—IRVING WHEEL- ER. SINGING, TALKING AND DANCING. CO000OD0H00000ON Pronram for Ionium BLACK WALL ~Drama.) TE (Vitigraph INCIDENTS OF THE DURBAR (Edison Educ ymal.) l THE OLD ACTOR. (Biozraph —Drama.) OPEN AT 6 P M. General Admission...loo Children, under 12....5¢ Alma Bassett. Iris Bryant. GRADE VII A, Gladys Davis. Mada Phillips. Edward Holbrook Grace Murrell, Nannie Funk. GRADE VII B, Redella Gain, Florence Robinson. Annie Maund Marten. Blanche Moody, Denver Marten. GRADE VI A, Louise Roquemore Iugh Walker Fannie Pope Henley Combs loe Holhrook, GRADEK D, 1 Sloan, Jr. Mary Weaver, Ray Huchingson. Donald Conant. Louise Pantley, GRADE V A, Annie Laurie Waring. Mildred Klausemeier, Ruth Taylor. Edna Bassett, Will Arendell, GRADE V R, Kthel Whitfield. Lounise Rogers. Chrisoline Wright. Roger Ford I'anl Sammons, GRADE IV A, Annie Lou Jarrell. Tyler Jackson. Irene Milton. Willie Ilert Anderson. VI B. L | My, 8 8. Griffin performing the « GRADE 1V B, Willie Burnette. Carrie Cumbie. Annie Seixas McGlashan. Helen Woods. Francis McKay. GRADE 1V ( Veleta Fancher. Emma Giddens. Edith Holbrook, Carrie Jerkins, GRADE 1T A, Marie Marshall J. T. House. John Cannon. GRADE IIT B. None GRADE IIT C. Aline Berry. Elila Cason. Francis Krummell. GRADE 1T A. None GRADE 1T B, None GRADE 1 Helen Kennedy, Lawrence Carver. Lillian Snyder. Eugene Acree. Lila Hendris. GRADE I B. A. None. CHAS. M. JONES, Principal. If you are not yet ready to build, why not get one of those beautiful lots in beautiful Orange Park addi- tion, before they are all gone. They are not going to last long when the winter visitors begin coming. - gy Lowry S. Moore visited friends in Lakeland on Sunday. J. L. Hamrick, of Sanford, was in ' our city Sunday visiting friends. Mr. Harvey Bates and Miss Alic Chestnut were married at noon postoffice at Grifli riony. A B, attractive The groom is the son of Mr while the bride i daughter of Mr. W | Chestnut, both being worthy Impulav young people Bates, H of that and “00- 1912, SU2in Cuny 2ACTS ! ABOUT ALASSKA ween almost ©N- parallels of latitude st s Jvian countries and Fiul: \! < varmed by the Japan ours us the Scandinavian coun- trics a \asha is 100,000 larger than Norway, Sweden and Finland put together. Cut off that much of the northern part of Alaska as worthless; and a territory re- mains as large as the three coun- trics named, and with a climate averaging little colder. Alaska has as much copper as Sweden has iron. Alaska has more forests than all three countries. Alaska has coal in quite unlimited quantities, and large deposits of gold. The population of the three coun- tries named is 11,000,000, The population of Alaska in 1910 was 64,356; an increase in ten years of %1 persons.—Chicago Journal. warmed by tire gulf stream square wiles WHY THE JUDGE QUIT FISHING ON SUNDAY. [ Tue following story has never been told in prin:. In thoe later years of slavery times there lived in Flor- idn « prominent jadge whose “beset- ting sin” was goirg fishing on Sun- day. Al at once he suddenly re- forined, but as persistently refused te assign a reason for his “change of heart.” Now, Pig, hrawny, it happened that “Ned,” burly, jet black native African slave, lived on a near-hy plavtotion. It was a custom of “Ned's” about onee a year, as he had heard the “call of the wilds,” to rua away and hide himself in the woods until hunger drove him back to the plantation fesh-pots. 1t finally leaked out that “Ned™ was respon- sible for the judee's sudden convei- gion. \We will let him tell the story “Hit wus dis er way. 1 been out in e woods t'ree days an' git orful hongry. De Jedge is settin® on Jde banks ob Trout creck Sunday mawn- in* fishin.' He jes' er haulin’ in do big tat perch. T'ink, says I, 1 gwin- ter skeeer de Jedge off an’ git do fish. So 1 drap my clothes an' slin down under de bank, whar de Jedge am settin’, an' when he turn eround’ ter put on er new wur-rum, I jes' siid inter de hole an’ when he look back, jump right outen de middle er de hole an’ shout at de Jedge: ‘Use de debble!” He jes' fell over PAGE FIVB Did you say Ladies’ Suit? Yes. Then go to MURRELL G SHARP'S And by the lvay men, get yourself a Royal tailored suit --that’s us back'ards an' yell: ‘0, Lordy!" an’ he git up frum dar er runnin’ lack do win' an’ er shoutin’ ter de top er his voice: ‘O, Lordy, Massa! O, Lordy, Massa! Sabe a po’ rebel frur de black debble, an’ 1'll nebber, no, rebber, .fish on er Sunday no mo'!'" And he never did. Moral: There's| rothing like “sccing things” to wake o man's conscience and send him shivering to prayer meeting. Again, it “de Jedge” had just been fortu- nate enough to have “imbibed” some modern ‘“‘theories” about ‘“Sunday,” etc., he might have fished all day Sunday and ecven ‘“de debble” could not have sent him high-balling, fishless, for home, with his “in’ards aii froze up” with scare.—J, B. Ley in Ocala Banner. Just think! Only $650 for a fine big lot, covered with large orange and grapefruit trees in Orange Park addition, on the shares of Lake Mor- ton. One-fdurth cash, balance 6, 12 and 18 months, 8 per cent. interest First. Fourth. Fifth. Fall. in Lakeland. Ninth. Tenth. } G ! Ten Good Reasons, Why You Should Own a Lot in Park Hill Because it is in the Best Town in South Florida. Second. Because it is as HIGH if not HIGHER than any point in Lakeland. Third. Because it has One Mile of Granolithic Side Walks. Because it has High Class Building Restrictions. Because 4 Beautiful Lakes can be seen from its Summit. Sixth. Because Shade Trees will be planted on all streets this Seventh. Because all Streets will be Graded. Eighth. Because it is the most attractive Residential Section Because Lotscan be sold on REASONABLE Terms. Bezause if you don’t, you will wish do, will always be glad. you had, if you Building M. STEPHENS

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