Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
e ‘yb meets tomorrow 4o for practice. All i the Presbyterian 4 focd sale Satur- iy Lake Pharmacy ilo .nding the winter in s apartments at Dr. yme, kindly present- this morning with a r plate on which ap- { Mrs. Hodges' home 111, Mr. and Mrs. nare much pleased with Lak here for some time and wiii b W e R o rcuce has been taken down ¢ the park and its appearance puch improved. J i that the park com- ¢ 1o Uity Council could now wisnce the usefulness of sk by having an opening cut . at the corner next to ave easy access to the cis It has been arranged: by i ave a gate put in on of the park in front ! the expense of steps lead- o the purk, and we helieve at the northeast cor- sutirely acceptable VMiunoer and mother, ched the city ston, Tex rip 1 Galveston tol A ry line It is | cood 1t these ack to 1 away a few they i ovements 1eht Lake “Your new tmd handsom Munecer, “fairs 1 oth ndsome ! 1 have d. 1 am glad to and, and I have beneeded rest, \We several weeks, nd the nd summer in | States.” Mrs. very good, but need of a rest and vi'l find both here | Ly friends ) PO‘X PELAGRA r.an aged German 1 his son-inlaw, n the Mr. | ()Hin""r 'e¢ north of town ive been the im- !vth. The remains former home of! -“acmc n ”‘S(WIA i "’““"ftm.mm. OLDEST AND BE!T IN THE FO"N]'Y “ OF THE STr'DIO Drama. ) —_— VEN PARSON T ~Drama. ) THE ATSI0N 8 0] - A Txngp gy e ————————————— DrRSONAL?Y } ARII\G DA DV has become necessary to erect a sec jond school building in order to ac- jodzes, who, with “""|chlldron. r station, in order th:\ll station door, but this wouldll‘r,_,,q L eompany but | died last m!hr‘ to Munt-| This is borne out by the fact that it commodate the increased number of These two large brick buildings argue much for the cuter- i prise and public spirit of the citi- zens of the town. Most of the busi- ness houses are of brick, and some of them would do credit to a much larger place. There are all the con- veniences-—such as electric lights with day current, water works, sew- erage, and ice plant. Ten years ago this growing, progressive town of some twenty-five hundred people was just a country store, a dwelling bhouse or two, a mulberry tree, & name on the map. “A8 every one knows, Mulberr, owes its rise and present importance to the phosphate mines around it. Millions of dollars have ben invested in this industry. 1 had been undes the impression that the phosphate iirdustry was a sort of evanescent, {uncertain enterprise. Here today and vonder tomorrow But one company here, and that not thel 1 was told by one of its en- ,ulni ers, has land enough on hand to kcep it busy for ninety years and is stull buying. - This serves to give some idea of the immense phosphate deposits around this place. 1t s sail that about half the phosphate of the | {world is mined in Polk county. “A few dayvs I went out in with how the phosphate it preparing it for hipment we o saw o wazr indeed Noth of ted seraping sinee a friend to see and handied What rovelation to soe the is mined oxp with seo phate or un Put mules nor geoons un men with pleks dies the nothing of The and w water from shovel wae tg te son ole process is done hy steam s the water is chot from | Compressed air 1 This iron “guns” in azainst the phogphate and rune deen wells larze stream i it. This slowly melts away lirto suetion pipes thronch which it | 1s earried to the Hydrau- i lie mininz it is ecalled The phos plate, fup into the form of emall eravels, i i('nrrv’ml hy tramway to the la gteam-dryine plants After heines is loanded into ears and is | hinped to market, where it fs nsed lin the manufacture of fertilizer Only a very small porticn of it is {veed in thie conntry Most of 1t is shinped 'n Europe and other foreign eonntricg continnons denos- washer | aried it EOOVS TO FF I'SF‘) { IN TEACEIRS' FX’\‘\'INATIO\T ft'mn the pnblishers at prices stated \lvv*”?'"x Civil Government of 1 Florida Painter and Co, De- , Land . < »xui® 80 | Alzebra--Milne'stlizh Sehool, A 1.00 Theory and Practice . White's | Elements of Pedazory, A 1.00 A UDITORIU " HUMAN HEARTS |Commg Feb. 27tn Sarah Bernhrdt i in | Queen Elizabeth IFeb. 24thand25th THE EVEN and |- Kind no | not even a steam | which is by this time lvm!'vu| i { prehension that this work, The followin: tevtg will he used as ections in the I-'lnr-{ imination for county | + 1912, and may be | { obtained from dealers in the State or Arithmetic Miine's Prog sive, Book III, A.......... 41 (;ramnmr—“,\'de's Two Book in English, Bookll. ............. .46 SSBD. .65 Florida History—Bennett and Brevard's, A .54 Civil Government—James and Sandford’s Our Government, Atlanta, Atlanta, Book Depository, ' from Ginn & Co.. School Ga.; "G l Course SSBD ..... Haistory—Our Republie, SRR e .50 Geography—Frye's Higher Ge- ‘ ORYADY, G ..orivnnnsnns 88 ‘ Agriculture--Duggar's Agricul- ture for Southern Schools, SRBD s e e .60 | INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT | Physioloey Ritchie's Human ivsiology, SSBD ......... i THE PHOSPHATE INDUSTRY. Composition Huntington's Writing to the Methodist Advo- I:Zlom»ms of Composition, cate, Rev. E. C. Hudson, pastor of the bs!m """"""""" 60 Methodist church there, has the fol- | FeAding -Any text. ......... lowing to say regarding Mulberry 'h':..sh.“l .th-ogrnphy = Mauey- and Polk county's phosphate indus- Simond's, A ..... . Anekce 1.20 try: Orthography — Aswell's New “Mulberry is quite a town. | am Century Speller, fism‘ ceee 18 told that its population has more Books marke.d "A m“-"‘m otten than doubled since the last census. from the \mvrnl-'un Book (o., Atlan- l a, Ga.; "3sBN,” from the Southern When thought advisable, booke have been chosen from the list adopted by the State Uniform Text Book commission. WCTU . Department. | __.|ing first day’s crowd. And it was a | On account of the Chautaugua the Woman's Christian Temperance Il nion did not hold its regular meet- Hing Tuesday Being reliably informed that Dr a telegram to Presiden: the people Xowlin sent Taft asking him to give the henefit of the doubt in regard to. the Webh bill, and allowing it to be | tosted after its pas: . in behal? of the W C.T. U, we wish to thank Lim for this act, and wish all preach- ers and fathers would take the same interest in the welfare of the risin. generation WHITE RIBBON SYMPHONY. committee unless she can gerve fait! intelligently, and the results o fully, promptly, willing to stand by Ilwl' individual I helieve that women should have a moral responsibility regarding fi nanclal matters in the prompt pay rrent of dues and pledzes, and a com like al thers, cannot be carrfed on withoni money. I pelieve in the value of a minut and that thievery of time on the por o one late member from those wait ing is reprotensible 1 believe *hat members should re frain from whispering during t}« | mrectings I believe no woman should seek « oflicial position for self-azorn membership in t vnion for stepping ctones only, ! [ that che should utilize her opno tunities for the altruiems of life I helieve the choracter and oot name of each individual men’ should he as saeredly gnarded hy tother members as are those of 1 l(-:mil'fi; and that the use of di} jm"vhl" methods in our society I!n the death-knell of pure. womar 1y orzanization 1 helieve the golden rale for whit | ribboners ghonld be, “Do rizht nun jothers, revardless of what othere « ;nnm von.”"-—Adapted from Mrs. Rn! jert Burdette action, ;nw‘ | ¢zement, or IANI-:N‘T THE LEGISTATURE ’ AND OTHER THINGS H Mr. Editor: I have some iden- that [ want to tell yon but first vant to tell vou that I alwaye lon with eagerness to get the vo- I am not much to ask quert” l' 1 was there {8 =0 fow ¢ swer me correctly, T -m r‘r ITenry, T want to toll ~ eometimes hut Unele Henr ling as T was rai~~2 the back wonds and never oot mo me spe! anee tn 70 to echonl. | never wry tr schonl but abont eicht months rar life and that was at different times, €0 you see aceording to soms theee dave T didn’t leara much at school. 1 see gome ehildren that hardly know the alphabet in eizht months. T don't know whether | ol u,'l..,“ \G TELEGRAM, LAK ELAND, FLA., FEB. 20, 1913, i it is in the fault of the child or the 'l( acher. When 1 should have been going to ;m *hoo] 1 was between the plow han- dies or picking cotton or in the woods hunting cattle or with my rifle hunting deer and turkeys and shooting those obnoxious hard head- ed allizators. This brings to my mind something 1 saw published in # paper in this State wanting a law { enacted to prohibit the killing of al- ligators. God pity the man that can't think of some law that will up- lift his fellow man and his country more than by protecting the obnox- ious 'gater. Well now to some of my ideas: | would like for the president to be elected for a term of ten years and for no man to have the office but for one term. I believe it would be petter for us if all our officers were elected for a term of ten years and only have Congress and the State Legislature to meet every five years and then there would not be so much unuecessary clamor and wire pulline for office and have the refererdnum law and when a man did not fi!' s office right put him out and «levt another in his place. There are wmore laws now than any commuon man can think of. One Legislature will make some laws and thd next one will repeal them and so we nev- er know what is a standing law. W. N. MILTON. ORANGE COUNTY FAIR BIG SUCCESS. Eight thousand people filed through the fair grounds gates yes- constituting a record break- crowd pleased with the exhibits, and pleased with the manner in which things were conducted. In other words, there will be eight thousand boosters for Orange county as the result of the first day's show.—-Or- lando Reporter-Star. THE GRST G WA SIGH OF A Easy Way to Preserve Natural Color of the Hair and Make It. Grow. A\ harmless remedy, made from common garden sage, quickly re- I believe that home must always (1o the eenter but not the Hmit o woman's lite I behieve in equal rights ino { tamily tor futher amd mother; Pivtellicence, aitection and fiial | speet 1 believe in nine-tenths of 1! ’nu-l‘-?n-x.\ doing the work and ow tenth the eriticising, instead of ! roverse, I believe no woman has a right accept an oflice or a place on 1 ! PAGE MIVR as important as the care for teetu to keep them from discoloring. Why spend money for cosmetics and for creams to improve the complexion, and yet neglect your bhair, whenI gray hair is even more conspicuous' and suggestive of age than wrinkles, ' 1t is easier to preserve the natural color and beauty of the hair than it is to have a good complexion. All that is necessary is the occa- sional use of Wyeth's Sage and Sul- phur Hair Remedy, a preparation or | common garden Sage and Sulphur, combined with other valuable rem- edies for dry, harsh, faded hair, dan- ' druft, itching scalp and falling hair. I After a few applications of this sim- ple, harmless remedy, your hair wili YOUR TIME - will always be right if you buy & gradually beé restored to its “tun‘lwnch it s rosalate color, in a short time the dandruft’ ! . eep it in repair for you will be removed, and your hatr will {;,::“ 8 keep e Lo longer come out but will start to| grow as Nature intended it should. JEWELRY Don’t neglect your hair, for it goes further than anything else toi© all kinds come to us. We carry : make or mar your good looks. You complete line of the newest desi; can buy this remedy at any drug|80d best values in Jewelry at I store for fifty cents a bottle, and | Prices. Come in and see our display H. C. Stcvens your druggist will give your money back {f you are not satisfled after using. Perchase a bottle today. You will never regret it when you real- fze the difference it will make in your appearance. mmoummoo FullWeight CleanGoods Chase & Sanborn’s . Bulk Coffee 25¢.pound Pure Food Store W . P. Pillans & (. \Btores gray hair to natural color. The ciore of the hair, to prevent it from pHONE 93 1osinge 5 & fils ing its color and lustre, is just HIDPO OO D EOFOROIGEOEOBO DAGIDIFBOPODOGLOMNIOIIBOSOS : — & [ ) "‘mw“““wwll\mfl_ Y. m“!‘, B VLS TR WO u PRI TR R T A T R, it BN First. Second. Third. Fourth. Fall. Seventh. Eighth. in Lakeland. PARK HILL VWAAYNVA VAW VAW VWA W/ Ten Good Reasons, Why You Should Own a Lot in Park Hill Because it is in the Best Town in South Florida. Because it is as HIGH if not HIGHER than any point in Lakeland. Because it has One Mile of Granolithic Side Walks. Because it has High Class Building Restrictions. Fifth. Because 4 Beautiful Lakes canbe seen from its Summit. Sixth. Because Shade Trees will be planted on all streets this Because all Streets will be Graded. Because it is the most attractive Residential Section Ninth. Because Lotscan be sold on REASONABLE Terms. Tenth. Be-ause if you don't, you will wish you had, if you do, will always be glad. G. C. Rogan or . =‘See= Deen- Bryant Building M. STEPHENS v