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

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The Cveming Telegram| Published every afterncon from the " Kent:cky Building, Lakeland, Fla. e e e e e e —————— ant-red in the postoffice at Lake- and, Ulorida, as mail matter of the socond ciass. 4. F HETHERINGTON, EDITOR. H..NRY BACON, MANAGER. B e BUBSCRIPTION RATES: ON JOaT .oov v inne e ) BiX mopthe ... oneaies rAea 1 1) Three months . ...cooeorenes 1.25 Delivered anywhere within thel fimity of the City 6f Lukeland for 1u geLts a week From t A we Hew s of lo.al matters, crop cowiitions, gountv aifairs, ete. Sent auywhere for $. Uu per yeal JR. PAGE AND HIS BOOX. | .2 v We have not read “The Southern- er,” the novel by Walter Page pub- i Msked priop to his appointment as' Chickens running at large is now Ambassador to England, but We ac-|a burning issuc in Kissimmee and an cept with distinet incredulity the!ordinance is asked for to stop it. The story in some of the papers that in|Gainesville Sun doubts if any such that book Mr. Page has reviled his:ordinance can be effectively enforced nztive South and pretty much every-|and that paper recommends the plan thing Southcrn, and made himself 80 (sdopted by some of the Gainesville offensive to this section that he must||adies who have suffered from the de- be promptly disowned as a recreant|predations of stray chickens, which son. 1# simply to kill them and send them Mr. Page is a man of letters Who to their owners. This is government has lived for many years in a broad,|by assassination, but in the absence cosmopolitan atmosphere in which | of any other remedy may be justified. provincial prejudices cann®t eurvive' and which in his case has given himl the signal advantage of observing his @unou DLANN% macmmmm neative section from the outside after, JULY 17 IN HISTORY. : a thorough acquaintances with it ‘o from an inside point of view. Under such circumstances ‘n any book he pight write about the South he must tvrite from the viewpoint of his later environment just as inevitably as the 1439—Commencement of a pestilence man of broader education will cer-| and famine, which scoured tainly revise the opinions of his England and France for two early years and put' them to the' years and caused an intermis- touchstone of larger observation and! sion of hostilities between the more matured reflection. i two countries. Without this ircedom of thought 1710—Battle of Alamanza, in Spain: and exprescion we can never have a literature that can escape provincial limitations and develop itself in that clear, free, 1fegiving atmosphere out- side of which no great or worthy, book was ever writtcn, Dickens and | 0808 LBORACRINOHCHHORCE LBOROICHCH LICOROICH by the allies. 1¥12-—Colonel Cass with 280 men, attacked and carried the bridge over the river Aux Can- ards, four miles from Malden. Thackeray botth satirized their own 1816—Bonaparte sent a flag of truce! country and countrymen freely and their books would be vapid‘ without it; and <what is true of those land, who proceeded with his two great authors is practlcallyl lllust ‘jous prisoner to Torbay. true of thg whole ranze of 1<n"hs]l 1898—The President issues his proc-! writers, who nevey hezitate to pounce' lamation regarding the gov- upon an English foible and thcreby' ernment of Santiago de Culu put into their literatuze its very hea.n.‘ 1911—Political parties in Canada and blood and bones to make it vir-| seem hopelessiy divided over fle ailg give it value in the world of reciprocity agreement. educated people. | 1912—First reports circulated con- If the South is to be the exception' nectin N. Y. police with the to this otherwise univerzal rule in/ murder of Herman Rosenthal, Auglo Saxon lands, it can only Lieut. Chas, Becler was sub- be on the assumption that we hola sequently ronvicted of insti- ourselves immaculate and infallible gating the murder. without flaw, fauit or weakness, past} = or present, and that it is intolerable | pepmg GOLLR LOOOARASONT DR presumption, for even one of our own' o scus (o find the heel of Achilles in| TODAY'S BIRTHDAY HONORS. the shining armor of our pcn‘cc-‘c‘ & man-of-war, Captain Mait- | R ton. That Mr., Page has gone ou t-i‘:"ao fuieluielelexlals el IsXuinlululn Xuluisiniel gice the lezitimate bounds of ]ns! privilege as a writer to criticise in| Scnor Luis Munoz Rivers, Porto decent and friendly spirit what he, Rlc.m representative in Gong thought needed eriticisinzg in tln was born in the town of Barrang mt‘s South we shall not believe until we July 17, 1859, Ie was educated in rsad it in his book; and thus calmly | the public schools; in carly life en-| rcposing in Mizzoura, we wait for gaged in eizar manufactwring and some indignant soul to send us a copy | scneral business; founded La Derio- of this dreadiul treason by a native cracia and worked consi actual crime in cold type, and when Pcrto Rico; has served his people in we find it thera fuily up to the speci-| almost every office at their commana Has been resident Commis-| fications, what we shall 4o for Wal- [t give, ter will be a plenty. sioner of Porto Rico at Washingtoa || ey since 1910. The Ocala Danner Is glad that the sririt of factionalism has been rooted| PERMANENT S0IL FERTILITY. out of the Democratic party in Flor- fca. In this connection wo note that The typo made me say in my last Claude L'Engle's Jacksenvill. paper,|article that “The farmers of Germany Dixie, is no longer in line with Sen-{and other old countries were not ato: Dryan, which indicates that|consuming all the phosphates they Claude and Nathan are out, probably {are getting from us” when I wanted on come question of patronaze. Soto say they were not acidulating all far as we have seen, our two senators | they got from us, but were putting are working harmoniously toz vllwr,m on their lands to have som» i and as party factions in a State are serve for the future. generally the result of a disagl‘(‘eJiH a fine powder, an r.ent between senators, we have thc'l' e soil, then leave rromise of a so'id Democcracy m taria to prer at Flerida. It is hardly possible for Put our fertilizer any member of the Lower House, tell us it has to be 1 even if he were co disposed, to phoric acid by the ¢ create a following sufficiently midable in either numbers or flience to constitute a faction perty hostile to both Senaors.!that this was taug L'Engle’s poltical future in Florida]be true; but it has long depends upon a policy of concilia- exploded as a theory. in-! plant food. :n the history of ticn, not of antagonism toward hls‘hcld on to the old theory it is bhard |3 to tell unless it is because it is profit- coileagues in Congress. Philip V., of France, defeated | and entered the Bellerophon! s, [ ning, ently for' son, with red lines drawn around the freedom from Spanish control over, d m with & w2 Inourstock you for-! phuric acid so as to e available for since been | Just why they \spicuous among the Americans entered in the coaching marathon from Hyde Park to South Richmond, Lm,lnnd a distance of about twenty miles, was A. G. Vanderbilt (driving) who passed the royal box, where Queen| Mary (arrow) was seated. It was noted that Mr. Vanderbilt, with whom s his wife, was the only man who pa<sed | by the queen and failed to raise his hat. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sturgis are on the seat in back of the Vanderbilt Qe able. One thing is established be- yond a doubt, that the Creator of this old earth put it in fine particles in the shape of phosphate of lime well mixed with the best agricultural soils to the amount of nearly 28,000 to 32,000 pounds to the top foot ot goil ,of the phosphate of lime twelve and a half per cent. phosphorus. Since all the best agricultural soils contain lime in the form of carbon- ate to the amount of four to eight times this amount per acre. Who is the chemist that can now tell us whether the Creator used a high or low grade of phosphate in preparing! the earth for the occupation of ani- mal life? The high grade is the most! valuable for long shipment, because of the freight rates, and since lime IS €0 universally distributed over the | earth, it does not pay to ship it far.l heice the value is measured by its phosphorus content. But heie we lhave a different condition confront- ing us than is common, for coil gen- | erally is deficlent in phosphorus and lime, why not make use of the low srades and apply both at once, and freely, thereby lay in a supply of the phosphorus for future use, as s o vin o 0 | ()@ Natlonal Steel Remfer(fl Cement Vaylt, Best in the World As a Buriat Recefs Nothing Heretofore Manufactured Can Compete‘ | make our lands fertile for all time i but it would help out until we were able to apply more lime in larger | quantities. I do not wish to be understood as Isaying this would be the right course | ,to pursue where you ' have nothing lvut pure sand to deal with, but I am i talking about such lands as we gen- jerally have in Polk county wnh’ |much elements of good soil to tuila upon. W. H, C. (To be Continued.) GO TO THE RESCUE. Don’t Wait *ill It's Too Late—Tol- low the Example of a Lakeland Citizen, ‘ Rescue the aclhing back. I If it keeps on aching, trouble may come, Oten it indicates kidney weakness, If you neglect the kidneys' warn-| Look out for urinary disorders. This Lakeland citizen will show | you how to go to the rescuec. shall, N, g setts Ave.,, Lakeland, Fla,, say b § 1s having trouble from di:orderel Kidreys and was suffering from b, uk—, ache and sorencss through my 1 lptns. i R. L. L. Ma & S 20 se0oe QUALITY e - $500 FOR A | RAINCOAT (§ Thatisguaranteed & waterproof--this guarantece means a new garment in place of one that leaks. There are others here {up to $10 00 should you . want something better- FQED PrTres Dt LITY ®#0e0s wUilh v { will find only the best, .Come in and let us show you. WILLiAN3CN MOCRE CO. Quality Shop for Men SALUTE THE QUEEN OM‘!‘;&&H;WM‘H‘& XIIIVAD 2 ruga ] FIOPPCPFQUALITY SC#408408 ¢ “— Doan’s Kiuaey Pills quickly 1id m. of the complaint and soon my kld-' neys were in good working order. 1! have had no need of a kidney medi- cine since.” | For sale by all dealers, Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buflalo,l New York, sole agents for the United, States. Remember the name—Doan’s-— and take no other. No. Six-Sixty-Six This is a prescription prepared especially | for MALARIA or CHILIS & FEVER, | Five or six doses will break any case. and | if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not | return. It acts on the liver bettc. han | | Calomel and does not grine or sicken e SAVE TIMEG m,OHEYg > ALt TONES L hICH 'PR°HPT', HRe | i g T A | /,,W , \ The NATIONAL WATER-PROOF CEMENT Vi /It is all the name implies: First: Steel Reinforced rhrougl‘out with expended $He"yp ‘makes it strong and ghoul-proof. \ N It is water=proofed b d h—= is scaled to the body of vault, after tEeachkefl e +| VISIBLE SEAL that sho ’ Secor.d: The old method o superseded by the more : Sanitary, Everlasting, Vexzmm-Proof Gl Waterproof, Natural VaU""“, perfect condition for ages and keep i res of the dear departed, ? d Proof, This will last in condition the remains " The price is withi All undertakers can There is no better evidence of e ularity of a bank than its deposits, ( : ! INCREASE FROM JANUAm TO JULY 1st WAS 150 PER cmg 3 Your account solicited, | kept in strict confidence.. Mrs. | day — Py ey J}:' Bo waunadl H Koud ol M Preside n“ '.:’.'ku. g 4 LV G GO Every Body Else Is Doing lt--, ‘r« e wil SO WHY NOT YOU? = .\IC Nk Smoke "TOWN BOOST"."% That Good 5¢ Cigar Made in Lakeland tor} and t tha have torl t sec 1 placed thatf 3 i the sealing is absolingly pertcct f burials in a Wo/{den RoughNBox s ‘ % n the reach of everyone. supply it at the Factory Price. «-MAD lAI([lANI) ARIIHCIA[ STONE WOR lMMERMAN Pmprietor

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