A 'IIUIN LOAD OF HLTTIiKltS VISITING I1UKUANIC-OOAIA COLONY WHERE THOUSANDS ARE FLOCKING A BRIEF STORY OF COLONY BUILDING THAT HAS ASTOUNDED THIS COUNTRY. BY CLEMENT YORE. One of the most tremendous land movements ever seen in America is progressing at the present time to wards Burbank-Ocaia Colony , In JMarlon County. Florida. Ono simply cannot compichendhat it means to eo a thousand people purchasing farms in Just a few days. Ono haa no Idea of a country that ono month contains no habitations , and the next thirty clayy la dotted over with cot- tagcu ; is throbbing and active with Slfo and movement , and is the center of improvement that canals , If not sur passes , those great days of the far west when whole counties were peopled pled oror night. Out this movement towards Florida OHAH. 11. mm ; . Florida' ! Wow ICoiplru llulldor. la far more Interesting and of greater Import than any movement towards 3and heretofore recorded in this coun try. Thu pilmal Influence of this great movement IB Charles II. Slog md ' the organization which ho has promulgated. i This man is the pioneer of Florida In the matter of placing northern men land women upon Florida farms. Less Shan ono year ago Charles II. Sleg or ganized his first colony , which was lo cated In St. Johns Park , Florida. Every acre of the 30.000 comprising thlb colony was sold within 30 days. The demand was so great ( hat Mr. Sleg secured another tract of land , amounting to some 30,000 acres , at Jacksonville Heights , and this In turn fjraa nold out with the rapidity of the Orst colony. Today nt these two great colonies , 8L Johns Park and Jacksonville Heights , are to bo seen many beautl- tul cottages ; hundreds of farms are being worked ; settlers are thoroughly atlslled ; land values have aribcn 100 % , and many of those settlers who bought land , and have not even im proved u as yet , are actually refusing In profits more than the amount of money they paid for their homes. Then Mr. Sleg began his bearch for his greatest and his best Florida farm community. After careful scrutiny of nil Florida lauds , ho decided that Marlon County , north of the County Seat , Ocala , hold the greatest piomiso for his Ideals , and ho purchased a largo tract of land here. Upon one side of this property lies the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad ; on the other , the Seaboard Air Line ; and ffhl liov how casr It la to clear land , tlmnly br tottluc iiro to tbo 'uunu , which contain Urgu qunntltltb of turjicmtno. through the heart of It travels the Ocala & Northern Railroad. Upon the eastern border of the colony , which Mr Sleg has called Burbank- pcnla. the beautiful Ooklawnha river jrunt , and over the breast of Us waters Itravel pustengcr and freight steam- rs from Palatka to Silver Springs. It Is thus neon that transportation , the gicatest and most necessary ot all adjuncts to a farm community , reaches its highest point of develop , meut at Burbank-Ocala finlnnv. i But a short time ago Charles II. Bleg announced through the public press his Intention of selling this prop- srty , as he had sold hla former colonies nies In 190D. The response to those announcements so great that it lurpassed the Ideas of Mr. Slog. To day the evidence which this man haa kt hla flnger ends of the enormous Demand for Florida soil , is more aston ishing than the reading of a work of fiction. Surely thla Is the day of back to the boll. To take a trip over the Burbank- Ocala Colony la to have a pleasu.ro that amounts almost to n vacation. l As ono approaches Florida upon my of the great railroads reaching tbla state , QUO la at once struck with the conversation ona hears in the making , dining or sleeping car. This conversation IB almost wholly con- lined to the topic of Florida , and gives nn Intilght into the real condition of the fame of this great state , for these people come from almost every sec tion of the North American continent. Every train carries many men and women who arc going to Florida , and strnngo as It may seem , the majority of them are routed to Burbank-Ocala Colony. From the worn-out hills of New Eng land , from the cold and bleak moun tain camps of the mining districts of the Rockies , from beautiful California , from chill and snow-laden Canada , from the cities and from the larms , Catholic and Jew , college professor and bricklayer these are the people who are settling today in Burbank- Ocala colony. Every race , every re ligion , every trade and every profes sion has some man or woman who is n settler at Hurbank-Ocala , and who from i his fact , prove that this land satisfies all people and all classes of people. Theio are three new townsltes in this colony , places where Chas II. Sleg and his oiganlzatlon have decided to build cities. When ono sees what these cities were but a short time ago , and looks at them when ono arrives - rives at Uurbank-Ocala Colony , ono has on idea of what their appearance will bo six months from today. The people are moving upon the fertile - tile Holds of Durbank-Ocala Colony in largo numbers ; they are preparing those fields for the reception of their Ilrst crops ; they are building their homes , and in the wake of these set tlers is traveling the commerce to the various lines of business , that de pend upon an agricultural community for their existence. Marion County , Florida , Is the ban ner county of the state. It is the county which but a few years ago in competition at Tumpa , Florida , with every county in the state , took first pri e for agricultural and horticultural products. Marlon County has more flno roads than any county in the state. It has local and long distance telephones upon Its farms , and one sees here more luxury in an hour's travel by au tomobile or team than one would be- llevo possible in a farming section. Wo must remember In traveling The { Experiment Fnnu nt Jlurbnnk-Ocala Colon/ . over Florida , that these people whoso homes \vo see , and whoso fields we , marvel nt. make their njonoy and' build their homes , not by the man- killing toil of working ICO acres of ground like is done in the north , but Florida is the spot where a man is rich who owns a ten acre farm. Without the question of a doubt , the greatest and most delightful portion ot Florida , \\hero plcasuio and profit aiowound and Inters omul , Is Marlon County , and in the very heart of this great county is located Burbauk-Ocala Colony. If you want to toad something of this gieat colony ; if you want to know in the language of irrefutable proof and undeniable facts and figures ; if you want to see with the eye of a camera what is now being done at Hurbank-Ocala , write for "Ten Acres and Freedom. " a book Issued by Chas II. Slog , and prepared \\ith a most comprehensive knowledge of nil ques tions arifaliig in the mind of a man who contemplates making Florida hia homo This great book Is very expensive , and It Is Illled with absolute proof that tolls a story which no man can deny , and it tolls it in the language of com mon sense. In nn interview with Mr. Slog re cently , ho nuxdo the prediction that every aero of Uurbank-Ocala Colony would bo sold before fanners in the north \\eio enabled to start plowing. Thlb means that many thousands of acres must bo bold each and every week , and that hundreds of settlers are bu > lng this land every day. The olllco of the llurbank-Ocnln Col ony Is located at the city ot Ocala. in Marlon County , is filled with settlers and prospective bottlers to this colony - ony , and the best part of It all Is that these settlers are hatlsfled. Many of Settlers living In tcnti unUl their homes are built them are sent to Burbank-Ocala for the purpose of investigating and mat Ing sure , not only for themselves , but for their friends , relatives and nolgh < bors , and most of these men buy lui mediately after & clug this land ftr many peoplo. To glvo one scfmo Idcn of the value of this property , and how firmly con vinced the Company Is that it will stand any investigation , the Board of Directors of the Now South Farm & Homo Company have authorized Chns. 11. Sieg to sell this colony land upon the strict guarantee that if it is not satisfactory to the purchaser , ho may ask for and receive back every cent ho has paid , together with C % Inter est , any time before the actual deliv ery of the deed. This land is selling nt the price of $25.00 per acre , upon the terms of 50 cents per acre clo\vn , and 50 cents per aero per month until the land la paid for , thus giving every purchaser 4 ! ) months after bin application has been received to complete his pay ments , while ho can move on and take possession of bin farm after a single payment of only fiO cents per ncro. This is at the basis of 17 cents per day for each 10 acres purchased. My ndvlce to ovciy man who really wants to make nn investment out of nis tinny savings , umi win como uncic to him in profits that are limited only by his own capabilities , is to write at OHCO for the great book called "Ten Acres and Freedom , " and Inform him self thoroughly before ho buys , and ; > rove to hit , own satisfaction that Bur- ijank-Ocala Colony is really entitled to all of the tremendous patronage which It is receiving today. , Just send in the coupon below. No letter is necessary , and you will re ceive by return mall this great book freo. BIG FLORIDA FREE BOOK COUPON NEW SOUTH FARM & HOME COMPANY 950 Merchants Loan end Trait Bljg. , CHICAGO AB per jour announcement In our paper , [ ilcasc send me "Ton Acrrq anil Freedom , " which dencrlbca your Burbank-Ocaln Colony farms In Mai Ion County , Florida. I do not agree to buy u furm , but I will read this litera ture thoroughly. { Name ' . . . . / * * j Address , N The Walter Was Too Smart. "I ate my breakfast this morning In a Market street restaurant , " said a down-town business man , "and some thing occurred that particularly ap pealed to my sense of humor. A man and a woman were seated opposite me , and the waiter placed a large plato of biscuits before the two. 'I prefer bread , ' said the woman. In a jiffy the biscuits were whisked away and replaced with the staff of life. I noticed a wistful sort of expression on the man's face as the biscuits disap peared , but he made no remark. 'I guess she's the boss of that ranch , ' I thought , and then the woman turned and said : 'I bellevo the girl thinks wo are together. ' As the waitress came back to give the couple a check she was just about to punch the amount ot two meals on ono when she looked up suddenly and asked If they wcro to- jethor. In ono breath they said 'No ! ' Well , you should have seen that girl's face. She blushed furiously and then capped the climax by saying : 'Oh , you sat there so quiet like , not speakin' , I thought you were married. ' " Phila delphia Record. Sight-Seeing with Reservations. Out of the Grand Central station the other day came a couple the slsht of whom caused citizens who saw them to admit to themselves that there might be , after all , some basis of truth in the "Uncle Josh" jokes of the allegedly funny papers. The old man grasped his carpet bag and bulg ing green umbrella firmly , and looked up and down the street , his mouth agape. "There's a heap o * sights in Now York , I gv.css , Maria , " ho said. "I misdoubt If wo sco them all. " The old lady's mouth set grimly. "Well , Silas. " she replied , and her manner was more than significant , "boin' as I'm with yo'li , there's some , I expect , that you ain't goiu' to see ! " Llppiucott's. Pushing the Goods. A number of drummers were sitting In a hotel lobby , when ono ot them be gan to boast that his firm had tho' ' most number of people pushing its line of goods. There was a little argument and then a drummer who had not had much to say before suddenly rose and said : "I'll bet any man in the house that my firm has the most number of people pushing its line of goods ! " " " exclaimed the boastful "Done ! ono The money was accordingly put up with a stakeholder , and then the boast ful drummer asked : "Now , what is your firm's line of goods ? " "Baby carriages , " murmured the quiet man as ho took the money and inada for the side doorc Exchange. Pessimistic. "What a pessimist Brown is. " "What's the matter now ? " "Ho even bewails the fact that ho can't live to collect his life insutanco. " Detroit Free Press. A Mark of Distinction. "Why do doctors wear Van Dyke boards ? " ' "So they won't bo mistaken for bankers , with sldo whiskers.- Bos ton Herald. Wo are told that the tide of the Thames affects the base of St. Paul's cathedral. The tide of our llfo may undermine the character of some man. Douglas Adam. When shiftless people are unable to annoy their neighbors in any other way they got a dog that will howl i > U night long. PARTY LEADERS WILL EXTEND BRIBERY INVESTIGATION TO HURRY THE ALLD INQUIRY Alld's Chnrgcs Arc Sunk In Flood of More Important Revelations Senator Conger Is Again on the Stand. Albany. N. Y. The name on an other of Hiram Moc's eiw'lopoa was spoken nt the legislative bribery inves tigation. The manner of Ita revela tion showed that the weight of evi dence descending alike upon Senator Bon Conger and Senator Jotham P. Allds , acctibcr and accused , has driven them in dcopcrntlon to distribute the blame. The name heard Wednesday was that of Jean Burnett , once assembly man from Ontario county , who died In Albany during the legislative ses sion in 1U07. The story Conger and Moo told last week is that the $6,000 sent to Albany by the American Bildgo company on April 23 , 1001 , was divided Into three envelopes. Allds , they say , got the first envelope containing ? 1,000. The second envelope hold $1,000 and the third $1,000. If the words spoken by Conger on the stand are true this thhd envelope was given to Burnett. Senator Conger's assertion that the republican state committee got a con tribution from the bridge companies' legislative "protection" fund In 1901 ! has only strengthened the determina tion of the ropubllcation leaders here to extend the bribery investigation without delay. In whatever way the circumstances of this contribution during the chair manship of Col. G. W. Dunn of Bing- hampton may be explained , the party leaders here seem to realize that it would bo suicidal to attempt to stillo the Investigation. Senator Conger's ordeal before the senate committee of the whole was not over when the investigation of his charges against Senator J. P. Allds was taken up Wednesday. The Allds charges , however , have all but sunk from public attention in the Hood of more important revelations. The senate Is now expected to hurry the A.llds inquiry to its close and then proceed to an investigation along the lines of Cougei's testimony. On taking the stand Senator Conger Identified a check of the Groton Bridge company , and was turned over to Allds' attorney for cross-examina tion. He was questioned by Louis E. Carr of Albany. By a series of questions it was brought out that the Conger family during the last ten years had con trolled or possessed a heavy interest in several Groton enterprises. In sev eral of these Hiram G. Moe had held stock. The witness said that at present ho was vice-president of the Gioton Bridge company , and his biother , Jay Conger , was its president. The stock $100,000 was controlled now by th\j \ Conger family. Refuses to Submit. Guthrie , Okla. Governor C. N. Ilas- kell in a letter to the secretary of state , icfused to take part in the fil ing of an Initiatho petition for the submission of a local option amend ment to the state constitution. This is the movement to re-open the ques tion of prohibition which Is now a fai lure of the constitution and is blocked unless the courts overrule the gover nor. The initiative petitions were of fered by various organisations , but they cannot be filed legally unless the signatures are attached in the pres ence of the governor. The governor contends that tt > e pro- por.cd amendment violated the enabl ing act which provides lor twenty-one years prohibition oL the Indian tcrri. tory side of the state. Convict is Inventor. Omaha. Judge Estello of the dis trict court has just been notified by the state paidon board that if ho will designate a suitable person to take charge of him , William Ilowaid , ; i convict In the state penitentiary will be paroled to enable him to perfect his invention ot a self-bniar.oing aeroplane which the prison authorities aio con- vlnced will bo an lnipro\emunt over any flying machine now in iibe. Howard was sent to the penitentiary fioiu Omaha in 1907 qn conviction i ? burglary. lie was known as an iuve-j- tor before that timo. Ho has In his cell now a model ot his proposed airship. The necessary financial backing lor the manufactme of his invention Is said to bo tihc.uly in sight. Iowa Sends One Statue. Washington. The first contribution of the state of Io\\a to the hall of fame in the capltol arrived Wednes day. It was the statue ot former United States Senator James Ilarlun of Iowa , in bionze. When mounted on the pedestal it will bo one of the largest statues in the collection , it Is the work of Miss N. V. Walker. Many Chemists Called. Now Orleans. The healing of testi mony iu the bo-callcd "bleached flour" case will probably extend over a per iod of several days. Following the ovoi ruling of exceptions attacking the constitutionality of the pine food law , filed by the Aetna Mills & Elevator Co. , ot Wellington , Kas. , the defen dant In the case , the government Is proceeding to take testimony , expect ing judgment in default against the milling company. Many prominent chemists of the country have been called to testify. REMARKABLE CAMERA LENS 'Recent Invention of a Johns Hopkins Professor Photographs Every * thing In Sight Baltimore , Mel. Prof. Robert WIN JHama Wood of the chair of exporlmen- | tal physics of Johns Hopkins univer sity , hns received word from the offi cials of the International Photographic exposition nt Dresden , Germany , that Hhero has boon awarded to him n prize , for hla striking ; exhibit of photographs , made with his flsh-eyo camera , and which show how the world appears to the fish. Prof. Wood's camera dooo not have 'the usual flat lens , but a projectlvo bull's-eye that photographs everything Picture Taken with Fish-Eye Lens. In sight , from the feet to the sky over head and all around the horizon , cover * Ing an angle of 18'0 degrees. It will photograph objects above water or while submerged In lake or pond. Thu professor has been at work on his camera for three years , but It was un known to the public until ho showed a scries of photographs at the Interna tional show at Dresden , where they at tracted marked attention. ' The ordinary camera reproduces only what Is Immediately In front of a small circle represented by its lens. If 1'rof. Wood's device bo placed on a floor the projecting fish-eye will photo graph all four sides of the room and the celling at the same flash. If held c'oso to a man , say a half foot from his vialst , It will photograph all on either side of him and all above his head and below his feet. Should It bo suspended from a balloon , It would take a panorama of a city out to the horizon. The photographs that won a prize at the international exhibit are unique. One shows a string of Johns Hopkins students that Prof. Wood lined up on a curbstone. The result has a concave effect , but the camera caught every man in the line. Another shows sev eral students in a circle. . The camera caught every one of them and Included the sky and the cobblestones in the street. They appear , it is explained , just as they would to a flsh looking up from a pond nt a group of men around a circular railing. WOMAN RUNS FOR SENATE Candidacy of Miss Vlda Goldstein Puts New Life Into the Australian Campaign. Melbourne. Miss Vida Goldstein , president of the Women's Political as sociation of Melbourne , is a candidate for the senate at the federal elections. Miss Goldstein io a talented young woman and the acknowledged leader of the woman suffragists of Victoria. Her candidacy has put new llfo into the campaign. The women of the fed erated states of Australia were given the vote In national elections In 1902 , Miss Vldn Goldstein. and Victoria was the last of the states to yield the state suffrage , which It did in 190S. Miss Goldstein stands as a strict non-party candidate. She advocates n federal marriage and divorce law , ab solutely equal for men and women ; dqual opportunities for women In the public service , and she favora olectl\ ministries. She Is an ardent National ist. Providential Interest Gone. The philanthropist had persuaded the noted tenor to sing at the enter talnment of hia mission Sunday school. The Italian relieved himself of a classic which giatcd on the untrained cars of the Impatient chlldien. But the white-haired philanthropist was moved. With tears in his eyes and sobs in his ( boat ho insisted that the tenor's song had surely been heard in Heaven. "If It has , " Interrupted a dies > stcd youth , "it's nil off with this school and we might as well disband. ' PHYSICIANS OF jJU DIFFERENT OPINIONS ON COOP- errs REMARKABLE SUCCESS HELD BY MEDICAL MEN OF NEBRASKA METROPOLIS. Omaha , Nob. , Feb. 1C. The aston ishing bale of Cooper's preparations in thl.i city has now reached such im mense figures that the medical frater nity at laigo have become forced Into open discussion of the man and his preparations. The physicians as n whole seem to bo divided with icgard to the young man's biiccess in Omaha sorao be ing willing to credit him for what ho has accomplished , whllo others assert that the interest ho has aroused is but n passing fad which cannot last , and which will die out as quickly as It has sprung up. The opinion of these two factions Is very well voiced in the etate'meats made recently by two of a number ot physicians who were Interviewed on the subject. Dr. J. E. Carass when questioned about the matter said : "I have not been a believer In proprietary propa- latlons heretofore , nor can I say that I believe in them at present. But I must admit that some of the facts re cently brought to my notice concern ing this man Cooper have gone far towards removing the prcjudico I had formed against him when the un- | icard-o demand for his preparations Drst sprang up In this city. Numbers of my patients whom I have treated for chronic liver , kldnoy and stomach troubles have met mo after taking Cooper's remedy and have stated positively that he has accomplished wonderful results for them. I notice particularly in cases of stomach trou ble that the man has relieved several cases of years' standing that proved rery obstinate to treatment. "I am the last man on earth to stand In the way of anything that may prove for the public good simply through professional prejudice , and I am Inclined to give Cooper and his preparations credit as deserving to some extent the popular demonstra tion that has been accorded them in this city. " Another well known physician who was seen took the opposite view of the "Cooper-mania , " as he called It , tvhich now has this city In ita grip. He said : "I can only liken the present state of affairs to a certain kind ot ialluclnation. For want of a better lame , I might call it 'Cooper-mania. ' The people of Omaha seem to be Inn in the belief that this man Cooper las health corked up In a bottle. "Some of them Imagine that he haa : ompletely cured them of various Ills , ludglng from their statements. It is 'jcyond ' mo to say -why the city has jone crazy over the man. It may bo safely put down , I think , to ono of .he passing fads that so often attack : he American public. "Sooner or later the people are jound to regain their senses and will : hen realize that the reputable physi cian Is the one to whom their health lad best be entrusted. " In the meantime Cooper meets sev- 2ral thousand people dally , and only smiles when statements of the above sharactor are quoted to him. Johnny Knew. The class in physiology was being called on. "Remember , children , " said the teacher , "there are no bones in the \ * stomach. " Johnny Smith's hand went up , "If you please , teacher , my baby brother has one in his. He swallowed a dollar yesterday. " Rheumatism Is Curable NATURE'S REMEDY ( NU tubletc ) will euro llheumntlsm and do It quickly. It so tliotoughly cleanses and icgulutea the Kidneys , liver and digestive system that Its euros seem almost magical. Results Kunruntecd. TdKe one to-night , you'll feel better In the morning1. Get a 25o 13ox. All DrUKRlBts. The A. II. Medlclno Co. , St. Louis , Mo. There aie plenty of people that have good judgment , but few that have reso lution enough always to follow it Carleton. cora > nndwctlstliv tlritbt < 'pu > I'numionlu. Jirin PulnUlIn niiil tlio danger la nvrrtcil. ( jualcil for tolas , bore thro it , qulnsy.'Jio,25oanatOa. Every man is worth just as much as the things are worth about which he is concerned. Marcus Aurolius. ONTAON12 "ItltOWO ODINTNK. " That iHl.A\ATIVK 1IUOMO gifa'tNl ! . look for tlio hiirnunro < il K. W. l.UOVii. TJsoU the World o\er totnroaColulnUnu Uay. 10. Noncommittal. "What do you call your cook ? " / "Mary Is her name. " < f KIDNEY TROUBLE Suffered Ten Years Relieved in Tkrea Mont/a T/ianteio PE-RU-NA. O.B.FIZER.Mt. Sterling , Ky .says : " i have suffered with kidney and bladder tcoubto for ten yesrspust. "Last March I commenced using Peruna and continued for three months I have not used it since , nor have I felt