Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, October 3, 1913, Page 1

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LAK PUBLISHED IN THE e e s S e o s e e i) L DT RTII.I.IONAIRES LOST NO BB IN CHARGING HIS WITH THE CRIME Inquest Was in Progress yous of death of the 11-yonr iidt Went Wild With Frenzy And Created a Scene (By Associate Press. ) BEWS IR0 TLRIVING LLDULIA | Medulla, Oct. 3.—The carpenters are still busy aad the gound of their Lammers are heard from early morn- | ing until a late hour. The sStandard Phosphate Co. is| havln:: a new dry bin built Lusi'h\‘ Lhe old one. Mr. ‘\Iedulla property to his sister, Mrs. | lu«l\kon Mrs. F. T. Dossey of the come sectinn, with her mother, MecMullen, have gone to Drooksvil (to visit Rev. and Mrs. Slaymaler. | i Our section was acain shocked | Sunday, Sept. 28, when the sad ol! son ,of Mr. and Mrs. Hawthorn, of north |Medulla. The lad went out in the! ‘afternoon to shoot such game ag he ! chanced to see and by an ac !:l‘"‘talj ‘shot from his cun fell to rise no Wel- | more. BES Wild Applause Washington, T 1 TOWN IN Garrett Smith has sold his I.AS FINALLY PASSED TEROUGH THE LAST STACES OF ITS LEG LATIVE CAREER, AND V.ILL K 10W BLECOLE _ L TORGIT 11 All Sizraturcs Attached | I. ter Is Happy (Er!yl' i-uhh m SI615 Bl il | eted the Pfi.ss:\g’c of ”1 idont 5l Except That of the Pr & end Satisficd |:'l shed, He was agsured by Demo "cratic leaders that the tariff will be sent to him for his sicna- (B Associated Press.) Oct. 3.—The tariff bill ; st week Prof. ite School In- visited the school and r's some questions in also inspeeted the build- and mummvnt and he thought thot some of the equipment was very poor. nd was oblized to et her sis- Florence, to trke her place She was able to resume her duties on Menday, however. | Mr. and Mrs. Sammon have been were improvin g. Mr. imoved to Dixieland. Among those who have been away !for the summer and have returned ) Mr. Zimmer, Mr. and Mrs. Starshury, Mrs. Blaine and son Bil- lio, as well as the Deans at Sparl- liss Lucy Conibear was sick last | ron the gick list but at last account ! Fill Towery and family have | No. 280. { i N U “e '} VIR BECED BUT BUSILESS STANDSTILL |LAKE CHARLES, LA, REPORTS WATER GOING DOWN BUT CONLITIONS ARE SERIOUS Rice Crop-Is Injured Greatly, Dam* 3 8 i i age Being Over One Million Dollars | (By Associated Press.) | Lake Charles, La., Oct. 3.—- York, Oct. 3.—Hans He was laid in his last rest- lapsed into a wild frenzy ing place at alout 4 p. m. Svniay the inquest into the death In the presence of a very larce wth Aumuller. He tore the Fing Of sorrowing friends = this tives Rev. Stephen d [ 10 G0 e e B gy preached a very comforting fu- ew them at the newspaper peral sermon. The bereaved nironts The jury held him respon- and children have the sympathy of bill comniittee passed the Ifouse at 1:22 Sneaker Clark im- mediately siened the Lill and Mai- hall then afiived his signature, com- pleting the lecislative carcer of the measure, The president will sizn as revised by the conference g bhave 'Flool conditions continued to im- prove today. The water is receding sion of their prop- costjon of the [Touse from fts cotion erty they bhousht of Mr. Tre:mper AEd ST Maase avlente 1iIRE futures tax amendment was alone last soring. fiive Is still at & necessary to complete the work cf! Quite a party of the youns folks standstill. The loss in the rice iu- on that measure, who could not 2o to chureh Jast Sun- | dustry of this section is estimated at ture tonisht. The way was smootiid .fo rthe last lepislative step in (I\o\ formulition of the bill, The ro- . and Mnr taken p . Laney, of Canada, afternoon. Business, however, Somao I tie death of the girl, a ver- ng reached quickly. The isted entirely of million- Schmidt was immediately re- to the Tombs. Whitman to- d he believed Schmidt is fid cxpected he will be tried. nderstood the statement the findings of the alien- is OP 01 CANE GROWN BY MR. LANIER , Oct. 3.-—We wish space \ahmhlo paper to tell .\bout‘ patch ol sugar cane grown | W. Lanfer. Mr. Lanijer| mall town lot on which is Score of 7 to 0 Sent Lakeland Fans SU™ in revenue from Chicago. There ’ are approximately 12,000 persons in | this city with annual incomes of a home, a barn and lot, also tbuildings. rt of this small tract Mr. “has planted to sugar cane of ow and the mule cane, hav- pted about 350 stalks. @nd commercial fertilizer in iantities at certain periods, Lanier states that he used in the way of cultivating handplow and a hoe, doinz the work early of mornings Waiting for breakfast to be l. This cane will measure en and elght feet in lenoth ji!l has one and one-hulf g to 2row, and he is countin<z Wleast fifty gallons of eyrup ornd ard made up. The puly common hich pine land, ( riy demonstrates what done in Florida in growinz ne, one of the most profit- Ps grown. fiES IN GOAL (£5 ON AGREASE ‘\ssorlated Press.) Inzton, Oct. 3.—Fatalities al mires for the first seven f the year numbered 1,437, to the burean of mines. slight Increase over last 3 of these were in Penneyl- | TIME IN "FRISCO Prancisco, Oct. 2.—The new idding dancinz in saloons, ., went into effect last d San Francisco had the ime it has experienced in pRrs. It Is gaid that the law e because of the frequent pde by society women to resorts where danceg and ows prevailed. The con- s growing into a scandal, ‘ticht-seeing” trips be- frequent, so prominent citi- the passage of a city or- orbidding dancing in such ly Asscclated Press.) k, Oct. 3.—A gizantic lot- me by which two million as been fraudulently ob- om the people of Porto Rico ' has been discovered, ac- o private advices here. Col- ee R. Collon, governor of On most of the | ! ‘more than $4,000. 600,000 wage earners there are about 13.000 having in- Jas fertilized with stable ma- | land’s ball team left at 1:30 yester- comes between §5,000 and $20,000 | ,day afternoon on a special train for yearly. There are 500 peosons whose This | the entire community. Sunday morning while the family of Mr. Wiley IIill was 2ettine ready to 2o to church their infant dauch ter fell out of the busay stritin~ th step with her head inflictine quito ay nely wound, which ecems to le do ing well. Mrs. Rennrett, who recontly come to this neihhorhood ie s {for- ing very much from an tion in ‘the left leg. She s beinz treated b\' Dr. Pierce of Christina. LHRELAND DEFEATED BARTOW YESTERDAY o has "o Home in High Good Accompanied by a loyal band of some three hundred rooters, Lake- ‘Hartow to cross bats with the local team there. Both teams had won the same number of games and this was to be the deciding one, which resulted in a victory for Lakeland, the score being 7 to 0, with Bartow claiming the goose egg. A bLetter day for the sport could not have been picked, and it was a pretty gi bt that arandstand, fnll to over- flowing, with a bevy of pretty vivl (mostly from Lakeland), bLanuers and pennants waving, everybody bubbline over with eveitement, If the hoosters’ epecial for the State of Florida had attended that |game they would have received ( jmany a valuable point from encouragement from three hundred {throats, Brazier, Lakeland's first batter came un, rot hig base on halls, ' ‘idr\n sacrificed him to cecar, O, sple zot a hit, 1Towell hit a fast one tno hot for the Dartow third hasa- man to handle and Rrazier and Gil- lesple scored. Two rine. | Again in the fifth fnnin: tvo ring 'were scored on a einzle by Gar- lets and another error by Hartow's third baseman. | Lakeland 2dded one run in the (8ixth and two more fn thn govonth rand then decided they had enonch | lead. | Partow featured some of the pret- tiest bonehead playing eeca around as a the 8. M ll,akeland rooters, and with shoutsof B, Maharg, c. f. 4 W. Garlets, r f.. lie bill at 9 tonicht. A its pass wood move that the ‘rom in an effort to delay the bill, viare overrnled hy Clark, carried without a roll call. The firs adminis tion BIG INCOMIS IN CHICAGO Chicaro, Oct. putting a tax on incomes becomes ef- | fective, Uncle Sam will gain a nice | her incomes are between £50,000, tween $50,000 whose incomes exceed $100,000 yearly. In hea ge tax which has S on varions concerns doinz business in the city. oryhody and coe whothor they those mentioned.” 1 Totals Mimms, 8. 8.... Davis, ©. Lakeland. . oovs here in a lonz time, especially fu L the eizhth {inning when Rrown, Sermour and O'Connor watehed a hi them waiting for the other to cateh it. Ba pis ard Howell, h fly drop between them, each of oy, ! Gillespie pitched air tizht ball and scv, cot four hits out of four times at the t. The special feature of the came was the all-around work of Cabrera, Lakeland's second baseman. 1t was was playing first or second and the way he backed up Meharg on first lespie 6, by Prown Double Plays—Prazier to Meharg, Mimms to O'Connor, | Prazier fizured in a double play O'Connor to Seymour. Umpires—Henley and Woodward. Time—One hour and fifty minutes. was nothing short of | work. big league of the sensational kind when run- |ning in from left fleld at a fast elip ,cancht a ball at his shoe-strines and got it to first in time to catch the runner goinz back from second. All in all it was a great game by their absence. fand a glorious end to a glorious sea- Tw Stolen tow Pase on Balls—By Causey 2, by at times difficult to tell whether he Gillespie 0. | Struck Ovt—Dy Causey 17, by Gil- ‘ (pected, but leaders an tul'mrr‘d llttlc final opposition to the program. ‘t a confercnee of idont moed to sitn the Dbill tonivht. Underwood of the ways and means Simy anrd members mitte, Viea Presi aker Clark, Les I'vo Tem (1 scene of wild apnlause grected ec in the llouse. Under-: Hounse recode ! the cotton futures amendment wos the only obstacle to the ment. vl points of crder were made These The mo- leaders committee, W0ns {1401 il 1, cnilver ident and mer vited to w sreat task of Wilson's ion has been acc the cianing, 1UKST'S PLANS it1ess Oct. 3.-—Mrs. Emeline Pankn , the Inglish suffraette leader, deniecs thav she has chan ed ! plans for visiting the United | St:xlns, She expects to safl for New \‘ork a weelt from tomorrow. “The object of my voyage to | America,” question in the minds of the Amer- ';lr-nu people, which Miss Ilaldane {did not answer, namely, why mili- 3.—When the law | Of a total of in Chicagzo they do in England.” $20,000 and 175 whose incomes are be- | and $100,000, ard {Mrs. Pankhurst is Miss Elizabeth S, i Haldane, who recently was in Amer- dane, the lord hi~h Great Dritain. While in favor of woman suffraze she has expressed ! pronounced taney. “Fortunately,” continued Pankhuoret, “on aceount of the reas- onableness of American men, Amer- fcan women appear to he gettine the i means. Neverthe- t even American wonen owe e eratitude to Eng- lisch mititancy for helping to make ‘“votes for women' the burning ques- tion of the day. I have no reason to expeet anything but a sympa- thetic welcome from the nation, the past histery of whieh shows it to Leen ilitant itself.’ today's fssue of the Telezram rs an ordinance covering the been imnosed It would be well for ev- un this ordinance are “among to look Ly peacel Jlegs, 1 think | il jarg, 1.0 Wiy 4 0 0 pwo ot S o - — 4 | o mm - = [ e - have a s o RISJLUTIONLS 0F RESPECT tutions on the death of Max "hereos our dear friend and class mate, Max IHawthorne, has Leen tak- from o.r midst, and Whereas we miss him and mourn for him, therefore be it en . D D = D D - DD =D = MDD OS OO WP Resolved, first, that we as a r'lm‘q: Totals b and os a sehooi cherich his memory, ! the memory of a bright, amiable life that we have been g0 closely aseociated with, and learncd to love, Seeond, that we extend our heart- felt sympathy to his parents and his and share with them the Innin7s 2000212007 000000000—0 Gilles- | Cau- Score b tteries—For Lakcland, For Bartow, is. i loved ones, and, Cillesnie, {corrow. Simmons, Cau-| Third, that these resolutions Le read before the stndent body and a dage 1lit—DMills, copy be sent to the Lakeland pa- Bascs—Lakeland 7, Bar- pers. 1. i RAYMOND HAYES, MARY FUTCH, HUCH FUTCH, Committee from Fifth ! Irma Morzan, Billy Young, , rence Collier, l.eslie Collier, Wiggins to chaw Collins, Stella Collier, Fanny i Akins, Ira Smith, Honer Glover, Ash- ley Kirkland, Lacy Tyner, Lutie | Hicks. Grade. 2. | Comments of the Game REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Bartow rooters were conspicuous Qctober 2, 1913, H. L. Knicht to 3. 8. Durrance. the | | of the cabinet are in- she sald, ‘is to answer the | tants ghould do the sort of things The Migs Ilaldane referred to by ! fea with her brother, Viscount Hal- | chancellor of ! opinions againgt mili- | Law- | Cren- (dny nieht, pathered at the house on the Ml ana snent a coudle of hours sincing enered sones, The vefreshing ghowers that fell angd the pr o weather we had last have wovderfully im- od o cornle of mustaches in lh(' hhorhood, Joceio Johngon fe the euest of id Mrs. Georze Phillivs, SCRIBE. woolk THATY I1PE 1T Car Jujaped S'lpwcly Tracks and Turned Over; May Be Several Fatalities (By Associated Prest.) Seranton, Pa., Oct. 3.—Thirty car bound for Dunmore overturned this morning. Twenty-four of the ! ¢lide down the slippery rails. The brake chain broke and when the car turned a curve it toppled over. EUROPEAN NEWS AND VIEWS Mrs. | London, Oct. 3.--The eituation ln Ireland is caueing a great deal of ‘ty to the home government, Everyone acquainted with jublic af- fairs who has been anproached on the cubject admits that there is tronble ahead, and that it is apt to be eerious, It a senarate zovern- ment s to be established by the op- ponents of home rule there, it is predicted that a chance in Eng- land's history is impending that may clop into almost anything. There {is no guarantee that a eenarate ‘qt rte would not be develoned; and (there fg every indieation that any ‘wmr"nont. of the kird wonld want | un 1l privilezes. The anti-home riule leaders, however, deelare Uv:\t thieir only purnose is to have one kind and one government for all England. ! In Germany the Panama Exposi- tion s ¢till o sobject widely dls- cueeed, and Americans have rot eiv- | cn nn hone of interestinz the kaiser | to the extent that he will request al of the leadire firmg of the empire to make exhibits. Of course such a “reqguest” wonld be equal to a command, T'is mafesty has orant- ¢l 0 many conferences to Cermans nd " merieansg intarectod in the enh- ject lately that there is hope that (ie y will be represented by a exhibit in San Francisco two years hence. Fov (B~ Assoclated Press.) New York, Oct. 3.-—One hundred persons fell fifteen feet in town hall today throush the eol ge of a #~'"ery. O nly four were gerfonsly hnort The gtructure was | beine use?! 2+ 2 synatoene. It saveed | iflnw at elvinz those beiow | time to A panic for the time prevai'ed 1y Ty Asesocfated Press.) SCRINTON TODAY !were injured and several were prob- ! ably fatally hurt when a Scrnnton' i injured were taken to hospitals. The ! car stalled on a hill and started to | an up- ! a milllon to a million and a half ’dollars. IG LINNER TO ROCSEVELT Oct. 3.—Colonel hom’mult will be the guest of honor New York, at a dinner, to which 5,000 invita- , tons have been issued, to toke place ‘on the New York Roof Garden this ?v\vnin::,. which is the eve of his de- L purture for Argentina. ‘1'he occasion wiki Sive im the opportunity to ex press his views on the political situ- atlnu The dinner is being given umlcr the joint auspices of the Pro- (eressive National Service and the Progressive Service of the State of | New York, of which Rezis H. Post is director. Timothy L. Woodruft | is chairman of the dinner committee. e 4 BIG HOME RULE MEETING New York, Oct. 3.—What f{s h)lannml as a national demonstration ! will be a meeting to be held in Car- nezfe hall, this city, next Sunday night under the United Irish League in the interest of home rule for Ire- land. This will be the opening gun yof what is hoped to be the f'nal cam- [ paign of the Irish In America in be- {half of the Irish Parliamentary par- ity. Cardinal Farley, ohn Redmond fand other distinguished percons have Cleent messages to the Learue and Irish clubg from all parts of the country will be represented, DETFILG ARRAGED 08 WORLD SERIES (My Aqsn(lfllod Proess.) New York, Oct. 3.—very one of the multitude of details of the cam- paiop of 1912 between the New York Nationals and the Philadelphia I Americans for the world's baseball championship has been pre-arranged. ‘H:'ro are the chief plans: Time, Oct. 7 and daily thereafter, except Sunday, until one elab shall have won four games. Place, Polo |#ronryds, New York; Shibe park, i Philadelnhia. First game to be {played in New York, the cames thereafter to alternate between Phil- adelphia and New York. Tie gcames to be played off the next dav in the other city from that in which the tie occurred. Thus, if the first rame in New York were to result in a tie the same would be played off in Philadelphia the next day, Oct, 8. Price of tickets, in Mw York, boxes, eeating four, $23; upper crand stard, $3; lower grand stand, $2; bleachers, $1. In Philadelphia, hox geats, $5; main grand stand, $3; riht and left field pavilions, $2; ;hlv'whors, 31 Seatinz arrange- Polo grounds, 22,000 re- eorved seats, 15,000 in bleachers; Shibe park, grand stand and bleache Im-s, 21,000, standing room for about | 2,000 more. Neither elub will be [ permittedl to erect extra stands om the field. No spectators will be al- |lowed to overflow on the fleld and ino ground rules will be made. | In the event of a seventh game being necessiry the city holding it will be determined by the toss of a i);wl:fs:, coin. In case a game Is postponed on account of rain or if for some other cause a legal game {8 mot played, the teams will remain in the . is said to be on the way son. The summary: ieland to Washington with : Lakeland of the suppression of tho- | The arrest recently of Man. | Braster, 1. 1.... 4 | , & rich merchant, the | Vaiden, 8. s... 4 pd of a lottery, fs under- Gillespie, p. ... § ¥e put an end to the op- | Mills, 3 b...... § & : Howell, ¢. ..., 4 J. G. Carter to yacob M. Taylor, J. M. Taylor to H. L. Knight. | Mre. Edith K. Moulton to O, P. Bartowites must have thonght the | Branch. day of judgment had come when the| Smith & Lakeland Special pulled into the de- | Branch, pot. Bartow woke up at once.| Lester Windsor to Stone & Mann. Cause, Lakeland. G. T. Edwards to Robert Nance. What it takes to root, Lakeland Washington, Oect, 3.-——Re:rrmn-] <t'\tlve Harrison, of Miseissippi, to-; ' day introduced a resolution to pro-‘ : hibit speculation in eotton futures. 'cny where the postponcuent oe- | u He would request the president to teurred until & legal game is played, = negotiate with forelgn nations to ! This does mot, of course, apply “i Hampton to 0. P.

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