Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, January 1, 1913, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR. e B L e e ‘“a {’l;i"l‘u iUinum is Ukher wiich the nation be- lappens 10 ber or she is away for a #ins the new year, and, coming to ' few days.—Luke McLuke. Pubiisued every afternoor (rom the our own State of Florida, we find | €entucky Buildiag, Lakeland, Fia that she is +::ring in . il measure . - BRI s e | 11 these actual honefas an mlrl ('l am very fond of limericks."— | «wiviwd an the postoffice at Lake-| rospects; but that does not begin . Woodrow Wilson.) Aod. Florida, as mall watter of the| (o tell of what the year just closed | Mr. Wilson of N. J w ud clasw. hag done for her or what the year | Row, S S N3 H W '5r h. l k 7 | HOTHERINGTON, EDITOR. just opening holds out in brlmantlAnd heq row o'er the lake to see promise for her. The story would | Woodrow, fill a volume. Among all the States| But if Woodrow some day Well, Here's One. . lived at Wood L SOOI e O SN O PO | NRY BACON : e S r::n::enden otc?m‘nuu 0i the South, or of the Union, she iSl Were to ask Wood, now pray | 2 u'pe i —t_—_ tcday pre-eminently the land of Would Wood row Woodrow o'er to é: ~JHSURIUTION RATES: promise. Old enough in history andi Wood Row? % ar year ceeeenaes $5.00 1SR 1L OSBRI el 5 Y *he-. gouths ... ..... 1.38 Lrlivered .nywhete withip the troits of the City of Lakeland o ganized government, her geogra- ! ohy and other conditions have iso- ! fated her, and Florida is now as a| rontier State of surpasging richness —<Cincinnati Enquirer. Luke McLuke Says A fool woman will go crazy over 14 | & | & | OO far ‘0 cants 8 week. —e « .av same olice B tuwsued 'HE LAKELAND NEWS 4 we Rly pewepaper giving & re- same f ‘ocal .oatters, crop condi- “ous couuty affaira, ete. Sent imvw-ere for $1.00 per year. NEVER DID NEW YEAR OPEN WITH FAIRER OUTLOOK-’I.; sure, and while a big beginning| A girl would rather have wavy S—— ’hn been made, it is but a begin-; lair in this world than be promised | Ler own. The world has found her short-haired woman. sut at last, and from e.ery State in the Union are coming men and women and money and energy in steadily increasing volume to join 3 ' hends with those already located to like, but she doesn’t have to stall make here another (‘alifornia Inlnround and beg a nickel from her wealth, beauty and productiveness. husband when she wants to go to a A girl doesn't care how lirge her | ears are as long as she has small feet. You can knock an old maid all you Florida’s destiny is as great as it picture show. The New Year opens today under | ning, and the whole State is pulsing a halo in the next one. auspices so fair and pleasant for the | with activities which mean a devel- A man who is 80 ornery that he people of the United States that the | opmen; in the next decade not to be ; czn't gey credit for a glass of beer g babitual croakers are silent, the pro- | equalled in any other part of the can get a woman to trust him wit phets of evil are not in evidence, | Union. That is thejoutlob for Flor- | ber heart and her future. g ond there is not one discordant note | iaa at the beginning of the new year,| What has become of the old fash- in the grand symphony in which are|and it is a prospect as plain to the 'ioned woman who had prunes on the blended the hopes and ideals and {eyes of the practical man as to the tuble at every meal aspirations of a great and prosper- i and incomparable diversity of re- a long-haired man, but you never % sources just beginning to come into heard of a man leaving home for a vision of the enthusiast. When you catch a boy using the ous nation for the year just born. —0 =i whisk broom a good deal you will 19 It is a fact not questioned that we It may be more or less happy New | know that he has discovered that | =3 are a prosperous people in every | Year for the rest of us, but we must . &irls are attractive. | \ | State in the Union, and even those | exclude the postmasters. They would ' Another reason for the high cost determined to see hard times ahead ' ke more or less than human to feel ©0' living is that Atlantic City took | & can give no reason for the gloomy | happy on a day which saddles upon the place of the old swimming hole ’t:: faith they hold to. Our prosperiiy them the mountainous burden of the last summer. ;1;: is rooted deep in economic cuimina- | parcels post. 1t will probably start | When the suffragettes get a place “é tions and adjustments beyond the'cfl easy, especially in the smaller Ot the ticket they will probably use :'1: reach of blundering partisan poli- | cities and towns, buy its possibilities | the hen-pecked husband as their & tics; and, while in commerce and of growth are awful to contemplate Party emblem. ’{- manufacturing and other material from the postmasterial point of view,!| The girls are not doing any wor l; agencies it is and always must be | AR S ‘l‘vi“'r: ‘.""‘r the passing of leap year |© ebb and flow, action and reaction, as THE DEMOCRACY OF DEATH. (1T ziel wants you she'll get yor. e ir the tides of the ocean and other BBy {leap year or any other old year, [ phenomena under the dominion of In the democracy of the dead all | FVery woman knows that if he: I'é natural law, it is flood tide with us ren at last are equal. There is: ""SP*nd was married to some other le now, with the end not yet in sight, reither rank nor standing nor pre- WO™in he would eet what he de 2 and we may be thankful accordingly. rcgative in the republic of the ®erved and be glad to sneak back to ; The crops of the past year were grave. At this fatal threshold the her. j" record-breakers with fair prices for philosopher ceases to be wise, and AT ¢ all products of the soil; from one the song of the poet s silent. Dives Best Exercise. '2' end of the land to the other, with relinquishes his millions and Laz-| The best kind of exercise is the C : . kind that makes you forget you are | :, rare exceptions due to exceptional arus his rags. The poor man is 481 exercising—In other words, play, says | ¢ cuuses, factories of every kind are rich as the richest, and the 1i 4| o physiclan.’ It's a good scheme to running full time; railroads are so man is us poor as the pauper. 1‘lwl have some more or less ltrennoun"‘; rosperous they are planning large creditor loses his usury, and the| game for a hobby—golf or bowling or | & improvements for the new year; a debtor ig acquitted of his obliga- | tennis or archery—anything that e d prodigious amount of building is in tion. There the proud man sur- ll:.ul:e:: ";;'ut"::':'::r::: x'e.r'eil:o ::: o progress all over the country, show- renders his dignities, the politician .’.“m.'“c exercise is not ..m ing new structures going up in ev- his honors, the worldling his pleas- thing, too. ery city, town and hamlet in Amer- ures. The invalid needs no physi- ———e ica; trade is so good that mercantile ¢:an, and the laborer rests from un- In Advocacy of Kindness. failures for 1912 were fewer {n requited toil. Here at last is na- “Deal gently with the old, for they vumber than for years past; labor is ture's final degree in equity. The have come a long way; and be kind everywhere employed at good wages “rongs of time are redressed, in-(to the young, tor they have a long —on a rising scale in many of the Justice is expiated, the irony of |Journey before them.'- -Belected sreat industries—and what tramps fate Is refuted, the unequal distri- we have are volunteers in the service Mution of wealth, honor, capacity, Who seek no higher calling. All the subordinate and auxiliary | activities to these main factors in! pleasure and opportunity which r:akes life so cruel and inexplicable ceases in the realm of death. The strongest there has no supremacy, and the weakest needs no defense. The mightiest captain succumbs to that Invincible adversary, who dis- arms alike the victor and the van- quished. - John J. Ingalls. il CROWN PRINCE OF TURKEY e e —— our wealth and well-being are pros- politics has passed forever, and we | have emerged into a new era with a ter understanding among ourselves tkan this republic has ever known And along with all this material | has been an extraordinary i awakening and nation-wide organ- fzing of the best elements of (he i e e ————te of sin and evil and solve the prob- Edith Had Overheard. lems consequent upon the mighty vice, immorality and extravagance. | "3® @ little daughter with whom he The conscience of the nation was | ®°Metimes finds it necessary to be u Never before were so many good men | "¢ when the hour for going to bed and women, representing every com- | “CMe8 around each night. ica, 80 active and so well organized | t'¢ father watched his 3-year-old to promote good causes and fight evil play on in a conscious effort to ap- their work there is less of faunting “Edith, do you kmow it is vour vice and flagrant immorality, more | Pedtime?” he asked. prieties of life, more sanitation, | 2lked over to her father with very both physical and moral, than ever | SOber mien. The press is argus-eyed to reveal | 2fter night I suppose I'll have to the ulcers on society and the weak |SUVMIt to it,” she said. a week passes that we do not read ' '8 offspring had climbed the stairs of conventions and associations, rep- | ' De tucked away by her mother, est character of the nation, meeting , "°™ Where he was sitting he said: in various parts of the country to! 1-t's have our little spats in pri- pering; the bitterness of sectional | more truly national spirit and a bet- before. moral | NO V AND THFN American people to fight the forces piling up of wealth and its resulting| OW¢ Philadelphia newspaper man never 80 alive and so alert as now. | tFifle severe. Particularly is this munity, large and small, in Amer-| 1“8t Bight the clock struck $ and social tendencies; and because of | Pe2T unconcerned. observance of the decencies and pro-| Edith dropped the playthings and before in our history. “If this thing is t.o continue night spots in our civilization, and hardly The newspaper man waited until resenting the best thought and high- i 2nd when the latter returned to the formulate plans and devise remedies vate hereafter.” 10 heal those ulcers and strengthen _ Hi8 wife agreed —Philadelphia ';r'h:. ;:1.‘::::::&:;‘?:?::‘:." :: these weak spots in our national and Times fa the United States. social structure Our courts, our' § Gy Legislatures and our Congress are Isn't It the Truth? all permeated by this high, strong €pirit of redemption and reform, and, while crine and «in and sorrow are ell aroura us it is only the blind After a man has been married for VOT'NG BOXES ten years he regards his wife as a |Al all the Drug Stores and H. good old scout to have around. He | Stevens' Jewelry Store Denny’s ray quarrel with her every day over | Fruit Store for the mon refislng 1o see, who denies some little thing, buy he forgets it m tm H ’ these 'l inee and fails to recognize in five minutes. He knows that she “ 0' rlrem' s the forcer of regeneration every- ! ism’t an angel and she knows that Car“ival where &' work as never before for he isn't a saint. And away down in the upiit, o humanity. Tiese zre the ne, hopeful con- kis heart he has a regard for her that never shows until somethine down. ington cut a cherry tree Carrie Nation cut a saloon up. Some people cut the mustard, but we cut the prices; ; Read and wee elsewhere. LADIES COAT SUITS $8 Suits now $16 Suits now $20 Suits now &25 Suits now We carry all leather shoes. them. See them before buying, $4.98 $10.98 $15.00 $18.50 $5 Pants at $4 Pants at $3 Pants at B $2.50fPants at p if you have bought mmmmmm MEN'S AND BOYS; SUITS A COST $3.50 $3.00 $2.48 $1.98 a big line off guaranteed Cut prices on rai] of QEOHOFOO 070 George Wash D OO PSR EQ DD DB DG DB BD ¢ DD AP RGP B D B . ove e = N. E. HARRELL & C0. 2 e —— MOGOIQIQI G To all those who have so gener- ously contributed to the success of my business by giving me a portion of their trade, I am grateful and extend best wishes for g Happy New Year. May ithold in its wake for you and those dear to you, “Life’s Choicest Blessings, Good Health, Exceeding Happiness, Abiding Peace and Unqualified Prosperity ¥ S . . BAILEY S

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