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STAR Si?-- .1 Weather Forecastf Showers to tonight; night; tonight; possibly fair tomorrow. OGALA, FLORIDA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1919. VOL. 26, NO. 157 FRANCE HAS TWO MIGHTY FRIENDS TURKS GIVING WILL GO TO MEET NEAR BEER NOT SO NEAR SOCIALISTS SHOrj MESPUI BEFORE DAYLIGHT ME TROUBLE IUIR. WILSON DIRIGIBLE LEFT 4 a' Steering Her Course Across the At Atlantic lantic Atlantic at Forty Miles an Hour East Fortune, Scotland, Wednes Wednesday, day, Wednesday, July 2. (By the Associated Press.) The dirigible R-34 started on its voyage to America at 1:48 this morning. FAR OUT AT SEA London, July 2. The position of the R-34 at 8 o'clock this morning, Greenwich time, was, 45 degrees and 20 minutes north latitude and 10 de degrees grees degrees and 40 minutes west longitude (about 025 miles off the coast of Ire Ireland) land) Ireland) according to a wireless from the aircraft received by the air min ministry istry ministry this morning. The machine was then making an average speed of 40 knots an hour. LAYING HER COURSE FOR LONG ISLAND The giant dirigible R-34 is the first lighter than air machine to attempt a trans-Atlantic flight. The airship, the largest of its kind in the world, measures G34 feet from nose to stern, .and carries three boats below the gas bag. She has a gas capacity of twelve million cubic feet and is com commanded manded commanded by Maj. G. H. Scott, of the Royal Air Force. The craft is equip equipped5 ped5 equipped5 with a wireless system as power powerful ful powerful as that of the great ocean liners. The landing will be made at Roose Roosevelt velt Roosevelt Field, Mineola, L. I. Under pres present ent present plans the great airship will only make a short stay before starting on her return voyage because of the fact that there is no hangar at Roosevelt Field or elsewhere capable of housing the machine. ; Accommodations for 200,000 persons" to witness the land landing ing landing have been provided. The R-34 recently made a 56-hour trip into the Baltic, durjng which she covered approximately 2000 miles. KERR IS WEATHERBOUND ' St. 'Johns, "July 2. Rain, fog and a northwest gale here and at Harbor Grace today prevented a start of ; the trans-Atlantic flight of Rear Admiral Mark Kerr in his Handley-Page ma machine. chine. machine. AMERICAN AIRSHIP BLEW UP Baltimore, July 2. Explosion of the big' navy dirigible C-8 at Camp Holabird near here yesterday, shook the countryside and eastern Balti more like an earthquake and jeopard- , ized the lives of 200 persons, who had gathered to see the flyer. The dirig dirigible, ible, dirigible, bound from Cape May, N. J., to Washington, and commanded by Lt. N. J. Learned, with a crew of six men and two passengers, landed on- the "camp fiell to repair the rudder. The explosion followed shortly afterwards and flames and blazing fragments scattered over the heads of the crowd burning and injuring seventy-five persons, mostly women and children. .The dirigible immediately burst into flames. HOLIDAY NOTICE The general delivery and stamp windows will be open from 9 to 10 a. m., July 4th. City carriers will mak one delivery in the morning. Rural carriers will not serve their routes on that day. All mails will be dis dispatched patched dispatched and boxed as usual. R. F. Rogers, Postmaster. WILL CLOSE FRIDAY, OULY 4 My garage will be closed all day Friday, July 4th; Patrons will please take notice. Bouvier's Garage, 2-2t M. A. Bouvier, Prop. V STANDS FOR VALUE Let us vulcanize your old, worn, blown-out tires and add greatly to their value and their length of serv service. ice. service. Thrift is the national watchword and" today thrift in auto, and cycle tires is essential. Vulcanizing is as valuable to used tires as repairing is to used shoe's. " BtALOCK BROS. PHONE 78 Oklawaha Ave .Ocala, Fla. America and Britain Will Never Al Allow low Allow Her to be the Victim of Hun Aggression (Associated Pres3) Paris, July 2. The Franco-British and Franco-American treaties, the Journal says, provide that interven intervention tion intervention of England and America on be behalf half behalf of France against Germany shall be interdependent. Great Britain and the United States, it is added, will only help France by combined action and not separately. The newspaper declares intervention must occur if disarmament of the Rhine territory is not sufficient to protect France from German aggression. WELL WORTH READING Paris, Tuesday, July 1. The cham chamber ber chamber of deputies voted to post through throughout out throughout France the speeches of Premier Clemenceau and Paul Deschanel, pres president ident president of the chamber, o'n the occasion of the presentation of the treaty to the chamber. ALLEN TO SUCCEED LIGGETT Paris, July 2. Major General Hen Henry ry Henry T. Allen, it was announced at Am American erican American military headquarters today, Jwill succeed Lieut. General Hunter Liggett in command of the "Forces of the Rhine' the new title of the Am American erican American occupation based on Coblenz. TAKE THE LID OFF Paris, July 2 General Pershing, it was announced at military headquar headquarters ters headquarters today, has issued Instructions that the military censorship be abol abolished ished abolished immediately. TRADE WITH TEUTONS Paris,, July 2. (By the Havas Agency. ) The French authorities are considering the question of re resuming suming resuming commercial relations with Germany, the Excelsior says. EDUCATIONAL FILM VERY INSTRUCTIVE Everybody today either owns a motor car or expects to own one some day. Almost everybody can "speak the language." But the knowledge of the general public with reference to motor cars is largely confined to what the motor car will do in business or family service. There is another side to the motoi car that is just as wonderful indeed, even more wonderful to many people -and that is the manner in which it is built up from ores and alloys, cloth and rubber, wood and leather, into an energetic, untiring, faithful servant with more than human endurance, and almost living in its response to the wishes of its driver. A series of five educational feat ures, recently adopted by the United States government in its educational work, starts today at the Temple theater, 'showing how motor cars are built by one of the largest builders of motor cars. One of the later features will show how Liberty motors were built for Uncle Sam's airplanes during the great war. TEMPLE ATTRACTIONS Today: Gladys Brockwell in "The Pitfalls of a Great City." Mutt and Jeff. Thursday: Evelyn Nesbit and hei son, Russell Thaw, in "The Woman Who Gave." Friday: Mae Marsh in "The Racing Strain" and Interantional News. JOBS FOR SERVICE MEN The secretary of the Board of Trade can put service men in touch with a business concern that wants fcur orfive responsible men. A good salary iV offered. Service men who are interested should see the secre secretary tary secretary of the Board of Trade at once. TO CLOSE ON THE FOURTH The following stores will close on the Fourth: Blalock Brothers. Altman & Charles. Davies the Tire Man. 2-2t TO ADVERTISERS Copy for dis display play display ads. must be in this office on the day before they are intended for pub publication lication publication The Star., tf . A big supply of Beggarweed and Sorghum Seed now on hand at the Ocala Seed Store. Phone 435. tf W. K. Lane, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, specialist Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Law Library Building, Ocala, Florida- tf Ford roadster in first class condi condition. tion. condition. The Maxwell Agency, Ocala. tf Allies May Have to Administer An Another other Another Whipping to the Ottomans (Associated Press) Paris, July 2. The Turkish situa situation tion situation is giving the peace conference much uneasiness. Reports received here indicate that there has been or organized ganized organized in Asiatic Turkey three Turk Turkish ish Turkish armies whose generals refuse to take orders from Constantinople. The Turks at Konia are threatening the Italians, while those at Balikesri are opposing the Greeks. AID FOR SUFFERERS FROM THE EARTHQUAKE (Associated Press) Florence, July 2. Relief for the victims of the earthquake in this dis district trict district Sunday was going forward more rapidly today. Minister of Public Works Pantano and Minister of Transportation de Vitp, arrived today and took charge of the work of for forwarding warding forwarding supplies to the stricken areas. STRIKE SUBSIDES (Associated Press) New York, July 2. The strike of the commercial telegraphers union against the Western Union and Pos Postal tal Postal companies was declared off this afternoon. This announcement was made by a deputy of International President Thomas. 'PEACE AND PROSPERITY' Colossal Sale at Frank's to Celebrate Their Coming The "Peace and Prosperity" sale at Frank's, which began this morning, is proving a great success. For several days, the clever man manager, ager, manager, Max Israelson, and his efficient assistants, have been marking and ar arranging ranging arranging the goods in the most con convenient venient convenient and attractive manner. They are the best of goods at the lowest prices, and when the doors opened the rush of customers almost took the clerks off their feet. When a Star man looked in this morning at ten o'clock, a look-in was all he could have, for he dared not go into the crowd of ladies for fear of crushing some of their dainty Trilbies with his brogans. The store was handsomely and pa patriotically triotically patriotically decorated inside and out with the national colors, and the dec decorations orations decorations and the handsome show win windows dows windows alone were enough to attract the attention of the most casual passerby. A great many people came in from the country this .morning to attend this sale, the merits of which were fully presented to them by the Star last week. HAPPY HOURS FOR THE U. D. C. The Daughters of the Confederacy spent a most enjoyable day at the beautiful suburban home of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Harriss yesterday. The ladies busily plied their needles and finished two quilts which will be sent to the old soldiers' home in Jackson ville. One of these quilts was the gift of Mrs. Bertie Badger Moyers of Tampa and was made by her mother-in-law, fhe late Mrs. William Moyers, who was well known in Ocala. The other quilt was made by Mrs. E. I. Carney, and other Daugh ters. At the noon hour a most tempt ing picnic lunch was served on the veranda. The pleasures of the day were added to by several victrola se lections, and a humorous reading by one of the new members. Another quilting will be held at the residence of Mrs. Emily Green on the after noon of Tuesday, July 10th, at two o'clock, when another quilt will be finished, the gift of Mrs. B. D. Black burn.- Rev. L. H. Kirkbv. who went to Jacksonville yesterday to meet his daughter. Miss Olive Kirkby of New York city, who was a passenger via the Clyde Line, returned last night accompanied by his daughter, who will be the guest for some time of her parents. No appetite? Then take a bottle of PEPTONA. Only one dollar at Ceng's Drug Store. 28-tf Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Malever and children accompanied by Mr. Thelbert Troxler left today in their car for Jacksonville and Pablo. Mrs. Mai ever and her younger children wil take a cottage on the beach for the summer, but Mr. Malever, Fred and Mr. Troxler will return in a few days Two Dodge touring cars for sale at bargains. The Maxwell Agency, tf Pennsylvania Will Take Distinguish ed Men Out to Greet the President (Associated Press) Washington. July 2. Vice Presi dent Marshall and all members of the cabinet are expected to crreet Presi dent Wilson at New York, when he arrives Monday. Secretary Daniels has arranged for the members of the president's official family to ero aboard the battleship Pennsylvania, which is o meet the presidential shin outside New York harbor and escort her to port. SHOULD NEVER BE SHUT (Associated Press) Richmond, July 2. Orders were re ceived in Richmond today for reopen ing of the United States employment office here. Hundreds of position seek ers visited the office yesterday to find he doors closed. A JULY SERMON, OR THE JULY MORN When that great artist painted that world famous picture "September Morn," little did he dream that a July Morn" would dawn through his window and find mankind, too, naked and shorn; little recked he of the whirlwind changes that a few years has brought to pass, and the misery that change has fastened upon us. But yesterday, a "July Morn" dawned upon us, and found mankind wholly unprepared to meet it; it has left him shorn and naked, as the artist in that famous picture. May we but have courage to face it; mankind, left naked to his enemies!- We laughed and winked at the pic ture where the artist had shorn wom an of her every robe, and shown hev as she was; but little we dreamed that picture to be a prophetic portrayal of ourselves but a few years hence! Man took credit for the picture, and enjoyed it for a season; but alas, like the fable of old, the gate has been swung on the. other side; things are reversed, and man has been stripped of his freedom by his counterpart, woman! The morning dawns without a cheer; the noon day sun shines through the lattice as before, but the ring and tinkle of the glass on the counter is silent; the sun sinks to rest as to nature's plan seemeth wise, but the merry din we once heard as we took our parting glass is buried! And woman, thou counterpart of man claims credit. To you it is due, but do you recall the divine injunction, Vengeance is mine, sayeth the Lord"? It wasft work of retaliation, of revenge for the folly of that artist; he left you shorn and naked, and you sought revenge! But why, oh why, fair woman, the world painted not that picture! Why punish the whole world for the sins of that one man? Are you to claim divine rights, and like the Father who punished the world for its sins against His Son? Why not have called upon man tc avenge your feelings, and punish that thoughtless offender? He would have been punished, yea, cursed! He would have been banished, stoned, starved, tortured, cut up into bits; no punish punishment ment punishment could you have demanded at man's hands he would not have in inflicted flicted inflicted with heer! Rather than suffer a "July Morn" to have dawned upon him, no ocean depths would he not have fathomed! No mountain peak would he not have scaled for you! But alas, the July Morn has dawn ed, and the picture it has drawn is fearful; but are its imprints lasting? Will man permit it to go on forever? You boast you have charge of the legislature, Congress, the executive and judicial departments of the coun country. try. country. You may have now through the instrumentalities of a few effeminate weaklings, who never had the man manhood hood manhood to take a drink when anyone was looking; you may have it through u, few weaklings who dare not let the world know what and how they drink. But your time is short, make the best of it you can, for man has now arisen to his feet; he will be sorrow ful no more. Did our forefathers stop to weep over the savage butchery of their loved ones? No, they pursued the foe, and slew him, leaving the dead to take care of its own; and that spirit pervades us yet. Fair woman, this is your last chance. Speak, oh speak, and tell those weaklings, over whom you dominate, and who have not the right to wear the spurs of manhood, to change, and change quickly; Force them to give bacft to mankind that which you so subtly robbed it of! Repent, O woman, and co back to the days when Old Glory waved over the land of the free! The savage man has awakened, the trum trumpet pet trumpet has blown that will not call re retreat treat retreat until the world is free; it is your last play in a long drama, and Attorney General and Congress Try Trying ing Trying to Cut Even that Slight Consolation Off (Associated Press) Washington, July 2 Congress and the department of justice yesterday moved to stop the sale of 2 beer under the war-time prohibition act. Prohibition leaders of the House after a series of conferences obtained a call for a meeting Monday of the judiciary committee, which is expect expected ed expected to agree promptly on an independ independent ent independent bill for enforcement of the war wartime time wartime law, defining intoxicating liquor as containing more than one-half of one per cent, alcohol and to recom recommend mend recommend passage of such a bill by the House at the earliest possible mo moment. ment. moment. At the time the department of justice made it plain its agents would enforce the act according to its interpretation that anything contain containing ing containing more than one-half of one per cent, alcohol cannot be legally manu manufactured factured manufactured or sold. QUIGG'S QUIETUS (Associated Press) New York, July 2. Lemuel Ely Quigg, a former member of Congress and prominent in republican politics in New York state for many years, died at his home here today. He had been in poor health for several years. ODD FELLOWS INSTALL THEIR NEW OFFICERS At the meeting of Tulula Lodge Tuesday night, the officers for the en ensuing suing ensuing six months were installed, D. D..G. M. Lamoreaux, from Center Hill, officiating. The officers were as follows: Joe Potter, Past Grand. H. R. Luffman, Noble Grand. C. W. Moremen, Vice Grand. Jake Brown, Secretary. M. M. Little, Chaplain. F. W. Ditto, Warden. J. D. Wilkes, Conductor. J. D. McCaskill, R. S. N. G. ' L. H. Pillans, L. S. N. G. Chris Simmons, R. S. S. H. D. Stokes, L. S. S. Tulula Lodge does not make much noise, but it keeps on the even tenor of its way, always doing good work, taking 'in a good man occasionally, and seldom losing one unless he lsd promoted to the greatest of Grand Lodges, where all the Odd Fellows in good standing go. A PLEASANT OCCASION Miss Pearl Fausett was the attrac attractive tive attractive hostess last night at a water watermelon melon watermelon cutting and dance, when she entertained twenty-five of her friends at the home of her parents on West Exposition street. The young people enjoyed various games, and several vocal selections by a male quartet composed of Messrs. Frank Gates, Altman, Purvis and Mayo. Ice cold watermelons w'ere cut on the lawn and enjoyed by the following: Mr. and Mrs. Clem Purvis, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mayo, Mrs. H. S. Chambers, Misses Myrtle Brinson, Proctor, Stearns, Mamie Fant of Irvine, and Miss Geiger of Micanopy and Messrs. William Altman, Frank Adams, Frank Gates, Castleberry, Christian, Tillman, James Brinson and Whorter Carter and Clark Young of Fairfield. BANKS WILL CLOSE JULY 4TH The undersigned banks of the city will be closed all day on Friday, July 4th, account of legal holiday. The Commercial Bank.. The Ocala National Bank. The Munroe and Chambliss 7-2t National Bank. when the curtain falls in this act, you will be rustled from the stage, and man will finish the play. The inner man is aroused; you may dominate now, and you may later, but play the game fair; if you do not, you will be counted out at the polls in November, when man asserts his rights, and for forever ever forever banishes you from all partici participation pation participation in civil government. We too, seek revenge, and as each dry morn morning ing morning dawns it adds pain to the already horrible and unendurable pangs left from the preceding day. Fair woman, take warning, our time will come, and no September Morn would suggest the manner in which you will be shorn of the so-called power you now claim; no July Morn can bring pains that will suggest what your torture will be. Fair woman, save yourself now. A Revengeful Sufferer. The Butternut Bread turned out here is acknowledged the best ever. Made entirely, by machinery and. a more sanitary product was never pro produced. duced. produced. Carter's Bakery. 21-tf Indications are that the Spartaeans Will Go Farther than In the March Insurrection (Associated Press) Berlin, July 2. The communistic leaven has again arrived at the fer fermenting menting fermenting stage in Greater Berlin and there are indications that the strike movement may develop into a politi political cal political insurrection. The candor and bold boldness ness boldness with which independent social socialists ists socialists and communist henchment are playing their cards shows they feel surer of their footing than during the March revolt. LOCAL LEGISLATION The city council at its meeting Tuesday evening authorized the pur purchase chase purchase of a chassis for use as a fire truck. This will replace the small truck now being used for hauling the chemical apparatus, which has been in bad shape for a long time. Messrs. Winer and Goldman were appointed H special committee to inspect several propositions made, and also the trucks offered, and select one suitable for the purpose. The purchase of this truck will be -quite a relief to those who have had the responsibility of getting the ap apparatus paratus apparatus to fires qf late. On several occasions the old car failed to run at very critical moments, and it was only by sheer good luck that serious losses were not sustained on account of it. t Mr. L. T. Izlar asked that he be allowed to insure the new fire truck. Taken under advisement. -The council intended passing upon the new traffic ordinance, but on ac account count account of its incomplete condition, Mr. Goldman, who has charge of it, asked for more time for its preparation, which was granted. Dr. Walter Hood called the atten attention tion attention of the council to a number of in interesting teresting interesting features in connection with the proposed ordinance. Mr. L. W. Duval, representing the Ocala Motor Club, was also present and presented several changes suggested by the club. Mr. Goldman was requested to have the ordinance in shape for pre presentation sentation presentation at the next regular meet meeting, ing, meeting, embodying the suggestions made by the auto club and such other changes as may be deemed best. .Complete detailed reports went read from Clerk Sistrunk, Dr. H. P. Watt and Mr. Frank Drake, chairman of the library board. The report of the city clerk showed balances on hand in each fund for the remaining three months of the year. Some of these funds show that the de departments partments departments must be very careful in their expenditures, as under the pres present ent present budget plan no department is al allowed lowed allowed to borrow funds for another, nor can the disbursing officers issue warrants against a fund unless there is money in the treasury credited to that particular fund for their re redemption. demption. redemption. The library report shows that instl- tuilcn in splendid condition, with con siderably over 5000 volumes now ok its lists. The health report deals principally with meat markets, bakeries and dairies. Dr. Watt announces that he has given reports of "good" on sever several al several institutions that might show a bet better ter better grade, and others that might show a lower one when more thoro inspection is made. - It was decided to dispense with in insurance surance insurance on the old market building, as it is practically a fireproof build building. ing. building. Eastman Kodaks and Films to be had in Ocala only at Gerig's Drug Store. 28-tf ES Arrival and Departure of passenger trains at OCALA UNION STATION. The following schedule figures pub published lished published as information and not guar guaranteed. anteed. guaranteed. (Eastern Standard Time) SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILROAD Leave 2:20 am 1:55 pm 4:05 pm 2:15 am 1:50 pm Arrive 2:10 am 1:20 pin 4:25 pm 2:15 am .1:25 Dm Jacksonville-New York Jacksonville Jacksonville Petersburg Tamna. Manatee 4:25 pm Tampa-St. Petersburg 4:05 pm ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD Leave Arrive 2:12 pm Jacksonville-New York 2:15am. 1:45 pm. J'ksonvllle-G'ineavllle 2:25 pm. 1:42 a.m. J'ksonvllle-G'nesrlll 10:12 pm. 2:15 am. St. Pet'abrg-Lakeland 2:12 a&i. 3:35 pm fit. Pet'sburg-Lakeland 1:25 pm 7:10 am. Dun2iellon-Wilcox 7.40 am. Du'neUon-Ikeland 11:02 pm. 5:25 pm. Homosassa 1:25 pm, 10:13 pm. Lees-burg 0:42 am, 4:45 pm. Gainesville 11:50 am, Monday. Wednesday. Friday. Tuesday. Thursday. Saturday; RAILROAD HDL OCALA EVENING STAR, WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1919 OCALA EVEIIII1G STAR Publlahed Every Day Except Sunday by STAR PUBLISHING COMPANY OF OCALA, FLA. II. II. Carroll, President P. V. JLavengood, Secretary-Treaurer J. II. nenjamln, Editor Entered at Ocala, Fla., postofflce as second-class matter. TELEPHONES Ha nine Office Five-One Editorial Department Two-Seven . 3IE3IUEK ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled for the use lor republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Domestic One year, in advance $6.00 dlx months, in advance 3.00 Three months, In advance....... 1.50 One month, in advance .' .60 Foreign One year, in advance 22 Six months, in advance 25 Three months, in advance 2.25 One month, in advance 80 ADVERTISING RATES Displays 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 six times 5c. per inch. Special position 20 per cent additional. Rates based on 4-Inch minimum. Less than four inches will take higher rate, which will be furnished on application. Reading: Notices t 5c. per line for first Insertion; 3c. per line for each subse subsequent quent subsequent insertion. One change a week allowed on readers without extra com composition position composition charges. Legal advertisements at legal rates. Electros must be mounted, or charge will be made for mounting. America yet has 470,000 men in Europe. The St. Augustine Bromides calls it July the thirst. Honest men are always paying the debts of swindlers. with a revolver or automatic pistol in addition to his rifle. Our war depart department ment department is also much in love with the trench shotgun, and any enemy who ever attacks America will have to run up against a lot of them. NO SAVING IN DYING There used to be a time when a man could save his family money and trouble by dying, but the only way he can do anything of the sort now is by jumping down the stack of a blast furnace or walking into a quicksand. The Tampa Tribune prints the fol following lowing following items of expense against a man who died from an operation: Opening and closing grave. $ 5.00 Embalming and casket .. 337.50 Funeral directors 16.0U Dr. R. C. Lembach 238.00 Dr. J. Park Neil 643.0U Dr. O. H. McCandless 60.00 Hospital bill (Kansas City). 149.78 Dr. George V. Allen 35.00 X-ray treatments ... 153.00 RUSSELL ISN'T RESPECTFUL Total $1,637.28 AN EXAMPLE TO AMERICA Every barroom in America was sore on the face of the earth. The Western Union seems smarter than the government in handling a strike.. . Sam Hilburri of -Palatka will prob probably ably probably run for Congressin the fourth district next year. We are not betting on Willard nor Dempsey, but we will give five dollars to the Red Cross if both- the brutes tre killed. The Dutch seem to have formed "an affection for the ex-kaiser. Well,1 the Dutch love Limburger cheese and ether bad-smelling things. Judging by his name, Eamon de Valera should be the president of a dago, greaser or spiggoty republic rather than "the Irish republic." We hope that the legislature of 1923, when, it reapportions the con congressional gressional congressional districts of this state, will show some sense in laying them out. At present they are freaks. The bolsheviki promise us a revolu revolution, tion, revolution, or at least a choice bunch of riots on the fourth. Well bet they won't start anything in this part of the country. There is nothing better to hang a man to than a liveoak limb. Why don't the people who are anx anxious ious anxious to set Ireland free go over and set her free. Nobody is holding them. The truth is that Valera and the other "leaders" are working the rank and file for its money, so they can live easy themselves. The mollycoddles who say there is no use in the pistol will be shocked to know that our war department re regards gards regards it as a most efficient weapon for close fighting. When the war cloed, the war department was work working ing working to equip every infantry soldiev MICKIE SAYS GOOD UVCrVVT GVtA G-OOO HOTAOt OO &.VM.O.L TlLl. TV4 OUT JES StttA UKG OtAfc fOVKA ttEV&ft. CHf OME TV Ot 'fct NN2. StT ALU TVt tSPE Vl tW V&TCft 1W VAS lWOMOUftt fct?CU The Tampa Tribune says: When the war was first started there were thousands of young Am American erican American boys who, growing impatient of waiting for opportunity to go as United States soldiers, rushed over the border and enlisted as members of the various Canadian units. They are beginning to get home now, those who did not make the su supreme preme supreme sacrifice side by side with their Canadian cousins, and it is pleasing to hear them tell how that wonderful Canada "treated us like 'gentlemen.' Gunner Harry Smith, a Connecticut soldier, back home, tells in the New York Times a story which is worth listening to. He says: "I was discharged one hour after arriving in Canada from overseas, and, equipped with my first month's gratuity allowance, transportation and service badge, was on my way home in the United States in jaza time.' We were also allowed $30 for civilian clothing. I am now receiv ing $70 and my wife $30 per month for the time stated. My wife receiv ed regularly and promptly $30 per month during my absence, plus for foreign eign foreign exchange money. I cannot speak too highly of the wonderful country which treated us American volunteers like 'gentlemen.' As Mrs. Malaprop said, "compari sons are odorous." We don't notice any tangible move toward getting any more property on the Marion county tax books. The state and county millage will be at least thirty mills, probably more. Oca'a people will have to pay about 7 per cent., not counting federal taxes. The trouble is at the fountain head unless the people bestir them selvesselves their taxes will put them on the pauper list. The postoffice of every city in the United States where mail is delivered by carriers charges two cents for postage on local letters. That has been the rate in Ocala for almost twenty years, yet Monday when two- cent postage was resumed dozens of people thought a cent came off theiv city letters. The bloody chasm has reopened in one place at least. Many northern democrats hate southern democrats for helping to take away their, whis ky. We have often thought that if northern republicans and southern democrats could get together and form a national party, the country would be better off. MICKEY IS THE STAR'S DEVIL Ocala will be rather quiet on the fourth. Most of the people who have autoes will go to Silver Springs, ov the Belleview or Cooter Pond picnics. Quite a lot of us, however, have no cars, among them .this writer, and he will stay at home to help print a paper "for the other stay at homes. One of the most infernally dishon dishonorable orable dishonorable things a man can do is to try to obtain a political office by appeal appealing ing appealing to his church or lodge member membership. ship. membership. One of our churches and one of our fraternal orders are being most unscrupulously used to further the ambitions of certain politicians. Mrs. Mayor Horwitz O'Brien has resigned her job as mayor of Moore Haven. She obtained a lot of notorie notoriety ty notoriety for herself and a little for hei town, but it is very likely that some ordinary runt of a business man would have made a better mayor. PHONE 108 or 243 for FRESH MEAT and GROCERIES Prompt Delivery MAIN STREET MARKET Editor Russell of the Palatka News is not so respectful as he maybe should be toward the missionaries who go around the state and at so much per diem from the government show the benighted people how to do things in an uptodate way. Following is one of his recent editorials: Milk Clubs and Cattle Ticks Miss May Morse, who is described as a dairy specialist and supervisor of milk clubs in Jacksonville, has been interviewed by the Florida Times- Union and her interview, more than likely written by herself, appeared in that paper of the 21st inst. Insofar as Miss Morse's work con tributes to an increased consumption of milk among children, and even adults, she may be said to be doing good. But Miss Morse does not stop there. In the course of her "inter "interview" view" "interview" she is quoted as saying: "The cattle ticks have been the greatest handicap to developing the dairy industry in Florida, and I find that members wTho live in counties where systematic tick eradication work is not in progress are voluntari ly dipping their cattle if there is a dipping vat available, or else resort to greasing their stock to keep the ticks off. "All of them have learned that the cows give less milk when carrying a lot of ticks than when they are tick free, and as increased milk production is the main object of the club which was originated and1 fathered by Mr. F. C. Groover, the members are doing everything in their power to keep their stock free of ticks. There is no doubt that with the release of counties from tick fever quarantine there will be a great increase in number of milch cows owned and they will be of much better quality than those now found in the state." Miss Morse is a city bred woman and what she doesn't know about cows would probably require as much book room as is afforded by the shelves of the Congressional Library. That she is a part of the syndicated crowd engaged in the propaganda for tick eradication in this state is ap parent. That propaganda is fathered, not by Mr. F. C. Groover, a wholesale druggist who would profit by the sale of tick eradicating chemicals, but the beef trust. It was this trust, aided and abetted by the press of Florida, that came mighty near causing the enactment by the late legislature of a bill com compelling pelling compelling the cattle men to dip their cattle every fourteen days for a long period of months and which would have compelled the counties of the state to build innumerable dipping vats at the expense of the people. But it would have done more than that. It would, had it became a law, have compelled every cattle man now doing business in this state to retire from business. And simply because he could not have complied with the law and remained in business. The tick no doubt has been largely responsible for keeping the cattle in industry dustry industry in this state from taking the place to which it is rightfully en entitled. titled. entitled. And it is gratifying to know that cattle men in all parts of the state are waking up to the importance of dipping their stock as a means of ridding them of the handicap to a greater prosperity. But this beef trust for which Miss Morse is at least indirectly working is not plugging for the prosperity of our Florida cattle men. Had they been successful in passing the ingeni ingeniously ously ingeniously worded law which they present presented ed presented to the legislature in the guise of philanthropic legislation, the men now in the business would have been ruin ruined ed ruined and the beef trust would have been in the saddle in Florida. Miss Morse has no reason to wor worry ry worry about the quality of milk produced in Florida. Having consumed milk in at least ten different states of the Union, it is our private opinion, here hereby by hereby publicly expressed, that a gallon of Florida milk will produce as much cream as the same quantity in any other state. Tick eradication is coming, but it is not coming to the cattle men of this stateof Florida through any ar arbitrary bitrary arbitrary acts of the legislature. It is coming through the education of the men who own the cattle to the prime importance of such eradication. But the city philanthropist who never owned a cow in her life, who knows nothing of the cow business, and wrho wTould shriek and run from a grazing Shorthorn, is contributing nothing by her learned diatribe on "Milk Culture and Its Relative Rela Relation tion Relation to a More Amicable Baby Crop," is going to contribute nothing, and then some, to that education. NOTICE Our store will be closed Thursday afternoon for the regular weekly hol holiday iday holiday and also all day Friday for July 4th. l-2t Marion Hardware Co. Camouflage is -i ric- going without ,0 VSS classes because H you think they i-. i raaKe you loots. old- csBjy Ocala, Fla. JfCJfilX NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the un undersigned dersigned undersigned on the 1st day of May, 1919, dissolved the co-partnership theretofore existing betwen them un under der under the style and firm name of the Welch-Todd Lumber Company. All parties indebted to the firm will please see Rush H. Todd at the office of the firm in Ocala, Florida. Rush K. Todd will continue the business formerly conducted by the Welch Welch-Todd Todd Welch-Todd Lumber Company under the style and firm name of R. H. TODD LUMBER CO. David S. Welch. 6-25-4t-wed Rush H. Todd. i There will be hot rolls and hot cin namon buns. Just follow the crowd. tX is strikingly portrayed in the latest production of Nelson Productions, Inc., which is being used by the United States Government as an Eatocattfoinail FeataFe Beginning this week, the first of five features will be shown at this theater, showing how motor cars are built in what is probably the world's largest motor car factory. This factory also built Ofoerfly Motors during the war, and one of the features show how these were constructed. The typically American production system here portrayed was one of the biggest factors in winning the war with Germany. It has also placed America first in manufacture. No matter what your age or sex, you cannot offord to miss this very instructive series. TeHtmplle THnsta0 WILL CLOSE FOR THE FOURTH Our store will be closed all day on the Fourth of July. We will NOT close for half holiday on the 3rd. 2t O. K. TEAPOT GROCERY. There will be hot rolls and hot cin cinnamon namon cinnamon buns. Just follow the crowd, tf Another shipment of the famous AlmrrZada.Face Powder in at Gerig's Drug Store. 28-tf DR. G. A. H. EDMISTON Veterinary Physician and Surgeon Residence Phone 501. Office Phone 123 Ocala, Florida. L. ALEXANDER PRACTICAL CARPENTER AND BUILDER Careful Estimates made on all Con Contract tract Contract work. Gives More and Better Work for the Honey than any other contractor In tbm city. WA KIRl 75c Good Quality Material Strips Checked and Plain White All fast colors and nice run of regular sizes Special for Thursday Only (GO " Winy Fay More ? 99 We Close TlMirsclay Afittermiooe OCALA EVENING STAR, WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1919 CHRISTIAN-BORLAND The home of Mrs. J. B. Borland in r:- u .. r v .:r..i noon wedding Tuesday, when her I youngest daughter, Ethel, became the bride of Mr. William Christian of Mcintosh. For the occasion the entire S lower floor was decorated in artistic simplicity with ialms,' bamboo and! vases of pink and white asters. j The bride was lovely in a girlish j dress of white net over satin, with a long tulie veil falling from a coronet of tulle and orange blossoms. She carried a big arm bouquet of white roses. The imxressive ring ceremony was j performed by Rev. Smith Hardin of j the Ocala Methodist church in the presence of only the families of the bride and groom and a few intimate : friends. As the guests arrived, fruit punch was served in the screened porch, which is really a summer living room. Immediately after the ceremony a de delicious licious delicious three-course breakfast was served in the dining room. The table was decorated with streamers of white tulle brought from a fluffy bow on the chandelier to the four corners and caught there with asparagus fern and pink and white asters. The cen centerpiece terpiece centerpiece was an enormous white cake on an exquisite cluny lace cloth sur surrounded rounded surrounded by fern and asters. Individual moire boxes of the bride's cake, tied with bows of white satin ribbon, were distributed by lit little tle little Miss Patience Dupree, the niece of the bride. Early in the afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Christian left in their new Buick touring car, amid a shower of rice and good wishes, for a honeymoon at Daytona and Atlantic Beach, after which they will return to their own home in Mcintosh. The announcement of the marriage of this popular young couple will be received with sincerest interest by their many friends throughout this an other states. The out of town guests included the groom's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Christian and their two daughters, " Mr. and Mrs. Dedman and Mr. Bar Barclay clay Barclay Neil from Mcintosh, Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Borland, Miss Edna Bor Borland, land, Borland, Mrs. Nat Hunter and little Miss Carolina Hunter, of Fort Myers, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Borland, James Bor Borland land Borland and Miss Eugenia Fuller of Ocala, and Miss Mary Branham of Orlando. OCALA OCCURRENCES If you have any society items for the Star, please phone five-two-three. Miss Fannie Belle Nelson has re turned from a visit at Oxford and is again at her post in the Book Shop. Mr. Hugh Geiger, after a pleasant vacation spent with relatives and! friends, left this afternoon for Merid Meridian, ian, Meridian, Conn. There will be hot rolls and hot cin cinnamon namon cinnamon buns. Just follow the crowd. Mr. Walter Troxler returned home yesterday from Jacksonville, where he spent two weeks with his friend, Harry Holcomb Jr. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Woodward and son, Mr. Clarence Woodward, or' Cotton Plant and Miss Helen Veal of i MarteL were in the city today. Just in, Lord Baltimore Paper in all j colors, CO cents the box at Gerig's Drug Store. 28-tf Miss Eugenia Clarke of Albany, Ga., will arrive in Ocala tomorrow for a moth's visit and will be the attrac tive guest of Miss Jess Dehon. Miss Theo Beckham left this after noon on the limited for Franklin, Va.J where she will be the guest of Mrs. George Smith and other relatives. Copy for display advertisements' must be handed in the day before they are to appear to insure insertion. We will not guarantee insertion the same day copy is furnished. Mr. and Mrs. James Cribbett of St. Petersburg, passed through Ocala vesterdav en route to Asheville. N. C. where they will spend the remainder of the summer. NOTICE TO PATRONS OF MASTERS STORE Our patrons are respectfully re requested quested requested to anticipate their require requirements ments requirements of service from us, for Thurs Thursday day Thursday afternoon and Friday of this week, as our store will close at l.p. m. Thursday, July 3rd, and not re reopen open reopen until Saturday morning, July 5. H. B. Masters Co. AGE NO BAR Everybody in Ocala is Eligible Old people stooped with suffering, Middle age, courageously fighting, Youth protesting impatiently; Children, unable to explain; All in misery from their kidneys. Perhaps a little backache first. Urinary disorders, dropsy may ouicklv follow. Doan's Kidney Pills are for weak kidneys. Are endorsed by thousands. Here's Ocala testimony. H. G. McDavid, retired carpenter, Henry and N. Osceola Sts., says: "I suffered from bladder trouble. I was comDelled to get up often at night to Eassthe kidney secretions and this roke my rest. Mornings I awoke feeling unrefreshed. I learned of Doan's Kidney Pills and procured some at Tydings & Co's. drug store, and they helped me in a very short time. Doan's soon strengthened my kidneys and bladder."! Price COc. at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mr. McDavid had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfgs., Buffalo, N. Y. Adv. 11 LIFE FIRE A. E. GERIG INSURANCE Ocala, Florida ACCIDENT AUTOMOBILE CALL PHONE 13 I When You Want First Class Mrs. W. W. Rilea, who since the death of her mother, Mrs. Batchelder two weeks ago, has been visiting rel atives in Winter Haven and St. Pe Petersburg, tersburg, Petersburg, returned to Ocala yester day. A big supply of Beggarweed and Sorphum Seed now on hand at the Ocala Seed Store. Phone 435. tf Mr. and Mrs. L. B. McKenzie motored to the lake today, accom panied by their niece. Miss Annie Pope Eagleton, who will remain for a; two weeks' viist with Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Martin. Misses Minnie Bobbins and Ada! Lederhouse of Miami arrived in Ocala today on their way to Cotton Plant, where they will be the guests for sev eral weeks of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Woodward. Do your shopping at the Book Shop before one o'clock Thursday. We will I also be closed all day Friday, July 4th. The Book Shop. 30-3t Mr. Cranford Standley, who has a splendid position in the Florida Na National tional National Bank of Jacksonville, will ar rive in Ocala Thursday night to spend his fourth of July vacation with his mother, Mrs. S. A. Standley. On account of the illness of Dr. E-. Van Hood, .Mrs. W. T. Gary has post poned the luncheon at which she had expected to entertain today the ex ecutive board of the Woman's Club in compliment to Mrs. William Hocker, who will soon leave for the west. Forty-two ladies, members of the sewing circle of the Methodist church, went down to the lake yesterday and held their weekly meeting with Mrs.) W. H. Clark. They carried a picnic lunch and in spite of the disagreeable weather had a very pleasant and profitable meeting. Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Blackburn and children. Janet, Jessie Ray and Ben- nie Culverhouse, leave the last of the week for a motor trip down the east coast. They will be the guests in Fort Lauderdale of Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Flippen, where the girls will re main for a longer visit, Mr. and Mrs. Blackburn returning in two weeks. There will be hot rolls and hot cin namon buns. Just follow the crowd. In Olde Virginia "Where "J Sl'y, B" f 5"V. Cig-mrtteTobacco ISgL lMKfCU J5RW. -it,. 9f "Along toward early autumn, after the to tobacco bacco tobacco crop had been cured, and packed away in the barns, the planters from up and down the riwr would foregather, usually at the Strcbridge place, thence to set out on the first fox hunt of th-. season." I'.aity Virginia, page 243. Times ctange, but Virginia tobacco still holds the world's favor "T IT THEN, in 1618, Virginia tobacco was ff introduced into England, it quickly became "the rage'. Since then it has gained steadily in popularity all over the world. In 1918, in the United States alone, five times more Virginia tobacco was smoked in cigarettes than all the foreign-grown tobaccos combined. That's because a cigarette of sun sun-ripened ripened sun-ripened Virginia has a crisp, lively relish that no cigarette of foreign or mixed tobaccos can match. Piedmonts made entirely of choicest Virginia tobacco will prove this to you, 1 - J rr I 1 f p"0 (Wn nn rm n I I c IX XTi JC L 3 z c: i NOTE Virginia tobacco is grown here in the U. S. A. Unlike foreign-grown tobaccos, it carries no Import duty. Import doty doesn't make a cigarette any better it merely adds to its cost. Piedmonts give you better value because all your money buys tobacco quality. PRESSING CLUB : : service : We call for your work and J make prompt return delivery. MARION PRESSING CLUB j 2 Smith & Garrett, Props. Mdver&.Riacfiay UNDERTAKERS and EMBALMERS PHONES 47. 104. SO? OCALA, FLORIDA Do your shopping at the Book Shop . before one o'clock Thursday. We will also be closed all day Friday, July 4th. The Book Shop.' 30-3t Rev. John R. Herndon went to Jacksonville yesterday to a call meet ing of the Presbytery of Suwannee. The Presbytery accepted Mr. Hern- don's resignation as pastor of the First Presbyterian church of this city and granted him a letter of dismission to the Presbytery of Orange, North Carolina, effective August 1, 1919. Two Dodge touring cars for sale at bargains. The Maxwell Agency, tf Mrs. E. G. Peek came ut from tht- lake yesterday, accompanied by Mrs. T. C. Fletcher and children, who have been her guests for the past two weeks, and who are returning to their home at Williston today. Mrs. Peek will return to the lake tomorrow and will have for her guests for a week Mrs. W. P. Preer and two children. Mrs. Emily Green received a letter yesterday from George Davis, who is in the hosrual in Atlanta, express ing his appreciation of the box of good things sent him last week by the ladies after the supper for returned soldiers last Thursday night.- George says that Edward Green came to see him in his rolling chair and they had a fine time talking about home and friends. Miss Sara Dehon left this afternoon for an extended visit to relatives and friends in Albany, Cuthbert and Americus, Ga., stopping in Jackson Jacksonville, ville, Jacksonville, where she will be the guest of Mrs. H. N. Hall for a brief visit. Miss Dehon will spend the month of Au August gust August with friends in Charlotte and Asheville, N. C. later going to Sum Sum-merville, merville, Sum-merville, S. C, where she will be the guest of relatives until October 1st, when she will enter Ashley Hall in Charleston, S. C. Miss Dehon will be away from Ocala until Christina, and will be greatly missed by the young society people which whom she is quite a favorite. AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING Our facilities for repairing all makes of automobiles are complete. Whether your car is in need of a gen general eral general overhauling or only minor re repairing pairing repairing we can do it at a very reason reasonable able reasonable price ,and we guarantee satis satisfaction faction satisfaction in every instance. We thor thoroughly oughly thoroughly wash up your car free after making repairs. Service Station for Moon, Maxwell, Chalmers and Oakland Cars. OPEN 6 A. M. to 10 P. M. BOWER'S GARAGE Ft. King Ave. and S. Magnolia St. Phone 516. Ocala, Fla. FUNERAL DIRECTORSand EKTIBALLIERS AUTOMOBILE SERVICE No charge for delivery of caskets anywhere day or night. WILBUR SMITH, SAM R. PYLES JIL, Licensed Embalmers Office Phone 10 Night Phones 225 or 423 TEE WINDSOR MOTEL Jacksonville, Florida. In the heart of the city with Hemming Park for & front yard. Every modern convenience in each rooza Dining room serrie li second to none. RATES From $1.50 per day per person to? 6. J. E. KAVANAUGO, Propiietsr ROBERT M. MEYER, Manager. OCALA EVENING STAR, WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1919 Send Us Your BLANKETS, RUGS AND COMFORTS They will RECEIV CAREFUL ATTENTION OCALA STEAM LAUNDRY PHONE 101 FIRST CLASS AUTO REPAIR SERVICE Also Oils and Gasoline FLORIDA HOUSE GARAGE Open 6 a. m. to 10 p. m. Phone 74 N. Magnolia St. Wow Is The Time To Help Us Give You Good Service We need jour help during this hot weather. Everybody is calling for prompt ervice everybody needs OUR ICE. 4 Do your ahare be sure that the ice man is not delayed at your home have the ice money or the coupon ready when he comes make it as easy for us to serve your neighbor as you want us to serve you. We know you will help us thank you. (Deals lice & PacMog Co. r Give the Children Comfortable Beds During arm Weather W In our stock of IRON BEDS will be found a pretty line of CRIBS for the smaller children. The , corner posts are sufficiently high to hang a canopy on when it is necessary to keep off marauding in insects. sects. insects. Also a pretty line of small size Rockers and dining chairs, Go-Carts, High Chairs and other articles dear to the heart of the little ones. Call and look them over. US MOTIIEK N. Magnolia St. Ocala, Florida LATEST LOCALS t There will be no drill of the Home Guards Friday night. Mrs. Lester Lucas friends in Jacksonville. is visiting j After July 5, the war department will enlist .no more men for overseas j 1 service. - Floyd Olds, who has been with the i aimy in France, has reached America, and is expected home every day. Ford roadster in first class condi condition. tion. condition. The Maxwell Agency, Ocala. tf Dr. Van Hood is somewhat better today, and if he continued to improve he and Mrs. Hood will leave tomorrow for Asheville. The people of Blitchton will hold a festival the evening of July 11th, for the purpose of raising money for a church instrument. All are invited to come. Sergeant Gary Gallant, who left with Company A, has returned from overseas, having landed in New York the 29th of June. He is expected home Sunday. Mack Taylor is building something that looks like a machine gun nest alongside his gasoline station, corner Washington and Main. Gasoline needs defense these days. Miss Collie Clark is spending a few days with her mother, Mrs. W. H. Clark, at the lake and upon return returning ing returning will open her summer school for primary pupils. Mr. R. L. Carter has joined the taxi brigade. He has a good car and is a most careful driver, and if you want to go anywhere he will take you ther eand bring you back. We regret to hear of the illness of Marshall Carn, who has been at attending tending attending business college in Jackson Jacksonville, ville, Jacksonville, but was taken quite sick a few days ago. He is in St. Luke's hospi hospital tal hospital and improving. That clever boy, Bernard Koonce, who enlisted in the navy several months ago, is home on a brief leave. He will go over to the beach, where his mother and grandmother are spending the summer. We regret to learn that our clevev young soldier friend, Corporal J. G. O'Brien, recruiting officer, must leave us, having been removed to Miami. He is a popular boy and made many friends here. His place will be taken by Sergeant Joe Reno. Nineteen seventeen Dodge, first first-class class first-class condition. Lots of extra equip- monf A Inrrriin TV) o Mavwull A con. cy, Ocala. tf Dr. Blitch was in town today, ac companied by Ensign Homer Howard, of the battleship Misissippi, who is here on a brief furlough. Ensign Howard was a teacher in the Blitch ton neighborhood before th,e war, and is much esteemed by its good people. That very smart and pretty act ress, Gladys Brockwell, will appear at the Temple tonight in a highly in interesting teresting interesting Fox picture, "Pitfalls of a Great City." It is a story of the most intense interest. There will also be the firs instalment of "The Romance of Industry," a series of pictures used by the government as an educa tional feature. The picture tonight will illustrate some of the methods of American efficiency, which when it got into full swing put "kultur" on the blink in short order. UNCLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS WANTED, LOST, FOUND. FOR SALE, FOR RENT AND SIM SIMILAR ILAR SIMILAR LOCAL NEEDS RATES Six line maximum, one onetime, time, onetime, 25c; three times, 50c; six times ; 75c; one month $3. Payable in ad- i vance. LOST On street or on Dunnellon road east of the Seaboard railroad, a black Stetson hat, size 7U, in paper! bag. Had Rheinauer & Co. stamped : on inside band. Return to Rheinauer j & Co. and receive reward. 2-3t ATTKACTtY LOST On Dunnellon road Saturday night, folding pocketbook with name "Annie R. Gordon" writtin in it; con contained tained contained $3 in cash and note made pay payable able payable to me. Finder will be rewarded by returning to Solomon Lewis, gen-. j eral delivery, Ocala. 30-3t HUNTER'S SECOND HAND HOUSE Furniture bought and sold. Get prices elsewhere, then see me there's a sale made on one side or the other. I have expert mechanics to put in good condition anything you have, such as furniture, lawn mowers, sew sewing ing sewing machines, scissors, knives, saws, pots, pans and all kinds of enamel enamel-ware. ware. enamel-ware. Repair all kinds of broken castings. Call at 310, 312 and 314 South Main street. 30-tf OLD FALSE TEETH Broken or not, I pay $2 to $35 per set, also highest prices for bridges, crowns, watches, diamonds, old gold, silver and platinum. Send now and receive CASH by return mail. Goods returned if price is unsatisfactory. BERNER'S FALSE TEETH SPEC SPECIALTY, IALTY, SPECIALTY, 175 So. Pearl St., Albany, N. Y. 17 ssssc ... ' II. ...I -.iuji. I "lll urn ; Alll llf cy) A !-r. 1 SA I M M Ki t 1 f f f A fx w it We Have All the Newest Styles and all the Standard Shapes and Shapes Anything You Want either in bulk or boxes any grade, any style. You know there is personality and distinctiveness in the style of stationery you use. We are showing a fine line of Bathing Caps. See them before buy buying. ing. buying. Gerig's Drug tSore. 28-tf SAG AD SULPHUR Schedule of SILVER SPRIWGS-OCALA BUS SERVICE Comiortablc Bus Will Until Further Notice Run Between Ocala and Silver Springs on Sundays and Thursdays on the following Schedule, Leaving Ocala from Court House. Thursday Schedule Ocala Lv. Silver Spgs. Lv 1:30 P. M .... 2:00 P. M. 3:30 P. M 4:00 P. M. 5:30 P. M 7:00 P. M. 7:30 P. M..... 8:00 P. M. 9:30 P. M 10:00 P. M. Sunday's Schedule Lv. Ocala Lv. Silver Spgs. 9:00 A. M 2:00 P. M 1:30 P. M 4:00 P. M. 3:30 P. M 7:00 P. M. 5:30 P. M 8:00 P. M. 9:30 P. M 10:00 P. M. Edo CaiFimicIiasl Proprisf or Nineteen seventeen Dodge, first- class condition. Lots of extra equip ment. A bargain. The Maxwell Agen cy, Ocala. tf SALTS !S FINE FDR KIDNEYS. QUIT MEAT Flush the Kidneys at once when Bads hurts or Bladder bothers Heat forms uric acid. No ttm ot woman who eats meat regu regularly larly regularly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well well-known known well-known authority. Meat forms urio acid widen clogs the kidney pores eo they sluggishly filter or strain only part of the waste and poisons from the blood, then you get sick. Nearly all rheuma rheumatism, tism, rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nerroua nerroua-Dees, Dees, nerroua-Dees, constipation, dizziness, sleeplessness, bladder disorders come from sluggish kid kidneys. neys. kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sedi ment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from, any reliable pharmacy and take a tablespoonful in a grass of water before breakfast for a few days end your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com bined with Uthia and has been used for generations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them, to actmty, also to neu neutralize tralize neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder is oit'era. Jad Baits is inexpensive and can can-not not can-not injure ; makes a delightful effer effervescent vescent effervescent lithia-watsr drink which all reg regular ular regular meat, eaters should take now ana then to keep the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kid kidney ney kidney cm i iJksf k ii ii E DARKENS GRAY HAIR It's Grandmother's Recipe Restore Color, Gloss and Attractiveness. Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compounded. brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray. Years ago the only way to get thi3 mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for "Wyeth's bage and bulphur Compound, you will get a large bottle of this famous old recipe, improved by the addition of other ingredients, for about 50 cents. Don't stay gTay! Try it! No one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair dis disappears, appears, disappears, and after another application or two, .your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. Wyeth's feage and oulphur Compound is a delightful toilet requisite for those who desire dark hair and a youthful ap appearance. pearance. appearance. It is not intended for the cure, mitigation or prevention of disease. THE UJO VEJrS-AJi-CAfl Because of its all-arouad utility, the Ford One Ton Truck vith vormidrive t has made itself an absolute business ne necessity. cessity. necessity. It's so dependable in service wher ever placed, flexible and sure in control and low cost of op operation eration operation and maintenance and possessing that vanadium steel strength, it has become the want in every line of busi ness, from retail merchant to manufactur manufacturer, er, manufacturer, from engineer to contractor, from cor corporation poration corporation to farmer. Let us tell you details and give you a demonstration. Truck Chassis $550 f. o. b. Detroit. Tucker's Garage Ford Truck Your Weed Ocala Phone 439 Florida The Fire Knocked Us Out For a While Bui the (Do EL TEAPOT Is Getting Back to it's Li ST AM ID) AMD We lost no time in putting in orders for FANCY GROCERIES Usually carried in stock and ever day brings something to help complete our line. Don't be shocked when we tell you that groceries are going to be higher. There is hardly any thing but what is advancing in price. Soms things may come down, but, ii we don't miss our guess, we will see things that we eat higher in price for the next year than we have ever heard of. Rice is expected to play out before the new crop comes in. Corn products are advancing every day. Fats and oils are going sky high. All soaps are moving upwards. We are not trying to scare you, but we are putting you wise so that you will know what to expect. That old economy stuff is still in order. Here is a list of new goods fust in. Look the list over and let us have your order. Royal Scarlet Seeded Raisins, Shelled Almonds, Heide's Almond I'aste, Royal Scarlet Samp, Royal Scarlet Unpolished Rice, R. S. Sal Salmon mon Salmon Steak, Royal Scarlet Fritter Corn, R. S. Split Peas, R. S. Guava Jelly, R. S. Marshmallow Creme, Brands Al Sause, Burnett's Extracts, R. S. Bouillon Cubes, Moro Black Molasses, R. & R. Boned Chicken, Ilittman's Caviar, Uroka Jap Crab Meat, Baker's Sweet Chocolate, Baker's Dot Sweet Choclate, Franco Beef Broth, Knox s, Cox s and Coop Cooper's er's Cooper's Gelatine, Chase & Sanborn's Seal Brand CofTee. C. & S. Teas Teas-Orange Orange Teas-Orange Peko, Seal Brand Orange Pcko, Emperor's Blend, Diamond 60 Mixed. S A WTA Y 100 7o Pure Butter of Nuts, for baking, shortening, frying and candy making. Does not contain any animal fat or cottonseed oil. Canned Shrimp, Lobsters, Herring Roe, Potato Chips, Strained Florida Honey, G. Washington Instant Cof Coffee, fee, Coffee, Barrington Hall Soluble Coffee. Kellogg's Cooker Bran, Kellogg's Toasted Wheat Biscuit, Pillsbury Health Bran, Pettijohn's Breadfast Foot!. Cream of Wheat, Shredded Wheat Biscuit. Pimento Cheese, Chili Cheese, Phil Philadelphia adelphia Philadelphia Ceram Cheese, New York State Full Cream Cheese, Pineapple Cheese. 0 Mo TEAPi WW Phones (GROCERY (Smith Grocery Company's Old Stand) 434, 16 and 174 |
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