Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, January 17, 1913, Page 4

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& b 2 B ) s L Rad (! { e ! % 48" > 1 ]y Al i ! K i 1 R B § vael & ) { L 4 ) ¥ e e iy PAGE FOUR. The Evonuy {viegrail —— s Published ovory afternoon from the Keniucky Duiiding, Lakeland, Fla. land, Fl as mail matter of the second ¢l M. P HETHERINGTON, EDITOR. HENRY BACON, Manager, SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One year BIXmonthe .. .. shizvis Thrce months Delivered anywhere within the limits of the City of Lakeland for 10 cents a week. From the same offi e is issued THE LAKELAND NEWS A weekly newspaper cgiving a re- same of local matters, crop condi, tions, county afiairs, etc. Sent any- where for $1.00 per year. The Times-Union defends itself against the charge of what it calls “The Crime of Frigidity.” No, no, dear T-U; not the crime of frigidity, merely the coolness of it—low tem- perature - Chilly atmosphere, you un- derstand. The issue is purely ther-| mal- not eriminal. 0 Dr. \White, saperintendent of the government hospital for the insane in Wi aton, at & me ting of alien- irts yesterday in that city said: g dovs not it is a relizious and social term for matizing persons wiao et and do manner alarms the remainder of society.” mean disease certiin things in a which [ Douhiless a cood many dous in this nort of the countrr, nnder sus picion madpess just now, wounld like to extend that definition to the canine and plead it their summary exe sider the prevailing way of dispos- ing of their cores as government by assassination. AR il tribe in bar ot ution. They con- New York and North Carolina ar- the latest States to declare for the eiection of United States senators by populiar vote. the federal comstitution will go throuzh beyond a doubt and with very little delay. The dear oid r actionaries think iy is dreadtul, sir, perfectly direadtul, the way the mer: reople these days are overturning cur most sacred traditions and insti- tutions and messing up things thev flouldn’t be allowed to touch, sir but the d. o. r. will have to stand for it all the same, SN A SGE l.ocal sewing societies are ancient wvseful and respected institutions in rearly every community in America, dbut even there the polson of asps tinds its way and does its evil work. Miss Evans, a school teacher , 24 years oid, up in Lawrenceburg, Ind., ! kas brought suit for $5,000 damages against the president of the Luw- renceburg Sewing circle for “slan- derous, wicked and malicious marks” m: ing circle in the pr » of others. The toncue is an unr little mem- ber ond cireles everywhere will do well 10 muke n note of this Indicna incidont. 0 re- Intellizent and mmpartinl winter visitors to Florida who have been to California and are able to make com- parisons between the two States are certainly competent witnesses to the quality of onr climate. In this con- rection, this from the Miami Herald is pertinent: “Dr. and Mrs George Park, for the first time. California hollow.” said the doctor ‘and I'm really =fraid of what my | griends back in Towa will think of |are worth careful reading: me when I teli them of this glorious weather. It i8 beyond beliet and | With all good causes and made you 1 quite agree with the Herald's edi- | espouse them? J Reprosentative young girls in New not the daughters of million- well-to-do fam- tilies, have concluded that they can'i ; T trarry and maintain a home on less Entercd in the postofice at Lake- than $10.000 a year. That is the in- York, aires, bug of nice, fermation imparted to the New York {1ty Mothers™ Clubs by Miss Perry ! ) tudy de! | matter. ~ated to {ind our about th: Let us be thankful tha | these representative young girls o that fAmericn i nog If they were ol marringe would soon little better than a reminis Lecom coene in ihis county and weddings so infregueny that cie of them would } @ local sensation equal to the ar- representative ! the i hion. ( E. Thomas, the new ;I'\-mm ratic senater from Colorado, [ viected Wednesday, is a Georgian by Jth avd for many years has stood [ in ke front rauk of the Colorado Like many other southerners satisticd with local conditions aft- 1 ihe war, he went to the far west his youth with no capital but biains, honesty, energy and ambition end climbed to the top. { bar. He has been sovernor of Colorado and is mighty well Fixed in the little matter of this Ivorld's soods. Charl being long end whiskered, but he 3 is not much lean, stringy for looks, charzeter in large measure and wil® { bt one of the strong men of the gen- | THE EVENING TELEGRAM, T.AX FLAND, FLA., JAN. 17, 1913. s brains and | That amendment to | about her at said Sew- | of | Sioux City, la., are visitors in Miami ‘ hicago told his pupils that he Dr. Park, who is a great morthwestern authority on B the eye and, cur, is delighted with | could say “yes Florida and its climate. *“It beatulfflllfl?fin qustions that he should put three-ring circus. t body of is in al of u The ate. America the opinions of . HYPNOTISM A POTINT these New York sisters as the false ! BRANCH OF SUGGESTION and silly conclusions of a bunch of | young women reared in an ntmOS-l phere of selfishness, Q-xtru\'agancol jend artificialism fatal to good sense disn afely (Contributed. ) “All truth is precious, if not all di- and a sane view of the great institu vine, and a sane vie' Ered 5| "l A 56 ‘tion upon which human civilization A4 NOAL dilates ‘l.he PONSES. Bust B needs refine. i W The influence of mind over mat- | ter has been a recognized - 'LOOK LIKE HOME s smip B B B | i 't since time inconceivably E RULE FOR IRELAND. | rcmote, We briefly produce a few of the many illustrations with which It reads like a page of fiction, but | history abounds. {it is a hard fact, nevertheless, tha’ A doctor was called to see a lady { the British House of Commons has!with 4 severe case of rheumatism ‘actually passed the Dbill granting |and tried to zive a vapor bath in bed: | home rule to Ireland. This probably ! with an old tin pipe and a teakettle, i means an Irvish parliament and pret- | 4nq only succeeded in scalding the ty nearly complete self-government i patient with the boiling water from | for that island, but the House o7 |the ovepr-rul) teakettle, The patient Lords is still to be heard from. In gopreamod: “Doctor yc Vi scald- | Gladstone's day the Commons passed Lod me,” and |,.u,,|‘(|r (,)”)(un'fml:‘tdm{;ll.‘lr ta home rule bill for Ireland and the PR RIKUMATISM \WAS ('l'lil'llb. Lords contemptuonsly turned 1l A lady saw a child in immediatc 'down, and they would be glad to do ' danger having its ankle crushed b o azain, but there has been a greal an iron gate. She was greatly agi- ‘change in English public sentiment . ted but could not move owine to in- lin the past few years favorable to I lvish home rule and the House of | e il.or'!s will e slow to defy that sen-' timent a second time. There is plen- 1ty of ty in England of abolishing the noble lords as a part of the zov- jernment of the country, and this |nay intimidate them into passing l'the Irish bill. But home rule is yet | far from a certainty, because the up- |per house of Parlinment is a very | uncertain quantity ruled by ancient customs aund traditions rather than (modern ideas, and it may get reck- less and kick the whole Irish gram to pieces, Sfeund with a Jarge red spot on the outer side. By morning her whole inflamed, I A French surgeon experimented . viith a hundred patients, giving them jm-;:nrc-nl water; then with a great show of fear that he made a mistake jond had given them an emetic, no fewer than eighty vomited. Common observations: What makes the hair stand on end? Why PrO idoes the hair turn suddenly gray? - Why do people blush? Why do they 0 (turn pale? Why does the heart pal- Vice President-elect Marshali | pirate? made a speech Monday to the |“'} Mental influences cure. Everybody dlana electors who met in Indian- js familiar with the fact thar a apolis that day to cast their votes taothache disappears in many *in- for president and vice president, and :st:\m‘vs as the sufferer approaches said to them: "1 assure you there (he dentist's office, foot w Records prov: will be no dispute in the incoming ! many a malady has been cured with national udministration for 1 do not | yread pills. A patient suffering from intend to oppose President Wilson.""! un attack of an acute colic, received i The assurance was unnecessary. The a4 prescription with the instructions: Llemocratic masses in this country “Take it.” He obeyed the order lit- bave unlimited faith in Tom Mar erally, taking the paper prescription sball. There is a quality about the jngtead of the medicine. The effect man hard to define in words which ' was magical. In a short time he was has carried him right into the full | ntirely cured. Many patients suf- confidence, not only of his party, but ' ¢ ping from paralysis for many years of the whole country and he stands | pyyv, heen knewn to leap out of bed lout a distinet, clear-cug personality. {und run when the alarm of fire was |+n satisfying in his robust common | yjven, Al this illustrates the influ- sense, his rare combination of sim- ! co of the mind over the body. nlicity and strength, his frankness, | : courage angd all-round adequacy that Bis fact have been built all the sy tems of mental healing which have he is justly regarded as one of the . om. ana gone since the world be- big “finds” in onr modern polities. wan. 1lypnotism is one of them, and LOF conrse he won't opnose Presidenc { Wilson; on the contrary, he will be! Ilns sturdy coadjutor and one of the yypaneh of drugless healing., (strong forces in helping to Keep the ! Abandon any thought of the mys- { party harmonious and the next ad- | (oriong in lht‘r;l])\-llli-('li | tainistration a success. Tom Mar-| pecause a thing is unknown to us is !ghall is all to the good. i no proof that it is mysterious or does l‘ - o I not exist. 1t merely proves that the facts connected therewith @ potent factor of suggestive ther- apeutics which is an important suggestive Can You Answer “Yes?" are un- | 5 . | known to us. takes a brave A Drofessor in the University of | nown to us. It takes a brave mind vestigate, To our forefathers most of the things in nature, which tp us seem ! perfectly natural, seemed mysterious, { The wise man is he who kecps his mind open ready to receive any ac- tually demontsrated fact whenever ehould consider them educated in the best gense of the word when they ' to every one of the e them. The questions are full of meat and Has education given you svmpathy - and proven. Now can we doubt the claims of | tense pain in her corresponding an- ! Later her stocking was removed | qond a cirele around her ankle wa- | Upon ¢ {to say: "l do not know; 1 shall in»!cordlnlly invited. and by whomsoever it is presented | gach month at 2:30 p. m. Has it made you public spirited? bypnotism? What is hypnotism in mystic realms and look through [ the invisible objects, tell the past. E;m sent, and reveal the unknown, to find the lost, and foretell the future Hypnotism is unmistakeably u geicnce. Its poteney was proven by [ the ancients, and we are glad to say [that it has lost none of its power tthrough all the ages past. “Thouzh fear doubt me, I shall win whate’er befall; ‘Though you jeer me, though you ) / v you me, thoush you For a few days only, will sell any suit in ., i window for $9.00, € Uf Jane Austen Unpopular, It has been pointed out with some | surprise that the late W. S. Giibert { had a strong dislike for Jane Austen, but a correspondent of the New York | Evening Post reminds us that Mark Twain had a similar antipathy. He sald once that “a library that does not contain Jane Austen's works is a good lib:ary, even if it hasn't another book {n it." Alsc any hat that we jj show in our window fo; $1.50. Now is your chance to g¢ some good clothes che: Uncle Pennywise Says: Things political are moving so fast that some of the old wheclhorses are having hard work to keep from being flout me, ' | Truth and | against you all'"” i Im over. ' [a¥el vap, TR NG ' The Hu JOSEPH LeVAY Lak: Lakeland Lodge No. 91, ¥. & A M. Regular communications held ou second and 4th Mondays at 7:3t m. Visiting brethren cordially in § 118 KCI’.tUCky Avenuc vited. J. L. LOVE, W. M. J. F. WILSON, Secy. S T R W L S i o Lakeland Chapter, R. A. M. N Rl ey ! i R N N A T T R Ty p— 29 meets the first Thuraday night i |g TR TR RTTIATY ‘each month in Masonic Hall. Visi ing companions welcomed. C. : Arendell, Sec'y.; J. F. Wilson, H. } Palm Chapter, (). K. S. meets every llecond and fourth Thursday uight: jof each mouth at 7:30 p. m. Mrs Flora Keen, W, M.. Lucle F. & |Eatou. Secy. Lakeland camp No. 78, W. 0. W meets every second and fourt: Thurs- day night. Woodmen Circle first| v ahird Thursdays, W. J. Estridz: ! Conncil Commander, Mrs. Sallie Scip iner Guardian of Circle. K OF P. Regular meeting every Tuesdar at 7:30 at Odd Fellows Hall, Visit Here at this drug store, If the docter « - ‘ 1 you need a certain instrument or appliance ((m right to this store— wec have it. ing members always welcome. | F. D. BRYAN. Chancellor Commarder A M. _ACKSON, Secretary. D e s etage v Red Cross Pharmac: Phone 89 » Quick Delit: { Grand Order of Eagles Meets every Wednesday night 1 0dd Fellows hall. G. W. Rowlano president; W. B. Hicks, secretarv { POST 13, G. A. R. Meets the first Saturday in every month at 10 1. m. at the home, o 1d. M. Sparlinz on Kentucky avenu. ! A. C. SHAFFER, Commander | 1. R TALLEY, Adjutant. | DOCOCOTOOBLLOOLO0O | é’ [ | Flnora Rebekeh Todge No 41 g py 7 # y £ meets every second and fourth Mon- ‘c«_ l L ‘ | & ‘,,' day nights at 1. 0. N. F. hall. Visit- | 3 ; For Ail hinds of | ing brothers and sisters cordially in- § vited. GODOOGOOHOC D MRS. JULIA FRENCH, N. G. MRS. T. E. ROBERTSON, Sec. Lake 2,100 F, mcets Friday nights at 7:30, at 1 0. 0. F. hall. Visiting brothers are l fa I Lodge No. See Us Fur ROSEDALE and,PARK HILL (1 Deen & Bryant Building Lakehndfi’r‘m;. E. M. SMAILES, Sec. T. E. ROBERTSON, N. G. G.ILAtBoL&SE , o f Orange Blossom Div. No 499 g G. 1. A. to B. of L. E. meets every Danlel In Second Placa. { second and fourth Wednesdaye of| Little Willie's grandmother had Visiting | Deen telling him Rible storles. his favorite being that of Daniel in the lions’ den. At the age of four he was taken to a eircus for the first time. Only Country Without Typewriters: Typewriters are now g use in nearly a hundred d guages, and they are sold : world; but there is still or tion which, for a very sim Qisters always welcome MRS. J C. BROWN S8ac’y Mre. J B HOGAN. Pres torial this morning that the world should know more fully the story of | Has it made you a brother to the this Garden of Eden.'” weak? e i Have you learned how to make The Fort Meade Board of Tragde friends and keep them? ) netted more than $200 from the re- | Do you know :\'ha[ it is to be a ibls to forcibly offer suzgestion cent old fiddlers’ convention in that | fricnd to yourself? ‘as to acts and thoughts not readily Here's a pointer for the Iake-| Can you lcok an honest man or ., willingly accepted at This is the most modern definition: ! Hypnotism is a state of mind, or men tal attitude, artificially produced, in which the powers of will and :miunl l@re changed, and during which it is | | city. other | Jand Board of Trade. There's more Fure woman straizht in the eye? ymeq, amusement and more instruction in Do you see anything to love in a | 7This is pot a twenticth-centyr. | gpelling bees than in fiddlers’ con-|lttle child? fad. Egyptlans have for many cen- ventions, and there ought to be morn | revenue. In this age of the world mighty governments—world powers | ——derive their revenues from any gource they can fairly get them from, | ro matter how small, and if a high- class spelling bee, with a paid at-| Will a lonely dog follow you in yyries practiced hypnotism by mak- the street? |ing people gaze fixedly at a glitter- Can you be hizh minded and happy | ing chrystal ball, and by the passes in the meaner drudgeries of life? | of the hand. Later, the irdoos hyp- Do you think washing dishes and ,notised themselves by staring at Van I Leeing corn just as compatible with [jmaginary point in space. The Greeks tigh thinking us piano plaving or | and Romans followed suit. |t tendance, under the auspices of the rolf? | known at that time as the Board of Trade, conld put money Are you zood for anything to your- | the passing of the hands. into the treasury of that institution |sclf? | brews and Assyrians nsed the same why not go for it? It would com-| Can you be happy alone? Many illustrations in the Bible bear tine rational amusement, desirable, Can you look on the world and see | corroborative testimony. education and good money all in one anything excepy dollars and cents? What was known to our ancestors | enterprige, and it might start an en- Can you look into a mud-puddlelas magic was the highest phase O(I thusiasm in the great canse of het- [ by the wayside and see a clear sky? | hypnotism. It was the stage of som- Can you see anything in the pud- | nambulism in which the spirit of the ter spelling that would sweep over the land and achicve a noble reform. jdle but mud? sypnotised subject is set frea to soar was “ure of | The He- | The Second-tland Man Cook Stoves, Heaters, One Four- burner Oil Stove, Beds from $2 or | ! ip, Dressers $4 up, Chairs 50c up, | 108 him a spanking. A litie later, Rockers $1.50 up, Office Desk, Settee, | Buffet, Sideboard, Sewing Machine, | Rattan Cot, a new 30-30 Rifle—Mari | lin takedown—and other articles too | numerous to mention. Just pur-! chased all of Dr. Bevis' household ! and office fixtures Second - Hand Store 210 West Main Street, Lakeland, Fla s has no typewriters th tongue. That nation is Ul —_— When the lion-tamer put his head into the llon’s mouth little Willle's excite- ment knew no bounds. Jumping up and down, he gleefully gereamed: “Oh, my! That knocks the spots Dantel'” me tMusic’s Ranne at Enfield “Music for sale. An | *Turkey in the Straw’ to "\ | Man,' and any of the Oh ! | #ags; see Ilenham & Murphs - in the Enfield Express. Didn’t Seem to Suit Mim, Bobbie, aged four, had always play- ed with older boys and consequently had picked up much slang. Recently | his mother had punished him by giv- | Nettles Made Into Fiber { Nettles by a new Gernan 1 are converted into a fit be combed, carded and spun lik | textile threads. still weeping. he came to his mother and gaid: “Mother, don't you love me at all any more?” “Why, yes, Bobby, why?" “Well, T don't think that ‘stunt’ you pulled off just now looks ' @much like it.” | ——— Wi Mzay Be Something In Them. A former convict says th . . not a disease,. but a respon that criminals are treated tor Iy, and that hor pa mistakes of the Well Expressed. “That man is not a very Y good lo- gician, but he is a most impressive talker.” “Yes,” replied Senator Son His theorles are worth inves s hom: “he i whot o ggetane re- = feoto oca o of *oviy g Low Ailtitude. peianent han teg ! “Mr. Wombat, you ought to go in ©* — 2 OVS. aviation. Many of our promiunent p<& True View of Life. ple are taking it up.” *l1 suppcs® * 1 am more and more impressed with Ought Have you got a machine tbat the duty of finding happiness —Gaorge Wil 8kim along nicely about eeved Eliot. feet from the ground?"—Judge

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