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I iLVolue 15 No 198 OCALA FLORIDA SATURDAY OCTOBER 2 1H9 j Fifty Cels a M
tyj 2 F
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V LUNG IALSAM-Al> mte farrflKltti fcy a cp-
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BAVM it LAWRENCE CO JfewTorfc-
K
hI T-i b P FULLER J C AYER
FULLER do AYERi
r DENTAL SURGEONS
J Once Over the Mnroe A Chambllaa
d Bankta OCALA FLORIDAt7 TERMS CASH
f
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< VJECHACED-ENTAL SURGEON
i Rooms 10 and 11
Second Floor Holder Block
OCALAFLOftIDATERMS CASH
I
1
ff t L F BLALOCK-Dental
ry
Surgeon
Wee Over Cta erdil InkPhone 211
Office hours 8 to 12 a m 1 to 5 p m
TERMS CASHF I
sCHARLES D HOLBERT
f I D
HOMEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN ANDJ SURGEON
OBce Second Floor The Munroe it-
CfcanbliM Bank Building OcalaFlorida
Tetophoiea Office 222 Residence21-
Ollce Hours 9 to 12 a m 2 to t-
op M 730 to 830 p m
F E McCLANEffcyskUi iN SirgeM
t General Practice Cala Made Promptlyt Night or Day l
Special Attention to Obstetrics Di
MUeee ef Women and Children
rOffice Rooms 322 Holder Building
Second Floor Phones Office No 333
Residence No 333-
OCALA FLORIDA
1ICE ICE
4
Ny rice Fro Red WaftMI
F
They say but if you will examinecarefully the Ice which melts so rapllyyoa will note that there seems tobe holes In it that the center Is whatla called snow ice which being por
t ous J allows it to melt quickly
y e Crystal IceThe kind we turn out Is as clear
and perfect as it is possible to makeice and is the most economical Iceto use Ask the man on the Red
A Wagon to stop and see you
FLORIDA PACKING
COMPANYPIMM5 PfetMS
t
IdlER MucKAY
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Uufcrtiktrs and Embahner-
st1 t D Mclver Alfred E Owes1 UlHIedak-
erfileCaskets ui Burial Robes1
All work done by licensed embalm
een and fully guaranteed
I eC BLANCHARD
rCWTRACTGR AND BUILDER
PLANS FURNISHED-
ON APPLICATION
P 0 Bex 4 OCALA Fill
S loDtezama Barbershop
1 iBCMMeettoa With the Hotel OSfce
T Skilled wormnea aid courteous at-
fit r tMtto to all Special attention tof i-
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FUNNYb
IAIIS
OCTOBER FNECUST
What Ganderhon Thinks will Happen-
and Sheuld Happen During thePresent Mouth
Copyrighted 1909 by C H Reitk
The Presidents tralHRan a little bit faster
And he got In at noonAnd addressed the postmaster
Then up and awayTo his subjects impartial-
At 2 he addressed-A United States marshal
Still on and yet onAs untiring as Hector
He was speaking at 4To a census director
f-
In>
vthe meantime he shaved
But had scarcely sheathed hisrazor
When he rushed out to talkTo a U S appraiser
Then one more ovationUpon his great journey
And a speech from the rearTo a U S attorney
They feared he was spentBut he proved a great stayer
And the next stop he talked-To a customs surveyor
They begged him desistBut he answered them fudge
And at 6 waS addressing-A Federal judge
Refreshed by some teaAnd a couple of crrills
He addressed an inspectorOf boilers and hulls
Then on and still onThe swift special ran
And he piled out and spoke-To a revenue man
Jthen ho for the nightWithout station or steeple
And he hit the hay sayingHurrah for the people-
S
October is from the Latin octomeaning eight Tha is it is abouteight times as pleasant as any othermonth in the year and the Ro¬
mans took this means of saying soThey were very fond of cracklingsand about hogkilling time Lucullus gave a crackling banquet at theAuditorium which made everybodysmonth water a month before itcame off Caesar sajd that crack-lings
¬
made Rome the mistress ofthe world and it was not until hersoldiers began eating spaghetti andvermicelli that the empire began todecay f
The hunting season will resumeupon the rippling lake and thehunter will get out his gun and hidehim in the brake the festive duckwill fly about aced in the smoke anddin a leaden pellet now and then willpenetrate his skin until the quar¬
rys gravity is overcome with shotand the sportman nearest when hefalls will clap him in the pot
The cider press will creak andwheeze and the sorghum pot willboil the wind will whistle through-the trees and the frog will bore foroil the haze of fall will veil thesun and the days grow soft andshort the nimble colt will jump andrun the lambkin will cavort the airwill smell of smoking hams and applebutter butts and the poor con ¬
sumer will renew his strength withhazelnuts-
The Cookite and the PearylteWill pull each others nose
And both explorers will line upTheir trusty Eskimos
The scientists will bite and scratch-As to which was prior
And well have to send for Roose-velt
¬
To find out whos a liarIt does seem terrible that he who
always knows whos lying should-be away in Africa when all of usare dying to know the truth Aword from him would quickly satis¬
fy us which one of them perhapsdeserves the brand of Ananias Afig for all the specimens he is ac¬
cumulatinghe ought to be here onthe job and duly separating thedouble tongued ones from the restand fulminating thunder as once hedid lest we shall make a very stupidblunder
However let us all rejoice andgive thanks in some manner thatboth men found the pole beneathour own immortal banner and that I
deciding which one wins is wholly-our wn doing with nothing inter-nationAl
¬
unfortunately brewing Itmakes oneshudder just to think ifPeary say had found it and havingmarked it with the flag and done adance around it he should return-in triumph here to banquet and re¬
view it and some dang foreignerpopped up and claimed he beat usto it-
TVed have to take it to The HagueAnd railing to agree
Wed have io go in battleships-And litter up the sea
With one anothers propertyAnd dye it with our blood-
In mortal combat till the oneOr others name was Mud
But nothing of that sort impends-and meanwhile Mr Taft will liveupon a pullman car and speak hispieces aft Hell range the bold in¬
surgents up for their unthinkingdeeds and bat them with his repri¬
mands away off In the weeds Hellcall the shy consumer up recallingall the squibs and jocularly feel thefat upon that worthys ribs Andhaving shown us at some painsabout where we are at hell disap ¬
pear around the bend wigwagging-with hlsbat-
TbefootbaU season will returnand the college men uplined willget their heads together with theirheels kicked up behind The val-iant
¬
captain will exhort his grimand bloody crew and the boys willbutt until their brains are batteredblack and blue The guard willcatch the flying end upon his pad ¬
ded bib the center rush will ra-
mPV
P
and sink the luckless floating ribthe human demijohns of noise willrise and pull their stoppers and theteams will fight and roll around likesuffragettes and coppers
S
The nuts will ripen and the quailWill whistle in the glenThe prohibitionists will chaseThe brewers round againThe hunters moon will sail the
skiesThe days grow soft and tender
And the farmer will make faces atThe cruel money enderThere wont be any doubt about
prosperity returning about the timethe sassafras and the sumach getto burning upon the hill and thefarmer rolls between the fields ofstubble his hands upon the steerIng wheel of his brand automobile-his back against the leather seatthe goldenrod saluting and nowand then the dulcet horn melodious-ly
¬
tooting
And then November will returnWith Fall and Winter married
And the luckless turkey will beslain
I
And decently cranberried
DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED-
by local applications as they cannotreach the diseased portion of the earThere Is only one way to cure deaf¬
ness and that is by constitutionalremedies Deafness is caused by aninflamed condition of the mucous lin ¬
ing of the Eustachian Tube Whenthe tube is inflamed you have arumbling sound of Imperfect hearing-and when it is entirely closed deaf¬
ness Is the result and unless the in-
flammation¬
can be taken out and thistube restored to its normal conditionhearing will be destroyed forevernine cases out of ten are caused byCatarrh which is nothing but an in ¬
flamed condition of the mucous sur ¬
facesWe will give One Hundred Dollars
for any case of deafness caused bycatarrh that cannot be cured byHalls Catarrh Cure Send for cir-
culars¬
free F J Cheney Co To-
ledo¬
Ohio Sold by druggists 75
Take Halls Family Pills for consti-pation
¬
ROCKY MOUNT LOVES ITS RYE
Roanoke Va Oct 2A local op-
tion¬
election of the Rock Mount dis ¬
trict of Franklin county resulted in a1 victory for the wets by a majority ofthree There is but one saloon in thedistrict It is located at Rocky Mountand pays a license 04000 Thecampaign was hotly contested
I
I
ROBERT GIVES
FOURTEEN REASONS
Why Frederick Did Not Reach the
PolePeary at Last Shows
His Hand
New York Oct CommanderRobert EL Peary gives the followingfourteen reasons for not believingthat Dr Frederick Cook reached thepole
First That Mr Peary and MattHenson either individually or togeth-er
¬
talked with every member of theSmith Sound tribe of Eskimos andobtained testimony that corroboratedthat of ETuckAShoe and APelLah the Eskimos who accompanied-Dr Cook that Dr Cook had not beenJut of the sight of land
Second Tnatx In violation of acustom of Arctic exploration Dr Cookhas not brought back records left incairns at points he asserts he hadreached notably the one left at CapeThomas Hubbard In 1906 by Peary
Third That Dr Cooks story thathe traveled from Annatok to the poleand then back to Jones Sound adistance of more than twentyfive andonehalf degrees or seventeenhundred miles Is one sledging season-is Impossible He points out thatthis is more than twice the best pre-vious
¬record of eleven degrees and
Mr Pearys best record this year offourteen degrees
Fourth That his general equip ¬
ment was such that it would be phy-sically
¬
impossible to have accom-plished
¬
the featFifths That Dr Cook maintains he
carried a glass mercurial horizon onhis trip of seventeen hundred mileswhereas Mr Peary used a cast ironhorizon so that It would not only besaved from being broken but could beheated when the mercury froze This-is necessary sometimes Mr Pearycontends as mercury freezes at mi ¬
nus 35 Cook reports finding it ascold as minus 73 degrees
Sixth That Prof Marvin broughtback from 8638 duplicate records ofMr Pearys march and of his own toprove absolutely that Mr Pearyreached that latitude
Seventh That Captain Bartlettbrought back from 8748 duplicate re ¬
cords of Mr Pearys march and of hisown to prove absolutely that MrPeary reached that latitude
Eighth That the sledge of Dr
WE ARE CLOSING OUT-
an assortment ofI
I
LADIES SKIRTS-
ate
ab-outHAIFPRICZ
Look at these prices and valuesand then come and look
N
at the good-
sii Lot 1
skirts are figured and plain colors Black Blue Brown Gray
etc Regular prices were from 225 to 300 selling now to close out
150-
Lot2Consists of Brilliantines Serges Worsteds Cashmeres in all the
leading colors Skirts that sold as high as 450 These are excel ¬
Jlent values selling now at s
225<
Lot 3You will miss the biggest bargain of the season if you dont get one
of these Skirts Panamas Voiles Serges Mohairs in all the colors
These Skirts sold at from 450 to 600 We are closing them out
now at
2 98
You will have to see these to appreciate their goodness Come now
while we have all sizes
FISHELSr
k 1
=
i II r I Y
< jI
Mrs Minnie A Bostickf 1l
ff
t YoJ 7 t r j
Y
Will have her elegant line iqf Ir-
a
t
FALL MILLINERY+
f On Display1
i t
frDTJIUII13I ft
THE ENTIRE WtKJ
ij
Monday Sept 27 to Saturday Oct 2 ir-
0
N > <e <
Will be pleased to have all the Ladles callf jf ill
Cooks was of such a type not builton the lines of any Arctic explorerssledge that It could not possibly havelasted for a march of a day with vastandard load of five or six hundredpounds
Ninth That Dr Cooks snowshoeswere of an impracticable type for usein the Arctic and were not the kindthat would conduce to speed
The ° Whitney CaseTenth That Dr Cooks leaving of
his records t Etah was a scheme onhis part by which he could claim theywere lost or destroyed and so couldescape being forced to produce them-to substantiate his claims
Eleventh That no man who hadcarried the American flag to the polewould leave such a slight and easilytransported article in the charge of aperfect stranger
Twelfth That Dr Cook did havefresh dog teams from Etah and couldhave carried his burdens to Uppernavlk
Thirteenth That when HarryWhitney went on board the Jeanie hedid not take time to go back to Etahand get the articles he must haveknown were valuable to Dr Cook
+
Fourteenth That if Dr Cook didleave such priceless articles at theEskimo village Mr Whitney wouldhave been anxious to have rushedthem to the United States-
A SHAKING UPMayan be very well so far as thetrusts are concerned but not when Itcomes to chills and fever and ma-laria
¬
Quit the quinine and take areal cure Ballards Herbine Con ¬
tains no harmful drugs and is as cer¬
tain as taxes If It doesnt cure youget your money back Sold by alldruggists
COOK IS COLLECTING THE CASH
New York Oct 2In the plauditsof hjs admiring countrymen Dr Fred ¬
erick A Cook the discoverer of thenorth pole is now reaping one part ofhis reward and the other part name-ly
¬
the tangible recompense of success-Is also beginning to materialize-
In a few days the explorer will starton a lecturing tour that cannot failto be remunerative but the New YorkHerald set the financial ball arollingyesterday when its treasurer handed-to Dr Cook a check for 25000 in
I payment for his stirring narratIve ofthe conquest of the north pole writtenexclusively for the Herald and nowIn course of publication in its col¬
umns and in the leading newspapers-of the United States England FranceGermany Austria and Denmark
SWEPT OVER NIAGARA
This terrible calamity often hap-pens
¬
because a careless boatman ig-
nores¬
the rivers warningsgrowIngr-ipples and faster current Natureswarnings are klndTbe dull pain orache in the back warns you the kid-
neys¬
need attention if you would es ¬
cape fatal maladies dropsy diabetesor Brlghts disease Take ElectricBitters at once and see backache fly
and all your best feelings return Af¬
ter long suffering from weak kidneys-
and lame back one U bottle whollycured me writes J R Blankenshipof Belk Tenn Only 50c a bottle at alldruggists
SHOUTED FOR SHIP SUBSIDY
Tafts Announcement Brings ImmenseApplause from a Seattle
AudienceSeattle Wash Oct Speaking
before the largest audience he hasfaced since his trip begana crowdthat overflowed the natural ampltheater of the AlaskaYukonPacific Ex¬
position with Its seating capacity ofnearly 20000 President Taft yester ¬
day announced that he would urge atthe coming session of Congress in hismessage the enactment of a shipsubsidy law
Mr Taft declared that the country-is ready to make such experiment andthat something must be done to buildup an American merchant marine Hisutterances on this subject were re-
ceived¬
with great applause
BOTH BOYS SAVED
Lour Boon a leading merchant ofNorway Mich writes Three bot-
tles¬
of Fole3s Honey and Tar abso¬
lately cured my boy of a severecough and a neighbors boy who wasso ill with a cold that the doctorsgave him up was cured by taking Foleys Honey and Tar Nothing else-
is as safe and certain In resultsSold by all druggists
r
IT IS A j FACT rt-
Ii
l<
r
r >that the man who carries his mosey la his pocketbook will = i
it-
y
spend all of it without thought while it becomes secoad a V r I
tore for man with a bask accout figure OH mabitaialag Vra reserve in his bank
i j d kJTheMunroe Chambliss Bank 1 f
Ocala Floridad
T FURNITURE cVOF McivER t MaeMY V
Jot
iCARRIES A LARGE vvllJ I
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f
>
<
MODERN AND COMPLETE STOCIft
1 OF rJ
>
t r
FURNITUREA-ND
>> >
J
>1
I
HOUSE FURNISHINGS I ALL KINDST-
heB
ttly last ii Central Florida Rat Ctaplridy Yary
Finishes be lte Carries laII Ttaes OK lafesf saki
lest in Fsrittire Kectiaf ip wife the ties ail Jilt vn
What the Peak Wait i
list carries a CtHpkfe Lit it liiliers ail Shelf
iariware Carriages Waftistoffies lafMSS SaMes < E-kUk aver Hr Stock aid tel Mr prices hefsfe ytt
make year purchases Ytws tespee-
tfrilyMclVER MAoIkirjOc-ala Florida a
KNIGHT r LANiLeading Vehicle Dealers-
of Central Floridal
AM iaMeise stock of KeliaUe Wafwf iifftes Cirtr-M4 CarrIages carried at al ttees
mess Saddles lap Ian Wfcij aid al Meat 3carried fcy a firstdass bane t1 Ws Iliad tafM II fttitles 6ya the factories sad always ii stock al lIeftfJI-twesl prices
We cai save YH mtj M ytir pvefcases he fceylarge tt uull-
Afeifs tor rat tf the kaitof art best sakes ifw aid R ks b
KNIGHT fit LANGDfii Side rt sure SCE FMBtA
FRESH MEATS AND VEGETABLEStI
Western Beef Veal Florida Stall Fed Beef S-
LW
c
Mutton Armours Star Ham Armour 13 Pork rT i
Sausage Cabbage Rutabagas t Turnips B ete tr ito
Sweet Potato Irish Potatoes Spanish Otoo-
PIune1OS
A i <
P E D w T AQ ft D tM
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