Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
5 { §§ Fiorida by boat is coming into popu- { K PAGE FOUR. Bo o [l:q N ¥ ! The svee:h of Presiden Zi g 'Ollll; ]’ § ¢ resident Zim, of 'ltl “ aie‘"‘dll}‘ the State Federation of Lalor, de Published every afternoon from the ";('d' h“r“re. £e -..mmlal Senyention gf Keniucky Building, Lakeland, Fla. if'mt body in this city and publighed dg : In' the Telegram yesterday, was an Entered in the postoilice at Lake-. admirable deliverance and deserves land, Florida, as mail matter of theg a wide reading. It was a srong ap- second class. ‘xwal for the rights of organized la- M. F. HETHERINGTON, EDITOR.I claims of that great cause. And, more than this, there was no jarring note in it to gratuitously arcuse clags antagonism and seek HENRY BACON, 'Slanager. = SUBSCRIPTION RATES: to segregate Oneyear ..........ooun, $5.00 | the labor union elemeny as a bodv Sixmonths .. .. ...... .o 2,50 apart from the rest of society, work- Three months ......... « 125 ling out its own destiny in cold and | Delivered anywhere within the limits of the City of Lakeland for 10 cents a week. | selfigh higher the | brotherhood of man, and that *‘fed- eration of the world” to which all disreenrd of From the same office is issued I THE LAKELAND NEWS A weekly newspaper giving a re- saime of local matters, crop condi, tions, county afiairs, etc. Sent any- where for $1.00 per year. With the experience of to things tend. both journaiist and legislator svmpathics, President Zim is lifted | above any narrcw view of the cause of which he is the official head In; { Florida, and believing in that cause . with all his soul, he seeks to pro- H S 2ad broaden his mental activities and; THE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAK ELAND, JAN 16, 1913 lurge, pture him, if possible, tie him up in a cool, dry place, give him togd and water and watch him. Don't Lill him unless it is absolutely im- sessible to capture him. If he bites L!h ir dogs, treat them the same way. There is no disease that creates as much panic in proportion as ra- bor and a wise presentation of theyjes, vet when it is taken in time ol i 3 with the remedies now Known to medical men, it is not difficult to pre- ont. It does not spread very rapid- stem up to a certain v man in the ordinary in the ly roint, and civilized community, if he is bitten iy be sure of recovery if by a dog, h: acts sensibly. He should at once consuly the nearest physician, who will treat the wound and report the case to the State board of health. which will nlways advise what is best to be done. The work of the State board is greatly helped by 1 knowing if the dog is mad or mot. The man is also greatly helped by knowing the dog isn't mad, which i3 The county seat war rages wm.s riote its interests along the enlight- often the case. The scientists can't decide about the dog until the dis- unabated fury in dear young Pinel- | ened lines which makes friends in-|eag, has passed a certain point. It las. its spongy fron¢ and remarks that it,, strength for the workingman by just too, must be considered a candidate | consideration for therights of others. for the honor. !Prosideng Zim has some excellent Bl ' legislation in view to benefit the la- Talk about 1913 being an unlucky | bOr interests of Florida, and as a 13! ~.m(-mber of the next State Senate he year because of the “hoodoo SR 0% 5 beilies & A vet Florida oranges and grape-! e osition to arcomplish e i much to better conditions for th.~l fruit are now rolling across the con-| i tinent to supply the demand In : working people in this State. stricken California! Of course that A e L5 AT O way of looking at the hoodoo might! Colonel Wailes has acted wisely ‘ not work in the Golden State, but.in accepting that $25,000 which has’ that's none of our affair. !b»en lying in the State treasury sub- | ATy SR "jeet to his order for years past, in | When President Wilson takes his scttlement of his claim against the scat next fourth of March he will State. He had exhausted every legal be stuffed with so much advice and resource, and to let the money f0 many suggestions from so many owarded him by the Legislature li- feople from so many different nurts' unclaimed while he brooded and ol the country that the poor man fretted his life away and ate out his may be too heavily ballasted to get. heart with impotent rage at what he up out of it again when it becomes telieved the gross injustice done | necessary for him to rise to the oc- Lim by the State, might have made : casion. , material for a great story but would i -0 i have been an empty husk for him.| There is no part of the world; His claim was for nearly $200,000 | where the criminal law should be|&#nd he gets but little more than an! enforced with such speed as in the “'8hth of it. He will carry a large, | ' ness. And Tarpon Springs now lifts'stead of foes and wins added | the dog is killed before that point is reached, they can only guess. The power of suggestion is great in supposed rabies. There are cases on record of men being bitten by dogs and dying in convulsions, al- though the dogs were afterward found to be free from the disease. Of late years there have been cases ¢f men and women who after being bitten rushed off to the nearest Fasteur institute at great expense when the animals that bit them were probably not affected with anything more than fright or ordinary sick- It is natural for a dog to bite when he is worried, and it is natural for a man to worry himself sick, sometimes insane, when he thinks he has the poison of rabies in his sys- tem:, Don'y kill the dog if you can help ft. He may prove the most impor- tant witness for himself and the man he has bitten.—Ocala Star. e e ke BOUND TO MAKE GOOD. The papers are devoting severa! South. Conditions here absolutely | ¥4rm grlevance through the r-main- columns of editorial about the new vnique would fully justify this: der of his days as a close companion ccurse even if it involved the making | to disturb his peace of mind, but he of a new constitution forevery South- | *ill have $25,000 to pay expenses ern State. Precedent and traditlon | “hile he is thus engaged, and we have their uses, but they shouldn't|"?ve known good men who had to te permitted to stand for a momens | Mustle for a meal ticket while they 11 the way of such an administration | ®ntertained a grouch, not as large of the law as would give its best and | Put Just as active and as good a quickest protection to our wives and governor and how he will make good. The editor of the Herald de- voted this space to Park Trammell when he was only Park Tram- well and wanted to be attorney gen- eral. We did the same for him when Attorney General Trammell wanted ! to be governor and now that he has I stayer as the Colonel's. We would |taken his seat-—the highest in the daughters and mothers and sisters against the assaults of human brutes at large. ; e ¥ The Telegram has been publish- ing here of late guite a lot of edu- cutive literature, pro and con, on the Yoy mighty comfortable with that Siate—we have no space to take up {little wad Colonel Walles got out oi | P What he will do. We just natur- the State trensury and so would any |811¥ know that he will make good one of an overwhelming majority of and after he has made good for his the citizens of Florida, and, in view | Ul term the Herald will take up of the certainty of death and the |#0me more space for Park Trammell erhemeral character of all earthly | for U. S. Senate or president of the foys and successes we advise the (~°|_;l7. S. or some other small office. i “The palatial houseboat Cocopo- dog and cat issue which l& a very). live ono in this community just now.{‘mel to make the As a further mnu;lhuuon to the ‘cause we reprint today from the Ocala Star a thoughtful and sugges- tive article under the caption, “Non"t Kill the Dog,” which, it secems to e, brings out some good points or the subject worthy of careful con-|!n a very comfortable and sensible sideration. Certainly the hasty kill-| Way over the disaster to the Cali- fog of the doz in the case in every | tornla citrus crop and its relation fnstance destrovs gome very impor-{‘'o our own State. That paper ex-' tant testimony |messes the general opinion among! —_—-0 the best people when it says: The dispatches tell us that one of “The Florida orange and grape- the features of the great suffravette | fruit grower, who has worked under | parade in Washington on the third | the great disadvantages of of March will be a division of sev-|!reezes, freight discrimination and eral hundred girls about fourteen|™any other highly charged obstacles, years old gowned in white and violet | veuld be less than human if he did and carrying banners inscribed, “Tho! ot indulge in a moment of gloating Future Voters of America.” By ev- ““'('r the reported damage to the fruit ery rule of legal construction that of California. The immediate result means that the votes-for-women | Will be a largely increased price for movement contemplates the dis- | hi8 own product, a higher valuation franchisement of man when the bal- | for his own lands, and for the State, fot is safely lodzed in the hands of |2t large, greatly increased immigra- woman. Forewarned is forearmed |tion. That feeling will be strength- A female despotism rear.q on the|ened when he remembers that, for ruins of this repudblic can never be|r'any years, he has had to take the while manly men are left to protect | Jibee and jeers of the Californta fts institntions against the insatiable | Erower. The State has had to suf-| ambition of the Tyrant Woman. We|fe:r frcm the extremely unfair eriti- would better examine the insides of | (ism coming from California sources. | this wooden horse called female sut. * frage before we admit it within the walls. gain and be happy on the way. ——0 | WE SYMPATRIZE BUT DO NOT FORGET. | The Miami Herald philosophizes | former has carried on a systematic paign of misrepresentation of that is Floridian, and he will temper cam- R — Traveling across the peninsula of farity now and is strong proof of the extraordinary development going on fr. this State, The Fort Myers Press tells the latest instance of nav- .+ §pation of this kind: about what is coming to them in that has come to California. The melo, Captain Sprague, from Phila- delphia, with the owner, William Disston and his family aboard. ar- rived here this morning from Palm Beach, via Fort Lauderdale and the eanals, thence on down the Caloosa- still too keen, not to compel us to a State that has not been quite fair overlook all that, now.” | He will remember that (‘alifornia | all l his sorrow with the reflection (hat|!"!¥ing at a luncheon taany California people are gelting | 2Pout literary figures. the whirlygig. But, after all, no one when they illuminate, when they un- n Florida rejoices over the dlnstorld""co" or italicize one’s meaning. memory of a not very remote disas- the other day, I heard a foreman em- | ter of like nature, in this State, is play an excellent figure. svmpathize with the misfortunes of LA L, pn\'e»‘ others, even if those others are in|™ent: 10 us in times past We may well jured voice replied: best of a bad bar<;Me‘“"m°’ Governor, here's to you! Cive us what you've got!—Sanford Herald. A LITTLE NONSENSE NOV AN.DE'FHFN S ‘J. M. Sparling on Kentucky avenu: . () Over the Coffee Cup. The following conversation recent- Iy took place between a well known comedian and his somewhat stern lendlady: Landlady ~Good morning, sir; kLow do you find the voffee this morn- ing? Comedian—-1 have named this cof- fee Novewmber, my dear madam. Landlady- Indeed, sit! And migh 1 venture as much as to beg to in- quire the reason for such a trite ap- pellation? Comedian—Oh, just because it is s¢ cold and cloudy. Landlady—You are a brilliant | young man; no wonder you make your audiences roar. [ thought of ruming it after you. Comedian—-1 solicit information. Landlady—Becauge it is so Inngl hefore it settles. Lite Robery Herrick, the author, was in Chicago “Figures,” he said, “‘are only good “As 1 passed a building operation | “*What are ye doid’ up thero, | | Rattan Cot, a new 30-30 Rifle—Mari | | ! Are the Statements of Lakeland Citi- | zens Not More Reliable Than Those of Utter Strangers? This is a vital question. It is fraught with interest 1o Lake- lind. It permits of only one answer. It cannot be evaded or ignored. A Lakeland citizen speaks here. Speaks for the welfare of Lake- | land. 'ANSWER IT HONESTLY. An urter stranger’s doubtful. | Home proof is the best proof. Fla., says: *I have taken Doan's Kidney Pill sand 1 consider them a ! good backache and kidney remedy. Last spring my kidneys troubled me and | had lameness in my back, to- gether with rheumatic pains. Doan's Kidney Pills brought me prompt re- lief and acted so satisfactorily that 'it is a pleasure to recommend them.’, For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s and take no other. Lakeland lAaod;eNNoA 91, F. & A |M. Regular communications held o. second and 4th Mondays at 7:30 p ‘n. Visiting brethren cordially in vited. J. L. LOVE, W. M. J. F. WILSON, Secy. Lakeland Chapter, R. A. M. N¢ 29 meets the first Thursday night i: each month in Masonic Hall. Visi fng companions welcomed. C. G Arendell, Sec'y.; J. F. Wilson, H. ¥ Palm Chapter, ¢). k. S. meets ever: second and fourth Thursday night: of each month at 7:30 p. m. Mr Flora Keen, W, M., Lucle F. ‘B Eaton, Secy. Lakeland Camp No. 78, W. 0. W meets every second and fourth Thurs. day night. Woodmen Circle first and third Thursdays. W. J. Estride Council Commander, Mrs. Sallie Scip | per Guardian of Circle. K OF P. Regular meeting every Tuesda at 7:30 at 0dd Fellows Hall. Vielt ing members always welcome. F. D. BRYAN. Chancellor Commandet A WM. _ACKSON, Secretary. " Grand Ordey of Eagles Meets every Wednesday night i 0dd Fellows hall. G. W. Row'ant president; W. B. Hicks, secretary. POST 23, G. A. R. Meets the first Saturday in ever: month at 10 1. w. at the home o' A. C. SHAFFER, Commander J. R. TALLEY, Adjutant. Elnora Rebekah Lodge No. 4 meets every second and fourth Mon- day nights at I. 0. N. F. hall. Visit- ing brothers and sisters cordially in- vited. MRS. JULIA FRENCH, N. G. MRS. T. E. ROBERTSON, Sec. Lake Lodge No. 2,1.0.0. F, meets Friday nights at 7:30, at 1 0. 0. F. hall. Visiting brothers are cordially invited. E. M. SMAILES, Sec. T. E. ROBERTSON, N. G. G LA toBofL E Orange Blossom Div. No 499 G. 1. A. to B. of L. E. meets ever) second and fourth Wednesdayr of each month at 2:30 p. m. Visiting Sisters always welcome MRS. J. C. BROWN S8ec'y Mrs. J. B. HOGAN. Pres ARCHER The Second-Hand Man! Cook Stoves, Heaters, One l"onl'-l burner Oil Stove, Beds from $2 or! 1'p, Dressers $4 up, Chairs 50c up.]‘ Rockers $1.50 up, Office Desk, Settee, | Puffet, Sideboard, Sewing Machine | *“A head appeared above and an in- | “‘Laying brick, of course.’ | *‘Well,’ shouted back the fore- hatchee from Lake Okeechobee. * * ¢ AR R : The Cocopomelo i a larze boat of DON'T KILL TEE DG, ;D““ from'.‘_"vr giiice 5 Mighi e 70 feet length, with a heam of 19 i layin' eggs. ‘ | feet, drawing only 2 fect of water,| A slight hydrophobia scare, which : \ which makes her an ideal hoat for |Started up in a near nelghborhood a | eruising along the Florida coast, and | feW days ago, gives the Star occasion Must Be Pretty Bad. | with the exception of the steamer Suwanee is the largest boat yet to cross the State via the canals from ! the Atlantic to the Gulf.” te repeat the warning it has already published a time or two, and that is, “Don’t kill the doz.” e It a supposedly mad dog is at Commercial Guayquil is one of the vilest pesh | doles in the world, surpassing evea Suez, which Kipling has invested with a hideovs immortality.—New York lin takedown—and other articles too numerous to mention. Just pur- | chased all of Dr. Bevis’ housebold“ and office fixtures | Sccoml-llmuli Store $10 Wegt Maia Street, Lakeland, Fla A citizen's statemeny is reliable. | F. B. Terrell, Lime St., Lakeland, | ¥ LO00C0000OOACOLOOOEY POBQLOFO PO i e —————— e ——— Commencing Saturd amiary For a few days only, ye will sell any suit in o window for $9.00. Also any hat that we wilj show in our window for $1.50. . Now is your chance to get some good clothes cheap, L= s s ) The Hub JOSEPH LeVAY 118 Kentucky Avenue Lakelan: [r oo el RS (R b ARG SN Where Can You Get Them Here at this drug store, f, If the doctor save you need a certain instrument or appliance (ome right to this store— we have it. e e+ e % e Red Cross Pharmacy Phone 89 ¥ Quick Deliven FOITOOOOODCAVNOCOOOO0C LT L For Ail hinds of See Us Fur ROSEDALE and PARK HILLLos Deen & Bryant Building 5. TAKE R ARDUI Woman’:Tonic Don't wait, until you are taken down sick, before tak- ing care of yourselt. The small aches and pains, and other symptoms of womanly weakness and disease, always mean worse to follow, unless given quick treatment. You would always keep Cardui handy, it you knew what quick and permanent relief it gives, where weakness and disease of t:e womanly system makes life seem hard to bear. Cardul has heiped over a million women. Try it Wrike : Ladies' Advisary Dept, Chattansogs, Mediciae On., Tesa, hwmumn"n-n--v-m [T} 3-!1 4y \ l akeland. Fiu - \ e ] Mr | | | | | l | - O T T IR T