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Classified Ll RS se x-‘id l{n bALLu FOR SALE-—-10 acres just at ci limits; fine young grove; good house; some truck land. See us for terms. The John F. Cox Real- ty Co. 150K #OR SALE—Fine lot, 60x130 on South Boulevard, juet offt Lake Morton. Only $1,000. The John F. Cox Realty Co. 1208 .#OR SALE—Good paying mercan- tile business; good location; must be sold at once; good reason for selling. Inquire 203 South New York avenue, city. 12156 ‘.5"-(7)R7.\‘Al,l«}-—:: five-room hung'ai;)—w'éz | wmodern conveniences. Take car part payment on one located in Waring addition. See W. F. Nicholl or T. L. Waring. 1214 JFOR RENT. e e —————————————) WOR RENT—Furnished rooms with private bath. Apply 1011 South Florida or phone 43 Red. 1207 #OR RENT—Furnished rooms for ight housekeeping. No children desired. Apply 401 North Flor- ida 1134 rent; lights, hot and cold water For further information ca'l at 312 South Virginia Ave. 1215 .Miscellaneous. DRESSMAKING, children’s FOR bl i WANTED—Position as a private eclothes a spmtm]t), terms reason- r 5 st ann | Hle des. M. fiench. 415 Host chauffeur; best of references. world, from Cuba in the western | Q‘m~‘;" i ’ it Phone 255 Red. 1209 hemisphere to Java in the eastern. | Rl BATRCL. But civen the area under cultivation s of suffirlent extent to warrant the work done there. a specialty of cattin THE EVENING TELEGRAM, LAK ELAND, FLA., = ) Advertising LA RSN e R T S T s, NOTICE It you want » first class mechanic to build your residence or to do other o carpenter work and one that has had W years of experience and i a hustler | and can do your work at the mini- mum cost, drop & postal to A. M. Hobbs, Box 627, City. 11 does it right. 11 WANTED(— Your safety blades to resharpen. ter than new. 26¢, 86¢c and 6 dozen. Lakeland Furniture Hardware Co. 1 EVERY DAY is bargain day at our store but Saturday is special shoes. Owent Dry Goods Co. | | and make life worth living. tle. Scott, Lakeland, Fla. 9 all horse furnishings Glashan. 11 e —————————————————————————————————— “Yes <on, that is a good haircut. | wil Wary to have her hair bobbed. c { The PHOENIX BARBER SHOP 1 have my | haye mother to take They make a kildren’s hair, is the fargost in Polk County e e et e ————— MCGLASHEN—He fixes harness and JUFFY'S DEAD SHOT CHILL AND FRVER TONIC—2 to § doses guaranteed to break up any case of chill and fever, or lagrippe. Taken as a tonic, it will build up the system, improve the appetite For sale at all drug stores 26¢ a bot- Manufactured by G. E. B. C. and prepare yourself not only to get a job but to hold one. | fOR BEST HARNESS, saddles and see Mec- S ————e MMANAGER | FLORIDA GROWS FIME SUGAR CANE No State in the Union Is Better Adapted for Its Culture (By Lee Latrobe Bateman) Sugar Cane This is another industrial crop which should prove one of Florida's greatest sources of wealth, but as such it stands much’ on the same basis as rice. I endeavored to point out in my last articles on the culture of this latter crop that for the farm- er to obtain the greagest returns for his produce local mills should be erected for the final treatment of the grain and for rendering it into a commercial product. I showed how the mill supports the farmer, and how co-operatively the farmer or a :ombination of them can support the mill and warrant its erection and maintenance. And sc it is with sugar cane. It is impossible for the farmer of him- self to combine the growing of sugar cane with the industry of making sugar. The manufacture of sugar from the raw to the refined or mar- ketable product is a vast undertak- ing of itself, calling for a large amount of capital, expensive and in- tricate machinery, and in order to compete with the markets of the 84 ——————————————————— razor Made bet Oc & 44 on e ——————————————————————— LOST—His job vecause he did not have the proper commercial g training. Do mnot let it happen :;?”do‘:;‘;:;ebemfiz:n“pi};o'g::em‘;“th to you. Cet in touch with the L. B D both in mechanical power, the meth- ods of extraction of the juice and its evaporation with the final purifica- B - o9kkeeping, shorthand type tion and preparation of the product writing, penmanship and tele- fop tha market graphy. 1171 / i To obtain the best and most profit- able results the agricultural work, i. e., cane growing, must be en- tirely distinct from the manufac- turing work, i. e., sugar making. This is the experience of the whole e o e 8¢ crection of a mill or combination of mills, there is no fear whatever hut that capital will be forthcominz to ectablish, carry on and maintain the walk by Western Union office. Owner can have same by calline at Telegram office and paying for this ad. 1211 FOUND--0dd Fellows' pin on side- | l of sugar makinz. 28, 1912, of treated the cultivation in | 1"lorida very fully, put more with fli | view to show how and why the ac-| companying industry of making | | syrup should receive greatorauemion | than at present, and urged the adon-} | tion of modern ideas in its manufac- ! 1 followed out the same reas- | oning with regard to “central fac-“ tories” for syrup-making as cited | above for sugar-making, though the necesoity is in a somewhat lesser | degree for the former than for the! latter. It is possible for the farmer up 10 a certain point to make his own 8yT- up, but it was shown and statistics | were given how larger profits will | accrue to him if he just attends to the growing and leave the manufac- i turing part to the factory. In either | event, whether growing cane for syrup or for sugar, it is a profltahlr: undertaking when combined witl a | centralization of the industry for the \.manufacture of the marketable pro-| I lu the lesue of Dec. a Grower r-cane the Flor | matter of rure. ! duct. i ! There is no State in the Union bet-| ter adapted to sugar cane than Flor- ida. Her soils suit the crop, though as is the case everywhere with any | crop, some soils suit it better than others. High pine land, with clay subsoil is the best, while flat pine land, if well drained, will glve ex- cellent results. Although cane is a| tropical plant, obtaining full matur- ity in frostless regions, still a light trost will not injure it. Consequent- ly there is mno district, not a slngloi county in Florida, where cane can-, not be profitably grown. Then again, | climatically Florida has the advan- | tage of Louisiana, which is the best | State with which to make compari-| sons. For sugar making the canes| must be mature, and it stands to rea- con that the longer the time for ma- turing the greater and better will be | the results. Cane for sngar mnl;ins!f {s not cut anfd stacked away for fu-| ture use; only fresh ean can he used in the factory, and its daily require- ments only are cut. Now, under | {hese circumstances look at the ad- Ve | {and (strange as it may aDi Florida has even over itself in va-| rious Grinding the \}\\'hi('h is the first opera i ! factory, zenmerally co the middle of Octoher \\\'hih‘ in Florida it nee { until the 1st of Decemlbs i 2ain of 45 days, within whic il"t'r mature the erop, hence a la eane the sections. 0 | 1 Loni a a4 not begzin PR CIORT | petition of beet sugar | peet sugar is produce | {he demand whic 1 more money o ir at Tropical Plorida, he central ¢ nid ere the cane time, yield, more sugd the farmer. its turn, Will overlap t rn portious, a8 th grow at any can be done W hen- lesirable or conven- in northe will sprout and hence plamtin:_' ever it is most d ient. If once the farme get hold of the main fi so to speak, ¢s of Florida will acts and “get the State together,” ' should and can be one ‘as.t augalj prod!win; center, far exceeding any belt of other portion of the sugur‘ . the United States. Over production need not be feared, neither the com- d and consumed iu countries unadapted to cane grow- ing. For example, Austria-Hungary, Germany and Russia are the great- est producers of beet sugar, for in not one of these countries can cane be wrown. Beet sugar never could, and never will, compete either in the quality or cost of production or the raw material with the cane in those countries where the latter can be and when the supply meets h at present in the United States it does not. For the 19(9-10 (which are the lat- est official statistics 1 have) the total production of cane sugar in the world was 10,787,500 tons, and of beot suzar 6,818,438; of this latter Austria. Germany and Russia pro- duced 4,663,982, The United States 1 for the same year 377,945 tons of beet sugar and 1,250,000 tons of cane sugar, including 145,000 from the Philippines; yet these two together fell far short of the demand, 2,000,000 tons had to be im- Of this amount of import grown crop of pro ag over ported. | there were about 3,000 tons of re- fincd sugar, the balance being raw sugar for the mills and of this only one-half ton was bect sugar. Does this show any very bhig demand for heet sngar in comparison with that Long Lifeof Lincn Aiamg with geed isuadry werk fa what ysw ere Yasking ‘7 Try uws, 5 luct Wkt we gy pivine LUER As a ruley\ L i e e S e Surely IFlorida has its oy, ity for the profitable proiy.: sugar cane, both from 1, tural and manufacturing s n o ricyl. Let us set to work and ”“'i"m-[“fit‘ in this one State the deuy |y exists for cane sugar today. .. the demand for today will i r,jflld er tomorrow and the next ¢, so on, for the American peg;,{;. | the greatest consumers of g, | the world. | With all this I must strige oy | little note of warning: \Wye, th: ! culture of sugar cane is taken yp o, | a large scale in Florida, and the g, | for this is not far distant it mu:l be done thoroughly; not just 5 littly patch of cane here and anotpy there; acres should be the keypgy, these will bring the capital for g, | tactories. i Then again the careful cultivay, of the cane must be understooq gy followed. While the actual culture as such is easy, yet there is myc ¢ learn and study in the best methog the right varieties, the proper fo, tilization, so that the gregyl amount of saccharine matter cap p obtained from the canes with whigp) the factories are supplied. It myy be remembered always in practie that the expenses of a factory for y keep for the year and for the map ufacturing the crop remain the gamg whether the canes are rich or poo, ! or whether the crop i8 good or bad, Hence arises imperative necessit of good cultivation by the planty and of circumspection in the pun chase and acceptance of canes by the manufacturer. i No. Six-Sixty-Si 0. Six-Sixty-Six This is a prescription prepared especiil) for MALARIA or CHILLS & FEVER| Five or six doses will break any case. a if taken then as a tonic the Fever will return. It acts on the liver better tha Calomel and does not gripe or sicken, ang an i | % b i URS is a truly wonderful showing of o 8 IR R Isn’t that > 1 Men’s and Young Men’'s AUTUMN FASHIONS. The new, smart Peck Models are originally and distinctively styled: The fabrics are rich and handsome. “PECK CLOTHES all wool and are guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction P “ If at oy time a Peck Suit or Overcoat fails to prove satisfactory, we Wil cheerfully replace it with a new one. fair treatment? We particularly suggest your seeing our models befort making your Fall Selection fley Clothing Company — Deen and Bryant Bullding %