Lakeland Evening Telegram Newspaper, November 11, 1913, Page 8

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FAaNR FIGHS PUSHING NEW DYNAMITE CASES Adam’s Satisfaction. . " 1 ‘lndunapollsj Ind., Nov. 11.—The;°. was culled upon 0 name tedcral grand jury venire for the No-i.m",,d with satisfactlon an he yembter term of court, which willim‘rkgd; “Whatever else moy AGam was surveylng the ruliuc: re probe the latest phases of the dyna-i pun, there never will be 2 sbor(a, mite conspiracy resulting from the ton’essions of George E. Davis, con- veued today. A rigid investigation bas been going on under the direc- tion of the U. S. Attorney Charles W. Miller, assisted by Robert J. Foster, detective in the employ of the National Erectors’ Association, who obtained the confession from Davis. *eatly Exprensed Warning. “This seat 18 proviiod nseription on o } uat heen placed o the T4 tewn At ot prariy o NOV istie Timz, O2PJJSITE CITY HALL is tae plac: ;o buy Jria pair jof shos. W2 havz for M:n and Boys Gun V1 1 Pasy Leather, Rpcsn Chlf ey g ~and Vici in ali latsststyles, bahoa orlace. Lifizs aa1 Chaldeaa 'we have Caavas, Bu k, Paeat Levier, Viciy Redion b anything in Shoes or Hosicry, B TCURS FCri v . WESTFOOTerY Yo i . kimbrough & Rutherford o [rjro-emeem—————— ™ arette of Quality Piedmo::t Quzlity means ighest Quality—Uachang. ing Quality. Yecar after ycar the same ripe, mecllow tobacco, tho same perfect workmanship, the same pleasurc and satise < Qe Imitators have despaired of evere cqualling Diedmont Quality. Whele coupon in eaca package, o Tt s T e A £ TN o e ) il M S G o =D S s i, D Al S D > Ne| ) OWNVES 00 REAL L 1o by of luhe of On! wich heen paved and mplet d, and, I \ e street lias sunn fronta = t Ceer, said lots being more p. Cost Per Block No. Lot No. Survey Owner Fr 1 N2l Munn's S A, Tlinson . 1 8,108 “ Carlton. 1 C i tane 2 A “ 2 N.1.2D bl 2 8.1-21 9. 8 B “« ] I “ 7 A “ 7 N2 K “ 7 8.1-2K “ ) Now then natice 1s her v elven that on el of *he ity of I oo w st dav i S . ' " o » tor anh neatnat @ tn haqe In @ T oane ten, g ha'l he rear A N e o an ) Mo KAt such certifieates immedia A? th sano'd " due and pay i C N eTaren e 0. 1. 'OPE, nis<doner of Publle Works, m oor e feet, <2'd lots Blo~* No, ©. J. POPE, Commisstoner of Tuh'la Warks ‘n the ennuly of partv embleris TN her, A, DT9LE hy the viome ‘or oid people wrnd childien, anc noy ‘or men who are barn tired,” {o the He sent wileh Sep wehe E CiTY OF LAKELAND, FL‘OR.'DAA i INUE from the center curbed inaccordance al cost of said paving and curbing is the xiv-two and 88-100 dollars) and the total s eeven hundred and forty (1140) lineal DOZEN guineas” ($60) would bring one in comfort from the Morocco® wharf, London, to | Togador, but it costs quite as ! wuch in money ard a thou- fsuud times as much in nervous force to traverse the short distance from . Mogador to Agadir. If Agadir is opened up these cities will oLly be five or six hours apart by sea. By railway they will be still nearer, and in boh cases a few shillings will pay one's fare from one city to the other, writes Francis McCullach in the Chi- cago Dally News. At present this journey requires four days of the most toilsome and uncomfortable traveling. At least three mules are necessary-—two for the baggage and onue for yourself. Your guide sits on one baggage mule, your interpreter on another, while an assistant muleteer belabors your mount in an almost hopeless cndeavor to keep It moving at a fair pace. Mules Lack Vitality. The mules and horses to be hired in Mogador are a very sorry collec- tlon. If we were nearer Spain I should be inclined to :magine that they had been rejected by the Span- ish bull fighters as too much lacking in vitality to figure even as passive victims in the buil ring. “When travelirg in most parts of Europe we assume that many things can be bought ¢r hired on the way. When traveling in Morocco we must bring as many things as it we were going to visit an uninhabited island. Pots, pans, Kkettles, corkscrews, spoons, & tent, beds. soap, tinned meats—it would take pages to ex- haust the list. A tent mizht be dis- persed with in the dry season, al though even then the dew {is very heavy, and one¢ might perhaps do with- out & mattresg, but ‘a camyp bed is nec- egsary to raise ouc above the floor of an Arab patio, which is sometimes a moving mass of fleas, Another necessary nuisance {8 an interpreter. All he can do is to tell you how much you have got to pay for fodder and corn, which, as you afterward discover, was not bought at all, but scut to you as a present by the local cuid. Your journey is a continuous running fight with your fnterpreter plus your mule drivers, GER DL LT thirsting for \ i your money and you feebly trying to keep down expenditures, Oh, for a little Arabic, a very little Arabic! Twenty well-chosen words would enable one to dispense with that egregious fraud, the interpreter, a few hundred would enable one to get some Inkling into the life of those tllert, spidery, light-framed Arabs leading or riding the solemn, spare and spidery camels to which they are 80 well ruited. Without Arabic one {s at the mcrey of a ring of clerks. translators and go botweens, Ordinarily there are three stopping places between Moeador nnd Azadir— Cald Anflusg’, Caid G'lulli's and the Sheikh Hemmuch's. The firet named and the last named are ordinary Aribh heuses, with great courtyards for eattle and o fow <tohls for men to gleep In. Caid Gilulli's is, however, a lurge fortress-like house surrounded by mud walls leoplholed for rifles, It containg, 1 belicve, the tomb of some Mol:mmedien €aint, for no Jew or Christian is as a rule allowed to en- ter it. Arourd DarGilulli the land is com- parativelvy fertile, though it is sur- prising how the haryest manages to grow un between the s'ones with which the ground is covered. It also supports some scores of Arab fami lies, while the rest of the road serms to by uninhadited. Even at Dar |(‘.i|u!!i_ however, there is no attemnt to create a town. All tao houseg ars apert, gererclly on hilltops, and the effect of this ¢seetic aloofress ig in- creased by the severe lines of the houses thems:lves They are all structures of straight | lines and tortress-like appearance. | They gererally take the shane of a lonz, low rectangle built of yellgw fsh age stuined stone, with one nastic-loc : deor, which never Brems 1o > orvered. and with no 1 windows at all, or else narrow, infre mo TYPICAL BUILDINGD Invied me w0 sleep tn one of his in- : “OR S:\LF}——(‘heap;; gord team of quent ones, mere slits like those in the tower of London. Naturally the population of the country is scanty. Most of the people | one meets are camel drivers, have come with their camels €ome-| times from places four or five days | to the south of Agadir. There are| only three or four wells on the road, and wherever there is a well there is generally Eome animation, €ome gigns of local life. At the first well which I passed half a dozen young, women were working at 8 windlass 80| long and so hard that I suspect there, was no water in the well at all, or very little, A Curious Laundry. The second well, near Caid Anfluss’, was an oblong platform of magonry. It reminded me of a music hall stage, and the resemblance was heightened by the fact that a naiive gentleman ln: a Maud Allen costume was dancing on it. On coming closer 1 found that he was dancirg on his week's wash- fng, which consisted of a white gar- ment about as large as a waistcoat, which he had first of all washed in the well. At this point the flocks of sheep and goats, a score of camels and geveral fine-looking bullocks and the ghouts of two young goatherds at play echoing down the valley imparted some animation to the scene. As & general rule a funereal silence hangs{ over all the country, especially at mid- day. One hears no village song, no shepherd's pipe. Where there i a well of cold water, however, people gather round it in the evening as we gather round a cheerful fire, and there {8 some, ap-| proach to sociability. The men's quar. ! ter of the most comfortable houses looks like badly kent barracks. One feels that an essentlal element of healthy social life has been left out.' Sometimes, in remote villages, one gecs a girl or two at the wells, but they are silent, like slaves in the pres- ence of their lords, and their faces are | generally covered. ‘l The most interesting place at which I stopped was the house of the Sheikh Hammuch, a poor caid whose lonely home was built on some sar d hills fac- ing the Atlantic, close to the place where the River Eitamer enters the sea, Here 1 was well received by the maeter, g gnare and 14~ ; AL T | i ner rooms looking out on a emall patio | with a well in the center. He offer.d ' me curdled milk, honey and tea, a' d ceemed well disposed toward Euro- peans. His son, Hadj Mahomet, a tall, lank man of about forty years of age, moving with the peculiar stately move- ment of the mountain Moor accus- tomed to riding and habituated rto loose, flowing robes instead of tron. f€rs, was not very cordlal in his wel. come. My irterpreter told me tnat he dislikes Europeans and upbraided his father for extending hospitality 0 me, Some miles outelde Gilulli and at an. other point a few miles outside Apa- dir s a market, or “so%o" where grain, fodder. bread and food of varl. ous kinds are scld. A fair is held in | these places at stated intervols, when | there is much animation and mavy | camels, mules and natives. Ordinarily. however, the score or 8o of rude srom; huts which constitute the eoko are quite drserted and uninhabited. The mountains to the sou'h of Mo- gedor really constitute a 1y uryl fron. tier on the south of Moroceo, The absence of ro:ds, of water and ot people mokes Agadir d'ffcult of ap proach and may lead to its eventualiy falling away from Morocco, —_— Packed, ! Crawford—So vou're golng awey to the country? ; packed yet? H Crab:haw—No: my wite faved me the trouble. She filled it with all her own things.—Judge, —_— Unfailing Remedy. Mrs. Newed (to dear friend)— What's the secret of getting & new frock g out of hubby after he refuses Mre. Wiley—If at firat you donm't succeed, cry Agaln!—.ludgu.' Have you your trunk i S SO Clas_‘si/ifé Fik SALLE.. FOL: SALK—10 acres on hard road, only two miles out; b acres in bearing grove; balance in truck. Exceptionally good for the price, $3,000. John F. Cox Realty Co. 1470 N FOR SALE--Nice lot on Tennessed . ... avenue, Scott’s Lakeland Heights, lot 3, block 3, part cash, balance payments. G. D. McColpin, 310 North Kentucky avenue. 1474 WO | e FOR SALE—\ good gra“e Jersey cOW now givinz milk., A bargain at $65. See . A. Cox or Miss Helia Cox. F. F. Box 453. 1475 | e—————————————————————————————— "OR SALE—Ten fine joung guinea fowls. /pply at Orange 8rove, N. E. corner Oak St. and Gil- mare gvente, 1448 A S e I RS e ey OR ‘SALE QUICK—Cottage on S. Virginia avenie, between Malt and Lemon streets; 5 rooms and sath. 2 fireplaces, nice lot, geo¢ location. elose in Now paying * per cent on $3,000. Don't be &lov Yours for $2.500. A, J. Moom (o] {5210 1278 OR 3'LE—A pair of horses. Apply to 920 Rose street or telephone 341 Black. 1358 OR S\LE OR RENT—6-room house. bath, hot and cold water; stove z0es with house. Nichols and \WVar ing Phone 336, Room b, over nnstaffice 1426 T ————————————————————————— 9o LOTS—Best location in city and any part of city for sale; good terms and will build for you. Nich- ols and Waring. Phone 356, Room 3 nver nretnfice LB Jih 1 ——————————————————————————————— 'OR SALE OR RENT—sSeveral cot- tages and bungalows. Nichols and Waring. Phone 356. Room & wer postoffice. 1426 tANL STOCK FOR SALE 1n aupburn dale State Bank. Address A. ( Tharp. Auburndale, Fla. 141 FOR SALE - fireplace, cloctric street, lot H(x200, St., for $4,000. Realty Co. lizht, paved Cox 1470 John F. N e E\WANTR RO G SAbE—My Barred Doceks ar zood as the best and bred to lay. cgag $1.00 Mop 15, &5 [atisfaction o cockercls $45 ¢ wranteed. 1 i OR 30 Lt—1Two-seated “Little” tomobile. Write Box 41, City. 142 SACRITICE SALE—DW ELLINGS' Two 3-room buncalows, all mo’ rnoconveniences; new; price $2.00 ¢ nd $2.250 each, for one week on 1 osinth bloek from Main street, Wi rarantee to resell etther for por haocer within ten davs of his pm for $250 profit, on inst2) \ddrasg Box 84, Lake 141 hiise ent pan mnd . horses, 920 E. Rose St. 341 Black. OR SALK sqnares from Main St. for $2.000 The John F. Cox Realty Co. 1404 et e~ ‘OR SALE—Tots in Ron Ar for $250 on eagy terme elenhone, eitv wa ter and electrie lehts, Four new honges beine built now. Ruy be- fore the price is advanced. John F Cox Realty (o, + RARGAIN IF SOL.D AT ONCE—21 acre farm. 20 in orave and enltiva- tion. 11 in hammoch ang bay on public road, near T.ake Hollings- worth. vard, prop., Main St, e ———— b "OR SALE—20 acres: 12 acres cit rus and 8 acres truck John F. Cox Realty Co, NOTIC Revular meeting of Takelans apter No 29 Thureday ar 5:20 " Companions plen ’ &0 come out ane 2'p promote this wark., B WiLRoN, Secretary — ‘PRAGE PLANTS FOR 1600, SVLE Sl ner T 8 See IRTE RENT—=Two or four furnishoer rooms for rent, neivata bath, Ap e W > v Mrs. 7. R, Streater, 503 Fas Oranze streeg, ilouse of 9 rooms, bath, | East Orange 1432 SN cood s only four The 1404 See B. E. Rrooks, wood- 1424 land, all cleared. 2 miles out, $2,100. The 1404 | P gome of the finest ":’ | 1 e e A e Adveriig, A DT e . - o “OR Rrjh‘l‘nl‘uumlmg s private bath, Apply h' ] Flonda or phoue gy s B D Y SO ORY St AXTTEE RTI vath aud all ; ey 317 So. ——————— titudep, Virgy ‘OR FIRE INSUR:\Ne Marler, Ey it 4 —~0ne fm\ 2pply 802 South m‘”ida ; or pione 63 Black, [y SUR RENT—Three oy, ) Soutn Lake Holliy gy, $3.50 per month, Johnson. i one iX-py for rent, or Will sl cho, o easy terms. A, \y, fc* _—_-_—\( FOR RENT—TWo njcely, rooms; only two blockg " pot. Phone 324, See T ‘rag /‘ ! —opi « Y i Miccellaneee —_— LOST 1t One gold watch, monogruion B. Finder please retur g | T. Cizar Co. and receive papiql WANTED—BY . desirable A rooms furnished for )i keeping; pleasant nejg or two furnished rooms 4 without meals. State ;reg¥ “Johnson,” care of Telegr HAVING secured the servicyig FAUST, an experience rapher, we will turn o work promptly. Pender i AUTOMOBILE OWNERS /¢ their tires vulcanized anid in the most satisfactor @t at W. B. Arendell's Bit General Repair Shop, o/l street, just back of Cent) macy. D m———————— ANY or all parts of harnes ORe to epnpner at o0l (e | LORSE furnishines and ooy elry at MeGlashan's anto in 'II" for property. Nicholsnig g dollars, three year nnally; close *$4,500 as security, X, care of Evening in e WANTED—*n oran-e after. Have 9 vears' and am a hustler, care Telegram. _ IF YOU WANT A HOVE stallment plan, -ee nr“a‘fl Realty Co., or R. M. !# are Acrtu| cal ] Having purehased and ¢ the Jesse Keen eatate of D8 one-half mile wenst of eitv ‘281 are now selling in 10 a" farm lands in this sect"” right price and terms. F lars gee 3. C. Rogan, Root "\een & Rryant Bidz. Phitg i PUANRE YOT'R ORNFRE ek, ofvine tnprevg, WINT Int af =nhlers and hens P. Pillans. vy SICK haness made who L McGlashan, the harne# WANTEN. - Camnatont 195 ranhar Anefras pocition | ‘e ST i3 | N Oraham ar Aany dafle Yo ean ».,"‘_.e tity. Maves Gro Co ! "MEWAKING prices, Sime 090 E. Rose S%ing 241 Plack. 9 ronennahle — % w A rev oante e gnontain y “ilding the mrer nt and tacty hooee nenev CACTTY AN TATATA Ay o T VEGETABLE GRIVI™SE Tha annnal meetin @ 29, ot | Roard of Trade rooms. !officers and matters of ' “Htance will come before !B | Prices of seed potators (action wanted on same. ;son, secretary . v

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