Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
CeVPVP0VEV208 0 * : AMERICAN ASSOCIATION - . R R - R - . . Standing of the Clubs W & < * o 0C®*Ce0P0®QP0S0QH0 @ 2 AMERICAN LEAGUE C*ce0e0eDIDEVED Standing of the Clubs W ® O @ | Pet. L. Pet New York, May 2§—What few Indianapolis. . SIRU T Clleage s 12 .676 |SPorting men there are in New York llzouxsvm&” 4 -+20 15 .571 | Detroit .. 14 22 |—and they are here because busi- ansas City .. .18 14 563 [New York .. 15 ness, or other reasons, prevented Milwaukee .. ...19 15 .559 |Boston .. 14 their getting away, are hugging the St. Paul .. ..16 18 .471|Washington .. .. 17 tickers closely for events that are Cleveland. . 24717 452 |8t. Touts .. . . 20 to be. For instance in Indianapolis, Minneapolis . . .12 18 .400 |Cleveland .. .. .. ..14 19 Freddie Welsh meets Younz Saylor Columbus .. ..12 22 353 |Philadelphia .. .. ..12 22 :::n‘gr:!{ as ”t"""‘“"e to the ":is au- AtMinneapolis 2, Louisville 4. Results Yesterda | obile mee! Omorrow. reddie At St. Paul 2, Indianapolis 6. At Chicago 8, New \'or{( L ¥ hnsdibc:en “"‘or?(_mg hard to get into At Milwaukee, Columbus, cold. At Cleveland 9, Philadelphia 8. :?("‘ l:m:; a\}x‘u'g \:_"""{‘! in ”:'s At Kansas City, Cleveland, wet At Detroit 2, Washington §. ¥ at the New est Side A. C., and while he is on his good behavior by h-hampion Chicago Cubs woud have been World’s Champion yet if they declare that the old world's started big league games time. at that In addition to the little set to be- tween Welsh and Young Saylor at Indianapolis toight, George Chip and Jack Dillon will clash in a ten- round bout. Perhaps the most interesting of the college events will be the Inter- nds. i 2sgedene0snieden will probably take on several other |colegiate A. A. A. A. Champion- 0200V @BV PLPY » * bouts as he has d 1 £ ships at Philadelphia today and to- 8 a dozen offers for ¢ 8 8 ' = > & : NATIONAL LEAGUE 2 matches waiting. jmorrow. It is too bad that the o FEDERAL LEAGUE o 040 SVEVEBOOSO ST l‘nno.rsu).' of \\"Istnn.}vm will not . * Standing of the Clubs At Superior, Wis., Joe Mandot and | °™Pete in the track and field deceosTsDEDITLT g i Red Watson, lightweights, are°Vent With the Western University A ¥ 1 matched for a bout tonight. Joe's |\l there would be a fine scrap of it in Standing of the Clubs :::lc:delphin i ':9 11 supporters say that he has a good |th€ Tunning jump and an excellent W. L. Pet. kglcf 553 e latel iz b chance to grab off the decision, | Channce for a new record. Stiles, of Chicago .. ...-21 14 .600, Stool "f 4 'lf 15 while the friends of Watson hold an | \Visconsin has cleared twenty-four Pittsburg .. w31 16 k88 e Foadl i . --‘: 17 entirely different view. feet one and one-half inches and Kansas City .. -39 14 (‘f)s“.)n CR MR e [ with Wesley Oler, who has a record Newark .. 19 1 incinnati .. Lo LG | o . for twenty-three feet eleven inches, We have been s | v Brooklyn .. L7 1 515 | New York .. PRI s LS | to u; gr::m:'l‘ L:; ;::‘;:;“i ;:‘u“r :‘:;s_ jand Richards with one of twenty- St. Louis .. .15 16 .484 .kesultheiterdny dry inklings ot &NEL orpantiea b’“"_ |three feet four and a half inches, Baltimore . 13 21 .382 ar p_h”“delphm [ GiceRo Imh intends to do with the Colol‘l;'ll “oompeting Eabnrletid old - ngiTen Buffalo .. 11 24 314 | At New York 5, St. Louis 6. League situation—a Fed farm in or- MISHt be sent to the discard. At B 2 By i E —a a - Results Yesterd A B"_‘(Dkl'\? & FRaE 0 zed baseball. But from all ap- —_— sults Yesterday | At boston 0, Cincinnati 6. pearancec 0. B. isn’t carrying that| Speaking of Germans on the Can- At Pittsburg 6, Buffalo 9. HEE = - - 0 - IO I3 O 3 -1 chip so rec poised on its|adian turf this year, there is one ® @ | shoulders these days. Teuton in Toronto who has not been CP0P0SVEO 0RO < SOUTH ATLANTIC @ e perturbed by the war spirit. That * * ®1 New York is all stirred up trving [on¢ is is William Krausemann, who o SOUTHERN LEAGUE R R EE-KE-E - NN to find out whether or not Gunboat [ Will start his mare Hampton Dame, b Standing of the Clubs Smith has retired from the ring. |in the King's Plate. Hampton Dane S 8 8. - DV RVSOBPOSD Y W. L. Pet. |we opine from that the puzzle is|at the present time is conceded a Standing of the Clubs Macon .. 15615 | whether he retired from the ring or |Splendid chance for vietory in the We T Albany .. the ring retired from him. Woodbine classic by the racing harps New Orleans . . 28 15 Charleston Ilhu what a victory that would prove Birmingham .. 15 Columbus . . The University of Minnesota is |—a German owner triumphant in Nashville .. 2220 Jacksonville .. trying baseball at 6 a. m. We here- |u..— King George Plate race. Memphis .. L eaR1s i 80; Savannah .. e Chattanooga . . .19 20 Columbia .. . Atlanta 18 21 Augusta 14 SOCIALIST DEFENSE NEW RUSSIAN LAWS o 5 s ; g AGAINST CORPORATION: Mobile ... .. . .16 24 Results Yesterday LEAGUE ORGANIZED G Little Rock .. .13 26 At Savannah 3, Jacksonville 4. T RyA i 5 e ssoclated Press Results Yesterday At Augusta 3, Albany 3. (By Associated Press,) 4 At Chattanooga 3, Atlanta 0. At Nashville 4, New Orleans 3. At Columbia 4, Columbus At Charleston 2-4, Macon 6- I GROWING PEANUTS *‘Nearly all our farmers here buy seed of peanuts every year, and make no effort to save their own seed. In fact they know nothing about hand- ling the crop except for hog pasture. Asking them why they say they do not know how. Please tell us how economically to plant, fertilize and harvest peanuts| This will interest those who wish to sve their own seed ing factories.-—The Progressive Farmer. - SEVEN HUNDRED STUDENTS IN PAGEANT London, May 28-—The Socialist National Defense League has been organized by a pro-war group of So- cialists including John Hodge, M. P., Robert Blatchford, the writer, A. S. Headingly, one of the leaders of the Social Democratic Party, George Petrograd, May 28—The new Rus- sian laws, directed against “enemy j corporations” operating in Russia, are thus officially summarized: “The measures authorize the Council of Ministers to close stock .nompnnlns operating under statutes ysanctioned within the Empire, with AS IN THE OLD DAYS By MARY MARSHALL. (Copyright, 1915, by the McClure Newspa- | per Syndicate.) | “It's such a bore not to have cof- fee.” Tom Blake drew a long puff from | his cigarette and then wearily Wwatched the smoke as it circled over { Julia’s head. It had come to be a | matter of fact for Tom and Julia Blair parties and pass an hour in quiet in the broad sweeping veranda overlooking the sea. Julia sat up erect and looked at Tom with the frankness of old ac- quaintance, the result of a friendship that had lasted through the days when lJnliu and Tom both left college sev- 'onl years before. “You are getting | to be a miserable, grumpy old bach- | elor, Tom Blake.” “When a man is as old as I am he doesn’t delude himself easily. I wish the Blairs would serve coffee. ‘Who wants an ice without coffee even in July?” “And you are miserable just be- cause they didn't happen to have it? ‘Why don’t you go down to the hotel and get some it that is the way you | feel? If anyone were at our cottage I'd like you to come home now. Cot- fee is very simply concocted.” “I dare you, Julia" Tom tossed his cigarette off the veranda and stood beside her. “Don't refuse a dare, do you? 1 double dare you to let me go home with you mow and make it. Remember how I used to dare you—dared you to kiss me once at our junior prom, and you were too good a sport to refuse. But kissing’s gone out of fashion now, Julia. I triple dare you to make the coffee.” A minute later Julia, her light evening cape thrown around her shoulders, stole down the veranda steps with Tom. Just as they turned into the pathway that led into the cot- tage two neighbors passed. “Its Julia,” one said, “and that Mr. Blake. No one's in the cottage, either. Funny of Julia tc be there alone, and that Blake they say used to be in love with her once.” Julia was fumbling with the keys and did not hear this, but Tom caught it. Once in the house Julia dropped { her wrap and started toward the din- ing room. “Oh, forget the coffee!” Tom called after her. “That walk down here was all the bracer I needed. I didn't really mean that I was going to let you go to all that trouble.” o . It was perhaps because Julia turned d smil ver her shoulder as sh glllllr'flad‘ % go‘%:? ning room, & partly bécause the remark of the Deighbor had brought back a flood of old recollections, that Tom rushed Dawson to come off like this at the || H. Robertg, M. P., Charles Duncan, M. P., and H. G. Wells, the novel- ist, to combat the Keir Hardie and hundred students of the Industrial |Ramsey MacDonald anti-war group. ‘Institute and College will take part “In this hour of national peril,” in a pageant here today. Gov. Brew-fgays the manifesto prepared by the er and family, Hon. Blewett Lee of League, ‘“when the independence of Chicago, Hon. Jacob M. Dickinson peoples is brutally menaced and the Columbus, Mi May .7-—Seven |the appointment of a special board {forward and caught Julia in his arms. for the liquidation of the business in , But it was a very different Julia from 'thone cases where the actual man-the Julia he had kissed in his college agement is in the hands of subjects, | days. She bad been frightened and companies or institutions of coun- l happy then. Now she was apparently tries which are at war with Russla '"""‘:"d- She drew away almost in “Tom!" there was deep reproof in of the U. S. war office and many other distinguished persons are present . and plant for hogs.”—From Georgia. Peanuts of the large white Vir- ginia variety are commonly hulled for planting. The Spanish nuts are often planted in the hulls. The rows should be made about two and a half teet apart and the nuts dropped 15 Yrishman (to officer who had res inches apart. Five hundred pounds cued him from drowning) *“You an acre of Thomas phosphate anl 100 thwarted me plans that toime, sor; pounds of cottonseed meal, in the ab- but the nixt toime Oi’'ll drown me- sence of potash, may make the nuts 'sif, be gobs, if Oi lose my life in the on your upland soil. The Thomas attempt.™ X. phosphate will carry lime enough for the peanuts. Cultivation must of course be clean. The nuts are lifted when mature and shocked around stakes about six feet high, nuts next the stake and tops out and left in this way to cure. They are then HE'LL DO IT THE NEXT TIME SEEMS REASONABLE A voung Western doctor has made the discovery that the ankle is placed between the foot and the knee in order to keep the calf avay from the corn. picked out and shipped to the clean- J.B. STREATER CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Having had twenty-one years' experience in building and contracting in Lakeland and vicinity, 1 feel competent to render the best services in this line. 1 comtemp!atmg building, will be pleased to furnish estimates and all infor- mation. All work guaranteed ). B. STREATER. amonds of Quality Fashion in Lakeland. We have Yamonds to select Di . Are still the Reigning § at present a large selection of Imported [ your purchase from. Every stone sold under a guarantee. ‘. «A PLEASURE TO SHOW GOODS Cole & Hull THE DIAMOND HOUSE Glass Box Candy FREE with each Sc. ¥ Liggett's Cheriade ¥ Remember Maxixe Chocolates and Cherries, and Triola Sweets 890 established public law and libera- ties of Europe are rustlessly vilote- ied, a handful of pseudo-socilalists in this country are breaking the nat- ional solidarity and weakening the ,hational effort in the face of the enemy. It has become a duty for true British Socialists to expose and repudiate the errors of these dream- ers. All of them are, consciously or unconsciously, the agents of German Kaiserdom and traitors to the im- perishable ideals of liberty and dem- ocracy which have united free Brit- tain, independent Belgium and Re- publican France in an indissoluble Jand glorious alliance.” i In the manifesto the following at- tack is made on German Socialism: “What is the German claim? Put rbriefly it may be summed up in the assertion that because an unwilling Serb-Austrian subject killed an Aus- | trian prince, Serbs; and because to ravage the § intervened to prevent Serbian annihilation, Germany was justified in exterminating the national inde- pendence of Belgium, ‘Civic freedom and national in- dependence are elementary princi- We cannot treat with German alists until they de » for these as the cialists of a have declared. Socialism ex- | ses itself internationally, It can- not develop anti-nationally. has n. ples of sociali “German Socialism and bureaucratic ideals. The pres- ent war is a choice between organiz- ed liberty and mere organization. British pro-war Socialists have made much of Liebkneckt, the (‘mr-' man Socialist who fought the war {budget in the Reichstag, while | German Socialists united for the | Fatherland treat Hardie and Mac- | Donald as heroes. ,000 GERMANS TO o BE INTERNED (By Associated Press) London, May 28—The Admiralty and Ware Office are not at all.pleas-’ ed over having to intern the 24,000 | age now at | Germans of military In spite of abuse for not tak- which had action sooner, a part of uch been the government lien enemies able The govern- es put littl them ntly men means a quarter of a mil- cost estimated at " ‘lxon dollars a week, to say nothing ‘ soldiers required for guard who ¢ be diverted from 60¢c value--Saturday only . - | Lake Pharmacy jof other service. Prisoners kept on Austria had the right | lhnrmful or dangerous to the State. 'lt is provided, however, that the rights of creditors are not to be in- |!‘r|ngod‘_ and that the interests of stockholders are to be observed as ‘far as possible, ““As an alternative, the Council {may appoint a special board of man- agement for the business of such alien companies, without closing {them or taking them over. “The same regulations are to be rapplied also to partnerships if any jof the full partners are subjects of enemy countries, if it is found that the work of these partnerships is harmful or dangcrous to the inter- "ets of the State.” The codifying of special measures against “enemy’ compan- ;dies and partnerships is presumably (done in an cffort to restrict illicit trade with Germany and Austria, { which has been going on to a certain extent through Scandinavia since the beginning of the war. these The Pennsylvania Railroad has made arrangements for the sale of about 300 old freight engines that have been stored at Pitcairn, Shaft- ‘on, Pa., and other points in the Pittsburg Division. The engines will go to a salvage company, some to be repaired and sold again for service 'with small railroads, but most of them will be scrapped and sold as old iron. always | | | been limited by political immaturity DIRECTION Doctor—You must be careful and follow the right directions for tak- ing this pill. Pat—G'wan wid ye. There's on- ~and whose operations appear to be" her tone, “how could you?" “But you used to let me. You know how you protested that night when we left college and didn't think we'd see each other for a whole long month afterward. But you ylelded and then you cried in my arms at the thought of the separation. And mow I am away from you a whole winter at a time and you don’t give me a thought.” He caught her again and kissed her as if none of the four in- tervening years had cooled his ardor. Julia struggled against his arms. “It is unfair,” she told him. “I ac- cepted your dare thinking that you gave it in good faith, and now I find that it was just a ruse. Please go away at once. [ don't mind being left here alone, but I refuse to stay alone with you.” “What if they did see? They could only think that I wanted to take you off by yourself where 1 could kiss you and tell you that I love you.” “But how unfair of you to suggest it just because I thought you wanted coffee and all the time you were planning—" Tom drew the girl's slender figure toward him. “Julla, 1 didn’t plan anything. you. I was a crusty old bachelor when I was at the Blairs. Coffee |- was the most important thing in life at that time. I'd forgotten the joy of touching your lips to mine. But it all came back in a flood of recollec- tion. Julia, I think that the neigh- bors will talk about us. I think it will be all over the place, the scan- dal of the summer. In fact, I heard someone starting the gossip as we came in. Julla, you are dreadfully compromised—that is what they say, isn't it? You have been very indis- creet to let me come in this empty house with you, Julia” Tom was /1y wan direction for it to go. must cost much more. If the government carries out its proposed plan, however, some re- lief will be provided by the repatria- tion of 10,000 elderly interned pris- oners, which will leave only 14,000 new ones to provide for. A large proportion of Germans and Austrians caught in Great Brit- ain at the outbreak of the war were waiters and hotel porters entirely :pendent on small wages In Ger- | many, the British interned are ul-[ most all tourists and students, and gives the fig (8E-AN O BRASSIE | duty Ininn internment ships are known to | cost $100,000 a week to maintain, Iand it is assumed the big land camps in the brassiere. Hundreds of thousands of en-Jolie Brassiere for the reason th. ary as a corset. ure the youthful outline fashi B oy rustiess—permitting laundering without removal, They come in all styles, and your local Dry Goods dealer will show them to you on request. If he does not carry them, x?flnwwil, blarlelw' BENJAMIN & JOHNES standing with his hands on Julia's shoulders holding her at arm's length from him. “Julia, the only 8quare thing for me to do now is to insist on marrying you. That is the sort of talk that the part requires, isn't 1t?" ‘You are laughing at me?” It was the old Julia and her cheeks were warm and her eyes had their old ex- pectancy as Tom drew her to him again. “l am in earnest, too,” sald Tom. “The old days have come back, and we're going to start out where we left off and forget about the coffee and the grumpy old bachelor down ot Blair's It supports the decrees. are the dnintiest, most serviceable garments imaginable, Only the best of materials are used—for i stance, “Walohn™, a flexible bon- ing of great durability—absolutely 5 them for you by writing to us. Send for ing styles that are in high favor. <« I didn't dream I'd kiss |f No one appreciates more speed in our Repair Department. fortune to hreak a lens or your frame, you need not “lost” very long. Avail yourself oi our Repair Department, and you be surprised to know how reasonabl vou out of the difficulty. We replace broken lenses for 75¢ and up. ined free. Repairs Quickly Made for mis- feel than we do the necessity When you have the will y and quickly ‘we can help Eyes exam- Cole & Hull LAKELAND, JEWELERS AND OPTOMETRISTS FLORIDA TICGE H1S HOUSE WHEN YOU FIGURE ON BUILDING, COME iIN § AND LET US FIGURE WITH YOU ON YOUR BUILD- § § ERS' HARDWARE. BUT BEFORE YOU COME IN KNOW THAT YOU WILL FIND OUR BUILDERS’ HARDWARE TO BE } CORRECT INISTYLE AND HIGH IN QUALITY. WE § ALSO MAKE THE PRICE RIGHT. S WHENEVER YOU NEED ANY KIND OF HARD- § WARE, IT WILL PAY YOU TO BUY FROM US. Lakeland Hardware and Plumbing Co.}' VAN HUSS' PLACE Send Us Your Orders —FOR— I BEAMS CHANNELS CHANNELS ANGLES and ALL SHAPES BOILER PLATE TANK STEEL GALVANIZED COPPER and ZINK SHEETS RUSS RODS STAY BOLTS STRUCTUAL IRON WORK OF ALL KINDS OAK, CYPRESS HAHOGANY CHERRY WHITE PINE and ALL HARD WOODS LAUNCHES DORIES SKIFFS BUILT TO ORDER BOILERS AND TANKS TO ORDER 0 CUSONVILLE .FLOR Our Moral Codes. Our moral codes were invented, not to prepare men for heaven, or for Utopla; they were invented by men who were none too good themselves for people who were not much worse. There are great differences in human beings as to the amount of knowledge and wisdom which they possess, but there is small difference in regard to the ameunt of goodness or rascality that the; manifest.—Mowry Saben, in Forwa. 1 Why He Was Pleased. “Yessir,” sald the rugged moun- talneer to the member of congress, “I'm goin’ to vote fer you, hard an’ frequent. You're one man as does a litie suth’n to protect home indus- try.” “Then you don't resent my stand in favor of prohibition?” “That's what I'm g-cheerin’ ye fer. You ain't interfered with us moon- shiners wuth mentionin’, an’ you've improved the demand a heap."—Ex- change. Famous South American Falls. The falls of Tequendama are situ- ated near the city of Bogota, United | States of Colombia, where the River Bogota rushes through a cleft 36 feet | wide and falis about six hund: feet | into a rocky chasm. Near the falls | is the natural bridge of Incononge, which is something more than mn,o; | hundred feet high. Satisfaction. Drive a nail home and clinch it so e fpouh. same as Brown had. His was | caused by worrying over his butch- SANITARY PRESSING CLUB CLEANING, PRESSING. REPAIRING and DYEING. Ladies Work a Specialty. Satisfaction Guaranteed. GIVE US A TRIAL Kibler Hotel Basement. Phone No. 393 WATSON & GILLESPIE, Proprietors L. W.YARNELL LIGHT AND HEAVY HAULING HOUSEHOLD MOVING A SPECIALTY 0Oak and Pine Wood Orders handled promptly. chones: Office 109; Res.. 87 Green o = OUR & vl LD ihe IS OUR MOTTO Which is proven by our six years success in Lakeland. Maker of the National Steel reinforced concrete Burial Vault Building Blocks of all discrip- tions. Red Cement, Pressed Brick, White Brick, Pier Blocks, 3 nd 4 inch Drain Tile, o, 7 and 8-ft Fench Post; in fact anything made of Cement. FLORION NATIONALVAULT CO Carlyle on Warfare. Are not all true men that live, ot that ever lived, soldiers of the same army, enlisted under heaven's cap talncy, to do battle against the same enemy, the empire of darkness and wrong? Why should we misknow one another, fight not against the ememy, but against ourselves, from mere dif- ference of uniform? All uniforms shall be good, so they hold in them true valiant men —Carlyle. All the Doctor's Fault. Doctor—“You have nervous dys- er's bl I directed him to stop' ] faithfully that you can wake up at night and think of your work with sat- istaction.—Thoreau. Newark, N. J. worrying.” Stranger—“Yes, and now he's cured, and I've got it I'm his butchee.”