Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, June 19, 1913, Page 4

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! - WS ‘way through the alphabet. ' The Evening 1 Published every afterncon from the Kentucky Building, Lakeland, Fla, witered in the postotlice at Laike sand, Florida, as wail matter of the pecond class. M., F. HETHERINGTON, EDITOR -— HENRY BACON, MANACER. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One year ...... 8ix months Three months ........ T Delivered anywhere within the fimits of the City of Lakeland for 1v eents a week. A From thje same office 1s issued THE LAKELAND NEWS, A weekly newspaper giving a resume of local matters, crop conditions eounty affairs, etc. Sent anywlere for $1.00 per yeat. RS $2,000 to have a chemist tell them! there was no suicidal poison in the system of E. O. Painter when he came to his death. This was pay- #ing pretty dear for something they did not want. —_—C— .-" Judge B. H. Palmer, of Lake Clty,1 95 an avowed candidate against ¥rerk Clavk for Congress, over ' in, the Second district. Clark is a pret-| ty smooth propositoin in a political race, and the man who beats him will have to know the game all the o— The Gainesville city council Killed| & proposed curfew ordinance for| that city--just why does not appear. | It is a measure that ought to be enforced in every community, Lake- land has such an ordinance, and the bare fact that it is in existence does good to a certain extent, having gome deterrent effect on the more tractable children. It is to be re- grotted that the regulation is not more vigorously ¢pivreed. ccurse, there ought to be a curfew iJaw in every kome and it would not ghen be necessary for the municipal- dty to pass one. o | Jt secms that wapat Uncle Steve eays “goes” up in Washington, in the matter of postofiicc®In his dis- trict, at least. ile landed Sam Wil- gcn at Bartow and Joe Humphries| ac Dradentown, in the face of pret- t r active oppusition, We have no ob- Jection to Mr. Wiison reading the posteards that came to the Bartow oliice, but it is a disappointment to many f{riends throughout the State| that that fine old soldier and schol- arly gentleman, Gen. E. M. Law, failed to receive the recognition his merits and services Jeserve. 0 The Orlando good roads boosters found lots of re:gon for their dem- onstration in favor of gool road! lmprovement, in theiir recent trip/ from Orlando to St. Petersburg. They encountered some fiercs teails which could harc'y be dignf o the name of roaas. Their :eport suould set forth conditions exi.tly) s they found them, regardless of any apparent reflection on the sec-| ticn or community where an ad-| verge report is necessary., Bad roads are like preventable discases, gud‘ . N | it is & crime on the part of any com- sinde and the Gulf of Mexico on the without other, nnity to tolerate them r:aking strenuous efforts to better -gonditions, 0 The Miami Metropolis exercises a gevere censorship poraries, and some of us are almost atraid to take our pens in hands lest we get a calling down for using somg cxpression that may seem us to hate been rendered permissible Ly custom, For instance, one un- fucky editor slipped into the com- fcrtable, though, perhaps reprehen- gi1ble habit most of us have, of re- ferring {o the address to the high schooi graduating class as a ‘“bac- calaurecate sermon,” and forthwith the Metropolis reads him a lecture upon the proper use of the worl “taccalaureate,” and tells him he i “ever so green.” Well, Webster's dictionary says baccalaureate means “an address to a graduating class,” and with that great and good book behind us we are going to use that eiegant and high-sounding word (which always reminds us of bas- chanalian) whenaver occasion. of- fers, even if the graduation be mero- il ll!‘c averaze return by the Florida It cost the insurance companics; i a 1% v t colize m ing from ke wWio h of any Tlere were ti their crors. on the trees and markets Some of them had kind of [ roit [ vere very bad. their whole crop in this market, with Jisastrous were yet other growers who !owed speculators to take their crop with very little, if any, mon-, results. | 18 E(:. down, and these sepcculators al- e struck this bad period and in | conscquence had nothing to pay the_’ { sgrowers with, However, 28 a whole,: | the growers of citrus fruits did very | well, and nore rioney came into| i Fiorida this year from the sale of | fruits than for any other year in| the history of the State, nrobably! clese to $16,000,000, &8s nearly 8,700,000 boxes werpe shipped and Citras Exchange to its growers was ciose to $2 per box f. o. b, Florida. TODAY" SEIRTHDAY HONORS. Former Congressman Ed\\'ard: Thomas Taylor, Democrat, of Glen-. wood Springs, was born at Meta- mora, Woodford county, Illinois, June 19, 1858; son of Henry R. and Anna (Evans) Taylor; spent his early life on a farm and stock ranch; was educated in the common schools of Illinois and Kansas and from the law department of the University of Michigan. He movel to Leadville, Colo., in 1881, He has served as county superintendent of gchools in Lake county; deputy dis- trict attorney, district attorney and ! . | Despite gueh fau | ty to scrateh vp a bed of bowers and ed fruit at a time whea it was (srlit wood, but she can get there ' Just the same. tout of the garden by ‘s worthless i year if she's half cared for. KVENING TELEGRAM, TiZ HEW CONCILIING __,.__; & § T S oo > | s as & propensi-: Tailers and Furnishers to His Majesty, The “American Gen- tleman.” Hats Like all th 1ts in the ths cwner of .the ! n to throw brick Lats aud spoil the feat young These 2e¢, the hen hos a o bamco in ther favor. Hor wope pever before of- cose is well stated in the following 3 fered at such extraor- enthuciostic writer: dinary LOW PRlCESi §3,50 & 54 STRANS §1.25 “A hen can’t plow, hoe corn, or Come in and get under one. Williamson Moore Co. “Fashion Shop For Men” She doosin't cost any more than a plug of tobacco or a arink of whiskey, but she can pay 8 rer cent interest on $25 and pay her board. Take an old speckled hen that has had ro raising at all —one that has been thrown out of the corn crib, kicked off tie porch by the hired girl, and then chasel pup, just that kind of a hen will pay expenses and clenr about $3 a Tle wondcr of it is that more peo- ple do not realize the value of chick- tends and raise enough to supply the i TTeat demand for them.—Tuscaloo- sa Times. asall e gt Nty No business man in any town should allow a newspaper pub!shed | pu————— oo amaaernea ir his town to go without his name mentioned in its columns some- » . wheres. This applies to all kinds of | eCIa! rrices bueiness, g(neral stores, groceries, — Successors to T. I. Woods & Co furniture déalers, profecsional men,I ard, in fact ,u!l classes of men that do business, This does not mean that| BELOW WE GIVE A FEW OF OUK ycu should have a whole or even a' PRICES WITH MANY OTHER quarter page ad in every issue or‘GOODS OF EQUAL QUALITY AND the paper, but your name and busi-| nees should be mentioned if you do‘PRICE. 1 rot use more than a two line space.! QUALITY OF GOODS IS THE A stranger picking up a ncwspaper FIRST THING WE LOOK AFTER should be able to tell just what busl-fAND THEN THE PRICE TO MEET ness is represented in a town oy YOUR APPROVAL WITH A GUAR. State senator; was elected to Six- lcoking at the business mentioned in over Its contem-| among the theatergoers of this city and will no doubt be welcomed by fier many friends and admirers. BLOW THE TRUMPET. It is a commentary on the intelli- gence of man that he overlosked IMorida in migrating in search of a {new home, Only within recent years has the Penirsula State been ap-| praised at anything like its true val- ue, I'lorida has sent the proof broad- i cast of its fertile soil ad great agri- ciltural possibilities, It is now pro- cducing the proof of its ability to raise cattle that will- compare favor- {ably with the west. In no State in the Union are the returns so large from intelligent cultivation of the s0il as in Florida. Gradually the world is learning of the unrivaled opportunities Florida offers, but a more rapid method of conveying the| udings s required. There are! hundreds of thousands. of men | awaiting the call. They arc scatter- ed over the whole country and are, ready to move to a section that of-| fers a climate favorable to farming, the entire year. Florida is the oniy| State that can offer all that is de- manded. Florida has climate, plen-| tiful rainfall, salt and fresh water streams, the Atlantic orcan on one| assuring cheap transporta-| tion to distant ports, pure artesian water, healthtulness, warm \\‘Illi\".s‘; and cool summers and delightful coast resorts within a fow lours! run from any part of the State, , Florida has a number of advantages| that sound like a tale from the Arab- fan Nizhts, but they are not known in the quarters where they -wvould bao appreciated, and from whieh wouid!| start a torrent of substantial sot-| tlers for the promised land, A State' i carapaizn of advertising i | 1f Florida is to come into its in the immediate future—St. Agistine] Record. TODAY IN HISTORY. 1472—King Henry VI, of England, . murdered in the tower. 1785—Battle of Mangalore (first I Mysore - war). 3 1793—The negroes’ and mulattoes of Cape Francois began an indiscriminate massacre of the whites. 1868—Arkansas re-admitted the president's vcto. over 1y from a cooking school. And if| 1886—United States Senate Tatifies this be rank revellion, make the treaties with Japan anc most of it, Mexico. it Large citles all over the country are makinz pre;arations to celebrate & “safe and sane Fourth of July.” Women's clubs are asking the news- papers of the country to emphasize he patriotic spirit in contrast to the tendency to make it a day of sports. 1911—The president and Mrs. Taf celebrated thefr silver wed ding, rece'ving thousands o guests on the White Hou lawn and world-wide -con gratulations. 191,—Roosevelt comes ont for presidentfal nomination, Chicago. | ty-tirst Congress and re-elected to tte paper. This is the best possl-‘uTEE THAT EVERYTHING the Sixty-second and Slxty-thlrdlble town advertising. The man| WILL BE AS REPRESENNED, congresses. who does not advertise his business v Miss Sylvia Summers, well- [does an injustice to himself and his THESE PRICLS FOR CASH ONLY known star, will appear at the town. He is the man who expects|}® pounds Sugar for.........$1.00 Auditorium for a week's engage!' the paper to do most of the boost- | Eest Butter, per 1b, ......... .4C ment, commencing Monday, June'lng for his town. The life of arny Cottolene, 10 pound can ...... 1.25 g 23. Mies Summers is quite a favorite| town depends upon the live, wide- Cottolene, 5 pound «.......... 50 awake and liberal business men in it.—Eustis Lake Rezion. Snowdrift, 10 pounds ........ 1.1¢ Snowdrift, 5 pounds .. I ¢ 6 cans Daby Size Cream...... .28 DON'T MISTAKE THE CAUSE. Octagon Soap, 6 for.......... 25 tany Lakeland People Have Kidncy | Ground Coffee, per pound ... .21 Trouble and Do Not Know It. Sweet Corn, 3 for ........... &8 Do you have backache? Best White Meat, per 1b. .... .i¢! Are you tired and worn out? B A1 KOrOSENDI A, e i 6 | Feel dizzy, nervous and depressed? ! | | Compound Lard, per lb, qn Are the kidney secretions iiresu- lor? Feed Stuff is our specialty, We arc Highly colored; contain scdl-’out on South Florida avenue, But | ment? cail us. We deliver the goods. Li%ely your kidneys are at fault. Weak kidneys give warnings ol distress. Heed the warning; don’t delay— Use a tested kidney remedy. Read this Bradley Junction tes- PII(]“B 337 timonijal: \ F. J. Johnson, Bradley Junction,|= N ays: '/ & T . e m ek o o ooe, WE PBY @ Premium my Kkidneys became disordered. I / For Your Cash ! suffered intensely from backache and pains in my loins and for sev- By giving you MORE and BETTER' material for LESS prices, eral days 1 was haidly able to work. We carry in stock ; | | | | The kidney secretions became irreg- EVERYTHING T*r in passage and I found diili- culty in straightening. Two box»s| from the brick for the foundation <o| {nside finish—you can buy from ue! of Doan's Kidney Pills fixed me up cverything you may need for bLuild-| in good shape, relicving the pain and soreness and uelping my Kid-| ing or construction. We scll direct, tc the builder. DYE LUMBER COMPANY cemplaint cince.” P. 0. Box D493, Gainesville, Fla. I | D. H. CUMEIE & CO. Lakeland: i'or sale by all dealers, rice 60 cents, Foster-Milburn Co., Bui- falo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan's—and take no other. “ROOSEVELT LEAVING' COURTHOUSE is needed | |y 4 Our photogravh shows Colonel Roosevelt and friends leaving the court- u' house at Marquette, Mich., afrer testifying In his libel case against Editor Newett of Ishpeming, R\'hy not moke THIS JULY the month from which you can date your frecedom from all the dangers and inconveniences of handlng funds by opening a CHECKING AC- your COUNT witk .thls institution, You are certain of all the safe- guards and convenicnces that a strong, well-managed bank offers when yu become one of our deposi- tors. 1CH0HOL0CH RO G PROPERTY OWNERS ATTENTION Sewers laid for only 10 certs per foot. We are prepared u furnish 4 inch Terra Cotta scwer pipe and dig the ditch and the pipe and fill the ditch for 10 cents per foot complete; alio ® are prepared to furnish lead connections for water mains at §1.i @ cach already to put on, and we will do all the plumbing In a how where there is five fixtures for $115, Get our prices or you will lose money. We do first cluss wort 8 only, C. A MANN, Managef§ & N. Kentucky Ave. Phone 257 Bowyer Builcings DROACROLOEOPOMOMHL RS/ 1 BACIOPOETITBORIR 08 9T AR O 5 WL ARE STILL GIVIRG AWAY those beautiful suits and pants--also Palm Beach suits--at less than cost, as we want to get ready for our fall line. We want all the room we canget, as we have bought an enormous stock of Hart Schaffrer & Marx cloth= ing=--also other goods. Our straw hats and other furnishings reduced in price. Now is the time to get bargains by calling around to see us. I Outfitter The Hait Schaftner & Marx Clothing l —-----------------—---—- JOSEPH LeVAY

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