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BOOST—REMEMBER THAT SATAN STAYED IN HEAVEN UNTIL HE BEGAN TO KNOCK HIS HOME T OWN. | Et. Harvester | 30. Ordered | " Dissolved [ LARED TO BE OPERATED IN | RESTRAINT OF TRADE | ppeal to the Supreme Court from This Decision Will Be | Taken ‘ . (By Associated Pre Paul, Minn., Aug. 12.—The! ) national Harvester Co. today declared to be a monopoly in aint of interstate and foreign y, and was ordered dissolved by | jority decision in the United '8 district court. iless the $140,000.000 r-yrpm'u—f submit a plan for the disso.ution | 1e combinatfon into at least » independent concerns within ays, or in case of appeal within | ays of the issuance of an appeal i .late from the United States su- | e court, the decision announces . the court will entertain an ap- tion for the appointment of a gver for all the properties of the ration, 1e decision of the court was 1 by Circuit Judge \Walter I. h of Iowa, with which Judge | iam C, Hook of Kansas agreed, | | from which Judge Walter A, orn of Minnesota dissented. 1 majority opinion heid that| 2(nternatlonal Harvester Co. was its organization in 1902 in tion of the Sherman law. The nal corporation, formed of five erns, violated the first he Sherman act by restraining betition among themselves. The yined organization also tendea onopolize trade in contraventicn -1¢ second section of this law. pe decision declares that while International Harvester Com- r and its selling organization, International Harvester Com- r of America, control from S0 to er cent of the trade in agricul- 1 implements manufactured by 1, their treatment of smaller Letltora in general has been fair just. he court finds fault with the ac- 8 of the corporation, aside from technical violation of the Sher- law, for on:!y two actions. The ion declares ilat there no ise for the advertising of the lucts of D, M. Osborne and Co. ndependent for two years &fter was iad virtually entered the luter onal Harvester Company. This rtising was to induce purchas- the court finds, from those who e opposed to buying from the bination. he other act cencured by the de- which the turned n was the manuer original conccrns * tosthe Internatio Willlam C. Lane, a ker, who cont ‘hased the proje in were Company York had New that | BE TAKEN TO THE SUPREME COURT | (By Assgocinte hicago, Aug al Harvester « he United Stat 00n as possi! ement here ormick, pres onal Harvester ERCENTENNIAL OF TRADE |on ew York. Auz s for the tercentenary nning of charters n | York and the opening of the| el of ama canal, includ santg in the par not be carried out laborate a scale ned by the comn European difficulties 3 have been steadily r costumes for > looked forward to the celebration The paz¢ years of c island of luctions of customs wh I 1t rt growth of t thousands cted to vi months’ f med to cu , Oet. 12. el had been | | | ratification {game yesterday at section |* LAKELAND, FLORIDA, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 12, 1914. BRYAN’S PEACE TREATIES TAKEN UP BY SENATE (By Associated Press.) Washington, Aug. 12.—Secratary Bryan's twenty peace treaties which the president urges for immediate werc taken up by the Senate today in executive ion. SALE OF AMERICAN COTTON IN LIVERPOOL (By Associated Press.) Liverpool. Aug. 12.—Five nun- {dred bales of spot cotton sold here is of 6.50 pence mid- 16,000 in- today on a b dling. cluding 1¢ teceipts bales Aniericans. 3.000 There is only one coachman in all England and she has been put out Lot business by the war. France and Germany have pended their parcel post service. BUS- Locals Lost To Brewster Yesterday A single, three bunts and an um- pire's decision Lakelard the Brewster. The whole thing was done in the second inning. Medina sineled, Nance unted, Alvarez bunted and was out lost ;&ll first, Galloway bunted, scoring Medina, Brown bunted and Nance was out at the plate by three feot ut Roquemore called him Mills singled and Galloway scored. Nance remarked after the game that he was out a mile and that he never had tagged the home plate, Verigan pitched a good game after the second inning but his lack of pep in hand- ing the bunts was in Brewster's victory safe, a factor great Our boys though they pounded the hall in 200d shape Not an error was made by the team played jam up ball especially Wat- son who picked some throws out of the dirt. The score by innings First Inning For Lakeland—Ginter hit the first ball pitched for a clean single, Gilles- pie sacrificed, Branch popped short, Van out at first. For Galloway first. Brown singled, Mills right, Painter and Taylor McDonah line drove to pitcher, runs. home and out at flied to walked, No Brewster Second Inning For Lakeland—Garlets fanned, (‘abera and Sawyer out at first For Medina Nance bunted safely, Alvarez bunted Brown Brewster singled, sacri- safely and bunted Mills Painter ficed, Galloway Medina scored, ly Nance and Galloway safe- singled fiied first. and scored scored, Taylor out at out to Three enter, runs. Third Inning For Lakeland-—Watson first, Ver For to first first pophed to izgan and Ginter out at fir Jrewsier-—~MceDonah Medina fanned, Nance No runs Fourth Inning Lakeland —Gillespie sin popped out Branch ond's Garlets era hit a long 0 1 muffed own fl Mills fanned Fifth Inning No run fanned Sixth Inning eland—B dina first, out Lal at first. For Brewster Alvarez fl Ne out at Seve nth Inning | scemed to be unable to hit sately al-! everybody | to ! at ) | i | \ | | \ | | | | ar Germans Are Advancing Thru Belgium ARMY HAS LEFT POSITION BE- FORE LIEGE Belgians Still Hold Liege; Germans Deny Losing 20,000 Men at Seige of Liege (By Associated Press) Brussels, Aug. 12.—The German army is being detacned from its po- sition before Liege and is advancing through the heart of Belgium. The main body of the German cavalry is engaged in a forward movement all along the front of the allied armies. BELGIANS STILL HOLD LIEGE (By Associated Press.) Tondon, Aug. 12 The French minister in a dispatch received here today says the Belgians still hold all the Liege forts and the French troops from Alsace nearly all the way to Liege, are having light skir- fishes with the Germans. The French practically dominate Alsace by having possession of the mountain and by Tholding strategzic points in that province. tops and passes DENIES LOSING 20,000 MEN (By Associated Press.) l.ondon, Aug. 12.—A Rome cor- respondent of the Exchange Tele- aph says that a Berlin dis- pateh gives General Von Stein's of- ficial statement regarding the Liege which he losing thousand men. He docs own but was concealing the bulk of He says a small forve engaged at Liege and the attacking force was annihilated. admits that the are still tact and says they will fall the heavy artillery arrives. e says it must not forgotten that the Belgian force was numerically great- than the Germans. Co siege in denies not the the the wias twenty give his figures, says mask of attack a real army . movement cnemy's He in- when forts be REGIMENT CROSSES MEUSE WITHOUT CROWN PRINCE (By Associated Press.) Aug. 12 A Rotterdam dispatch that a correspondent the Rotterdam Courant been positively by offi- | at Vise that the German crown | prince’s regiment crossed the Meuse | l.ondon, says of has wred German cers river several days ago without the prince, who is reported to have hee wl seriously injured a week a2o by an | assassin The report has never been officially confirmed — | For faithful service durin the last year the Capital Traction Co. | of Washington, . ( distributed | among conductors and motorme n | 680,17 in honuse This is an | nnual cnstom « rail ' my I'hiose employe wi ‘ ten irs received $100 cach 10 ( AT $T cl nd tl 1 e ' 0 nd DRUGS IN RUBBER HELLS N York, Aug 1 I low ru r heels as a mean ba fling er John Regzio 1 | | $ in the drug section ol s supplied with morphin { ) and heroin for over 2 montt s method was foun ut 1 ly as the result of hi wearing tan shoes on brother John was placed in the ‘}‘*I'-‘ k of cells early in June, time prisoners near plentiful supply of nar e was put u L ant St the drug squ i men W 6 £ 3 1 tt Re Mofitenegran Ports Are Blockaded AUSTRIAN FLEETS IN THOSE WATERS German Boat Sunk by German Minn; Crown Prince Unable to Accom- pany His Army (By associated press.) Vienna, Aug. 12.—Foliywing close on Austro-Hungary's deeiora- ion of war on Montenegro yesterday, it was officially announced today here that the Austro-Hungavian flects had maintained an effectis blockade of the Montenegran coast since yesterday. ] GERMAN TORPEDO SUNK BY GERMAN MINE (By Associated Press.) London, Aug. 12.-—-A Coperhagen digpatch says a German torpedo boat destroyer reported sunk by a boiler explosion Aug, 5, really struck German contact mine. The Rus a ian commander at Sveaborg has ordered | the residents of that place and Hels- ingfors to leave as a battle is immi- nent. GERMAN AIRSHIP FLIES OVER BELGIUM Associated Press) A (By 12 Brusseis thousand it Aug. flew Drussels, erman today height of feet. it did There is uo fear of food shortage hro. acroplane over at a fwo Shots at not reach FLORIDA CITRUS CROP WAS 7,651,614 BOXES Citrus fruit crop for the season recently closed, including the last months of 1913, and the opening months of 1914, amounted to 7,651,- S14 8,125,465 boxes the preceding season, which was the banner season in the history of the fruit industry in the State. The last season lasted about two monthg longer than does the aver: and the fruit $15,000,000 boxes against shipping season brought approximately into the State, The statistics of the fruit mar- keted were compiled by the Citrus Exchange from fizureg able showing the ol handled by the exchange, abont one halt of the erop, and from the records showing figure hoxes of of number avail amount fruit of various transportation companies and companies handling fruit in the i northern cities Establish New Record Manager l.. D. Jones of said the [ he ey that timate on report hased the at the exchange from all parts of State ploce 1915 crop 9,000,000 hoxe tablishing a record Mr new ther said that never Tone 1 time at th season ol the prospect for an W OT abundant 0 promising a now, and thi condition of the and appearance ol the fruit give assurance of a crop of ticnall fi quality all ‘ 1ality Conditions Favo rable ha died affect 'y rowoer )y rather than we This re hrongh market 11 1t of rican the fact that navigatiorn o lar v part of t} of the world will ociated with the war and carrying of supplies for vast : quantities of oranges rom and a considerabl Spair Americar outh of lemon supy Italy Tribun lands Tampa I. 0. 0. F PICNIC \ict A as FUBLISHED IN THE BEST TOWN IN THE BEST PART OF THE BEST STATE Florida | » 40.000.000 TO PURCHASE AMERICAN SHIPS (By Associated Press.) Washington, Aug. 12.—A bill to apppopriate forty illion to purchase occan going ships to carry American trade was introduced in the House today. Such ships would be naval auxiliaries. dollars MILLION DOLLARS FOR FRIENDS IN EUROPE ——— (By Associated Pres Washington, Aug. 12.—Up to to day million dollars had been deposited with the zovernment ) nearly a by Americans for relief of friends in Europe. (By Associated Pr Brussels, Aug. 12, It is officially announced here today that the Ger man retirement reported yesterday is marked. No other puhlice becoming more news from the front made Causes of Austria’s Prof. Albert Bushnell Hart, of Harvard University, a historian of rare distinetion who has nade a first-hand study of conditions in castern lSurope, in article for the New York Times: “The cerime of Servia, in the eyes Austria, is not assassination but Of all the exasperating things that happened to Austria in the course of the Balkan wars, the most exasperating was the appear- ance of a strong and victorious Ser- via. The Austrian army of over one hundred thousand men, masscd those months, looked across the hor- on the frontier of Bosnia during all der with fury as they saw th: Ser- vians Montenegring taking the sanajak of Novi-Pazar and thvs cut- ting off their road to Salonik:a, heat-} ing the Turks, capturing the impor- towns of Monastir and Uskub, in the siege of Adrianople. says an of SUCCeSS . and tant or helping From every point of view this was hateful to Austria. It meant that the door on the south (the road that Austria has long dreamed of making her own to the sea- was shut tight and guarded by an able bull dog." IFurthermore, it the begin- of a Slav power in the Balkans. border, the begin- meant yning at Austria's ning of vast desiens by the Slav peo- {ple, of whom Russia is the head and very champion Racial as well as polit ical antagonisms were thus brought {to sharp issue. The | of Teuton against Slav were ever-smoulder- ing fires Vhlown into flame The rise of Ser :\IJ\ gave fresh courage and quick tened dreams to the Slavie peonle ey Terywhere. Not only did Russia 1]nul\ warmly upon its Balkan Kkin Cdred, but millions of Slavs, seettered | trom the Aretic to the Adriatic and [ Acgean scas, felt the throb of racial [ conseionsnes Within \ustria ;memu. itsell, there are fome twen [ tv-tour million Sla almost hak | the empire's population ! In the light of these circumstance 5 Austria’s unbending attitnde toward Servia becomes intelligible I"he [rowth of Slavic power, the advance ment of Russia’s ambition 1o for {southward and win a port on the Aeg the proare of those peo ‘ le whom the Teutons have Hong felt they must lay match |sword I path « o Teuton and !')w path of the la e opposed Anstri unbition and R H 1 bition both point to territorial pr outheastern Kurope. Hen \ tria trok 12ainst I 1 med at | | 1 jalitar I Austria ind Ger I'%! ly an allianc of | ag 1 ! ¢, then, lie the deepcr root 0 ir that is to yield so ghastly a harvest I'here are other factors | many of them ehind far struggl The DTESSUTE rivalr 1, the form at home things must he con 1 me t ol WARBURG TO GIVE UP FINANCIAL INTERESTS Pr | | LAKELAND EVENING TELEGRAM B e P U — Criminal Prosecution Against N.H WILL BE BEGUN AS SOCN AS POSSIBLE Agreement to Settle Civil Suit Not to Have Any Effect on (By Associated Press.) 'Washington, Aug. 12 prosecutions under Fnat the $herman law in the New Haven case will not be delayed by agreement to ettle the government's without tight clearly here today . will ceedings as soon criminal civil - suit was indicated The department begin eriminal possible. a court of justice pro- as AMBASSADORS ARE FIGURE HEADS NO LONGER A more common usage in referring to American has been to term them “figureheads.” n the past these ideas may have been more The ambassadors or less correct, may have been social Perhaps they have not to show the work laid amba necessities, heen driven upon them. Now it is different ., The American ambassadors abroad have their hands tull. They will be hard worked and worried men un- til tive great war is over. Some of thein may be in the cities around Which contiict rages. There they will be aimost forced to stay until actea’ battle drives them to seek satety. For they will have covern- ment matters of great moment to look after American business in- terests wWill ery to them. American veoples who have heen unable to get out of the war-infested seetions will beg for money and protection, Other at war with the one to wiom he is ambassador, will have dumped their responsibilities on his shoulders., rations, Between the call from his govern- ment tor news and its demands upon his time for attention to special mat- ters, as the delivering of re- qrests for explanations, perhaps, or ultimatums; and, the harrowing de- talls of the war around him, he will Le overworked and perhaps be able such to eat little and sleep less. The American ambassadors will show that they are not “lizurcheads.” Now the must he on the is time when good men jobs It not, our na- a diplo- the make a that nation tion may mistake; matic blunder will plunge Aincrican the fight ol But ask the into ident of the Unit former if pr od States, or a president, men who are sent ambhe hes will tell you as dors have a I'hey The money fon Wiy lignreheads 1o that vhile the heen obvious Vou cquirement ha many years, it ha ery very Idom been the canse of chooging his wor a mian of no will cans has in consti- tution an that the man of 1 been sehooled very rou nomattey of and that liile that our diplomacy sretted ometimes it is to be niation cannot 1 PooL tahl nen as throad, ambas 1 ador alaries the to man VAUDEVILLE MAN- AGERS' ASSOCIATION