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Page 1: v P- p N i r 1 7I r1 r PeclEilsufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu/UF/00/07/59/08/00825/0132.pdf · v > P- N r p t O i t oi1T t r I t-r VT7 r1 1 7I i 1 F I zt TWO OCALA EVENING STAR SATURDAY

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TWO OCALA EVENING STAR SATURDAY APRIL 18 1903r I

B ROBINSON President-S

f

I BUTCH Manager J C BOOZER Ass ManagerGEO J BUTCH Te-

llerCOMMERCIALI

I

BANKOCALA FLA

Our Best Attentiontf

Everything of a banking nature entrusted to our caroreceives our best attention We shall be glad to

have a share of your businesst

D E McIVER GEORGE MacKAY

McIVER MaeKAYr DEALERS IN

jt

1 j FURNITURE ANDi HOUSEHOLD GOODS

furniture Stoves China Crockery Lamps Rags Carpets Maitings Linoleums Blankets Comforts Table and Bed

Linen Pictures Portiere and Lace Curtains

Harness Saddles Trunks Suit Cases and Satchels

1 4 f BUILDING MATERIAL

Us Lime Sever and Flue Pipe Lath Shingles and Cement-

Wagonsv

Carriages Buggies Undertakers Goods

CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERSI

J

fCa ZI on or write us foi pri-

cesMelver

J r

MacKayOCALA FLORIDA

I

Pure Food Meat MarketHugo Russell Proprietor

Wholesale and iietail Dealer inI 1 fI

IFRESH AND-

FLORIDA

SMOKEDI

AND WESTERN MEAT-A Complete Stock of Meats of All kinds

on Hand at All Timest I

STALLS I 3 CITY MARKETTELEPHONE 132

1

S L BITTINGr REAL ESTATEOcala Florid

i

I am constantly adding to my list of magnificent lands and city property offered at bargain prices I can sell some very desirable small farms

f

I Went the cityat prices that will surprise you v tI am offering the Glenwood Hotel just across the street from the gov-

ernment¬

building now being erected V

It will pay owners of property to have their taxes carefully looked af-ter and having an experience of eighteen years In the business amfamiliar with the records

ii

DAVID S WOODROW J W AKIN GEORGE H FORD

OCALA PLUMBINGAND ELECTRIC CO

DEALERS IN JfI tJr iW

Standard Makes of Plumbing Goods Gas Engines PUltl JrrigatingPlants Acetylene Gas Plants Sold and Installed Complete Estimatespromptly submitted on any Work in our lute JP 0 Box No 944 OCALA FLORIDA Ole No 370

v

J iAND VEGETABLES

Florida Stall Fed Beef12 Ham Armours Pork-

bagas Turnips Beets s

toes Spanish Onions

ARDSIWOODR01iv

ar-

yimpaa v

nee Postsaken

Tdr r ffi1llilllil9-t

IiittcrEE Toms in luck said Larry

UCG Finn as he watched two ofthe prettiest girls in theward sail by the engine house-

nd give Tom Brennan the handsom-est

¬

fireman of hook and ladder com-pany

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No a perfect fusillade of eyeadoration-

To the divil wid Tom said DooleyBryan shrugging his brawny shoul ¬

ders In downright disgust He dontbe human What ails him Oi dunnoall the gurrils in the parish crazy overhis black eyes an he not noticin thim

Was he always so inquired Larryulfe was returned Dooley iver

since Maggie Harrigan tuk the veilOho said LarryThey were engaged said Dooley

enraptured with himself as a gossipwhen Maggie got the vocation It was

near kiln Tom but av course he coulddonothin

He couldnt said Larry Whydidnt he carry her off

Murder ye divil phwatye be sayinTIs the bride of heaven she is ItsAshamed av you Oi am ye baste Nopoor Tom had tosubmit but hesniver been thesame Oi sup ¬

pose now con-cluded

¬

Mr Bry-an

¬

meditatively-if wan av thim

members av the 1 r

Four Hunderredwere to come by

I and give Tomthe glad eye hedniver incourageher Tissthrange-thot the nuts alIns fall to thetoothless divils uTO THE DIVIL WID

With which TOM SAID DOOLEYsage observation BRYAN

i Mr Bryan betook himself to the bur-nishing

¬

of the hose cart as a relief tohis overcharged emotions

All was true Since the day Tom I

Brennan tore his manly heart out inbidding an eternal farewell to thebeautiful girl who renounced him forher vocation the big fellow had neverbeen the same

All women were like shadows to himHe had loved one truly devotedly andhe had been forced to give her up toheaven He could never lovew another

Tom never noticed women He sim-ply

¬

went about his business of savingproperty and lives as if there werenothing else in the universe for a big

fhandsome athletic fellowOften as he lay in his bunk at the

engine house as he rode tempestuouslythrough the crowded streets as hefought the flames he repeated to him ¬

self the last words he had g iid to liesI

beloved I love you Maggie darlin-I would live for you or I would die foryou and since you bid me tear out myheart I must do it

The Easter morning dawnedthe-very Easter on which Toni had hopedto lead his sweetheart to the altar Hethought of her as he roused from hisdreams of her sweet face Life was

I

over for him he said He saw againthe crowded church the white robednovices He smelled the incense heheard the roll of the organ the solemnvoice of the priest He shivered andturning buried his face in his pillow

SUddenl the alarm roused him Helistened I He sprang from his bunk I

I and a moment later was down the poleI and in his place on the truck His

face was like the face of the dead Asin a dream he heard the cry Where-is It and the answer from a dozenlusty throats The convent

The convent and the orphans homeadjoining were ablaze It was evident-at a glance that the buildings weredoomed The main business was tosave the sisters and the children

The bravfcry of the nuns and theirproteges was only second to that ofthe magnificent fellows who fought for I

the lives of these helpless people Ev¬

ery one recalls the amazing fortitude-and courage displayed at this fright-ful

¬

hourThe children had been well drill ¬

ed for just such a moment of periland nobly did they now obey their in¬

structors Such deeds of heroism aswere done that bitter morning are nev¬

er lost Their memory remain as aneternal inspiration

Tom Brennan thrust a ladder up to awindow of the dormitory just beneath-the huge gilded cross that surmounted-the roof of the convent-

In this window serene calm herlips moving in prayer stood a sweet

faced sisterholding in herarms a tiny crippled boy So

Vllhi symbolic wasthe attitude of

lit k1 this holy wom-an

¬

I that not oneIrish heart Inthe vast crowd

I

below failed torespond-

It is SisterMary Beatricemoaned themother superi-or

¬

She kneltupon the bareground andcrossed herself

g When TomBrennan hisface blackenedF-

OR ONE INSTANT HE with smoke andHELD HER ON HIS his eyes blazingHEART with heroic ex-

citement¬

reached the window SisterMary Beatrice looked steadfastly at

him with her old sweet smile the smilehe had loved

lie held out his armsThe child first Tom she said as

she laid the little boy on the broadbreast of the fireman

I A raiglMy shout went up from theI crowd below All had spt u that sub-

lime¬

act All realized what it meant-A

I dozen hands received the childI and Tom Crennan turned back up theI ladderI He lifted Sister Mary Beatrice fromI the window

For one instant he held her on hisheart

Then as the frenzied spectatorsgroaned and cursed and prayed theconvent walls swayed in

And at the foot of the cross TomBronnan died for his Maggie darlin

Edith Sessions Tupper in New YorkHerald

A FALLIBLE CALENDAR-

How a Gourdful of Stones PostponedI Priests Easter

In the Greek church every priest Iscalled a pope This title comes fromthe old Greek papas father a termwhich in the Latin church came to beapplied only to bishops and finally tothe bishop of Rome alone The peas ¬

ants of Bulgaria are mainly of theGreek faith and the village pope Is tothem what M le Cure is to the devoutpeasants of France Consequently hefigures In many of the Bulgarian folk ¬

lore stories and is sometimes even madethe object of a good natured joke Thestory of how a pope lost his Easter isrepeated every Lent

There was a pope once upon a timewho was unable to read and therefore-did not know when Easter was to beKnowing that his people expected himto know it he was greatly disturbed-by the fact and confided his trouble toa friend It is easy enough said thatman to the pope Get you a drygourd put as many pebbles in it asthere are fast days in Lent and whenpeople begin to fast you begin throw-ing

¬

pebbles one little stone each dayWhen the last one is gone the next daywould be Easter sure And judgingfrom the clamor the pebbles make

I

when you shake the gourd you can also I

tell the people whether Easter day is I

far or near added his adviser I

The pope thought the Idea excellent I

and adopted it immediately He gothim a fine gourd counted fiftyfive peb-bles

¬

in it and as the people began tofast he commenced to throw out a peb-ble

¬

every morning as he washed his I

face Whatever he did wherever hewent he carried the gourd along withhim But one evil day the pope fellasleep and some mischievous man who I

had discovered the secret of the gourd I

put in it as many more pebbles as it I

could possibly contain The pope nev ¬

er suspecting anything amiss went onwith his pebble throwing business asbefore Finally the great day came-as some one had read in a book andthe people and all the children dressed-in their new clothes started merrily to-go to church when to everybodysamazement they met their own pastordriving a plow and a yoke of oxenafield I

Father pope exclaimed they doyou mean to plow on Easter day

Easter day I quoth he while shak ¬

ing vigorously his gourd Listen tothe clatter of this accursed squash andthen tell me if there be any hope forEaster either during this year or thenextCbicago Tribune-

An Indian Passion Play-A remarkable Easter celebration is

the Passion plays of the Indians ofthe Schelt tribe on the banks of theFraser river Skwa Vancouver Itsmotive is that of a sincere desire to in ¬

struct the Indians In the grand lessons-of the death of Jesus Father Chirouse a French missionary adopted-the plan as the best to reach mindsthat could not comprehend the full sig¬

nificance of the spoken wordIts first representation in 1899 re¬

sulted in hundreds of conversions Ithas been continued since with the re ¬

sult that Indians of other tribes comefrom a great Distance to see the spec ¬

tacle and in many cases go away be¬

lieversFather Chirouse insists on the most

reverent presentation Three hundredIndians take part in the twelve tableaus First comes the garden of Gethsemane next is the betrayal and then-in order follow Christ before Pilatethe mocking of Christ by the Romansoldiers the famous Ecce Homo and I

all the other incidents until finally theclimax Is reached in the crucifixionBrooklyn Eagle

VEaster Weather Lore

According to an old English proverb 1

a wet Easter is not favorable to theI

consequent crop of hay-A good deal of rain on Easter dayGives a crop of good grass but little good

hayIf the sun shines on Easter morning-

it will according to the same author¬

ity shine again on Whit Sunday A

Sussex piece of weather lore goes fur¬

ther declaring that if the sun shines-on Easter day it will shine a little ev¬

ery day all the year round while thereis a corresponding notion that If it I

rains then it will rain a little if onlya few drops every day during the en ¬

suing yearNew York Herald

Easter Used to Last Eight Days-In the ancient church the celebration

of Easter lasted eight days but afterthe eleventh century the time was lim-

ited¬

to three days and soon again re ¬

duced to two days It was formerly-the favorite time for performing the I

rite of baptism The courts of justicewere closed and alms distributed tothe poor and needy who were evenfeasted in the churches Slaves wereset free and as the fasting of Lentwas over the people gave themselves I

up to every enjoyment

c

PeclEils J-

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ifor f <

pI

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Monday and TuesdayI

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April20 and 21J-I

tI v-

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Special No I Special No2Ladies Nainsook and Mennens Borated

Cambric Gowns trim-med

¬ Talcum Powder regu¬

in Embroidery and lar price 25c our priceLace worth 150 our onlyprice only 12 11-

I

2e t >S4c-

SpecialSpecial No

No3 Lames Bleached Rib¬

Hartford Xminister bed Vests taped aroundRugs size 30x60 inches neck worth 12c ourworth 3 our price only price only

I

I J84 7c

Study our prices and comparewith other stores r

Look at the Windows1 t t

T

The Variety Store-

Connoisseurs of FineLIQUORSW-

illt

do well to patronize our bar We serveonly the purest of Liquors old establishedwellknown brands liquors that have become r

mellowed with age and will do you good andnot harm Courteous treatment to our patrons and service by Skilled mixologists

i1

Agents for AnheuserBusch Beer

Ocala House Wine Rooms I

W A KALLENBERGER Manageri

n

SILVER SPRINGSHOTEL FOR SALE-

At a great bargain 1000 cash bal-ance

¬

in light annual payments com ¬

pletely furnished open all the yearMr Browns continued ill health com ¬

pels a sale For a live man no betterhotel opening is offered in the SouthBeing located opposite the famousspring Seaboard railroad station andOklawaha steamer landing and butsix miles from Ocala over a fine roadits advantages as an automobile housefor Ocala parties a tourist hotel andas a resort for sportmen can hardlybe overestimated Building seven yearsold and unincumbered having paidfor itself in a short time This adwill also appear in Boston and NewYork papers Dont allow a northern-er

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this unusual bargain Apply toowner on premises Pictured detailspostpaid by th rm J Ken294 Zashingtf-

When

on M

you tffeiiiOcala ne

Fishels big store7

14 OF POUND A WEEK-

At least is what a young baby ought-to gain in weight Bees yours Ifnot theres somethin wrong with itsdigestion Give ip esElixir and it will f b gih Joining atonce Cures stomach antf5owel trou ¬

bles aids digestion tops fretful-ness good for toothing ba19esT-by AntiMonopoly Drug CompanyPrices 25c and 50c-

SEABOARD SCHEDULE-

Day TrainsNorthbound leaves 150 p niSouthbound leaves 1250 i > in

Niqht TrainsNorthbound leaves 205 a mSouthbound leaves 130a m

SHE IS AFRAID OF RATSYour wife will be awfully scared

when she sees a rat run out of thathole in the plastered wall Betterhave it patched with Alabastine Ithides the cracks tooj A Morris Jr I

Decorating thats my businessr

4

i VetinaySurgeonOi-

fiee

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oppositeTompkins Livery bit

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EP GUERRA S

McIVE-

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All Wo-

balmers andi

IceQ-

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