Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, September 9, 1913, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE FOUR e B R s s e ok O | peace and brotherly lov e'7 Just ! "le t‘e- -HJ “ld lddi | { think of it! Study of and adher- we=——e=—= | ence to the Commandments and the l’ubll:.he-l terpuon (rom the | Beatitudes would have made it un-. Kentuc., and, Fla. | ne y for Goverror Gilchrist to b——— ———————— - | Worry about ‘legal technicalities.” knter . stoitice at Lake- SRRl land, Fio il matter of the) Ryube Allyn, of the Sarasota Sun, peccnd i has through the assistance of the et I Telegram, discovered why that at- | M. F. HETHkmNGTON, EDITOR. | mosphere of cool detachment, not to —— ~———————" | say haughty aloofness, about our HEN®" , MANAGER. nevertheless highly esteemed Broth- i er Straub of the St. Petersburg SUBSCKIFIIUN RATHN: Times. Says Rube: PRe JORT . i . i edeeaes $5.00| “The Lakeland Telegram says #ix months ., ......... .. 2.560| Straub of the St. Petersburg Times ®hivee months i .+... 125! 1s too “acidulous” at times. THgnks, Delivered :nywhere wiinin the| Brother Hetherington. We have known and admired Straub for over twenty years, and still feel more or | less guilty and apologetic in his From tne kawe omce 18 issued august presence. We did not know THE L\lhELA‘ND NEWS," what to call that thing in him, A weekly newbpaper giving «. resume which, added to his exceptional men. ®f local matters, crop conditions,|tal acumen, produces a feeling of re- limits, of the Ulty of Lakeland for 10 perts a week pounty affairs, etc. Sent anywhere| moteness. “Acidulous—that's it. for $1.00 per year. y Huh!” | — ettt A long article which appeared in the Telegram a few days ago sum- marizing the great amount of street[ anrd road improvement, sewerage, | etc., now in progress and in con-| THE GOOD WORK OF A ' FLORIDA WOMAN WRITER The Pensacola Journal has been publishing recently in its Sunday is. | sues some notable literary work from the pen of Miss Celia Myrover Rob- inson, of the staff of that paper. One of these contributions is a story | of Old Pensacola, entitled “From Out the Past,” which tells in brilliant phrasing vivid with color and fra- grant with the essence of the pur- est romance and sentiment the story of a young soldier who marched away to the great war fifty years ago to die in battle with the parting gift of his sweetheart, the half of a ‘“gaily patterned shawl” on his person, she having retained the oth- er half to be redeemed by him upon his return. Half a century later al whlte hnircd l.ldy still holding in r half of the shfl\vl is u\mlul in tlle story in a pathetic and effective little climax. { The templation in the various counties; of Florida, was credited to the Man- | ufacturers Record. Mes @D Clough, of Lakeland, wrote the ar- ticle for the Record and our failure to give him credit was uninten. tional. ORI 2 Sometimes it is necessary to con- sult a dictionary before being sure one has been complimented by the Lakeland Telegram.—St. Peters- burg Times. That’s one of our little devices for helping on the great cause of popular education. i MINNESOTA PEOPLE PLANNING | TO0 COME TO LAKELAND following quotations from a on And the charm of the story, aside | letter dated at Mankato, Minn., brought before us with all its sweet | are all good here this fall, and prices ascociations in such clear and are good. We are having hot weath- charming retrospect. Tt is such ! ‘ cr—90 and 95 most every day. | prose as this which awakens in the{ “llope you will like it at the Ford ‘ | ered memory of the reader the h:\nntlng‘ Ilouse. Mr. Ford and T are quite melody of sweet old songs of a day chums. Spent a whole day fishing that is dead and dear and tender | together on Lake Parker. Am hop- voices that shall be heard no more, ‘ ing to go fishing with him again | and the ace is debtor to Miss Robin- " soon.” son and others like her who can give | such musical voice to the sentiment lying hoarded and unexpressed in so many hearts to whom life is some- thing more than the best that mod- ern materialism can give it. Miss Robinson's work in hoth prose and poctry has frequently ap- peared in the magazines, and to her rare gifts as a writer she adds the personality of the true gentlewom- an, impressive in its charm of un- affected simplicity, higsh and con. stant courage, utter devotion to duty | and to noble ideals, and unfaltering faith in that ‘“something botter somewhere and sometime” which shines like a star along the pathway of every zood woman in this world. ! — ) ———— “THE LAW 0F LAWS” A modest lllrlo editorial in the Jacksonville Metronolis under the above caption deserves to go the rounds. It recalls to our attention that which we are constantly for- getting, that the true rules of life have been lonz ago laid down for us in words so simple that a child may understand them and obedience to those rules would save us the weary wandering and stumbling amid these “hundred thousand prin- ciples of law"” which never seem to get us anywhere nor lift us out of the darkmess and chaos of our own ulflshneas avood and vice. The edi- prTtu torial is as tollows: “Advertising calendars of firms publishitiz law books announce that one hundred thousand new princi- ples of law have been enunciated by Jurists in recent years, and lawyers are urged to buy and study hcoks: containing these so-called principles, If people would only study and at. tempt to adhere to the edicts con- tained in the Ten Commandments and the promises of love given in the Sermon on the Mount, what would be the necessity for those hundred thovsand principles of law. Have they brought us one whit nearer the reign of honesty, justice, prince John Wanamaker, golf player. ' YOUNG HEIR TO M} LI.IONS A GOLF ENTHUSIAST e Secor nd heir to willions, is an enthusiastic and clever /HE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAK ELAND, FLA., SEPT. 9, 1913. s ' AN OLD GARDEN , (oy Celia Myrover Robinscn.) I know a garden—an old, o'd gar- | den that I love. It is sweet with memory and garlanded with blossoms ! that are fadeless. When spring stirs softly and wakens under April’s kiss, my old garden flings out golden ban. ners and purple pennons to every vagrant wind that blows. Along an old fence that leans in friendly fashion towards the road, great bushes of white spirea burst | into snowy banks of bloom, feathery wreaths and spotless plumes of flow- er decking the weather beaten hoards, as if for festival. The dense magnolias that line the long walk which reads from the white, green-shuttered house to the rusty iron gateway are caught in a network of lavender and purple, where wistaria climbs in sinuous loveliness to the topmost branches and the farthest limbs. Roses blossom here—old fashioned | roses, pink and yellow and red and creamy white—and in a shady bed one may find hundreds of lilies-of. | the-valley, in green sheath gowns, and hyacinths, pale and sweet and slender. 11 lilacs grow, and white jessamine Tiny *“‘Stars of cem the grass, and fleus lis tlutter purple flacs under a vink crepe myrtle tree, in which a crimgon woodbine (*'J:mbers to reach the sun. For there is a riot ot color in my old garden. The flowers grow here as freely as the birds sing Little brown rabbits scurry at approach, and green and brown lizards sun themselves lazily on the mossy stones. Down these paths once walked and Youth and Romance went hand in hand. llere children played and grew happily to manhood and womanhood. Here lovers gath- wile corner <here is a starrvy that tiue beec love. ! erlileben” de Beauty SKIiPPER, 1033-Mon. {NOTICE CF CHANGE OF NAME AND RESIDENCE OF THE ALA- FIA TRADING COMPANY Notice is hereby given that on the 13th day of September, A. D., roses and gave their vows of | build nests and forage for their young, and the days and the nights | are filled with music. And when summer, all in shining blue and gold, star-gemmed, comes through my gar- | den, there is laughter and the danc- ing of the joyous and the happy- hearted, and the gay voices of chil- dren calling, and the murmur of lov- ers under sapphire skies. Now, when autumn comes, in robes |. of crimson and brown, to take the place that summer, sadly and with reluctance, has so lately left, still my old garden smiles, and dahlias and zinnias flame along the grass grown borders. And when winter, robed in white and decked in jewels, comes with sil. ent tread, my old garden is still friendly and beautiful, waiting for the kiss of spring. But at night, if you walk down | these garden paths you may meet the ghosts of yesterday. Little chil- dren who have never grown up, come at night to play with the white lilies and the fragrant roses that they loved so well, and have missed in the streets of shining gold. Maidens come timidly and lovers meet them at old trysting places under the stars and flowering vines. Young mothers wander, dreaming, and widowed women walk once more side by side with the husbands of their youth. ! Sometimes at night, iwlnds are still and earth waits, sil- i ent and awed, for it knows not what | mysteries, age wanders here, with the shining face of youth, and when winds sob and sigh through the tree tops, if you listen you can hear Ave Marias for souls that have passed. But whether youth laughs to 'y(ml.h‘ or age walks slowly Memory lingers. Starlight | from its exquisite telling, is that it ! the 5th from Mr. Marion Ilills to' | § Gy AR LG et - ; fealty and under the gold and crim- | wind - frazrance g noonbeam an §s all true, one of the numberless | M. G. Willard, may be of interest| ; i v ool -““ 5 ‘] : i 2 | soon banners of autumn tragedy | Gew wet grasses—ghosts of dear, tragic minor epicodes of the vast|to some Lakeland people. Mr. Hills, | | Frar 3 s ; 2 .. istalked, and war's iron heel trode ' dead hopes and flowers of the ases war tra~cedy fortunately rescued and | with his wife and Dbrother-in-law, { X i : ! 8 S ,vpon the flowers. i that can never fade. These are a preserved in classic prose by a rare- | whom he refers to as 'Squire, spent ; 4 2 : i i \ It ; it i Kekealind. i both | My old garden laughs in the part of my carden, my old, old gar. H writer st winter in Lakels : y #iftc (e} v i , sbringtime, and in the tree tops birds den that 1 love. Another contribntion by Miss made real estate Hl\"‘.\“)ll'”l.w here. Robinson in altocether different | “We are glad to hear from you! S U S e X S T T B D SRS Pl i vein is entiiled “An 0! Garden,” and Lakeland. 'Squire has golc NOTICE: }U undersiencd, by authority of a nnd’m‘ reproduce it in .T-vx,, ifesue of | place, and hopes tc b e i\u ol more than three-fourths of Hu‘ Telooram ¢ maething almost | We expected lo start the fl t wee hi Notice Is nereby given that call. {ail the stock of lh( Alafit Trading unique in t literature of today. } in September, but lave been wait- | {ed moeeting of the share-holders of | (o Ny, at a me g held I'nl that In its d motif it is the an ing for Mr. . J. Straw, 28 Weloy. aspertean State Bank will be | purpose, and calic (] and notified th iterialiem which has | want to take a car hetween us, ile ‘l‘Id at its officc In Lakelind, Fla., a! | provided under section 2675 (2130) sadly tho tone of modern ! hopes to be able to F““'_" ahout thelq.00 o 1, Sept, 10, 1913 for pur- | of article 9, of chapter 2, of the gen- writine by » ont €0 muech of | 15th, and we hope to be i cland | posc of sidering whether o@ not 3‘-‘-; statutes of the State ¢f Flori the sentimoent « ' to be cathered | by the 1st of October, sure. i the cupital stock nf the bank shall |w apply to his excelleney, Park ., e mnle o mely ines “ ah o0 i ar aving | { | 4 : fmn: suel and homely things | Am glad to hear you are having { be increas.d to $50,000, and to at. "i'; immell, governor of the State of as the “t . we have all [ plenty of rain, and hope our grove | yeng to such oiher bnsi 18 may | Florida, for a change in the corpo known gometime in onr lives and|is all right, and hope to pick 5‘”““12)0 properly beousht before the meet: rate name and residence of the which Miss Robinson’s pen has pefruit from it next year. Crops|ine s President | said Alafia Trading Company, so that the name and residence will be (I.m ed s follows: when the! when | winter winds are wailing, my garden | is a spot that Time loves and where | and bloom and summer | “The ame of this corporation shall be “The Ridgewood Trad-' You Know What P. T. Barnum Said We're here to contradict the statem; People don’t want to be “humbugys] Because they misplace con- fidence in ““Cheap John” $15 tailors is no reason that they have ' “money to burn.” Ed.V.Price& Co. Merchant Tallors Chicago enjoy our customers’ confi- dence because they “deliver the goods.” And we can prove it Williamson-Moore Co. ‘FASHION SHOP FOK MEN. PHONE 298 DRANE BUILDING SOPmONT By BV PRICC 4 CO m.,—_.‘ tow, Florida, this 21st day gust, A. D. 1913. J. A. JOHNSO, Clerk Circuit (o ing Company;” fits principal of- fice shall be at Lakeland, and its principal place of business shall be at Ridgewood, Florida, all in Polk county. The remaiuing provisions iof the charter of the said Alafia i 1165 i : In the Court of the County Judg, g | for Polk County, Florida. In re estate of Susanna Willlany r’ NOTICE OF GUARDIAN'S sa.. | Trading Company, for which letters patent were lssued on December 1, 1906, shall remain as at present constituted. Willlams, David L. Williams, Jr., Tng Willlams, Minors. Petition for th Lakeland, Florida, August 14, A. |to sell lands. T D, 1913. Notice s hereby given that f, Davi 3 liams, of Washington County I Guardian of the above named min ALAFIA TRADING COMPANY, \ 0 in Washington County, I'ennsylva o 1072 By 1. b. O'Hern, Secretary. |1 Nttt ot heira ar | 1072 Secretary. J. Willlams, deceased, will on the September A. D. 1913, apply to & {M- Trammell, Judge of the (o 5 v TN v ~ lat his oftice in Bartow, Florida IN THE TENTH JUDICIAL CIR- {to sell nllL the right, mlcu u‘ml CUIT COURT OF FLORIDA, POLK |same being undivided intere COUNTY—Ilarriet Eugenia Sims | inors In and to the followi |situated in the County of I'oll, A vs. James H. Sims. ;Hurldu. to-wit It appearing from the affidavit of N i Harriet Eugenia Sims which is ap- 'H i"'[ 8) w{hh‘ e ! pended to the bill of complaint filed 'east; Also that tract b W 15 .« east of the Northwest corn i herein, that the defendant, James Quarter of Northeust Quarter H. Sims, is a resident of the State ty-nine (29) atoresaid, and 4 o T . . 1 02 chai J HEl 3N of Florida, and has been absent for :.zrm ‘};':,'_'f}.;l!;:,',:.‘ x;,:,,f‘.c“‘.‘r. i i more than sixty days next preceding to point of beginning. P 1 f ,. | Said application t be made or the application for the order of puh- 'si it 1s for the best inters lication, and that said defendant is 1079 DAVID L. WILLIAMS over the age of twenty-one 1R) B ——— e | there is no person in the State of | I - service of a subpoena upen Angwered, whom would bind said defendant, | T"“"hfr In lerson om It 18 thcrefore ordered that the| Wiy Wille, don't you S ierclio e I | sald defendant, James IT, Sims, ap- :g‘ég;x?y '\i‘llerkrlw , 4 pear at the m..n house in Bartow, fp,.op!fl who mad: :I"fm‘itil, on October, the 6th, 1913, | Willle—"“De Anti-Se to ans said bill of complaint. | Judge It is f r ordered that this or. e I ,der be 1 ied in the Lakeland The Average Man Evening Telezram for the space of The average man wili -’ [ fonr consecutive weeks nest preced- | (eteTinary when his pet - 4 | but he 1 willing to reiv 4 | ing said October the Gth, 1913, | g o Y kind of “dope” whes ! E Witness my hand and seal at Bar- well himgelt WO T 1913, d, grandson of 1 wierchant | a thril The Telegram Wili Soon Begin Another Serial Story attention right from Q@ A pretty love | story, with of grest interest It will claim the readers’ the start, ling incidents make it one ®®

Other pages from this issue: