Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, August 7, 1913, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR. 1 IIE Evening Telegram Published every afternoou from the Kentucky Building, Lakeland, Fla et - I days: Entered in the postofice at Lake-| “Their dulled intellectual palate mad, Florida, as wail matter of the demands that truth shall be baited ,corroborative testimony from some { reliable source, e (e Dr. Chas. D. Parkhurst says of the newspaper reading public these socond cleas with some succulent attraction e e N — that shall soluce them into an un. a v intentional interest in the truth, which the attractive allurements en. tertainingly disguise.” Just so, Doc., and we are clean HETHEmNUTON, EDITOR s o o i e S HENRY BACON, MANAGER. SR out of bait this morninz, which is SUBSCRIPTION RATES: { why we reproCuce the cbove para. Omevear, ....... .- .....$5.00] graph in which no “succulent attrac- @z mmonthe .. .....eeeeen . 8.89 tion” lurks. Mhree months . ......cotoven 1.26 O Deliverad anywhere within the Hmits of the C'ty of Lakeland fer 10 oents a week Froin ihe same office 18 Issued yTHE LAKELAND NEWS, reform school at Marianna, by the fit place to send a boy to reform him? From the testimony of Man. ager Ball we take it that the char- | 'y wa‘gk'.y newspaper glving a resume | acter of the toughest kid in Florida of 19cal matters, erop londltlonl.lwould be seriously if not perma. eounty affairs, ete. Seat anywhere| nently injured by serving a term in €or $1.00 per year that institution, Why didn’t the R b et last Legislature take testimony as A COURT IN THE SPOT-LIGHT to the conditions prevailing in the reform school, now so frankiy stated by its manager, and make provision The Supreme Court of Alabama for improving them? certainly got in the spot-1ight where e (e admiring millions could gaze upon it} (e are sorry that Orlando won't | and applaud it by its recent ruling put her commission form of govern- which so larzely destroyed the force ment which she adopted by popular of useless technicalities in the eourt | oo Tyesday, into operation at once procedure of that State. With mag. {nstead of waiting until next Janu. nificent common sense that learned ary. We want to see how the young tribunal simply put these technical thing works in a clty of the Lake- obstructions to justice out of com- land class as soon as possible, as el by L decision to that effect some of our own folks are agitating without waiting for years for legis. | gon that form of government. fative action; and now that it has — — been done and done so easily, what That absurd plan to check the reason is there why every other boll weevil advance by forbidding court of last resort in the land cotton planting down through a big ghouldn’t do likewise? The Rensa- belt of Alabama and other States cola.Jonrnal reflects the best public has been very properfy rejected by gentiment on the subject In the fol. Congress wnd the suggestion of the loxxing: | Telezram for improved cultural A rocent ruling of the Supreme | .inoqs gtronsly recommended. ACom‘t BEARaLAI ARIR R0 R jm“"’l‘cxma golved the problem that way, | cial rffnrm that is attracting wide and it is the only way. | attention, It is to the eifect that no Pty i Our ambassador to (termany, flnd-! case shall be reversed on account of | a technical error unless it be shown ! ing that his house rent costs him | ' more than his salary, might try the positively that the whole cause of the defendant would be injured by refrenl, This princinle has from time to time received the endouse. ment of meny lawyers and some | VD harder luck than W. J. B. Judges anl will be received gladly! =0 i his bank roll. by the ~roat mass of citizens who?ocmbmmmu% want cxact justice in the courts. The’ decision will not appeal to a certain ¥ AUGUST 7 IN HISTORY class of lawyers who are in it for | © the moncy nor will it Please that | OOU GENROMOUDGOD SN LORK0 class of jurists who put so much @ 1874-—Governor Dix, of New York, stress on the dienity and dlvlnel ordered the attorne gencral right of judeges, This ruling strikes to make an investigation of directly at the evil and cannot help charges against Mayor Have- but be beneficial. However, a few meyer, of New York City. years ao such a ruling wonld have | 1903—Lieutenant General Nelson A. been impossible The recent shake- Miles issued an address to up of public oninfon and the grow. the army on the occasion of fng demond that jud~es ghall be an- his retirement. gwerable o he public for thelr acts | 1904—The British, under Colonel just as other folks are, i3 bearing Younghusband, enter Lassa fruit.” unopposed, the Dalai Lama having fled to & monastery. 1904—Japancse land troops in Louisa Bay, west of Port Ar- - — No paper that fails to say good thin~s of its contemporary as does the Lakeland Tvening Telegram, can thur, fail to be welcome, or to become at { 1911—Through the London dock last a power in its ficld.—Jackson. strike 100,000 men were thrown out of employment. 1912—The - National Progressive party convention at Chicago nominated Theodore Roose- for president and Hiram W, Johnson for vice president. ville Metronolis. Is this sentence a crypiosram, or what is it? We are golng to lay it before the grammar school with a request for a diagram.—Tampa Times, Cryntorram nothing, Our Jack- eonvilla contemporary merely meant to say that the Teleoram had a pleasant habit of saying monsnnt‘,._ thines ahont its neiohbors at the 9 AY n psyeholocieal moment which made ‘1)3 THR e S ARl AT s ft a welcome visitor and helped its | SR DROKRAONNCRIGIONS TRORIR) CRODHIN fnfluence as a pudlie journal. We _— pass un the Ziagram as a neglisible Former Concressman Charles N. proposition, | Fray, Republican, of Port Denton, 0 was born at Potedam, St. Lawrence The Tarpon Sprines Teader con-fconmy. New York, Aug. 7; was tributes a paracraph to the discus. ' educated at Middlebury colleze, Ver- gion of the nude in art as represent- mont, and Chicago Colleze of Law; ed by the Sentember Morn picture | served as assistant prosecuting at- whieh s conepicnous not only as torney of Chanteau county, twelfth being serfons amid g0 much Ninpaney | judicial district of Montana, but as undonbtedly renresenting the { 1897-98; was elected presecuting views of a large element of thelunornoy fn 1898, and re-elected in Ameriean peonle, That paper says: | 1900, 1902 and 1904; was married “It fen’t =0 much tho September [ in 1901 to Edith C. Wackerlin; Morn os it is the vile tendency|while serving his fourth term as which makes the Sentember Morn | proscenting attorney was elected to possible that needs to be blotted | Congress, and was re-elected to the out.” 'Sixty-sccond Congress. Now let Dr. Lambricht and the E— art conneissenr of the Ocala Star| PERMANENT SOIL FERTILITY take a squint at it from this ansle and eny something. Our own pose Sinea the Danes have had the ad- remains sevérely judicial until welvnnt:\fzcs of their agricultural hizh get a look at the picture and recefve schools, they have atandoned the a certificd assay of our emotions aft. | old practice of conductiny their farm er doing so. ' operations in accordance with the —0 cizns of the moon, ete, and have Hearst, of the abandoned the ruinous prints a dispateh from Toxae in veing the widely advertised “Com- of them to the effect that the Nepna. nleta Fertilizers” with small tom. CROCA0RCH DXRORCHC: LLCHORORORCHORCCROON IR vellow fonwnalg, “ne erats of that State are roisine a porary profits in systems of ultimate! fund of $50,000 by popular :ub.'land ruin, instead of basing them gerintion to present to Secretary Bry- | upon definite practical scientifie in- an on condition that he will forsake formation which is easily av the lecture platform during his term { to all who will study the e 1o to his cfcial dntles. s an Iasult to Mr. Bryan and was such public service Institutions as go Intended and prodably had no|the agricultura) experiment stations. truth in it whatever. When you see | They have learned that you ean not it in a Hearst paper always cal] for | extract from the land elements that Whose fault is it that the State(demonstrated over and over azain f admission of its manager, is not a | other experiment stations that mix- German Chautauqua reute to help | nesia, lime, phosphorus and nitro- He seems to be in | gen, and every land owner and til- ol @, and gaining a knowledge of impor- n S © o poliey of | are not in it. ~Hence they see to it that their soils are supplied by what it is deficient in in the cheapest forms they can get and thenm make them available for plant use. You can not fool & Dane by takinz a ton % of raw phosphate and adding to it about a tone of sulphuric acid, two tons of filler, thus producing four tons of “available phosphate” (?) and make him believe he is buying a large amount of phosphorus. Even where nothing is said about the price (which is usually more than three times that of raw phosdhate ! per ton and that multiplied by four) because it is only one-fourth the strength in phosphorus as the raw ! rock. He knows that it has been by the Ohio, Indiana and scveral | ing the raw rock, finely ground with ' stable manure it becomes more | & available than with sulphuric acid, | It is well understood also if plowcd! under with the debris of leguminous 3 crops that it rapidly becomes avail- I able. Why ship our phosphate to Europe or fertilizer factories and then buy {t back for more than twelve times the price our mines are | getting for it? Why not persuade | some of our mines to grind some of | it fine and sell it to us direct. The | Aemand would be great when we get to understand its value and how to use it, as we should. The same /] money paid out for so-called “avall- | 4 ahle phosphoric acid” invested in the raw rock and applied properly would make our lands rich in phosphorus to last for years. To understand this clearly we must keep in mind there are ten elementary substances which bear the same relation to the mak- ing of vegetation and fruits as brick and mortar bear to a wall of mason- ry. If any one of these ten elements is entirely lacking it is impossible to produce a rlant or a tree or a spear of grass, Two elements, car- A 4 bon and orygen, are taken into the of fiftcen dollars in fe-s plants from the air throuzh their| When a hunter sccurcs a licease leaves; hydrozen is sccured from wa- it entitles him to hunt onl; dinr ter absorbed by the roots; iron and :the remainder of the seacon then sulphur is plentiful in all soils; but open. Ii the license is secured the other five elements require care- during the closed cason then the| tul consideration if lands are to be liolder may use it (o lunt during, kept fertile. These are potash, mag- the entire succeeding opea seasen. There is to be a game 111 hird protection fund out oi which the ‘expenses of the warden and dep- {uty wardens are paid which are; not otherwise provided for. ‘This [fund will be kept up by the «ol- ilcction of fees, fines, ete. Hvery i tant facts and principles, the aver- Féied a}l Tonics A S i age farmer of the past and many of |55 © q$°’°°9 shall be turned over the present has made the acquain- |t€ the State Treasurer to he aided tance of the fertilizer agent and in- (t0 the State school furd. stead of purchasing what he needs| Several other chtanges in the cld for the permanent improvement of laws have been made. Oid huntt- his soil he buys what the agents ers who have looked over i'.¢ new wants to sell him, with (ke common |lows declare that all sportsmen result that tho seller is enricked, 'would do well to make 2 caraiul] while the soll i3 merely stimulatedto study of the ncw provisicus be- # PROF. GRUNDAHL C.| A. MANN At Auditorium Tonight L e e e T dollars, provided the same det: are carried out as given for Lie] |securing of a county license. This | State license will entitle the limnt- ‘er to take game or fish in any {county in the State. Nou-resi- dents may secure a license unider the same conditions and at the 'same place, but must pay the sum At Audito/fxium Ton|ght [ Be the Kode Your Qwn C Rarely docs a man who wears ready-made clothing look right init. It was not made for him, and no matter how well it may apparently fit, the fact remains that when the suit “‘settles’ and loses its ironed false form, it will cave in here, bag there and wrinkle somewhere else. ? Sy 1 1 for q a7l (Afiran 7 i - bmbw) O A ~n alc b] )G ler of the soil ought to be as well ac- quainted with these five elements as he is with his five nearest neigh- bors. Instead making this acquaintance Clothes made-to-measure by Ed. V. Drice & Co. Merchant Tailors Chicago are not “‘just-as-good’’ as the “‘store-box” kind—they are unqualifiedly BETTER in fi, *J greater poverty. W. H. C. fore indulging in any shooting e g " (Contirued.) this fall. They also declare that mdlvxduahty and style. But the pl‘iCC 13 ité ] {while 'tllc law is drastic m some reasonable. s 'PRESENT STATUS OF FLA,, Provisions it will do much to pro-| ; | FISH AND GAME LAWS. ;flc'tn:Efi‘\:;liqqgglcgl:EEJIJIE;]:L:Si See our new woolens and leave ';' i ¢ kson- your measure with us—NOW! oje} All of Floridas game and fish' 33y 52w snpa —————— ‘laws have been changed with an NO. 666 jidea of protecting the game of the Th |State. The last Legislature pass is 18 a prescription prepated especiall ‘ . The Iz gisla pass- pesialy. ¢d two important bills, one of for MALARIA of CHILLS & FEVER, Williamson-Moore Co th ‘it Ol Five or six doses will break any case. and '\\'hdich created the oiiice of fish if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not ‘FASHION SIHIOP FOR MEN. i, and game warden for the State fetum. It acts on the fiver better than | m aud the other for the protection Calomel and does rot gripe or sicken, 25¢ | Phone 298 < Drcne BU“dmC " o! the game and fish of the State.] = X ,The State game and fish warden is to have an ollice in Lallahassec or in any other place selecied by the governor. lle is to name a warden for cach county with the jconsent of the Governor. ‘Lhese oflicers are to look aiter the en- fcreement of the laws in regard ito game and fish. Sheriils, den- uty sherills, marshals, constables tand policemen are all made ex- ollicio game wardens. Open and closed scasons are established for the pro.cction of all kinds of game and fish. Ilcavy penalties are provided for any vio llations of these dilferent pi icns. The propagating periods of all animals in the Siate are {aside as closed scasons. No er is permitted to take more t ten pairs of any kind of game birds. It is provided in the act that the title to all wild game and birds in the State shall vest n the State Doors, Brick, Lime, Cement, Laths rd Plaster for that Mo }‘iomc, and when complected don't fail to let s furnish it. | EVERYTHING FOR THE/HOML provis e e e —————— e Q@ '20 Per Cent Reduction on all Refrigeratofs and Ice Boxcl v during August. BE WISE; don’t miss thig; Cash Only. e —————————————————— i icant must show his for the purpose of giving the Sfflndi g i / s O S ? ng of contestants in word contest Augus\/2z It is provided that any 1 i 2 & owner may h‘:z:t‘u B ; Irs. T. J. I\Ilardls 4232 MrS. A E. Nll"erl 3‘!*!:' without a license dv Ifl G ¢ / | > season for any and al ISs . L‘ CrC\VS 3292 Mrs \v H : -ln'iin 2::‘ lganre. Residents of the rr i g ek R nmay secure *a hunting liccuse!'§ MFS. \‘V- l‘!- Flcml 232 19 [ieoin e Concly Jodgs fon.. she = ng 2328 Mrs, Ada P2’ ok 2312 county for the price of one dolla 5 T Wi - . The applicant 1 Nrs. John F. Wilson 1832 Mrs. J, E. Sharpnack 1€(¢ T 10C0§ % {hier g Mrs. Reed Tillis 1200 A s e i Mrs. M. M. Moore Lakeland Furaiture & ( {tion. The County Judge may also! {grant any resident a State hunt-| ing license for the sum of three E - [} ariware C

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