CHAPTER XXI. OPPORTUNITIES FOR LABOR AND CAPITAL THE first and greatest need of Florida is population. It is beyond all other regions of America the most favored for poor people with little capital but of industrious disposi- tion, able and willing to work. Capital and wealth are al- ways welcome everywhere, but it is an established fact that, wherever labor leads, capital always quickly follows. Look at the history of all our Western States. It was always the case that the poor pioneer emigrant with a rifle, and an axe or spade, hewed the first pathway. It was the wheel- barrow" emigrant that opened up the great mining regions of the Rocky Mountains ; then came the small storekeepers, then the wholesale dealers, then the bankers-the real capi- talists-railroads, and telegraphs: and thus were States founded and solid prosperity established. By all means let. the poor people come to Florida, for nowhere can they live so cheaply, and so quickly earn a living"; while, if they are at all industrious and possessed of common good judgment, they can soon accumulate a competency. If they can bring a little money, sufficient to obtain a few acres of land at cheapest rates or to take up a homestead on the public lands, to build a cheap cottage, and to subsist for six months, so much the better ; they are then sure to succeed and gradually better their condition. But even if empty-handed, let them come, for employment can surely be found to preserve life and give the new- comer time to look about for a better chance.