Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, December 20, 1912, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR. [he Evening Telegram ——————————————— — Published every sfternoon (rom tue Kentucky Build:og, Lakeland. Fia ‘ tariff views of that party are accept- able to the southern Republicans and not cbjectionable to thousands of Democrats, and the antitrust senti- rients of that party are approved of by other thousands of Democrats, it certainly appears that the fuure of the Progressive party in the South vill be brilliant beyond anything HETHERINGTON, tt:at the Republican party could ever A. J. HOLWORTHY « have hoped for. | susiness aud Circulatios Manager | The Bull Moosers will hav;aiv. t!;eir = TE i time to organize the South, but when W ERGIRT TN SATen | they tslart to do so it will mean a ?ue I 2.50 |more formidable oppesition to De- ! ;,:ul:e:::n;,' i 1:25 mocracy there than has been known [} Dellvered anywhere withip the |for seventy years.—Cincinnati En ‘» Iimits of the City of Lakeland | duirer. i _—___———,M il o { Hillard J. Bruce, a Connecticut From the fame office s lusued 'newspaper man, w{xo covers the con.; THE LAKELAND NEWS tinent with his activities and work(;. « weckly newspaper giving 8 re- for some months on the Pensacoa; «wme of local matters, crop condl-| Journal three years ago, is back in lons, county affairs, etc. Sent the Deep Water city contributing t'm soywhere for $1.00 per year. f!hg local press. In last Sunday’s —_——————————x | cdition of the Journal he has an ar- Iticle from which we take the fol- THEY WILL MAKE A VERY ilowing and we believe that our read- RESPECTABLE OPPOSITION. | . o)) endoree it as an apprecia- : Ition well deserved: We reproduce tcday on this page “And the cause, | may say, i ! of | of the Telegram a leadx}lg article | Hioides Ubstiiy. 200 Bebissdlty from the Cincinnati Enquirer, which tand fair-mindedncss and progress is has in it plenty of food for SOBEr| 0 oporany oy vory far to seek. It thought. The Fnquirer argues|, -, .. ¢ ine most part, in the| strewdly that with the Republican| oo ..o/ " o0iimiem of Florida news- party practically dead, North as well papers. They rarely knock anything o South, and the Bull Moose or Pro-| 5 oy 'no 5t knocked; they gressive party in full accord With| o000 "0y 00" boost anything that southern Democracy on the DeBTO| ., .. oo 1o hoosted. They have had question, the only reason Why thou- |, o'\ g," with the stupendous de- gands of southern Democrats have re- velopment of & State now coming malned with that party will havel, . "yo o0 with a speed that is teen removed and they will 8o OVer |, ;0 tha more timid and conser- to the new party, with whose prin-{ . .co siates to the north of her ciples on other issues they are more And it is a good thing to know that in sympathy. Perhaps 80, but there ., i4, 1ooite are coming more and will not be enough of them to 'm'ir'nre to appreciate the intelligent peril the Democratic majority in the |y oo o6 their press, and that, 1it- | South. The masses in long-established | )y 11416 one of the most labor- e ——— Eutered in the postofice at Lake -and, Florids, a8 mall matter of the w-cond clase. v F EDITOR. parties are not academic in their way | peinting to the lawyer for the de- there!""—Ladies’ Home Journal. | homely man over there?” A LITTLE NONSENSE NOW AND THFN | | The Three Classes of Men, Men may be divided into three :—the man before you marrie? m, the man after you married him. aud the man you didn’t marry. The man before you married him wzs all soul. . Tie man after you married him is mwostly stomach. The man you didn't marry is the caiy living example of the perfect man. Why the Judge Was Powerless. The jury, arter long deliberation, seemed unable to agree in a perfectly | clear case. The judgze, thoroughly ex- asperated at the delay, said: “I discharge this jury.” One eensitive juror, indignant at what he considered a rebuke, faced the judge. “You can’t discharge me-" he sai}, ! with a tone of conviction. “And why not?” inquired the judz. : in surprise. ‘“Because,” announced the juror, ' fenee, “I was hired by that man | The lady had just been introduced | to her partner at a holiday dance and | was talking to him vivaciously. “Tell | me,” she said, “who Is that torrlblt-'; The gentleman looked. “That,” he caid, ponderously, “is my brother.” “Oh!" gasped the lady in horrifi¢ emazement. Pardon me. Really, | badn’t noticed the resemblance.” During the Christmas dinner a | young Frenchman was seated next to QO HOPOFIH P IPAHFOIASO L O FOP 0P O FOPOP TP ORI DOBOBD & COOOAODOOOO of thinking and the prejudices many years of political association | of | fous, even if one of the most fasci- | nating callings in creation is moro hold them together with bonds hard and more g eneronsly remunerated as 3OS SO = 'a fine-looking younz woman whe was 4 wearing a gown which displayed her | beautiful arms. George Washington cut a cherry trec down. Carrie Nation cut a saloon up. Some people cut the mustard, but we cut the prices. Read and weep if you have bought elsewhere. LADIES’ COAT SUITS MEN'S AND BOYS SUITS 47 COST $8: Suits now $16 Suits now $20 Suits now &25 Suits now §4.98 $10.98 §15.00 $18.50 §$5 Pants at $4 Pants at $3 Pants at $2.50 Pants at SPPbPPPbpaic We carry a big line of guarantecd §3.50 $3.00 $2.48 §1.98 A\ all leather shoes. Cut prices on ail of them. See them before buying. tie beneficlaries of its pecullarly ef- | «[ came near not being here to £ ive atri is , anize < i - : 4 | gl ieitive patriotism come to recoznize yj y¢ ¢aid ghe. “I was vaceinate: 4 jusy co into its own after long an t o : ‘vhr\ part it has pl:n_\'qd in the deve!- a few days azo and it gives me con- * patient waiting; and the outher lopany of a npaturally favored and | sidarable annoyance.” | wing - 3 especially would reverse the| rrodiziously developing common-| qpao young foreigner gazed at the character of all human motives inl ooy ShbAcas ok LR pnahea: e bk @ things political if it she '1d forego its . t 80 " he replied. opportunity, cast away its prestige A Wihore wark vei varclastad ® and seriously impair its strength at The (;m e ilon demirely sud wala this particular time in f(.ver of on an flbs.ton o * untried, infant party with nothing R hecter to offer it thaw fiself al*2adV iy 45 from Jong observation in Cali- kas. But the Enquirer's article tornia, has this to say Niih , hi say on the sub- 3 e : nmalkes gocd reading novertheless, and [ Joots Visiting his home town after many Aty TR years' nbsence, a gentleman met Sam, | it is probubly correct in its conclu-!" «yrpaer wige o-operative hnmllln':i) B gion thut the Bull Moosers will give 1- doinoi Hellave bRy ot T i the village fool. o not believ at the ¢ Bl ey 4 e ) us more formiduble opposition than wuetry can be overdone, in my lil'v-‘ Hello, Sam,” he said. “Glad ': s we have ha -ears past. B L = 'sce you. What are you doint now? any we have had for years past. But time at Jeast. Far back in 1885 the still {he the churehioroant® we are forzetting—the Pops made U8 (alifornia orangze raisers were pre-x"‘ pumping the church orsan? fight for our very lives in more than dicting that the limit of fruit “Yessir, I'm still pumping the or- cting that the limit of fruit was! : N , ' one southern State, being produced that would pay. gan. An’ gay, Charlie, I'm rettin’ to At be a pretty fine pumper. The other that time they were raisin 2,000 : 34 ; apiis beschfil) day they had a blg orzanist over EULL MOOSERS AND THE SOUTH. | cirs. Last year California shipped friom New Haven and 1 pumved a over 40,000 cars of citrus fruit, and ; y T % With the almost complete sub- 4¢ the best of prices. Last ,\'car:”cce he couldn’t ‘play!®—Rvery. mergence of the Republican party | Florida produced the largest crop ot] sectionalism in the politics of the {cranges ever marketed, and at tip- United States loses the greater part|ycp prices. Tht Florida Citrus Ex- cf the little strength it had left, an¢ | change had been conducting an ad- ®ith the disappearance of that party | vertising campaign of education a3 eecionalism will go under, we hope |t the eating qualitics of Florida or- never to retrun to disturb the har-|;nges, and this campaign will be re- wony of the States in the Union, peated again this season, creating a It the Republican party had closed | rinch greater demand than would the bloody chasm of the war upon ,otherwise have been probable, and so to break. The Demorratic party has N. £. HARRELL & CO. REVIQEOLYLOIGIYIOIOIOIVIGIGTO DO OO IRE DY ¥ - -0 Can we overdo the citrus industry in Florida and grow too many or- ianges and grape fruit? *Stroller” in | the Florida Grower, who knows how Blowing Some. S R e o R R L=l = e Bl o B o e T B PARK HILL bt (Y i body's. . “I WILL” (By George Matthew Adams.) 1 will—make this day worth while. 1 will drop the past, remembering it only as a valuable path thru which {1 have walked into the Now. I will take up the work of the day Ten Good Reascns Why You the lines which Lincoln approved of | increasing the market valne of thy and Johnson strove to carry out, but | yroduct. California has been carry- failed through the opposition of th2 | ing on such missionary work for then radical Republican leaders, tha four years, and so the demand for country would have been spared the humiliating and bitter years of car- pet-bag reconstruction, the era of domination of the South by Repub- lican methods and party practices that were then indefensible and are today regretted by every fair-minded American citizen. It wag the years of carpet-bag re- _construction, not the war, that bred fn the Bouth the bitter opposition to the Republican party. , It was the mistakes ag to racial pol- fcies and racial problems from 1865 to 1900, not #0 much the events of 1861 to 1865, which rendered the Fouth as adamant against that party. With the passing away of the Re- publican party, with the organiza- tion of a new party free from that record €0 hateful to the Caucasians <f the South and so injurious in its results to the nation, southern sec- tionalism will become but a memory | days while Turkey is guing for peace | slderate of my health, jealove of &nd the new party will find jteel? | truly national in its sphere of u-u,-r:\-I tionr, The Demeeratic leaders, face vwith in the face to n zetive Provrecsive party , will find that cronomi. s gich as the relagiony of the turiff o the procpe: H ol g v of the and 19 the cetablighe tion of vill not be euhordinated to racial or o i lems, for there will be no guection | of danver when the two partic: a unit in the treatment of tho 12ms of the South. In their position upon the ques. tinns of the trusts and the eorpora- tions the policiegs announced by tha Prozreesive party geem to run on the fdentical lines as those held by many Lemocrats of the South, and if the ternrice ted to be nrob- | probe trial en- ¢ citrus fruit is constantly growing, at a much greater ratio than would naturally come through increase of vopulation, though this is no incon siderable factor.” \ i i s Mr. Finley J. Shepard, the St Louls railroader, who has just won the hand and heart ot Miss Helen Gould, feels so good over it that he loves everybody and thinks it is n mighty fine world to live in. In his optimism he even declares that “the chances today for a young man in the railroad business to succeed are as great as ever before.” Aw, come cft, Finley! Where is there such g other chance for a young man in the rallroad business as you met with? Show her to us if you would convince us. | i i Little Greece is very cocky these and refuses to be appeased even | (v hile her allics have suspended op- D | erations pending nerotiations to end | €°Me In contact. T will work fyn tha | ¥ the war. We have known bantam \rarriors to come in for a bad licking vider just such circumetances. { and sneeess of my coneorn e The Sanford Herald talks in a vers familiar, friendly and frequent way, Lout the “new ccunty of Harney.” Where is it and when did it happen? —0 She Understood. “1 suppose, of course,” says the fluffy creature to the captain, “that the bow of the ship is go called be- cause it keeps bowing all the time, but why do you call one side the star board and the other the port” “The star boarders stay on one side and the porters on the other,” is the will- ing explanation from the officer. I ot personal pledze to do my best— with interest and enthusiasm, I will ao the things [ have failed to do be- fore. I will attempt new things tha: ! know now that I can do. I will go ahead. 1 will play the game today with a warm heart and a cool head. I will smile when I feel like frowning. 1 will be patient when I feel tempted to scold. I will take personal com- mand of myself. I will be loyal to the concern for which I toll. I will be faithtul to all mu trusts. I will master the smalj- est detail. I will boost not knock. 'l will do—not intend. I will get things done. 1 will work because I like to. I will be fair and just because there is no other way—to win. I will do right because it s right. I will drink aefeat, if it comes fit .times, as good medicine. T will sweat by courage- cus effort—determined to succeed‘ at oll times. T will be careful of my time, con- my honor. I will help make tha dav great for evervone with v wm I reonle whom T serve ywity - N ol heart and with all mv mind ang wiin, | all my strensth. For i the o1, Bi'dan | & the glory ard snececs of mv gy ente | T will make this ¢av vort) v NOTICE. Patrons of the La“eiang Laundry are resnectfnlly aehes arrance to have their work 1nna 4 OLCe OF as early as poscibla in ory N to avoid possible dicannnicgee next week, as we find the hely qnc. | tion a hard problem at ench timee Kindly co-operate with us this weel and oblige. R. W. WEAVER, Proprietor. nt | Should Own a Lot in Park Hill & First. 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. Fourth. Becauseit has High Class Building Restrictions. Fifth. Because 4 Beautiful Lakes can be seen from its Summit. Slxthi: “Because Shade Trees will be planted on all streets this all, Seventh. Because all Streets will be Graded. Eighth. Because it is the most attractive Residential Section in Lakeland. Ninth. Because Lotscanbe sold on REASONABLE Terms. Tenth. Be-ause if you don’t, you will wish you had, if you do, will always be glad. =—See—— G. C. Rogan or J. Deen- Bryant ¢ dlding M. STEPHENS

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