Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, June 27, 1913, Page 4

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Priie R THE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAKELAND, FLA, JUNE 27, 1913, b Tie Eveaing iclegram Published e.ery aiterncon from Ui Keéntucky Building, Lakelaud, F eutered in the postofiice at Lake ..and, Fiorida, as wuil matter of the socond class. HETHERINGTON, EDITOR F SUBSCRIPTION RA Ong year @ix wonthe Nhree monthe Delivered anywlere Yizmits of the City of Lakeland for 10 eerts From thie same office s {ssued TUE LAKELAND NEWS, A weekly newspaper giving a resume of local matters, crop conditions, ocunty affairs, etc. Sent anywhere for $1.00 per yea:. i ———————————————————— A PRINCELY ENTERTAINER. w week. The most successful meeting of the Florida Press Association in all its pstory is being held in Tampa, be- ginning yesterday and closing tomor- row. The attendance is unusually ] arge and the proceedings are full of interest for the scribes, The big event of the meeting was the banquet tendered the visitors last pight by Editor Stovall of the Tampa Tribune. This delightful affair was beld in the press room of the Tri- bune, which was converted for the occasion into a handsome and com- modious banquet hall. Of the wealth of delectable viands; .of the spirit of kindaess and frater- nity which pervaded the affair; ot! the brilliant speeches sparkling witn wit and wisdom, delivered by prom- inent wen of Tampa and editors from various portions of the State—we re- frain from writing of these things| for, however delightful and enjoyable to the members of the profession con- cerned, the general public has only a passing interest in them. But it {s not out of place to pen a line of appreciation for the host who fur- nished this princely entertainment, for Mr. Stovall’s reputation rests not vpon his doing the handsome thing by his confreres in journalism, but in doing big things for his commun- ity and the State he has attained an eminence where his personality is ot | public interest, his newspaper being! pn institution of State-wide promi-| nence. Starting from modest beginnings, having conducted little sheets in the villages of Lake Weir and Sumpter-| ville, and later in the then small tewn of Bartow, he came to Tampal alout twenty-two years ago, his equipment consisting at that time ot ud “‘apronfull of type.” The I:ismry: of Tawpa from that date to this lms‘ been ws closely interwoven with, as, Leen faithfully chronicled by, ! s 3 b ! ! ampa Tribune, Rapid and mai-| velous « s has Leen the growth of the City, the Tribune was always a little | a. al:cad of that growth—anticipatory and c.cr aiding its further piosress. And this is true not only of 'l'um;u! tut of the whole of South Florida. | There is not a community 1! peninsular Florida, west of Lake Oikzecchobee, which does not owe| geme of its growth and prosperity to the Tampa Tribuue. In nearly all these communities it maintains cor- respondents whom it pays to furnish matter booming and boosting the ro- gpective towns, thus actually paying) ter the privilege of publishing the| most elfective kind of adveitising thieso towns could purchase if they were to engage in a publicity cam-| paizn. Like all successful men Mr, Stovall, bas his critics, and the Tribane, lilie! has its But there is no denying the fuct that the man and the insti-‘ tution have done mucih for the peo--| ple of Florida; that the man is able ard forceful, and that the news- puper ranks with the foremost of the ccuntry. That one man should take upon Pimseil the trouble and expense of entertaining with such lavish hospi-’ tality scme one hondred and fifty | visitors to his city, shows a disintorf ested whole-souled generosity that wiil not soon be forgottem by its' Leneli The citizens of Tampa gencrally—its Loard of Trade, its job printers and the va Times spee- ifically—all joined in hospitality as Findly as it was liberal; but on the ycll of honor in this respect the name of Stovall “leads all the rest ell iirst-class newspapers, knockers, iaries. i by bactarial action. & DGO0D T Ny JU < 27 IN EISTORY o < 1788—Virginia adopted the con- stitution of the United States. 1806—Dattle of Guenos Ayres (Napolenic Wars). 1862—Seven days’ fight around Richmond. )—Gen., Thomas Willilams began 186 to cut across the peninsula opposite Vieksburg, to chanz: e of the river. Kings-| Harris- | cs entered from ton, 13 miles burg, A, Cascimir-Perier president of France, 1898—Third Manila expedition sail- «1 from San Francisco. 1903-—Many religious reformers kill- ed in murderous outbreak in province Yedz, Persia. 1911—Joseph Caillaux became prime minister of France. 1912—Bitter fight at Baltimore among Democrats over the nomination of a candidate for president. elected 1ca4 1801 — TODAY’S BIRTHDAY HONORS. Former Congressman D. J Foster of Vermont, was born in Barnet, Caledonia county, Vt., June 27, 1857; was graduated from the St. Johnsbury Academy, at St. Johns- bury, Vt., in 1876, and from Dart- mwouth College in 1880; was admit- ted to the bar in 1883; was prosecut- ing attorney of Chittenden countyv 1886-1890; was State Senator from Chittenden county, 1892-1894; was commissioner of State taxes 1894- i898; was chairman of the board ot 1ailroad commissioners 1898-1900; vas chairman of the commission rep- resenting the Government an dpeo- ple of the United States at the cele-| Lration of the first centennial of the independence of the Mexican Repubh-, lic at the City of Mexico in Septem- Ler, 1910; was elected to the Fifty-| goventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses and re-elected to the Sixty-secon Congress, PERMANENT SOIL FERTILITY. We do not think that the analy-| _ sis of soil will tell all that is neces- sury to be known about the soil. It may have the elements of plant fer- tility in it, and yet not be fertile, because of other conditions, The plant food may not be available. There is one thing certain that if the soil dos not contain the essential clements of plant food it must be sup- plied. If it does contain them, but i an unavailable state, we have the problem before us of making them available, If the phosphorus is de- ficient we must supply it. If there i plenty of phosphorus in the form o phosphate of lime (the form in which the creator distributed it in| ai! coils) we must make it available In other words! see to it that other conditions are! i | right, and it soon becomes available.! Agricultural science teaches us that the baceriolozist is nearer to| the cultivator than the chemist; luu! to be su ! Loth to g ( sful he must make use ol t the best results. This is just as true for the doctor of soils, | the doctor of human ail- nments or those of the animal vrv.rl 1s for The soll Is no longer to be Lu)"uwl‘ upon as a deasd inert substance, but!' as a living creation, full of living| organisms, upon whose well beinz| and growth the life of man himself, depends, for man lives upon what | srows out of, or subgist upon what is grown, from the sois. The grow- | er or tiller of the soil that depends! upon the chemist alone for his giud- a«nce is as much at sea as the doe- tor that does so, for the treatment or guidance of his patents back to Lealth, when sick. People look with suspicion upon a octors skill thas take no notice of the teachin; science as to the causes of diseasc The doctor that would now point to the water we drink or the air that loose h:s ctanding among the best informel The one that is most up with th profession, takes into account the ac-! tion of bacteria, microbes, and bactil- lus, that are not visible to the unai-- ed eye, but well known as important factors in health and diseases. Science in any line is the making use of all the known truths, or l the knowledge that bears upon or yellow fever, would ¢i chemistry alone, a dealing with the soil, n hacteriolozy and in hand. m srower a tnild upon by experience that i made known, will be a guide t < AUTO CHUGS AND SPURTS, Z 5 , SO0 QUAAOATOA0OR OTFOOC COOND Women are preferring closed cars! for touring purposes, because they afford greater protection. . . . | For hauling nitroglycerine in| Oklahoma, where they ‘“shoot” the! I ¢ii wells about the same way as a Luilder blasts his way through a wall of rock, a white truck with a s:ecial body has been built for thel ‘wstern Torpedo Company of Bart lesville. Robert Temple, the man who built the first automobile that ever ap- peared on the steets of Denver, Colo- rado, is about to tour to Europe in a specially built car with his wife and nine children. The car will be a forty-five hourse power, eight passenger coupe. . During last year forty-four cars, valued at $62,438, were imported in- to Trinidad, twenty-nine of whica valued at $41,605, came from the United States. Extensive improve- ments in the road system promise to create an enlarge ddemand for ma- chies in 1913. L] A simple way to determine the poles of a battery is to immerse the wires leading from the battery or other source in a glass of salt water. Stortly bubbles will form on the neg- ative side. Although some batteries are identified as you mention, others have their positive painted red and tle negative black. Junite a number of weii-establish- ed, English motor car builders have 1ecently discarded their single cylin- der machines in favor of multi-cyl- inder cars, but whether because there was more profit to be made from lar- ger models or because the law- priced American-built car cut into their market too severely it has al- woys been difficult to decide. Not- witstanding, here is the new two- seated 8-horse power “light” car working back to the old lines, ori- ginated in France. others; but without a knowledge of what he has been dealing with, can gulde mo one accurately, W .H.C. (Continued.) Hats $2.75 EVERY STETSON HAT in stock is embodied in this sale. We must, and we are going to sell ever dollars worth of our present stock—we nee:l the room and don't want the mer-| chandise. This lot of hats sold formerly ac! §4.00 and $5.00; you can find th shade, style and size you want, Droy in tomorrow and look ‘em over. Our store is somewhat disfigured, but we are still on the job—com right In. WILLIAMSON-MOORE CO. . “Fashicn ShoplFer Men” ™ | ¥ )= Hold Pieceof Cut Glass, to the light and see it sparkle like & | thousand diamonds. Note how deep | is the cutting, how beasutiful the pattern, Buch & plece on your sldeboarc | would be a constant source of pleas ure and pride. You can afford t in bave it and more to mateh it Our special prices for cut glass » make It gnod for prescats of s kinds, P . The Nati Cement Vault, onal Steel Reinforg Best in the World As a Buriar Recepy, Nothing Heretofcre Menufactured Can Compese M ' v A g \ d T\'«"'c.';" ) Tl . A Ay o . 3 eal iy ot ,‘ ,. '.l, ‘w5 # ‘)’ o 3 b v - It is all the name implies: First: Steel Reinforced rhroughout with expanded Shee makes it strong and ghoul-proof. Secord: It is water-proofed by a Specal Process, and the is sealed to the body of vault, after the casket is placed therein VISIBLE SEAL that shows the sealing is absolutely perfect, The old method of burials in a Wooden Rough Box is superscded by the more Sanitary, Everlasting, Vermin-Proof, Gh Proof, Waterproof, Natural Vault This will last in perfect condition for ages and keep in resp 'condition the remains of the dear departed. ; | I Thc price is within the reach of everyone. All undertakers can supply it at the Factory Price. ----MADE BY--- LAKELAND ARTIFICIAL STONE WORK H. B. ZIMMERMAN, Proprietor JOROHOHO C OHOROBCHOMCHOBOHCHOSCHCHOCHBOHCHCHONCHS 10BCH0808080B0BO0RIREHOIORCHCHO LK PROPERTY OWNERS ATTENTION Begin Early to Tralr Children, It i habit alone that creates obed ence in the child, and for the ch!ld, and if 1t 18 not formed early, nothing bus bard, bitter “warfare” can ever pro wiote it In its being. System is one ! of the noblest laws in evidence. It is the great “under study” for universs neara Sewers laid for only 10 certs per foot. where there s five fixtures for $115., SO only. ol Lu i Phone 257 W Bowyi Lo Q0 QP OeQe iyl N. Kenlucky Ave, j f‘":;‘._,l' 0 i s TS Ay NEW LINE OF RUG- AND ART SQUARES JUST RECEIVED . P : 0 SEED DSOSV - - Exclusive Rugs for Exclusive Peop!c Everything in Furniture, Hardware and Building Material, FHOPEOIIOE0OIIOPGOIIVII00 SOBOSCFOHO 1o s : B0 GOS0 LAKELAND Oz IS S SR B e o e OZ)%) > COMPANY When You Think = [ AN/ Ay At W The NATIONAL WATER-PROOF CEMENT VA We are prejard furnish 4 inch Terra Cotta sewer pipe and dig the ditch axdy the pipe and fill the ditch for 10 cents per foot complete; & are prepared to furnish lead connections for water mains at cach already to put on, and we will do all the plumbing inalk Get our prices or you will lose money. We do first clas® <C. AL MANN, Manag Furniture«a 7 ap dipare _ » Think of I/} R S e Wi Ty (4

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