Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, January 24, 1913, Page 1

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Panshed in the Best Town in th: Best Part of the Bes e e 05 [ L0 KILLING TING ‘17 07 ACCIDENTAL SEO00{- OF NAZIM PASHA. \ssociated Press.) iple, 24-—Fi,hting i+ several places in the ruing A de wnd ther RES ::-J Jan. 1 or more blie excitoment followed { N <.r and commander of the pmy who was shot last Ihe hooting was domne by ey, or Talaaty Bey. 1o have been accidental. | licers shot when Nazin wed dire on them from a win- im, who was sitting inside was struck by ey niormed the Kuropean am- .rs tnis morning that all the 1~ necessary will be taken to tie security of the city, FAKE CHECK ARTIST MAY BE IN FLORIDA, at Memphis, Tenn., <irous of obtaining informa- varding a fake check artist horities now thought to be in Florida, | | cspecially among the real The secretary of the Ilstate association azents Ronl teal wonld asgk that all real estate] . in your city be warned of a iing his name as E. B vio, under the pretext of wish- property, presents vhich reads as follows: 1. lorton, fhhngo, lllmuh o buy uting the National Malleable | "o, told the story here that his Mre. Elizabeth Borton An- 0 lives in Chicago, had been | by her physician to live in | ler o climate, and Memphis, had been selected as her | fe nezotiated with two dif- estate dealers for the a dwelling costing re- vy 37,000 and 35,000, anl 14, 1912, in closing which he was to pay $1,000 i money, he presented a real of cor- heck of the Continental and ereial National bank of Chi- 111, purported to he signed by Angell, and made pavable to . Horton; one for $1.2 ther for $1,500; receiving back rom one of the real estate men $250 "1 %500 from the other. Both cer- 'v! “hecks were forgeries. description of this forger is ollows: 40 tg 45 years old; five *ix inches; weight about 145. nm complexion; iron gray hair sibly prematurely gray); gray ¥ mustache (may now be 0ili shaven): blue eyes; wore clothes; black Englisn derby oxtra high turn down collar; shoes; four-in-hand polka dot smokes Pall ..all cigarettes; rinks Scotch whiskey; wears nose lasses; and a good talker and He has beep indicted here nassing these forged checks, and tils warning is sent to all real es- '#ln exchanges, that members be no- and put on guard, and his ar- effected, in the event he at- pts similar swindles In other 1“5 The utmost caution should tercised if he shows up, so as 7o' 1o alarm him until a wire of his Trsence is sent to either E. 0. Ken- R Th resser I*. executive secretary, Memphis ! state association; PRusiness Club building, Memphis, or to the O'Havers Detective “nev, Baltimore, building, Mem- | Drrn op HEART FAILURE. {By Associated Press.) Atlanta, Ga., Jan. 24.—The father | " Robert S. Sharp, chief inspector of the postoffice department, died of heart fajlure here late yesterday, azed 73. OCCURRED TODAY AS/ wvere many | ;m Pasha, forme: | It a lmllm.: the new minister of the | Hor- | his each ! 50 and thv“ LAXILAHD n.onm. FRIDAY, JAN. 24, 1913. S NSATISFACTORY GREAT BATILE 0 ENGLAND ¥ BRODKLIN fere 7 0 ¢k Tuesday right when e was rn down by a street car at Sixth and Main streets, M. H. Dor- sett, Gy years of age, vice president of tie Overman-Williamson Co., liv- ing at 1729 Pearl street, died at the lic3oto sanitarium at 1:15 o'clock _.is. ufh-rnn'(mv Blood clots on the { GAZETTE SAYS HIS SUGGESTION‘SEVENTY STRI’{ERS ATTACKED brain and fracture of the skull MIGHT DISTURB GOOD RELA- 300 WORKMEN WHO RETFUSED t proved fatal to Dorsett, who was at| first believed to have cscaped \\uh TIONS BETWEEN COUNTBXES TO QUIT WORK. i dinor injuries. In an effert to san 1 et S | the injured man's life, Dr. ¢. P} Loudon, lan. 4. —— Secretar By Arsociated Press.) Perey operated on him, Dorsett ral- | Knox's reply on the Panama que New York, Jan. 21.--Seventy I 1ied slightly following the o'w‘r'!mnl tion was found unsatisfactory Ling sarment workers save bat | it was unable to hold his own, soon lllln\w evening papers which ma with stones and revoliers in! inking into a stite of coma. Dor- comment The Westminster i Crcokiyn today to 200 employes of leott was attempting 10 cross ““,'/ulv nerally tooked upon as the tactory who had refused 10 quit : Lt oof way of the street car com mouthpicee of the covernment, sa vk When the police TESOrVes | | “Knoy's suczestion leaves the do cared the streets it was tonnd that i nany at the time of the accident, ['open to a long series of bickerin oreowas badly injured and a <Im:(-n! | | which might do mich to undermive ot minor inguries. ! :sIHAWBEflfllES AHE .Hw good relations between the two e | countries A THE EXAMPLE OF LAKELAND, : 1] "l —r | MUVING SuME i KNOX'S REPLY DON'T Petersburg js in a mix up over | ! SUIT LONDON PAPERS 1 “Sunday opening™ question, The e s o fieture shows want to open but the } [ Thousands of Quarts Now Being! (By Assoclated Press.) yor savs no. Now the picllll'l‘l | Rushed to the Northern . Washington, .an. 24, -Secretin Bow men say that all business ini Markets. | Knox's reply to the British protes 11 ety must suspend on the Sab- peres | inst exemption of - Amerie: nd that the faw must be en- | Visitors and nome folks alike | Corstwise shippinz from the '““‘"” od as against ail. So that the should visit the packing shed of \lmi canal, tolls having ben received ' iyation is becoming unpleasant, evpress company ip the uftornoons- London it ix incumbent upon i nir jrogressive neighbor, Lakeland, | {and view the fine strawberries which | British office o come to adeeision o solved the problem of \‘nnd:l.\'i {are woing forward to the northern it onct oun the vourse to he pursw fertainment by providing a sacred [ markets, Botween 5,000 and 6,000 |0 the continwanee of negotiution i coneert every Sunday afternoon | Cuarts leave this section daily, and|“"" ials here are awaiting the Biel is held in the auditorium, Or- i is indeed an interesting sight to | Cision With interest becanse upon ndo mizht profit by Lakeland's ex- depends the probability of Taf 5010 Orlando Sentinel | see the packing operations and the splendid fruit which goes to tickle the pulate of the northerner, who is puying hetwen 35 .md 1l vvms p«r IAMILES DRDWY reaching a satisfactory settlemend before he leaves oftice OCKEFELLER MAY BE HEARD NEXT WEEK l About fi 3,000 quarts went forward l and last from Lakeland. Griffin - and Galloway, this week Kathleen, (By Associated Press.) | Princeton, N J., Jan. 24 Dudley | 1, of fatalities are unknown Lir is expected that an e \.lmm.nmlfl | viee at L img service {will preach morning and evening on t blate YOUNG PEOPLE'S MEETINGS ARE WELL ATTENDED. COLLAPSE OF BUILDING COST EIGHT LIVES ONE IS FATALLY HURT AND FOURTEEN RECEIVED MORE OR LESS SERIOUS INJURIES. Those who attend the Young Peo- ple’s service at the Presbyterian church in the afternoon enjoy the Gible reading and lessons which Mr. Newell gives to the young people. Lasy evening an appreciative au- dience listened to the minister as he showed them the power of Jesus to heal those who would look to him for salvation. Salvation is full and free, but we must accept it by faith in Christ Mr. Newell's methods have noth- ite of the sensational ip them. He preaches the plain Gospel, in a clear (By Associated Press.) Lind convineing manner McKinney, Texas, Jan. 24. -l is Saturday afternoon, the Younsg i certain that yesterday's store col- People and children will have a ser- 2:15. There will be no even- Saturday Mr. Newell lapse here was not a holocaust, which was believed to be the case this morning when daylight showed { the Sabhath day. i the stripped ruins, 1n whiel there — ‘\\ no possibility of finding any number of bodies, The death IENNESSEE E[EGIS E”*( standy 8t eight, with one probe “ihl_' fatally injured. Fourteen oths ire hurt, Exaggerated stories ‘ul the accident in which the number hish ad Uthirty-tive or torty, are explained by W. R. Webb, of Bell Buckle, Elt‘(‘t(‘dl the remarkable excitement Lers ‘Ul deaths were placed as There for Tel‘m Expiring on 1\\‘I> a bhig bargain sale on at the March 4 [ store, which drew trade from a large % csurrounding - seetion and the store Nashville, Jan. 21 Prof. W. It i e A e \ i was crowded b, of Be uckie, an indepen Y i i b el Or ML DUty f““ L i The building which adjoined the cit Democrat, was today clected asd | Cheeves brothers' establishmenr was United States senator for a term end- 0 A C _ a farm implement cone ing March 1 the next Ho defeated | A _ e - A g : corn. The collapse of a wall in the AL T, Bryan, editor of the Nashville H el implement house threw its weight ‘emocrat. : T againgy the larger building and with {a noise that shook the town to its ! foundation, hoth sank into ruins. At the first crack of timbers, clerks and customers alike broke for the streets, Pressed outward by weight of the imom store swaved, sagzed and byise oceupied hy MASONIC GRAND LODGE OF FLORIDA ELECTS OFFICERS Jacksonville, Jdan. 21 The Ma- sonie Grand Lodze in annual session in this city clected the following of- feers for the ensuing vear canal tol's, having heen received at Dr. B Glover, of \lmm-i”'""'"h into the department store cello, was raised from depury grand »‘:md in an ingtant hundreds of tons master o grand master. Cephas L. of merchandise and the wrecked and shattered hbullding material rained George | i vi which brought into local circulation | ; A f ‘I\\Ilsoll. of Mariann: was rafsed |’ | i it | i : g Wiashingron, Jan. 21, The House { from senior grind. warden to de m“ in 2 heap into the department store, vout $12.000, figuring on a basis of | (By Associated Press., | money trust committee hoped to be | TG e i ' plling thirty-five feet in th i : i \ w9 N ; y-iive fee > alr, ‘0 conts, the price many of thel Memphis, Tenn,, Jan, 24— A0 an=|ghle 1o conclude its investigation to- NS i Rpee ¥, O Jageed timbers stuck [ l nlL o b stige 3 B > W | Jagee s stuck § growers contract their crops at a'| ontirmed telephone report oday [ gy Chairman Pujo and Counsel Tampa, went from junior 1o scnio: { g “Al:r . ":“;] ”' ‘1. r(l":l : l(; ':::m‘ i : g i % - & v arde S York Live After d ent of stunned ac- the opening of the season. {trom the vicinity of last w=hts | ypiiemyer will then make arrange- A WAL ot Yorks of Bl % S T | ireak in the main levee near Big \ W |‘I ‘ I‘ | l"uk‘ took n long fump from juniop | UVity hundreds of rescuers pitched | brea P omi g 2 ments to examine illiam Rocke- tor vy .p. | into the ruins. Scarcely had they b o s . i three| ¢ < : o srand deacon to junior grand war- > d 2 DON'T WANT THE JOB. Lake, Mo., e members of thre lhllm I'nm expects Rockefeller 'v‘ den. Dr. Henry Robinson, of Jack- | mounted the heap when tongues of S negro families were drowned Sum=1 e iy New York early next week, .nnl1 ' flame burst through it. From all sonville, again wag elected ;,rnnl u\.r the city camg workers and they I'ield Malone, son-in-law of Senator s ol ”\Il‘ Wi frado L hare treasurer for the thirty-sixt i i r - we formed into r<|x)s hy Mayor YGormi ; ras t pveral | . [ tle had no opposition W. P Web- | Were I days ago to have accepted an ap- i | ster, of Tacksonville, was also re | ‘ ' FLORIDA HOMESEE .| BOY FROM SANTA ROSA deeted for the seventeenth year as | hausted another |n.-.l- its plnce. From pointment as secretary to President | Wilson. declared, after a conference | . : CHAMPION CORN RAISER. ; arand seeretary. 1 had no opposi- . ”“,‘ hnrlnlm: ruins bricks were hurled 1 vith the president-clect today that! The Tampa Times of yestirdayy o : {tion, WYL BOWilkie, of Dunedin, | aside, timbers forn out "‘_“‘ cast into | Covernor Wilson has not offered | 1Y : i Gainesville, ':AH 21 “l('h'.ll'(ll“..m also re-elected zrand chaplain | the street and human iu'lilw ‘Hned ‘. me. either direetly or indirectly, SArriving in Jacksonvill day | Niiller, of Baker, Santa Rosa .Myllllly, Cor the eleventh year. No opposition ,fmm the wreckage and harried to v appointment under the "nin'dl will be five cars of homese! over s been declar <‘l the champion boy ‘Ih“f"l’””h*» ates government, nor has anybody the Atlantic Coast Line, A\ omi ¢ corn grower of Florida for 1912, He | : R 5 I f '[ Cincinnati will go to Narv to- | produced from his acre 129 1-4 !SE UmFORT SYSTEA OF representing him done so. Lam RO 05 N peossen i a boo-t it lushels o corn a4 cost of 26 cents iAG“flM PUS]PUNE“ “N | FARMERS' WARLHOUSES i callClubine o "W”””‘"wm' e & tle town near Kissimmee cill ! er bushel Hastings' Prolifie corn | | = Hot “\.'."W' thut any will he oflnrvd‘;i\“ tholt How homesneker "‘u”i vo used for seed. The land was| EnMPENSA‘“uM B".Ll Columbug, Ohio, an. 21 % uule s i [ welcome. A car will go 1o of L plowed I inehies deep, the "“"'“f form system of warehouses through- | e lihe following towns in cont lor-!were 42 inches apart,~and fh ,\u.ndi ont the United States, which is ad- ! {tda: From New York to I ‘?"l‘~l in the row abony 10 inches { | da, from Chicago to St. I -1rL:,’ The champion hoy corn grower | :nd from Cincinnati to Sehn All|gets a free trip to Washington, | "HUEH In SIuP PA“IE these cars are loaded with torthern | through county contribution, and people who are going to Yo in| $50 in cash from the Hastings Seed T Florida, and make their b here | Co., of Atlanta, Ga. { (By Associated Press.) ! —— It would not only he well for nurl New York, Jan. 24— William E.| MA[L TRAIN BEAT HIM T0 IT. |boys to note the high yield at a low Corry, when cross-exnmined today —_— cost but also for our farmers to con- in the government’s suit to dissolve Norristown, Pa., Jan ! The|sider seriously the matter of low the steel corporation, testified that| i'nited States mail was too fasy for|cost of production. Corn can and he opposed the purchase of the Ten-| Robert Mulfinger, 65 yens 4, alshould be produced in Florida at so nessee Coal and Iron Co. and latr|yeaithy business map of t Nor- [ low a cost that the farmers produc- concurred when the financiers de-| rictown township, and to t'is he|ing it would not only receive reason- cided it was necessary to stop the|,wes the fact that he is alivv. Mul-{able daily wages for all the time panic. Corry is said to have be-lfno0r planned to commit <:i id= and | employed in making the crops, but, lieved the purchase price {00 high. pdertak- ) in addition, a reasonable profit on t his|the investment he wrote letters to a loca! er and a local banker af* MAKE IT LAW IN ALL STATES. | hurial and his last wishes | hey re-| Richard Miller has made good not ceived the letters so prompt' they jonly in securing 2 high vield but Columbus, Ohio, Jan. 24.—The so- called “drunken chauffeur” law, which was the first bill signed by Gov. William Sulzer, of New York, was today offered in the general as- sembly by Representative Bartlemeh, of Tuscarawas county. It provides found Mulfinger lying in nic bath-|also what is vastly better he has room with a tube connecte! <ith the zas fixture in his mouth was revived and demanded to know Why they had saved his life. Mulfinger lost money recently in invcsiments and fearing that he was zoinz to the made good from a business stand- point. He has paid for his seed fertilizer, time for himself and his team and ha: a splendid profit to show for the “brains mixed with the labor.” a fine of $100 and six months in jail| noor house, he preferred (ath to] Santa Rosa county carried awny for intoxicated persons who drive tha, fate. the champiouship for 1912, Who motor cars in public. Provision also =2 will carry away this splendid prize is mads that when a vietim is run | popE ALL RlGHT for his county in 1913? There are cown the chauffeur must remain at SAYS JIX HILL. | already about 1,000 boys enrolled the scene of the accident and give and other names are coming in daily his name and address New York, Jan 24 Jamcs . Hill | Who will win I came to New York from <t Paul Twelve cars of lettuce were this morning. He sa’d that e hald}hipped from Sanford last Tuesday t 2t which date the prices qu 22.23, a most desirable advan been unable to discover ¢ HU“KEFEU.EH RETURNG TO PALM BEACH ¢ 5" cpinior that 1 e nnduly concerned over the political (Ry Associated Press.) cituation. He regarded zeneral busi- Prinewick, Jan. 24 —-After a vis- | ness conditions as good. it of one day to Jekyl island, Wil- {liam Rockefeller and party left late vesterday. It was understood their | destination was Palm Beach, Fla. - ¢ over was several weeks prior to last week. The new cold storage plant at Pa- latka Is rapidly nearing completion and will be the best and most com- vlete of its kind in that section of Florida. Dunedin, a little town near Clear- water, has organized and will soon launch the Bank of Dunedin. \ the rainous prices paid for lettuce | (By Associated Press.) Washington, Jan. 21— Samuel Gompers today asked the louse ju- diciary committee to postpone their action on workmen's compensation bill until the Railroad Brotherhood employes, opposed to it, could be heard. The committee took no ac- tion. vocated by the National Farmers' Congress, will be devised by a com- mittee which was appointed here to- day by Charles F. Sanford, of Lon- don, Ohio, presideny of the Congress, and Levi Morrison, of Greenville, Pa., chairman of the executive com- mittee. The committes is to con- sist of Harvie Jordan, Atlanta, Ga.; | William A. Bowen, Arlington, Tex.; MASONIC GRAND LODGE { Joshua Strange, Marion, Ind.; James MEETS IN JACKSONVILLE A. D. Finley, New York; William Creasy, Catawasie, Pa., and Henry Jacksonville, Jan eich | Feig, Minneapolis. As instructed by t.-fourth annual communication ol {¢pe convention held at New Orleans the Grand Lodge of Free and Aecept-1 g, September, 1912, the committee is ed Masons convened Tuesday in theeq work out a plan for a system of Masonic Temple, on CSlain street, warehouses in which farm products acksonville. When the zrand mas- | .an be stored. ter called the to order nearly every seat was occnpied and during the day and at night others art in the city to attend the meetings. except Liberty Liberty county has no lodge. The grand sec- retary said that the order was grow- lod 2 ANDREWS CLEARED BY THE JURY FOR KILLING SHERIFF. Every county in the State After deliberating for less than an bour, a jury in Criminal Court yes- terday afternoon acquitted William P. Andrews of manslaughter in con- is represented. ing numerically steadily and that nection with the killing of Sherift there were now in the State between Johy N. Langford at the Duval ho- | 10,000 and 11,000 members of the tel 6n Aug. 25. 1012 ks tive lodses As already told in the Metropolis, i Ithe trial opened yoo erday morning IPHGE uElEBAIEs HE_ ' hefore Judze Maxw 1. The only eye | { witness was J. W. Harcher, a former member of the Lecis! ture. who re- | lated the incidents which led up to { the killing. Mainbard H. Myerson, one of the youngest members of the bar of Du- val county, who assisted lon L. Far- ris in the defense, m~de an able ar- gument to the jury. County Solicitor L. D. Howell was n:cisted in the prosecution by ttorney Ernest Knicht of Starke, a brother-in-law of Langford.-Jacksonville Metropolis. CALLED TO GONSTANTINOPLE (By Associated Press.) London, Jan. 24.—The new Turk- ish cabinct decided to recall the Ot- toman peace delegates here, accord- ing to a dispatch from Constantino- ple. Turkey is said also to have re- quested its ambassadors to Vienna and St. Petersburg to returp to the Turkish capital. | | | i i |

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