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EVENING Weather Forecast: Showers tonight and Sunday. 0 GALA, FLORIDA, SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1919. VOL. 2G, KO.'GG TO BE PART OF THE CE TREATY NO CHANCE, WIRES MR. WILSON, TO SIDETRACK THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS , (Associated Press) -7 .-. New York, March 15. Secretary Tumulty has received a ; cablegram from President Wilson saying: "The plenary council has positively decided the league of nations is to be a part of the peace treaty." The message was in response to an inquiry asking the tiuth of certain newspaper stories saying tho ieagua wasn't to be incor incorporated porated incorporated in the peace treaty. WILSON AT WORK AT ONCE Paris, Friday, March 14. President Wilson plunged into the peace confer conference ence conference T;iobIems immediately upon his a; rival today,, beginning a conference with Premier Lioyd George as sooi. as he reached the new presidential residence. After luncheon the presi president dent president held a long conference attended by all the main directing forces of the conferencs excepting Premier Or Orlando. lando. Orlando. Later Mr. Wilson visiteet President Poincare". IT NEEDS IMPROVEMENT (Associated Press) Washington, March" 1G. The post post-office office post-office department has called a confer conference ence conference here April 1st to 3rdto discuss improvement and extension of the postal service. y ; MRS. JAMES FORT The sound of a pistol shot at about SCb'clock this forenoon caused some excitement on East Claris: street. Upon investigation it was found that Mrs. James Fort had shot herself through the abdomen with a ,32-cali-bre revolver. She was immeHiately taken to the Marion County Hospital, where, after an operation, she died about, 11 o'clock, j ; x No cause can be given 'for the deed, except that Mrs. Fort had been mort or less indisposed for some weeks, and possibly became despondent. She gave j no intimation of her intentions when Mr. Fort left home only a short time - before she fired the shot The body is now at the undertaking parlors of E. C. Jordan & Company, awaiting funeral arrangements. Mrs. Fort has always been of a cheerful and kindly disposition, and her death greatly grieves her rela relatives tives relatives and friends. V ; : SHADY : ,". Shady; March 13. Mr. Leslie L. Horne has. recently sold one of his farms, the still place. We understand that Mr. Horne will move about two miles to his other farm. We are glad of this for we would hate to see this estimabel family move away. Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Douglas and children of Weirsdale came oyer Sun Sunday day Sunday and brought Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Douglas home. Mr, Douglas says the South Florida Fair was good but in his estimation the old Marion County Fair was better. v We are glad to report Mrs. Carl Buhl steadily improving and with the aid of her crutches can get about siome. " ' Rev. W. H. Wrfghton preached Sun Sunday day Sunday afternoon to t a large audience. Rev. Wrighton was accompanied by Mrs. Haskell. Miss Mary Gates and Mr. John L. Edwards : The Sunday school is growing in in interest terest interest and attendance. We were glad to have Mr. and Mrs. Horne .with f us Sunday afternoon. Mr. Horne is the genial superintendent of Calvary Sun Sunday day Sunday school, Mr. Whaley of Arkansas was also in attendance at the services Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Sam Redding's friends regret to hear that she is sick and have missed her from her usual place at church. -:y- We are glad "A Lady Contributor" has resumed her place on the' Star. She is making friends and admirers all the time' and weenjoy that column very much. Wednesday afternoon, Mrs. J. D. McCaskill of Ocala invited the writer ' to accompany her and a party of friends to Silver Springs." The day was ideal, fair and cool and the ride, the beautiful scenery at this season, tne springs, the jolly party altogether gave us a delightful afternoon, the memory of -which will linger long with Little Miss May Yealey of tZuber ia visiting Ker grandparents, Mr. and , Mrs. Sherman Holland. The farmers are "pegging away" between rains. Sometimes we hear them grumbling, but they ; are pretty cheerful mostly, : We know we cannot starve in Florida and We can live like kings in Marion county, if we do not have something very unusual from the weather man. OlOIEflS IILII TO STAY Doughboys Anxious to Come Home but Don't Intend do Shirk Their Duty - (Associated Press) Coblenz, Friday, March 15. Gen. Pershine inspected the First and Sec- cid divisions here today, presented more than eighty decorations and talked with the soldiers, all of -whom expressed a willingness to remain as long as necessary for the United f States to keep an army in Europe, al although though although they are eager to'return home. 1 0 ENABLE COUNTIES TO MANAGE FAIRS Following is a copy of a bill to be introduced at the coming session of the legislature: y An act to authorize the several counties of the state of Florida to conduct and operate fairs and exposi expositions tions expositions for the benefit arid development of the agricultural, horticultural, live stock and other resources of the sev several, eral, several, counties of the state of Florida, and to prescribe the powers and du duties ties duties of the boards of county commis commissioners sioners commissioners of the several counties with relation", to such fairs and expositions. Be it enacted by the legislature of the state of Florida: Section 1. That whenever the board of county commissioners of any coun ty m this state shall deem it for the best interest of such '.county, it shall be lawful for such county, acting by and through said board of county county-commissioners, commissioners, county-commissioners, to hold, conduct and operate county live stock, poultry ag agricultural, ricultural, agricultural, horticultural and othe, r fairs or expositions at any or all times, or from time to time, for thatJ purpose; to buy, lease, acquire and oc occupy cupy occupy lands; to erect buildings and im improvements provements improvements of all kinds thereon; to develop the same and to sell, lease, or convey v such property or any part thtreof in the discretion of said board, from time to time, and to charge and receive compensation for admission to such fairs or expositions and f or. he sale or renting of space for exposi expositions tions expositions or other provisions, to conduct and, hold public meetings; to super vise and conduct ;lectures and all kinds of demonstration work in connection with or for the improvement of agri-Lmen cultural, horticultural, stock raising, poultry raising and all matters con connected nected connected therewith ; to hold exhibits of agricultural and horticultural pro products, ducts, products, live stock, poultry, and domes domestic tic domestic animals, to award premiums and prizes and to give certificates or di diplomas plomas diplomas of excellence and generally to do, perform and carry out all manner of acts and business usual or proper in connection with such county fairs or expositions. . Section 2. In order to carry ( our the purposes of this act, the several boards of county commissioners of this state- are hereby, authorized to employ such agents and ko expend in their discretion such sums of money as they may deem expedient, to be paid from the funds of the several counties. Section 3. This act shall become effective immediately upon its becom becoming ing becoming a law. v ATTENTION,- CLUB MEMBERS The opening session of the short course on; home economics will beghl at 2 p. m; Monday,, March 17th, at the Woman's Club building. The dem demonstrators onstrators demonstrators will.be present andemoll andemoll-mfint mfint andemoll-mfint cards will be given out. All members are urged to attend. CARD OF THANKS We, the undersigned, wish, to thank the public for saving our household yesterday. ; Mr.- and Mrs. Delbert Haskell. MrsvF. LN Grantham. v Mrs. A. M. Rochford. ; Mrs. Annie Sheffield. 223 Oklawaha avenue. The Ocala Iron Works Garage is at your service any time night or day. Your patronage is solicited, no mat matter ter matter how small or how large your job might be. V 13-tf Tr in, 1 1 r V Ladies, we have another shipment of those Roxbury Household. Rubber Gloves, sizes 6 to 8, at fifty cents the pair. Gerig's Drug Store. ; tf ' Lj Butternut bread has now returned to its old time flavor. The war is over and we do riot have to use any substi substitutes tutes substitutes in its manufacture. Carter's Bakery. 13-tf a f 40,000 eggplant and pepper plants, 25 cents per hundred; fifty for 15 cents (les -sthan 50 not sold.)' Ocala Greenhouse. 14-6t Oakland Sensible Six will arrive. 14 soon A1ER AGIST OOLSHEVIS Sarmatia Will be Stationed by the , Allies as the Sentinel of Civilization , (Associated Press) Paris, March 15.0ne of the first questions to be considered by the council of ten, with President Wilson participating, will be the boundary be tween Poland and Germany. It is unffiocially known that Danzig is in included cluded included in Poland by the Polish boun boundary dary boundary commission and the general ter7 rtorial commission, which are known to have agreed upon a boundary which gives Poland strategic points which should make her an effective barrier between Bolshevism and western Eu rope. BRIGHT BITS f ... (By a Lady Contributor) The whisper of a beautiful woman can be heard farther than the loudest yell of duty. Some wicked wretch has most un unkindly kindly unkindly said, "Old maids are embers whence the sparks have flown." ' "Do you 'know that you talk in your sleep," said Mrs. S. to her, husband, the municipal judge. "Well, do you begrudge me those few words?" he snapped back. A widow said to her daughter. " When you are my age, you will be dreaming of a husband." "Yes, mam,' replied the thoughtless little hussy, "for the second time.", We were asked the question a few days ago, "Why. some women are called Amazons?" Oh, we don't know, unless, perhaps, er it is because they are uncommon uncommonly ly uncommonly wide ,at the mouth." ' A woman who has never loved, hugged, kissed, played, with, listened to, t told stories to or thoroughly spanked a child, has missed the car cardinal dinal cardinal joys of life. m 9 m We are enjoying at the present time the most gorgeous, moonlight season. A few evenings ago a couple of young casually, dropped into a certain home for an informall call. The fam ily were seated about in pleasant groups on the spacious veranda, and 'two" were swinging in the swing. A young lady approached. Tfc" "real -sweet" youncr fellow, seeincf as he supposed an intrusion, remarked playfully and with a beaming simper, "You need not look at me as tho you wanted to eat" me." "Qh, no," sweetly replied the young lady as, she turned to find another seat, "I never eat greens." "Oh, sir," said a fond little bride, to a telegraph operator a few morn mornings ings mornings ago, "I want to send a kiss to my husband this morning; how can I do it?" "Easiest thing in the world, ma'm," said the obliging operator. "All you have to do is to give it to me, and 111 transmit it right away.' "If that's the case," f eplied the blushing young thing, "the directoi ought to put much younger and hand handsomer somer handsomer men in your position." . Says one lady to another, "I can trace my ancestry ,back through nine nineteen teen nineteen -generations." "You can?" said the friend, "and what else can you do?" With a blush, the dear soul looked to see how far she had dropped.- Those are fortunate boys and girls in Ocala who are not at the mercy of homefolks too busy and too self self-seeking seeking self-seeking to see that they have the right kind of food, the right kind of associates and the right kind of fun and the right kind of home study. Seemingly the most popular litera literature ture literature of the current month is the florid pronouncements of the seed and fash fashion ion fashion merchants. "No mere writer of modern times.' says an exchange, could 'rival their editors in the gaudy, sparkling wordingsl" If a poet should present a faded wisp of parsley' or a tattered vision of moonglow-silk. after the effervescing manner of the seed and fashion merchants, the blankest wind of blank verse would be worth a couple of dollars per line. If Titian could handle his pigments as the greens and silk dealers do their praises, he wuld be something more than an old master, andthere would be statues of him in every park in the United States, including the new Tus- cawilla park in. Ocala. It's a wise dove indeed that knows his own feathers these times. At every church in Ocala Sunday there will be something worth hear- GIVE PEACE HIT AW Preliminary Treaties, According to British Plans', to be Made at Once with Central Powers (Associated Pres3) Paris, March 15 -The British peace conference program is understood to contemplate the signing of separate preliminary treaties with the Central Powers as soon as possible after Ger Germany many Germany is so disposed. Nexfc-would come consideration of any amendments to be presented to the constitution of .the league of nations, and then the league would be whipped into shape. The final peace treaty would follow and it would include the leageu of nations plan. The leading thought among the British now seems to be to strip the preliminary peace terms of all unnec unnecessary essary unnecessary incumbrance and secure' the signatures of the Central Powers so the worjd can begin to settle back to normal. SPECIAL MEASURES NECESSARJ Paris, Friday, March 14. The sub sub-commission commission sub-commission of the commission, on re responsibilities sponsibilities responsibilities for the war has reported that strictly and technically criminal prosecutions for those nvho brought about the struggle were "anomalous and Unnecessary," according to an of official ficial official communique. The report added that the peace conference "might adopt special, measures and even create special machinery to deal with those who planned the war." NEUTRALS RESPOND Paris, March 15. The pace confer conference ence conference invitation to neutrals to partici participate pate participate in a discussion of the league of nations has brought responses from Switzerland, Holland, Denmark, Nor Norway way Norway and Sweden, which forwarded statements of their views to the con conference ference conference secretary. ing, something that will make you live the following week days better, if you catch the lesson. The Chicago News says the Ger Germans mans Germans have painted theirparrot white, and are trying to pass it off for a peace dove at the conference, but it keeps on yelling for crackers. The editor of this column is easy to get along with and never hard to please, and we rejoice to see the worn- ea coming into their own, and so fari as we have observed they are doing good work in shops and offices. But may we say without offense that while at work in public places, girl clerks should forget their love affairs. Per Perhaps haps Perhaps the young men are more to blame' than the young women, but when we go into a store and are com compelled pelled compelled to wait 'while the girl clerk flirts with a gentleman admirer, it re recalls calls recalls an old habit we have been trying to quit for a number of years: to withold swearing vengeance. No young man should lean on a counter and talk to a girl clerk and no clerk should allow it. The proprietor does not like it, the customers do not like it, and you lower self-respect when you permit the liberty. Observing Visitor in Miami Herald. A banker we- know says that in loaning money, he also asks about the man's wife. Is she a spender. Does she often run the financial affairs of the home against her husband's wishes 01 judgment? The. banker is suspicious of that sort o'f man. You may think when a woman, is very prominent socially she; "helps" her husband, but this banker denies it. " Perhaps Ocalans know little of "Purim Day." It is a festival of "lots" and falls on March 16th this year. It is one of the most popular of the Jewish great days, and deservedly holds first rank among merry-making events of this year. The history con connected nected connected with Purim is that of fair Esther the loyal Mordecai, who per persuaded suaded persuaded the mighty king of Persia to sav their people from destruction. Regardless of the absolute histori historicity city historicity of the book of Esther, Purim earns veneration from both orthordox and reform Jews for the earnest ap appeal peal appeal to hold faith in a higher power, an(J that material powers, material grandeur, isto be sacrificed and for forgotten gotten forgotten when one's friends are in dan danger. ger. danger. Nowhere 'is the solidarity of the Jews for the purpose of bringing God's truth to earth so well illustrated as in the simple story of Esther. And a serious moral lies beneath the jocu jocular lar jocular light vein that the festival season produces. 1 Ocala has never before had so many bridal couples or, rather, we should say, young married folks. "John and Mary," who have just re recently cently recently established their wee little home, sat cooing on the front stoop of WOULD SHIPS I'll BE SHIHED In Return for the Boats, Monthly Rations of Food Will be Given by the Allies (Associated Press) Brussels, Friday, March 14. Ger German man German delegates to the conference here regarding the Allies taking over the German mercantile fleet and provis provisioning ioning provisioning Germany today, definitely ac accepted cepted accepted the conditions imposed by the Allies. A monthly ration of 270,000 tens of foodstuffs was fixed by the Allies. SUCCESSOR TO EISNER v Basel, March 15. The Bavarian diet, which convenes Monday, will be asked to elect a new premier to suc ceed Kurt Eisner, who was. assassi assassinated nated assassinated in February. BOAT OWNERS WILL EMPLOY STRIKE BREAKERS (Associated Pre as ) New York, March 15- In an effort to break the harbor worker's strike, the boat owners today planned to pii.ee their vessels in operation with strike breakers and called on the po police lice police for protection. fEMPLE ATTRACTION FOR THE WEEK Today: Priscilla Dean in "The tiirea iiusoana." Monday: May Allison in "A Suc cessful Adventure." Tuesday: Norma Talmage in "The Forbidden City." NOTICE The home'-economics committee program that was to have been given at the Woman's Club Saturday after afternoon noon afternoon will be merged into the house housekeepers keepers housekeepers week and there will be no club meeting. All members of the committee are urged to be present at these lectures and demonstrations. Mrs. B. H. Seymour, Seymour,-Chairman Chairman Seymour,-Chairman Home Economics. their tiny dove cote, when John says to Mary: "Dearie dear, let's have a Welsh rabbit for dinner this evening." Sure, how grand; we certainly will. Now hurry and get balck exactly at six." And they parted for the day. Near the appointed hour John appear ed, whistling as merrily as a jaybird, and was thunderstruck to see Mary approaching from the rear with eyes overflowing with tears. "Oh, John," she said, "I have had a most horrid day. After you left I went to the market to get the rabbit for dinner, and the impudent man laughed and said 'there isn't a Welsh rabbit in all Ocala.' I couldn't find a plain rabbit this side of Santos. So, that you might not be disappointed in your dinner, I hired -a car and went to Santos, and the man there let me have an. awful nice Belgian hare, and was awfully sweet to kill it for me. I got home at 1 o'clock tired out, but went to my job like a nice little girl, and here I've worked, from one to six o'clock, and that rabbit isn't half picked yet." It is nice to be liked. Editors (let me whisper) are just as sensitive to compliments as the rest of man or womankind. Every compliment is re received ceived received with a hope, and sometimes we are rewarded. "Some one very kindly remarked to the editor of "Bright Bits" a morning or two ago, "We en enjoy joy enjoy your column very much indeed. Why don't you write for the short story magazines, too?" Perhaps we are trying. Anyway, little friend, your liking of us is a great incentive, a wonderful spur. We respond to it like flowers to the sun. Said a legisator-elect between gulps of coca-cola, "What do you consider the object of legislation, Jim?" "Why, er the greatest good to the greatest number." What do you consider the greatest number?" continued his quizzer. "Why, er, no one, of course." A man's best marriage certificate is a bald head. ' "Did you ever stand aside and listen to your audience's opinion of your sermon as it came out," asked one minister of another, not long since. "I did once." A pause and sigh, "but 111 never do it again." "I. am certainly in favor of heavy taxations on bachelors," said a dear old lady. "True, madam,", said the fogy. "Bachelordom ie indeed a great luxury-" One debt of gratitude men owe to Dr. Mary Walker, and one which they ought never to forget, is that it was she who invented the inside neckband on shirts, the band which protects the SEAS FOPi il II r nnn L liiii i American Transport Struck a Mine in tne North Sea and Lost with Nine of Her Men (Associated Press London, March 15. Nino sailors are reported to have drowned La the sinking of the American naval trans transport, port, transport, Yselhaven, Baltimore for Copen Copenhagen, hagen, Copenhagen, which struck a mine Friday morning, according to Lloyds. Thirty Thirty-five five Thirty-five survivors were landed at Hartle Hartle-jkjoI jkjoI Hartle-jkjoI by a British steamer. PUTTING A CRLMP IN 4 WAR-TIME PROHIBITION Devotees of Gambrinus Anxious to v Put Drouth Off to the Very Last Day T (Associated Pres.?) New York, March 15. Preliminary action toward testing the constitu constitutionality tionality constitutionality of the war-time prohibition act was taken here today when a suit was filed in federal court by the mi nority stockholders against the James Everards breweries. The court is ask ed restrain the breweries from sus pending manufacturing activities May 1st and its sales July 1st as required by federal statute. The complaint al alleges leges alleges the", emergency prohibition clause to the agricultural bill is un unconstitutional. constitutional. unconstitutional. ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF TRAINS AT OCALA Seaboard Air Line, Northbound No. 4: Arrives 1:41 p. in. Departs 1:5G p. in. No. 16 (limited): Arrives and de de-departs departs de-departs at 4:07 p. m. No. 2: Arrives 2:50 a. m. Departs 2:55 a. a. Seaboard Air Line, SouthbcnnJ " No. Arrives 3:06 p. in. Departs 3:26 p. a. No. 15 (Limited) : Arrives nnd de departs parts departs 5:10 p. rn. No. 1: Arrives 2:45 a. m. Depart 3 2:50 a. zn. Atlantic Cozst Une (Main Libs) Northbound No. 10: Arrives and departs 6:42 a. ca. No. 40: Arrives 2 p.'m. Departs 2:20 p. xn. No. C3: Arrives and departs 3:27 a. m. Atlantic Coast Lire (Main Lb..e) - Southbound No. 37: Arrives and departs 3:16 a. m. No. ZD: Arrives and departs 3:C5 p. xn. No. 9 1 Arrives and departs 10:13 p. m. Atlantic Coast line Brssches, Scuth- be HE 5 No. 151 (Sunny Jim): For Wilcox, Monday, Wednesday and Friday, leaves 7:10 a. in. No. S3 (Sunny Jim): For Lakeland, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, leaves 7:40 a. m. No. 141: Daily except Sunday, ar rives 11:50 a. rn. from Wilcox. No. 43: For Homcsassa, leaves 3:23 Atlantic Coast Lin 2 Crunches, Ncrth- No. 43: From Homosassa: Arrives 1:3 p. zn. No. 150 (Sunny Jim): From Wil Wilcox, cox, Wilcox, Monday, Wednesday and Friday, arrives C:45 p. ra. No. 32 (Sunny Jim): From Lake Lakeland, land, Lakeland, Tuesday, Thursday and Satur day, arrives 10:43 p. m. No. 140: Daily except Sands y, leaves for VCiox at 4:43 p. m. Oklawaha Valley No. 71 (southbound): Arrives 1 pjn. No. 72: (northbound): Leaves 3:CD flesh frcm being rubbed by the collar button. The Literary Digest, perhaps, en joys one of the largest circulations of any periodicalln the world. In its classified columns of advertisements is an almost inch ad. of Fruitland Park, telling to millions the beauties of that little city and how melons, peaches, cotton and orange groves thrive. Its board of trade is awake and forging ahead. It seems to folks that know that section of the state, that if Fruitland Park's board of trade can afford an almost inch ad. in the Literary Digest, that Ocala can well afTord two or three inches, to run con continuously tinuously continuously as does Fruitland Park's ad. Certain it is that "the bee that gets the honey doesn't hang around the hive." Ocala must advertise. Must go after the people with good advertise advertisements, ments, advertisements, placed in the best papers and magazines of the country. ! Uso the unclassified ads. It pays. OCALA EVENING STAR, SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1919 OCALA EVENING STAR Published Every Day Except Snnday by STAR PUBLISHING COMPANY OF OCALA, FLA. R. IU Carroll, President P. V. Leavenood, Secretary-Treasurer J. II. Benjamin, Editor Entered at Ocala, Fla, oatof flee as second-class matter. TELEPHONES nnlea Offlet Ffve-Oae Editorial Department . . .Two-Sevea MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled for the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper herein. All rigrhts of republications of special dispatches herein are also re reserved. served. reserved. uu aieu w iuu&i news iheuusucu SUBSCRIPTION RATES Domntie One year. In advance. . ...'. . .f 6.00 .Six months, in advance .......... 3.00 Three months, in advance.......! 1.50 One month, in advance..........-.' .60 One year, In advance. . ... . . . 18.00 8Ix months, In advance .... . ..... 4.25 Three months, in advance. 2.25 One month, to ad vane..... .80 - ADVERTISING RATES Ptspiayt Plate 10c. per Inch for con consecutive secutive consecutive insertions. Alternate Inser Insertions tions Insertions 25 per cent, additional. Composi Composition tion Composition charged on ads. that run less than fcix times 5c. per inch. Special position 20 per cent, additional. Bates based on 4 -Inch minimum. Less than.four Inches will take higher rate, which will be furnished on application. I trading Notices t 5 c. pet line for first Insertion; 3c. per line for each subse subsequent quent subsequent insertion. One change a week allowed on readers without extra com com-oosltlor oosltlor com-oosltlor charges. RATES. SLx line maximum, one time 25c.; three times 50c; six times 75c; one month 3. Payable in advance. Legal advertisements at legal rates. Electros must be mounted, or charge will be made f or mounting. THE TERMS OF PEACE It is more than likely that the terms that the Allies will grant, or rather enforce, onGermany, have already been practically agreed on, and that within a few days they will be known. The Germans will agree to them,, of course. They can do nothing else, except resolve themselves into the state of a besieged city, with its main defenses taken, its ammunition almost expenses and its provisions almost consumed."-,;"; '.'v.:5; It is impossible for any qutside the inner, circle of statesmen to know what the tirms will be. But it is reasonable to suppose that while they will be severe more severe than any . ever inflicted on any ; people before, excepting those who have been exter exterminated minated exterminated or subjugated -they will be milder than could have been expected; far milder than those Germany would have exacted if she had won. There are many who feel, and ,witb great excuse, that the same bitter cup that Germany compelled Belgium, Serbia and Rumania to drain, and held unrelentingly to the lips of France until British and American might dashed it away, should be pass passed ed passed to her in turn and she should be compelled to drink it dry.' Such just justice ice justice as this, however, is beyond the right of man and is only within the power of God. "Vengeance is mine, I will repay," is the most exact truth. Vengeance is the most unwise of poli policies. cies. policies. It ever recoils on the avenger. It would be no use to try to make the Germans suffer what they have made others to suffer. It could only be done by going thru their country, with fire and sword, inflicting murder for mur murder, der, murder, rape for rape, robbery for rob robbery,! bery,! robbery,! and by the time it was : done there would be no decent people left hi the world. ; It seems the disposition of Ameri America ca America and Britain to dictate terms that while severe will give the Germans, a chance to redeem themselves, and while France, which has suffered most of the great powers, it naturally the most bitter toward the Teutons, there is no danger that she will do anything to sully her hitherto-unstained soul ty trying to be unmerciful. Germany will have to pay a heavy indemnity how heavy it is impossible to say in advance, but it will be a MICKIE SAYS NO. StR ; MKMAEU O'BRIEN NOU CAWTT OO OOVJVi -TO "fvtE ITEMS FOft -The PAPER.FOSt L VOU'RE QOVN(x lO CHURCH WHH ME. SHOULD THINK VOio OBT ENOUGrH OP THAT rRINtlNCjr OFFICE DURING- THE VMEfcK VMVTHOUT HfeMlNGr BUT MAVJ rrn s ha. sue? MICKY IS TIIE STAR'S DEVIL burden ; that it will tax her muscles to carry. However, it will be one that she can bear, and rid of the burden of imperialism, if her people estab establish lish establish an orderly government and work with the century-old habit of German industry and thrift, they will not be any worse off than the rest of Eu rope. Almost the entire world, in conse quence of the war, is racked with trou trouble ble trouble and burdened with debt. A treaty that renders Germany hopelessly bankrupt will add to the load that other nations musf carry. "We can't shut them up in an iron ring to starve and murder each other, for if we do we will transfer the obloquy they now bear to ourselves, in even greater measure. It is therefore almost certain that the peace conference will give the Germans terms that will enable them to establish a credit, feed themselves and renew their business. They will have to pay as much as they can pay for the damage they have inflicted on Belgium, France and Britain, and pos possibly sibly possibly on some neutral nations. The United States has already confiscated more than enough German property to' pay for the damage the Germans did to American property. The Unit ed States is not likely to ask for a war indemnity, and it is to be doubted that the Allied nations will. It would be utterly impossible for the Germans to pay. They could not even pay in terest on the war debts of the Allies. As for territorial changes, the world has probably found out that taking provinces by one- nation from another doesn't' pay. France will un undoubtedly doubtedly undoubtedly keep Alsace-Lorraine, t and probably 'occupy the Saar basin. Alsace-Lorraine will not be an an annexation nexation annexation but a restoration. The Saar coal mines will be kept as an indem indemnity nity indemnity for the mines of Northern France, which the Germans wantonly ruined. They may be returned to the Germans in the future. A small part of Germany contiguous to Liege will probably go to Belgium for strategic strategical al strategical reasons. Denmark claims a part of Schleswig, which is peopled by Danes, and which was annexed by Prussia in 1866, and will probably obtain it. The port of Danzig and a wide strip of territory thru East Prussia, possibly all East Prussia, Posen and part of Silesia, are likely to go to Poland, which the Allies desire to rebuild into a powerful nation. 'Austria, Germany's partner in crime, has gone to pieces, and all left to do is to sort the pieces out. Italy will take the territory in which Ital Italians ians Italians predominate, which will give her the line of the Alps, Trieste, Fiume, and possibly a long line of the .east Adriatic coast. -Bohemia, and More More-via via More-via are already the independent na nation tion nation of Czecho-Slovakia. Poland and the Ukraine are fighting over Galicia, but the Allies will insist that it go to Poland, a part of which it was before the partition. Croatia and Slavonic have cast their lot with Serbia in forming the new nation of Jugo Jugoslavia. slavia. Jugoslavia. Hungary has set up for her herself,! self,! herself,! and will form a small but com compact pact compact nation. Transylvania and Buko Buko-wina wina Buko-wina have already been annexed by Rumania. . Bulgaria will be allowed to live. She will have to give up territory she took from Serbia and Gree.ce, but may be given Adrianqple and a part of Thrace.." Turkey will be taken to pieces. It is likely that all Asiatic as well as European Turkey in whieh the Greeks predominate will be given, to Greece. This will include a large part of Asia Minor. Constantinople will either be internationalized or given' to Greece with "an agreement that the Darda Dardanelles nelles Dardanelles and Bosporus shall always be open to all nations. Armenia will be become come become an independent nation, with either France or America as a guard guardian ian guardian until the people are able to go it alone. Britain will administer Meso Mesopotamia potamia Mesopotamia and France Syria. Palestine is likely to be opened to the world and put under the administration of an in international ternational international council. Arabia is already independent. About all left to the Turks will be Anatolia, a province of Asia Minor,, of about a hundred thou thousand sand thousand square miles of territory and four million inhabitants. The Bag Bagdad dad Bagdad railway passes thru it, but that will be internationalized, and it is more than likely that it will be put under American business management.'-;-- Germany's colonies, according to President Wilson's plan, will be in internationalized, ternationalized, internationalized, but it is likely that the British, Australians; South Afri Africans, cans, Africans, French and Japanese will con control trol control those in their spheres as com completely pletely completely as tho' they were annexed. Japan already holds the territory Germany took from China, and which Japan in turn took from Germany. We do not believe that Germany will 'plan for a war of revenge. We believe that when the Germans have opportunity to return to the ways of peace and time to think, they will try to reinstate, themselves in the good will of the-world. There is nothing in- revenge for them. The influences that have just defeated them will be stronger twenty or fifty years from r.ow than they are today. A great many conflicting issues and irritating circumstances will be done' away with by the -treaty, and with the fearful object lesson it has had the world will settle down to enduring peace. The greatest menace now is Bolshevism, but it will eventually 'commit suicide. "The war is over and we are now using no substitutes in our famous Butternut bread. Carter's Bakery, tf Oakland Sensible Six will soon arrive. 14 AT THE CHURCHES TOMORROW Baptist 9:45 a. m. Sunday school. A cordial invitation is extended to all visitors at the First Baptist church. Ahe Rev. J. T. Frazer will preach in the morning at 11 a. m. At 7:30 p. m. Rev. R. F. Rogers will preach. B. Y. P. U. at 6:30 p. m. Mid-week prayer service at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday. Gome and bring a friend. Grace Episcopal Second Sunday in Lent 8 a. m. Holy communion. 9:45 a. m. Sunday school. 11 a. m. Morning prayer and ser sermon. mon. sermon. Subject, "The Forfeited Bless Blessing." ing." Blessing." 7:30 p '. m. Evening prayer and sermon. Subject, "The .Hardest Fight." Lenten services of each week: Tuesday, 5 p. m. Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. Thursday, 5 p. m. - Alethodist 9:45 a. m. Sunday school. v Let all the teachers and scholars be in their place. .11 a. m. Preaching by the pas tor on "Lift. Up Your Eyes and Look on the Fields.? John 4:35., 6:30 p. m. Senior Epworth League. Come on time. 7:30 p: m. Preaching by Rev. J. T Frazier. This will be perhaps your last opportunity to hear this good preacher. 7:45 : Wednesday, payer meeting. Since you have signed "pledge for fellowship of intercession, please come to prayer 'meeting and pray and worship with us. Strangers and visitors are cordially invited to our services. Smith Hardin, Pastor. Christian Sunday-school at 10 o'clock. Mrs Jennie Whitfield, superintendent. f First Presbyterian 9:45 a. m Sunday school. L. M. Murray, superintendent. 11 a. m. Public worship. 2:30 p. m. Junior Society. 7:30 p. nu Public worship. 8 p. m. Wednesday, mid-week prayer meeting. The pastor will preach at both ser services vices services tomorrow, in the morning on "Giving Ourselves," and in the eve ning on "Our Strong Consolation." The jroll call last Sunday was not altogether a success, since a large number of the members of the church were not present. This makes the work of the church much more diffi cult, since it hinders the' getting of the plans of the church before the whole, church. Every member ought to be in his place on the Sabbath, ready to receive all the instruction and inspiration that is provided. I want to urge every member of the church to be present tomorrow morn ing. The sermon touches upon a vital theme to which many, alas too many, are indifferent. The canvassing committees were appointed last Sunday, and were giv en lists of persons, to. be solicited. This canvass will be made tomorrow afternoon, and it is especially request ed that all the members of the church and congregation remain at home un til the committee calls. It will facili tate matters, if members will have already gone over the matter of sub scrjption torthe church work for the next year and be ready to subscribe. At the meeting of the officers last Sunday it was decided to ask the church to subscribe 2000 for local ex penses and $1500 for benevolences. This means that every one is urged to increase his contribution for the present year at least 40 per cent. Members are urged to consider the matter prayerfully, and it is hoped that no one will fail to do his part. John R. Herndon, Pastor. ..? St. Phillip's Catholic Church Every first Sunday of the month divine services will be at 9:30 a. m. and at 5 p. m. The other Sundays, services at 10:30 a. m. and at 5 p. m. Instruction for the. children at 9:30 a.' m. y Daily service at 8 a. m. . Christian Science Society of Ocala (Yonge's Hall) 10 a. m Sunday school. 11 a. m. Sunday service. 7:45 p. m. first Wednesday in each month. , Reading room Commercial Bank building, second floor, open daily ex except cept except Sunday, from 3 to 5 p. m. fOU CANT GATHER FIGS FROM THISTLES Neither can you secure a decent, economical and lasting job of paint painting ing painting if your paint contains adultera adulterated ted adulterated Linseed Oil THE QUALITY IS NOT. THERE. You avoid all risk when you use nKnr since you buy the Pure Linseed Oil YOURSELF at Oil price and add it to .the 2-4-1, the result will be pos positive, itive, positive, since YO U YOURSELF will have made it so, by using Pure Lin Linseed seed Linseed .Oil. Adv 1 For Sale by THE MARION HARDWARE CO., Ocala, Florida.- ". OCALA, FLORIDA. RESOURCES OVER $950,000.00 r RAILROAD SCHEDULES Arrival and DeDarture of nassenirer trains at OCALA UNION STATION. The following schedule, figures pub published lished published as information and not guar anteed. (Eastern Standard Time) SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILROAD Leave Arrive 2:50 am. J'cksonvllle-NewYork 2:50 am. 1:56 pro. Jacksonville 3:26 pra. 4:07 pm. Jacksonville 5:10 p.m , ( Tajnpa ; 2:50 a. nw Manatee v 2:50 am. ( St. Petersburg ) 2:26 pm. Tampa-Manatee 1:41pm. 5:10 pm. Tampa-St. Petersburg 4:07 pm. ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD Leave Arrive 2:12 pm J'cksonville-New York 3:15 am. 2:20jpm. J'ksonvllle-G'inesvllle 3:35pm. 6:42 am. J'ksonville-G'nesville 10:13 pm. 3:15 a.m. SL Pet'abrg-Lakeland 2:12 am. 3:35 pm. St. Pet'sbrg--Lakeland 2:00 pm. 7:10 am.- Dunnellon-Wllcox 7.40 am. Du'nellon-Lkeland 11:03 pva. 3:25 -pm. Homosassa 1:45 pm. 10:13 pm. Leesburs 6:42 am. 4:45 pm. Gainesville 11:50 am. Monday, Wednesday, Friday. Tuesday, .Thursday, Saturday. TERRIBLY SWOLLEN Suffering Described As Tcrfcro Relieved by Black-Drangbt : Rossville, Ga. Mrs. Kate Lee Able, o! this place, writes; "My husband is an engineer, and once while lifting he in injured jured injured himself with a piece of heavy ma machinery, chinery, machinery, 1 across the abdomen He was so sore he could not bear to press on himself at all, on chest or abdomen. He weighed 1C5 lbs., and fell off ixntil he weighed 110 lbs., in two weeks. He became constipated and it looked like he would die. We had three different doctors, yet with all their medicine, his bowels failed to act. He would turn up. a ten-cerif bottle of castor oil, and drink it two or three days in succession. He did this yet without result We became desperate, he suffered so. He was swol swollen len swollen terribly. He told me "his suffering could only be described as torture. I sent and bought Thedford's Black Black-Draught. Draught. Black-Draught. I made him take a big dose, and when it began to act he fainted, he was in such misery, but he got relief and bega? o mend at once. He got well, and we both feel he owes his life to Thedford's Black-Draught." Thedford's Black-Draught will help you to keep fit, ready for the day's work. Try it! NC-131 LEGISLATIVE NEWS You will read the legislative news published in this newspaper during April and May, but for the most com complete plete complete report published read the Flor Florida ida Florida Times-Union. Send $1 today to the Times-Union for a subscription to the daily and Sunday Times-Union from March 20th to June 5th. 12-8t NOTICE TO DISCHARGED SOLDIERS AND SAILORS Particulars as to obtaining the sixty dollars bonus for discharged men can be had by applying to the undersigned. D. Niel Ferguson, Chairman Civilian Relief Committee, American Red Cross, Ocala, Fla. t 5 NOTICE In the Circuit Court of the Fifth Ju Judicial dicial Judicial Circuit of Florida, in and for Marion County, in Chancery. James Weille, Complainant, vs. H. J. Jennings and his wife, M. B. Jen Jennings, nings, Jennings, Defendants Order for Constructive Service. It is ordered that the defendants herein named, to-wit: -H. J. Jennings and his wife, M. B. Jennings, be and they are hereby required to. appear to the bill of complaint "filed in this cause on or before . Monday, the 10th day of March, 1919 It is further ordered that a copy of this order be published once a week for eight consecutive weeks in the Ocala Evening Star, a newspaper published in said county and state. This 10th day of January, 1919. (Seal P. H. Nugent, Clerk Circuit Court, Marion County, Florida. By Ruth Ervin, D. C. L. W. Duval, Complainant's Solicitor. 1-11-sat . Oakland Sensible Six will soon arrive. 14 We : Incite Yomp Attention. invite your attention to the detailed state statement ment statement of this bank as reported to the Comptroller of the Currency at Washington, D. C. printed else elsewhere where elsewhere in this issue. We believe that you will agree with us that it is a strong well balanced, statement and shows an increase in deposits for nearly $200,000, as compared with the same date of last year. We invite new business and we are able to-take care of it. NATIONAL BANES Charter No. 10578 REPORT OF CONDITION OF THE HIE ADD C1L1ISS I1ATIHL At Ocala, in the State of Florida, at the Close of RESOURCES 1. a Loans and discounts, including rediscounts, (except those shown in b and c) 423,781.33 Total loans V. Overdrafts, secured, none; unsecured, 188.18 U. S. Bonds (other than Liberty Bonds but in including cluding including U. S. certificates of indebtedness): 2. 5. f U. S. bonds and certificates of v owned and unpledged Liberty Loan Bonds i y a Liberty Loan Bonds, 3. 4 and Unpledged 6. d Liberty Loan Bonds, 2, 4 and 4U per cent, pledged to secure state or other deposits or bills payable .: !. 15,000.00 Bonds, Securities, Etc (other than U. S.) : 7. b Bond3 (other than U. S. Bonds) pledged to se se-t t se-t cure postal savings deposits.. c Bonds and securities pledged as collateral for state, or other deposits (postal excluded) or bills payable e Securities other than U. S. bonds (not includ including ing including stocks) owned unpledged. f Collateral trust and other notes of corpora- tions issued for not less than one year nor . more than three years' time.. H Total bonds, securities, etc., other than U. S.. Stocks, other than Federal Reserve Bank stock Stock of Federal Reserve Bank (50 per cent of subscription) .. ....... a Value of banking house, owned and unincum unincumbered bered unincumbered ....... Furniture and 'fixtures Real estate owned other than banking house . Lawful reserve with Federal Reserve Bank . Cash in vault and net amounts dua from nation nation-al al nation-al banks.. .. ....... Exchanges for clearing house Checks on other banks in the same city or town as reporting bank (other than item 17) Total of items 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18 Checks on banks located outside of city or town of reporting bank and other cash items . Interest earned but not collected approximate) ! on notes and bills receivable not past due. War savings certificates and thrift stamps ac 0 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 15. 17. 18. 19. 21. 22 tually owned TOTAL. .. $040,557.39 LIABILITIES - 24. Capital stock paid in .......... $ 50,000.00 25. Surplus fund C0,CC0.C3 26. a Undivided profits 6,110.11 27. Interest and discount collected or credited, in advance of maturity and" not earned (ap (approximate) proximate) (approximate) 3,600.00, 29. Amount reserved for all interest accrued 1,503.00 33. Net amounts due to banks, bankers and trust companies (other than included in items 31 ' or 32) ....... 25,349.43 $4. Certified checks outstanding 102X3 Total of items 32, 33," 34 and 35 34,513.86 Demand deposits (ether than barJk deposits) scb- jec$ to Reserve (deposits payable within 30 days) : 36. Individual deposits subject to check 509,565.03 37. Certificates of deposit due in less than SO days (other than for money borrowed) 30,000.00 38. State, county or other municipal deposits se cured by pledge of assets of this bank . 18,009.54 Total of demand deposits (other, than bank de deposits) posits) deposits) subject to Reserve. Items, 36, 37, v 38, 40 and 41 .! ... 557,575X2 Time deposits subject to Reserve (payable after 30 days, or subject to SO days or more no- I tice, and postal savings) : 42. Certificates of deposit (other than for money borrowed) 34,786.32 44. Postal savings deposits 1,503.07 45. Other time deposits 205,962.2 Total of time deposits subject to Reserve, Items 42, 43, 44 and 45 242,257.81 46. United States deposits. (other than postal savings): a War loan deposit account 21,000.00 21,000.00 TOTAL ... 946,557.30 Of the total loans and discounts shown above, the amount on which interest and discbunt was, charged at rates in excess of those permitted by law (Sec. 5197, Rev. Stat.) exclusive of notes upon which total charge not to exceed 50 cents was made, was (none). The number of such loans was (none.)1 STATE OF FLORIDA, COUNTY OF MARION, ss: I, DeWitt Grifiln. cashier of tne above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. DeWitt GriInf Cashier. . Correct Attest: Subscribed and sworn to before me J. M. THOMAS, this 15th day of March, 1919. T. T. MUNROE, (Seal) Ola Potter, A. E. GERIG, ' Notary Public Directors. You should patron Lie the progrehre merchants who eArertlsm la thesa column and iare yourself money. Alsa hmlj m ocjlIa and Ilarlcra craw. Read the Star Want ads. It-pays C I U Reserve District No. 6 Business 'March 4. 1919 423,781.33 423,781.33-183.18 183.18 423,781.33-183.18 indebtedness 4U per cent, 50,000.00 50,000.00 137,002.07 152,002.07 4,000.00 no 2,000.00 224249.34 19,703.13 67,952.47 6,350.04 2,400.00 35,000.00 3,500.00 14,115X3 4S,C2G.C3 s 134,353.22 3.242.41 .32 133,545.95 554.67 09.00 . 834.09 RAT Tf Uiiiiiii I OCALA EVENING STAR, SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1919 ( 4s NOTICE! Property Holders of Ocala : Can Your House or Forai turcDurn? Arc You Sure That it Will Never Catch Fire? Will Wafer Injure II? V Can You Afford to Lose It? IL TwTZKiAR: GaryBIocIc WILL CARRY YOUR RISK. Here is a List of GOOD THMGS TO EM Just in Salt Mackerel, each . ... 20c 5-lb. Pails 24-oz. Fancy Salt Mackerel, pail . . Gem Boneless Codfish in pound Jbricks . . .... .... ...... Holland Style Herring . . French Sandwich Puree ...... Burnham's Clam Chowder Japanese Crab Meat tin. . . Dry Pack Shrimp, tin. . J; .'. Tuna Fish white -lb. tin... Tuna Fish, white, -lb. tin . K. S., Salmon, Steak, -lb4 tin. K. S. Salmon Steak, 1-lb. tin.. Herring Roe ; . ... . .;. . Shredded Codfish, glass .'. Sorrento Cheese, -pound . . . Imported Roquefort, pound. Brick Cheese, pound . .-. .... Pineapple Cheese,, each ...... Edam Cheese, each ........... f?imento Cheese, jar . ....... Miiladelphia Cream Cheese, tinfoil. .;. . ....... . . . Imported Swiss, per tin ...... McLaren's Imperial Cheese -$1.85 .3oc . . 5c ...25c ...15c ...48c ...20c ...28c . .20c ...28c ...47c .. .20c . . 17c .$1.10 .$1.80 ...60c .$1.25 .$2.00 ...20c ...20c . .65c . .16c We have other cheese, them. V Ask about Frankfurters in glass ... ... . . ' Finnan Haddie in glass . . . ' Fresh Grated Horseradish, glass. Preserved Ginger in glass. p. . . Crystalak Milk Powder . . . I Hires' Root B,eer .Extract. . . Hansin's Junket Tablets....... v Tournado Kitchen Bouquet. . . ' 1842 Apple Cider, per quart.... ''. Sunbeam .pple Nectar, quart... . I Domino Sugar Tablets, 2 lb. . . Domino Sugar" Tablets, 4 lb. . . J ack Frost 4X Pwd. Sugar. . . . Cube Sugar, "bulk, lb,. .' . N. Y. Canary Brown Sugar ..... Jordan Shelled Almonds . . Valencia Shelled Almonds ...... Salted Almonds, per jar . . Salted Pecan Meat, per jar. . .. Salted Peanuts, per lb.. . . . ; Nutja (Nut Jam) Dates, Nuts, etc for sandwiches ............ ,47c .45c .20c .20c .69c .25c .12c .35c .60c .45c .35c .65c .15c .15c lie .'aoc .70c .45c .45c .60c .15c DM yon Imow that this store is brim foil bl ffooci t Mnqs to cat. The best in the state. IL TEAPOT GROCERY Corrected eyesight has been the open door to 41 good health for thou thou-S. S. thou-S. sands of people who didn't dream there was anything wrong with their eyes. Dr. K. J. Weihcv Eyesight Specialist Graduate Optometrist JMh Weihe Co.', Jewelers, Ocala, Fla. FOR- Groceries , and Meats Phone 108 or 243 Main Street Market w. H. MARSH Prop. m L. ALEXANDER PRACTICAL CARPENTER ; AND BUILDER j Careful Estimates made on all cJbrir tract work. Gives More and Better York for the Sidney than any other contractor la tba city. I I OCALA QCCURRFJIGES If you have any society items, please phone One-Two-One, (121). PARTY FOR YOUNG FOLKS Last night Mrs. W. K. Lane enter entertained tained entertained in 'honor of her niece, Miss Minnie Jones of Trenton, N. J.f who is spending thewitner in Ocala. The party took the form of a St. Patrick's Day affair. The house was decorated in Shamrocks with quan quantities tities quantities of dogwood, giving a spring springtime time springtime effect. As the guests arrived, they were given favors of hats and clay pipes, emblematic of the Irish saint. All during the" evening punch was served, the punch table being attrac attractive tive attractive in its decorations of dogwood and Shamrocks. ; The evening was spent in playing games rook and pit, and the ever fascinating ouija board was present. For those who didn't care for cards, dancing was in order, the music b& b&-ing ing b&-ing furnish by the grafanola. At the conclusion of the" games the hostess served ice cream and cake. The evening passed only too 4 quickly for the young people, who merrily whiled away the hours. Among; those who enjoyed Mrs., Lane's hospitality were Misses Edith Edwards, Elizabeth Bennett, Elizabeth Hocker, Rhoda Thomas, Ruth Simmons, Eloise Bou Bou-vier, vier, Bou-vier, Mildred Bullock, Mary Mathews, Uilaine Barnett, Minnie Jones v and Messrs. Allen Holfinrake, Fred Wines, Nat Mayo, Foy Carroll, John Bouvier, Albert Bullock, Julian Rentz, Harry Holcomb, Tom Wallis, John Cook, Claude Barnett,- John Hardin and Robert Blake. Oakland Sensible Six will soon arrive. 14 Mr. F. W. Brooks of North Lake Weir was in town today. While al most an( invalid, Mr, Brooks put up a good fight' yesterday when alone and unaided, except for a long handled pitchfork and a rope lasso, caught alive and carried home with him a six-foot alligator. Mr. Brooks was driving along and heard the 'gator blow and stopped and investigated. The saurian was crossing or attempt ing to cross from Bowers' lake into big Lake Weir, and got against a wire fence. After subduing and lasso ing him, Mr. Brooks tied the rope to the rear axle of his buggy and towed the 'gator home, "where he was skin skinned ned skinned and the" hide will be. tanned as a present for Mr. Brooks' son, just re turned from France. If you feel your bones aching get a box of Rexal Cold Tablets at Gerig's Drug Store. It may prevent your having "flu." tf Mrs. J. S. Wheeler of Springfield, Mass., and Mrs. Everett S. Root of Westfield Mass. who for the past three weeks have been the guests of Mrs. S. R. Whaley, left yesterday for the east coast, where they expect to stay about a week before returning to their homes. This has been their first visit to Florida, and, they were charmed with the state, our spring being so different from what they have been accustomed to. The many friends that they made will be glad to know that they like .Ocala so wrell they contemplate returning. ' i Rev. Smith Hardin had the pleas ure, Thursday, of uniting in marriage, at the Methodist parsonage, Mr. Wil Wilbur bur Wilbur Montgomery and Miss Hazel Calderj a verv Tnre-lnnkinc rnnnlp from Wauchula.' Both were of age, but as there seemed to be some oddo sition to their "marriage, they came to Ocala to have it performed. We guarantee to do your automo automobile bile automobile repair work cheaper than any other garage in town and guarantee satisfaction on top of this. What more need we say? Ocala Iron Works Garage. 13-tf Mrs: W.j L. Scott and daughter, Mary went to-Lakeland this morning to spend the day. Mrs. P. D. Briggs, who has been visiting in Lakeland for ten days, will return with Mrs. Scott and daughter. Mrs. Briggs was for merly of Homosassa, but for the past month has been making 1 her home with Mrs. Scott, . Friday F. W. Brooks of North Lake Weir received a telegraih from his son, Corporal Jonathan EJ Brooks, of Co. B, 330th Battalion, Tank Corps, stating he had arrived safely in New York and for a while would be station ed at Camp Upton. He has returned from a tank camp near Langres, Fiance. Mr. Asher Frank has gone to Tam pa for a few days to attend to busi business ness business before returning to his home in Salisbury, S. C. He expects to stop irl Ocala for a visit to his sister,"Mrs. Max Israelson, on his return. Mr. and MrsH. B. Whittington and children returned last night from Savannah, where they havelbeen 'vis 'visiting iting 'visiting relatives. They expected to be gone sometime but thinking there was nc plce like home, they cut their visit short. The attendance was very good at the union Bible study class yesterday afternoon, the study being from Rom. xii. Next wek the subject will be "The Victory Life.'' All Bible stu students dents students cordially welcomed. : EQUAL SUFFflAEE DEPARTMENT EDITOR, ISABEL STUART MAYS Center Hill, Fla. "We shall light for the things which we have always carried nearest our heart f or democracy, for the right of those who submit to author authority ity authority to have a voice in their own gov ernment Woodrow Wilson. Mr. Crawford Explains (Tampa Tribune) Editor Tribune: Your editorial en entitled titled entitled "By What Authority?" has just been called to my attention. I do not wish to enter into a discus discussion sion discussion of the Suffrage, but would like to make a short statement with refer reference ence reference to my acts as the democratic national committeemar from Florida, since tfiey have been called into ques question. tion. question. When I gave my proxy to Mr. Ed Edward ward Edward F Goltra, member of the com committee mittee committee from Missouri, I said nothing as to how he should vote on this mat matter, ter, matter, not anticipating that it would come up at the meeting, but if I had been present in person I should have voted for the resolution. More than a year ago, after the president fo the United States had publicly indorsed the resolution, the democratic nation national al national committee, by a practically unani unanimous mous unanimous vote, adopted a resolution en dorsing the president's position. Mr. Goltra knew them that I voted to in dorse the president's position, and was, entirely justified in assuming that I had not changed my views. In November last the legislature of the state of Florida, in special ses session, sion, session, refused to adopt a resolution en endorsing dorsing endorsing the attitude of the Florida senators in opposing the Anthony amendment. I do not know where you obtained the figures you-use in your statement that "less than 5 per cent of the wom women en women of Florida are actually in favor of the suffrage amendment to the fed federal eral federal constitution," as the Federation of Women's Clubs, the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, the State Teachers' Association, and other organizations composed largely or wholly of women, have endorsed the amendment and I have nowhere heard of or seen any notice of any op position among Florida women. The end of your sentence from which I have quoted is very misleading, prob probably ably probably not intentionally so. The con concluding cluding concluding portion of the sentence is as follows i "a's proposed by the national woman's party." The amendment was not "proposed by the national wom woman's an's woman's party," but by the National Am American erican American Suffrage Association, with which the national woman's party, better known as the militant suffra-i gettes, has no affiliation. As stated, I do not wish to enter into a discussion of the merits 'of the suffrage question, but if there were no other reason for endorsing the amend ment common sense distactes that course to any one desiring to see the democratic party saved alive, and as the representative of that party in Florida I consider it my duty to at least render what assistance I can to continue the party's existence as a political factor in the nation J. T. G. Crawford. Jacksonville, Florida. - A National Union of Women Citizens At the golden' Jubilee of the Na National tional National American Woman Suffrage As Association sociation Association to be held in St. Louis March 24-29; there will be projected one 'of the greatest enterprises ever undertaken by the national associa association. tion. association. This is nothing less than a na national tional national union of women citizens com comprehensive prehensive comprehensive of the interests of the women voters of the country as weli as the non-voters. Hitherto the National American Woman Suffrage Association has functioned as a body of women' seek seeking ing seeking the ballot. With the entrance of New York into complete voting ,power in 1917, with the addition of three full suffrage states in 1918, and the granting of presidential suffrage to the women of three states in 1919, making seven irt all where women have presidential suffrage, the na national tional national realizes that it must look for forward ward forward to a rapidly increasing force of women who are using not seeking, the ballot. A re-constructed organization is therefore demanded by the present strength of the v voting women of the United States. The creation of a national union of women voters is to mark an epoch in the cause of political freedom. It is to point the way to the uses women will make of that freedom after they are enfranchised. The name and the plan of wrork art to be presented for discussion and acceptance at the convention in St. Louis. One of the workingplans sug suggested gested suggested is that of two houses, one to be made' up of representatives from the voting states, and the other to be made up of representatives from the non-voting states. A suggestion corrfes that the former might be known as the house of voters, the latter as the house of delegates. Fifty years ago in' January the Am American erican American Equal Rights Association was found to be too loosely strung to hold the teething .demands of the women of the country who had been newly awakened to their need of the ballot by, the events following the civil war. History has repeated itself. In 1919 women of the country have a renewed impetus to work for the enfranchise enfranchisement ment enfranchisement of all women because of the events in the great war. In 1869 the first national- woman suffrage convention in America in mil w it Or A Of Ocala, Florida AN ACTIVE U. S. DEPOSITARY . At Close of Business Tuesday, March 4th, 1&19. Condensed from Report to the - Comptroller of the Currency. RESOURCES O Loans and Discounts, Bonds and Securities--... .$429,873.76 Liberty Loan Bonds, War Savings Stamps and U. S. Treasury Cer- . tificates of Indebtedness. ....... 202,486.90 Stock in Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta ... ...... ...... 2,700.00 U. S. Bonds tp Secure Circulation...... ........ ...... 75,000.00 Banking House, Furniture and Fixtures..... .:. .1 38,500.00 Other Real Estate owned 2,883.62 Overdrafts ,26.37 Cash on Hand, and Due from Banks...... 172,953.00 TOTAL .. .... .5924,423.65 , UABILITIES Capital Stock, Fully paid in.: $ 75,000.00 Surplus, (earnedj ................ .. 15,000.00 Undi vid ed Profits ....... j J 2,46 1 .77 Circulation .... 75.000.00 Dividend unpaid ... 1 . 60.00 D EPOS ITS ... 756,901.88 TOTAL ................... ..$324,423.65 hi; III! Deposits March 4th, 1919. 1 .. ..... Deposits March 4th, 1918 ... .. Increase One Year..::.. it January, marked an epoch. In 1919 the fiftieth national woman suffrage convention in America marks another epoch.' - In 1869 there was not a woman in the country who could vote on a ques question tion question of political importance. ' In 1919 women, have been given the right to vote for president of the United States in 25 states, in which the women over voting age number 12,500,000. Not all these women will vote. Neither do all the males in those same states. In much the same relative proportion as the adult males, so will the adult females of these common commonwealths wealths commonwealths cast their ballot for president. In many western voting states the male population is much larger than the female population. In fifteen of the 25 states where women have been granted the right to vote for the next president, they now have full suffrage. These fif fifteen teen fifteen states contain more than 7,300, 7,300,-000 000 7,300,-000 women over 21. ". If the proposed coalition organiza organization tion organization should be effected it would be pan-partisan and non.mil itant.v Its immediate purpose, so far as America is concerned, would be to further the complete enfranchisement of all Am erican women; its farther erachingj purpose to equalize the democracy of the country, especially as regards conditions governing women and children. The same purposes, immed immediate iate immediate and ultimate, would hold good so far as the world is concerned en enfranchisement franchisement enfranchisement for all women and im improvement provement improvement in the conditons of life governing women and children the world over. Does. this mean to form a new party exclusively of women? If a party is "a 'body of persons united for some purpose," it does. The proposed coali coalition tion coalition also seems to be a party insofar as it aims to be a "part or portion' of the government. In the sense that a party aims at 'political ascendency' the new union would not be a party. There would be no intention of massing women a?ain men; its object would be to utilize the tendency, already existing among the enfranchised women, of turning their vote-seeking associa associations tions associations into law-making agencies for better social conditons. There are now so many of these active legislative bodies of voting voting-women women voting-women that to the National Ameri American can American Woman Suffrage Association the time seems to have come to co-ordinate them and mass their forces. Remember you get quality service at quantity price at the Ocala Iron Works Garage. 13-tf Statement of the Condition of 1 11 1! li ! I Millinery Announcement : Patrons and Friends are cordially : : invited to call and inspect the ex- qnisite line now on display in all the : j newest and smart models, beautiful j : patterns in ' ! DRESS HATS SPORT HATS I : STREET HATS j Work Room Unexcelled : : Hair Goods and Hair Work a : : specialty. j I Affleck Millinery Parlor i . 4 South Side Ocala House Block J WHITE STAR LINE TRANSFER STORAGE AUTO TRUCK SERVICE Icnj DisUmce Lloving V PnONE 222 COLLIER A merchant who advertises usually has something- of tnertt to offer bis customers, and xou can depend cm his merchandise telnsr fresX because be lis lt ofiT by a4rertiils fcefore It etwb ell a his islTa. Pcru2r thiz. sun . $756,901.88 578,599.24 5178,303.01 t 4 v w w w VAfJS BROTHERS m n ill" My OCALA EVENING STAR, SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1919 NEl ERU1T STAND J (Next to Anti-Monopoly ' Drugstore) i FANCY FRUITS I FRESH VEGETABLES ; ; AND GROCERIES : All Prices Reduced : PHONE 369 SAVOY CAFE j " -SALTFiS DIRECT FROM OUR FISHING BOATS TO YOU! Delicious fresh caught Dry Salt Fish direct to the consumer by prepaid parcel post or express 15 lbs. for $2.00 Special price on barrel lois TOE ST. GEGRGE PACKING CO. St. George on the Gulf -, Apalaehicola, Florida Atlantic Hotel Hay and llogran.Sts. Jacksonville, Fla. All railroad ticket offices In bulldingr, center of everything. All modern im improvements. provements. improvements. First class in every par particular. ticular. particular. Rates, one person, $1 to $1.50; two persons, $2 to $2.50. Bath $1.50, $2; two people. $2.50, $3. ; 4-3 -E. FRANK PIERCE, Prop. UNDERTAKERS and EMBALMERS PHONES 47. 104. 80S OCALA. FLORID A coat now and then of DAVIS OLD COLONY WAGON PAINT pre preserves serves preserves your wagons t and farm imple implements ments implements and makes them look like new. .Wont you let us prove' to you by one trial that there is no -finish that will give you a lasting satisfaction like -. v For Sale by : TII MARION HARDWARE -Ocala, Florida. I tf"5 r.rrfLL'r-l What DoYou Drink For Breakfast? Nows a ftood time to try the All-American Extensively used inplacedr coffee because of its fine flavoi; general economy Health value. Contains no caffeim Ynill like Posium "There's a Rmson EE- EAT AT THE 6REEK-Afi1ERlCAH CAFE A la CARTE SERVICE Everything In the Market ": k Best Dome Cooking Qaick Service C Jeffers j P Props. II. D. Baxter Phone 272 114 S. Magnolia St., Next to Clarkson Hardware Store. 3 beverade POSTOM LATEST LOCALS Mrs. B. T. Perdue left yesterday afternoon for Palm Beach to visit friends. ; Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Clark, who went to Jacksonville Wednesday, re returned turned returned home yesterday. Miss Susie Lou Ellis left today for St. Augustine, where she will spend the week-end with friends. Mrs. Zelma Casont who has been visting Miss Frances Tarver, returned d her home in Irland Grove today. Bring "us your automobile repair work-and' if we do not satisfy you yourQrork will not cost you one penny. Try us ononis proposition. Ocala Iron Works Garage. Phone 4. 13-tf Mrs. Lawrence Kelly and infant son are now at the home of Mrs. Kelly's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Moorhead. Mrs. Lyman Claridyof Talladega, Ala., arrived yesterday afternoon to be at the bedside of her father Mr. W. O. Massey. The Presbyterian silver tea will" be held at the residence of Mrs. G. S. Scott Monday afternoon, from 4 to 6 o'clock. All cordially invited to at attend. tend. attend. Mrs. Scott and small son, Otley Webb of Okeechobee, who for the pasc few days have been, guests of Mrs. D. "V. Tompkins, returned to their home today. Mr. W. L. Scott, engineer on the Homosassa train, has been taking a few days vacation for the' purpose of making his income tax returns. tvlr. Alvis' Landers of this city, who has been stationed in the telegraph office of the Royal Poincianna. Palm Beach, expects to leave there in about' two weks. You don't have to telephone to find out when your prescription will be delivered. We fill them as the doctor writes them and send them out promt promt-ly. ly. promt-ly. Gerig's Drug Store. tf Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Taylor of Pitts burg, Pa., arrived last evening for a short stay in Ocala. They are prop property erty property owners in the northeastern part of the county. V Mr. John Batts of Tucker's garage with three other young men left early this morning for Leesburg, and ex expects pects expects to return this evening with three new Fords for Tucker's garage. If you pay for automobile repair service, why not get it under a guar guarantee antee guarantee of SATISFACTION or money refunded. Ocala Iron Works Garage, tf fhe friends of Miss Rosebud Robin Robinson, son, Robinson, formerly of Ocala, but now liv living ing living in Jacksonville, will be interested to know that she has accepted a posi position tion position with Dunn in Jacksonville. Mr, H. L. Gardner is expected to arrive in the city today from Palatka. He will spend tomorrow in town, ex pecting to returntomorrow night ac companied by Mrs. Gardner, who has been visiting Mrs. Duncan McDonald for the past two weeks. W. K. Lane, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, specialist Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Law iLibrary Building, Ocala, Florida. tf Mr. and Mrs. Weller Carmichael are receiving congratulations over the arrival of a bab daughter, who came early yesterday morning, at the hospi hospital. tal. hospital. This i the second daughter tthat has come to gladden the home of Mr. and Mrs. Carmichael.;, The many friends of Mr. Wallace- O. Stovall will be glad to know that he has returned to the city from Key West, where he has been stationed. Mr. Stovall has received his discharge and will resume his old position at the Tampa Morning Tribune. Tampa Times. ; The ideal weather which the weather-man has been giving us Is just right for picnics and the young folks cf the fourth grade with Miss Wy Wy-nona nona Wy-nona Wetherbee and Mrs. Paisley, their teachers, have taken advantage of it to spend the day at Silver Springs. Miss Louise Booe with her class have gone to the lake, going dewn to the Meffert dock in Mr. Mef Mef-fert's fert's Mef-fert's truck, where they expect to have one grand time, playing and bathing. Another shipment of Nunnally's, 'The Candy of the South," in today. Wev always have it fresh, is the reason we sell so much of it. Come and get yours at Gerig's Drug Store. tf One of the decided improvements in the second ward is the cleaning up of the old water works building. The old, rusty smokestack which has been swaying in the breeze at an angle of 45 degrees, has be ntaken down, mak making ing making that vicinity much safer. The two old boilers have been removed, one having been sold to the canning factory and the other to the mill at Oak. The whole inside of the build building ing building has been cleaned out, with pros prospects, pects, prospects, of the back part being used as a garage for the city trucks, while a sort of machine shop is to be installed in the front for the repairing of the city's machinery. W. O. MASSEY Mr. W. O. Massey passed away this afternoon at his home on Watula street, about three o'clock. Mr. Mas Massey sey Massey had been in poor health for' some time, but his relatives were not un uneasy easy uneasy over' his condition until a few days ago, when he began sinking. Mr. Massey had been a resident of Ocala for many, years, moving to Lake Weir several years ago where he and Mrs. Massey made their home in a pleasant cottage by the side of the lake. Recently his son, Mr. Como Massey of New York came to spend a month with his parents, and while here arranged the cottage in Watula street, for his parents to occupy, mak making ing making many improvements in, the same, and the aged couple had only been settled there a few days when Mr. Massey's last illness overtook him. Mr. Massey was surrounded by his family at the end, his daughter, Mrs. Claridy of Talladega, Ala., arriving yesterday, and his son, Mr. Como Massey, wife and two children having been here for the past six weeks. Mrs. Massey has been the "constant nurse and companion of her husband during his illness. f The funeral will be beld tomorrow afternoon at the house, at ,3:30 o'clock. At the time the Star goes to press the funeral arrangements have not been announced. Interment will be in the old cemetery. Ocala has lost a good and useful citizen and the sympathy of all goes out to the bereaved widow and her children in their hour of bereavement. ' Last night the young folks of the .Baptist church were treated to and were- guests at a real old fashioned pimo. Mrs. C. L. West was the host ess at this delightful affair, which was so thoroughly enjoyed by all who at tended.- The great dishes of chicken purlo with pickles and coffee, were all that one could desire in the way of re freshments. After the supper the young folks passed the evening listen ing to the excellent music which all present entered into so heartily. Those present wert' Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Wrighon, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Bri gance, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. West, Mr. and Mrs. Clem Purvis, Mr. and Mrs. W. .T. jWhitley, Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Marsh, Mrs. George Williams, Mrs. J. J. Peeples, Misses. Donnie and Wil lie Proctor, Donnie Sims, Mabel Akin, Floyd Whittle, 'Elsie Hall, Mary Gates, Eunice Marsh, Ruth Hardee, Bessie Marshall, Pearl Keef e, Winnie Hunt, Miss Stone and Messrs. Willie Hood, Frank Gates,, William Altaian, Hall Hinkle, Harry' Cole, Paul Brinson and Earl Mayo. The funera services of Mrs. James Fort will take place at 10:30 a. m. Monday, from the residence of Mr. E. C. Jordan in thethird waj-d. The pall bearers will be Messrs. Percy and Junie Perkins, Charles Rawls, Walter Pedrick, L. J. Blalock "and J. T. Jen Jennings. nings. Jennings. Carlyle Blackwell and Evelyn Gree Greeley ley Greeley showed; up well in "Courage for Two," at the, Temple last night. They are two of the best in picturedom. Smart and "pretty Priscilla Dean will apDear tonight in "The Hired Hus Husband." band." Husband." Mr. Automobile Owner, look at this: Carbon burned out of four cylinders for $3; six cylinders, $4, at the Ocala Iron Works Garage. 13-tf Mrs. W. K. Lane has as her guest Miss. Winnie Cobb of Tallahassee, who arrived today. Miss Cobb has been in Dunnellon nursing her sick sister, and en route home is visiting in Ocala. Ollie Mordis and his friends were greatly pleased at a picture of Ollie and the interior of- his store, on the Temple screen last night. It was a good likeness. OCALA FRATERHAL ORDERS R. A. ll. CHAPTER NO. 13 Regular convocations of the Ocala Chapter No. 13, R. A. H- on the first Friday in every month at 7:30 p.'m. - J. A; Bouvier, H. P. Jake Brown Secretary. MIRIA1VJ REBEKAH LODGE NO. 15 Miriam Rebekah Lodge4 No. 15 meets the first and third Monday eve evenings nings evenings in each month in the Odd Fel Fellows' lows' Fellows' hall at 7:30 o'clock. Mrs. W. T. Whitly, N. G. Eloise Bouvier, Secretary. 0 ORDER Or .EASTERN STAR Ocala Chapter No. 29, O. E. S., meets at Yonge's hall the second and fourth Thursday evenings of each month at 7:30 o'clock. Mn. Isabel Wesson, W. M. Mrs. Susan Cook, Secretary. WOODMEN OF THE WORLD Fort King Camp No. 14 meets nt K. of P. hall at 7 :30 p. m. every sec second ond second and fourth Friday. Visiting sov sovereigns ereigns sovereigns are always welcome. W. W. Stripling, C. C. Chas. K. Sage, Clerk. MARION-DUNN MASONIC LODGE Marion-Dunn Lodge No. 19, F. & A. M meets on the -first and thira Thursday evenings of each month at 8 o'clock tratil further notice. H. O. Cole, W. M. Jake Brown, Secretary. DWELLING PARTLY DESTROYED An alarm of fire startled the town soon after four o'clock Friday after afternoon noon afternoon and the word soon passed that Mrs. J. W. Davis' boardinghouse, 219 Oklawaha avenue, was burning. t A large number of people- were soon gathered in the vicinity; all who could to help; those who couldn't to look on. The firemen laid four lines of hose and after a short but fierce battle put the flames down. They had plenty of volunteer assistants and most of the furniture was carried. out in time. They also had to work lively to" keep the adjoining buildings from catching, as the sparks were flying lively. The fire seems to have 'started be between tween between the ceiling and the roof and wa under full headway when discov discovered. ered. discovered. Most of the damage, was done upstairs and at the back. There was no one in that part of the house when the fire started, which accounts for its getting such a start. In searching for the cause of the fire, Chief Chambers found a penny in a fuse in the electric switchbox up up-.stairs. .stairs. up-.stairs. Somebody, in order to avoid a little inconvenience, had stuck a penny in the fuse, a short circuit re resulted, sulted, resulted, and damage amounting to over a thousand dollars was the "bill. The house Is the property of Mrs. Emily Green. The fire chief thinks the damage is at least $600, maybe more. We understand that it is insured. Mrs. Davis and boarders saved most of their furniture, tho some of it was broken or damaged. Mr. and Mrs. Davis have moved into the house across the streat.. formerly occupied by Mr. John R. Dewey, and will re resume sume resume taking care of their boarders as soon as possible. EXCELLENT MEETING FRIDAY AFTERNOON There was a well attended meeting, io discuss vital county affairs at the courthouse Friday afternoon. Thru the kindness of Mr. Frank Merrin, we have a full report, but owing to our linotype motor being rather lame to day we' are obliged to defer publicai tion to Monday. UNCLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS , WANTED, LOST, FOUND, FOR SALE, FOR RENT AND SIM SIMILAR ILAR SIMILAR LOCAL NEEDS RATES Six line' maximum, one time, 25c.; three times, 50c: six times 75c; one month $3. Payable in ad advance.' vance.' advance.' FOR SALE 1917 Ford touring car. Best grade new top and two new tires. Apply to J. J. Beard, North Magno Magnolia lia Magnolia street (Teuton's old stand). 15-3t FOR SALE Six second-hand Fords; real bargains; come and loot at them. Auto Sales Company, Mack Taylor. WANTED Single-phase'-2 to 3 H. P. electric motor; also several 10-foot floor show cases; must be in good condition. Apply to Altman-Charles Company, northwest corner of Ocala House block. 14-3t WANTED A good young milk cow with young calf. Apply to E. N. De De-Long, Long, De-Long, between 12 and 1 o'clock. No. 2, Masonic building, Ocala. 7-6t FOR SALE One horse colt, nine teen months old; one automobile, one surrey. Apply to Jay Heisler, 806 Lime street. 12-t FOR RENT Three or four nice rooms with all modern improvements for light housekeeping. Apply at 212 Orange avenue. Phone 39. 12-t WANTED TO BUY A small tome of five or six rooms, with modern im improvements provements improvements in good location in Ocala. Can pay $200 down and $50 per quar ter. Address, Box 164, city. 12-6t FOR SALE, CHEAP A second-hand typewriter. Apply Star office, editorial department. 13-tf AUTO REPAIR SERVICE For quick and reliable automobile service come to the Florida House Garage. J. C. Lanier and H. C. Williams. 8-lm WANTED Stenographic work after 4:30 p. m. Office of fire chief, call 331 or 255. Mrs. Hampton Chambers, lxn WANTED All kinds of second hand furniture, guns, beds, etc. Notify me and I will send for th'em. J. W. Hunter, Gunsmith, South Main St. tf OCALA LODGE NO. 286. B, P. O. E. Ocala Lodge No. 286, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, mets the second and fourth Tuesday eve evenings nings evenings in each month. Visiting breth brethren ren brethren always welcome. Club house oppo opposite site opposite post oG re, east side. . J. H. Spencer, E. R. -E. J. Crook, Secretary. EDimval MotteH JACKSOXVILLJS, FLORIDA. 10O Rooms. SO Baths Opposite postoffice. All modern im improvements, provements, improvements, elevator, telephone lee lee-vlce. vlce. lee-vlce. Rates without bath, $1 and, up; with bath, 1.50 per person. W. s. JONES. M?rr. Klenzo Creme insures clean teeth and healthy gums. Sold in Ocala only at Gerig's Drug Store. tf AN ELECTRICAL jS7fl?KT2 Our garage "work has grown to such an extent that we had to have an Electri Electrical cal Electrical Expert, and we have secured the . services of Mr. E. Van Horn, a factory expert : : : : : : OCALA IRON CO T9 THS. IKftf "Tl j J WE OFFER more articles of value around house house-cleaning cleaning house-cleaning time tliau you think possible. Household ammonia is effective for cleaning pur purposes. poses. purposes. m Some of the best chamois sldns you' ever saw. Sponges that wear and give satisfaction. Mo III balls and moth flaltcs for the winter things. All Iinds cf Disinfectants . Axhundred other things that lighten the burden of , house-cleaning. Dir f v. VULCAN I Z I N G New Business New Machinery New Methods Pay us; a tall and see samples of our repair repair-work. work. repair-work. The method used by us eliminates the big white patch on your casings and is guar- anteed tor the life of the tire. Gasoline, Oil and Air at the Curh ALTMA FM-C HARLES CO. No. 1 Main St. Ocala House Block Ocala, Florida. H-C-E 2; Real vs. False Economy At This Time Resist the mental suggestion to curtail your regular taking of ice until "the weather turns warm again." Your refrigerator is going niqely now; it is Vrtlt chillef "and it is doing full duty as your prac practical tical practical SAVER. Don't let it lapse eren a little bit it may sulk on you all the remainder of the season. OCALA ICE AND PACKING COMPANY Jacksonville, Florida. In the heart of the city with Hemming Park for a front yardi Every modern convenience in each room- Dining room service is second to none. RATES From $1.50 per day per oerson to $6. ROBERT M. MEYER, Manager. : E Co JdDKPABJ.& C. Fnneral Directors and Embalmers AUTO 'HEARSE SEEVECE We deliver caskets free anywhere in the county. Calls promptly answered night or day. wilbur c. smrrn sam il pyles, jil LICENSED EMBALMERS. Day Phone 10 Nisht Phones 225 and 423 WORKS GARAGE n 'n Lj r- W) yJu ,jD v iL r '4 J. KAVANAUGII, Proprietor. 1 |
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