ocala banner. (ocala, florida) 1905-11-24 [p page...

1
s i PAGE SIX THE OCALA BANNER M1 I THE OCALA BANNER TSARS HABSIS Editor P V Leavengaad Easiness Haaager t a 3 + 1- r a- fs t v- rs MOTTO THE BASNKB BEXLEVDTQ as THOSE AT THE TOP WELL ABLE TO- t TAKK CARE OF THEMSELVES HASi- d + TAKES ITS STAND IX THE BARRI ¬ 1 CADES WITH THE COMMON PEOPLE 4D ITS FIGHT WILL BE MADE FOR- kS THE BETTERMENT OF THOSE AT THE BOTTOM ° ff FRIDA NOVEMBER 24 1905 F T The democrats in Ohio are jubilant The Isle of Pines prefers to float w Y the stars and stripes I The Metropolis big press enables it K je to print all its telegrams Chauncy Depews after dinner F speeches are as a tale that is told ExGovernor Odell of Sow York 1 did not show up well in the lime- light The unexpected sometimes hap ¬ = pens Key West for instance has- t had a railroad strike mm- te I r Talk about rightabout movements I x r How is this Pennsylvania in 1904 504000 republican majority 1905 44 000 democratic majority- The ° Albany Herald says that the I Georgia gubernatorial campaign is suffering from decayed dignity and an overload of overripe personalities I If it be true that when thieves 4 fall out honest men will get their I f dues wont the policy holders in the I old line insurance companies have a f picnic I f Mayor McClellan has joined with s Mr Hearst in requesting the courts- to 3- f compel a recauvass of the ballot McClellan is all right and does not z t fear a judicial investigation it = We undersand tnat Candidate Hill- man r is preparing a recipe for cooking potato pone It is said thatit is des- tined ¬ r t to become more popular than rQ the new fad for cooking okra- It glues me pleasure to send you the enclosed writes Andrew Car ¬ negie as he mails a 10003 check tor f i the relief of the Russian Jews It is a pleasure that the newspaper editor rarely enjoys Mayor McClellan of New York is not building any air castles just now regarding presidential possibilities in If 1908 He will have cause to be pret ¬ f ty well contented to hold his present jobPensacola Journal The Jacksonville Sun Claude Iv Engles and Cartoonist Taylors pa- l ¬ per is out and is all that is promised- It is rich rare racy brilliant scin ¬ tillating and luminous from kiver to kiver It will appeal to every man in Florida and the women and child ¬ ren will cry for it The Ocala Banner speaks of some very beautiful hogs Now we want- to suggest a getrichquick scheme Just put those hogs in a teut and charge admission Miami Morning News That would be a hoggish- way of making money Live Oak is still advancing with the times Last week the citizens met in mass meeting and organized a board L of trade White Springs Herald Ocala has had a board of trade for the last decade and instead of one has two daily newspapers y In order to forestall election frauds- in New York city 3I r Hearst offered v 15000 to anyone who would give evidence of cheating at the polls and up to this time no evidence has been forthcoming sufficiently authentic to claim a dollar of the reward and is not likely to but Mr Hearst contin- ues ¬ to revamp those old stories about Tammanys corruption which has been the principal diet of republican newspapers for the last forty years fi r 5 y K e- 1t PROSPEROUS CITIES f- Our dry campaign speakers have had good deal to say about the pros ¬ perous cities of Florida and refer to Tallahassee Live Oak Lake City and Gainesville as examples- It I is our opinion that the cities named nor no other cities in the in ¬ terior of Florida are prosperous or can ever become prosperous as long- as the present freight rates continue Ocala is as prosperous we believe- as any interior city in the state but it is bound hand and foot and wheth- er ¬ it goes wet or dry In the pending election it can never hope to become- a city unless its freight rates undergo- a very radical change One hundred and thirty dollars on outgoing freights in car lots and the excess charges running it up in some instances to two hundred dollars Is a killing frost to our trucking business and the rates to interior points are alike prohibitive The prosperous cities in Florida are the seaport cities Jacksonville Key West Pensacola Tampa Miami etc and these cities are prosperous be ¬ cause of the advantage they enjoy over the interior cities in freight rates In the matter of prosperity the wet or dry argument cuts very little ice A Prosperous Country The last official data obtainable from Washington show a large in ¬ crease in trade and crops The grain exports for the 9 months this year amounted to 105219693 bushels as compared with 45573796- for the same months last year The reports for this year are preliminary- and estimated to include 97 per cent of the actual shipment This year the corn exports have been 52752212 bushels as compared- with 34441771 bushels for the cor- responding ¬ months last year The j September export of grain this year amounted to more than ten million bushels over September of 1904 The domestic movements of trade during September show the same increase Yearly two million head of live- stock arrived at five of the largest distributing centers in excess ot Sep ¬ tember a year ago while the increase- of receipts of grain in twelve import- ant ¬ interior centers aggregates over 27000000 bushels more than the cor ¬ responding month last year The to- tal ¬ I increase in the lake shipments- this I year to and including September i 30 as compared with 1901 aggrega- ted 14756265 net tons a gain in the I flour outbound movement of 211225 ji tons j grain and flaxseed 22394715 bushels coal 512310 tons ore and minerals 11743741 tons lumbar 75 501000 feet unclassified freight 4t S 661 tons i At New York receipts of grain dur ing September totaled 9515490 bush ¬ els as against 6123651 a year before I Yew Yorks grand total receipts of grain and flour and corn meal the t first nine months of this year aggre- gated 50742041 in 1904 Dissatisfied Laborers Even King Solomon had trouble- of his own with the workmen en ¬ gaged in the building of the temple- and the F E C railway is no less favored in its effort to extend its line to Key West Of course where so many are employed a certain per ¬ I cent of the workmen are murmurers These dissatisfied ones are either leaving the extension work or are being discharged for cause They claim that the conditions were mis- represented ¬ to them but this cannot- be so because the conditions must have been apparent They were hired to grade and construct a rail- road across the Florida keys to Key West Surely they knew that this meant work with pick shovel and ax they must have known that it meant camp life in the woods- It meant hardship It did not mean that they wire to sleep on feather beds eat fried chicken and do indoor work About fifty or sixty- of these laborers arrived here yester dap from the extension work and were all arrested by the city marshal who released them under promise i that they would either get work or J leave the city Some of them left last hight others found work and there are still others in the city i + Miami Sews ss t- f erg Eleqveae and Agriculture To men possessed of willing hands resolute hearts and level heads no finer field than Florida was ever pre ¬ sented for occupancy It is a field boundless with the best elements of wealth and substantial enjoyment- It has an endless quantity of raw material of every sort and rich pro ¬ ductive soil upon which all the fruits all the crops and all the animals nec ¬ essary for mans subsistence comfort and convenience can be cultivated- and propagated and with a climate that brings to the pallid cheek the slow of health to the listless eye the sparkle of a new life transforms the careworn frame to one of reanimated nature brings rest to the wearied mind and takes from the memory of adversity the stings of distressAg ¬ ricultural Report- Fun in The School Room The Tallhaassee True Democrat says that Editor Tom McBeath of the Florida School Exponent takes up the schedule of questions pro ¬ pounded to applicants for schools in Hernando county by Superintendent- Russell and suggests a number of jocose additions to the list among which we find the following- Do you believe that exGovernor Jennings discovered Florida and that Comptroller Croom owns it If not where have you been living for the past five years Have you ever held public office Why did you let go Was there any- thing ¬ left when you turned it loose Did you get away with the swag If so how many other officials did you have to divvy with to keep em from squealing on you Rather a Weak Explanation- The Ocala papers are trying to make it appear that iocal option in Alaehua county is creating great havoc which it not druth It cites the killing ot a negro at Orange Heights as one instance and the facts are that there was no liquor in the case The negro threatened a white man and afterward he cursed the little child ol the man who did the I shooting in self defense I The other was a ease where a num- ber of negroes got whiskey from i Ocala or some other licensed town I and had a drunken row Per iaps if there had been no liquor to be had in Ocala there would not have been any trouble Gainesville Sun Generat Gilchrist Will Plant Okra General Gilchrist has bought three forty acre tracts of land lying just on the outer edge of town which he is having lotted cleaned up and other ¬ wise put in shipshape A part of this land will be put on the market at an early date while the outside forty which is very fertile land and well suited for trucking will probably be reserved by the General for the ex- tensive ¬ growing of okraPlant City Courier- The Milk in the Cocoanut The election expenses of Wm R Hearst for mayor of New York in tho recent election as filed this morn ¬ ing with the secretary of state were SO206sAlbany ex Yi Tele- gram No wonder Mr Hearst is hot un ¬ der the collar With that much money spent on an election campaign- there ought to have been something doing What was all that money spent for The Brass Band George- Yes dear- HBefore i we were married you once I asked me if I enjoyed a brass band n I Yyes perhaps I did I I You did And said yes But it I seems I misunderstood you George I My wedding ring is making a black i mark on my finger I Cleveland Leader I Just a Little Nerve and Grit A man came here a few years ago and had less than fifteen dollars By I industry he soon managed to pur- chase ¬ i an orange grove and paid for it with two crops of fruit This season he sold 1500 boxes of oranges This is only one of the many successes in DeSoto county Wauchula Advo- cate ¬ r The New York mayoralty election has added to the spice and flavor of > yellow journalism j lOUR LOCAL EDITOR IN SAINT LOUIS Visits the AnneuserSusch Brewery and the Beautiful Botanical Gar ¬ dens LOUSVILTLE KY Nov IS 1905 Special Correspondence Ocala Banner With a party of friends the local editor spent several days this week at St Louis A wreck ahead caused us to spend several hours at a little town I in southern Indiana It was an in- tensely ¬ t disagreeable little village and naturally gave us a most unpleasant impression of that section of Indiana- On our return trip we were in a bet ¬ ter frame of mind and things in that same country looked entirely different to us It proves the truth of the adage that things appear accord ¬ I ing to the lasses through which they- are seen The view point has much to do in shaping ones opinions Saint Louis is a big city but one certainly misses the great exposition The crowds look small by comparison- to I the swarms of people one saw in I every nook and cranny of the city last year Several of the Pike attrac ¬ r tions were running during the sum- mer ¬ months but now hardly a vestige I of the fair remains I This fact however gives one all the more time to see the city itself I and the two days that we were there I manner were spent in a delightfully pleasant I Everybody has of course heard of the AnheuserBusch brewery and a trip through the property of this company is alone almost worth a visit to this western metropolis It is told that when an American in speak ¬ I ing of the gigantic Worlds Fair to Emperor William the Emperor asked this question Where is St Louis anyway and that the gentleman feelingly and forcefully replied It is right next to the AnheuserBusch brewery While this of course is a fiction is dosnc miss the mark a great I way I t One is almost appalled at the im ¬ I mensity of the brewery In fact it I I is in itself a city It covers one hun- I ¬ I dred and twentylive acres of ground equal to sixty city blocks and em- ploys ¬ I rive thousand people There is I the brewhoase bottling works malt houses ice and refrigerati tr plants I II printing establishment steam and i electric power plants stock houses I storage elevators etc The company operates four of the largest switch engines ever built and two thousand- of the most modern refrigerator cars The sale of beer for 1903 amounted to 1201762 barrels The streets and the buildings are I beautifully kept and regular guides- are employed to pilot the visitors through the establishment It was marvelous to watch the rapidity with which every employer worked Not t a minute was lost and each one seem- ed ¬ I intent on accomplishing more than the one next to him There was no cigarette nor pipe smoking no loit- ering ¬ and not a minute was lost It was ever a rush and a hurry but no disorder nor confusion followed The most perfect system prevails in every i department and speeds along as if I worked automatically- Mr Busch has his residence near the brewery on Busch court We were shown through his private sta- bles ¬ I which was in itfelf a treat I At the conclusion of the trip through the brewery everyone is al lowed to drink as much of the iresh beer as they choose Another interesting feature of Saint Louis is Shaws Botanical gardens These are perhaps the largest and t most complete gardens in the United States and perhaps equal to anything- n Honolulu or Japan They were I the property of Mr Henry Shaw one I of that citys wealthy citizens and I distinguished philanthropists At his 1 death he bequeathed these gardens to Saint Louis and a large amount for I the maintenance of the same Al- most ¬ every flower fern palm and I j plant that can be found in any coun I j try is grown in these gardens and are i most beautiful and luxuriant The green house that is especially devoted- to l the cultivation of air plants is par- ticularly j I interesting Every variety j I of the orchid is shown and many of j- I them were in bloom and were very j 1 lovely i- eR 4 4 N t = t fi t Just at this particular season the j chrysanthemum show was on and 1 i was the most exquisite picture imag- inable f There were hundreds and j hundreds of varieties of this gorgeous j flower of every color size and hue t They were very attractively and ar- tistically ¬ arranged in an immense- tent and the profusion of beautiful I colors and the many delightful odors was most intoxicating- The recollections of these beautiful exquisite and superb pictures will lin- ger ¬ long in the memory of those who were so fortunate as to be present Saint Louis has its large depart ¬ ment stores palatial hotels hand ¬ some clubs fine residences swell flats and comfortable apartment houses beautiful parks and theatres- etc very much like any other big city It is growing very rapidly and within the next several years its citi ¬ zens expect that the population will reach the million mark Its union depot is very magnificentprobably- the finest in the countryso that as soon as one reaches the city ones first impression is bound to be favor ble Fantana the musical comedy- that clever Jefferson de Angelis has made famous during the past sum ¬ mer and fall was the attraction at the Garrick theatre this week It id a bright breezy and beantiful little opera and was greeted by a very large audiences It comes up fully to the reputation it had won in the east Our stay in the city though brief was delightfully spent and the mo ¬ ments flitted away all too quickly How much life and enjoyment and excitement and exhileration one finds in a great city There is always something for the eyes and the soul- to feast onpaintings sculpture colossal statues fountains parks theatres churches attractively deco- rated ¬ windows and animation beau ¬ ty and life at every turn The blood- In ones veins courses more quickly and tingles with delight and joy It all comes from having a popula ¬ tion Thats the explanation Let us hope that in time the population of the south will become as dense as the population of the north and west and then we shall have the same spien j dors beauties attractions and activ- ities f 1 I I am reminded that I have said t nothing of beautiful Louisville and her hospitable people I shall make them the subject of a separate letter- I shall next visit Atlanta Jackson- ville ¬ and then return home- S aFe ELIZABETH HARRIS AN AWfUL SKIN DISEASES- ores Covered Neck and Cheeks Itched Day and Night Noth- ing ¬ JI Did Me Any GoodWas Growing Worse I CURED BY CUTICURA- AT COST OF 450- Miss Nellie Vander Wide of Lake- side N Y writing under date of April 18 1904 says I do wish you would publish this letter in the news ¬ papers so that others suffering as I have may see it and be helped I suf ¬ fered for many months with an awful skin disease sores covering my ears neck and cheeks Scabs would form and they would swell and itch day and night Then they would break open and blood and matter run out- I had tried many different remedies- but none of them did me any good- I was growing worse when I tried the Cuticura Remedies The first application helped me and when I had used two cakes of Cuticura Soap three boxes of Cuticura Ointment and three bottles of Cuticura Resolvent I was completely cured- TORTURING DISFIGURIN- Ghumours Eczemas Itching and Chafings Cured by Cuticura- Th agonizing itching and burning of the skin as in eczema the fright- ful scaling as in psoriasis the loss of hair and crusting of the scalp as in scalded head the facial disfigure- ment ¬ as in pimples and ringworm- the awful suffering of infants and anxiety of wornout parents as in milk crust tetter and salt rheum- all demand a remedy of almost super ¬ human to successfully cope with them That Cuticura Soap Ointment and Pills are such stands proven beyond all doubt the testi ¬ mony of the civilized worldC- atsenta Ssp Ointment tad Pillf rr K M th out zont tie world Paver Drug A Chem Corp So J e fropnaan Boiton Of Send for How to Cure skia HuiBur s r Irl 1 t < t u K s IED PIT LIFE Thats what a prominent druggist said of Scotts Emulsion a short time ago As a rule we dont- use or refer to testimonials in addressing the public- but the above remark and similar expressions are mrde so often in connec- tion ¬ with Scotts Emulsion thcc they are worthy of ecasional note From Infancy to old age Scotts Mmulsion offers a reliable vie ns of remedying im- proper ¬ and weak deveiop- inent restoring lost flesh tad vitality and repairing waste The action of Scotts Emulsion is no more of a secret than lik- en composition of the E i sion itself What it does- it does through nourish- ment ¬ the kind of nourish ¬ ment that cannot be ob- tained in ordinary food- Ko system is too weak or l delicate to retain Scotts Emulsion and gather good from it We will send you a rv = i e free B< si ijs TUT iz the or = or i bcl sn the rip > r < = rr ixnl z oi F = < 7 51 I SCOTT BOVINE demists 409 Pearl St N Y C 0c aai S 1 all druggists The Arcadia News thinks that it is too bad that the everglade drain- ing scheme could not be sidetracked in favor of some plan to settle people upon lands already drained and ready for cultivation To the by- stander J ignorant of political mrei pulling it would seem that for the H present the need in this state is for 5 more inhabitants When the vast tracts of fertile soil now awaiting- the homeseeker are settled then would be time to prepare more lands Has the News or any other paper in J Polk and DeSoto county given a thought to the probable effect of the J Okeechobee drainage on the lake systems ot these countiesFlorida- Sun It is the loser that does the howl- ing and when all the facts and the truth are known it is more than prob able that the cries of fraud now being so lustily made by Hearst will turn out to be only the loud mouthings of an angry and disappointed office seeker It has already been discov ¬ ered that many of the charges he has made were false though he may have made them upon false information His offer of 10000 for evidence to convict somebody of cheating him out of the mayoralty has not been called for yetPensacola News Governor Browards everglades drainage scheme won him many votes in his canvas last year but since the people have had time to study the question more closely a strong sent- iment ¬ j is forming against carrying it I into effect and it is understood that j land owners who are to be taxed to I carryon the work will resort to the courts to stop the collection of taxes levied for that purpose Manatee River Journal- Hastings Florida farmers will plant 3000 acres of Irish potatoes- this season The potato is an expen- sive ¬ vegetable to handle and as the land around Hastings is particularly adapted to their cultivation we hope that the enterprise of her farmers will be awarded with a large yield and remunerative prices Standard Oil Dividends New York Nov 16 The Standard Oil Company has declared a quarter- ly ¬ dividend of 10 a share The pre- vious ¬ dividend was d a share and the dividend at this time last year was F a share Today declaration bring the total dividend for the year to a share Last year it was 30 Flo- rida gets ner full share of the dhidendi- s i r5 s i C e y i r I J t r t u

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Page 1: Ocala Banner. (Ocala, Florida) 1905-11-24 [p Page Six].ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu/UF/00/04/87/34/00352/00579.pdf · s i PAGE SIX THE OCALA BANNER M1 I THE OCALA BANNER TSARS HABSIS

s

i PAGE SIX THE OCALA BANNER

M1 I

THE OCALA BANNER

TSARS HABSIS Editor

P V Leavengaad Easiness Haaager

t a

3

+ 1-

r a-

fs

t v-

rs MOTTO THE BASNKB BEXLEVDTQ

as THOSE AT THE TOP WELL ABLE TO-

t TAKK CARE OF THEMSELVES HASi-

d + TAKES ITS STAND IX THE BARRI ¬

1 CADES WITH THE COMMON PEOPLE

4D ITS FIGHT WILL BE MADE FOR-kS

THE BETTERMENT OF THOSE AT THE

BOTTOM°

ff FRIDA NOVEMBER 24 1905

FT The democrats in Ohio are jubilant

The Isle of Pines prefers to floatw Y

the stars and stripesI

The Metropolis big press enables itK je

to print all its telegrams

Chauncy Depews after dinnerF speeches are as a tale that is told

ExGovernor Odell of Sow York1 did not show up well in the lime-

lightThe unexpected sometimes hap ¬

= pens Key West for instance has-

t had a railroad strikemm-

te

I

r Talk about rightabout movementsIx r

How is this Pennsylvania in 1904

504000 republican majority 1905 44

000 democratic majority-

The° Albany Herald says that theI

Georgia gubernatorial campaign issuffering from decayed dignity andan overload of overripe personalities

I If it be true that when thieves4 fall out honest men will get theirIf dues wont the policy holders in the

I

old line insurance companies have af picnic I

f

Mayor McClellan has joined withs

Mr Hearst in requesting the courts-

to3-

f

compel a recauvass of the ballotMcClellan is all right and does not

z t fear a judicial investigationit

= We undersand tnat Candidate Hill-

manr

is preparing a recipe for cookingpotato pone It is said thatit is des-

tined

¬

rt to become more popular than

rQthe new fad for cooking okra-

It glues me pleasure to send you

the enclosed writes Andrew Car¬

negie as he mails a 10003 check tor

f i the relief of the Russian Jews It is

a pleasure that the newspaper editorrarely enjoys

Mayor McClellan of New York is

not building any air castles just now

regarding presidential possibilities in

If 1908 He will have cause to be pret ¬

f ty well contented to hold his presentjobPensacola Journal

The Jacksonville Sun Claude Iv

Engles and Cartoonist Taylors pa-

l

¬

per is out and is all that is promised-

It is rich rare racy brilliant scin ¬

tillating and luminous from kiver tokiver It will appeal to every manin Florida and the women and child ¬

ren will cry for it

The Ocala Banner speaks of somevery beautiful hogs Now we want-

to suggest a getrichquick schemeJust put those hogs in a teut andcharge admission Miami MorningNews That would be a hoggish-

way of making money

Live Oak is still advancing with thetimes Last week the citizens met inmass meeting and organized a board

L of trade White Springs HeraldOcala has had a board of trade for

the last decade and instead of onehas two daily newspapers

y

In order to forestall election frauds-

in New York city 3I r Hearst offered

v15000 to anyone who would giveevidence of cheating at the polls andup to this time no evidence has beenforthcoming sufficiently authentic toclaim a dollar of the reward and is

not likely to but Mr Hearst contin-

ues

¬

to revamp those old stories aboutTammanys corruption which has

been the principal diet of republicannewspapers for the last forty years

fi

r

5y K

e-

1t

PROSPEROUS CITIES f-

Our dry campaign speakers havehad good deal to say about the pros ¬

perous cities of Florida and refer toTallahassee Live Oak Lake City andGainesville as examples-

ItI

is our opinion that the citiesnamed nor no other cities in the in¬

terior of Florida are prosperous orcan ever become prosperous as long-

as the present freight rates continueOcala is as prosperous we believe-

as any interior city in the state butit is bound hand and foot and wheth-er

¬

it goes wet or dry In the pendingelection it can never hope to become-

a city unless its freight rates undergo-

a very radical changeOne hundred and thirty dollars on

outgoing freights in car lots and theexcess charges running it up in someinstances to two hundred dollars Is akilling frost to our trucking businessand the rates to interior points arealike prohibitive

The prosperous cities in Florida arethe seaport cities Jacksonville KeyWest Pensacola Tampa Miami etcand these cities are prosperous be ¬

cause of the advantage they enjoyover the interior cities in freightrates

In the matter of prosperity thewet or dry argument cuts very littleice

A Prosperous CountryThe last official data obtainable

from Washington show a large in¬

crease in trade and cropsThe grain exports for the 9 months

this year amounted to 105219693bushels as compared with 45573796-for the same months last year Thereports for this year are preliminary-and estimated to include 97 per centof the actual shipment

This year the corn exports havebeen 52752212 bushels as compared-with 34441771 bushels for the cor-

responding¬

months last year The j

September export of grain this yearamounted to more than ten millionbushels over September of 1904 Thedomestic movements of trade duringSeptember show the same increase

Yearly two million head of live-

stock arrived at five of the largestdistributing centers in excess ot Sep ¬

tember a year ago while the increase-of receipts of grain in twelve import-ant

¬

interior centers aggregates over27000000 bushels more than the cor ¬

responding month last year The to-

tal¬ I

increase in the lake shipments-this

I

year to and including September i

30 as compared with 1901 aggrega-ted 14756265 net tons a gain in the I

flour outbound movement of 211225 ji

tons j grain and flaxseed 22394715bushels coal 512310 tons ore andminerals 11743741 tons lumbar 75

501000 feet unclassified freight 4t S

661 tonsi

At New York receipts of grain during September totaled 9515490 bush ¬

els as against 6123651 a year before I

Yew Yorks grand total receipts ofgrain and flour and corn meal the t

first nine months of this year aggre-

gated 50742041 in 1904

Dissatisfied LaborersEven King Solomon had trouble-

of his own with the workmen en¬

gaged in the building of the temple-and the F E C railway is no lessfavored in its effort to extend itsline to Key West Of course whereso many are employed a certain per¬

I

cent of the workmen are murmurersThese dissatisfied ones are eitherleaving the extension work or arebeing discharged for cause Theyclaim that the conditions were mis-

represented¬

to them but this cannot-be so because the conditions musthave been apparent They werehired to grade and construct a rail-road across the Florida keys to KeyWest Surely they knew that thismeant work with pick shovel andax they must have known that itmeant camp life in the woods-

It meant hardship It did notmean that they wire to sleep onfeather beds eat fried chicken anddo indoor work About fifty or sixty-of these laborers arrived here yesterdap from the extension work andwere all arrested by the city marshalwho released them under promise i

that they would either get work or J

leave the city Some of them leftlast hight others found work andthere are still others in the city i

+

Miami Sews

ss t-

f erg

Eleqveae and AgricultureTo men possessed of willing hands

resolute hearts and level heads nofiner field than Florida was ever pre¬

sented for occupancy It is a fieldboundless with the best elements ofwealth and substantial enjoyment-It has an endless quantity of rawmaterial of every sort and rich pro ¬

ductive soil upon which all the fruitsall the crops and all the animals nec ¬

essary for mans subsistence comfortand convenience can be cultivated-and propagated and with a climatethat brings to the pallid cheek theslow of health to the listless eye thesparkle of a new life transforms thecareworn frame to one of reanimatednature brings rest to the weariedmind and takes from the memory ofadversity the stings of distressAg ¬

ricultural Report-

Fun in The School RoomThe Tallhaassee True Democrat

says that Editor Tom McBeath ofthe Florida School Exponent takesup the schedule of questions pro¬

pounded to applicants for schools inHernando county by Superintendent-Russell and suggests a number ofjocose additions to the list amongwhich we find the following-

Do you believe that exGovernorJennings discovered Florida and thatComptroller Croom owns it If notwhere have you been living for thepast five years

Have you ever held public officeWhy did you let go Was there any-thing

¬

left when you turned it looseDid you get away with the swag Ifso how many other officials did youhave to divvy with to keep emfrom squealing on you

Rather a Weak Explanation-

The Ocala papers are trying tomake it appear that iocal option inAlaehua county is creating greathavoc which it not druth It citesthe killing ot a negro at OrangeHeights as one instance and the factsare that there was no liquor in thecase The negro threatened a whiteman and afterward he cursed thelittle child ol the man who did the

I

shooting in self defenseI The other was a ease where a num-

ber of negroes got whiskey fromi Ocala or some other licensed townI and had a drunken row Per iaps ifthere had been no liquor to be hadin Ocala there would not have beenany trouble Gainesville Sun

Generat Gilchrist Will Plant Okra

General Gilchrist has bought threeforty acre tracts of land lying just onthe outer edge of town which he ishaving lotted cleaned up and other¬

wise put in shipshape A part ofthis land will be put on the market atan early date while the outside fortywhich is very fertile land and wellsuited for trucking will probably bereserved by the General for the ex-

tensive¬

growing of okraPlantCity Courier-

The Milk in the CocoanutThe election expenses of Wm R

Hearst for mayor of New York intho recent election as filed this morn ¬

ing with the secretary of state wereSO206sAlbany ex Yi Tele-

gramNo wonder Mr Hearst is hot un ¬

der the collar With that muchmoney spent on an election campaign-there ought to have been somethingdoing What was all that moneyspent for

The Brass BandGeorge-

Yes dear-

HBeforei we were married you onceI

asked me if I enjoyed a brass band nI

Yyes perhaps I didI

I You did And said yes But itI seems I misunderstood you GeorgeI My wedding ring is making a blacki mark on my fingerI

Cleveland LeaderI

Just a Little Nerve and GritA man came here a few years ago

and had less than fifteen dollars ByI industry he soon managed to pur-

chase¬

i

an orange grove and paid for itwith two crops of fruit This seasonhe sold 1500 boxes of oranges Thisis only one of the many successes inDeSoto county Wauchula Advo-

cate¬

r

The New York mayoralty electionhas added to the spice and flavor of

>

yellow journalism

j

lOUR LOCAL EDITOR

IN SAINT LOUIS

Visits the AnneuserSusch Brewery

and the Beautiful Botanical Gar ¬

densLOUSVILTLE KY Nov IS 1905

Special Correspondence Ocala BannerWith a party of friends the local

editor spent several days this week atSt Louis A wreck ahead caused us

to spend several hours at a little townI in southern Indiana It was an in-

tensely¬

t disagreeable little village andnaturally gave us a most unpleasantimpression of that section of Indiana-On our return trip we were in a bet ¬

ter frame of mind and things inthat same country looked entirelydifferent to us It proves the truth of

the adage that things appear accord ¬

Iing to the lasses through which they-are seen The view point has much todo in shaping ones opinions

Saint Louis is a big city but onecertainly misses the great expositionThe crowds look small by comparison-

to

I

the swarms of people one saw inI every nook and cranny of the citylast year Several of the Pike attrac ¬

r tions were running during the sum-

mer¬

months but now hardly a vestigeI

of the fair remainsI This fact however gives one allthe more time to see the city itself

I

and the two days that we were thereI

mannerwere spent in a delightfully pleasant

I Everybody has of course heard of

the AnheuserBusch brewery and a

trip through the property of thiscompany is alone almost worth avisit to this western metropolis It istold that when an American in speak ¬

I

ing of the gigantic Worlds Fair toEmperor William the Emperor askedthis question Where is St Louisanyway and that the gentlemanfeelingly and forcefully replied Itis right next to the AnheuserBuschbrewery While this of course is a

fiction is dosnc miss the mark a great I

way I

t One is almost appalled at the im ¬

I mensity of the brewery In fact itI

I is in itself a city It covers one hun-I

¬

I dred and twentylive acres of groundequal to sixty city blocks and em-

ploys

¬

I rive thousand people There isI the brewhoase bottling works malthouses ice and refrigerati tr plants I

II printing establishment steam and

ielectric power plants stock houses

Istorage elevators etc The companyoperates four of the largest switchengines ever built and two thousand-of the most modern refrigerator carsThe sale of beer for 1903 amounted to1201762 barrels

The streets and the buildings are

I beautifully kept and regular guides-

are employed to pilot the visitorsthrough the establishment It was

marvelous to watch the rapidity withwhich every employer worked Not

t a minute was lost and each one seem-

ed

¬

I intent on accomplishing more thanthe one next to him There was nocigarette nor pipe smoking no loit-

ering¬

and not a minute was lost Itwas ever a rush and a hurry but nodisorder nor confusion followed Themost perfect system prevails in every

i department and speeds along as ifI worked automatically-

Mr Busch has his residence nearthe brewery on Busch court Wewere shown through his private sta-

bles¬

I which was in itfelf a treatI

At the conclusion of the tripthrough the brewery everyone is allowed to drink as much of the ireshbeer as they choose

Another interesting feature of SaintLouis is Shaws Botanical gardensThese are perhaps the largest and

t

most complete gardens in the UnitedStates and perhaps equal to anything-n Honolulu or Japan They were

I the property of Mr Henry Shaw oneI of that citys wealthy citizens andI distinguished philanthropists At his1 death he bequeathed these gardensto Saint Louis and a large amount for

I the maintenance of the same Al-

most¬

every flower fern palm and I

j plant that can be found in any counI

j try is grown in these gardens and arei most beautiful and luxuriant Thegreen house that is especially devoted-to

l

the cultivation of air plants is par-

ticularlyj

I interesting Every variety j

I of the orchid is shown and many of j-

I them were in bloom and were veryj

1

lovely i-

eR4 4N t= t fi

t

Just at this particular season the j

chrysanthemum show was on and 1

iwas the most exquisite picture imag-inable

f

There were hundreds and j

hundreds of varieties of this gorgeous j

flower of every color size and hue t

They were very attractively and ar-

tistically¬

arranged in an immense-tent and the profusion of beautiful I

colors and the many delightful odorswas most intoxicating-

The recollections of these beautifulexquisite and superb pictures will lin-

ger¬

long in the memory of those whowere so fortunate as to be present

Saint Louis has its large depart ¬

ment stores palatial hotels hand¬

some clubs fine residences swellflats and comfortable apartmenthouses beautiful parks and theatres-etc very much like any other bigcity It is growing very rapidly andwithin the next several years its citi¬

zens expect that the population willreach the million mark Its uniondepot is very magnificentprobably-the finest in the countryso that assoon as one reaches the city onesfirst impression is bound to be favorble

Fantana the musical comedy-that clever Jefferson de Angelis hasmade famous during the past sum¬

mer and fall was the attraction at theGarrick theatre this week It id abright breezy and beantiful littleopera and was greeted by a very largeaudiences It comes up fully to thereputation it had won in the east

Our stay in the city though briefwas delightfully spent and the mo ¬

ments flitted away all too quicklyHow much life and enjoyment and

excitement and exhileration onefinds in a great city There is alwayssomething for the eyes and the soul-to feast onpaintings sculpturecolossal statues fountains parkstheatres churches attractively deco-rated

¬

windows and animation beau ¬

ty and life at every turn The blood-In ones veins courses more quicklyand tingles with delight and joy

It all comes from having a popula ¬

tion Thats the explanation Letus hope that in time the population ofthe south will become as dense as thepopulation of the north and west andthen we shall have the same spien j

dors beauties attractions and activ-ities f

1

II am reminded that I have said t

nothing of beautiful Louisville andher hospitable people I shall makethem the subject of a separate letter-

I shall next visit Atlanta Jackson-ville

¬

and then return home-SaFe ELIZABETH HARRIS

AN AWfUL

SKIN DISEASES-

ores Covered Neck and CheeksItched Day and Night Noth-

ing¬

JI

Did Me Any GoodWasGrowing Worse I

CURED BY CUTICURA-

AT COST OF 450-

Miss Nellie Vander Wide of Lake-side N Y writing under date ofApril 18 1904 says I do wish youwould publish this letter in the news ¬

papers so that others suffering as Ihave may see it and be helped I suf¬

fered for many months with an awfulskin disease sores covering my earsneck and cheeks Scabs would formand they would swell and itch dayand night Then they would breakopen and blood and matter run out-I had tried many different remedies-but none of them did me any good-I was growing worse when I triedthe Cuticura Remedies The firstapplication helped me and when Ihad used two cakes of Cuticura Soapthree boxes of Cuticura Ointment andthree bottles of Cuticura Resolvent Iwas completely cured-

TORTURING DISFIGURIN-

Ghumours Eczemas Itchingand Chafings Cured by

Cuticura-Th agonizing itching and burning

of the skin as in eczema the fright-ful scaling as in psoriasis the lossof hair and crusting of the scalp asin scalded head the facial disfigure-ment

¬as in pimples and ringworm-

the awful suffering of infants andanxiety of wornout parents as inmilk crust tetter and salt rheum-all demand a remedy of almost super¬

human to successfully copewith them That Cuticura SoapOintment and Pills are such standsproven beyond all doubt the testi ¬mony of the civilized worldC-

atsenta Ssp Ointment tad Pillf rr K M th out zonttie world Paver Drug A Chem Corp So J e fropnaanBoiton Of Send for How to Cure skia HuiBur

s r Irl 1t< t

uKs IED PIT LIFE

Thats what a prominentdruggist said of ScottsEmulsion a short timeago As a rule we dont-use or refer to testimonialsin addressing the public-but the above remark andsimilar expressions aremrde so often in connec-tion

¬

with Scotts Emulsionthcc they are worthy ofecasional note From

Infancy to old age ScottsMmulsion offers a reliablevie ns of remedying im-

proper¬

and weak deveiop-inent restoring lost fleshtad vitality and repairingwaste The action ofScotts Emulsion is nomore of a secret than lik-

encomposition of the E ision itself What it does-

it does through nourish-ment

¬

the kind of nourish ¬

ment that cannot be ob-

tained in ordinary food-Ko system is too weak or

l delicate to retain ScottsEmulsion and gather goodfrom it

We will send you arv =i e free

B< si ijs TUT iz theor= or i bcl sn the rip > r

< = rr ixnl z oi F= <751 I

SCOTT BOVINE

demists409 Pearl St N Y

C 0c aai S 1 all druggists

The Arcadia News thinks that itis too bad that the everglade drain-ing scheme could not be sidetrackedin favor of some plan to settle peopleupon lands already drained andready for cultivation To the by-

standerJ

ignorant of political mreipulling it would seem that for the H

present the need in this state is for 5

more inhabitants When the vasttracts of fertile soil now awaiting-

the homeseeker are settled thenwould be time to prepare more landsHas the News or any other paper in JPolk and DeSoto county given athought to the probable effect of the JOkeechobee drainage on the lakesystems ot these countiesFlorida-Sun

It is the loser that does the howl-

ing and when all the facts and thetruth are known it is more than probable that the cries of fraud now beingso lustily made by Hearst will turnout to be only the loud mouthings of

an angry and disappointed office

seeker It has already been discov¬

ered that many of the charges he has

made were false though he may have

made them upon false informationHis offer of 10000 for evidence to

convict somebody of cheating him

out of the mayoralty has not been

called for yetPensacola News

Governor Browards evergladesdrainage scheme won him many votes

in his canvas last year but since the

people have had time to study the

question more closely a strong sent-

iment

¬j

is forming against carrying it I

into effect and it is understood that j

land owners who are to be taxed toI

carryon the work will resort to the

courts to stop the collection of taxes

levied for that purpose Manatee

River Journal-

Hastings Florida farmers will

plant 3000 acres of Irish potatoes-

this season The potato is an expen-

sive

¬

vegetable to handle and as the

land around Hastings is particularlyadapted to their cultivation we hope

that the enterprise of her farmers

will be awarded with a large yield

and remunerative prices

Standard Oil DividendsNew York Nov 16 The Standard

Oil Company has declared a quarter-

ly

¬

dividend of 10 a share The pre-

vious

¬

dividend was d a share and the

dividend at this time last year was Fa share Today declaration bring

the total dividend for the year toa share Last year it was 30 Flo-

rida gets ner full share of the dhidendi-

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