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'' r r VOL 20. OCaLA, FLORIDA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1913 NO 95 P REAPER ' pi uuvn nfluunn ULMHV1LU bttlWUn 5KST UK SOUGHT FOR OX THE Savannah, Sept. 12. Currency OCEAN WILL LAST FOREVER (amounting to $71,900, in transit - 'from the Chase National Bank of SW1 PED THE SHEKELS Somebody Got Away With $71,900 i on Its Way from New York to Savannah DEADLY ACCIDENT 'CHARGE OF CONSFIRACYiWDitKlIIG FOR 0!i A DESTROYER!- - -! THE VATEHVAYS .in Xew' York Upset 'by Sudden Passiusz olitical Calculations of All Parties Xew York to the Savannah Bank and His Trust Company, and to Brunswick ;and Valdosta, Ga., banks was stolen from a portable safe on the Atlantic Xew York, Sept. 12. Mayor Gay- Coast Line train No. SO, between or died on the steamer Baltic at sea Jersey City and Savannah, which ar- r 1 i j i 'rivorl JiPre vesterrlav mnrnl n or . uwuA vyCUUesud, "ueruuuu. I ; .7 'scalded "that News of his death was rpfpfvd fn rniy tnousana aouars oi tne Two Men Killed and Four Severely Scalded by an Explosion on the Craven The Seeks to Put Thaw Mack in the Asylum Colebrook, .X. H., Sept. 12. The case of Harry K. Thaw, fugitive from Matteawan. free agent for three cjpnt 1 9 The United States torpedo boat Craven, gheriff Dre of Coos countyf N H wnicn was aamagea at sea wnen me hag assumed the familiar forward boiler exploded and wnicn Approval and Disapproval of Differ ent Routes by the Hoard of Savannah, Ga. Engineers reached Fort Screven, Tybee Island,: ; uncertainty and delay. Washington, Sept. 12. The spe- 'cial board of engineers authorized by aspect of Congress in 1909 to survey the route Counsel and estimate the cost of an inland working for I and against his return a. i j j : j e ii z : alter iu uieu nau u.a ul iuii iu-,to tfae asy,am agreed nQt tQ arraign juries and four others were so badly. Wm Defore poIiCe magistrate until tney were sent 10 me EDAaI WILL BE FIRST Amundsen's Trusty Boat Will Lead Procession of Ships Across the Isthmus Xew York, Sept. 12. When the Hamburg-American liner Victoria Luise reached port last night, it be became came became definitely known that the Ant Antarctic arctic Antarctic exploring steamer Fram, which had carried Amundsen to' the South Pole, will be the first vessel to pass 4 p. m. yesterday and then to -ea ui ms utaiu was receiveu m ,.(. hnimital rparhpi Savannah' i ie following message sent by wire- amount was consigned to the Savan- J'. hX jrLv ?h.'jUrn the CT Until t0d&y' ;ss and cable to Robert Adamson, is secretary, from Rufus W. Gay Gay-or, or, Gay-or, his son, who sailed, with him: f "Father died Wednesday at 1 yock, due to heart failure. Notify J .XL t fl loiuer. I Adolph Kline, by virtue of his of-'exlress ce as acting president of the board. talk. nab. Bank and Trust. Company here. The money was shipped by Southern Express Company. the shortly after noon yesterday. The; Craven came into port for inspection. wjtn It was in tow of the Shubrick, a sis-l tor tnrnodn hnat nnrl n tucr Thp nf ir is nor irnrvrn noro rr a-nar imo iiioia . . , n . 4. ficial report of the accident contains T will coot banks in Valdosta and Brunswick the .. .. Jerome will seek i t,i- i , lilt: uauica ui uic juuuniua not vi t.- i ; j UI- T, i additional sum was consigned, as the i ailing in tnis, Jerome i .j;;,. : .uecm auu mju.tu. ;that Thaw ,8 lnsane and I me ucau -i. .m.i,auc.i i-uici "a tnrnod nvor : tr waterway from Boston to Rio Grande through the Panama canal. river, yesterday submitted to Con-j On board the Hamburg liner was gress its reports on the Beaufort, S.'Capt. Thorward Xilsen, master of the Amundsen on He had with" Thaw is charged with consnirins The special board approves a 1 0 0-, him a cable from Col. Goethals. ask- others fto bring about his es-ifct barge canal of 10-foot depth ing that he be at the isthmus with cape from JLatteawan and it is uponj'rom Eeaufort to Key West, at a cost rthe Fram during the month of Sep- this charge that William Travers of ?ol,000,000. The board of en- tember and saying the Fram would a3!C to Key West, Fla., section, and Fram, who was with ialso on the trans-Florida section. j his perilous journey. his extradition. iSineers for rivers and harbors does be allowed the notable privilege of company officials refuse f aldermen, assumed the reins of prnment on being notified of May- EXPLORERS KILLED jter tender; !der. Serio W. O. Milton, water ten-; Matteawan J usly injured: T. Gabbitt,) ,.hn T an will contend should be attendant from ! Aiaynor's death. He will be acting fiay until January 1. Mr. Kline is resident of Brooklyn and a republi-f an. Left Xew York Septemler 4 Mayor Gaynor sailed away from Kew York on the morning of Septem- er 4 on the Baltic. An hour before' he sailed but one man, his secretary,! new .of his plans, outside of the iiember3 of his immeiiate family. 'he mayor's announced purpose was brief vacation trip on the ocean. Ie feit that the tonic effect of the alt air would restore him in some measure to health. The Baltic was flue at Queenstown today. The mayor died as the Baltic was- hearing the other side. The news of pis death was sent by wireless to Juxhaven by Rufus W. Gaynor, andsteamer on the 'Olavon frATYi Pnvhoron f n X cir Vnr lr VilJ VVl AAVS V- UA1IU V. J w t oi n y cable. Mayor Gaynor left Xew ttork at a time when the city was teething inone of the strangest mu- firemanf J. C. Dalton, water tender; iXew York ctyf who raced with Jerjof HY THE ESKHIOS s Schmind, chief machinist's mate Radford and Street Murdered Their Guides in the Far . Xorthem Regions Slightly injured, Uv tender. D. B. Smith, water i not concur in the report of the spe-. being the first vessel to navigate the cial board. I canal. Former Chief of Engineers W. H.j The captain said he would remain Bixby, who signed the report, reeomhere until Saturday, when he will John Lanon, private detective in i aiends to Congress the construction leave for Colon by the Panama line a -foot canal from Beautort to ; steamer of that date. He added that Johns rher only, to be built at a! the Fram is on her way to Colon from ome all the way to Sherbrooke, Can- 3t- Ensign W. i command of explosion: D. Lamont, who was inimeet "We were seven miles off Martin's jada, after Thaw's arrest in the Do-jost approximately of $1 4,000,000,. Buenos Ayres. He left her there minion, arrived here yesterday. To!aQd recommends that the work start three months ago and went on a visit appropriations 'to his old home in Norway, which he had not seen since the return of the Amundsen expedition from the South emergencies he has been madeiat once witn annual the Craven, says of the a special attendant from MatteawanJor about $800,000. 'arid he is waiting opportunity to get Neither of the two boards ap- v. mnipeg, -Manitooa, sept. iz. "c muca .uailluS;his hands on Thaw and For nearly two years friends of the industry light, bound for Savannah, him direct ror th x explorer and naturalist, Harry Vin- jcent Radford of New York, have awaited news of him from the Can Can-jadian jadian Can-jadian Northwest, where, since 1909, he has been engaged In a hunting tand exploring expedition. With Rad Rad-jford jford Rad-jford was George Scott of Ottawa, a man of considerable experience in 'Arctic exploration. A story reached Ottawa from j Chesterfield Inlet yesterday which when there was a violent explosion , A n t a in the boilerroom. I do not definite; know the cause, which must be de determined termined determined by an official inquiry." The explosion is believed to have been caused by the tubes in the for- V,aiu UUiiC1 1U11U1U utJ- of habeas corpus but decided that to ome' around was a dangerous move TRAIN OFF THE TRACK and held the matter in abeyance. start with proves the trans-Florida canal at'ToIe York line. Jthis time, although the Lake Harris SURE EXOUGH STATESMAN DeLand News: In her senior sen senator, ator, senator, Florida for the first time in her i history has in the halls of Congress TRIED TO KNOCK by a crowd that neither jroute, via St. Johns river, Oklawahaj - cheered nor hooted, Thaw went about j river and Lakes Griffin and Harris, the village, accompanied by Sheriff ii3 approved whenever naval, military Drew, apparently contented and ar commercial needs shall justify hopeful. Local counsel yesterday 'construction. made plans for his release on a writ General Bixby reports that before a man of national and .international many years there will te need of a j reputation. canal across Florida of a depth muchj During the four years of his in- jgreater than 12 feet, but recommends cumbency of the office. Senator jnow a 7-foot channel across Florida, J Fletcher has taken a prominent posi- ! Lawyers kept him up until a latevia the the hour laving nlans tn racist ovtra.n.'.chobee. Everglades and Lake He has ordered the Okee-iticn in all matters of public policy; board -he is recognized as a deep thinker jt : uilc in c ii 'dytpal political, campaigns In its his-'ign with j may explain the long silence. A mail ; The Lakeland Telegram has Hudson Bay route following to report of the accident ; tion to New York. to report on this project next winter. and a polished if not a flowery ora- brings the story of the murder of to Mr. J. L. Connelly j Mr. Jerome, accompanied by Dep- The cost of a 10-foot harge canal,tor. Radford and Street by Eskimos. J Mr. Ralph Walker of Auburndale, jmv Attorney General Franklin Ken- across Florida by the Lake Harris! Like the rest of us, Fletcher Is not According to this report the two 'spent last night in. Lakeland, return- jnedv of Xew York reached town ves-'route is estimated at $16,500,000. above, making mistakes. He has ing to his home this morning, andjter(j Both Messrs. Jerome and'Tne two rePrts were accompanied 'made them, as .you, reader, and the having been up the road yesterday :-t-j 'A by many charts, tablets of estimates .vriter have made them and will con- left Chesterfield Inlet in a party of Indian guides as Candidate for Re-election land joined another party of Eskimos he was a witness to an automobile at Schultz Lake; whence they pro- accident near Inverness, which came! f uc uctuic ma uciJctnai "iceedea to Uatnurst inlet- near resulting ratany tor tue occu y nnrinon nn rno c rv rtn 1 1 ciorva iiv rn .i i -v r t t t ri 1 1 .. i i "ii'" i x wo muniiis ago me .onnvv esL poui ui me Ltti j. li. vouueii, a 1U1U&" j Jerome reseniauves oi inaepenaeni pon-; mounted nolice learned that in an phate operator of Inverness. t lal organizations that they had pHprrntinn with thP F!slrirHn5 T?ad- accident. Mr: Walker said: sen him as their standard bearer f ord had been killed. For months' "Just north of the lake s the mayorality campaign. A the Eskimos kept silent and then the ness at the railroad hrong that crowded city hall park.wruth leaked out terday. Both Messrs. Jerome Kennedy were indignant at the ac- t tion of the Canadian authorities who jput Thaw over the border yesterday, j ao-uraenis, i j "We had'o inkling of it,!' saidible ofilcial c and blue prints and ure formidable documents, forming the most valua- Of the assembled to hear him accept. He had prepared a speech of acceptance, but was so weak that he was unable to deliver it, and his secretary read it for him, the mayor standing be beside side beside him. crossing, Mr One-of the tribe.Connell drove his car into the side'tice based on the habea "To say the least, it was a high-handed piece of work. It was neither fair to Thaw, a lunatic, nor to the state of New York. More- jover, it upsets the principles of jus- corpus act. tinue to make them. In Florida Mr. Fletcher was recog- ontribution yet made toinizei for, many years as the leader of Ithe literature of inland waterways, the old "Straight-out" faction of the uiove a bpear uiruugn naaioru, anu.ui mC cai. me auiu "a, j dQ not doubt that jt wi result when street went to his comrade s completely demolished, tnere not be-; assistance he was killed in the same ing enougn oi it lett to pay to re manner. The exact date of the trag- move it, except some of the tires and! edy is not known but a small detail the engine, of mounted police under Sergeant .chance was Mr. Connell by some! in more or less !ada." of a scandal in Can- The cost of a Beaufort to the not killed instantly and i ly." He was expected to attack Tam-; Egertson has been sent to invest!-, was much revived when taken of iiviVny nan sharply, politically, as ioon as he returned to the city. Be Before' fore' Before' his departure he issued a char- TjaJiv Hall leaders and other po.liti- v-al opponents, in which he referred gate. There had been no indication (the train at Inverness. of. "Mr. Connell hit the express car sol entire car; sa put lhaw across j that they were break in settin 7-foot channel from democratic party. lie was elected St. Johns river is ; repeatedly as mayor of Jacksonville estimated as follows: From Beau-1 as a progressive leader; he was sent i'crt to Cape Fear, $2,S72,111; to to the state senate as a progressive; Little River, $3,724,219; to Winyah he was chosen as the chairman of the Bay, ?5,677,S00; to Charleston Har-Estate executive committee by the bor, $1,227,S00; to Savannah river, progressive democrats, and was in $427,400; to Fernandina, $195,000; sympathy and fullaccord with them bt. Jonns river, ?2oi,ii'0. Con-i and with the late Governor liroward. atcrial campaign in 1908. hpr an.i Rroward were the tnougnt giving him an even j mm down with no was contemptible and coward-1. 7 t . iT ., T, , x. tmumg on to Key West, cost by sec- In the sena nd Kennedy. "If those who i T ... n. . . . i'.cns: To Indian river, $2,491,0o6; ; when Fletcl the line o Key West, $2,127,950. 'contestants, Fletcher received many Commenting on the fact that there votes from progressives; Broward's: American officers in sight thev fail- i's already an eight-foot inside route frien.is were not able to line up the- to look at the Here was other side of the i Thaw, a lunati vo them as "miserable scamps' fri.tinn until the jl.iv nf Honnrhiro iliarr! that hp iarrprl flip I 1 ei Then as the sleds were beinz loaded land tore off the iron steps unier the i I case. Raflfnrd cnt into an altprnatinn with middle of the pxnrpss rar n-r' one of the Eskimo tribe about thejseemed to know that the auto had hit'1" !00 hK Rothes on inrl j- i- . . i t- . . , in.-, uaw, biiuri oi iunas ana wicn no ana proper adjustment of the binding; the tram except some "children who , Mean ui litiiisi.'ui laiiun aiive ine au- asserted that-they were seeking his'; thongs, and in anger he kicked the "moral assassination." Death Overturns Political Situation saw the wrecked car lying by the man. j track and said that there was a man Instantly the Eskimo grasped his under it." ATavnr flavnnr's siirffipn dpath rnm- vpr-rpaHv enoar and hpfnro ATaHfnrrll " l J 1 ' nnd overturns tne municipal po- couia aerend himseit tne weapon was!""A liUDut i;u, is. i'. i. i I pletely litical situation. It removes from the; plunged into his breast. When this field a candidate for mayor who was '.happened Street was harnessing a expected to cut heavily into the vote j dog team, and seeing his companion of the fusion nominee, John Purroy.fall and thinking to save him from tthell, and leaves only the tickets another spear thrust, he picked up i'tVinated by the democrats and the his rifle to go to Radford's assist- fnsJnnlets Tho fnrmpr Ic hparipd w p ti r whan fha rdlmn witVi m-Vi r rr-t Edward E. McCall, former chairman he was working attacked him from jtomobile-he commandeered from a 'newspaper man. Thaw is not a sane i man. That has been proven time time again. This male it the It was a jrrom me ueiaware river to lieaurort, ; progressives entirely ior even me iand that a twelve-foot route from great commoner Broward himself. Lous Island Sound to Eeaufort has j Fletcher is not a dyed-in-the-wool -ccn recommended, while also, either ; progressive. He wouldn't work o' in fact or approved, there is a six to vote for a progressive simply because seven foot inside channel between !he espoused the cause with a loud -Charleston and Jacksonville. General j mouth. I Bixby recommends the seven foot; While he has not yet formally an an-iranal iranal an-iranal from Beaulort to the St. Johns, no i.ice 1 his candidacy to succeed of the public service commission of th3 district. The mayor's re-nomination was brought about by no particular poli political tical political faction of party, but represent represented ed represented only his personal popularity. Politicians who discussed his death today expected that his Ocala Lodge, No. 2SC, Benovelent and Protective Order of Elks, mets the second and fourth Tuesday even ings in each month. Visiting breth brethren ren brethren a1 ways welcome. Chas. W. Hunter, E. R. Joseph Bell, Secretary. Ad. thing." behind and Street too fell, mortally wounded. Harry Radford was born in New York on Jan. S, 1SS1, and was edu educated cated educated at the LaSalle Institute and Manhattan College, eventually quali qualifying, fying, qualifying, as a civil engineer. He had and was a fellow of followers traveled widely would make no attempt to nominate; the American Geographical Society, a ,Ljcandidate in his place. No other member of the places on the Gaynor ticket have yetjauthor of several books on travel. teen filled. A big lot of new Company. novels at 9-1 1-C WOODMEN OF THE WORLD The j m- expedition in February, 1909, tending- to be away four years. It is known that the two men had mapped out the region they traveled, discovered the River Thalsen. six Arctic Club and the .hundred miles long, amd Lady Grey lake, 100 miles in length. They had He left Xew York on his present assembled a fine collection of fauna. Foit King Camp Xo. 14 meets in Yonge's Hall at S p. m. every second Friday. Visiting sovereigns always welcome. J. F. Thompson, C. C. Chas. K. Sage, Clerk. Ad Xext meeting Friday night. Sept. 12. so that tar?s anrl nihpr lirht rra ft hinrplf. therp is no doubt that Sena- terrible i may go from the southern New Eng-jtcr Fletcher will be a candidate in (land coast to lower Florida without; 1914 and it's going to take some ! danger from heavy Atlantic gales. I mighty hard work to pry him away The section of the waterway now from the position he has soaccept soaccept-most most soaccept-most generally needed, he said, is j ably filled. that from Eeaufort to Cape Fear,; and recommends improvement of; OUTGOIXfi MAILS CLOSF tnis section nrst. Next should come j the section between Winyah Bay and Charleston; the Charleston-St. Johns; section coming third. I A. C. L. m. ; m.; ORDER OF EASTERN STAR Eastern Star Chapter 29. regular meeting first Friday mcnth at Yonge's Hall. come. Florrie Condon, Sec'y Mrs. A. E. Burnett, Worthy Matron. ODD FELLOWS Tulula Lodge No. 22, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, meets every night each. Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock in Visitors wel-i Yonge's Hall. Fort King avenue. Vis itors in the city invited to be with us. G. L. Taylor. N. G. NORTH 5:05 a. 12:45 p. m. SOUTH 6:10 a. 2:10 p. m.: 2:30 p. m.; f p. m. I S. A. L. NORTH 12:50 p. i 4 : 10 p. m.; 9 p. m I p m.; 9 p. m. OCALA NORTHERN: NORTH 7- 7 a. rn.; U':oa p. m. STAR ROUTES Blltchton Cahary 2 p. rn. m.: SOUTH 12:50 and Almond cocoa soap, which is with out an equal. Get it W. L. Colbert, Secretary. Adv. Pharmacy. at the 9-2 Court lr -7 - ' i "Wllul IP.ra.lf IMilJMiy o j 1 IDo wMIdlillfflffl 1 rwo THE OCA LA EVENING STAR, FIJI DA V, SEPTEMBER 12. 1913 OCALA OCCURRENCES f Woodmen meet tonight. Band concert this evening. -ir. r. iJiitji lfii luuny iui a isil ; to Tarpon Springs. Itev. 'J. B. Ley went to Mcintosh for a brief visit this afternoon. Mr. W. G. Tilghman of Palatka was jn the city today. Policeman Koonce is out after two days of sickness. Mr. William Odell of Oxford was in town today. Judge W. S. Bullock left this aft afternoon ernoon afternoon for a fishing expedition to the You can phone 496 and have your stationery, books or office supplies sentsent by The Murray Co. 9-ll-3t Sheriff Smith, of Lake, the "high "highest est "highest sheriff" in the state, was in town today. 1 A Star reporter had the pleasure yesterday of taking a look at the new welding apparatus in use in Luckie's garage. It is a small but compact and efficient machine, and when one considers that it welds cast iron, something thta has hitherto been im impossible possible impossible in the mechanic arts, it is also wonderful. Cast iron, as most people know, is too brittle to weld by ordinary means, but in the fierce flame ejected by this new machine it melts into the cohesive tendency of the finer metals, and when run to together gether together and cooled, it is stronger than when new. Mr. Luckie showed the reporter how the machine worked, and in a few minutes had welded an apparently hopelessly shattered piece of iron into its former shape. The apparatus is as simple and speedy in its operation as it is efficacious. Mr. Luckie has been in business but a few weeks but he has all he can do. Ten cars were standing in his garage last night, and it has not had less than eight awaiting repairs since the second day after it opened. Those Kewpie dolls are cute and will not break. They are waiting for your girl at The Murray Com Company. pany. Company. 9-ll-3t Mr. W. L. Martin, secretary of the Leesburg board of trade is in town today, trying to interest our busi business ness business men in the booster train. FOR RENT Four furnished rooms for light housekeeping, two blocks from courthouse. Apply at 20C N. Main street, or call for Mc Mc-Lucas Lucas Mc-Lucas at Williams' barber shop, Ocala House. 9-ll-6t Mr. C. R. Kreger is in Jacksonville on a business trip, and may visit bis wife and little girl at Daytona Beach, before his return. . Don't send for office supplies.' You can save money oy getting tnem at The Murray Company. 9-lI-3t 7Iiexall toilet cream, an excellent and Tieautifier. At Gerig's Drug stores. 8-29 Messrs. Jim Pyles and W. B. Gal Gallagher lagher Gallagher returned last night from an automobile trip of several days thru Lake and Orange counties in the in interest terest interest of their firms. 'Do you need an alcohol stove to 'take with you on early morning r trips? You can heat water or coffee "in four minutes. Look at them at the Court Pharmacy. 9-2 Wash rags and bath towels at the Court Pharmacy. 9-2 ,:"Mr. C E. Shaw, of Aberdeen, lliss., a well known traveling man, left today for Jacksonville, after a stay of a few days at the Harrington. The injunction asked for against the city, to restrain it from doing certain work on the streets was serv served ed served this morning. Until it can be dis dissolved, solved, dissolved, work on the streets must stop. Mayor1-Robertson took Secretary Rooney, Mr. A. T. Thomas and sev several eral several other friends for a fishing party and fry to his Withlacoochee farm this morning. Mr. W. W. Stripling, one of Flor Florida's ida's Florida's most popular traveling men, was here recently in the interest of the firm he represents. Bronson Times-Democrat. Mr. E. K. Nelson,' after a two days' business trip In and around Ocala, lert this morning for Dunnellon, where he will spend the night en route to his home in Tampa. It Is a little late in the season, but Twe want to call your attention to -a nobby line of bathing caps which yon can find at the Court Pharm Pharm-- - Pharm-- acy. 9-2 Mr. 'Chas-BrTTuiteu received news -today thaSlr. J. L. Connell, of In Invernesswho vernesswho Invernesswho was so badly hurt Wed Wednesday, nesday, Wednesday, is resting easily and his mentis ire certain of his recoverv. ie acciflent was owine to Mr. Con- - i a. :I1 beiri j earing wben tne before t tore the hard of hearing. He was the railroad with his auto. train suddenly came out of a deep ciit. too close for him to ston i e collision. The collision .step off the express car, -while the auto was smashed, and the j0T i a .i j i j Saed-orer, with Mr. Connell under It He was rescued by a party head headed ed headed by Mr. C. D. Schultz. ALL and WINTER amplcs NOW ON DISPLAY. I TO OD&C ailors. HO FIT-NO PAY. hone 167 MKI1KV KVKMXG FOR THE MOOSE Luckie's Garage. I have just opened up my new garage on North Main street, and solicit a share of the patronage of car owners in Ocala and surrounding territory. The repair department is prepared to do. all kinds of auto automobile mobile automobile repairing on short notice. None but first-class workmen em employed, ployed, employed, and therefore, I am in po position sition position to guarantee every job that leaves the place. Rates will be found reasonable as high-class workman workmanship ship workmanship and good material can be fur furnished nished furnished GIVE ME A TRIAL T. C. Luckie, Proprietor Building formerly occupied by Ides Theater. Mclver & MacKay Funeral Directors UNDERTAKERS and EMBALMERS Fine Caskets and Burial Robes. D. E. McIYER and C. V. ROBERTS Funeral Directors All Work Done by Licensed Em Em-balmers balmers Em-balmers and Fully Guaranteed PHONES: D. E. McIVCR 104 C. V. ROBERTS 305 Undertaking Office 47 The Ocala lodge of Moose held last night a successful meeting, which was attended by some fifty local members and several visitors. The principal event of the evening was the reception and initiation into the order of Messrs. J. D. Rooney, J. O. Dekle, H. C. Gettier. Henry F. Goeke, C. H. Dekle and W. H. Har Harrison. rison. Harrison. The initiation was presided over by Dictator Edwin Spencer, Jr., and was impressively carried out by the very efficient degree team. The new members are first-class citizens and were warmly welcomed into the order. They thought it was a little too warm for awhile, but wouldn't have had it different when it was over. After the business meeting and in-1 itiation, the Moose adjourned to the big room on the first floor, where they found a long, broad table, well covered with good 'things, to which they did ample justice. The princi pal dish was purlo, of which there was a large supply most excellently cooked. Backing up this was slaw, sandwiches of various kinds, bread, pickles and many other things. The solids were washed down with brim ming gobletsfull of Secretary Bry an s favorite brew grapejuice which the Moose, being nearly all democrats, have taken to like ducks to water. After the collation, pipes and tobacco were handed around and the members finished the evening with games and conversation, helped out by the music of the superb graphophone. The Moose lodge is growing stead steadily ily steadily and rapidly. 15AXI) CONCERT PROGRAM The following program will be given by the Metropolitan Band from the bandstand this evening: March, "Emblem of Liberty" B. J, Hollowell. Waltzes, "Wine, Wife and Song" Strauss. March, "Cottage Grove" E. G. Allen. Cornet duet, "Bolero" (Messrs. Gerig and Tucker) R. B. Hall. Intermission. ; March, "Panama Guards" James Crosswell. Overture, "L u s t s p i e 1 Keler Bela. Selection, "A Trip to Japan" M Klein. Overture, "King Rose" G. D Barnard. A. E. Gerig Director. OPEN DAY AND flGHT Merchant's Cafe, A. C. L. depot corner. Meals a la carte and lunches at any hour. Adv. MANUSCRIPT COYERS An elegant line of lawyers' mana- script covers, in any color that could be desired, just received at the Star office. MRS. V. R. MEDLIN Bronson Times-Democrat: Mrs W. R. Medlin died Monday night at Otter Creek, and the remains were brought to Bronson Tuesday morn morning, ing, morning, interment taking place Tuesday afternoon in the new cemetery. Mrs. Medlin was the daughter of Mr. Sant Wilkerson of Otter Creek, and is sur vived by her husband and four child ren, father, mother and several sis ters. PROFESSIONAL C J. E. CHACE Dental Surgeon --!- Rooms 9, 10. 11, Holder Block Phone 250 OCALA. FLORIDA Terms: Cash. L. F. BLALOCK Dental Surgeon Office Over Commercial Bank Phone 211 OCALA, FLORIDA M. C. IZLAR Dental Surgeon" Office Law Library Building Phone 444 OCALA, FLORIDA J. G. PURYIS Dental Surgeon Office Over Nash Dry Goods Store -I- OCALA. FLORIDA v JOSEPH BELL Attorney at Law I Office Second Floor Munroe and Chambliss Bank Building OCALA, FLORIDA i FRANK'S ODD diilAU. ED 8c Oc 10c !9c A few of the prices that is bound to move the remainder of the Spring and Summer goods: rH 36 inch Pajama Checks, per yard . 40 inch White Lingerie, per yard ... 40 inch White Sheer Lawn, per yard 36 inch Brown all all-Linen, Linen, all-Linen, per yard 170 of- f.Vlrvrorl hroxro . A CIO L. VU1U1VU VXXCXXXXILJX CX J O f Wl l per yard . . Fast colored Dress Lawn per yard . . Ladies' 10c Ribbed Vests 9 4 for . ... Jt Ladies' 25c and 50c 1 Ar Sailor Hats for vt Ladies' White P. K. Skirts at . Men's 25c Underwear at ... . Men's 50c Athletic Un Underwear derwear Underwear at . Men's 50c and 75c Soft Collar Shirts . Men's Odd Shirts, 50c and 75c goods, at 98c .tC 37c 43c 25c ' J. TP TlD . 1X1 El V 1 JL J USE STAR WANT AOS FOR RESULTSThey "Deliver U.e Goods." 1 THE OCALA EVENING STAR, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1913 THREE J If 1 JL jT I ihi miJ?p' M' ""''mmmmm "" "J...--, : l,g 1 .V If a good business chance came your way, in the shape of a piece of property or a share in a thriving business, it would be nice to write out a check for the amount. If sickness or fire invade $out home, it would be nice to have money in the bank, no mat matter ter matter what might happen, because it is a safe-guard against possible old age or sickness and poverty. DO YOUR BANKING WITH US IV e Pay 4 per cent Interest on Savings Accounts itmtxtii W. H; MARSH Phone 108 HEADQUARTERS FOR WIRE FENCE We have Just received a carload of the Famous SOUTHERN Wire Fencing, Staples and Hay Wire and are in position to make you some attractive prices on it. We arethe only dealers in this section of the country that handle this brand of. fence and have demonstrated in the past that it is absolutely the. best and strongest fence on the market, and running It as we have In competition with many inferior grades of wire fence. We have had some phenomenal sales on it and made many friends and customers, v Give us your orders, if the good? don't make good we will. 5 Mini Qf!"! .:::::::::xxxx li yt "an honest man may have a bad title through no fault of his own" "a good man does not always mean a t;ood title' "men pass away, titles run on forever." ... 'an abstract of title is the only means by whieh you can determine whether you are buying land or a lawsuit" I 5 4 A ljJIjWW U fla Get my prices on that new Bungalow, Cottage, Residence or Store, Office Building or School House. My prices are Right, my Work Guaranteed. I eJ. O. McCASKILL, X CONTRACTOR V X "If I do it, it's 1 ffftm 2 X FRESH MEATS x t ? ? V y X V ! y Y ' V & L-slitlu V" titTul title anil abstract co. JU tl j II MM IXlUTf 1 AND BUILDER OCALA, FLA. don Right." KI1NAIMK1 BY CANUCKS Is Wliat Thaw Guards Fear May le Attempted Colebrook, X. H., Sept. 12. Twenty-five Canadians, several of them outspoken opponents of Will William iam William Travers Jerome after his arrest in Coaticook, Quebec, last week on a charge of gambling, and others from Sherbrooke, where Harry Thaw re receive.! ceive.! receive.! such an ovation in court, have followed the fugitive across the bor border der border into Xew Hampshire and have revived the intense partisan feeling so evident while Thaw was in the Dominion. Jerome denounced one of them in public today. Their presence in Colebrook enliv enlivened ened enlivened what was otherwise a typical Thaw day for those who have been following the erratic course of Stan Stanford ford Stanford White's slayer since his escape from Matteawan Sunday morning, August 17. There was no court pro proceedings. ceedings. proceedings. Thaw's arraignment being put off by mutual consent until ten o'clock this morning, and Thaw's lawyers, apparently thinking him safer in the custody of the sheriff than at large, abandoned their at attempt tempt attempt to release him on a writ'of ha habeas beas habeas corpus. The guards about Thaw's hotel were increased last night from twelve to twenty. The chief of police ap appointed pointed appointed his deputies yesterday after hearing stories that officers from Xew York might attempt to spirit Thaw away. He augmented them in the face of rumors that the Canad Canadian ian Canadian contingent might essay the same thing with the idea of snatching Thaw from Jerome's hands and at the same time rebuking high Domin Dominion ion Dominion officials responsible for Thaw's sudden deportation. Groups of Canadians stood about the hotel corridors and on the street corners throughout the day and closely followed Thaw on the two trips he made from his room. The first of these was to the barber shop, the second to the office of his chief counsel, Thomas Johnson. Two auto automobiles, mobiles, automobiles, engines running, stood at the curb in front of the office all the time Thaw was within. This so alarmed the chief of police that he and his men completely surrounded Thaw when he was brought out and escorted to the hotel. AXDERSOX OX HIS EAR k Washington, Sept. 12. As the cli climax max climax of the vigorous republican con condemnation demnation condemnation of democratic legislative methods which has marked the cun cun-rency rency cun-rency debate. Representative Sidney Anderson, of Missouri, on the floor of the House late yesterday resigned as a member of the powerful ways and means committee. In a speech bitterly assailing legislation through caucus action and partisan consider consideration ation consideration of the Underwood tariff bill and the Glass currency bill in com committee, mittee, committee, Representative Anderson de declared clared declared that the "system of legislation established here" made his efforts on the committee a "farce and a fraud." NICHOLAS SCHLEMMER Bronson Times-Democrat: Xews of the death of Xicholas Schlemmer, an old and highly respected citizen of Cedar Key, was received here Mon Monday. day. Monday. Mr. Schlemmer' was one of the best known men in the state, and it 'was with sorrow that his hundre's I of friends learned of his death. He I about eighty years of age and had been a resident of Levy county for mere than thirty-five years. He had been in failing health for some time. Mr. Schlemmer is survived by a wife, several children and grand children. MARIOX-DUXX MASONIC LODGE Marion-Dunn Lodge Xo. 19, F. & A. M. meets on the first and third Thursday evenings of each month at 7:30 o'clock, until further notice. C. E. Simmons. W. M. Jake Brown. Secretary. Ad KNIGHTS OF PITH IAS Ocaia Loage Xo. 19. Conventions jheld every Monday at 7:30 p. m. at Castle Hall, over the Jaxr"s Carlisle drugstore. A cordial welcome to vis visiting iting visiting brothers. D. W. Tompkins, C. C. Chas. K. Sage, K. R. S. Ad CONCORDIA LODGE F. L OF A. Concordia Lodge, Fraternal Union of America, meets in Yonge's Hall on the second Thursday evening of each month. Geo. L. Taylor, F.M. Chas. K. Sage, Secretary. Ad CHAPTER NO. 13, R. A. Mi. Regular convocations of the Ocala Chapter Xo. 13. R. A. M., on the fourth Friday in every month at 1:30 p. m. C. B. Connor, H. P. Jake Brown, Secretary. Ad FOR RENT Upstairs furnished for light housekeeping, consisting of 'three rooms and bath: city and cis cistern tern cistern water. Mrs. P. H, Gillen. Xo. 1 S. 5th St. 9-10-6t GIANT HAS WEDDED A FLOIilDA GIKL i The simple announcement that Mr. ; Lawrence Doyle, of Breeze, Ind., and Miss Gertrude Elizabeth McComb, of iSantord, Fla., were quietly married iin Xew York City on September 3, i : may appear to the vasual newspaper : reader as just a common place wed- ,ding announcement. t But when it is stated that Mr. Lawrence Doyle, of Breeze, Ind., is that celebrity in the baseball firma firmament ment firmament of the continent, known from coast to coast as Larry Doyle, the scrappy captain of John J. McGraw's! Xew York Giants, and that Miss Mc McComb Comb McComb is the only daughter of James McComb, editor of the Florida Grow Growers' ers' Growers' Xews. and well known in journ journalistic alistic journalistic circles throughout the state, it will be seen that the apparently simple wedding announcement is one of a great deal of interest, not only in Jacksonville and Florida, but throughout the entire country, where Doyle is known for his powers on the baseball diamond. Times-Union. HOTEL FOR REXT AT LAKELAXD, FLA. Wanted to rent, a 24-room hotel at Lakeland, Fla. Located one block from new Atlantic Coast Line sta station. tion. station. Nice location. Seven rooms furnished; 17 bed-rooms in all; two bath rooms, two toilets and lavator lavatories; ies; lavatories; hot and cold water. Price of rent $100 per month and no less. Address, C. J. IJ., I O. 15ov 271, Lakeland, Fla. 9-1 l-2t Our Fresh Roasted COFFEE 25c, 35c, 40c per Pound Florida Tomatoes, large size.... 10c Fla. Tomatoes, small size 3 for 2."c Block's Crackers, 6 5c. pkgs for 25c Block's Crackers, 3 10c pkgs. for 25c Cans-Thomas Co. ! PHONE 1S We can save you money on your Furniture and Household Furnish Furnishing ing Furnishing purchases. A large stock of both new and second-hand furniture. We make a specialty of the IX IX-STALLMEXT STALLMEXT IX-STALLMEXT BUSINESS, and can make you low prices and easy terms. Try our method, you will like it. Second-Hand Furniture Bought at , Highest Market Price. The Success Furniture Company, ! Iletween Market and Laundry Thone 481. OCALA, FLA. 9-11 dly G. C. SHEPHARD, DEXTIST. Holder Block, Rooms 9 and TO. PHOXE 250. If you would Buy, Sell, Lease or Exchange, see me at the Courthouse or write for my bulletin of summer bargains in Choice Properties : : J. H. BRINS0N! OCALA, FLORIDA I I T hy ;.:r Call Phone 267 Ocala Meat Market when you want First-class Fresh Meat, Fish or Vege Vegetables. tables. Vegetables. Corn-fed pork from my own farm. Al Rhame, Ocala's best cutter, will serve you. Prompt delivery. D. N. WALDRON, 112 N. Magnolia St., Ocala, Fla. Where Is Your Money? While the family was at dinner over $930, hid in a desk upstairs, was stolen from a St. Louis, Mo., home. Depositing money in a strong institution is the best insurance against fire, burglars and dishonest servants. A safety deposit box also affords absolute securi security, ty, security, at a cost of as little as S3 per year, for money, jewelry and all valuable papers; Large and smaH accounts welcomed. THE Ocaia National Bank UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY WMft 1 1M nrm ........... iuMlllA UAVA 75 Cents Per Crate Delivered. Cash must Accompany Orders. J. D. BAUGH, Winter Haven, Fla. i COLUMBIA COLLEGE, Co-Educational, Lake City, Florida A high-grade College whose Faculty is composed of Christian men and women trained in the best schools. Our courses lead to the degrees of A. B., B. S., and A. M. Moral influences excellent and surroundings conducive to study and development of high character. Departments: Collegiate, academic, business, art, expression, and music. Application should be made now for rooms. Adress, A. P. MONTAGUE President Read our UNCLASSIFIED ADS. lor yoar wants """VP if "JF or W. B. JONES Dean FOUR THE OCALA EVEXIlN'G STAR, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1913 OCALA EVENING STAR PUBLISHED EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY IilTTIXGER & CARROLL, PROPRIETORS It. R. Carroll, General Manager Port V. Leavengood, Business Manager J. H. Renjamin, Editor EntereJ at Ocala, Fla., postoffi.ee as second class matter. phoxe s: SURSCRIITIOX RATES (Domestic) (Foreign) One year, in advance $5.00 One year, in advance $S.OO Six months, in advance 2.50 I Six months, in advance 4.25 Three months, in advance. One month, in advance 1.25 .50 2.25 Three months, in advance. One month, in advance.. S SENATOR KERN EXPRESSED I youngest son, just eight months old. THE PROPER SEXTIMEXT claim this cannot be beaten, be- ; cause we doubt very seriously if any SWTMMIXCJ OX SUNDAY The following from Collier's t ther man ever had a 61 year old Weekly is interesting just at this son and an eight months old son un un-time: time: un-time: er his roof at the same time." Senator John V. Kern of Indiana! Incorporated in the Congressional Record some extracts from a speech made to the republican editorial as association sociation association of Indiana by former Vice President Fairbanks: "I have no doubt that the dis- Governor Major of Missouri, says Homer Croy in Collier's, says that the happiest days of his life were when he was a boy on a farm and turbances in Mexico during the lastran away, swimming, Sunday after- few years have been due in a great-;noon- er or les3 degree to an effort on the! I have been a boy on a farm and part of ambitious, cunning men to j have run away, swimming, Sunday force intervention and possibly an-j afternoon, but my great love for the nexation to the United States. The ( truth keeps me from saying that exploiters of public utilities and of these were the happiest days of my the mineral and agricultural re- j boyhood. sources of our neighbor have un- One Sunday I invited two boys to doubtedly thought that they would -come home with me after Sunday gain much if they could force inter- j school. At dinner pa told me not to vention by the United States. There 'go swimming in the creek that aft aft-are are aft-are soldiers of fortune in Mexico who jernoon, as I might get the yellow wouia undoubtedly welcome such a jaundice. contingency. ikept wondering what he would find 'to set his teeth into. He came at me' t Irapidly, as if that wasn't worrying, him. It worried me greatly, al-j (though 1 -aid nothing to him about lit. When he came at me I with-, drew. I withdrew. so fast that I did not stop to c;,en the sate fcr him. ; Although I was not hampered by; any wearing apparel or finery of any, jkind, I did not make the speed I de- sired. The dog was good at run-;i ining. I don t know whether he was! bred for running or not I did not; stop to inquire. I did not stop to j cavil. I had left all my cavil in my! other clothes. The dog snapped at1 my calf. I removed it as rapidly as: I could, and spoke to him in a deep; guttura, but he paid no heed to myj wish to be left alone. Finally I j reached the high wooden gate behind our barn and mounted it. Once I was safe, the dog turned and with withdrew drew withdrew in the direction whence he came. No effort was made on my part to detain him. Just as I drew in a sigh I heard a step. It was pa with the same hazel sprout in his' hand. i Our greeting was short and our conversation desultory. When I came J down pa told me to turn my back to him, although I felt that this was not manners. I stood with my back to him for a long while, first on one foot, then on the other; part of the time I spent in mid-air. When pa and I had finished with the hazel sprout it was about worn out. So was pa. and I myself felt that we had accomplished enough for one day. j That night at supper mother look-; ed at me and exclaimed: "Why, son, it beats me where you got that mud.". "It beats me where I got it too!" I answered fervently, but mother thought that was just a fill-in an answer. swer. answer. Governor Major's happiest days may have been the ones when he ran me est T (Swal? If you demand the best all good business men do you vili find this bank's service to customers far greater than just ordinary. From every standpoint whether it be responsibility, integrity of management, security, ability to extend accommodation, or the desire to be of assistance to each patron you will find us ready always to do all we can to meet your re requirements quirements requirements with complete satisfaction. Yellow jaundice becomes very few people. Yellow jaundice ' T P . 1 4. ll e n uui spcLuidLuis lii .uexico sul-.makes a person look too mucn as fer pecuniary loss as the result of though somebody had dropped an egg: away and went swimming on Sunday, recurring revolutions, that is a mat-, in full possession of its powers on but his father must have patronized ter for future consideration, when 'him ami thPn haH mniinimiciv hiHflon a different hazel natch from mine stable government and peace are ful- the towel. ly established in that country. It is I We boys wandered out to not warrant for shedding the blood iCreek, w ooked ,nt of Americans. To sacrifice the life Charlie Jones in Dixip dpfpnds his the cool I JOXES DEFEXDS .JAX of one soldier for all of the dollars investors or speculators have ventur- , depths of the water, but we couldn't (see any yellow jaundice. We felt that it had been a backward season ed in Mexico would be the supremest for ow jaundice and that prob criminal folly. bly all the spawn had been killed. VofirK- all t V a t naa Kn ro!,l nrt "t : J "c l"c.For some reason or other I forgot I all about what pa had said, and in a ..j o. wisdom in respect to the Mexican situation is embodied in these words of Mr. Fairbanks. The Americans who have property in Mexico acquired it because they hoped for big gains. Just because Mexico is a less stable country than the United States, money invested there can usually make larger spe speculative culative speculative profits. It was for these ,fit of absent-mindedness took off my clothes. When next I noticed what 1 1 was doing I had water in my ear. j We swam down the creek and jinade a slippery bank, where we would go up to the top and coast down on the lower end of our spinal column and our elbows. Tiring of this, we bpean to throw murl at parh profits that the speculators in lands, j other ming our vo5ceg ,n Hght. mines, and public utilities went in.jhearted jaughter. i had just plant- l- r It -v A -k I 4. T 1 5 iiau ucch cuuLKUl w nil oral- 0a a iQ.,a If they nary profits they could have invest invested ed invested their money- at home under a sta stable ble stable government. They took a long chance to make big profits. Now a large- pliable handful of mud in the ear of one of the fellows, and was laughing at his plight, when I saw pa coming down by the creek with a loner, shanelv hapl-hrnsh 1.1 x i - mat me cnance nas gone aeainst! .. s .-j " y riiii i in n m n j ri i The nlight had They want thickened. Thpn it snddpnlv nwnrr- me unuea states government to them they are not game. .help them out. One Senator Senator Albert B. Fall, of New Mexico is the war eagle of Congress. A newspaper In his home state, the Albuquerque "Journal," says of him: "Senator Fall doesn't want peace in Mexico. He was against Diaz and for Madero until Madero won; he was against Madero and for Orozco until Madero was overthrown and killed; he is against Huerta and for Carranza now. Senator Fall is for rebellion in Mexico. Why?" The Nashville "Democrat" is probably correct when it answers this interrogation by pointing out that the senator's Mexican mines would be worth ten times as much under an American protectorate. Judging by the following from the Sylvan Valley, X. C, News, they must live long and stay young in North Carolina: "Mr. L. M. Grant, a son of Mr. O. P. Grant of Transylvania county, "himself 61 years old, returned last Tuesday to visit his old home on King's Creek, near Brevard. Upon arriving at the home of his father, Mr. O. P. Grant, who is now 88 years old, he found the old gentleman sit sit-tisg tisg sit-tisg on the front porch nursing his ed to me what pa had said at dinner. I felt nonplused at myself for having forgotten it, and decided to go to some quiet spot and think it over alone. With me to think was to act. I acted with great celerity; it was the best brand of clerity I had ever come across. I darted out through the under underbrush brush underbrush toward my clothes, but some unthinking person has removed my raiment. The person had left no clues. I would have been more con content tent content if he had taken the clues and left the clothes. I must have clothes! What would people think if they met me on the moor with nothing on except a mud bath? I wanted to save these peo people ple people all the embarrassment I could, so I streaked it for the house of a neighbor. Here I intended to bathe in the water tank and get enough clothes to return home. But the neighbor's dog did not know this; he misunderstood my plans. He thought I had designs on the house. But I hadn t on a single design. All I had on was a layer of gumbo and a friendly mien. I had no place to put my hands. The pockets of my friend friendly ly friendly mien were missing. The dog was a large, quick-tempered creature and rushed at me im impulsively. pulsively. impulsively. Without my trousers I home city against the accusation of political greediness as follows: "Some thoughtless persons take up the fight against Jacksonville, which some Jacksonville politician, who befouls his own nest, usually starts and which is to create preju prejudice dice prejudice against Jacksonville in every political fight. The state of Florida has a governor who is a south Flori Florida da Florida man. a secretary of state who is a west Florida citizen. The commis commissioner sioner commissioner of agriculture, treasurer, comptroller, state chemist attorney attorney-general, general, attorney-general, adjutant-general and all the members of the railroad commission and its attorney are men who do not live in Jacksonville. The great pa-, tronage pie when it was cut by the government furnished no slice to a Jacksonville man. Every appoint-, ment given out by the governor (and! there were many of them) have been handed out to men who did not live in Jacksonville. When Uncle Sam: was ready to do stunts at the pie counter he gave Senators Fletcher and Bryan the knife and the result was as follows: Collector of inter-; nal revenue went to Marianna, col-( lector of customs to Apalachicola,: United States attorney to Tampa and; the United States marshal is to go to Lakeland. Thus, when people think; it is perfectly plain that when It! comes to state or federal pie, the( rest of the state has Jacksonville; beat a mile. Of course the talk about' Jacksonville getting everything isj only to deceive the ignorant, as Jack Jacksonville sonville Jacksonville hasn't had a look in in state offices and Fletcher and Bryan have both turned Jacksonville men down just because they are Jacksonville men. The talk about "Jacksonville," however, usually comes from a Jack Jacksonville sonville Jacksonville man who is usually prompt prompted ed prompted by some political scheme." What is the difference between berth and death? Not much, if it's in a sleeping car designed on the kindling wood plan. St. Petersburg Independent. Those wanting school books should not wait until the last minute. Come early and be sure you get them at The Murray Company. 9-ll-3t The M unroe & Chambliss Bank OCALA, FLORIDA General Building Contractors BUILDING IV1AFEIRIAJL.! FOR SALE 9 Block North East of Postoffice, OCALA, FLORIDA 303 North Osceola Street. Bought ihis W eei s for You nave j i in in j aiuraav Lve. rost Come In and Get Your Copy I am neither a philanthropist or a magazine dealer. My business is the selling of good clothes. But there is a good clothes message in the center of this week's Saturday Evening Post ( Sept. 13th ) so vital that I am determined to have every good clothes-buyer in this town read it so far as I can make that possible. A WONDERFUL CLOTHES MESSAGE So I have accordingly bought a quantity of S. E. Posts at the full re retail tail retail price and every man who calls this week will get a copy FREE with my compliments. I don't claim that I am giving away a fortune when I present a copy of the Post. But I do claim that if you will read carefully the wonderful double page ad. that the Royal Tailors have inserted in this issue you will save yourself hun hundreds dreds hundreds of dollars on your clothes pur purchases chases purchases in years to come besides get getting ting getting clothes satisfaction that you cannot better anywhere in America at ANY PRICE. A BROADWAY TAILOR SERVICE A WITS VOL HERE Right here in this store you can place your order for a Broadway made-to-order Fall Suit a suit with that matchless grace; that stun stunning ning stunning style, that indescribable touch of refinement and class that only a merchant tailor can produce. Right here you can get your pick of half a thousand of the most origi nal woolens and .Spring fabric novel novelties ties novelties in the country. And the cost? Well unbeliev unbelievable able unbelievable as it may seem, a mere $20, 25, $30 and $35 will bring you thru the Royal System the very uttermost in a real custom-made suit! A guarantee of absolutely ALL WOOL. A guarantee of Irreproach Irreproachable able Irreproachable fit. A guarantee of absolutely unlacking and unwanting 1 satisfac satisfaction tion satisfaction in every particular or your mon money ey money back. COME IX AND GET TODAY YOUR COPY Do you wonder that I am willing to buy a copy of the S. E. Post to get such facts befdre you. And don't hesitate to come In and get your copy. You won't be solicit solicited ed solicited you won't be importuned. Just ask for the Post and you'll get it as long as my supply holds out. There are plenty of good stories and articles in the Sept. 13th Post. Yes I'll admit I am willing to fea feature ture feature the sugar coating to get you to read the Post this week. For once you see the big Royal ad you'll con consider sider consider your clothes problems settled for life and we'll both be glad I spent the nickel. It) Go EWE The Harrington Hall Haberdasher; I ft STAR Want Ads "Deliver the Goods!" Try ThemJ V I? We have just received the most complete line of Shirt Waists in the newest creations ever brought to Ocala. We have them in linen, Net and Silk, the latest designs in colors with Persian trimmings and or ornaments. naments. ornaments. We invite your inspection. I T, Meflveimstoim Giver of Good Values Giver of Good Values E. THE OCALA EVENING STAII. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12.. t9't3 FIVE y y y y y y y y y y T Y v y ? ? y y y X y Y V X Soda crackers are more nu nutritive tritive nutritive than any other flour food. Uneeda Biscuit are the perfect soda crackers. Though the cost is but five cents, TJneeda Biscuit are too good, too nourishing, too crisp, to be bought merely as an economy. Buy them because of their fresh freshness ness freshness because of their crispness because of their goodness because of their nourishment. Always 5 cents. Always fresh, crisp and clean. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY CH ILimEX WILL HAVE THKIH 1XXIXG AT THE OCALA CHAUTAUQUA In arranging for the great ebautau ebautau-pua pua ebautau-pua to be held here in the spring, it has not been the idea of the board oi trade to present only those things for the pleasure and benefit of the adult. Too little do we think of the kiddies in our preparation for ""good times," but in this forward move movement, ment, movement, the Chautauqua, which the board of trade is bringing here for the universal uplift of the commun community ity community as a whole, much will be provide! for all the youngsters. They are a vital part of the true Chautauqua and k::kx:::x: UNCLASSIFIED ADS Lost, Found, Wanted, For Sale For Rent and Similar Local Heeds FOR SALE Two choice corner lots, east Oklawaha avenue. Big bar gain. Apply at Star office. 8 2S-tf j FOR SALE 1913 motorcycles and j motor boats at. bargain prices, all makes, brand new machines, on eay! monthly payment plan. Get our j proposition before buying or-jou will! re&ret it, also bargains in used j motorcycles. Write us today. En Enclose close Enclose atamp for renly. Address. Lock I they will have their own special fea- Box n Trenton. Mich. 7-lS-tf itures in the assembly next winter. j This department will be termed FOR SALE White oak hall tree the Junior Chautauqua. As it is sole-'and hat rack; has mirror, umbrella ly for the inspiration and uplift of j rack, etc. Cheap for cash. Apply the child, it will be kept separate and Star office. 8-2S-12t distinct from the heavier features capable of being grasped only by the! FOR SALE A brand new visible "grown-ups," so that the little folks typewriter, a forty-acre farm near will not be interferred with and their Ocala; tw well drilling machines, time enroached upon. A special hour one horse and new set of horness. will be set apart during the after-! Terms if desired. Address, C. T. noon. Of course the children will Hodges at Waterman's store, Ocala, be greeted at the sessions of the big Fla. 8-19-lm Chautauqua and their reduced child's tickets will admit them to all ses-' ro: SALE A small cottage, good sions, but the junior Chautauqua i3'locaton; cash and time; bargain if their special department and moth- taken quick- Address' Cottage care tne uiar. y-u-ut I I Call up Phone 300 and Let us Give an Eslimate on Your xthe attend each junior Chautauqua proved property. half cash balance ers are urged to supply their little ones with children's tickets and have FOR SALE Big bargain in unim- PLUMBING AND ELECTRICAL WORK We Guarantee To Save You Money on Any Work in Our Lines x luJ1'UUBUl on easy terms. Addhess, Box 1C4, .J. I feature of the Chautauqua and much c-t 9-G-6t y!will be said and done duringthese hours to please the children and in- . 'spire them with high ideals. Tickets man who is thoroughly familiar with Xjwill be sold at half price for the a Shay locomotive, can get a position children, so no parent will have an by applying to the undersigned. Only adequate excuse tor denying their a first class man who knows his bus little ones the privilege of the chau- ineSs need annlv. R. J. Rivers. Am wre employ none but experts we are In position to guarantee ev every ery every piece of work we construct to stand the Inspection of the most rigid Inspectors. It costs nothing to get our figures and yon are the winner, whether we secure the contract or not. Give us a trial. y "tauqua iness need Ocala, Fla. apply. R. 9-l-12t i X char The junior department will be in a nf rtry r,tr viz-v -f ? t V . e ac KJL Clii CA;ci L, 111 tllC (JCiaUU Ul v Mrs. Lydia W. Locklin: a trained kindergartener, author and poet. During these hours Mrs. Lockling will talk to the little folks in a way own. She will tell them many wonderful tales, all in a way the' can easily understand and eniov. Ibhe will tell them about the fairies; M. W. TUCKER OCALA, FLORIDA CLYATT BLOCK x y i ? y all her WANTED A second hand ice box; one that will hold 100 pounds! oi: ice; must be in good repair and j at reasonable price. Address S. K. L., care tSar. 9-3-6t-" i 5 v mm m. 17 w r.iW M strikes Z j HOUSE WANTED Wanted to rent, a modern six or seven room : residence; must be in good location! i .... . i Ishe will talk to them about the sua in nrst ciass condition. Apply Bible: she will tell them taips nf bi-'t L- O. Tyler, Ocala, House. 9-2-Ctd - i center 1 ill :j&m$ hi SI everytime SS Ball FOR RENT Six room cottage with bath, etc., corner Watula and South Seventh streets. Apply at Southern Express Office. 9-4-tf MONEY WANTED $3000 wanted on gilt-edged real estate security. Address, Money, care Star. 9-G-4t r.a- L. C. Smith & Bros. Ball Bearing, Lonj Wearing Typewriter give minimum operating effort Think of everything that is modern and useful in typewriter construction then add twenty to thirty per cent, for increased efficiency due to ball bearings -r- that's The L C. Smith & Bros. Typewriter It's compact, complete, easy to operate, durable and proof against inexperience and carelessness. . Ball Bearings permit closer adjustments without bind ing than any other form of bearing. Expressed in human effort, this means that the operator can do more work better work, with the least physical and mental strain. Mail this Coupon checking tht kind of work you have to do: Gentlemen :I am interested in a Typewriter for General Correspondence Card Writing Tabulating Label Writing p Name Mm Address B yi Billing 3g m i tory, all -in an astonishingly clear manner capable of being grasped by the child mind She will do many many-things things many-things that will make the chidren love her and stimulate them towards the wholesome things of youthful life. Mrs. Lockling's department is intended for the children up to ten years. For the older children there will be held an oratorical contest TABLE BOARD Can supply The winner of this contest will be ble board for two young men or for awarded a handsome gold medal by man and wife in private family; the Christian Culture Institution. 'room in house or immediate neigh neigh-The The neigh-The winning of this medal will mean borhood. Address, Table Board, care a great deal not only to the child, Star. 9-6- 6t but the adult who has had the con-' testant in charge during the prepar-J WANTED To rent, two or three ation for the contest. The speakers rooms for housekeeping, or cottage; will be marked strictly according to 'couple without children. Address the rules governing such contestsjB12X, Star. 7-S-6t and the speaker to whom the prize is awarded will win it on his or her LOST' STRAYED OR STOLEN merits. Careful preparation is there-lA light sorrel mare with flax mane fnfA Paeon 1 1 n 1 o nrl nrnennvfirn tllld t3.il White StST testants should begin to prenare at 1913-Fall and WMfer-1914 tail; white star in face; two years and five months old. A lib- nnna frvr. tha ntn.t r,,i v, -5i leTal reward for return to J. J. Gas- w i 1 111V .UlUtOl, 1.1 il VI c:i LliCT guiu ance of their school teacher. Any subject may be chosen, but the markings will be made on the man ikin, Sparr, Fla. 9--4t FOR RENT New five room cot- To L C SMITH & BROS. TYPEWRITER COMPANY Beat Office art Factory at Syraaee. K I 14 W. Forsyth St., Jacksonville, Fla. o06 Florida Ave., Tampa, Fla. ner in which the speaker handles thei t. 0. A. , , 'South Sixth and Tuscawalla streets; subject. Each school or grade should: t ,. , . .... , .'electric lights, bath room and other have its candidate and these should ; . . modern conveniences. Apply to Mrs. uc siimucieu uuvvn uuriiig ine winter to three to appear on the platform of the Chautauqua for the final con contest test contest for the medal. This final con contest test contest will be delivered from the junior Chautauqua platform before both juniors and seniors. J. D. Rooney, Secretary. Haycraft at Haycraft & Camp's mil mil-jlinery jlinery mil-jlinery store 9-S-6t SUGGESTIONS TO THE SECRETARIES STENOGRAPHER WANTED At once for 30 to 60 days. Possible -permanent position if competent. 3S9 or 342. 9-10-3t SITUATION WANTED By an able-bodied and intelligent man, able and willing to do any work. Has Ibeen in the sawmill business and is A group of board j familiar with machinery, and will DeLand News: of trade secretaries are making an effort to get up a "Booster Trin" toitake an-v Position offering a fair re R. C. MUNCASTER iiwsyiiAW FIRE LIFE ACCIDENT HEALTH BURGLARY. EMPLOYEES PLATE GLASS LIABILITY Ocala House Block Phone 420 i travel from Florida to Chicago in a jmuueidnuu. special train, distributing literature jca'a' Fa' en route. This is all very good, butj-" hnw tnanv nenulp would a lot of ulv FOR RENT - i i - i men attract to Florida? Why Address, 9-10-tf Box ISO, Upstairs furnished not for light housekeeping, consisting of select a hundred towns in Florida, let each town select its most beauti beautiful ful beautiful young woman, let the towns give these girls the trip and the literature to hand out? It would not be neces necessary sary necessary to send the girls away from the Icars. People would flock to the sta stations tions stations and wait for handouts from ,the Florida beauties. It would be al al-most most al-most impossible for men to get the ! people to accept their literature. The girls could give away irainloads! of it. Every man within a hundred 'miles of the route who had any t j gumption whatever would go to see the display. And its only men with i gumption that Florida wants. three rooms and bath; city and tern water. Mrs. P. H. Gillen, 1 S. 5th St. 9-10-6 cls-No. FOR Hi Grade Printino Call at the STAR JOB OFFICE! CHAPTER NO. 13, li. A. M. Regular convocations of the Ocala Chapter No. 13, R. A. M., on the fourth Friday in every month at 1:30 p. m. C. B. Connor, H. P. Jake Brown, Secretary. Ad OFFICIAL DIRECTORY CITY OF OCALA Mayor J. D. Robertson. Recorder L. T. Izlar. Assistant Recorder Joseph Bell. Council B. A. Weathers, presi dent: J. H. Taylor, president pro tem; E. C. Bennett, Baxter Cam, J. W. Hood, E. T. Helvenston, G. A. Carmichael, F. G. B. Weihe, C. M. Livingston. Citv Attorney C. L. Sistrunk. Citv Clerk H. C. Sistrunk. Treasurer and Tax Collector W. W. Clyatt. City Engineer J. R. Moorhead. Superintendent Light Plant J. C. Caldwell. Superintendent Water Works .. A. Campbell. Marshal A. J. Brigance. Fire Chief H. S. Chambers. Sanitary Inspector G. W. Cleve Cleveland. land. Cleveland. Street Commissioner R obert Marsh. IPEMHMG Sattifdaiy, epi 1 On display will be all that is New and Authentic in Men's Suitings and Overcoat Overcoatings ings Overcoatings for the coming season. We Bid you welcome, one and all, and assure you of an interesting exhibition. SUET OR OVERCOAT TO YOUR MEASURE, IN ANY STYLE 500 Nifty Patterns on Display. Fit and Workmanship Guaranteed. A WORD OF THANKS We take this opportunity to thank .the citizens of Ocala for their liberal support. We have tried hard to earn it on the mer merit it merit of our merchandise and ser service, vice, service, and, thanks to your good judgment, we have succeeded. We appreciate your patronage, and cordially invite you to call again. Our Fall and Winter line is most complete and we can serve you as in the past. THE DIFFERENCE Between our garments and the ordinary tailor's product is, that we give each order our in individual dividual individual attention, making them up according to your personal instructions and your own ideas. Our facilities are such that we do positively give you as good a suit for $15 as others ask $23 to $35 and often $40 for. Stop in Saturday you will not be urged to buy. Clothes Bought of Us Are Pressed FREE OF CHARGE. THE Woolen Mills Carn BIdg. l Ocala, Fla. iMJTY of our service is its promptness. You are waited on when you enter the store. You are not urged to buy We expect the character of our JEWELRY to do the selling. So pay us a visit no matter how little time you can spare. The gdods and prices will tell you lots and prompt attention will enable you to buy as quickly as you desire. But take longer if you can. A. E. BURNETT Oeala, Florida Akin ttts Plumber Is now prepared to g;ve you estimates on all kinds of PLUMBING, STEAM FITTING & GAS FITTING and everything in this line. When placing your con contracts tracts contracts for work in my line let me have an opportuni opportunity ty opportunity to save you money. All work installed is on strict guarantee of satisfaction. J. W. AKIN Phone 388 or 235 S. Osceola St. Ocala. Fla. DR. F. E. McCLANE, M. D. SPECIALIST IX CHIJOXIC DISEASES The Dr. McClane Medical, Surgical and Electrical Institute OCALA, FLORIDA. PHONES Offlce, No. S33. Dr McCIane'a Residence, No. 407. Office Suite 1 to 7. Holder Block Southwest cor. Public Square. mix THE OCALA EVENING STAR, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1913 T I OCALA SOCIAL AFFAIRS (If you have any item3 for this department call phone 100) Informal Dance for Misses Rurkheiin and Lytle Miss Mozelle Burkheim of Gaines Gainesville ville Gainesville and Miss Maggie Lytle of Stan Stanton, ton, Stanton, were guests of honor last eve evening ning evening at a very delightful summer dance given at the home of their hostess, Miss Josie Bullock, on S. Third street. It was strictly informal, the young men being invited to obtain partners and drop in for the evening. Mr. Raymond Bullock assisted his sister in the duties of hostess and Mrs. J. II. Strunk, in the absence of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Bullock, chaperoned. The entire lower floor of the res-; idence, which opens en suite, was converted into a dance hall, the rus j being rolled back, and the veranda j Tas used as a promenade. Ice cold j grapejuice was served during the evening, and dancing continued until 11:30 o'clock. Enjoying this lavely affair were a dozen or more couples which includ included ed included several of the college set who will leave shortly after spending their va vacation cation vacation at home. Miss Agnes Harris, who has often visited Ocala in the interest of the Woman's Club and the tomato can canning ning canning club work, has returned to Tal Tallahassee lahassee Tallahassee and is ready to begin her duties s s director of the home eco economics nomics economics 'epartment of the Florida State Col'ege for Women. Miss Har Harris ris Harris taught the same sub'ect in the Johns Hopkins Unherrity, Balti Baltimore. more. Baltimore. Mr. William X. Gramling, Jr., of Waycross, Ga., whose critical illness was mentioned In these columns, died at his home Wednesday, the cause being appendicitis. Less than two months ago Mr. Gramling was a guest in the home of Mrs. S. A. El Ellis, lis, Ellis, and his many friends among the school set join with his host of friends at home in extending deep deepest est deepest sympathy to the bereaved par parents. ents. parents. Mrs. Frank Harris and handsome grandson, Master Harris Powers, ar arrived rived arrived home, yesterday from the mountains of North Carolina. They Fere located at Busbee Hall and maae irequenc irips io points or in interest terest interest nearby, -including ,AsheviIle. Mr. Harris joined his wife two weeks ago and accompanied' her home. uioocs uwiii auu J-rciiif liiilUaSluu, accompaniedby their father, Mr. Henry LiVmgson, have gone to Orangeburg,- S. c, to visit relatives, after which he Mrs'ses Livingston will go to Al&rJt'o spend the winter with an aunt, and to attend school. gston will lea his daugh- ihTTreturn home. tersat2t Ken a f Miss Ernestine Brooks ha5--one to ClearwgTfer to visit Miss Poly Mc Mc-Mullen. Mullen. Mc-Mullen. IBelore returning Miss Brooks will 'visijjher brother, Mr. James BroofrsTin Tampa. Mrs.. T. C. Luckie is expected home tomorrow from a visit to her mother, Mrs. Sheppard in Daytona. Mr. and Mrs. G. X. Mills of Berlin spent the day in tovni shopping and visiting with relatives. Mrs. J. E. Johnson and little daughter Sarah, returned last night from several weeks absence, during Breakfast Foods Quaker Rolled Oats Puffed Rice Puffed Wheat Puffed Corn Kellog's Toasted Corn Flakes Post Toasties Cream of Wheat Grape Nuts Shredded Wheat Biscuit 0. K. TEA-POT GROCERY OCALA FLA. which time they visited in Asheville. X. C, and Swainsboro, Ga. Mrs. George Hendree Harrison and two interesting sons have gone to Griffin, Ga., for a stay of several weeks with Mrs. Harrison's mother, Mrs. Watt. Jacksonville Metropolis. m Miss Donaldson Entertained Miss Bess Donaldson, an attractive visitor from South Carolina, who has been the honor guest at several in informal formal informal affairs, among which was a house party given at Lake Weir by her host and hostess, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Walters, was again compli complimented mented complimented last evening when Miss Edith Williams, a member of the house party, entertained in her honor. The guests at this enjoyable affair includ included ed included only the members of the house party and the young men who motor motored ed motored down to the lake in the evenings to be with Mr. and Mrs. Walters. Three tables were arranged for cards and after spending an hour and a half at that pleasant diversion, the guests were served to a deli deli-ciously ciously deli-ciously prepared supper, including chicken purlo, sandwiches, pickles, salad, olives, wafers, coffee and mints. m Mrs. Gray Entertains in St. Peters Petersburg burg Petersburg Mrs. C. M. Gray gave a delightful party yesterday afternoon at her home, "Gray Oaks," on Lakeview avenue in honor of her house guests, Misses Alice and Mary Polk and Frances Jordan. Old-fashioned games, music, readings, and dancing furnished the entertainment. Lemon Lemonade ade Lemonade was served .through the after afternoon noon afternoon and later ice cream and assort assorted ed assorted cakes, followed by pink and green mints, was served. In each mound of ice cream was a small Japanese silk fan for the favors. St. Peters Petersburg burg Petersburg Times. Mrs. Gray resided in Ocala for a number of year3, her husband, the late Rev. Gray, being rector of Grace Episcopal church. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Chas. E. Harris this afternoon, a fine boy. Mr. Harris is one of the Star's competent young printers. He and his young wife came here several months ago from Jacksonville, bilt their old home is in the valley of Virginia. They are an estimable young couple, and their friends warmly congratu congratulate late congratulate them. Mrs. Etta Robinson went to Jack Jacksonville sonville Jacksonville this afternoon, going espe especially cially especially to be with Miss Elizabeth Mc McDonald Donald McDonald during the absence of her mother and brother, Mrs. W. K. Mc McDonald Donald McDonald and Mr. Darwin McDonald, who will visit relatives in Monticello. Miss Alice Sexton will join Mrs. Robinson next week for a visit with Miss McDonald. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Xash will leave Monday for Xew York, where they will spend the next few weeks. Be Before fore Before returning, Mr. Xash will pur purchase chase purchase goods for his store. Cardsy-feceived from Mr. and Mrs. W. KjZewidski, Jr., who are tour touring ing touring ihe Brftishf Isles; and the western pari of EuTopA)n a' motorcycle, state thafthe3"-TTfe7 envying the beauties of V Mrs. W. W. Stripling and daugh daughter. ter. daughter. Miss Ellen, of Ocala, arrived Sat Saturday urday Saturday and are guests of Mrs. Strip Stripling's ling's Stripling's sister, Mrs. C. H. Campbell, for a few weeks. DeLand Xews. Mr. Henry Blount of Jacksonville, who lived here several years ago with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Blount, has gone to Xew York for a short visit before returning to the University of Virginia at Charlottes Charlottesville. ville. Charlottesville. Miss Emma Cannons of DeLand, who has been in Europe all summer, with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Cannons, reached Jacksonville today ; on the Lenape. They visited prac practically tically practically all of the important counties while away. Miss Cannons was an attractive Christmas visitor to Ocala winter before last. Miss Anna McDowell of Ocala was here yesterday for the purpose of organizing a class in music. Citra notes in Metropolis. Miss Mary Gates returned this af ternoon from her visit to friends in Gainesville. Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Mayo of Sum- merfield were in the city today. Mr. O. W. Cordero will go to Jack sonville tomorrow, to accompany home his wife and baby, who are stopping with his parents on their way home from the Carolinas. Picnic to Lake and Silver Springs Taking advantage of the last Thursday afternoon holiday and the ideal weather, combined with gor gorgeous geous gorgeous moonlight nights, fourteen formed a congenial party yesterday going to Lake Weir early in the aft afternoon ernoon afternoon in a large auto truck. Swim Swimming ming Swimming was indulged in and at early twilght a beautiful picnic supper was spread, after which the crowd return returned ed returned horue anJ went to Silver Springs to further enjoy the beauties of the night. There the remainder of the lunch was eaten. The party was chaperoned by Miss Lillie Frost and included Misses Sallie Bird Young, Mary and Ruth Ervin, Mabel Batch Batch-elder, elder, Batch-elder, Ethel and Sallie Mae Boring of Waldo, Messrs. William and Leo Rilea, Carl Frazier, Jack Fulcher, Met Carter, Clarence Blalock and Mr. Luffman of Sparr. Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Sapp and child children ren children returned this afternoon from their visit to Ohio. Miss Lulie Holder returned this afternoon from heV visit to friends in Carolina. Mrs. W. T. Cole returned today from, three' months' pleasant visit to old friends in South Carolina. AT THE TEMPLE THIS EVENING If you'll just make up your mind j to get an early start this evening! there is a splendid entertainment in j store for you. The program at the Temple for tonight is one of the best 3er; and, just think, after seeing the entire show you will then have ilenty of time to enjoy the band con concert cert concert in the moonlight. Don't fail to come early. Following is the pro- ram: Behind a Mask. Kline drama. Phillips' March Engagement. An Essanay comedy, and a good one. The Artist's Oream. Pathe drama. Brought to Bay. A splendid west ern drama by the Kalem Co. Adv. OPEN ALL NIGHT The Merchant's Cafe Is a first class place to take your meals. Open night and day. J., R. Dewey, proprie proprietor. tor. proprietor. 2-28-tf Tennis rackets and balls at The Murray Company. 9-ll-3t C ALL on AND Pan! 'tilts a -V I: L j i I ... J . i: V.. OFF Regular Price. rr9 p i mm ni Hi IS 113 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiititiiiiiitiitKttdittitiitiiiiiiititiiiiiiitttiiiiiitttiitt ..X.o .So Til ( I (!h LMJo Grocery Depariment Royal Dutch The Cocoa that is ALL COCOA Until you have tried this you have not yet tasted the most exquisitely flavored Cocoa on the market. ' Absolutely Pure, Therefore Economical. ULLO .So (BIT (CflDo THE HOUSE OF QUALITY Ocala, Florida. COTTON l'I,AXT Cotton Plant, Sept. 11. W. M. Barco left Tuesday for his home at Fort Green, after a week spent very pleasatnly with his friends here. Mr. J. P. Daniels was carried to the Marion Conty Hospital Monday. Mesdames A. W. Woodward and W. M. Barco spent Monday with Mrs. H. W. Long at Swiss Cottage. Mrs. William Seckenger and moth mother, er, mother, Mrs. Hood, of Martel, are spend spending ing spending a few days with friends here. Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Reynolds motored out Tuesday evening and spent the night with Judge and Mrs. C. R. Veal. The young folks and quite a crowd of older folks sepnt a pleasant even evening ing evening Tuesday at the church singing. Mrs. W. M. Barco and two attract attractive ive attractive little girls left Wednesday for Ocala to spend a few days, thence to Terrell for a visit with her sister, Mrs. C. P. Pillans. :k:x..::: PHI SIGMA FEMALE COLLEGE 902 Fort King Ave. Ocala, Florida OPENS SEP. 29 E0R THIRD ANNUAL TERM RATES: $8.50 FER MONTH. TERMS IN ADVANCE. t This school will properly train and educate young ladies and girls , in a practical useful course for higher and better life. We solicit ..the attendance of pupils who appreciate our efforts to advance thera trapidly and thoroughly, making the work in school a pleasure as 4 well as an elegant means of culture. We have agreed to take a few small boys about 12 years of age lu X our primary and preparatory department. j, Young men's classes from 2 to 5 p. m. or from 7:30 to 9:30 at night. Best attention and thorough teaching. PIIOXK iiHH FOR CATALOG. DON'T LET BABY SUFFER WITH ECZEMA AXI SKIN ERUPTIONS Babies nee a perfect skin-covering. Skin eruptions cause them not only intense suffering but hinder their growth. DR. HOBSOVS ECZ ECZEMA EMA ECZEMA OINTMENT -can be relied on for relief and permanent cure of suf suffering fering suffering babies whose skin eruptions have made their life miserable. "Our baby was afflicted with breaking out of. the skin all over the face and scalp. Doctors and skin specialists failed to help. We tried Dr. Hobson's Eczema Ointment "and were overjoy overjoyed ed overjoyed to see baby completely cured be before fore before one box was used," writes Mrs. Strubler, Dubuque. Iowa. All drug druggists, gists, druggists, or by mail. 50 cents. Tydings & Co., Ocala, Pfeiffer Chemical Co., St. Louis, Mo., Philadelphia, Pa ad MARION COUNTY DIRECTORY Judge Circuit Court W. S. Bul Bullock, lock, Bullock, Ocala. District Attorney E. W. Davis, Ocala. Clerk Circuit Court P. H. Nugent, Ocala. Sheriff J. P. Gallow-y, Ocala. Tax Collector W. L. Colbert. Ocala. Tax Assessor Alfred Ayer, Ocala. Treasurer John M. Graham, Ocala. Surveyor W. A. Moorhead, Ocala. Judge of Prouate Wm. E. Smith, Ocala. County Commissioners C. Carml chael, Ocala: J. W. Davis. Summer Summer-field; field; Summer-field; W T. Henderson, Lynne; D. G. Watkins, Dunnellon; Walter Luff Luff-man. man. Luff-man. Sparr. Board Public Instruction J. H. Brinson. Superintendent, Ocala; B. R. Blitrh. Blitchton: J. S. Grantham. Fort McCoy; W. D. Cam, Ocala. t f f Y GEO. C. and MRS. G. C. LOONEY, PROPRIETORS r Jacksonville's Finest AND ! Florida's Largest and Best Year j Round Hotel I The Hotel you take your Mother, Wife or Sister to : Home Hotel of the State European Plan $1.50 Per Day and Upward A. M. Wilson, Thos. M. Wilson, ASST. MGR. PROP. AND MGR. Jacksonville, Florida SayS si No matter what it is you have to sell, or what is you want an ad in our Unclassified Column ill bring the desired results. I -t y ? ? y ? y y ? y y v THE OCAK1 EVENING STAR, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1913 y CAHMICHAEL REPLIES TO ; LIGHT'S "llilliy FOR !: MORE IHFQRMATIQfJ" In your weekly and daily issups of J tEe past, week there appeared an arti arti-J J arti-J cle headed, "If He is Wrong, Light Want sto Know Why." This article I"- Purported to be written by Mr. Light, the statesman from Reddick, who afc tempted to give 'light' on the subject of whether prohibition was a goodj thing or not by some comparisons he has made relative to different coun counties ties counties in this state as to population, mlllage and assessed valuations. There is an old saying that "figures will not lie but Is nevertheless true that a nprson ran n arrant M figures that they will cohvpv but halfiing tne fact tnat Alachua county has the truth to the people. The writer of this article was nev never er never very favorably impressed with the habit of knocking one's own county, f. as Mr. Light does, for he has always I believed that Marion county 'was the j best county In the best state in the ucai iittiiuii oi me wunu, aiiu it occa occasion sion occasion should ever arise when,t". Jie thought that taxation was unnecessar unnecessarily ily unnecessarily high in this county, or the popula- rJion at a standstill, and the county X going to the "bow-wows," as Mr. Light f suggests, for any reason, he would, like the Arab, fold his tent and silent silently ly silently steal away to another and a better county, rather than stay in his own and pelt it with' brick-bats of distort distorted ed distorted figures. Mr. Light attempts to show, by less than a dozen cities in the state, wbicn he picks out from the census reports to suit his ov.T- purposes, that Ocala has not increased in population as fast as some other towns, comparing Ocala with Lake City, Gainesville, Tallahassee, and other places. The few illustrations that Mr. Light, gives totally failed to prove his contention, because he has not given all of the facts connected therewith. For in instance, stance, instance, Columbia county, in which Iake City Is located, and whichls dry, had a population in 1900 of 17, 094, and ten years later had a popu population lation population of 17.CS9. Leon county, in which Tallahassee is located, had a population in 1900 of 19,887, and in 1910, of only 19,427. These two coun counties, ties, counties, which Mr. Light says prohibition has helped so,, when compared with St Johns or Dade counties, which Ir. Light claims license has hurt so", show that St. Johns county had a pop ulation in 1900 of 9165, and in 1910 of 13.20S; and Dade county had a population .in 1900 of 4955. and in 1910 of 11,933. r t; For the information of Mr. Light and the public, we refer to several counties in the state where prohibi prohibition tion prohibition has been in force for a number of years, and to other counties where prohibition has been unable to gain a foothold: Baker county dry, population in 1900, 4516; 1910, 4805. Brevard coun county, ty, county, dry, population in 1900, 5158; 1910, 4717. Calhoun county, dry, popula popula-rm rm popula-rm in imn. 5132.- 1910. 7465. Citrus f county, dry, population in 1900, 5391; V 1910, 6731. Clay county, dry, popula popula-' ' popula-' tien in 1900, 5369; 1910, 6116. Wa Wakulla kulla Wakulla county, dry, population in 1900, 5149; 1910, 4802. Hamilton county, dry, population in 1900, 11,881; 1910, 11,825. Sumter county, dry, popula population tion population in 1900, 6187; 1910, 6696. -';: On the other hand, a glance at 'the wet counties of the state show, that the great growth of this statpj has L ibeen almost entirely in the wet coun- l Arties. ilV s f Escambia county had in 1900 a pop ulation of 28,313; in 1910, 38,029. Hills Hillsborough borough Hillsborough county, in 1900,' 36,013; in 1910, 78,348. Monroe county had in 1900, 18,006 population; in 1910, 21,- 563. And so the list goes of most of the counties in the state, showing that the greatest Increases have been In the wetv mil nties. and the counties that are at a standstill and the counties that have decreased have been the dry counties, and Mr. Light's effort to pick out three or four of the cities of this state and compare thewith Ocala, to .Ocala's detriment, is1 unfair; and does not state the fact correotly. Mr. Light has attempted torfbraijare Ocala and Marion county with Gaines Gainesville ville Gainesville and Alachua .county, .'to Ocala's and Marion county's detriment. The facts of the case are thatiii J900 Alachua county had 32,245 poulaCion, and In 1910 had 34,305, an increase of barely over 2000 people, notwithstand Ing the fact that in' that period the University of Florida was moved to . Gainesville, causing to move s; there hundreds of people who would not have otherwise settled there. We vent ture the assertion that if the univer sity had not been moved to Alachua county that Alachua county .would show an actual decrease in popula tion- In the same period Marion coun ty, without the aid of a university, in increased creased increased over 2500 in population. Mr. Light inquires why Gainesville shows a greater increase in popula population tion population than Ocala? I reply, solely be- cause of the university. The same rea- earth, and whenever it falls my lot son applies to DeLand, to Tallahas- j to lose faith in this, my county, I shall see, and to Lake City, each of those certainly not be the one to stay with with-towns towns with-towns being the center of some uni-jin its limits and continually knock it. versity. But we again assert the fact that notwithstanding that those coun counties ties counties in which those towns are located have remained practically at a stand standstill still standstill in population. It is mentioned in Mr. Light's arti article cle article that the assessed valuations in Marion county have not increased in proportion to the assessed valuations of three or four other counties in the state which Mr. Light names of course selecting those counties which suit his purpose. Examining, howev- er' his Comparisons between Marion and Alachua counties in regard to as sessed valuations, I desire to say that the comptroller's report shows that Alachua county has assessed $3,233, 110 of real estate, while Marion coun ty ahs assessed $3,184,300 in real es- tate' 0r nearIy aS much- notwithstand bia ur eeveu mousauu more pepits than Marion county. The public will not be led astray by the argument that Alachua county has increased its valuations, because it is thoroughly understood that valuations are placed upon property by the tax assessors of the various counties, and that when additional revenue is needed, either :the millage or the property valuations may be raised. It becomes, then, very evident why Alachua county has rais raised ed raised its valuations so much; because, after the saloons were driven out of Alachua county, that county, needing revenue, was forced either to raise its millage or its valuations, and preferr preferred ed preferred the latter course. But the few counties that Mr. Light selects to prove his contention do not, as a matter-of fact, substantiate his point, be because cause because the counties of the state, taken as a whole, show just exactly what itie population of the various counties of the state, taken as a whole, show, and that is that taxes are lower in the wet' counties than in the dry counties. For instance: Baker county, dry, levies, 19 mills; Brevard county, dry, levies 20 mills; Citrus county, dry, levies 25 mills; dry, levies 24 mills; wet levies 17 mills; ty, wet, levies 14 DeSoto county, Duval county, Escambia coun coun-mills; mills; coun-mills; Franklin county, wet, levies 11 mills; Hernan Hernando do Hernando county, dry, levies 23 mills; Jeffer Jefferson son Jefferson 'county, dry, levies 20 V2 mills; Lee county, dry levies 23 mills; Man Manatee atee Manatee county, dry, levies 26 mills; Nas Nassau sau Nassau county, wet, levies 11 mills; Pas Pasco co Pasco county, dry, levies 22,2 mills; Put Putnam nam Putnam county, dry, 21 mills; St. Johns county,- wet, 18; mills;' St. --Lucie county, dry, levies 26 mills. In ad ad-ditio'n ditio'n ad-ditio'n to that, Mr. Light has failed to take into consideration that in the dry counties much larger license fees are paid. Marion county pays half as much taxes in licenses alone as Alachua pays on real estate to the state of Florida, and about four times as much license fees as Alachua coun ty "pays. Therefore, when Mr. Light attempts, by three or four illustra illustrations tions illustrations of towns in which are located colleges, which have been placed there within the last ten years, to show that Ocala and Marion county are not on a par with those counties, he has failed to give all the facts In connection with the case, which prove just exactly the reverse of what Mr. Light, is attempting to prove. Why did not Mr. Light mention in his summary of the conditions in this state the statistics as given above in instead stead instead of taking a few illustrations which suited his purpose? Is it that Mr. Light in his wisdom and his searches into the facts and figures of taxation, overlooked these matters, or was it because he thought that his ar ticle would be unanswered, and the real facts given? We cannot say. But, at any rate, I assert that the comptroller's report and the census report all prove that prohibition has not only not benefited any county in which it exists, but has been a detri ment and injury to that county. Briefly, in conclusion, It is men tioned In Mr.' Light's article that Ma Marion rion Marion county's expenses for court costs are greater than that of dry counties, and to prove that he compares Ma rion with Alachua and with Ley coun counties. ties. counties. Possibly Mr. Light was ignorant ot the fact that in the last two years Marion county has been put to the expense of several thousand dollars In the trial of one or two cases alone, the chief among which was the Wa Waterman terman Waterman trial, not in any way caused by Marion county being a wet county. He neglects to mention the fact that within recent months Lake county, a dry county, has been put to the ex expense, pense, expense, in one case, of more money than Marion county pays out in an en entire tire entire year in court costs, namely the Hough case, caused by drinking blind tiger booie. I desire to say, as' I said In the be beginning, ginning, beginning, that I believe that this coun county, ty, county, with its fine progressive spirit, with its magnificent public buildings, including a new court house, a new jail, and other public buildings, with a greater mileage of hard roads than any dry county in Florida, with its general freeness from crime, and its high moral tone, is the best county in the best state in the best nation on This county was prosperous before the freeze, and overcame a tremen tremendous dous tremendous set-back when its orange groves were devastated. This city has been ravaged by fire, by bank failures and other catastrophes, and yet we have grown to be a prosperous and a thriv thriving ing thriving city, talked of favorably by all throughout the state, and I have no hesitancy in predicting that if Marion county stays in the wet column that it will continue to grow and continue to lead the other counties of this state in business, in morals, in progressive progressive-ness ness progressive-ness and in thrift. Let us all pull to together gether together for a splendid countj and let us make her the richest and proudest county in the state, intsead of using her for personal political aggrandize aggrandizement ment aggrandizement with prohibition as the stepping stepping-stone stone stepping-stone to some selfish end. C (ED) CAR-MICHAEL. P. S. Since writing the above, the following letters and telegrams have been received from Pensacola, Plant City, St. Petersburg, Miami, giving the statistics of those cities which are "wet," and showing their great growth ; Dear Sir i am requested by the mayor to say that owing to the city offices being closed for a half holiday on Saturday that the Information ask asked ed asked for by you could not be obtained until this morning, and he has wired you this a. m., as follows: Assessed valuation, 1903, $6,950,920, based on 70 per cent, valuation. Assessed valuation, 1912, $15,675, $15,675,-840, 840, $15,675,-840, based on 60 per cent, valuation. Population in 1903 was 19,521, and in 1912, 29,510. JOHN G. WARD, Comptroller. Miami, Fla., Sept. 6, 1913. C. Carmichael, Ocala, Fla.: Ten years ago the property valua tion was $580,000; population, 3200; Regretting that the delay was una voidable, I am, Yours truly, present valuation, based upon one- third value, $5,000,000; population, 15,- 000. J W. WATSON, Mayor. St. Petersburg, Fla., Sept. 6, 1913. C. Marmichael, Ocala, Fla,: Population in 1900, 1575; in 1913, 8500. Valuation, $S72,147 in 1903; valuation in 1913, $C,179,S45. J. G. BRADSHAW, Mayor. Plant City, Fla., Sept. 6, 1913. C. Carmichael, Ocala, Fla.: Population ten years ago about 1100, records all burned. Assessed valua tion in 1907, $300,000; population, 1800. Present assessed valuation, $S0O,00O, real value $3,000,000, ,and population not less than 4000. W. B. HERRING, Mgr. (Advertisement) LOY'Ati ORDER OF MOOSE The Ocala Lodge No. 699, Loyal Order of Moose, meets each Thursday evening at 8 o'clock in the Moose building. Visiting brothers are in invited vited invited to attend our meetings. Geo. F. Mershon, Dictator. E. L. Stapp, Secretary. Rexall tooth paste, a perfect den den-trifice, trifice, den-trifice, antiseptic and deodorant; 25c! tubes, at Gerig's drug stores. 8-29 Loo!( Out For Poison Ivy Keep Your Blood Pure and Danger will be Avoided. All Blood Disorder are Knocked Out by S. S. S. Strolling through the woods or clear clearing ing clearing brush, picnickers, hunters, fisher fishermen men fishermen look out for poison ivy. And in the meantime keep your blood pure by using S. S. S. If your skin is rough with eczema, pimples or any other eruption, S. S. S. stimulates the fine network of blood vessels in the skin to dry up and heal all sore spots. S. S. S will do this positively. It dominates the principle of osmosis, stimulates the cells of the skin to select their own nutriment from the blood, made pure and healing by the wonder wonderful ful wonderful medicinal ingredients of this fa famous mous famous blood purifier. It is a safe rem remedy, edy, remedy, as it contains no minerals, and yet its action is a marveL You can get S. S. S. in any drug store, but insist upon having it. The Swift Laboratory in Atlanta. Ga, pre prepares pares prepares this famous blood purifier, and you should take no chance by permit permitting ting permitting anyone to recommend a substi substitute. tute. substitute. And if your blood condition is such that you would like to consult a specialist freely, address the Medical DeDt., The Swift Specific Company, 186 ! jrnft Bidg., Atlanta, Ga. ANDERSON SEEKS TO RECOVER FROM ESTATE OF ANGIER For legal services rendered during rhe lifetime of Jonathan C. Angier, for which it is alleged no compensa compensation tion compensation has been received, Herbert L. Anderson, one of the prominent at attorneys torneys attorneys of the city, has filed a suit for $12,000 damages against Henry C. Saterfield. as administrator, and Lydia A. Angier, as administratrix. of the estate of Johnathan C. Angier, deceased. In the declaration, which was filed, together with the praecipe for summons ad respondenrum, it is stated that Johnathan C. Angier died on October 25, 1911, and that services were rendered to Angier, during his lifetime, which amounted to $8,929.10, but which have never been paid. Jacksonville Times Times-Union. Union. Times-Union. CITI'A Citra, Sept. 12. Miss Clara Belle Smith left Sunday for Chicago, to enter the Methodist training school to prepare for missionary work. Harry Borland of Beaver, Fla., is here to spend the winter. Mrs. Bor land and little son, James, wilV come in a lew weeks. Jack Williams left this morning for Indian Springs. Mrs. Fishback and children of In Indiana diana Indiana are the guests of Mrs. Rowell. Mrs. Melton and three children are visiting relatives at Dawson, Ga. C. W. White of New York is here for a few days. Mr. Ed. L. Wartmann came home for a few days from Atlanta. Mr. Wartmann says he came home espe especially cially especially to cast his vote to help carry Marion county dry. Miss Byrd Wartmann of Ocala is spending a while with her brothers here. Miss Anna McDowell of Ocala was nere yesieraay lor tne purpose organizing a class in music. the of STAV ON YOUR FEET Taking Calomel Means Staying Home for the Day Take Dodson's Liver Tone and Save a Day's Work. If an attack of constipation or bil biliousness iousness biliousness hits you, there's no need to take a dose of calomel and spend at least a day getting over the effects of it. The Court Pharmacy sells the liver tonic, Dodson's Liver Tone, that takes the place of calomel and starts lazy liver without any bad after-effects. Dodson's Liver Tone does all the good thai; calomel ever" did, yet it is absolutely harmless to young people and old. It is a pleasant-tasting veg vegetable etable vegetable liquid that will relieve consti constipation pation constipation or sour stomach or other trou troubles bles troubles that go along with a lazy liver, without restriction of habit or diet. You don't leave off any of the things you regularly do when you take Dodson's Liver Tone. The Court Pharmacy sells Dod Dodson's son's Dodson's Liver Tone and give it a strong rersonal guarantee. They say, "A large bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone sells for 50 cents, and we will hand any person back his 50 cents if he tries a bottle and doesn't say that it does all that calomel ever does and does it pleasantly. Get the genuine Dodson's Liver Tone and if you are not pleased with it we will give your money back with a smile." Adv 24 REDDICK Reddick, Sept. 11. Miss Emma Vidall, of Gainesville, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Cromartie last week. Miss Georgia Long, of Ocala, is the guest of Misses Ruth Light andAnna Sherouse this week. Some of Reddick's most popular young ladies were shopping in Mic Mic-anopy anopy Mic-anopy last Wednesday. School opened last Monday with a large attendance. Miss Nannie Jones left last week for her home in Rochele. Some of the young people at this placeattended the picnic at Sparr last Friday. Mr. A. C. Maddox and sons, Clar Clarence ence Clarence and Marshall, were visitng friends at Decomerlast Friday and Saturday. Miss Katie Stuman returned to her home in Gainesville Wednesday, af after ter after a few days spent with Mr. and Mrs. R. N. Johnson. Miss Ruby Johnson is in Gaines Gainesville ville Gainesville having some dental work done. The infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Young, is quite ill. We all wish for a speedy recovery. Mr. A. Sherouse visited friends at Rochelle, Sunday. Miss Hattie Friday returned to her home in South Carolina last Friday, after a visit spent with her grother, Mr. S. L. Friday. Mr. Glover Denham had a very painful accident last Thursday while working on a house. The rafters gave away and he fell seventeen feet. Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Row were shopping in Ocala last week. To Prevent Blood Poisoning apply at oace the wonderful old reliable DR. PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL. a tar tar-gical gical tar-gical dressing that relieres pain and heals at the same time. Not a liaimeat. 25c. 50c $U0O. GAS IN THE STOMACH comes mented. Get rid of this badlv digested matter as quickly as possible if you would avoid a bilious attack. S I M M O IM S RED 2 LIVER REGULATOR (THE POWDER FORM) i Is a cleansing and strengthening medicine. It is a liver tonic first ot all and the liver is always aifected when the stomach goes wrong It puts life in a torpid liver, helps digestion, sweetens the breath, clears the complexion of sallowness, relaxes the bowls and puts the body in nne, vigorous condition. solo ir ouunt. mice, unci neuu, oo. J. H. ZEIL1N & CO.. ;? m ", xfgjfi v i. w r i a t t ?. ...... . This 12-room house, and lot, 75 by 150 feet, at Lake Weir, Fla., for sale to the first applicant for $1000; $300 of which must be paid cash, balance $50 per month, with interest. House will cost $3000 to build it. Suitable for dwelling or boarding house. Title perfect. Don't wait; it wil be sold at once. This ad. will not appear again. R. L. MARTIN, -ad D&W-lt Madam : Do you like the rang9 you've got? Don.t you need a new one? Your family will not be happy and healthy un unless less unless their food is well cooked. A proper range means food. One of our ranges will lighten the hard work of cooking, and make it fun. Come let us explain our ranges to you. 1 anon lariware C. Phone 118, Ocala, Fla. f The Laundry That Made Ocala Famous I v y 5 r V y i George Giles, J. Tu Wiley, President Vice-President A St. George Richardson, Assistant Cashier. Mctoopoffltom C(Do9 (Xot Incorporated) BANKERS' Capital $25,000.00. Do a General Banking Business, and Solicit the Patronage of the Public. Metropolitan Building South Magnolia St. Ocala, Florida from fad'VArh fo PROPS., ST. LOUIS. Mo . i,v I t J", 4 o 3 ; -f" 'i - ".Z. -""5 j,. Room 9, Merchants Blk., Ocala, Fla. A. To a Person Who Prides ? Himself on His Appearance Clean, Fresh, Well Laundered Linen ? is a necessity. To supply that ne necessity cessity necessity is Our Business. Ocala Steam Laundry 402-404 S. 31ain Street Thont 101. Frank P. Gadson, Cashier EIGHT THE OCALA EVENING STAR, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1913 HOW'S THIS? We offer one hundred dollars re reward ward reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. We the undersigned have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transactions and fin financially ancially financially able to carry out any obli obligations gations obligations made by his firm. National Bank of Commerce, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in internally,' ternally,' internally,' acting directly -upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all drug stores. Take Hall's Family Pill3 for con constipation, stipation, constipation, adv Concerning Eating. Let your heartiest meal be at night, or whenever your work for the day Is over. Fruit, toast, soft boiled eggs and oatmeal make a good breakfast. When the intermission between hours of labor is short no heavy food should be taken into the stomach. Hundreds of persons who eat heartily and return to work almost immediately afterward have dyspepsia, STRENGTHEN WEAK KIDNEYS Don't suffer long with weak kid kidneys. neys. kidneys. You can get prompt relief by taking Electric Bitters, that wonder wonderful ful wonderful remeiy, praised by women every everywhere. where. everywhere. Start with a bottle today, you will soon feel like a new woman with ambition to work, without fear of pain. Mr. John Dowling of San Francis fo, writes: "Gratitude for the wonierful effect of Electric Bit Bitters ters Bitters prompts me to write. It' cured my wife when all else tailed." Good for the J'.er as well. Nothing better for indigestion cr Mliousness. Price 50 cents an 1 $1, Sold by Tydings & Co. adv. One Cause of Family Trouble. Good Dr. Josiah Oldfield has discov discovered ered discovered that "although rr.urriages are made in heaven, they an too often marred at the breakfast table." But we find that they are still oftener marred at the dinner table. This is be because cause because of small platters. Statistics teach us that 9.4 husbands out of ev every ery every ten carve on platters so ruinous to tablecloths, shirt fronts, coiffures, "wall paper, ceilings and the moral na nature ture nature of man, woman and child that the only logical consequence is dispute. All those who have a torpid liver, weak digestion or constipated bow bowels, els, bowels, look out for chills. The season is here and the air is full of disease germs. The proper thing to do is to put your liver in good condition and purify the stomach and bowels. SIMMON'S RED Z LIVER REGULA REGULATOR TOR REGULATOR is the right remedy. It answers the purpose completely. Price large package, $1; small size, 25 cents. Sold by all druggists." ad i f Y Y Y 1 Y Y Y X Do You Wear Pants ? If yon do they should always be spotless and nicely pressed. Pressing and cleaning is our Y Y Y X Y y T Y 4 businoss. one. Call phone twenty- DODSON & RENTZ. 7-5-tf , W, G, 8LANGHARD EQNTiMCTPa m BUILDER PLANS FURNISH EIV ON APPLICATION P. O. BOX 40 OCALA. FTA. WOOD ' The 'Wood season will soon be here, and it isn't a bad plan to prepare for its coming now. I am in shape to nil a limlte.i amount of orders for well sea seasoned" soned" seasoned" OAK WOOD in any desir desired ed desired lengths. Get my prices beforo laying in your fall and winter supply. Call Phone or leave your orders at the Count's Gro Grocery cery Grocery Store, Cor Ft., King avenue and S. Main street. v J. H. J. COUNTS OCALA FLA. L. ALEXANDER, PRACTICAL Carpenter and Builder. Careful Estimates Made on All Con tract Work. Gives more and bettc work for the money than any othe contracto- in the city. 'Queen of Sea Routes" tTJCRCn ANTS' & MIXERS, TRANS. CO JACKSONVILLE TO Savannah, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Boston and Providence Fine steamers; best service; low fares; wireless telegraph. Through tickets to and from principal point3 fiend for booklet. H. C. AVERY, Agent, Jacksonville, Fla. L. D. JONES, a A. Seminole Hotel. Jacksonville. Fla Finest coastwise Trip in the World" tfGracCe LivirvgsforvHill Lufz AUTHOR f "MARC1A SCHUYLER" "PHOTOr KANE" "DAWMOr THC MORNING" ETC. ILLUSTRATIONS y- CHAPTER VII. Three days later Tyron Dunham en entered tered entered the office of Judge Blackwell by appointment. After the business was completed the Judge said with a smile. "Well, our mystery is solved. The little girl is all safe. She tele telephoned phoned telephoned me just after you had left the other day, and sent her maid after her hat. It seems that while she stood by the window, looking down into the street, she saw an automobile contain containing ing containing some of her friends. It stopped at the next building. Being desirous of speaking with a girl friend who was seated in the auto, she hurried out to the elevator, hoping to catch them. The elevator boy who took her down downstairs stairs downstairs went off duty immediately, which accounts for our not finding any trace of her, and he was kept at home by illness the next morning. The young woman caught her friends, and they insisted that she should get in and ride to the station with one of them who was leaving the city at once. They loaned her a veil and a wrap, and promised to bring her right back for her papers and other posses possessions, sions, possessions, but the train was late, and when they returned the building was closed. The two men who called for her were her brother and a friend of bis, it seems. I must say they were not so attractive as she is. However, tbe mystery is solved, and I got well laughed at by my wife for my fears." But the young man was puzzling how this all could be if the hat be belonged longed belonged to the girl he knew to "Mary." When he leff the Judge's office, he went to his club, determined to have a little quiet for thinking it over. He was annoyed when the office-boy ap appeared peared appeared to tell him there were some packages awaiting him in the office. "Bring them to me here, Henry." The boy hustled away, and soon came back, bearing two hat-boxes one of them in a crate and the heavy leather suit-case. With a start of surprise, Dunham sat up In his comfortable chair. "Say, Henry, those things ought not to come In here." He glanced anxious anxiously ly anxiously about, and was relieved to find that there was only one old gentleman in the room, and that he was asleep. "Suppose we go up to a private room Let Himself Silently Into the House. with them. Take them out to the ele elevator, vator, elevator, and I'll some In a moment." "All right, sah." "And say, Henry, suppose you re remove move remove that crate from the box. Then it won't be so heavy to carry." "All right, sah. I'll be thah in jest a minute." The young man hurried out to the elevator, and he and Henry made a quick ascent to a private room. He gave the boy a round fee, and was left in quiet to examine his property. As he fumbled the strings of the first box his heart beat wildly, and he felt the blood mounting to his face. Was he about tor solve the mystery which had surrounded the girl In whom his interest had now grown so deep that he could scarcely get her out of his mind for a few minutes at a time? But the box was empty, save for some crumpled white tissue-Daner. He took up the cover in perplexity and saw his own name written by him himself. self. himself. Then he remembered. This was the box he had sent down to the club by the cabman, to get it out of hi 3 way. Ee felt disappointed, and turned quickly to the other box and cut the cord. This time he was rewarded by seeing the great black hat, beautiful and unhurt in spite ef its journey to Chicago. The day was saved, and also the reputation of his mother'3 through some unaccountable mix-up. maid. But was there no word from lVs to bad 1 couldn't have found it the beautiful stranger? He searched I before and so saved you a lot of wor wor-hurriedly hurriedly wor-hurriedly through the wrappings, rv- But vou are one na tbe richer for pulled out the hat quite unceremoni- J lt for 1 Paid tne bm yesterday. Please ously, and turned the box upside down, accept it with my compliments." -but nothing else could be found. Cornelia exclaimed with delight over Then he went at the suit-case. Yes, the recovered hat there was the rain-coat. He took it i "But bow in the world could it have out triumphantly, for now his mother ?ot into your closet, Tryon? Tf 7fvi (Vatk , could say nothing, and, moreover, was not his trust in the fair stranger jus justified? tified? justified? He had done well to believe in her. He began to take out the other garments, curious to see what had been there for her use. A long, golden brown hair nestling on the collar of the bathrobe gleamed in a chance ray of sunlight. He looked at it reverently, and laid the garment down carefully, that it might not be disturbed. As he lifted the coat, he saw the little note pinned to the lapel, and seized it eagerly. Surely this would tell something! But no, there was only the message that she had arrived safely, and her thanks. Stay, she had signed her name "Mary." She had told him he might call her that. Could it be that it was her real name, and that she had meant to trust him with so much of her true story? He pondered the delicate writing of the note, thinking how like her it seemed, then he put the note in an In Inner ner Inner pocket and thoughtfully lifted out the evening clothes. It was then that he touched the silken lined cloth of her dress, and he drew back almost as if he had ventured roughly upon something sacred. Startled, awed, he looked upon it, and then with gentle fingers lifted it and laid it upon his knee. Gradually, as he looked, the gown told its own story, as she had thought it would: how she had been obliged to put on a disguise, and this was the only way to hide her own dress. 'With a sigh, he carefully folded up the cloth gown, wrapped It in folds of tissue paper from the empty hat-box, and placed it in his suit-case. Then he transferred the hat to its original box, rang the bell, and ordered the boy to care for the box and suit-case until he called for them. During the afternoon he took oc occasion casion occasion to run Into the Judge's private office about some unimportant detail of the business they were transacting, and as he was leaving he said: "By the way, Judge, who was your young woman who gave you such a fright by her sudden disappearance? You never told me her name. Is she one of my acquaintances, I wonder?" "Oh, her name is Mary Weston," said the Judge, smiling. "I don't be believe lieve believe you know her, for she was from California, and -was visiting here only for a few days. She sailed for Europe the next day." That closed the incident, and, so far as the mystery was concerned, only added perplexity to it. Dunham purposely remained down downtown, town, downtown, merely having a clerk telephone home for him that he had gone out of the city and would not be home until late, so they need not wait up. He did this because he did not wish to have his mother or his sister ask him any more questions about the missing hat and coat. Then he took a twenty twenty-mile mile twenty-mile trolley ride into the suburbs and back, to make good his word that he had gone out of town. A little after midnight he arrived at the club-house, secured his suit-case and the hat-box, and took a cab to his home. He left the vehicle at the cor cor-lest lest cor-lest the sound of it waken his mother or sister. He let himself silently into the house with his latch-key, and tip tiptoed toed tiptoed up to his room. The light was burning low. He put the hat-box in f the farthest corner of his closet, then he took out the rain-coat, and, slipping off his shoes, went softly down to the hall closet. In utter darkness he felt around and finally hung the coat on a hook under another long cloak, then gently re released leased released the hanging loop and let the garment slip softly down in an incon inconspicuous spicuous inconspicuous heap on the floor. He stole upstairs as guiltily as if he had been a naughty boy stealing sugar. .When he reached his room, he turned up his light, and, pulling out the hat-box, surveyed it thoughtfully. This was a problem which he had not yet been able to solve: How should he dispose of the hat so that it would be discov discovered ered discovered in such a way as to cast no fur further ther further suspicion upon the maid? He took the hat out and held it on his hand, looking at it from different angles and trying to remember Just how the girl had looked out at him from under its drooping plumes. Then with a sigh he laid it carefully in Its box again and went to bed. The morning brought clearer j thought, and when the summons to breakfast pealed through the hall he took the box boldly In his hand and descended to the dining-room, where he presented the hat to his astonished sister. "I am afraid I am the criminal, Cor Cornelia," nelia," Cornelia," he said in his pleasantest man manner. ner. manner. "I'm sorry I can't explain just how this thing got on my closet-shelf. I must have put it there myself Visible Mo die No. 10 R ental Terms One Month $3 Six Months $15 Sold EASY PAYMENTS Plan Paragon Ribbons, Red Seal Carbon Papers. Machine catalogs and supplies booklet on request SMITH PREMIER DEPARTMENT W. liity St. Jacksonville, Fla. Impossible. I left it m my room, I know I did, for I spoke to Norah about it before I left. How do you account for it?" "Oh, I don't attempt to account for it," he said, with a gay wave of his hand. "I've been so taken up with other things this past week, I may have done almost anything. By the way, Mother, I'm sure you'll be glad to hear that Judge Blackwell has made me a most generous offer of business relations, and that I have de decided cided decided to accept it." Amid the exclamations of delight over this bit of news, the hat was forgotten for a time, and when the mother and sister finally reverted to it and began to discuss how it could have gotten on the closet shelf, he broke in upon their questions with a suggestion. "I should advise, Mother, that you make a thorough search for your rain raincoat. coat. raincoat. I am sure now that you must have overlooked it. Such things often happen. We were so excited the morning Cornelia missed the hat that I suppose no one looked thoroughly." "But that is impossible, Tryon," said his mother, with dignity. "I had that closet searched most carefully." "Nevertheless, Mother, please me by looking again. That closet is dark, and I would suggest a light." He beat a hasty retreat, for he did not care to be present at the finding of the rain-coat. "There is something strange about this," said Mrs. Dunham, as with ruf ruffled fled ruffled dignity she emerged from the hall closet, holding her lost rain-coat at arm's length. "You don't suppose your brother could be playing some kind of a joke on us, do you, Cornie? I never did understand jokes." "Of course not," said practical Cor Cornelia, nelia, Cornelia, with a sniff. "It's my opinion that Norah knows all about the mat matter, ter, matter, and Tryon has been helping her out with a few suggestions." "Now, Cornelia, what do you mean by that? You surely don't suppose your brother would try to deceive us his mother and sister?" "I didn't say that, Mother," answer answered ed answered Cornelia, with her head in the air. "You've got your rain-coat back, but you'd better watch the rest of your wardrobe. I don't intend to let Norah have free range in my room any more." 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