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                    <text>frty Substantial
IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD'S GREATEST
VOLUME II

THK

“ City Substantial’

VEGETABLE SECTION

SANFORD, FLORIDA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3,1921

the tax rev isio n fight

New Type o f Railroad Snow Plow

IN SENATE NARROWS
DOWN TO THREE ISSUES
Soldiers Bonus, E xcess
Profits Am endm ent,
Sales, Corporation

H erald

Sanford

NUMBER 191

AMERICAN LEGION DEMANDS
BONUS BILL FOR VETERANS
CONVENTION HAS CLOSED

# Hanford MacNider, o f
*
Iowa, Chosen as N at­
*
4#
ional Commander
#
WASHINGTON, Oct, 3.— #
#
Estimated
expenditures of #
*
government for fiscal year #
#
1922 now placed at $3,940,- #
AT
*
IN n e x t tw o d a y s b u t
090,090, reduction of $94,000,- #
PRESENT NO ONE CAN
# FOR REMOVAL OF NATIONAL
000
from
August
10
estimate.
#
HEADQUARTERS FROM IN­
STATE DEFINITELY
#
Harding hns informed con- *
DIANAPOLIS TO K. C.
#
gross in lotter to Spenkor Gil- #
(B r T h. A uocU U d Fr**»)
#
lette.
#
WASHINGTON, Nor. 3,—The
KANSAS CITY, Ncv. 8.—The nat­
#
The
Philadelphia
and
Reading
railroad
Is,
preparing
for
the
expected
hard
#
ional
convention of the Amorlcan Le­
ta* revision fiiiht In the senate
winter
by
equipping
Its
locomotives
wlthWhls
new
type
of
snowplow,
said
tc
#
# # # # * * rva P v t # # # # ) *
had narrowed today to three prin­
gion adjourned here Inst night after
be the most efficient yet devised for clearing snow of moderate depths from
electing Hanford MacNidor, of Mason
the tracks.
cipal issues, soldiers bonua exMADERIA ARRANGES
City, Iowa, national commander; se­
ce»H profita amendment, ealee
TO RECEIVE CHARLES
lecting
other officers and ndoptlng
tax and corporation Income tax.
ARABS ATTACK JEWS
AND IUS QUEEN.
resolutions
covoring a wide rnngo of
Senator* In charge of the meas­
THROW ROMIIS IN STREET
subjects. Tho convention hnd been in
ure thought It could bo disponed
JERUSALEM, JERUSALEM. session without a recoss since early
(B r Till A u o o liti4 F n u )
of In two days and that the bill
LISBON, Nov. 3.—Arrangements
morning.
could he pnHited by Saturday
(B r T h . A i m b t o l Fra**)
have
been
completed
to
receive
former
The election of Mr. MacNider to
JERUSALEM, Nov. 3.—Five pernight at latent.
Emperor Charles and Ex-Empress
succeed
John J. Emery of Grand Rap­
1sons were killed, and thirteen others
Zita of Austria Hungary as exiles
ids, Mich., wns made unanimous nfter
wounded
in
disorders
hero
today
Watson’s Charges
of tho Island of Mndcrin, nceoording
which included throwing of bombs. more than hnlf of tho stnto delega­
to advices received today from Fun- Hundreds o f A rticles East and W est Bound in Police sny tre trouble started In an tions hnd seconded his nomination nnd
Will Have P roof
attempted attack by Arab rioters on threo other Candida tes nominated,
By Several People chnl, chief of the city of Island.
the List
Roy Hoffman of Oklahoma City, Earl
Jewish quartera.
M. Cline, of Nebraska City, Nebr.,
Hanging of American Soldier* Seem*
(D f Th* A iio clttsd P ra ii)
to and from points west of Chicago,
and
John F. Williams, of Joplin, Mo.,
to Have Evidence
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 3.—Reduc­ and Mississippi river ns soon ns the
hnd withdrawn in his favor.
tions of freight rates on hundreds of tariffs can ho published.
Tho vice commnndors chosen wero
(Dr Tho A uocliU d F r a u )
nrticlcs,
cast nnd west hound, nnd
The reductions were announced as
George L. Berry, of Rogcrsvillo, Tenn.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 3.—Letters
amounting tu ns much ns 50 per cent representing the policy of tho carriers
II. Nelson JnckRon, of Burlington,
and telegrams from pernonn offering
of
existing rates in some cases, wore to "reduce freight rates ns well ns
Vermont, and Charles Kendrick, of
to submit proof of charges that Amernnounccd Inst night by thu Southern wages where tho reductions can ho
Snn Francisco, representing tho army,
enn soldiers overseas hanged without
made
in
tho
public
interest."
Pacific
company.
The
reductions,
it
nnd Rnymond Bracket of Mnrbiehond,
HOYS
ROMPED ON THE COLON­
trial presented in sonnto today by
was
declared,
nvernge
about
20
per
Among
nrticlcs
on
which
tho
reduc­
EL
-OTHER RESOLUTIONS
Watson, of Georgia, whoso presenta­
SENT UP FOR LIFE. ESCAPED Mnss., nnd J. A. McCormick, of Fort
tions
west
hound
will
bo
effoctivc
are
cent
nnd
will
bo
effective,
as
in
the
Lyon, Colo., of tho nnvy.
OF
INTEREST
tion of the original charges In tho sonAND HAS BEEN HIDING IN
case
of
changes
made
to
meet
compe­
drygoods,
iron
and
steel,
tin
pinto,
Tho Rov Enri Blackman, of Chantc several days ago rosultod In the
LAKE COUNTY
nuto, Kans., n mlnlstro of the Chris­
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. 3.—The tition of water borne traffic via the glucose products, machinery, rofrigappointment of a special commlttoo to
national convention of the American Panama Cnnnl ns soon as approved by erntors, pitch, turpentine, glnss, vehi­
investigate.
TAVARES, Nov. 3.—Luther Wil- tian church, Disciples of Christ, waa
cles,
furniture,
coal,
canned
goods,
tho
Interstate
Commerce
Commission;
One of tho telegrams, Wntson snld Legion hero rejectod a report of its
son. nged 32, white, escaped convict elected national chaplain.
linoleum
nnd
Honp.
Rates
on
cast
in
tho
caso
of
rates
from
nnd
to
points
A fight for tho rcmovnl of tho nat­
was from a former major in tho army committee on resolutions castigating
and outlaw who has defied authorities
bound
products
which
nro
reduced
inoast
of
the
Mississippi
river
and
Chi­
ional
legion headquarters from Indian­
and snid he could assist in substan­ Col. George W. Harvey, Amurlcan am­
of four central Florida countios for
cludo
those
on
bornx,
vegetables,
liops,
cago,
as
soon
ns
eastern
roads
con­
apolis
to Katinas City, which tho Mis­
tiating charges. In presenting docu­ bassador to Great Britain, anil de­
more thnn a year, was shot to death
flour
and
nuts.
cur
In
thorn,
nnd
in
the
case
of
rates
souri
delegation
promised in pro-con­
claring
him
unfit
to
represent
the
ments Watson, with feeling, clashed
by deputy sheriffs whilo resisting nrvention
enmpnigning
to bring on tho
with several Bonntors and was remind­ country.
rest at a point soma 15 miles south
floor,
did
not
develop.
RELIGIOUS DENOMINATION
The action dealing with Ambassa­ LADY GOLF CHAMPION
ed by Vice-President Coolidgo ho
of Clermont Tuesday evening.
Tho election of officers concluded
COMMITS SUICIDE ON
INTERESTED IN MANUFACTURE
should proceed in order nnd observo dor Harvey enmo after a brink fight
The body was brought to Tavnres
an
ail dny session markod by dobnto
MASSACHUSETTS
LINKS
OF SACRAMENTAL WINES. and a guard established hero Tues­
the sonnto rules. Wntson again at­ on the floor in which Colonel Harvey
and
wrangling over certain sections of
tacked Senator Wadsworth, Republi­ was severely arraigned nnd defended
day night for fear that n raid might
( By Th* A**ocl*t*d F ra u )
(D r Th* A»*oc!*t*d Pr.M l
the
resolutions committee report.
by
delegates.
can, who first called tho sennte atten­
NEWTON, Mnss., Nov. 3.—The
WASHINGTON, Nov. 3.—Repre­ ho made to secure it. Thero wns no Particularly heated was the discussion
Tho resolution asserted the ambas­ body of Louise Tellier, Massachusetts
tion to Watson's charges. "It is only
sentatives of religious denominations trouble, however, and all wns quiet of a resolution criticising severely the
a few hours since I wns put on tho sador’s remarks at the Pilgrim’s Day open golf chapion wns found today
nnd others interested in the quesion here yesterday.
rack in a most supercilious manner banquet in London shortly after he Imaging by a small ropo in the shel­
Wilson escaped from tho stnto speech delivered by George Harvey,
of whether wholesale denlers in sacra­
by ex-associates of Willinm Harnes, a nrrived In England, in regnrd to the ter on links of Hrnehurn county club.
prison farm at Raiford the early American ambassador to Great Brit­
mental
wines
may
do
business
undor
crook," Wntson snid. Wndsworth did motives that actuated Americn's en­ Medical examiner and police said it
part of 1020. He was serving a lifo ain, beforo the Pilgrims' Club in Lon­
prohibition
lawh
be
given
n
hearing
not reply.
trance into the war were false and wns suicide.
term for thu murder of a deputy don, upon his nrrivnl in Englnnd to as­
by
tho
Department
of
Justice
next
untrue, constituting n gross slander
sheriff who sought his arrest after sume his duties ns nmbnssndor and in
Tuesday.
on tho service men nnd women of the DEPUTY SHERIFF SHOT
REDUCE PUBLIC DEBT
he escaped authorities who had taken which Mr. Hnrvoy discussed tho rea­
country.
ABOUT $465,000,000 IN
him into custody on a charge of as­ sons why the United States entered
WHEN PISTOL FELL
FEARS
ENTERTAINED
After
the
original
Harvey
resolu­
saulting his sister-in-law. Since his tho war. Tho original resolution was
MONTH OF OCTOBERFROM 1IIS POCK E l
FOR SAFETY OF SCHOONER
tion had been tnhlcd, a substitute res­
escape he had dodged nnd resisted of­ thrown out of tho report on a roll call
ROUND
FOR
TAMPA.
olution wus adopted. It wns couched
l Hr T h. A noclaU d F r a u )
ficers of Polk, OhccoIo, Lake and Or- vote nnd inter a substitute wns adopt­
(0 7 Th* Ai*ool*t*d Pr**()
WASHINGTON, Nov. 3.—A reduc­ in less caustic terms and wns adopted
MIAMI, Nov. 3.—Ben Culix, depu­
nnge counties. Ho is snid to hnvo liv­ ed. Tho substitute wns writton in
(Dy Th* A**ooUt*d Praia)
less sharp terms and expressed tho
tion of about $465,000,000 in tho pub­ by unanimous vote. It stated that ty sheriff of St. Lucie county was ac­
TAMPA, Nov. 3.—Fenr for the ed in an outlaw camp near tho corn­ belief thnt tho ambassador's rolic debt during October wns announc­ Mr. Hnrvoy’s remarks did not repre­ cidentally shot when his pistol fell safety of the British schooscr M. A. ers of the four counties nnd to have
mnrks did not represent tho truo fool­
ed today by tho trensury. Tho total sent the sentiment of the American from his pocket Sunday nt Fort Bclllvcnu, which sailed from British
“‘ .J0®* ane olhor
con ing for which tho American Legion
Legion
nnd
was
amended
on
motion
public debt on Sept. 30 stood nt $23,Pierce nnd died nt n hospital here late Honduras for Tampa via. Cuba Hhort- vict with him.
Last week former Sheriff T. C. stands. It directed thnt a copy of tho
024.10B,125.00 while on Oet. 81 tho of delegates from South Carolina to yesterday.
ly
before
the
hurricane
entered
tho
Smyth was defendant in a suit bro’t resolution ho sent to President Hard­
total was $23,450,406.60, making n de­ omit the title of colonel ns applied to
Gulf
last
week,
is
expressed
heru
to­
by Joseph Wilson for $5,000 damages ing.
crease for the period of $464,050,628. Mr. Hnrvcy. Tho resolution wus pass­ MAN GETS LIFE
day
in
marino
circles.
Tho
schooner
Two resolutions benring upon fed­
for falso nrrost in connection with
The henvy decrcnso In tho national ed provided that n copy ho sent to thu , FOR TRAIN WRECKING
cnrrled
six
men.
eral
compensation for soldiers wore
the charge on which his brother was
AT LAPEER, MICHIGAN
debt during tho pnst month officials president of the United States. Thu
among
tho mass adopted. Both dosubstitute
was
adopted
after
several
sent up for lifo at Raiford. Tho trial
faid, was accounted for by heavy re­
LARGE
UNIDENTIFIED
VESSEL
clnrcd
in
fnvor of Immedlnto com­
delegates
declared
they
believed
the
( B j Th* A***aUt*d Prat*)
was hotly contested. Hons. Mat Mncdemption of government securities.
ON FIRE NEAR HALIFAX
pensation
legislation.
Ono submitted
LAPEER, Mich., Nov. 3.—Henry
original
resolution
lost
only
hccauso
Farlano and N. B. K. Pottingill, of
Nearly $400,000,000 worth of trensury
ACCORDING TO RADIO. Tampa, represented Wilson, and Hon. by tho convention's legislative com­
Grates, who confessed Monday he
of
its
strong
wording.
certificates wero retired whilo tho
Amid cheers the convention, adopt­ wrecked tho fnst Grand Trunk train
Kd. Davis nnd local attorneys repre­ mittee declared thnt "aftor careful
tisunl trensury flnnncing was omitted
(Br
Th* A**ocUt*d Pr*M)
consideration of nil of tho arguments
nenr
hero
Frldny
night,
pleaded
guil­
ed tho report of its legislative com­
HALIFAX, Nov. 8.—A largo un­ sented Mr. Smyth, who is now clerk ndvnncod in opposition to tho measure,
nn Oct. 15 nnd no new certificates Is­ mittee confirming that body's stand ty today nnd was sentenced to life
identified vessel in on fire four hun­ of tho circuit court of Lake county.
sued until Nov. 1.
on tho question of immediate federal imprisonment in the Michgnn peniten­ dred miles southeast of Halifax, ac­ Incidentally tho Jury awnrded Wilson including tho lotter of tho secretary
compensation for Hcrvico men and tiary.
Naturally this of tho treasury and tho address of
cording to n radio call to Canadian ono cent damages.
m o ther a n d f a m il y
tho president to congress, wo still
asking that such action ho taken
naval department from the British trial brought out many of tho Wilson firmly bcllovo In tho Justico, fairness
BURNED TO DEATH
"without further equivocation or de­ CHARLES INTERNED
clan from south Lnko county and it is
tnnkcr Snxolclno.
,
IN TOLEDO APARTMENT. lay."
ON MADEIRA ISLAND
presumed thnt during tho week when and immediate necessity of tho ad­
QUESTION OF ALLIESThu convention, although late in
the witnesses were present that there justed compensation measure.
EIGHT
PEOPLE
INJURED
'B y T h . A ito cU t.d F r a u )
Tito resolution declares that the
a
TOLEDO, Ohio, Nov. 3.—Mother, getting started, raced through
IN PENNSYLVANIA WRECK. wns n lenk as to tho whereabouts of legion reaffirms its stand upon ad­
(B r Th* A***«UU&lt;t F ra u )
quuntity
of
routine
business
yester­
Luther Wilson.
three smnll daughters and ono son,
PARIS, Nov. 3.—Negotiations re­
Acting upon tho information Sher­ justed compensation, nnd asks that the
were burned to death this morning day nnd cleared docks for recoption lative to tho possibility of interning
(B r Tb* A uocU U d F r a u )
of
tho
report
of
tho
committee
on
res­
COLUMBUS, Ohio, Nov. 3.—Eight iff Cnssndy sent out deputies C. W. "congress of tho Unitod States pass
when flro destroyed tho fruit storo
olutions and tho election of officers, former Emperor, Charles on ono of persons wero Injured, nine seriously, Cooper nnd II. C. Cnsh to bring in tho this mensuro without further cquibonnd apnrtmont of Wolf GroCnburg,
tho outstanding features of the con­ tho Mndcirn Islands, which haH been | when the Pennsylvania passenger escaped convict. As a circuit court cation or delay."
Indiann avenue nnd Ewing atreot.
Tho other compensation resolution
In progress between tho Allies nnd
cluding program.
_ .
, ,
,
. . .
trn*n *rom Columbus to Sandusky, was in fession the shoriff could not adopted was offered by tho resoluThe dead nro Mrs. Grecnburg nnd her
Resolutions on compensation said Portugal is nearing n conclusion, the wna (Jorn!lc(| nt Lcwi„ Contor ncar undertake tho hazardous task with
children.
tlonn committeo.
thnt "after careful consideration of Journal declares-today.
| |u.ro this morning.
his fearless doputies.
It nsserted thnt, tho Amorican Le­
all arguments against tho measure,
Cooper nnd Cnsh left thoir car on
TO SUBMIT PLANS OF
gion
reiterates its position In favor of
including tho lotter of the secretary of Great Britain, nnd Vice-President EDITOR DAN IIANNA
tho main road nnd walked some fivo
CAPITOL EXTENSION. of tho treasury and tho address of Coolidgo. Other visitors, including
tho
adjusted
compensation for dis­
CLEVELAND NEWS AND LEDGER miles off thu beaten paths through charged soldiers, nnd "doptores the
President Harding, we- still firmly Mnrshul Foch, Gen. Baron Jacques
swamp
nnd
underbrush,
through
tho
DIED OF HEART FAILURE.
TALLAHASSEE, ?Jov. ,3.-11, j. bcliove in the justice, fairness nnd Im­ and Gcnernl Pershing, were to spond
wild country known as Green Swamp. request of President Harding to deKlutho, of Jacksonville, architect of mediate necessity of the adjusted com­ n pnrt of tho dny at tho flying field,
When thoy approached Henry Walk­ lny passage by congress of n measure
Th* A m m U M F ra u )
the extension to the capitol, which Is pensation mepsuro."
Marshal Foch and Gen. Pershing hav­
CLEVELAND, Nov. 8.—Dan R. er’s house thoy saw Luthor Wilaon for the samo, and tho acquiescence of
shortly to bo mndo In this city, will
Tho convention also adopted a re­ ing on their program a trip to Lenv- Hannn, publisher of tho Clovoland in a Ford car driving in their direc­ congress in that request."
nppear beforo the'board of commis­ port of tho Amorlcnnlsm committeo onworth. Kona., to look ovor the fed­ News and Cleveland Sunday Ledger, tion. Thoy headed out into tho rutsioners of state institutions on next covering a wide range of subjects, and eral prison nnd military barracks died of heart failure at hla homo to- tod roadway and with leveled guns
to Tavares about 8 p. m., and a Jury
Monday and submit his final plans and Including more stringent rcgulatloh thore. Tho American general planned day.
called upon Wilson to surrender. In­ was'empanelled, viewed tho body, af­
specifications for the work, accord- of radical activities. Recommenda­ to stay at tho fort some timo to make I
________________
stead ho Jammed on tho brakoB of his ter which it was turned over to an
|n*r to an announcement nude by tions also were made for tho restric­ an Inspection. The two left last night EARTHQUAKE SHOCKS
car, reached for hia gun beiide him, undertaker at Eustls. Tho family was
Rivera H. Buford, attorney general, tion of Immigration.
on a special train for St. Loula. Gen. I
FELT AT LIMA, PERU. and In a second had tho gun raised notiflod yesterday that the body was
“ day. After the plans and specifica­ Three of tho distinguished visitors J4acquea also-left last night aboard I - ■■ ■ ,
to shoot, but was a second too late. at their disposal.
tions have been submitted and adopt­ horc for tho convention left early yes­ 0 sp&lt;jpial train for Omaha whore ho j .LIMJAJPeru, Nov. 8.—Four sharp Two loads of shot entered his face
ed, tho board will advertise for bids terday for the East. They were: Gon. will attend tho -International Air Con- j earthquake ahocka were felt Jn thla and chest. He died Instantly,
jcity yesterday morning.
for the construction of the extension. Dias, of Italyt Admiral Earl Beatty, greaa the latter part of this week.
The deputlea brought the body on | Herald—b ^ th ^ p o ^ -T ifc .fn&gt;m ***
ESTIMATED EXPENDI­
TURE OF OUR GOVT.
FOR THE YEAR 1922

8ENATE FINANCE COM.
RESUMES HEARINGS
On TARIFF QUESTIONS
-------WASHINGTON, Nov. 3 . Tho Senate Finance Committee resuming hearings today
on the tariff questions, ordered a favorable report on the
house resolution extending tho
emergency tariff law to Februnry first or until such time
ns permanent tariff schedules
be enacted into law.

TAX MAY P A S S

MOTION WAS LOST

RAILROADS RATES SLASHED
SOUTHERN PACIFIC ANNOUNCES
CUT AVERAGING 50 PER CENT

LEGION REJECTS
RESOLUTIONS
ON HARVEY

FLORIDA OUTLAW
W AS KILLED
BY DEPUTIES

Mm:*

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*

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TH E SANFORD DAILY HKRALDyW EDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1921

»AGE BIGHT

PERSHING AND
FOCH RECEIVE
BIG OVATIONS
s
LEGION GREETS WARTIME COM­
MANDERS WITH
CHEERS
:
■

(B r T h . A u o c lit.4 B n u )

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:

Went
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There’s a day and night dif­
ference between MANSCO
and the ordinary athletic Un­
derwear—because MANSCO
is the product of the makers
of M anhattan Shirts.

■

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Sanford Shoe &amp; Clothing [
Company
j
spite of numerous pitfnlls nnd count­
WHAT THE AMERICAN ARMY
er attacks of the enemy. It succeeded
ACHIEVED IN WORLD WAR
RECITED »Y GEN. FOCH from pure tenacity nnd determination.
After St. Mihicl I now inscribo upon
its proud banners tho name of the Ar­
(Continued from P m # One)
18th of July, pnrtlcipa ted in tho vic­ gonnc.
torious counter offensive of the tenth
"On tho 10th of October, this great
and sixth French nrmleB between task finished, it joined hands with tho
Alsno nnd the Mnrno and contributed fourth Fronch army in tho defile of
in groat mensure to thnt victory.
Grand Pro. In consequence of this
“Finally it was thnt spirit which tho enemy's resistance wns severely
animated ull
thoAmerican
army shnken; the moment had nrrived to
when, on the 24th of July, General give him the finnl blow.
Pershing formed your splendid units
“On tho first of November, just
under his own direct command.
threo years ago today, tho first Am“On tho 12th day of September, oricnn army again attacked nnd, in a
1018, the first American army deliver­ splendid advance, renchcd Buznncy,
ed its first battle on the soil of penetrating the German lino for more
Frnnce. It dislodged the enemy from than 10 kilometers.
tho St. Mihicl salient where he had
“Tho enemy this time retired def­
ontranched himself for nearly four initely; the stars nnd stripes at once
years, threw himback beyond the took up the pursuit,, nnd, six days
foot of tho hills of the Meuse. From later, floated victoriously over tho
the very first tho American army en­ Mcuso reconquered.
tered into glory. How many further
"After St. Mihicl, after the Arlaurels wns it yet to win?
gonne, the American banners now
“Tho St. Mihiol operation wns near­ bore tho name of the Meuse. In a
ly ended when tho American urmy at­ few days you had taken 45,000 pris­
tacked on n new front. On the 25th oners and 1,400 cannon from the
of September it wan engaged on tho onomy. Glory to tho First Amorican
right wing of the vust allied offensive. army! Glory nlso to thoso of your
The point of direction assigned to it divisions, which, distributed among
wan Meziercs, on the Meuse.
tho French nnd British armies con­
“Deployed from the left bnnk of tributed in great mensure to the final
tho Mcuso to the eastern confines of success, whother with the Fifth
Chnmpngnc, it had three army corps French army to tho northwest of
in line on a front of nearly -10 kilo­ Rheims, or with tho Fourth Fronch
meters.
.
army, in which they carried in mag­
“Before it stretched the region of nificent assnuit, tho strong positions
the Argonnc, formidable emplacement of Orfonillos; or agnin with the Brit­
of tho German defense, a wooded ter­ ish armies for tho capture of tho fa­
rain, rugged, difficult in its very nu- mous Hindeifburg line, or with tho
turo and rendered moro so by ull tho group of armies in Flnnders pursuing
defensive organizations which had tho enemy upon tho road to Brus­
been accumulated there during the sels.
last four ycurs.
“During tho tlmo your second army
“Nothing could discourage or chock impatiently awaited to nttack in its
your army. It threw itself with gen­ turn in tho direction of Mcthew, which
erous ardor into tho immense molce. wnH nlrcndy stretching its arms to
Tho task was n rude one, but it wns us for dcllvcrnnco. But, hnrrasscd
carried out to a thorough finish. Night nnd dofeated, the army of the enemy
and day for a month you advnncod in laid down its arms. Tho solemn hour

saw

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w

KANSAS CITY, Nov. 2.—The Amoricnn Legion received Ha wartlmo
commnndera — Mnrahnl Ferdinand
A story appealing and emotional to the very aend, also—
Foch, of France, nnd General John
J. Pershing—hero yesterday with a
welcome fit for tho heroes of victor­ SCORE MOVE TO
“Bath Tub Perils,” a Sennett Comedy
ious armies. Ten thousand guests and
LEGALIZE BEER
visitors to the national convention
gave the great military leaders a
WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—An at­
tumultous greeting thnt spoke of tho
Tomorrow— Mary M iles M inter in “Moon­
feeling of tho Amorican soldier and tack on former attorney general Pal­
ligh t and H oneysuckle” ; and “Cust­
people for the two men.
mer and a number of senators is
ard’s L ast Stand” a Comedy
After hearing the visitors, the con­ mndo in a statement issued yesterday
vention adjourned until todny to per­ by tho Hoard of Temperance. Pro­
mit the delegates and visitors to at­ hibition and Public Morals of the M.
tend tho dedication of Kansas City's E. church regarding the beer regula­
memorial to its war dead and to par­ tions issued last week by Secretary
ticipate in tho big Legion parade yes­ of the Treasury Mellon, and based up­
on the decision of Palmer “that doc­
terday aftornoon.
W H EN YOU TH INK OF COFFEE
Marshal Foch brought to the Le­ tors may prescribe unlimited boose."
gionnaires a personal declaration of “No ode had any respect for Palm­
THINK OF
comradeship nnd from his government er's decision when he gavo it," said
bore tho official greetings of France.1the statement, “and no one has any
Just tho nppearnneo of the marshal respect for it now. It may bo that
wns enough to thro wtho big hail into Palmer could bo appointed to somo
n frenzy of npplauso nnd General Per­ office again, but unless we miss our
shing wns given nn cqunl ovation by guess he could not be elected dog
cntchor of Podunk."
the former soldiers and visitors.
Tho statoment says that Mellon’s
John J. Pershing commander of the
A lw ays Fresh
Amorican expeditionary forces, yes- decision to put these regulations into
terdny extended on bohalf of Ameri­ effect is “most unfortunate nnd is
can Expeditionary forces, extended on contrary to tho general policy of the
behalf of tho American Legion and administration."
“No doubt some father, long dohis own native Btnte, Missouri, a for­
mal welcome to Mnrshal Foch of niod his boor will tank up on tho good
Frnnco, commander-in-chief of tho al­ medicino now nnd go homo to bent
out the brnins of his baby," said the wo can only say this, “There are mil- FORGER ARRESTED IN MIAMI.
lied armies.
“I cordially greet you," said Gen­ statement. “If so there arc certain j lions ot PC0Pl0 who wlU meot y°u nt
eral Pershing, In nn address delivered senators who should attend tho funer-;tho P0" 8 w^cn tho dny comos.”
MIAMI, Nov. 2.—The passing yes­
before tho nntionnl convention of tho nl. If tho senntors who are respon­
terday of a $1 bill which had been
B. G. Smith, of Oviedo, was in tho raised to n $20, caused the arrest of
Legion at which the French common- sible for the filibuster which has dcloyed
the
anti-beer
bill
that
the
peotoday mingling with his many Frederick George Reeve, a recent ar­
dcr wns guest of honor, “not only re­
calling the nffcctionnto relationship of pic will not remember their inexcus­ friends. He reports Mrs. Smith as rival from Toronto, Canada. Ho wns
other days, hut also recognizing the able behavior they have sadly mis­ recovered from her recent operation bound over to tho next term of fed­
patriotic unit thnt has grown out of read the signs of tho times. Thero for appendicitis und she has been eral district court under bonds of
those associations nnd the common are enough drys in any state to see to moved back to hor home.
$1,000. United States Commissioner
purpose thnt exist to uphold more it thnt such unpatriotic action is
Tonight nt tho Star Theatre Alice Gnhnm said he countcfait bill was
faithfully those things thnt lie nt the properly dealt with.
tho ebest pioco of work of tho kind be
“To Senators Broussnrd, Stanloy Luke in “Over tho Wire" u Btory ap­
foundation of this great republic of
had
ever seen. Reeve declared ho re­
nnd Rend, among tho Democrats, nnd pealing nnd emotional to tho vory end
ours.
ceived tho currency at n local store.
and
“Bath
Tub
Perils"
a
Sonnett
“M. le Mnrechnl, tho American Lo- to Senntors Brandogeo and Moses
gion is particularly honored by your nmong the Republicans, to all who comedy will be the attractions.
For office supplies, stationery, etc,
presence hero among us. Wo extend hnvo aided and nbettod them in their
For first class Job work—the Ilornld come to the Herald office.
nn cqunlly cordial welcome to that in­ conspiracy against tho constitution,
trepid lender of Italy's victorious ar­
mies thnt crushed tho military auto­
cracy of Italy, General Diaz, nnd to
tho representative of tho bravo Bel­
gian army, whoso courage defied tho
stnggering blows of Germnn militar­
ism, Gen. Jacques, nnd the grent enptnin who commanded tho British nnvnl
forces whose victories on tho sea
made tho land victories possible, Ad­
miral Beatty.
“American people everywhere wait
to do you honor. Personally, I urn
extremely delighted to extend to you
the greetings of tho Anicricnn armies
that crossed tho sen to fight beside
you. I am also honored to speak for
my friends nnd neighbors here in Mis­
SATURDAY, Nov. 12th—Opening Day.
WEDNESDAY, Nov. 10th—Governor's and '
I’rfN.i Day.
souri and accord you n most sincere
MONDAY,
Nov.
14th—Children’s
Day.
THURSDAY,
Nov. 17th— All Florida Dny.
welcome to this grand old stute where
TUESDAY,
Nov.
lOtli—Shrine
Day.
FRIDAY,
Nov.
18th—Kiwnnia Day.
I wns born and whero I lived in boy­
SATURDAY, Nov, 10th—Auto Races.
hood.”
Tho fifth Florldn State Fair and Exposition at Jacksonville, much enlarged
Gencrnl Pershing then turned his
and Improved, rnnks with tho greatest fairs In tho South. Tho state and fed­
attention to tho Legion nnd praised its
eral governments are participating extensively nnd many fair attractions, ot
campaigns for Americanism nnd kin­
moro than usual merit havo boon provided for your Interest and ontertalniuunt. (
dred ideals. Ho urged tho Legion to
continuo its efforts to bring into be­
- (0
ing a military forco, representative of
tho peoplo which “in any future war
will escape tho results of unprepared­
ness thnt you suffered." Ho urged
thnt tho Legion bend its efforts also
townrd obtaining nil possible relief
for incnpnclnted veterans &lt;rf the war.
He predicted thnt great good would
come from tho conferonco on disarma­
ment in Washington, and that an
agreement would be reached which
The world's greatest sensation, Auto Polo, h a s been secured as the premier amusoment
would lesson the chances of war.
attraction every aftornoon nnd night, oxolt lag hone and automobllo racos, thrilling
Delegates to tho American Legion's
free acts, athletic contests and many other forms of amusement and ontertalnmont will
nation convention hero extended nn
bo of absorbing Interest.
■
official greeting to thoir “buddies,"
The truck and tractor display TRUCKS
VARIED
Enlarged exhibits of all the ac­
Foch nnd Pershing.
is representative of the best TRACTORS
INDUS­
tivities
summed
up
under
this
Indications wor othnt the ceremony
types of these machines. Ma- FARM
TRIES
classification.
would exceed ovon tho vociforoun dem­
chinery displays cover practi- MACH1N.
Florida's rapid development in
onstration to tho two leaders Monday
LIVE
cally all agricultural equipment. ERY
the live stock industry i»

Grade “ A” Coffee
BEL-JAR COFFEE CO.

hi

)• p

night upon their arrival when thous­
ands mot them at the station.
Greetings of Marshal Foch and
General Pershing were the principal
events of the morning. In the after­
noon the Legion’s big pafodo took
place with thousands of Legioners,
members of tho Grand Army of the
Republic and Spanish War Veterans
and others in the lino of march. Le­
gion officials expected to sandwich
some convention routine into fhe meet­
ing proceedings, after which tho gath­
ering was to proceed to Union sta­
tion Flazn whoro tho Memorial Kan­
sas City Is to eroct to its war dead,
is to bo dedicated.

M

.

PJione 447-W

rv w -If f;

SEVEN RED-LETTER DAYS
OF PLEASURE AND PROFIT

FLORIDASTATEFAIR

JACKSONVILLE NOV. 12-19 1921

Auto Races

which compensated ail the sacrifices
froely honored our cause.
“You hnvo mndo thoso sacrifices;
moro thnn 75,00 of your countrymen
woro buried in the soil of France. May
thoy rest in ponce.
Your French
brothors In arms watch over them.
"Glory to you who survive them
and who enjoy victorious ponce. You
may well bo proud of your past ex­
ploits.
"Your country had asked you to
lay low a redoubtable enemy. You
have placed him at your mercy and
aftor having assured every guaran­
tee for tho liberty of your peoples
you havo imposed upon him tho poaco
which your government haB dictated.
Has not your task been completely
fulfilled 7 As for mo, tho great hon
or of my life is for mo to hnvo guided
along the road to victory the Amori­
can army of 1018, which was a real
grand army, beginning with its com­
mander."

INDUSTRY Br*phically *hown in the pens
of fine stock.
POULTRY Fanciers of Florida and other
AND PET ,tates feature extensive exhibSTOCK
j}, 0f fjne poultry, pet stock,
BOYS' AND
GIRLS’
CLUB
WORK

Horse Races

AUTO POLO

r*bb'l,‘ etc.
Florida Boys' and Girl*’ Clubs
of all kinds have exhibits of
great educatiqnal value.

Florida’s State University in a
special building displays its re­
markable development and
represents the advantages obtained from its courses in engineering, etc., and its value to
the state in its research and experimental work and other de­
partments.

UNIVERSITY OF
FLORIDA
EXHIBIT

___ f a r t h e r la S o n a a tlo a a d d rrs a
B , K . H A N A rotJW D IO , ■ • • M ta r r a a d U f a r r a l M an ager.
I l l D r s l - V s d i S K l i D id * ,

J a c k s o n v ille , K li.

Special Low Farea and Liberal Btop-Over Privilege# Are Allowed on All Ltnee.

ib

�TH E SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, M l
county, and probably every other
county in the state, than was ever
sold while the saloons were here, add
the worst feature of the whole busi­
ness is, that no restrictions govern
the sales whatever, Liquor is being
sold to young boys openly, and flag­
R. J. HOLLY_____________ Editor rantly, and they seom to bo ablo to
If. J. LILLARD.«.Sacretary-Treasurer buy it any time they wish. Whllo the
H. A- NEJBli*-.,-—. -vGencral Manager saloons were here, and after they were
put out of buslnss and the package
ROBERT J. HOLLY, Jr,
omovtATioa x u u n
law prevailed, young boys could not
Phone 148 up to 8. P. M.
buy liquor. Putting out the saloons
Ad—e tla m f o g IU&lt;U X a o w ' oa
was tho best job evor undertaken, but
the next step of national prohibition
under the present law, placed tho soil­
ing of liquor into the hands of people
who will Boll it to anyone who has tho
price. The present prohibition laws
are tho joke of tho century, and will
react into the selling of beer Just as
Member of The Associated Pi
sure as they keep up tho present
farce.
Armistice Day will now bo a nation­
al holiday. Wo thought it was one
already.
The Republicans will not accept tho
sales tax which seems to the average
individual to bo the most fair tax that
c6uld bo' levied.
The Republicans
would rather tax tho poor man on the
small income.
W&amp;rningh are In tho Florida papers
about certain peoplo going about tho
state selling so-called furs. They are
fakes pure and simple. Ilownro of
the fur sellers and all other kinds of
sellers except your homo morchnnts.
You know who they are.
Now the coal minors In Indiana
have decided to walk out right.in tho
middle of the cold weather. Wo often
wonder how thoy expect to gain tho
favor of tho public by cutting off
their supply of winter coal. Well, wo
don't need any of their coni In FlorlDlspntches yesterday said that the
now Democratic chairman would
"pull tho cover off the Republican ad­
ministration." We thought that was
being done every day by the newspa­
pers nnd the Republicans themselves.
Many of tho methods of the adminis­
tration aro not favored by tho Repub­
licans, themselves.
PLANT PETUNIAS
The Civic Committee of tho Wclfnro
Department of the Woman's Club will
give petunias to anyone in the city
desiring to plant thorn if they will
phono in their name. This iH certain­
ly a step in the right direction towurd
making a more beautiful Sanford. If
you know what thu petunias are you
will remember that so many of the
beautiful Florida towns and cities last
yenr planted n profusion of tho pe­
tunias and they bloomed all spring
nnd part of the summer to mukc a
gorgeous display of tho riot of colors
wherever thoy were planted. Here­
tofore the raising of tho plants was a
problem to many folks as they did
not Boom to know how nnd the price
of the plants prevented others from
growing them but now that the Wom­
an's Club will furnish the plants to
nnyone desiring them every home in
Sanford Hhauld plant hundreds of pe­
tunias and innko Sanford one of the
prettiest cities in the state. The pe­
tunias lend themselves admirably to
any sort of plan for bunutification
nnd can be grown anywhere nnd ev­
erywhere nnd mnku tho finest kind of
flower to carry out tho idea that Flor­
ldn is thu Lnnd of Flowers. Evory
homo in Sanford should plant potunias this season. Phone Mrs. A. E,
Hill nbout tho plants.
PROHIBITION LAWS ARE A JOKE
You can talk about this much moot­
ed question oil you plunsc, but if you
will look at it front all nngles, you
will dlscovur that n license on beer,
that would give a bonus to tho sold­
iers, or give It to any department of
tho government, would bo better thnn
the present system of allowing every­
body to sell rotten liquor In any quan­
tity nnd tho government gets nothing
for It. If anyone can show us where
tho bcnellt of the present prohibition
laws are derived for nnyono, wo will
bo In favor of them, but they are the
greatest Joke of tho century. Thoro
is more booze being sold here in this

PEAS IN POTATO NESTS

Mako nests of mashed potatoes
by molding potatoes Into flat
cakes and pressing a round bot­
tomed oup Into tho centers of
each. Fill centers with cream­
ed Flag Brand Peas. Brush tho
potatoos with ogg yolk and
brown In oven.

Deane Turner
Phones 497-494
WBLAKA BLOCK

It cvuiot be FLORIDA GOING
OUT FOR BIGGBR
light be glvGAME, NEXT YEAR.
We do not
■
or examples
By John “Red" Doris,
of the radFlorida’s Gators are gradually tnktraific will Ing on harder elevens os tho season
oy are right progresses and next Suturday at TamJrcar thous- pn wlll battle the University of South
roducta, cab- Carolina, tho "Fighting Gamecocks"
potatoes, for jn what Is expected to be one of the
i hungering, hardest fought engagements of tho
tho freight Be„ on&gt;
nnot bo sold
Conchs Klino and Van Fleet aro
licor*
prepared for any emergency that may
' .aV0- 1,01 nrlso ns tho Florida camp Is sotting
ZPn« ° f'n* Petty w*th aB players in tho pink
r great ad"
contBN°n w*th tho exception of
th a tl
i i” Beasley, one of her beat'linesmen,
lall nrofit la Florida in 'winning last Saturday’s
rer Bt ft jjj gamo over Howard College, of Montworkors do Fomery, came through without an Inork oven at Jur8d P*ay®r and aI"° brought back
better than Into tha
"B,x slx” Dlckspn,

in your home, by startin g a savings
account for every member o f the
fam ily.
A parent’s plans for the success
and happiness o f their children—
your boy’s or g irl’s wish for future
wealth or, greatn ess—all depends
upon th e hom e training, the, atm os­
phere o f conscientious th rift and
economy which is found in every
w ell-regulated Am erican Home.

RUN AND VANDALISM
The licrnld, each year, speaks nbout
the boys having fun on Hallowe’en,
nnd our idea of fun and our idea of
vandalism and rough stuff, is clearly
define!.
i t seems that tho boys of
Sanford this year, paid some atten­
tion. to thia advice, and nothing has
been reported thnt urns real bad. As
usual, cars were moved nnd windows |
soaped, and the books at tho high I
school were taken out of desks nnd
hidden, and n hunch of little things
happened that would indltnte horse
piny only, nnd nothing thnt boro any
resomblnnco to rough stuff. How­
ever, In yenrs gone by, windows In
tho school house were broken nnd oth­
er misdemeanors committed Hhat cost
tho tnx payers real money, nnd must
have been committed by boys with no
renl conception of fun. Every grown WEATHER AND CROP CON­
man was a boy once, nnd can look DITIONS IN FLORIDA FOR
back upon tho many pranks played
WEEK ENDING NOV. 1ST,
during his "Cnlf Stage/’ but few of
them care to aid or abet tho malicious
Temperature: The week averaged
destruction of property.
It seems warmer than tho seasonal, except tho
thnt other towns suffered in this re­ last day, which was quite cool over
spect ns the following from the Or­ the northern and central portions.
Precipitation: There was no rnln
lando Itoporter-Stnr would Indicate:
We hope the police department will of moment, except showers during
add sufficiently to the force next Monday, the 81st. Torrential rains
Hallowe’en to make a repetition of the attended the east-northeast move­
vandalism practiced Monday night Im­ ment of the hurricane of 2-1-25 from
above Tampa on the West Coast to
possible.
A crow of boys ,Rome nlmost men, Titusville on the East Coast; there
who should Imvo known better, went wore, also, high winds throughout the
nbout town, upsetting flowers, smash­ peninsula.
Condition of Crops: Great damage
ing chairs nnd crenting havoc whoro
wnH
done truck crops, especially on
occupants of the house were not at
low
lands,
in tho central portion of
home.
the peninsula; much replanting will
Everybody who is not a grouch,
be necessary. Cano was prostrated,
likes to sec tho young people hnvc and citrus fruit was blown b ff or
fun, and there are a number of wnys
in which enjoyment can ho had other
thnn by wrecking the efforts of home
builders nnd property beniitiflers.
It is the duty of tho parents of
these youngsters to see that they do
not continue their vandalism In the
succeeding yenrs, and it is also the
duty of those who know who these
children are to make the fnct known west of tho Suwanee river. The rain­
to tho parents thnt they may bo cor­ fall was very heavy In much of tho
central division from the 21th to 26Th
rected.
However, n few special plnlr clothes —the Inst days of tho previous week:
men next yenr might holp matters Gninesville reported 4.4; Sanford, 5.7;
out nnd stop tho prnetlco which goes Ft. Myers, 3.9; Lnkuland, 3.2; Now
to the proportions yihore fun ceases Smyrna, 4.2; Ocala, 5.7; Tarpon
Springs, 8.7; Eustls, 5,5; Clermont,
nnd vandalism begins.
WAR LESSONS ARE IIARI) TO
LEARN
A Jackson, Mich., paper gives an
illustration of thu blighting effect of
a too-hlgh freight rntu upon a flour­
ishing ipdustry, us well ns upon tho
railroads themselves. Not far from
Jackson there are thousands of acres
that produce nothing but u coarse,
wild grnsB, worthless for hny, for no NOBODY CAN TELL WHEN VOU
DARKEN GRAY, FADED 1IAIK
stock will cat it and thrive. But
WITH SAGE TEA
down in Pennsylvania there are fac­
tories that make hay rope out of just
Grandmother kept her hair beauti­
such grass. It is a cheap form of
fully
darkened, glossy nnd nttructivo
binder for certain packages, nnd thu
Michigun farmors and thu Pennsyl­ with a brew of Sage Tea nnd Sulphur.
vania factories got together and de­ Whenever her hair took on that dull,
veloped a trade. The factories were faded or streaked appearance, this
willing to puy $12 to $13 per ton for simple mixture was appliud, with won­
freight rate of derful effect. By asking at any drug
tho hny, and with
$5.20 per ton to tho factory, the farm­ store for "Wyeth’s Sage ami Sulphur
ers got $7 to $8 per ton for a product Compound," you will get a large bottle
which would otherwise have been of this old-time recipe, improved by
pure waste. That was satisfactory the addition of other ingrudiciiU, all
and a thriving business was built up. ready to use, nt very llttlo cost. This
But eventually tho railroad workers simple mixture enn be depended upon
demnnded more pay, and to moot their to restore natural color and beauty to
demands tho railroad Increased tho the hair.
A well-known downtown druggist
freight rate on buy to $12 por ton.
snys
everybody ubcs Wyeth’s Sago
That made it more than tho Jopc mak­
nnd
Sulphur
Compound now bccauso it
ers could afford to pny ntiduhoy went
dnrkons
so
naturally
and evenly thnt
elsewhere for thuir,supply. A business
nobody
enn
tell
It
has
been applied—
that brought thu farmers of Jackson
it’s
so
easy
to
use,
too.
You simply
county $50,000 u year was klllod, tho
dampen
n
comb
or
soft
brush
and
railroad was doprivel of rovonuo from
draw
it
through
tho
hnlr,
taking
one
tjie freight, although they had to run
strand
nt
a
time.
By
morning
tho
tho nnmu number of trains, and their
expenses were not
......reduced at all. The
storekeepers in tho Immediate vicin­
ity lost their Hhuro of the spending of
$50,000 with them, and business stag­
nated.
CARPETS AND RUGS
Another Instance Is givon. Juck*
WASHED
son hoy buyers aro buying hay for
the uastern market In Ohio, bocauso
tho freight is $0 per ton less than It
is from the Michigan district. Tho
Mjchfgnn farmers have hay to . sell) ‘ Electric Waahera used,
and would be glad to take tho Ohio Steam Pressery, 317 1st 8
prico for It, but tho $fl freight handl

A COMMUNITY BUILDER

F. P. Foreleg President
B. F. Whitner, Gasiuer
going to turn out to this clash and
tnuded tho University and the-retnarknblo showing tho Gator’s arc mnking
this season agreeing thnt tho 1021
squad is the best yet turned out by
Florida. In an npponl for support from
the stnto nt largo Mr. Freeman snys
thnt the success of tho university de­
pends upon the nowspnpers of tho
state and that If Florida Is to get
nnywhero In this world every paper
will hnveto boost nnd plnco tho uni­
versity pn the map through a rigid
cnmpnlgn of puhllctty.
In view of the fact thnt Florida
is gradually renching tho top of the
ladder in tho football world, it seems
to mo that the schedule committee of
the S. I. A. A. should consider F'oridn
by plncing her on n schedule with such
elevens ns Tech, Georgia, Auhun, Van­
derbilt, nnd other strong tenms of the
association whon the 1022 'schedule
is drawn up. Sooner or Inter this must
he done. Tho cople of this stnto have
gone "football crazy" nnd thousnnds
will attend big games played In this
stnto in place of hundreds who attend
now. When the next meeting of tho
nssocintion Is hold "force" should bo
applied to the powers that bo ta place
Florldn on a fltiffer program. Tho
grentest publicity the Gntor’s or the
university could possibly expect to
get Into the Mg games comoH right
from n successful gridiron season.
Recently nn Indlnnnpolls high school
requested !100 schools to send In their
opinions on whether athletics should
be broadened out. Among this num­
ber two hundred nnd eighty-seven
thought thnt football, bnsketball,
baseball,and track were the grentest
"upbuildera" for schools. So it Is with
ech, Georgia and other southern col­
leges, neigthcr tho Golden Tornndo or
the Bull Rugs would have been known
the length nnd brendth of the lnnd hnd
It not been for their football elevens.
Rcnllzlug the vnluc n college derlvs from athletics n big mnjority of
the oSuth’s leading colleges go out
"strong" for new material evory yenr,
At Harvard It was announced thnt 27
candidates como out for quarterback
this year not mentioning the army
thnt tried out for the other nositlons.
Florldn officials, it is reasonably
cortnln to say, realize just why other
colleges draw so many Btudehts every
yenr. Plenty of athletes and plenty of
athletes os the answer.

You Can Find the N am e o f Every Live Pro
fessionpi and B usiness Man in
Sanford in This Column
LAW YERS

CONTRACTORS

George A. DeCottes

S. 0 . Shinholscr

Attorney-at-Law

Contractor and Builder

Over Seminole County Ilnnk
SANFORD
SANFORD
*:• FLORIDA

HARTFORD BATTERY
“B attery Insurance”
Sold and Serviced by

Edw. H iggin s, Inc.
H aight &amp; W ieland
GARAGES

T. A. Butner, Prop,

CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS
Planes nnd Specifications Cheerfully

Furnished
All Work Guaranteed
H. T. PACE
P. 0. Box m

Builders &amp; Contractors
Sketches and Estimates Free; m
building too Inrge and none too smalL
-----ALL WORK GUARANTEED----

W ilson &amp; Shorey

Expert Repairing

Pine nnd Garland Sts., Orlindo, Fix.

OIL, GA8 and ACCESSORIES
Oak and First

PU R E WATER
Elder Springs Water

Geo. W. K night
Real Estate and Insurance
SANFORD

99.98% PURE
Phone 311-W
Ssnford, FIs

FLORIDA

.. Em ploym ent Bureau..

LORD’S PURITY
WATER

Tho vocational commRteo of the Busi­
ness and Professional Women’s Club
AS GOOD AS THE BEST
requests all young women desiring Dally Service
Phone ltf
employment to register at the First
National Bank.
AGNES 0. BERNER, Chairman

SANFORD .NOVELTY

D. F. SUM NER
PAINTER
L IT XX PAINT YOUR HOUSE
Wilt OMlract or Taka Job by the Hour
PHONE 111
I** LAUREL A

bands in stock
Crank Shafts Re-turned

Phone 475

FLO!

Smith Bros. Garage

&amp;

LA K ELA N D STEAM
LAUNDRY

-:-

Sanford C onstructs Co,

Sanford M achine
I I Q T F N f T,ie l,e8t evidence
L l k j l L l l . of wisdom, is tu
Foundry Co.
believe what wo can’t under­
General
Machine nnd Roller Works
stand, and that la why they ail
Automobile Flywheel Steel Gear
patronize the—

SANFORD BRANCH

-:-

Sanford Steam Laundry
FOR SERVICE
Call 146-.T
W. RAWLING, Prop.

A cteylene W elding
OF ALL KINDS

WORKS
V. C. COLLER, Prop.
f;,f,

f.

General Shop and Mill
Worji
CONTRACTOR and BUILDKR
517 Commercial Street

Sanford, FI*.

TRANSFER
"WE DELIVER THE GOODS”

Quick Service

T ra n sfe r

Storage Facilities

If we please'you, tell nthers; If no
tell ua. Phono 498

HOTELS
Hotel Montezuma
"Sanford’B New Hotel"
$1.50 Up Per Day

Sanford W elding Co.
Located in Eagle Bldg., 205 Oak Ave

B efore buying your

Phone .175

Fourth and Stafford Avt

N ew Era Printery
G. BoHsett Smith, Prop.
COMMERCIAL AND
JOn PRINTING

Come in and look over
our line

UltINh
Elder Springs Wnter. It*
or cent pure. Phone flu
Office supplies of all kinds at The
licrnld Printing Co. Whon you want
anything in this line see The Herald.
Wo have It cr can got It
Try a Herald Want Ad today

GILLON &amp;
Electrical Contactors
Phone 442
111 Park Ave

�TH E SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3,1931
___

— HenlleBof__
Mature in Brief
. pcr«iinel Heme
• rI n te re a t

.

Ben Overstreet, of Longwood,
attending to bosines* here today.

ef the
In ana About' Summary
Plottlnx SwaU

W. C. Smith, of 'Ocala, was (n the
city today transacting business.

Talks Succinctly
Arranged far.
Herald Readers
"

3T h e

C
3

Dr. W. C. Blacimftn, 'b f Wtfriwa'
ranch, ia In town today o n ‘buslnae*. •
— p—
W. A. Baadon (a in the city todayattending to buaineaa for ’the A. C. L.
R. R.

----- * ‘ W
Ti
Fair tonight and #
.ange in temper- *

J. F. Jenkina, of Atlanta, is in the
city today calling on hia'Jooal custo­
mers.
*ul

*
#
*
#
Get busy- ■winter approaches.
#
Weather is (Treat on tho winter #
*
vegetables,
*
#
make
Sanford farmers ought to
*
good this season.
*
2.day Sale, Fridsy and Saturday eh #
Yowell’s.
r ; 101* H
^
^
f Hi*
The Temple Pipe Organ _Club Vlll
hold Us Christmaa Bakaar November
Mth. The place to be annonced lat„
182-Mon*Thur-tfc

Suoh a dask of winter and the
woither . So delightfully cool
|an&lt;k,mice. .^Fall wraps and
jaulfai.aro how in order and
business Will speed up. After
‘reading this weather report
road the advertisements and
get ready for winter. It ia a)jmost here.
5(40 A.. M. NOVEMBER 3
Maximum 1• /•ii**«*i.«! M■ 78
Minimum _______ __ ___ 48

*
*
#
#
#
#
#
#
#
*
#
*

Hupmobile m akes fin­
al reduction, open mod­
els, $1250, D etro it—B.
&amp; O. MOTOR CO., San­
ford.

188-tfc

FOR PETUNIA PLANTS,

Tho Civvic Commltteo of the Wel­
Party finding button In O. K. fare Department of the Woman’s Club
BREAD will receive 50c.
During! will givo potunin plants to overy one
week thoro will bo n special button who wnst them if they will telephone
put in O. K. Rrend worth $1.00 to | name and number of plants required
finder. Your grocer will give you tho
to Mrs. A. E. IUll, phono 90.
money. There will bo a button In
one loaf each day.
188-lwc
We recharge MngnctooB. Let us
fix yours.—Hof-Mac Battery Co.
191-fltp

Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Westhovon, of
Ghllicothe, Ohio, are spending some­
time here at the Montezudia,.
1
fit***'¥
1

wintwr.T;

As Armistice day approaches the
LeBarge, one of America’s greatest
big pnrndo looms bigger and blggor artists, will he in Sanford Novem­
and it begins to look as though all ber 9th.
industry will have to tnko a vacation
on the morning of tho 11th in order
Princess Pat?
to be in the parado.

Dr. Wm. Kcrmodo has taken an of­
fice in the Oarner Woodruff building,
nnd will practice Chiropractico and
spinal adjustments.
Consultation
nnd analysis free. Rend his adver­
tisement in tho Dnily Herald.

Edwin Nelson, of Tampa, was the
dinner . giibat of Mr. amUMre. D. I*
Thrasher, last evening.
M;.
;

in Seminqle County that w on’t be found in th is show. N o show on
the midWdy will be any better than th is one add it will be Worth
your tim d to in vestigate it:

Am&lt;&amp;. W I S E ©

Y @ on

A ir ©

H im w s f t n ia illn f f iii

why not investigate the d ifferen ce between Campus Togs C lothing
and those of other m ake and see th e difference !in price. Another

Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Barrett, have
returned from a a ’ext cnd&lt;Jd stay in. the
•asL.andiwlil bo in Sanford for tho

Judge Warlow, of Orlando, was
among the prominent visitors to the
Tho DeVoe Mottlestone system city today.
will be shown at the Ball Hardware
Co., today, tomorrow and Saturday.
2-day Sale, Friday und Saturday at
Sec it done, do it yourself and be con­ Yowell's.
*
191-2tc
vinced.
Hear LeBarge, at tho Baptist Tern
Guaranteed rebuilt bnttorles at one- pio November Oth.
half price.— IIof-Mnc Battery Co.
101-0tp
man cars, airplanes, submarines,
The Lndics of the Episcopal Church telephones and grent 7,000 mile wire­
will hold their Bazaar and Supper; less stations are equipped with tho
December 1st and 2nd in the Pariah master “EXIDE” Butteries, the bat­
Rouse.
171-tfc tery is tho life of your enr, get the
best. We recharge and repair all
makes.—Ray Brothers, Phono 048.
Princess Pat?
170-tf-c

Have your watches nnd Jewelry re­
paired at McLnulin’s. Two first class
wntch makers. Prompt service.
140-tfc

Mrs. R. H. Rcnlck returned home
last evening from Tamph.. where she
spent several days.
&gt;

is the man who will have charge o f the Freak and Side Show a t th e
big Street Carnival startih g n ex t W ednesday *riignt and lasting:
three days and We understand th a t theire i6

Princess Pat?
Hupmobile m akes fin­
al reduction, open mod­
els, $1250, Detroit-^-B
&amp; O. MOTOR CO., San­
ford.

BATTERIES—America’s first car
was regularly equipped with stort­
ing mid lighting Batteries in 1911,
this battery was an “EXIDE”, today
tho master battery of tho world. Do
not be misled by tho so-called Just as
good.—Ray Brothers, Phone 648.
175-tf-c KNIGHTS TEMPLAR ATTENTION,

Don’t miss LeBarge tho great ver­
Tnylor Commandery will hold a
satile entertainer, Baptist Templo on stated conclave on Friday evening,
November Oth.
November 5, at 7 o'clock. Tho order
of Malta will be conferred and full
Frederic II. Rand and his daughter dress rehtarsal in tho order of tho
were in tho city today on business Temple will follow. All Sir Knights
II. E. TOLAR,
nnd visiting their many Sanford please attend.
Eminent Commander,
friends.

v, "

Mr. and Mrs. Cttas. Fodder arrived
last night from Chicago and will
■pond the winter hero at the Montexuma.
J. A. Berryhil), of Charlotte, N, 0.'
representing Charlotte Clothing Co.,
is in town today calling on local mer­
chants.
WILL BOOST HOME PAPERS
Harry Forrnn, of E usUb, is the
guest of his sister, Mrs. D. L. Thrnshor, coming over for tho rehcnrsal of Week of November 7-12 Set for Na­
tion-Wide Endeavor
tho Woodruff-Thrasher wedding.
"Subscribe tt&gt; your homo town pa­
per.”
Hupmobile m akes fin­ This is the slogan of a new nation­
READY FOR OCCUPANCY DECEMBER 1ST
al reduction, open mod­ wide movement backed by the Nation­
TERMS
al Editorial Association and other
els, $1250, D etro it—B. agencies.
FIRE INSURANCE
O. MOTOR CO., San­ Tile movement has back of it fur
more than a selfish desire on tho part
ford.
188-tfc of newspapers to acquire Increased
circulation, for It is, in effect, a stop
toward the perfect unification of
IHI) THE ELEPHANT START
America by the strengthening of ties
FLOWING WELL ON BULKHEAD that bind everyone to his native soil.
WATER FLOWING ON GROUND.
The campaign is, moreover, an ex­
cellent opportunity to boost tho homo
town. Tho men and women who
were born and reared here have, some
of them, been nwny for many years
and many important changes hava (
Classified advertisements, 3 cents s fine. No ad taken for leaa that.
selentists and well diggers nnd outers taken place—changes in which they
In Snnford today. Tho circus pitched would bo greatly Interested.
It 1h 25 cents, and positively no classified ads charged to anyone. Cash
their tents o ntha lake front yester­ more often tho case thnn not thnt j must accompany all orders. Count five words to a line and remit aeday morning and the groundH wore private correspondence overlooks theso ( eordingly
comparatively dry. The rings wore changes, however cnrofully one might j
FOR RENTHnllFH** 111 11 1 I*_
padded ns usual with Bnwdust and I i i l i i m n l t n u iw ifn
FOR SALE
hay and excelsior and boforo tho per­
FOR SALE—Best opportunity for FOR RENT—Suburban home
formance started were dry nnd all
wholesale and retail fish market on
107tfc
right. After the performance in tho
East const Dullditg, dock and sidp- TOT! RENT—Light
housekeeping
afternoon a flowing well was discover­
ping platform. Address W. P. Wil­
rooniH,
Mrs.
Baldwin,
210 French
ed in one of tho rings, nnd the wutor
kinson, Now Smyrnn, Fla. 10-17-lm Ave.
189-Btp
came out of the ground in such a
MIRACLE CONCRETE CO.—Build­
qunntiy last night thnt the riding acts
ing and pier blocks, cement pockots,
W ANTED
and other acts in one of tho rings
cement
sidewalks
with
guarantee
to
WANTED—Customers for fresh milk,
were handicapped and the little Indies
lust and not break or crack. Genoral
morning and evening deliveries*—-R.
who wero forced to wade through the
cement contracting. All work guar­ L. Garrison Phone 8711. 100-St-Tu
wnter were inconvenienced. It was
anteed. Elm avenue between Third
a source of wonder to all who saw
and Fourth street.—J. E. Tcrwllligor, WANTED—Team work. Apply
Hnnson Shoo Shop.
178-18
Prop. Phono 224-W.
178-lm-tfc
SECOND HAND SHOW CA!
FOR SALE—Eight young mules, all
Wonted. Herald Printing Co.
good condition, good workers. Will
183-Btp.
soli one pair of them at a great bar­
TRAIN SCHEDULE
gain.—G. F. Smith, Snnford or Her­ WANTED—Show case, flvo or six
feet long. Horald Printing Co.
ald office.
180-tfc
Southbound
183-Btp.
Sanford has been wanting a supply
FOR SALE—Have two small orange
Arrive
Depart!
of water for some time nnd it would
groves at n bnrguin. Will take city WANTED—An Ico box thnt will hold
bo well to investigate this water that No. 88______ 2:80 a. in. 2:48 a. m property ns part pay for ono or both.
100 to 150 lbs Ice. Notify Herald.
8:40 a.m. Reply to P. O. Box 134.
seemed to Bpring forth from the enrth No. 27..........
18-6tp
187-tfc
when tho olephnnts trod on 'ho No. 89______ 2:55 p.m. 3:20 p.m. FOR SALE—Rough framing lumber WANTED—Two unfurnished ropmi,
ground and it might bo a good Idea No. 85........... 0:55 p.m. 7:10 p.m.
and boards cheap. Also somo good
suitable for light housekeeping,
North Bound
to u bo r. few elephants hero to bring
sound
mules.—H.
S.
Long,
Ostuon.
close
in by couplo without children.
Arrive
Departs
forth water when it was needed or at
Rhone
481L________________lflS-Btp
References
exchanged. Address "J.
least to discover whuro ths,)o hl'jJei. No. 82........... 1:48 a.m. 2:03 a.m.
N."
care
of
Herald.
185-tf-dh
84......... 11:46 a.m. 12:05 p.m FOR SALE—9 room houso in good
wells oxlst. We alwnys knew tlmt No.
80......... 3:05 p.m. 8:25 p.m.
condition, 313 Magnolia ave. Ex­ WANTED—A cash bargain In a reel
tho flowing wells worn governed In No.
cellent
location. Price $0,000. lB9-3tc
No.
28.................10:00
p.m.
donee, fairly close in, Advise iocA'
their flow more or lo u by tho pros i
tion
and best price in first roply.—E.
Trilby Branch
sure of tho water in tho Inkos but it
WOOD—Dry oak and plno, 2 stran
Clayton,
care Herald,
189-0tp
Arrive
Departs
was left to tho circus to discover thnt
load $7.50, delivered.—D. W. Short,
5:00 a. ra. Longwood, Fin.
189-3tp WANTED TO RENT—Residence, of
nn elephant pressing on tho surfnre •No, 100_____
8:25 p. m
about six rooms, unfurnished, for
of tho lake front could start n well of •No. 24..........
FOR SALE—Ladies' second hand
7:00 a.m.
ono
year or longer. Reasonably close
Burfnce water flowing. And on the «No 168..........
clothing it\ excellent condition. Can
7:35 p.m.
in,
some
yard room doslred. Givo lo­
other hand if this new spring is sur­ No. 22..........
bo seen at Miss Saints’ Drug Store,
Leesburg Branch
cation
and
pricu, in nnswer to P. O.
face water nnd soft watqr it would 1u
Sanford Ave.
190-3tp
Arrive
Departs
Box 719, Snnford.
180-fltp
a good thing t&gt;r tho city to imiko use
FOR SALE — Giant bush nastur­
•No. 157........ 4:00 p. r .
tium plants; also ferns. Mrs, H. N,
No. 21........ 2:52 p. m.
Lumloy, 902 French.
190-2tc
101.......... 0:30 p.m.
INO TRADE. ONE THATfl NOT
Princess Pat?
•No. 25.......... 2:00 p.m.
FOR SALE—Favorito four burner AFRAID OF A LITTLE WORK.
No. 22.......... 7:00p.m
gas stove nnd oven, $25 cash. Wight APPLY AT THE HERALD PRINT­
Oviedo Branch
Grocery Co.
100-tpc. ING COMPANY.
tf
PLENTY OF ROCK IN FLORIDA
Arrive
Departs
For office supplies, stationery, etc,
OCALA, Nov. 3.—It is of so general •No. 120.......... 11:00 a.m.
ABK FOR YOUR RECEIPT.
come to the Herald office.
3:40 p. m
belief that Florida is mostly sand or •No. 127_____
Post cards—local views— 1c each at
swamp that people of other states •Daily, except Sunday.
Subscribers to the Dally Herald
the
Herald office.
probably would be surprised to know
should ask for a receipt when1the
ASK FOR YOUR RECEIPT.
thnt there is more solid rock in it
FOR
RENT
carrier boya collect from you. It Is
than in the same area in many other
parts of America. Tho country around
Subscribers to the Dally Herald FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms. the only protection you have in case
Apply 1004 Elm Ave.
162-tfc the' carrier changes or there happens
Ocala Is not only underlaid with lime­ should ask for n receipt when the
stone which in many places crops out carrier boys colloct from you. It Is FOR RENT—Two largo, connecting to v- - mistake In the account, ta c k
but there ore large quantities of flint, the only protection you have in case
rooms, suitable for couple, desiring Carrier boy ia supplied with receipt
unexcelled aa road material. There Uie carrier changes or there happens light housekeeping rooms. 219 Oak
books, and Is commanded to giye a
is constant demand for lime from all to bo a mistake in the account. Each Ave.
185-tfc
receipt by the Horald. See th at you
parts of the country and one Arm carrier boy is supplied with receipt
which operate* a rock crusher near books, and is commanded to give a FOR RENT—Furnished room, 200 get your receipt n t tho end of eaoh
Park Ave.
lUl-fltp week If you are paying that way.
here is now filling an order for 540 receipt by tho Herald. See that yo"
P
M
g
HI
g
p
g
burnished
rooms
for
cubic yards of crushed rock for the get your receipt a t the end of each
light.housekeeping;
also
two
gnMan's Inhumanity to man makes
government.
week if you are paying that way.
. . . . . 'inn
*» —
ni___ . .503-W.
. ...
309 French.
Phono
countless thousand* ripe for revotu191-2tc

&amp;

A. P. CONNELLY

WANTED- ”

AS WELL AS TEN YEARS AGO?
IF NOT SEE

'§ Optometrist-Optician

O p p . P o s to ffic e

TO SEE BETTER SEE MOORE

�----------

—*T----------

On the Altar ol Necessity and Merchandise will be Sold so Fast and Furious, it will Make You Stare in Open-Mouthed Amazement

COME TO THE

Hold Your Breath and Wait|Jfor It

Read About This lO c Dress Ginghams

Read About the 5 9 Cent Work-Shirts

As a reward to the first 25 women entering through the door—which will be
thrown open promptly at 9 o’clock Friday morning, November 4, the first
day of the sale—there will be sold 4 yards of Gingham, the regular 35c kind

As a reward to the first 25 men to enter through the door—which will be
thrown open promptly at 9 o’clock Friday morning, November 4, there will
be sold a ONE DOLLAR WORK SHIRT FOR ONLY FIFTY-NINE CENTS

FOR ONLY lOc PER YARD

There are No Strings to This O ffer

aiamity unequalled m

C o m m er ce— i t ' s A s to n is H in g jy ia g n itu a e , r o r c e ar

Amazement the Buying Public ot This Community
Thousands of Dollars Worth of

D O N ’T

AWAY!!

REMEMBER!!!

This Means a REAL Sale!
READ THIS CAREFULLY
If you do not wish to save 50 to 100
per cent, don’t come, for we can’t
ask more than the prices marked

SO COME ALONG
THE
STORE
THAT

SATISFIES

DAYS ONLY
Quantities Limited For This Sale—You Can’t Forget the Bargains, so
Remember the Store—Closed All Day Thursday to Arrange the Stock

Owing to the extensive advertising
of this gigantic Sale, we want you
not to be misled by fictitous adver­
tising. Be sure to see the name—

The SURPRISE Shoe Store

Sanford A venne

FLORIDA

�►

I&gt;

Looking jBank

^ '■)

|

Line&lt; imtyway. Previous to the crea­
tion of .t he now division, th e Ja«)aonville district was the lone department
•
.4
■
&gt;4
(
of td(ft 'rtad 4n 'tMi tftat*.' &gt;*hte nnis jefelous o f its reputation fo r Ser­
noilTTcrfmddt of *the! ■itii* district was
made
by. P. f t Albright, general man­
vice and seek s to ju stify it anew w ith
ager,^nd
approved by ’Lyman Delano,
each individual probleni pteseh ted
executive vice-president.
to it.
Under the;announcement the Tampai district will include the main line,
Sanford to Port Tampa and branch­
The know ledge and experience o f
e s; .Narcoosee, Bone Valley, Thonototh is bank is available to it§ friends
sassa, Haines City, add Tampa Southtern, The Jacksonville district Includes
arid patrons a t all tim es, regardless
ithe Jacksonville tb i ISanford,' main
61 th e size o f th eir transactions.
iline, Including the Sanford terminal iM
and branches; Trilby, jDeLand, Lake
Charm, Florida Midland, Astor, Leestburg,i Lgne Park and Sanford and
.EVfrgjadim.
&gt;
u«&lt;|
Tho following officers have been ap­
pointed for tH Tampa district; F. B.
Langley, superintendent,' Lakeland;'J.
C. Svflnd^ll,, assistant superintendent,
Prairie, junctlw ^gnd.W . F .ftyrp|iam,
train
master, Lakeland. Jacksonville
SERVICE
&gt;
::
PROGRESS
,
STRENGTH
appointments jfollowi ,T. L. Dumas,
4 % INTEREST PAID
superintendsnt, ;Sanford, and U N.
1
' '
'
•• ••
Hansell, train master, Sanford.

|

i

■
ST. PETE MUST HAVE
a Madorin handkerchief and ease were
FRESH EGGS, OR— ?
won by Mrs. Ashby Gibbons, of Tam­
pa; whllo Mr, Kirtloy making high
ST. PETERSBURG, Ncv. 3.—With
scoro among tho men, was awarded
eggs retailing here at 80 cents a doz­
silk socks, Mr. Woodruff and Miss en, Dr. W. E. A. Wyman, pure food
Thrasher were presented a beautiful inspector, declares purchasers must
framed plcturb ns souvenir of tho get their money’s worth, anij.to that
evening.
end ho has launched a campaign
Delicious refreshments of Ico cream against aged specimens of tho hen
in pink and green, cake coffeo and product.
mints wore sorvod.
"Eggs unfit even for baking pur­
Among those present were: Miss poses are brought to be dally," he
Thrasher, Mrs. Forest Lake, Mrs. D.
said. "Eggs are high In prico and the
L .Thrasher, Mr, J. D, Woodruff, Mr. public must and shall get an equival­
and Mrs. Iiobcrt Hines, Mr. and Mrs.
ent for its money. It is up to tho mer-t
C. It. Kirtley, Dr. and Mrs. Ben Cas­ chnnts to either recundle the eggs
well, Mrs. Ashby Gibbons of Tampa,
they buy or tnko the consequences.”
Misses Agnes Dumas, Marion Phil­
lips, Daphne Wimblsh, Norma Hern­
NOTICE.
don, Sara Wight, Lcttiu Caldwell,
Adelaide Higgins, Marjorie Clay,
The Business nnd ProfosBlonnl Wo­
Florence Henry, and Mario Teague,
Messrs. Ed, MelscK, Paul Lake, Ned men's Club will hold a bnnquot nt the
Chittenden, Benjamin Whitner, Ran­ Templo Girl's Homo on Monday ovcdall Chase, Raymond Phillips, Billy I ning, Nov. 7th at 8 o’clock. Tickots
Holden, Hawkins Connelly, Hodgson
$1.00, on sale nt Temple Girl’s Home,
Ball, Walter Connelly, Bob Deane and
with Miss Agnes Berner at First Na­
A. R. Key.
tional Bank, and with Mbs Katherine
STAG DINNER
Wilson, nt McCuller’s store. Plcaso
Messrs. Hawkins and Walter Con- get tickots by Frldny.

MRsi FRED DAIGER, SoeUty Editor,
|_______ Phono 217-W

SOCIAL CALENDAR
Thursday—Mrfl. W. J, Thigpen will
entertain the members of the Ev­
ery Week Bridge Club at her homo
on Park avenuo at 3 o'clock.
Thursday—Mrs. D. L. Thrasher will
J entertain the members of tho
1 Thrasher-Woodruff bridal party fol­
lowing tho rehearsal.
Friday—Woodruff-Thrnsher nuptials
will be solemnized at the First
Presbyterian church at 8 p. m.
Friday.—Mrs. G. D. Hart will enter­
tain at a birthday party for her
little daughter, Georgette, at her
home on Sanford Heights from 3
until 5 o’clock,
Saturdny—Tho Children’s Hour will
bo held nt Central Park at 4 p. m.
MONDAY—Nov. 7, banquet for Busi­
ness and Professional Women’s
Club, nt tho Temple Girl's Home, on
Park avenue, at 8 o’clock.

EM U

dBEBLDtMT] EMBKujdEltHl

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LOOK! See H ow Miich M ore jl.O M S WORTH NOW a t THRASH“
- I '
'■ ' E f t &amp; G A R NER ’S
. . . . . . .

"

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.J,

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Than it was a year ago. For example, note the following equasion:
Shit Clothes
.....I.'...."..........Ar?...,.&gt;.l'V.....t.
Shoes
Hat
• • ••&gt;

*60.00
7.60
7.60
4.00

hirt
Shir

This is what...................... &gt;,....... .................................................................... *79.00
would buy a year ago

H ERE IS W H A T $79.00 W ILL B U Y A T TH RASH ER &amp; G ARNER’S
'
TODAY—
’ •!

*60.00
7.50
7.50
.4.00

.

,&lt;L

S u it......................................... ........... ,.a....................................................... *35.00
Shoes
6.00
Hat
...........................................................................................................
4.00
Shirt —
................a..........*........—
.
.. '4.45

P - :V
KftW r

W e SPECIALIZE
on IGNITION
MAGNETO
W ork and P a rts
B i-

I

“F oot o f F irst St.”

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Note .................................................................................................................................. *79.00
Will'buy 70 per cent more merchandise at our Store now than It would a year ago. Reduc­
tions, received by us,, in. turn passed to :our customers. If you believe in our business pol­
icy give us your business. Service and Satisfaction Guaranteed at—
Vi 1

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Thrasher &amp; Garner’s

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DAYPARADE
WHICH WILL BE STAGED BY THE
LOCAL POST OF THE AMER­
ICAN LEGION.
Tho following business concerns,
fraternities and Clubs, of Sanford
liavo liberally subscribed their names
in agreement to enter a decorated
flont or automobile to represent their
respective lines of business. Names
will bo added from tlmo to time and
from the floats already listed it will
bo a parade of magnitude never be­
fore witnessed in theclty:
American Legion.
Sanford Pnint A Wall Paper Co.
Woman’s Club, Welfare Dept,

Knights of Columbus.
Sanford Farmers' Exchange.
L. P. McCuller.
The Yowell Co.
Amerlcnn Fruit Growers.
Sanford Furniture Co.
Hill Hurdwnre Co.
C. W. Stokes.
Blackshcar Mfg. Co.
The Herald Printing Co.
Populnr Market, two floats.
Frank Akers Tiro Co.
Sanford Truck Co.
Snnford Mnttrcss Factory.
The Auxiliary of tho Sallle Harri­
son Chapter N. S., D. A. R. (Children
of tho American Revolution).
Any one welcomo to ontor a float
or decorated car. Suitable cash prizes
will be awarded by the Firt National
Bank, Seminole County Bank nnd Peo­
ples’ Bnnk of Snnford.
American Agr. Chemical Co.

, ~

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OWNS OLD VIOLIN.
COCOANUT GROVE, Nov. 9.-^1.
W. Snyder, of this place, Is the owner
of a violin made In 1513 by Gnnpnrd
Lurfu Prugger, one of Italy’s most
noted instrument mnkors. The violin
is regarded by exports as ranking in
boauty nnd quality with the greatest
violins of any master.
Tho instrument was mndc for An­
tonio Reglo, on Italian nobleman, ac­
cording to history, nnd wns presented
to Princess Selvcta Dulco of Venice.
It wns willed some years ngo to Mr.
Snyder, by William Griffith, of Ches­
ter, Pa., ns a rownrd for services ren­
dered him by Mr. Snydor twenty
yenrs before.
One of tho largest musical instru­
ment concerns in tho country has in­
formed Mr. Snyder thnt Prugger
violins’ wero tho pioneers in the field,

- (DiEll] D[A]E[T][[][IltT] IHEKymBlHl

7:30 ]P. \I.

RALPH STODGHILL, Singer

— WMm niaiPiEmmE EiiBiEiiiicitei
xa

ivi m

« o

* a

MEETINGS

H0F-MAC
BATTERY i
CO.
;V

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*46.25
iK(r*
in a d d it io n
c
8 Pair Shoes • • • • * • * * • * * • * * * • • • * • # • * • • • * • * • * • * * * » * • • • • • • • • * • • • • * 1 5 . 5 0
2 Pale Silk Hose
'4.00
4.00
9.25
1 Nlk! Suit

D. C. Marlowe.
*
Hopkins Shoo Shop.
*
A. J. Lousing, (0).
#
*
C. A. Matthews.
#
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Ball Hardware Company.
fa * * ta * # Ka Ml * #M** * lot
Lloyd Shoe Store.
West Side Grocery.
PARISH HOUSE KALENDAK.
Bryan-Whoeler Motor Co.
Friday, Nov. 4, G. F. S., Party, Mrs.
Wight Tire Co.
John Leonard!, directress.
B. A O. Motor Co. (2 floats).
Holy Cross Parish House
Sanford Cycle Co.
Nov. 4.—G. F. S. Party—Mrs. John
Haynes &amp; Ratliff.
Leonard!, Directress.
City of Sanford.
Nov. ID.;—Methodist Supper.
Mobley’s Drug Store.
Nov. 27.—Brotherhood of St. AnPputh Bros., Bakery.
drew Dinner.
•
Cates’ Crate Co.
Dec. 1-2.—Holy Cross Bazaar,
Coca-Cola Co.
Dec. 0-7.—All Soul’s Bazaar.
Woodruff &amp; Watson.
Haight &amp; Welland.
Cates Grocery Co.
TAMPA’S CIGAR
OUTPUT NORMAL Deane Tumor.
Newberry’s Drug Store.
Carter Lumber Co.
TAMPA, Nov. 3 . - With slightly less
than
33,000,000
cigura
manufactured
T.
J. Miller &amp; Son.
WOMAN’S CLUB HOLDS IMPORT­
hero
during
tho
month
of
October,
as
Union
Pharmacy.
ANT BUSINESS MEETING
shown by the Bale of Intorna) Revenue
Sanford Shoo A Clothing Co.
Tho Womnn’B Club held a most im­ stamps, the city's principal industry
Hanson’s Shoe Repair Shop.
portant business meeting on Wednes­ may be regarded as having returned
Roberta Grocery Co.
day afternoon. MrH. Loonnrdy, the to itH normal output of ”a million a
Baumel'a Specialty Shop.
president, was in tho chnir.
dny.” For many months after tho1 Raffeld-IIonig Co,
The question of tho sale of tho pres­ strike which lusted through nlno
F. P. Rlnes.
ent club house nnd tho orcction of a months of 1020 nnd lapped over into
A. Kanner.
now one wns diseussed fully. After 1021 for a month, tho output wus com­
F. Schwartz.
much deliberation, tho Club voted to paratively smnll, numerous orders
Chero-Cola Co.
put tho mattor Into the hands of tho having been cancelled because of the
Brown’s Market.
building cominittco. They will Hocuro innbllit yof the manufacturers to
Caldwell Furniture Co., Inc,
prices on lotH nnd plnns for n now make deliveries. More than 8,500
L. C. Leonardy Meat Market.
club houso, nnd also investigate nil workers wure on the benches during
Water’s Candy Kitchen.
offers of purchasers of tho present tho last week of October and manu­
Surprise Shoe Store.
building.
facturers said It probably would bo
Bandera Emporium.
Thu officers nnd chairmen gavo necessary to employ about 2,000 more
Seminole
Market.
splendid reports. Tho chairman of within the near future in ordor to
Rivers'
Bros.
(2 floatj ).
Literature announced thnt all visi­ care for tho holiday orders.
Pure
Food
Markot,
tors wore welcomo to the meetings of
Kant Vulcanising Co.
the, Literaturo nnd Music Depart­ VOLUSIA COUNTY’S
Miller's Bakery (4 Coats).
ments.
TAX ROLL COMPLETED Star Theatre. (
After the report of tho committee
Cla-TTac .Tractor.
on Revision of tho Constitution, the
DELAND, Nov. 3.—Volusia coun­
Gtlton A Fry.
meeting was adjourned.
ty's tax assessment roll for the ensu­
John T. Brady.
ing year |s 115,045,084 according to
Perkins A Britt (2 floats).
A. W. Smltn announces that ho will tho records In the office of the coun­
ft,C . Maxyrsll.
double tho present capacity of his ty tax assasffor. The assessed valua­
Ed. Higgins, Inc.
saw mill near Plant City In the near tion of real estate is placed at |U ,Hof-Mac Battery Co. (2 floats).
future to take care of the Increase of 884,010, pataqnal property $2,434,090
Sanford Steam Laundry.
and railroad!, and telegraphs at $Lhis business In that tsaetlon.
Wight
Grocery Co.
030,084. The total county, etate and
Roman's
Club.
t«x«M o b# (polluted, in .Volusia
j Post cards—local views—le each poll
MM-I.
M.
Dreanar.
aggregates |714,D51. .
the Herald office.
nelly entertained at a "Stag” dinner
Tuesday ovening nt their home on
Magnolia avenue, complimenting Mr.
J. D. Woodruff, whose marringo to
Wlss Mny Thrasher tnkes place Friduy ovening at tho Presbyterian
church.
Tho table wns beautiful with its
appointments, nnd tho pretty color
scheme of pink nnd green was beauti­
fully carried out. In the center was n
urge cryHlnl howl filled with pink
roses and on either side wero crystal
cnndlo sticks holding unshnded pink
topers. On tho plnco cards were toasts
very appropriate nnd in keeping wth
tho occasion.
After dinner a "mock” shower wns
given tho groom-elect.
Among those enjoying this delight­
ful occasion were: Messrs. J, D,
Woodruff, Hnrry Ferran of Eustis,
*Jod Chittenden and ltulph Woodruff.

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EBEMIIEIIEI

FOR MISS THRASHER
Mrs. Raymond Key entertained nt a
lovely bridge party IbbI evening at
her homo on Park avenue, honoring
Miss May ThruBhcr, a charming brldo*
elect,
Mrs. Key, Mrs. Thrasher and Mrs.
Foreat Lake formed tho receiving line
welcoming tho guests on their arriv­
al. Miss Thrasher was beautifully at­
tired In black charmcuso with ostrich
trimmings.
The decorations wero elaborate and
beautiful and featured n dainty color
motif of pink, green and luvendnr. In
tho reception hall the table was cen­
sored with a “Kewpie” brldo, in full
wedding attire and groom with the
conventional ovoning full dross suit,
and u cunning litlo "Kewpie” flower
girl. In the living room and dining
rooms whore the card tnhlea wero ar­
ranged lovely pink roses, lilies und
lavender flowers wero artistically
placed. At each guests place at tho
card tables little pink baskots with
lavendur flowors hold coated almonds
carrying out the color motif.
Sovaral interesting games of bridge
wero enjoyed, tho prizo for high score,

m

*79.00

GEORGE HYMAN, Preacher

m a E fflD lE )

fjjF'

S p e c ia l M e e tin g s at th e B a p tis t C h u rc h

10:00 A. M.
BEE

.

•MIVIV1

Jfr fy;
-/A ;

Elder Springs Water Co.
W. S. Parker.
,
T. W. Williams.
Camp Fire Girls
Chamber of Commorcc.
Chase A Company.
Rotary Club.
N. Do V. Howard.
Chapter of U. D. C.
Thrasher A Garner.
Bowers &amp; Roumcllat.
Social Dopt., Woman's Club.
Znchary-Tyler Voneer Co.
Sanford Battery Service.
L. O. Rcvand.
M. D. Barber.
Wakefield Preserving Co.
Anyono wishing to o'nter call Lloyd’s
Shoo Store.
168-tf.
For office supplies, stationery, etc.,
romr to the Herald office.

having been made two hunded years
before Stradivarius was known and
that their commercial value is an an­
tiquarian rather than a musical one.
The instrument is In a bnnk vault
In Jacksonville, and Mr. Snyder has
refused several Inrge offers for 1L
Ono prospective purchaser several
weeks ago offered Mr. Snyder $100
for tho original four strings.

PIANO OWNERS NOTICE”
Will bo in town for n limited tlmo.
For immediate service phone—
MACK THE TUNER
18216tp
Valdez Hotel
-Got your Scratch Pads from The
the Herald offica.
TUY A DAILY BXHALS WAXT AD.

Is Investments
The Safest, Soundest, Wisest nnd Most Profitable Invest­
ment In Snnford Today is

.

SANFORD REAL ESTATE

p Ask any of the people who have bought through us and they
H will tell you that their investments In Real Estate have
gained for them a profit of between—

•

40 A N D 100%

'A
We have the following property for quick sale nt prices
g that will not you a handsome profit:
“
Four adjoining lots on Thirteenth St., between Mag­
nolia and Palmetto Aves. Those lots face city park.
Four adjoining lots on Park Ave. between 11th and
12th streets.
Three lots on Magnolia avenue between 12th and 13th
streets.
Threo lots on Sanford avenue betweon 11th and 12th
streets.
City water, gas, electric lights and sewers to all this
property.

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Geo. W . Knight a
REAL ESTATE A N D INSU R AN CE
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•.«■&lt; f • * * * .*

a Bank Account

Frank Erlcsor. Is Hvlng again In
UpBala on the heme of his brothor,
Mr. Stcilt.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Tom Fortlor
on the 22 of October, a fine bnby

boy.
,
Miss Eva Mnlm was a visitor on
Saturday, among her old frlcndB In
Upsala.
.
.
Clarence Borgcjulat has returned
from a visit with tho homefolks a t
Tiger Bay.
Mr. and Mrs. T. O. Tyner and fam­
ily spent the day, Sunday, with their
relatives near Wlndermore.
Somo of our neighbors were out
hunting a few nights ago and killed a
■
catamount nfter a stiff fight.
Llttlo Myrtle Mhtor h u h her log !
quite badly on one of the school
swings, confining her a t homo for a
few days.
Mrs. August Swanson and Mra. Geo.
Bnllingor spent the day Friday In
Upsaln making a few calls and taking
dinner with Mrs. Erlcsori.
Mr. and Mrs. J cbso Lee nre having
them n house built on tho west Bide on
First street, next to his parent’^
home. Clark Pierson and Oscar Boyd
are doing the work. Wh1shall bo Sor­
ry to lost them in Upsala. The land
we understand Is n present from Mr.
and Mrs. Stcdt.
Mr. nnd Mrs. J. J. Ehrcnspergcr,
of Cullmnn, Ala., arrived Monday,,for
u visit to their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
E. Ehrcnspergcr, at Now Upsala. They
made the trip In their car through
the country. On Wednesday thoy all
went, with Miss Olga Beilin, to visit
with relatives In Orlnndo, nfter mak­
ing a trip Into Sanford to boo tho lit­
tle new niece.
Mr. nnd Mrs. John Borcll have re­
modelled their houBe this summer, al­
most making it over, enlarging it nnd
adding porches nnd nro now trentlng
It to a cont of paint mnklng n cosy
little home.
Mr. Konnn, who lived n few years
ago In the Clark house in Grnpeville,
was calling on our locality, Tuesday
lie states there is no ptneo like 8nnford nnd he expects to move his fnmlly back from Jacksonville nnd sot
again his business of shoo repairing
at whirl) be Is quite an nrtlst in his
line, to our way of thinking.
There Is n report about that Itov.
Tt. W. Edwnrds is dead. AH we know
is that Itov. Albertson snyB that ho
has loft us nnd that he and Mrs. Al­
bertson will be with us on tho fith
of November, nnd then wo shall know
the truth. They will hold a service
on Saturday evening at Lake Mary
nnd also on Sunday at 11 o’clock, nnd
at .‘I, at Upsnla, and In tho ccvcning
at Panin nt which all nro invited.
Norman Swanson, of Celery ave­
nue, spent a few nights last week
with his pnrents, Mr. nnd Mrs. Nell
Swanson.
Mr. nnd Mrs. J .E. Lundqulst and
sons, E. W., nnd E. F., nnd thoir fami­
lies, were Sundny callers nt tho homo
of their relatives In Grnpeville nnd
also Mr. nnd Mrs. Swanson nnd
Archie.
CONDITION OF FAItM CHOPS
FINE IN STATE OF FLORIDA
SAYS FEDERAL BUREAU.
GAINESVILLE, Nov. U.—Condi­
tions for fnll crops and farm work
generally nre excellent over most of
the state according to tho weekly crop
review of tho Fodornl Bureau of Crop
Estimates hero for tho week ending
Saturday, Tho harvesting (of com
continues nnd ptnnting of oats which
hnd been delayed by dry weather Is
now going forwnrd rapidly. Yields
of rice hnvo been satisfactory nB
wholo nnd harvesting of hny is nbout
over with much of it being bnled.
Farmers nre busy plowing nnd pro*
pnring land for Irish potatoes with
large acrenge expected. Sweet pota­
to yields are showing up low.
The recent storm “did some llttlo
dnmnge to the citrus fruit crops on
the west const’1 says the bureau with
“serious dnmnge In several localities.’’
Oranges and gmpefrult nre moving
to market freely.
Truck In low lands was damaged
last week by excessive rains. Eggplant
and popper Is moving In cnrlond lots
nnd early Indications point to a largo
watermelon acreage next spring.
The condition of livestock generally
Ih good with hogs beginning to move
to market.

tj i X

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

November

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le$

COATS

SILKS

50 Coats for the 2-day Sale,
sizes 14 to 44, made of best allwool Velour and Polo Cloth.
Special, each—

Silk Canton Crepe, 40-in. wide,
Navy, Black, Brown and Grey.
Special for 2 days only, yard—

$19.00
COAT SUITS
Tricotine and Men’s wear
Serge Suits, Silk Lining and
nicely tailored. Sizes 16 to 48.
Special—

$24.00
DRESSES
35 of the newest Serges and
Satin Dresses, values that
were made to sell for $25.00.
Special for 2 days—

$3.29
SILK and WOOL
CANTON
40-inch, Black, Navy and
Blues. Special, yard—

$2.98
GINGHAMS
50 pieces of 32-inch fast color
Gingham, plaid and check, all
the new patterns, for yard—

$14.75
SWEATERS
COMFORT SALE
100 big size Comforts that
have been selling for $9.00 to
$10.00, now—

$4.98
BLANKETS
3 lots Plaid and solid colors,
double bed size, remarked for

$3.98 $4.98
$6.98

Special Sale on Sweaters for
Ladies. New Tuxedo and
Coat style. All sizes. New
bright colors. Special, 2-days,

$4.98
WOOL JERSEY
54-inches wide, the best qual­
ity, all colors, for 2 days only,
yard—

$2.29

Only 50 double Blankets to
sell at these prices.

BED SPREADS

HEADQUARTERS

Extra large size and heavy
weight, assorted designs.
Special, for—

—for—
1fOYS AND DOLLS

DOLLS FROM 18c TO $18.50

NOTICE
Tho Sallle Harrison Chapter, N. S.,
D. A, R„ will have Its regular month­
ly meeting Saturday, November 12,
at 3:30 p, m. with Mr*. U- R. Phil­
lips hostess, at 717 Park avenue. Tho
lender for the day will be Mrs. Billla
■J. Starling, subject “Noted Women of
the Revolution,’’

Start a bank account with us and we will help you make It
larger. W&lt;3 ore equipped to care for your deposits with abso­
lute safety. There is no function of a bank we cannot per­
form. Every facility afforded to farmers and others for
transaction of their banking business. Accounts may be
opened by mail and monies deposited or withdrawn in this
way with equal facility. There are scores of young men In
Sanford who should start
a bank account. The
dimes they
f* _ *
i|.
'
throw away every month if brought to our bank would make
them independent os they reach the noonday of life. In fact,
every person who has a dollar should start a bank account.
Try it and you will always thank us for this advice.

fi* i in ■on?".' ’ 'fJuTPfib , faTTj.c.cl
— ■■■ ■' ......... .. ' ■1 ....... ■■

o f Sanford
M !■»
Eye* Examined

CHULU0TA
Well ,we all lived through tho
storm. ThiB section suffered some from
tho wind’s blowing oranges off tho
trees nnd twisting off some few limbs,
also the water hyncinths moved across
to tho other sido of tho Inko.
Mrs, P. S. Holes, formerly Miss
nerthn Jacobs, arrived a few days
ngo from Rcklnw, Texas, to spend tht
winter with her pnrents, Mr. nnd RLra.
G. M. Jncobs.
Mr, Ilornce King, who Is clerk of
tho circuit court, Kansas City, Mo.,
hns been visiting his sister, Mrs. J.
E. Snyder, for the pnst two weeks.
During Ills stay in Floridn he and Mr.
Snyder visited many points over tho
stnte, Tampn, Miami, DoLnnd, Dnytonn, and hmny others. They mndo
those trips by automobile nnd thereby
saw much of the country that other­
wise would hnvo been missed. Mr.
King is well plenscd with Floridn. Ho
left Sundny morning for St. Augus­
tine on his way homo, accompanied
by Mr. nnd Mrs. Siiydcr, to that city.
Mrs. Olllo Story, Mrs. Wm. Leo,
Mr. nnd Mrs. Walter Borgnrd nnd
children, visited tho former’s daugh­
ter, Mrs. Dick Mitcholl, nt Oviedo,
Sunday,
There are two now houses ready
for occupnney in South Chuluotn,
thoiio of Mrs. F. M. Story nnd Mr.
Wm. Leo.
Miss Ethel Collins and n girl friend
of Orlnndo, visited the former's old
home here Sntiirilny nnd Sunday.
Mr. nnd Mrs. J. Tlldcn Jacobs, of
Luke Monroe, Mrs. M. E. Jncobs, Mr.
nnd Mrs. Then. Aulln nnd Theodore,
Jr., of Oviedo, were callers here Sun­
day afternoon.

SALTS FINE FOR
ACHING KIDNEYS

Glasses Designed

H enry McLaulin, Jr.
OPT. D.

OPTICIAN

OI*TOMETRIST

Graduate Northern Illinois College
212 East First St.
Sanford, Fla.

AUTO EXCHANGE
Dependable Service
Practically New
Chevrolet .....
One 1919 Ford Touring Car, In
first class shape,
at only .................
Liberal Terms on Both these Bargain!

Repair Work by Experienced
Mcchnnlcs nt Right Prices

A t the Foot o f F irst St.

SEMINOLE
ABSTRACT CO.
Get An A bstract B efore
Buying Property
E. A.
DOUGLASS, Pres.
• &gt; •.•••» i • • •••*•• ■.r . n . us
Edith Lucille Ball
Teacher Plano and Harmony
Graduate Chicago Musical College

WE EAT TOO MUCH MEAT WHICH
Residence 719 Oak Are.
CLOGS KIDNEYS, THEN
THE BACK HURTS
Most folks forget thnt tho kidneys,
ike the bowels, gut sluggish nnd clog­
ged nnd need n Hushing occasionally,
else wo hnvo hncknche nnd dull mis­
ery in the kidney region, severe headnehes, rheumatic twinges, torpid liver,
acid stomach, sleeplessness and all
sorts of hluddcr disorders.
You simply must keep your kidneys
active and clean, and the moment you
feol an nclio or pain In the kidney
region, get about four ounces of Jnd
Salts from nny good drug store hero,
take a tublespuunful In n glass of wat­
er before breakfast for a few days
nnd your kidneys will then act fine.
This famous salts Is made from the
ncid of grnpcH nnd lumon juice, com­
bined with lithin, and in harmless to
flush clogged kidneys nnd stimulate
them to normu! activity. It also neu­
tralizes the acids in thn urine so It no
longer irritates, thus ending bladder
disorders.
Jnd Salts is harmless; inexpensive;
makes a delightful effervescent llthiowater drink which everybody should
toko now nnd then to keep fhwlr kid­
neys clean, thus avoiding serious com­
plications.
A well-known local druggist say* ho
sells .lots of Jnd Salts to folks who bollovo in overcoming kidney trouble
whllo it Is qnly trouble.—Adv.
The world news the day It happens,
delivered at &gt;your door each evening,
lfic the week.
Try a Herald Want Ad today.

Phon* 141

BANANAS BANANAS
A car load on A. C. L.
D ray Track

DOZEN .77.15c-20c
BUNCH. . . . $1.25 UP
CO-OPERATIVE
STORES
It you want the beat ME
and GROCERIES At the low 'll
possible prices. Come to se e _
at the old Depot Waiting Room,
South Railroad Avenue.

Phone~575-L-2
MRS. ID A A U ST IN
&lt;18 M .anoli. Are,
MAKER AND ALTERED „*•
LADIES'CLOTHES
—Get your Scratch Pads from
Herald—by the pound—lfic.

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                    <text>Hm lXft « p

^

iwY-t -tv

•*■•'• •* - if

__________

'

'

-v-d- , ...
THE

THE

'City Sabstantiar

“CitySnbstantial”
IN T H E H E A R T OF T H E W O R L D ’S G REATEST
volume

Speech to American
Legion Convention at
Kansas City

IS PROUDOF THEM
MARSHAL OF i FRENCH ARMY
TELLS OF POWERS OF
UNCLE SAM’S MEN

NUMBER 190
'm

WHAT THE AMERICAN ARMY
ACHIEVED IN WORLD WAR
RECITED BY GEN. FOCH
In

V E G E T A B L E SECTION

SANFORD, FLORIDA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1921

n

m

Greeks Fleeing From Nicomedia

MOORE IIAVEN SELECTED
FOR COUNTY SEAT OF
GLADES COUNTY.

NATION WIDE STRIKE BEGINS
IN INDIANA COAL HELDS
TWENTY THOUSAND ARE OUT

(■ y T k . AuoeU U d FraM)

• (BX T h . A m m UU4 Ft. i i )

WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—President
Harding celebrated his fifty-sixth
birthday today quietly at tho Whito
House, no special program having
been arranged for the occasion.

ORGANIZATION
FIGHT-LEWIS
BY DEMOCRATS

NEW CHAIRMAN
OF DEMOCRATS
HAS OWN IDEAS

LEGALIZE BEER
FOUR PER CENT
TO GET TAXES

*

PRESIDENT HARDING
Discontinue Check Off
FIFTY-SI$ YEARS OLD
TODAY— NO CELEBRATION. I
System Collecting:

MOORE HAVEN, Fin., Nov. 2.—
Thin town wan selected as tho county
sent o f Olndea county in yesterday's
election by n largo majority over
Palmdale, tho only other contestant.

KANSAS CITY, Nov. 2.— Marshal
Foch, principal guest of honor for
the day, entered the Legion conven­
tion hall from a side entrance and
went to his box amid cheering Just
«s the convention was called to order BETWEEN McADOO AND COX
yesterdny. He wns preceded by a
CONTINGENTS AND MERE­
guard of Americans, holders of the
LY IlY-PLAY
congressional medal of honor.
(B r Th« AitocU U d f n u )
Tho text of Marshal Foch’s ad­
ST. LOUIS, Nov. 2.— Former Unit­
dress before the convention follows:
"Officers, Non-Commissioned Of­ ed States Senator J. Hamilton Lewis,
ficers and Soldiers of tho Groat Amer­ of Illinois, who attended the Demo­
cratic National Committee mooting
ican nrmy:
"My Dear Comrades of the Ameri­ yesterday said the fight between McAdoo nnd Cox contingents for the
can Legion:
chairmanship
was as profitless as
"I cannot tell you how great is my
“
mutiny
In
tho
nrmy preparing for
satisfaction at finding myself nmong
war
over
selection
of drill sargennt
you, valiant soldiers of 1018, to live
fer
dress
parade.’
He snid conflict
again our glorious memories. Three
between
McAdoo
and
Cox forces over
years ago, on the first of November,
1P18, the entire Amoricnn army in organization would make former Vice­
France took up vigorously tho pursuit President Thomas It. Mnrshnll the
of the defeated enemy and did not halt nominee for president in 11)21.
until the German surrender.
"The hour of glory for the Ameri­ SOLEMN REVERENCE
PAID UNKNOWN SOLDIER
can army, u proper culmination for n
BY PEOPLE OF ITALY.
military effort was prodigous alike
in its intensity as in its rapidity. One
(By Th* AuoeU U d F rau)
and nil you have had your chafe In it.
ROME, Italy, Nov. 2.— Solemn rev­
You may well be proud.
erence by tho King nnd Peasant were
"In responding in mnss to tho call
pnid Itnly’s unknown soldier, symbol
to arms of your government, in equip­
of her hnlf million dond, when the
ping, training and organising our­
body arrived in Romo this morning
selves ns rnpldly ns possiblo you had
in view only the purposo to take your and transported on n gun enrringe to
place as soon as possible in the line n church where it will lie in state untl(
interment noxt Frldny under the Vic­
of battle.
tor
Emanuel monument.
"In numbers: Eighteen months nfter the declaration of wnr by tho
INDICT FLORIDA MAN
United States on Germany the Amer­
IN NEW YORK COURT
ican army had passed from effectives
AS A nOOZERUNNER.
of 9,500 officers and 12.r),000 men to
180,000 officers and 3,000,000 men.
O r Thu AtiocUUil Fre««)
"Effort of organization: If In tho
NEY YORK, Nov. 2.—Three broth­
month of March, 1018, you hod In ers, John, Dnnicl nnd Frank Gully,
France but six divisions, six monthB owners of the converted yacht John
inter you had 41, of which 31 engnged Gully, which was seizod several dnyH
in battle.
ngo, were nmong seven men indicted
"Effort in instruction: In order to today, by the Brooklyn grand jury in
have officers, non-commissioned o ffi­ connection with the transportation of
cers and men rapidly trained you mul­
liquor by boat.
tiplied in America ns in Franco your
Tho names of tho other four were
schools ami camps which became cen­
not made public. All nre charged with
ters of prodigious activity.
bringing liquor hero from the Bnhnmn
"In order to arm you and camp you
Island. One of tho number, the author­
the American manufactories worked
ities said, was n wcnlthy resident of
without receipts and supplied nil your
Florida.
nods.
"Admirable effort also in transpor­
tation: You swopt away every ob­
stacle which interfered with bringing
ymr units from tho centers of in­
structions to tho ports of embarka­
tion.
"In France, you improved the ports
if debarkation, crentcd new installa­
tions, increased the traffic of tho
railroad system by work of all kinds USED IN DEFRAYING EXPENSES
FOR SOLDIERS'
and multiplied your storo houses and
BONUS
hospitals.
•
«
“ Your shipyards wore organized
(By T h . A i.ooU t.d F r .il)
for intensive production in such a way
WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—A bill to
that when tho wnr ended you utilized
legnlizo nnd plnco four per cent tax
f"r your ocean transportation almost
on boor and light wines to bo used in
fmir millions of mnrino tonnage, in­
defraying tho cost of soldiers bonus
stead of 94,000 available at the bchns been drafted by Representative
ginning of the war.
Brennan, Republican, Michigan, nnd
"And meanwhile your Hplcndid wnr
will' be presented to congress, ho an­
fleet, thanks to ita vilignneo, and its
fine military qualities, protected with nounced today, as soon ns tho Amer­
ican Legion convention at KnnsaH
nn efficiency to which I am happy to
City hns acted on tho bonus ques­
Pay tributo here, tho transportation
tion.
°f your troops and material,
"A prodigious effort on tho part of
UNION MINERS STRIKE.
your entire nation’s intelligence, will
power nnd energy. A prodigious ef­
ATHENS, 0., Nov. 2.— Between
fort which hns filled your associates
275
andd 800 union miners employed
w‘ th admiration and gratitude nnd
by
tho
New York Coni Co., at Floodconfounded your enemy.
’
wood,
this
county, went on striko this
"This splendid spirit o f an entire
morning
as
a protest against tho
nation wo find again on the battle­
check
off
Injunction
issued yesterday
fields of Franco, where it was blaz­
by
Judgo
Anderson
in federal court
oned in tho admirable virtues of brav­
at Indianapolis.
ery and heroism.
Tho striko, as far is it could be
"It was tho spirit of tho second nnd
third American nrmy divisions which learned hero, was not authorized by
one month Infer took part in tho bat­ any officials of the United Mino
tle of tho Mamo and distinguished Workers of America, and was insti­
themselves Immediately in operations tuted by the local miner on their
around Chateau Thierry and Bellenu own account,
Woods. Again it was the spirit of
theso fii^q divisions which, on the
The world newi the day It happen*,
the Herald office.
(Continued on Pago Eight.)

3’ V

Fearing the wrath at the Turks, the Greek papulation or Nleomedlu, has
evacuated the city.
The photograph Just received shows tho evacuation.
Greek ships lire standing by In the harbor, while tlm Greeks an* seeking refuge
ubourd. Nicomedia In the capital of Hlthynlu, and about Ml miles from Con­
stantinople.

DAILY STEAMSHIP SERVICE
BETWEEN JAX AND NEW YORK
AND JAX AND SANFORD

WANTS MILITANT AND EFFIC­
IENT ORGANIZATION TO
SHOW UP G. O. P.
(By T h . A i.o e l.U 4 F r o .)

Union Dues

BROKE CONTRACT
(By Th. A uoeU U d Pt» m &gt;

-J

INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. lv—
Work In the Indiana coal field
ia practically at a Btand still to­
day as a result of walkout* of
twenty thousand men employed at
approximately
three
hundred
mines in the state according to re­
ports received at union headquar­
ters In Terre Haute. Walkouts
resulted from telegrams sent to
union ntiicinls yesterday by gen­
eral officers of the United Mine
Workers advising them regarding
discontinuance of check o ff sys­
tem of collecting union dues as
breaking existing wage agree­
ments with operators.
Injunc­
tion prohibiting check o ff Issued
by Federal Judge Anderson here
yesterdny.

ST. LOUIS, Nov. 2.—Tho devel­
opment of the Democratic National
committee into “ the most militant
and efficient organization" within his
eapneity and dissemination of facts
concerning "short comings" of tho
present
nationnl
administration
nmong overage citizens, is in brief,
the policy of Cordell Hull, the new
SEVERAL WOUNDED
Democratic chnirmnn, as outlined to­
Clyde Line Puts on More
IIY HANK ROBBERS
day
to tlie Associated Press.
Hull
IN SHOOTING MELEE.
Boats to Supply
expects to leave late today for Wash­ HOADS AND MEN IN
ington.
(By Th. AatoeUt.it Prttt)
Trade
SOUTHEAST CREATE
JONESBORO, Ark., Nov. 2.—Marl­
AGREEMENT HOARD.
on Light, a farmer, was shot and kill­ BUFFALO BILL’S WIFE
ed, and two otheis were wounded In u
WAS IIURIED TODAY
(Djr The Associated Preas)
gun battle in the Bank of Alicin, Ar­
RESIDE HER HUSBAND.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—Crcnlon
kansas, betwoen three bandits and tho
of tho train service bonrd of adjust­
WHEN CITUUS FRUITS WILL bank officials today. Light was hit
(By T h . A tiocl.U d P r«.«)
ment for tho Southeastern region,
SUPPLEMENT TIIE HEAVY
DENVER, Col., Nov. 2.—Tho body
by n stray bullet. The attempted
which wll sit In Washington for tho
SOUTHERN TRAFFIC
robbery was interrupted when tho of Mrs. William Cody lies today in purposo of ndjusting disputes growing
bank employees opened up fire with n tho grave with her hushnnd, Buffalo out of porsonnl grievances or out of
(By Th. A«»ocUtod P r .ti)
shot gun, causing the bandits to Hoe Bill, at tilt top of Lookout Mountnin, interpretation or application o f sched­
JACKSONVILLE, Nov. 2.—
near Golden, Col. In carrying out tho
without getting anything.
ules, practices nnd Agreements which
traffic officials of the Clyde Line
wish of tho widow that she bo buried
cannot ho settled by direct conforat a meeting here yesterday de­
with her hushnnd, it wns necessary to
cnce, wns announced today by rail­
cided to innguratc dally steam­
place her casket directly over that of
roads o f the Southeast ..nd tho four
ship service between Jacksonville
her husbnnd in crypt bhtsted from
rnilrond brotherhoods.
nnd New York as soon as the
solid mountnin rock.
freight shipments warranted, it
Under an agreement entered into
was announced today.
Local
between th brothrhooda nnd sixten
HUNGARY OBEYS (RIDERS
shippers believe service will Ik*
Southeastern rends, decisions o f tho
OF ALLIES TO EXPEL
established when the movement of
honrd nre final nnd binding on both
THE IIAPSHURG DYNASTY.
citrus fruits nnd other commo­
pnrtics to nny controversy if approved
IF THEY INTEND TO ABANDON
dities becomes heavy within the
by a mnjorlty of tho board’s mem­
(Ur T h . A u ocU t.d F r in )
TRACKS MUST GIVE
next few weeks. Daily freight
BUDAPEST, Nov. 2.—The cabinet berships of eight. The honrd, however
NOTICE
nnd passenger service on the St.
has decided to comply with the allied will have no jurisdiction over disputes
Johns river lietwccn Jacksonville
ultimatum
to dopose the Ilnpsburg involving requests for chnnges in
(fly Th. AuoeU U d P r .u )
nnd Snnford begins November
WASHINGTON,
Nov.
2.— An dynasty, nnd hns convoked the assem­ rates of pny or In rules covering
15th.
amendment to the Interstate Com­ bly for Thursdny to pnss the neccs- working conditions, jurisdiction over
such mnttors being vested in tho Uni­
merce act requiring the railroads to snry motion.
ARREST BROKER IN
continue operating one year after per­
Former Emperor Chnrles and his ted States Rnilrond Bonrd.
CONNECTION WITH BIG
mission for their abandonment was wife have left Tihnny and sniled
MAIL ROBBERY. given by commerce commission pre­
nbonrd the British gunboat, Glow MARINE TO HE TRIED
AT BOSTON FOR MURDER
pared for introduction in the senate Worm, for Gnlntz, Roumnnia.
(By T h . A t.oel.U d P r .u )
today
by
Harris,
of
Georgia.
Present
OF A FLORIDA MAN.
NEW YORK, Nov. 2.—The first nrlaw
permits
junking
of
roads
Imme­
rest in connection with the holdup of
(Hr Th* A uoeU U d F rai.)
n mall truck at Broadway and Leon­ diately after commission grants per
WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.— Richard
mission. Harris said twelve months
ard street, October 24, and tho theft
Wiesenfcid, a mnrino nttached to the
time would purmit peopio nlong tho
of ensh nnd securities vnlucd nt more
Boston nnvy ynrd, will stand trial in
roads to re-arrange their plana of
than $1,000,000 was made last night,
tho fcdornl court nt Boston for tha
providing means for assisting in fi­
when George DoMnngfe, 30, broker,
killing
of Quincy C. Bouden, of Pan­
nancing railroad property If it was
was held on n charge of being Impli­
ama
City,
Fla., n fellow private In the
a question of more funds to insure
cated.
marine
corps.
continued operation.
AMERICAN
PRISON
ASSOCIA­
Orders authorizing tho turning over
TION GUESTS OF 8UI»T.
of
Wiescifcld to the civil authorities
Armistice Day
JACKSONVILLE GIRL
BI.ITCH
wore today In the hands of Boston
SLIPPED ON STEP,
Declared Holiday
FRACTURED SKULL
nnvy ynrd ofYicInis, having been Issued
(By T h . A ..ooU U d F rau )
By U. S. Congress
JACKSONVILLE, Nov. 2.— Dolo- yesterday by the Judge advocate o f
(By T h . A uoeU U d Frau)
gntes to tho Amoricnn Prison Associ­ tho navy. Wiesenfcid recently admit­
JACKSONVILLE, Nov. 2.— Mne L.
In Honor of Unknown Soldier to Be
ation convention nre inspecting the ted before the nnvnl bonrd o f inquiry
Buried That Day
Edwards, 28, of this city, slippod on
stnto prison farm today nt Raiford as that ho killed Rouden.
the top step of tho basement stairs
guests of Supt. J. S. DUtch. Dele­
(By Th* A uooU U d F m . )
of a local hank today and fell to the
WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—Armis­ bottom, fracturing her skull. She gates will investigate tho honor sys­ FIRE DESTROYS niG
tem a f tho prison nnd pnrtnku of bar­
HOTEL AT D E L A N D ./
tice day, November 11th, will bo de­ died nn hour Inter.
becue prepared by prisoners.
clared n nationnl holiday in honor of
DELAND, N ov. 2.—The Harlan
Amorica’a unknown soldier to bo bur­
BIG SUM FOB ORLANDO.
DEBOER CONFESSES
hotel nt Lnke Helen, near here, to­
led that dny in Arlington. Congres­
TO KILLING BEST
gether with tho norvants’ quarters,
sional nction on the resolution re­
ORLANDO, Nov. 2.—Tho present
AT MIAMI FRIDAY billiard rooms nnd pump house, waa
questing the president nnd nil state
year with building permits for ten
governors to proclaim that day n hol­
destroyed by fire yesterday with a loss
(By T h . A u e .I .U d F rau )
iday wns completed todny through its months totalling $1,577,026, promises
of approximately $60,000. The flames
MIAMI, Nov. 2.—John Doboor, 31,
to break nil records for construction
ndoption by the senate.
wore said to have originated in the
confessed today according to tho sher­
in this city, especially ns permits for iff’s office to huving killed John Best, pump house.
ST. PETERSBURG’S
the milion dollar structure which tho 07, Inst Friday night nnd throwing
BUILDING BOOM.
BURCH INSANE?
Ornngo hotel company will erect hore tho body in Uiscayno bay with an
quoted an saying ho shrdlu etaoin un
ST. PETERSBURG, Nov. 2.— More nnd tho proposed addition to tho San
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 2.—When
.
. . .
. , , . . .
, iron weight nttached to his body. DewnH quoted „ „aylnir th#t ho tho caao o f Arthur C. Burch, indict­
than 250 building pormits, tho largest Juan hotel are expected to be taken
number in tho history of the city, out during November. Octobor, with kmcd Bcgt whon the jnttor rofUsed to ed Jointy with Mrs. Madalyne Obonwere issued during October, tho re­ construction amounting to nearly Rjvo him money for a trip to Now chaln for the murder o f J. Belton
Kennedy, wns called for trial In the
$200,000 stand in third place for this York,
port o f tho local building inspector
year with August pormits amounting
supreme court here today, counsel fo r
mndo public today. The total vnluniMO.ooOandJunolaftdlngwUh over
Burch presented affidavits to the
MIAMI TOTAL8 LARGE.
tlona amounted to $414,450. The p e r-! $300,000.
court, asking that Burch be eexamln(B r TH. AuoeUUd Fr*M)
ed as to his sanity.
mlts called for the erection o f 121 j Out of 141 permits granted by the
MIAMI, Nov. 2.— October’s building
residences, eight apartments, and one building dopnrtment forty-Avo are for
The affidavits were made by at­
hotel. The total for the year thus far j now residences andthroe aro for large activities brought tho total valuation torneys fo r Burch. They declared the
la $3,004,145.---------------------------------------apartment houses .The largest per­ of pormltn issued hero during the flrat application fo r a sanity test was bas­
-----------------------------,
j mlt one for $150,000, is for an apart- ton montha o f the year to $4,813,200. ed upon the "incoherent speech and
—Get your Scratch Fada from' The Jment houso now nearing completion Tho aggregate for the month( waa actions" o f the defendant during the
$869,200.
Herald— by the pound— 15c.
on Colonial drive.
past few days.

DURING

I

WITH MINE OPERATORS AND
INJUNCTION ALREADY BE­
FORE JUDGE

WINTER

RAILROADS
CANNOT QUIT
WITHOUT NOTICE

DE LE G A T E S

INSPECT FARM
AT RAIFORD

38

�PAGE SIX

■

TH E SANFORD D A IL Y H ERALD , TU E SD A Y, N OVEM BER 1,1921

WHAT VARIOUS CITIES
ARE DOING WITH BEGGARS,
CRIPPLES AND SOLICITORS

Quality

te n 3

Questionnaire Sent Out By the Florida Develop­
ment Board is Interesting

W ill ‘Tell

D O R O T H Y D A L T O N in
.a s

JACKSONVILLE, Nov. 1.— The Orlnndo and Tnmpa, $10 per day;
following condensed report on que*-'Tallahassee, $75.00 per dny.
i «
i
0.— What license feo la charged for
tionnaire aent out by Florida Devol-I o|icIton( who g0 from hoU8(3 to hou8c

Men Repeat
their
Purchases
on

\ rh ompson

Shoes

not because they are the best known fine shoes in
the world, but because to them personally they
have rendered complete satisfaction.

In the Final Estimation o f a Shoe

"Q uality
■
■

yy

Tell

Our customers find that nil our merchandise is
sold on this bnsis and that prices are always con­
sistent with quality.

SanfordShoe&amp; Clothing
Company

oping Hoard ia made up from replies j tnkUiK orders for gooda to bo deliverrocoivcd from city officials in Day-led later? Lakeland, $26.00; Ocala,
tonn, Ft. Myers, Gainesville, Jackson­ $60.00; Daytona, Fort Myers, Miami,
ville, Lakeland, Miami, Ocnln, Orlan­ $100.00; Tnmpn $10 per day; others
do not charge license, nnd both Day­
do, Pensacola, Tnllnhnssee, Tnmpn
tona nnd Ft. Myers mnke exception
St. Petersburg, St. Augustine am where satisfactory credentials are
West Palm Bench.
shown thnt solicitor is working under
1. — What privileges, if any, are ex­inter-stnto commerce net.
tended to the blind nnd crippled to so­
4.— Do you charge itinerant mngnlicit alms on streets or sit in promi­ zino subscription solicitors nny license
nent places in wheel chairs or on feo? Lnkoland and PonBacola, $26;
cushions to sell pencils and trinkota? Ft. Myors and Ocala, $100; and Ocala
None except in Gainesville, Jackson­ requires $260 bond; Tampa, $10 per
ville, Ocala nnd Pensacola on permit day; others do not require license, but
by mayor; and in West Palm Beach try to discournge patronage of itiner­
allow them 24 hours, desinnte their ant solicitors.
stand nnd charge license fee of
Remnrks: • Tnllnhassco has recent­
$7.60.
ly enneted an ordinance requiring
2.
— Whnt license fee is chargeditinerant
for
merchants, even with n ternselling goods from house to house by pornry place of business, competing
itinerant
peddlers?
Jacksonville, with local merchants, to pay $50 per
$25.00, except vegetable and fruit dny.
peddlers, $75.00; Minml nnd Ocnln, i West Palm Bench charges $500 li$50.00; Gainesville and St. Augustine, j cense to peddlers or street vendors of
$75.00; Dnytonn, Ft. Myers, Pensa-(medicines, drugs or other proprietary
cola nnd West Palm Beach, $100.00;! preparations purporting to havo modLnkclnnd nnd St. Petersburg, $200;1icinal virtues.

BONUS ISSUE
IS PUT UP TO
REPUBLICANS
REED PUSHING THE TAXATION
AMENDMENT THAT DELAY­
ED THE BILL

TO DEVELOP ST.
JOHNS RIVER IS
OUR PROGRAM
CHAM HER OF COMMERCE * IS
COMMITTED TO PROGRAM
OF SHIP HY WATER
Ship by water. Tho Chamber of
Commerce is committed to a program
to develop the St. Johns river. It
will be necessary to secure federal
appropriations for deeping the chan­
nel and interesting the government in
the proposed St. Johns-lndian River*
canal. Volume of water borne ton­
nage will force the government to
make the much desired improvements.
Through the efforts of the Chamber
of Commerce, tonnage carried via St.
Johns river has been greatly increas­
ed in fact to such nn extent thut the
Clyde Line has been compelled to
put on a daily boat service. When
tho Chamber of Commerce sends its
committee before the government o f­
ficials requesting the much desired
improvements, it is hoped thnt water
borne tonnage will have been in­
creased to such proportions ns will
cause the government to see the neces­
sity of opening up the St. Johns riv­
er to the const and deepening the
present channel.
This condition,
however, cannot be brought about un­
less every merchant in Sanford has
shipments consigned to him routed via
water wher. possible. The sole ex­
cuse for the existence of n Chamber
of Commerce lies in doing tho great­
est good for the most people, in civic,
commercial, agricultural and indus­
trial production and also transporta­
tion nffairs; in rendering service which
will help the community, whether it
knows it or not; and in handling mat­
ters of general interest, which ordi­
narily no Individual will nttempt, and
which ho COULD not handle if ho
SHOULD attempt. It behooves uvory
merchant in Snnford to support the
movement originated by their local
Chamber and become affiliated with
tho Central Florida Water Trnflfic
League, an organization consisting of
tho shippers of all sections contigu­
ous to Sanford who ure interested in
tho ship by water movement, not only
from the monetary benefits to lie nccruod, but also from a desire to de­
velop that great rate equalizer, the
St. Johns river. The Central Florida
Watur TrafTic League will maintain
an officiont traffic buroau as an in­
tegral part o f its organization, to
guard
the lawful rights and pro­
mote tho interests of the shipper.
This department or bureau will main­
tain n complete tariff file to nfford
scrvico in the quotation of rates nnd
routing of shipments, tracing of doloyal shipments, advico with regard
to claim matters, decisions o f tho In­
terstate Commerce Commission, tho
State Commission, decisions of the
courts and advice regarding many
questions that arise in traffic mat­

ters. In addition the bureau will un­
dertake to check and audit freight
Dills for a nominal fee to members.
The Central Florida Water Traffic
League will serve the interests of all
communities of this section on all
matters affecting transportation and
in addition will carry on a work of
education amongst the merchants nnd
shippers to the great benefits to be
derived in shipping by watur.
The
spcciul committeo of tho Sanford
Chamber of Commerce assigned to
this work will endeavor to securu a
large membership from Sanford for
the Central Florida Water Traffic
League.
WILSON UNABLE
TO ATTEND PARLEY
HEALTH IS HAD.
WASHINGTON, I). C., Nov. 1.—
Former President Wilson appeared
today to be making a good recovery
from nn nttnek of indigestion and se­
vere headaches, which has kept him
in his bed for the Inst few days, his
physician, Rear Admiral Cary T.
Grayson, said today.
After nn early call nt the Wilson
home, Grnyson said tho ex-president
probably would be able to sit up con­
siderable today. He expects him to h«t
able to resume his usual routine to­
morrow.
.
The former president, Grayson indictnted, probably will be able to keep
nn appointment scheduled for tomor­
row.
While Wilson's present illness is
not regarded ns extremely serious by
his physicians, his general condition
in such thnt ho requires most enrofut
attention and care. Ever since he be­
gan to make a general recovery from
the stroko which two years ago a f­
fected one arm nnd made his wnlking
difficult, the ex-president has been
subject to attneks of indigestion nnd
severe headaches.
Theso recurring nttneks mnke it
apparent, Wilson's intimates sny, thnt
for some time to come, at least, he
will not get bnck into politics or again
take up his notable
fight for tho
league o f nations.
Ho already hns decided to remain
completely nloof from the arms par­
ley, it was learned, through replies
sent to nmbnssndors htro who sug­
gested thnt lending foreign rfo'cpnton
would like to call on him and renew
ncqunintanccs formed nt tho Versail­
les conference.
Wilson still takes n keen interest
In both Democratic nnd international
developments, but it Is more thnt of
nn nvorngo cltldcn, wol Ivorsed In
governmental nffnirs, thnn of a nat­
ional leador.

MAN AND FAMILY
LODGED IN TREE
ESCAPED THE FLOOD.
SARASOTA, Fin., Nov. 1.—Captain
Corey nnd his family, who resido on
Longboat Key, underwent a thrilling
experience during the storm Inst
week. When the waters of the Gulf
began to rise into tho Corey home,
('apt. Corey and his family entered
their small motorboat nnd set out
for tho mnlnland. Tho motor wns put
out of commission nnd tho litttle ves­
sel drifted before tho wind, flnnlly
lodging in tho top of a tree. Capt.
Corey mndo tho boat fnst and ho nnd
his fnmily wore rescued next day a f­
ter the high water had subsided, leav­
ing tho boat lodged in the tree top.

WASHINGTON, Nov. 1.— Renewnl
of the fight in the senate for the pass­
age of the soldiers' bonus bill result­
ed in a further set back yesterday for
the tax revision measure. Republi­
can lenders forced a night session, but
with tho bonus issue still undisposed
of, there nppenred to be doubt wheth­
er tho tax bill could be brought to n
voto before Saturday, if then.
There was a four hours’ discussion
yesterday of the Reed amendment pro­
posing to continue tho excess profits
tax nnd to use the proceeds to defray
the costs of tho five-way adjusted
compensation plan. This was follow­
ed by the introduction of an amend­
ment by Scnntors Simmons, of North
Cnrolinn and Wnlsh of Massachusetts, f
Democratic incmbors of the finance
committee, proposing payment of tho Y
bonus out of the interest nn the na­
f
tion's foreign debt.
The latter amendment will not lie t
formally moved for adoption in the ?
senate, its authors announced, until ?
action hns been taken on the Reed f
amendment. Meantime, Senator Reed
is delaying formal presentation of his T
amendment until there hns been full t
T
discussion of tho whole question.
Senator Penrose of Pennsylvania, in
plnn of the majority to move to table
t
the Reed proposal on the ground that ?
tho soldiers’ bonus has no place in n
tax mensure. Mnjority leaders had
not decided .Inst night, however, what T
would bo done with rospcct to the
Simmons-Wnlsh amendment, which i
tho authors duclured would "make tho T
issue dearly one of bonus or no bonus
without raising the question of tho T
condition of tho public treasury which f
has been th cchicf argument present­
ed by opponents of tho bonus plan."

A romance staged in the hnunts of society and showing
whnt goes on behind the scenes. Also—

FOX N E W S and PIC TO R IAL

Tomorrow— Alice Lake in “ Over the W ire”
and “ Bath Tub Perils” a Sennett Comedy

SETTLEMENT IN IRELAND
RESTS UPON ULSTER.
LONDON, Oct. 31.— Effort* hove
been mndo during tho week-end to
prevent a breakdown In the Irish
ponce confcronco, but n contluuancc
of the negotiations now scorns to de­
pend nlmost entirely on tho willing­
ness o f tho Ulster authorities to as­
sist in coming into line with the Sinn
Fein.
Sir Janies Craig, the Ulster promior
who hns professed n desire to work
nniicnbly with southern Ireland in an
nil Ireland council, will it is said, bo
offered greatly extended powers for
tho northorn parliament, nccompnnicd
by a strengthening of the position of
the ecentral council connecting tho
two Irish parliaments nnd it is de­
clared to be tho belief thnt ho may
nccept this.
But, It is nsserted, Sir James will
opposes nny curtnilnicnt of tho area
of the northern pnrlinment nnd will
especially resist nny cutting off of the
representation o f northeast Ulster In
the imperinl pnrlinment which he regnrds ns tho greatest Snfegunrd for
Ulsto.
Tho prevailing belief hero seoms to
be in various quarters, that oven
should there bo n breakdown in tho
present conforenco, tho truco in IreInnd should continue.

i

\±
±
i
±

WOMEN PHARMACISTS
HAVE BROKEN BARRIERS
AND FILLING PRESCRIPTIONS.
NEW YORK, Nov. 1.—Women
havo broken down the bnrsics to phar­
macy nnd nBo filling positions fosmerly only to mon.
Acting Dean G. C. Diekman, of tho
Collcgo of Phnrmncy, nt Columbia
University, in tanking this statement,
snid tho collcgo records showed that
women excelled in scholarship nnd hat
earned more thnn their share of class
honors.
’ "In practical work, where neatness,
dispatch and, above all, accuracy nrc
deciding fnctors, their record is un
enviable ono," ho suid. "Tho old preju­
dice against tho employment of wo­
men in pharmacies, excepting perhaps
n minor capacity* ia rapidly disap­
pearing in tho largo citieB. In subur­
ban and rural communities women
have always been accorded their juBt
recognition."

A. W. Smitii nnnounces thnt ho will
Man’* Inhumanity to man makes
double tho present capacity of his
snw mill nonr Plant City In tho near countless thousands ripe for revolu­
future to take care of the increase of tion.
his business in that tsectlon.
The world new* the day It happen*,
— Get your Scratch Fads from The delivered at your door each evening,
16c the week.
Herald—by the pound— 16c.

There
Will Be
A

Mottletone
Expert

at

BallHardwareCo.,Phones
K a il F l n l S i., S a n fo rd , Fla.

NOV. 3-4-5

WatcA iheWindow&amp;r
AnnouncementDates

The corner stone of the lew $75,­
000 school building for the town i&gt;f
Quincy hns been laid this week. The
contractors state that practically all
of the foundation has been placed and
thnt work is progressing very nicely
on same.
.

f

W E ARE

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Out of Business
A N D W IL L CLOSE O U T OUR

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f
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f
?
T

Entire Stock

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Of Ginghams, Silks, Percales, White Goods, Linens, Organdie, T
Voiles, Bleachings, Satins, Sateens, Nainsooks, Ladies’ Hose, Un­
Y
derwear, Bed Spreads, etc.

f
f
f
f

This stock is all new stock purchased before the last raise in
market prices and we are going to sell it all to move it quick at T
prices—
T

BELOW COST------ SALE BEGINS
/

ff
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f
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T

Wednesday Morning t
f
November 2nd f
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United Textile Stores Co.
OPPOSITE POST OFFICE

SANFORD, FLA.

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♦

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�B s a &amp; tr *t r * -

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IB SANFORD DAILY HI

PAQBTWO

ANFd^ bAlLY HERALDM j . .r M :
■VMS UtMMM II«M l u l l / St H i or hopclosaneds showed on every fide.
M
in w
Then a surprise met them.
The magistrate ,afttr hearing the
detective’s Complaints, proceeded to
rtnmaHitns____________ question every man separately. It
JL J. H O L L Y ----------------------- Editor developed that nearly all of them were
I f.'J . LILllAKD...Secretary-Treasurer decent mon, in hnrd luck and honestly
H. A. N ERL-........... General Manager seeking employment. Thoy were not
sleeping on park bonches for tho fun
of it— a fact which might have been
Inferred (n tho first plnco. Ono-flfth
of them were honorably discharged
, . w J i r n a Trio. la ASvaaca
•Oaa Taar' i t . - ................................. t».............. !••*• soldiers and sailors.
As thoso stories wero unfolded,
* * M*T »4im i4 'fi *6itr Or ’ baniii ***’ '^ »
a*. w et . . 1 . ......................... .......I S Owns every person in tho courtroom found
his sympathies enlisted. Tho judge, in*
stead o f sentencing tho prisoners
emptied his pockets to get' them a
night’s decent lodging. Spectators did
Member of The Associated Prase
likewise.' Hardened detectives volun­
tn o
teered to hojp them find jobs. Every
man loft the courtroom cheered up
rm
■i
If S.
a id with a better chance of finding
Circus day.
work ne^t day.
Law and socioty gained as much as
And circus wenthor.
the
prisoners did. If men out of jobs
-o everywhere
were treated in so hunia!n
Blg crowd in town today soolng the
a
way,
them
would be incomparably
circus and buying goods.
less bitterness at tho bottom o f odr
industrial systtm, and less menaco in
Sanford merchants ore putting on
hnrd times.— 8t.'AUgUSttno Retford. '
special inducements to trado here.
-------------o-----------WHY PROHIBITION IS BEING
The Sanford Horald intends to make
MADE A JOKE.
a " Campaign ngnidsfc Hie selling of
tk ybung boy.i. Somebody will
It would appear that prohibition
hAVe to ’get busy at once'of; this queswns given a test by the rum element
t i i n .' ,,,:
just to see how far the jokes in the
fn
o—
■- laws of the states nnd nntlon would
Tampa will buy the gas plant or
permit them to go.
The limit has
staftcorto o f their own. Commission
nbout been renchod nnd now It cnn be
form 6 f government seems to Imvo
seen thnt thero is a great deni of this
changed public opinion down there.
„&lt; ., * • &lt;•
^ * i
in •
fuunny paper business made out o f
tbo prohibition enforcement mnttcr.
Miami will buy the street rnilwuy.
The government has uutteriy failed
They Bay there is no money in street
to check the influx of wholesale liquor
railways, thoy say thoro is no money
smuggling in this country off tho
in owning municipal plants, they sny
const of Florida and liquor right now
— but then why is it that private cor­
cnn be bought in Lnkelnnd and deliv­
porations own them?
ery guaranteed for n littlo nbovo tho
------------ o--------- ■—
cost in ordinnry times. Political Influ­
IN OUlt WASTE BASKET TODAY.
ence nnd cowardice In office, both ju­
dicial nnd otherwise, in many sections,
Copy of Congressional Record.
has followed tho arrest of would-beSpeech on Hanking.
bootleggers and they have been re­
Article on insects of Arabia.
Article on Philippine Independence. leased ns though it were n kangaroo
One on Women and Men o f Voting court. Tho next thing to interfere
with the proper Inw enforcement wns
Age.
Anonymous communication about the permit system nnd the opening of
the bonded wnrohouscs; thon would
city politics.
Anonymous article on a prominent come tho big quantities of seized evi­
dence thnt would mysteriously disnpcitizen and his private life.
Anonymous nrticle about a Sanford penr when timo for trial rnnio; then
the liquor importations began to In­
official.
Speech that one of our congressmen crease instead of diminish; hccauso of
the light fines nnd sentences which
nover made.
the rum runners would get they wero
Speech on the Mediterancan fly.
willing to tnk • a chance when they
Speech on speech.
can clenn up a living in a yenr which
Speech.
Specc
would tnkc them n life-time In other
Spee
lines to get. The system seems to
Spe
hnve hnd the protection o f officials
In mnny places from top to bottom
Sp
S
because of their dilntory nnd don't
------------ o------------enre spirit in stopping the transpor­
tation and sale of goods, nnd in this
TO THE PARENTS OF ROYS.
state ns soon ns the order came that
Not long ngo skilled lnbor received you could not arrest n mnn without n
high wages, while many eduented and search wnrrnnt nnd thnt even thnt
trained men wero poorly paid. It is could not bo done at night, right at
possible thnt the school boys became tho time the sign wns jmt up: "Boys,
impressed with this, nnd that thoy go the limit nil you (dense at night,
reached tho conclusion thnt it wna hut just don't get caught in tho day
better to go to work than to go to timo."
Not until we get officers who will
school.
But the condition wns ab­
normal nnd could not Inst. Now we are hack up the inw nnd see thnt no one
getting bnck to normnl nnd in tho fu­ person is better thnn the other in ev­
ture more than at any time in the past ery state nnd county office nnd in the
the ahilitios horn of education nnd nntlon ns well, will the rum trnfflc ho
training will lie in demand nnd com­ blocked. It is a joke at tho present
mand n high price.'W ith n trained time nnd whisky right now Is more
iblnd a man can multiply the useful­ plentiful thnn moonshine nnd every­
ness nnd earning pbwer of his hnnds body is making shine thnt seems to
many fold. Civilization is bult upon want it. The officers o f Polk county
this fact. Educntinn brings rcnl bless­ hnve been exceptions in their efforts
ings, makes friendship’ valuable by to keep tho situation cleaned up, but
teaching us how to servo nnd bo use­ even at thnt, the rulings of courts and
ful, nnd gives to life its deepest satis­ the don’ t enro spirit of other coun­
factions. For these purposes educa­ ties and the wny tho Fedornl prohi­
tion Is Indispensable. Givo your boys bition officers themselves are clean­
— your children—the host education ing up, makes us look on tho situation
you cnn. If you should reach a flnnnc- with disgust, for there nre hut fow
inl limit, Inspire your hoy to enrn hlB of them who nre not making their
way. Bo satisfied with nothing less thousands of dollars per week by let­
for your children thnn a comploto ting tho rum poddlcrs get by with just
about nil they please. The govern­
education.— Hardee County Hornld.
ment at this time Is jrnying out mil­
*'
---- !— — o-----------lions in money nnd forcing men to go
JIEl.P FOB VAGRANTS.
into the liquor business who have nev­
er dreamed o f such a thing boforc,
The police swopt down on 200 mon
simply because It nppenrs to be an
sleeping in n New York park tho
easy matter to secure nnd sell whisky
other night And arrested 57 of them.
nnd ns long ns tho profits runs from
400 to 1,000 per cunt, tho chnncc to
them Is worth whilo.—Lakeland Stnr.

THE HEItALD PRINTING CO., inc!

W it

K

w

Br i .

BrV

•

HEINZ

SPAGHETTI
Dne of the many delicious Heins
products fa the cooked Spaghet­
ti In a tomato sauce with cheese.
AH that ntfisds to be, done t o p ft pare the dfsh la 16 heat the can ’
’ 15 'tniddtek' ln bolllrtit' Water be­
ifM t ' h
fore opening.

Deane Turner
Phones 497-494
WELAKA BLOCJt

l^.vV

r

.

•

.

’

), WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1121

, •
Senator Bunkum, gt the State of
i
■omnia, in thlT record tor tho slmjjle
reasoh that Uie senator nover made
any such speech, but he slips it Into
tho Record with tho idea of fooling his
friends back home, and when they
read o f the (applause) and thu
(cheers) and tho other bunk that Alla
the pages o f the Record, they begin
to think that tho senator is paying
half his salary for a Washington
press agent— and ho usually Is doing
thnt thing. Tho Congressional Rec­
ord should bo expunged, and in this
respect tho Jacksonville Metropolis
gets off the following truth}
Representative Blanton o f Texas
has been rebuked by tho House for
Incorporating "obsceno matter" in the
Congressional Record and tho atmos­
phere around tho capitol ia onco more
serene ns n May morning.
Blanton deserved tho rebuke if the
matter was as obscene 6s reported,
for while'the American public likos
jokes and appreciates a good one to
thdMnat drop, it takes offense at a
vulgar
told ' publicly. Public
modesty Is sometimes fair more puri­
tanical than Individual modesty. This
is'one o f the queer twists in human

joke

nature.'
It develops in the Blanton incident
thnt the Congressional Record is the
one unedited publication in this coun­
try. We hnd suspected this for n
long time. Tho Record Is absolutely
devoid o f editorial earmarks.
A member o f Congress takes tho
floor nnd says, "Gontlomen, I want
to put something in tho Congression­
al Record. How about it 7"
"Go ahead!" tho other mombers
shout—and ho goes nhead.
And no power under high heaven
cnn keep whatever he has in mind
from going in the Congressional Rec­
ord!
Even the linotype operator who got
Mr. Blanton’s copy off the hook pro­
tested at putting It In typo—but to no
avail; the foremnn snid ho hnd no au­
thority to "kill" the "obscene mat­
ter."
The Congressional Record is al­
ready censored enough to make it a
Joke. But what the Congressional Rec­
ord needs is an editor, n man who is
competent to pnss on tho copy nnd
vested with tho authority to edit it
down to the j oint o f public docency.
We renlizo this means nnothcr Job for
some newspaper man, which Rhould
make it pnrticuinrly interesting to
President Harding, who recruits ns
many government employees ns pos­
sible from the ranks of the Fourth
Estate.
THE PRETTIEST LIMBS IN THE
WORLD— FAKE! FAKE!

Thnt thoro is nothing new under the
sun hns been accepted as nn axiom for
centuries. The expression is common
and time-worn, one of those saying
thnt has lost much of its significance
because of universal use, yet which,
when considered seriously, still has
n grent deal of truth in it, nnd always
will have, for there is nothing so rnre
ns a new idea.
Playwrights arc often accused of
stealing jdots. Novelists nro only giv­
en credit for developing old ideas.
Tho world hesitntes when called up­
on to give praise to nn individual who
has conceived something now under
tho sun. Originality is the priceless
quality.
But when nn editor "springs some­
thing" thnt hns not been seen before,
it is up to his fellow-editors to how
before the Bhrino of his cleverness,
therefore wo tuken o ff our hat to
Claude C. Jones, editor o f the DeSoto
County News. His scheme may bo
old ns the hills, hut ns fnr ns our ob­
servation goes it is new ns a home­
made doughnut.
"Tho Prettiest Legs in the World"
is the title o f nn editorial in the last
issue of tho News. The first para­
graph of this editorin) rends:
"Whilo wnlklng down Oak street
Tuesday wo met n woman. She had
beautiful eyes nnd wns dressed in tho
height of fnshion. Her physique was
perfect. She wore silk stockings nnd
a short skirt. Just its we turned our
head townrd her she entered nn auto­
mobile nnd when she put one foot on
the running board we saw— Dr. J. H.
Coffee, secretary of tho DeSoto Coun­
ty Chnmber o f Commerce, walking to­
wnrd us."
Then Editor Jones follows with nn
upjieai for tho Chnmber of Commerce!
Tho caption is forgotten nnd in tho
most serious of tones tho future of
CUT OUT THE RECORD.
tho civic organization is discussod!
This mny bo taking an unfair ad­
We wero thinking tho other dny, vantage, for Editor Jonas arouses
while reading of that congressman your curiosity until your norves tin­
who suffored shame and ignomy, and gle, then ho drops you in tho midst
wns almost expelled from tho house of a dreadfully commonplace subject.
for something he had in tho Congres- But 6s h'o says, "our knowledge of
sionul Record, thnt tho Record was to human nature enabled us to know that
blame as much as the congressman. |you ' would hurriedly glnhco ovor tho
Tho Congressional Rocord has been i heading to the other odltorials on;thli
ono of tho standing Jokes of the Amor- j P«go, hut would stop to rend th is, 'Are
lenn people for so long, that It scorns you guilty d f reading thus fu r?"
Oh, pshaw!—Jacksonville Motroptho congressmen would wako up somo
oils.
’
time and ceuso putting all their chit­
'
------ochat and cloak room gossip and other
fkiry'tales into a record that should 1 The arrival of short akirta may,add
contnin'nothlng but facts. Tho pub- hundreds of parngrajlhori' to tho
•
• •
all atired
f I _of0 aL.
**~*Styi *q# «n
ttba n
ranks
off thn
tho iitinntnlAVfMT
unemployed.
lie
is «___
heartily
the —
spfe

—

, •

■

1

•

’

w
Everybody has written about the
trials amTlribulations of the country
editor, but few have written about
h i i ’ joys.' He stands abend of the
preacher, the lawyer and the publics
speaker, because he never talks to
empty bonches, but speaks in all the
homes where his paper goes. He
in your home, by starting a savings
never makes impromptu speechos,
account for every member o f the
which generally disgust the audience,
family.
but writes with deliberation and pre­
meditation. The preacher’s Influence
A parent's plans for the success
fnr good seldom reaches farther than
and happiness o f their children—
his congregation, whilo tho editor's
your boy’s or girl’s wish for future
field for good reaches all the congre­
gations in the county. The lawyer
wealth or greatne?s-^all depends
makes a good speech in tho church
upon the home training, tha atmos­
house and only one or two hundred
persons hear him, but when tho editor
phere o f conscientious thrift and
Irrltes a good editorial It Is copied In
economy which is found in every
various papers in the atate. The edi­
wpll-regulated American Home.
tor distributes more flowers than a
florist asd he asks nothing in return
and Is hot overloaded with obligations
to the public. The editor has oppor­
tunity to do the individual citizen a
!»• f1(
111* k, f,| tr»H ___ I
H
service and he never hesitates to do
A
COMMUNITY
b u il d e r
it. The editor has the greatest Op­
portunity to convert men and woiden
F. P. Fowler, President
to his way o f thinking on public ques­
B. F. \Vhitner, Cashier
tions. As the lighthouse on tho shore
warns the ships from the rocks, the
editor can worn tho populaco from
frauds and fakes. The editor has tho
groatest opportunity to protect soclety from evil by standing* for tho
Inw nnd crcntlng public sentiment for
his town nnd county, nnd if botn
do not grow it is not his fault. He
/.Ji 11
helps tho dosorvlng young mon with
words of commcndntlon nnd restrains
tho old by words of warning.
His
You Can Find the ?fame o f Every Live Profield of usefulness is broader thnn
nnyono else In the community, nnd if
. fessional and Business Man in
ho docs not get any returns for his
efforts for settlement ho hns n suf­
Sanford in This Column
ficient reward in seeing things get
bettor. Ho rejoices In his opportunity
for service to his
fellow mnn, his
LAW YERS
CONTRACTORS
town nnd his country nnd goes on his
way rejoicing, whether or not he gets
S. O. Shinholser
George A . DeCottes
any return for it.— Elizabethtown,
Contractor nnd Builder
Attorney-at-Law
N. J., News.
Over
Seminole
County
Bank
SANFORD -;- -;FLORIDA
■------------ o-----------SANFORD
FLORIDA
SENATOR BUTCH DEAR.

Stflrt a Thrift Club

PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS
DIRECTORY OF SANFORD

TALLAHASSEE, Nov. 1.—Tho re­
mains of Newton A. Hlitch, state rail­ HARTFORD B A T T E R Y
II ■
I
'I
'
road commissioner, commander of tho
“ Battery Insurance”
Florida division, U. C. V., nnd former
state Honntor, whoso death occurred
Sold and Serviced by
here Sunday night, wns burled at
Starke at 11 n. m. today.
EJdw. Higgins, Inc.
Services in Tnllnhnssee were held at
Haight &amp; Wieland
1 o’clock nt tho First Baptist church
of which Mr. Illitch wns a devout hnd
enthusiastic member, Rev. Runyan,
GARAGES
tho pastor officiating.
Besides his widow, Mr. Blitch is
Smith Bros. Garage
survived by five children, two sons
Expert Repairing
nnd three daughters. They nre: J.
OIL,
GAS
and ACCESSORIES
S. Blitch, sujioritnendent of the state
Onk
and Flrat
prjson farm nt Rniford; S. R. Blitch,
of Montbrook; Mrs. J. E. Futch, of
DcLnnd; Mrs. Thomas Limbo, of
•Geo. W . K night
Starke, and Mrs. Etta Brownlee, of
Starke. Threo brothers also survive
Real Estate and Insurance
him. They nre B. R. Blitch, of Ocala;
SANFORD
FLORIDA
G. M. Blitch, of Irvin, nnd J. M.
Blitch, of Morristown.
Offices of tho Floridn Railroad com­ .. Employment Bureau.
mission hero wero closed Monday out The vocational committee of the Busi­
o f respect to Commissioner Blitch.
ness and Professional Women's Club
requests all young women desiring
Manager Weeks, o f Fisherman's employment to register nt the First
’1 1
Pnrndiae, tho fishing camp rccort on National Bnnk.
AGNES G. BERNER, Chairman
Lake Apopka, reports tho completion
f J r
1
rt * 4 ■
tt
o f five log cabins nnd they hnve ad­
ded eighteen rowboats to the fleet.
D. F. SU M N E R
Demands for cottages nre moro thnn
they can supply, nnd n good senson
PAINTER
bids fnir fo rthis now nnd popular
LST ME PAINT YOUR HOUSE
lake shore rusort. Bass fishing is good
W ill Ooatr.ot or Toko Job by tho Hour
the yenr 'round
PHONE IIS
H I LAUREL AVE.

The best evidence
LISTEN!
I? wisdom, is to
believe whnt we can’ t under­
stand, and that is why they all
patronize the—

SANFORD BRANCH
LAKELAND STEAM
LAUNDRY

Phone 475

T. A. Butner, Prop.

COOL WEATHER IS
COMING
Before buying your

HEATING STOVE

^

^

i • a*

rt I

»;

Cpme in and look oyer
our line

BALL HARD­
WARE COMPANY

Sanford Machine #
Foundry Co.
(ioncrnl Mnchine and Boiler Works
Automoblla Flywheel Steel Gear
bands in stock
Crank Shnfts Ite-turncd

Sanford Steam Laundry

Sanford Constructs Co.
CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS
Planes nnd Specifications Chcerfallj
Furnished
All Work Guaranteed
ii. t . P a c e
p . o . b« z i «»

Builders &amp; Contractors
Sketches nnd Estimates Free; so
building too large nnd none too amslL
----- ALL WORK GUARANTEED-----

W ilson &amp; Shorey
Pine nnd Garland Sts., Orlando, Fla

PURE W ATER
Elder Springs Water
99.98% PURE
phone 81 M V
Snnford. FU

LORD’S PURITY
W ATER
AS GOOD AS THE BBST
Daily Service

SANFORD

Phone 197

NOVELTY

WORKS
V. C. COLLER, Prop.

General Shop and Mill
W ork
CONTRACTOR and BUILDER
517 Commercial Street
i • »

Sanford, FU
_si

T R A N SF E R
“ WE DELIVER THE GOODS’

Quick Service Transfer
Storage Facilities

FOR SERVICE
Call 146-J

If we plcnse you, (ell others; if no
fell us. Phone 498

W. RAWLING, Drop.

HOTELS

Acteylene Welding
OF ALL KINDS

Hotel Montezuma
“ Sanford’s New Hotel”
11.50 Up Per Day

Sanford W elding Co.
Located In Eagle Illdg., 305 On!: Ave
Phone 175

Fourth nnd Sanford A t ,

^ e w Era Printery
G. Bassett Smith, Prop.
COMMERCIAL AND
JOB PRINTING
DRINK
Elder Springs Water, fts 00 08-1 (M
t t 'cent 'pure. Phone 51:
Office supplies of all Kinds at The
Herald Printing Co. When you want
anything in this line see The Herald.
We have it or can got It
Try a Herald Wont Ad today.

GILLON &amp;
Electrical Contractors
Phone 442

111 Park Ave

�soil
aI R

^C&lt; &gt; a n * w

This is a Sale on Seasonable Merchandise from our entire stock and will be a general
clearance at a Sensational Reduction on On Our Entire Stock of Dry Goods, Notions,
Silks, Hosiery,* Furnishings, Silk and Muslin Unederweaf, and Ready-to-Wear.
STORE WILL BE CLOSED THURSDAY THAT
MAY RE-PRICE OUR STOCK
New Standard ot Value in Fine Apparel
Coat Suits, Frocks, Blouces, Skirts
A T PRICES T H A T W IL L A P P E A L TO E V E R Y W O M A N W H O W A N T S
GOOD CLOTH ING A T L O W PRICES
FROCKS FOR STREET A N D A F T E R N O O N A T V E R Y SP E C IA L PRICES
Lot N o. 1...................................... $10.75
Lot N o. 2 .................................... $13.75
Lot No. 3................................................ $19.75

Extra Value in Coats of Approved Design
Assured Quality, and Dignified Style
TH REE BIG SPECIAL GROUPS at.................................... $15.00, $19.00 and $29.00
N O V E M B E R SA LE O F FIN E SUITS

There is a full season of wear yet to come and selections are still at their best.
Values that W ill Am aze You
Ladies’ Holeproof Hose, Lisle, at
pair......... .........— .,....... „ ..............................
Ladies Holeproof Hose, Silk, at
pair ...................................................................
Ladies’ Holeproof Hose, Full Fashion Silk, at
pair ................... ....................... .-.......................
Ladies’ Kayser Lacv Hose, at
pair ..................................................................
Ladies’ Van Raalte Fancy Lace Hose, at,
pair ...................................................................

Messaline Satin, 36-in.

Chiffon Taffeta (full range 0 - 6 Q O
of colors), per yard ............ o J L # « 7 0
Canton Crope, (40 in. wido, C O C A
in the best shades), yard... V * ^ * ^ * *
Satin Back Canton Crepe (an exquisite
fabric in all shades)
O Q
per y a r d ................................t “ O # A ,tA
Wool Storm Sergo (48-in.
(
Navy and Black) per yard.. &lt;
French Serge (all wool, 4G-in. i
wido), per yard .................. &lt;
Brocaded Canton Crepe (40-in
cy and plain colors),
i
per yard ..............................1
Canton Crepe, (40-in., Black, i
Brown, Navy and blue), yd.. &lt;
Wool Jersey, 54-in, nil
(
shades, per yard ................ *

An exceptional fine quality Ladies 6-button strap wrist cape, fancy cuff,
embrodery back, $5.00 value,
0 9
S pecial............................................................................................ «P O e l t f
.

r

mi

Kid Gloves, three clasp wrist length (real kid, excellent
O A
quality, all shades, new goods) .................................................. A f f

HAND BAGS,----------HANDKERCHIEFS,----------WOMEN’S NECKWEAR
, .
1 case 81x90 Satin Bed Spreads,
at each ............................................
1 case Ripple Wearwell Bed Spreads,
81x90, Special, each........................

«

,|

• 1 tf

,. ,if

ft

E V E R Y SORT OF

* *

BLANKET AND COMFORT

EXTRA SPECIAL
j

64-in. Imported Table Damask,
per yard .................................

New Fall Patterns in both cotton und silk. Spec,
ial 36-in. light and dark patterns, y a r d ........

Collection of Taffeta, Satin, Crepe, Fancy Silks, etc.,
special price.

at

♦&gt; About
ADout 100 odd sizes o f consets of well known
knpv makes, to close
«?♦ them out we offer them during this sale,
A
(values up to $10.00) at $4, $3, $2 and.

During the Sale While They Last
10 yards 40-in. Sea Island
Cotton .............................
10 yards English Long
Cloth .................................
12 yards English
Nainsook ..........................
12 Pillow Cases,
42-in....................................
12 82-inch Hiick
Towels .............................
12 SpoolB
Cotton y..K.......... ,..............
12 81x90 Sheets, best
makes ...........................
illft iiliiiC) l&gt;m!
h&gt; •

$1.25
$1.25
$2.00
$3.50
$1.50
65c
$14.75

- • - ! JY yllji Ju t."!J*i Uf{f. ■1/ uiii. *

40-in. Sea Island Cotton, 3,000 yards for this sale,
10 yards to customer, yard...................................
86-in. Pajama Check, the best grade,
O
10 yards f o r ...... - ............................................... V
27-in. Red Seal and other standard brands
Ginghams, for this November sale at .................
32-in. Renfew Gingham, Fall Patterns, fast
colors, standard brands, at ............ ....... .............
32-in. Scotch Gingham Checks, Blue, Brown,
Black and Pink, November Sale f o r .....................
50 Dozen 81x90 Wearwell Tape Selvage, no
Q
- better sheet for service made, a t ................... V
50 dozen Pillow Cases, Wearwell,
at each ........................................ ............................
Mohawk Sheets, 81x90
•
0
• at, e a c h ...... .’........................................................V
r V 1*. r "•’
L.v*

i'*r •

O Q

Cotton Blankets, Double Bed size,
each
......................................................
Cotton Blankets, full size 66x80, white and
gray, with pink and blue border, each
Cotton Blankets, white or gray, extra heuvy
wool, size 72x80, e a c h ..................................

I
t

All Plaid Wool Blankets, large size,
each .................................................. .........
All Wool Plaid Blanket, our special, full
sizo, 72x84, each ....................................

72x84, various coverings and colors,
price, each .....................................

Tailored Suits ranging from the simplest Tailored effects to
the most artistically designed, shown in O A ff A A U
ah'the correct m aterial............................j»

Styles that will appeal to every woman. Sma^t Sport effects
graceful walking coats in, jrnany
materials and colors. P rice ......

Showing o f the most distinctive and original styles in Serge,
Tricotine, Satins and othor New
A H j" U
Fabrics. P r ic e .... ..................................... »
p

�a brida w u placed. Mrs. Bill aeryad
• salad course followed by an ice
course.
Miss Thrasher wore on this occas­
ion a very becoming frock of green
georgette, with a picture hat of
black.
Among thoso enjoying Mrs. Hill’s
cordial hospitality were: Miss May
Thrasher, Mrs. Robert Hines, Mrs. C.
R. Kirtley, Mrs..Ben Caswell, Mrs.
Dick Brown, Miss Esther Miller, Miss
Norman Herndon, Mrs. Ed. Betts,
Mrs. Joo Chittenden, Mrs. Gibbona of
Tampa, Miss Fern Ward and Mrs.
Howard Smith.

This Forward

if'
R?5'
ec-

is jealous o f its reputation for Ser­
vice and seeks to justify it anew with
each individual problem presented
to it.
The knowledge and experience o f
this bank is available to its friends
and patrons at all times, regardless
o f the size o f their transactions.

HALLOWE'EN PARTY.
Misses Frances and Esther Louise
Hughey cntertalnod a number o f their
friends Monday eve at a Hallowe’en
pnrty at their home on Fifth street.
The home was tastefully and at­
tractively decorated with the usual
dccoraions for tho occasion with the
color schomo o f black and orange.
Thero were plenty o f spooks games
and stunts of original character were
indulged in until a late hour.
Especially clever was the make-up
of the fortuno teller and in her mind
and palm reading. Refreshments were
SERVICE
PROGRESS
STRENGTH
very daintily served, the color scheme
4 % INTEREST PAID
was here carried out In ice cream,
enkos, favors, etc.
At a late hour tho guests doparted
pronouncing the affair a decided suc­
in charming profusion in decorating cess.
tho rooms where tho card tables wore
MR. AND MRS. EI). RANDALL EN­
arranged.
TERTAIN
Of unusunl interest was tho game
MRS. FRED DAIGKIt, Society Editor, of bridge played during the after­
Monday evening the Christian En­
Phone 217-W_________
noon, high score being made by Mr*. deavor of the Congregational church
A. B. Wallace, who was awarded a with a few friends wero entortained
SOCIAL CALEN D AR
by Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Randall nt their
vanity enso.
At the conclusion of the card game home on West First street.
WEDNESDAY— Business mooting of
The rooniB wero decoratod with
the hostess served u naiad course with
the Womnn’a Club at tho club rooms
black cats, witches and other things
accessories and ten.
on Oak avenue.
Mrs. Aylctte Fitts neted ns substi­ pertnining to Hallowe’en.
Tho evening wan passed pleasantly
Wednesday— Mrs. Raymond Key will tute for nn nbsent club members. Mrs.
plnying
all sorts of Hallowo’on games
ontertaln at nn ovening bridgo par­ Britt's guests includod:
Mesdames
ty complimenting Miss May Fcr- Aylctte Fitts, R. E. Houmillat, E. F. and later in tho ovening Mrs. Randall
ran Thrasher.
Housholder, B. L. Perkins, M. S. Wig­ Hcrved hot chocolate, pumpkin pie and
gins,
A. B. Wallace, Clnudo Howard, and sandwiches ns refreshments.
Thursday— Mrs. W. J. Thigpen will
entortnln tho members of the Ev­ I). P. Drummond, H. B. Lewis, D. D.
EVENING BRIDGE CLUB
ery Week Bridge Club at her homo Caldwell, Hal Wight and Miss Mablc
Tho
members o f tho Evening
Bowler.
on Park avenuo nt 3 o'clock.
Bridge Club wero very charmingly enFrldny— WoodrufT-Thrashcr nuptinls
tertnined Tuesday evening by Mrs.
HALLOWE'EN PARTY
will bo solemnized nt tho First
W. C. Hill at her homo on Fourth
The Hallowe’en party given last street. There being three tables of
Prcsbytcrinn church nt 8 p. m.
evening by the members of tho St.
Snturdny—The Children's Hour will Agnes Guild, at the Parish House, players.
Quantities of lovely pink roses were
ho held at Central Park nt 4 p. m. was a decided huccoss.
used in decorating tho rooms whoro
MONDAY—Nov. 7, banquet for Busi­
The Parish House was very attrac­ tho enrd tables were placed.
ness and Professional Women’s tive with decorations of pulms, crepe
After n number of interesting rub­
Club, nt tho Temple Girl's Home, on paper, black cats, witches, jnck-o’-lnn- bers of bridge Mrs. R. E. Newman
Park avenue, at 8 o’clock.
terns, goblins and other Hallowe’en was awarded the prize for high score

The Seminole County

SOCIETY

Hair i Q Q Q D B D
1 0 :0 0 A . M .

THB SANFORD SMALL BOT
DID NOT RESENT THB
EARLY MORNING EDICT.
There was a great stirring at dawn
today. Boys were not routed out of
bed in timo for breakfast, for they
wero down in the railroad yards
bright and early waiting tho arrival
of the flying squadron o f tho four
trains that carry tho‘ ponders o f
Howo’s Great Londan Circus and Van
Amburg's Trained Wild Animals.
Yes, the bands will play, tho calli­
opes wil hoot and tho great lumbering
olephants— nineteen of ’em—will amb­
it heavily through the thoroughfares
at the end of the street parado, for
which many things are claimed as to
length, beauty and novelty. All the
cages and dens o f the combined me­
nageries will be open to the view of
the crowds along the curbs, and seven
bands and throe calliopes will arouse
the true circus day spirit with their
quickening lilts.
There’ll be something doing on the
lot from morn
midnight; from the
interesting sight o f "getting the eblg
thing up," to the last chariot race,
fro mthe parade to the departure of
the fourth section o f the trains after
the last big top wagon has been loaded.
The performance wil Istart at 2 and
8 p. m., and the doors of tho doublo
zoo will bo opon one hour carllor for
the visit of tho ethrongs before tho
opening pageantry Inaugurates tho
big show performances In tho three
rings, on the stages, in tho steel
arenas, In tho air and on tho track.
With hundreds of feature circus and
wild nnlmal acts, fifty clowns and
many novelties, tho Howe-Van Amburg circus day, it la claimed, will
bo ono that will bo pleasantly remem­
bered for its hugeness, its speed, its
color and Its all around "all circus"
appeal.

MONDAY BRIDGE CLUI1
Mrs. Charles L. Britt wns tho
charming hostess yestorday afternoon
whon sho entortained at bridgo nt her
home on Palmetto avenue, tho guests
including the members of the Mondny Bridge Club.
Pink dnhlins and coHinos wero used

The Presbyterians nro entortnining
Miss Ella Graham, of Kwangju, Koren. Sho is speaking at the Women’s
Efficiency Conferences over the state,
and will be nt tho Presbyterian
church tonight. The prayer meeting
will begin nt.'J o’clock and last 30
minutes, closing nt 7:30 in ordur to nllow those desiring to do so to attend
tho services at the Baptist church.

LARGE
STOCK
B E TT E R
SE R VIC E

“Foot o f First S t ”

*-

School Shoes
Little M iss Gypsy Smith
Elder Springs

Little M iss Mildred Caudle
SOI E. Fifth Street

N os. 199

BOYS AND GIRLS GET BUSY
Numbers for

6 pairs

are still out— you may find your
ber In one of the three schools—
E A ST SIDE PRIMARY,
W EST SIDE PRIMARY,
GRAM MAR SCHOOL.

T H E Y A R E OUT-

num­

F IN D THEM

S A N F O R D , F L A .
First Nat’l Bank Annex

"T he Family Shoe Store”

mviMtwi.

8 E E 0 U R W ,N D 0 W

AMERICANS CAPTURED.

GBAIN PRICES TUMBLE.

CHICAGO, Nov. 2.— Grain prices
undurwent a severe tumble todny, car­
rying wheat and oats down to tho low­
est level rcnchcdd in 1021- About six
cents a bushel was cut from tho valuo
o f wheat for futuro delivery, May
touching $1.02 ns compnrcd with
Post cnrdn— local views— 1c each at $1,00 3-8 to $1.01-2 nt yesterday’s
tho Herald office.
finish. Lack of buying wob a feature.

WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—State .lcpnrtmont advices from Chihuahua,
Mexico, received today, reported the
capturo of four Americans by Mexi­
can bandits. Payment of 25,000 pesos
wns demanded for their release which
was finally brought about by pay­
ment of only 5,000 pesos.

□ □ □ n OB □

M e e tin g s a t tH e B a p tis t C h u r c h

7 :3 0 P . M .

R A L P H S T O D G H I L L , Singer

------- EHEUD [gBBEQIsOCr] EDEBEtclEi
symbols. Gay culored lanterns were
strung from the four corners of the
room und with the lightH covered in
black nnd yellow paper cast a soft
glow over all. In one corner a for­
tuno teller's tent wns spread, and here
Miss Snrn Muriel dressed ns a "witch'
told fortunes for tho guests.
A splendid progrnm wns rendered
under tho direction of Mrs. Julius
Tnknch. Mrs. Newberry gave two de­
lightful groups of rending nnd was
called for several encores. Mr. Maur­
ice Hclston sang two soIob accompan­
ied by MiHH Snra Mnrdrc. Mrs. Tnk­
nch rendered two numbers in her
uhuuI charming manner.
After tho musicnl program games
nnd contests wero enjoyed under tho
leadership of Clifford Peabody, uBslstcd by Mrs. Raymond Key and Mrs.
Clifford Peabody.
A number of the G. K. S. girls dress­
ed as "goblins" served delicious sandv ’chcs nnd coffee.
'1 here wer&gt;* about or.u hundred and
fifty who enjoyed this dollghtful ev­
ening's entertainment und n goodly
sum was realized.
IIRIDGE PARTY FOR MI38
THRASHER

H0F-MAC
BATTERY
CO.

•

ium mm

DDBD

DAUGHTERS OF WESLEY ENTERTAINBD
Mrs. Vnnco Douglas and Mrs. W.
A. Lester entertained tho members of
tho Daughters of Wesley Class lust
ovening at their homo, 800 Magnolia
avenue.
Quantities o f golden rod and yel­
low daisies were used in decorating.
Bnskets nnd vases of these bridge
flowers wore effectively placed around
tho rooms,
A short business meeting was held
followed by a sociul hour during
which tho guests sewed for the Christmns bazaar.
At a Into hour tho hostesses sorvod
chicken salad sandwiches, olives, coffco and candy as refreshments.
Thero were nhoi t :ii::tcen mombors
present nt last night’s meeting.

OF FIR ST T W O P A IR S OF

KOREAN MISSIONARY HERE

GEORGE HYMAN, Preacher

B1IH111 BUM□

W IN N E R S

Mrs. W. C. Hill ontortnlned nt cards
yesterday afternoon at her homo on
Fourth street, honoring Miss May
Thrasher, a bride-elect of Friday.
A profusion of roses was used In
decorntlng, a pink, lavendar und green
color motif being curried out, nnd
scores for tho afternoon wero kept on
tnlllca done in designs suggestive of
brides.
At the conclusion of several rub­
bers of auction, Mrs. Robort Hlnos
having mndo high scoro, wns awarded
a sot of bud vases. Tho honoreo, wns
presented n gold Chinn condlmont set,
ns souvenir o f tho afternoon.
Following tho awarding of prizes,
tho guests wero invited Into the din­
ing room for refreshments. Tho table
hnd ns its centerpiece a cunning "Kew
pie" doll dressed ns n bride, on either
end of tho tnblo cut glass baskets
filled with pink roses, tho handlos
tied with pink nnd lavendar and
green, bride’s mnlds frocks marked
tho places of the guests. At Miss
Thrasher's place, s doll dressed as

nmong the ludies, which wns u silver
tea strainer. Mr. Newman huving
made high score among the men was
presented two linen hnndkcrchicfs.
At n late hour a tempting sulnd
course wns served. Dr. Ralph Stev­
ens substituted for nn nbsont club
member.
Those enjoying this lovely party
were: Mr. nnd Mrs. R. E. Newman,
Col. nnd Mrs. George Knight, Dr.
nnd Mrs. S. Puloston, Judge nnd Mrs.
F. E. Housholder, Mr. and Mrs. D.
L. Thrasher, Dr. Ralph Stevens nnd
W. C. Hill.

m * * * * *« *« r* * * * * *a
*
*
*
*

MEETINGS

_________ ____

Pt, * * * A * * KU *4 * * * * * *

*
*1

PARISH HOUSE KALENDAR.
Tuesday, Nov. 1, 8 p. m., "Measuring
Pnrty," S. Agnes Guild.
Frldny, Nov. 4, G; F. S., Pnrty, Mrs.
John Loonnrdl, directress.
NOTICE.
The Business and Professional Wo­
men’s Club will hold a banquet nt tho
Temple Girl's Home on Monday eve­
ning, Nov. 7th ut 8 o’clock. Tickets
$1.00, on sale at Temple Girl’s Home,
with Miss Agnes Berner at FlrHt Na­
tional Bnnk, and with Miss Katherins
Wilson, nt McCullor’s store. Plonso
get tickets by Frldny.
NOTICE
Tho Snlllo Harrison Chapter, N. S.,
D. A. R., will hnvo its regular month­
ly meeting Saturday, November 12,
at 3:30 p. m. with Mrs. L. R. Phil­
lips hostess, nt 717 Park avenue. The
lender for tho day will bo Mrs. Billie
J. Starling, subject "Noted Women of
the Revolution."

SPEER AND SON
It indicates that the world’s wheat KNIGHTS TEMI’ LAR ATTENTION.
PUTTING ON BIG SALE
crop totals 88,000,000 bushels moro
Tho officors and members of Taylor
FOR TEN DAYS ONLY. than InHt year nnd had a great deal to
ddo with the Iobb. Export business, Commnndcry will hold n full dress re­
In this issue of the Daily Hcruld however, developed ns a result of tho hearsal in tho order of the tomplc on
appears a page advertisement for break.
Wednesday ovening, November 2, at
Speer &amp; Son, for their big fall nnd
7 o’clock.
winter snlo that will Inst ten days,
All Sir Knights with uniforms
HULL TO BE CHAIRMAN.
nnt In which there are some good bar­
please attend in full dress equipment.
gains in seasonable goods of all kinds.
ST. LOUIS, Nov. 2.—Cordell Hull,
H. E. TOLAR,
To buy all this up to date, new, fresh of Tennessee ,will bo chosen chnlrCommander.
stock, nt tho beginning of the winter
mnn of the Democratic Nationnl Com­
senson, means much to tho buying
PIANO OWNERS NOTICE
mittee this afternoon to succeed Geo.
public, and they appreciate the efforts
White, of Marietta, It wns announced
Will bo in town for a limited time.
of this store nndd expect to crowd the
following rofusul of Edward Goltru, For immodiato servico phone—
place on Friday, opening day. For
committeeman from Missouri, to re­
MACK THE TUNER
instnnee, the ladies want coat suits,
sign to make way for Breckcnridgo 18216tp
Valdez Hotel
coats, winter wraps, nnd dresses; they
Long, of St. Louis nnd Washington,
want blankets, comforts, etc., they
D. C. Mr. Long nnd Mr. Hull wore tho
—Got your Scratch Pads from The
wnnt tho very latest styles in dross
only two nil factions ngroed upon for tho Hcrnld offlco.
goods and materials and they are get­
tho chairmanship.
the Herald office.
ting this pick o f the market at Speer’s
store, right now when they need it
most. In the mnjorlty of coses stores
wait until the winter senson Is over !
boforo putting on a sale o f this up to '
dnte fall nnd winter goods. Not so
with Speer &amp; Son. They nro giving you
tho advantage of tho new and fresh
and up to dntc lino of everything in
The Safest, Soundest, Wisest nnd Most Profitable Invest­
suits and dreHses nnd coats nnd hos­
ment in Sanford Today is
iery, nnd furnishings, as well ns piece
goods and draperies nt tho very be­
ginning of the senson nt prices that
will move them right now. This is
Ask any of tho people who have bought through us und they
ono of the best opportunities to snvo
will tell you that their investments in Roal Estate have
money thut has been given to you this
gained for them a profit of between—
season. Just rend tho advertisement
nnd carefully note tho prices. They
40 AND 100%
will convince you that this Is your
Wo have the following property for quick solo at prices
grent opportunity to got the very best
that will net you n handsome profit:
at very reasonable prices and nt tho
Four adjoining lots on Thirteenth St., between Mag­
beginning of winter. Rond tho page
nolia and Palmetto Aves. These lots face city park.
nd in this issue.
Four ndjoinmg lots on Pnrk Ave. between 11th and

Investments
SANFORD REAL ESTATE

WAS SERVING SENTENCE-

JACKSONVILLE, Nov. 2.—R. M.
Buffington, escaped Duval county '.onvlct ,was serving a sentence of one
CARPETS A N D RUGS
year for grand larceny, county o f­
W A SH E D
and cleaned at your home or we will ficials said today. He escaped from
call for nnd deliver. Hamilton Beach a road camp near here last Saturday.
Electric Washers used. — Snhford
Post cards—local view*—l c each at
Steam Preasery, 317 lat St. Phone 560
100-0tp the Herald office.
t* t a daily w ould wajtt ad.

TAY

a daily

LLD w o n AD.

12th streets.
Threo lots on Magnolia nvenuo between 12th and 13th
streets.
Three lots on Sanford avenue between 11th and 12th
streets.
City water, gas, electric lights nnd sewers to all this
property.

Geo. W . Knight
R E A L ESTATE A N D IN SU R A N C E

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD; WEDNESDAY,' NOVEMBER 2,1921
~~~~
UHle Happonlage
Mentloa ef
(falters la Brief
personal Items
ef latereat

In and A b o u t
dt The C ity dt

f

•

Snmmsry ef the
netting Smell
Talks Succinctly
Arranged for
Herald Roadere

W. E. Swift, o f Jacksonville, waa it
city yesterday transacting bull

-------------- —

th e w e a t h e r
For Florida! Fnlr tonight and
W ednesdayi cooler in South
portion tonight.

Groat day today.
Go nnd take your children, yea.
If you have no children, take some
other mnn’s, but go.
Wo oro talking about the circus and
„0 are you. It ia all right to say you
don't care for a circus. But you don’t
mean it.
Dr. Oliver Miller, o f Jacksonville, is
spending somo time here with his
father, T. J. Miller.
J. H. Hughes, of Sobring, formerly
of this city, arrived horo yesterday
for an indefinite stay.

SANFORD’S
TEMPERATURE
Well, wo shot them with a
natural yestorday. It was cool
In tho early morning
and
seemed to grow colder dur­
ing tho day and last night
was really colder than usual
and the result this morning in
tho weather is 74. Not so
bad when you think about it
at this time of tho year and a
circus In town at the samo
timo. Circus usually comes in
with tho cold wenthor. How­
ever, it Is just right today and
no kick coming. Means bet­
ter trade, better feeling, bet­
ter cropB, better town, *
5:40 A. M. NOVEMBER 2
Maximum ......................... 74
Minimum ............ „........... 52
Range ..............................
55
Barometer .......................20.97
Calm.and clear.

Tho Temple Pipe Organ Club will
hold its Christmas Bazaar November
20th. The place to bo annonced lat182-Mon-Thur-tfc answer the question, "IIow to get An­
er.
swers to Prayer." This ought to in­
It. 0. Burnsdnlo, o f tho Nosh-Link terest all of us. 7:30 p. m.
Abstract Co., has returned from a
BATTERIES— Our Pullbusiness trip to Orlando and Jackson­ "EXID E"
mnn cars, airplanes, submarines,
ville.
telephones and great 7,000 mllo wire­
The Ladles of the Episcopal Church less stations are equipped with tho
mnster "EXIDE" Batteries, the bat­
will hold their Bazaar and Supper,
tery is tho life of your car, get tho
December 1st and 2nd in tho Parish
best. Wc recharge and repair all
House.
171-tfc
makes.— Roy Brothers, Phono 548.
170-tf-c

Princess Pat?

master battery o f the world. Do
be milled by the so-called just as
L—Ray Brothers. Phone 548.
175-tf-c

183-tfc

Wmthor is just right for those big
snles the Sanford merchants are pull­
It. L. McKonzIo, of Jacksonville,
ing every week now. Get busy and
representing the Kelly-Springfield
make liny while the sun shines nnd cut
tires, was in the city yesterday at
Ice while the weather is cold.
tending to business nnd mingling with
friends.

Princess Pat?

183-tfc
Have your watches nnd Jowolry re­
paired at McLaulin’s. Two first class
Party finding button in O. K.
watch makers. Prompt sorvice.
BREAD will receive 50c.
During
llU-tfc
week there will ho a special button
Dr. .1. N. Robson, Alfred Robson,I JV* in
K' Ilrcml ™ rtlj *L0° *
Paul Shoemaker, Ralph Warren and flnder- Y °[,r * roco* " iU * iv°
tlJ°
Maurice Ilelston, formed a congenial I
Th«r o 1wil1 1,0 ft bu“ ° " in
party motoring to Tampa, Clearwater Hno ,oaf cnch &lt;lny188' lwc
ami St. Petersburg Sundny.
Dr. nnd Mrs. Brownlee, Mrs. R. J.
Holly, Mrs. ,T. N. Whitncr, Mrs. Bul­
Party finding button in O. K.
HUEAD will receive GOc.
During lock, ami several other members of
week thcro will bo a special button the Presbyterian church, attended a
put in 0. K. Bread worth $1.00 to meeting of the missionary societies
finder. Your grocer will give you tho j
Oakland today.
money. Thero will bo n button in
--------one loaf each day.
188-lwc BATTERIES— America's first
car
--------! was regularly equipped with startPrnycr meeting tonight at the Con- ing and lighting Batteries in 1911,
gregationnl church. Mr. Burhuns will this battery was an “ EXIDE", today

Today, tho personal skill of tho optical specialist is aided and sup­
plemented by scientific refraction instruments developed by modern
science. Ills diagnosis nnd prescription are accurate to n degree that
was impossible a fow years ago before thcao Instruments were de­
veloped.
My refractive room is.equipped with such scientific instruments
as the Universal Opthalmometer, Dezeng Phoromuter, Dczcng O p h ­
thalmoscope and Rntinoscope Set, Hardy Trial Case, etc. But theso
scientific instruments would bo of no vnlue unless I hod the proper
skill nnd experience In the manipulation of thorn. My service is such
that you can accept it with entire satisfaction.

TOM MOORE
Optometrist-Optician— Opp. Postoffice
B E TT E R SEE MOORE

J. N. Hampton, of Waycross, was a
business vlslto rhore yesterday for
the A. C. L. R. R.

And don’t you know that even wooden indians move on Hallowe’en?
Last year in a neighboring town a wooden indian left his cigar store
post to be found next morning walking in a movie.
Everyone goes
somewhere on Hallowe’en.

F. Parrett, of New York City, was
among Sunford’B quoto of out-of-town
visitors hero yesterday.
A. O. Malmberg, of New York City,
mode his headquarters at the Montazuma yesterday while here on busi­
ness.

Hupmobile makes fin­
al reduction, open mod­
els, $1250, Detroit.— B.
&amp; O. M OTOR CO., San­
ford.

Ibrora

Dim

&gt; LYWi

some special shirts and neckwear for our young men to wear that
night. They are fine values— appropriate patterns. And the new suit
you want for that night— just you come and look at what we have for
you.

188-tfc
Remember that tho doors o f the cir­
cus open tonight at 7:80, and tho show
begins promptly at 8 o'clock. This is
fo r the information of the public as
they have been asking tho Herald o f­
fice about the time all day.
fTho many friends of Dr. Oliver J.
Miter aro glad to see him hero on a
few days' visit with his father, T. J.
Miller. Dr. Miller has been very till
for. somo time at his home in Jack­
sonville, but is recovering now and
hopes to be all right in a few woelcs. STEAMSHIP MAN
SEES OOOD TIMES.
Harry Neol and LeCInlro Irwin, of
Business conditions throughout tho
tho Herald Printing Co., returned
country,
especially in tho east and In
from Okeechobee City today aftor
the
shipping
industry, nre bettor and
Bpending several days thcro looking
bright
prospects
nre in sight.
after tho Okeechobee News. They
This
is
tho
way
E. A. Kelly, assist­
report everything nt Okeechobee City
ant
general
manager
of the Clydoas being in a flourishing condition
Mnlory
Steamship
Co.,
with general
and the News getting n bunch of fino
hondqunrtcrs
In
New
York,
sees the
business.
conditions now existing in this coun­
try.
' } ;"V1H
Princess Pat?
Mr.
Kelley
arrived
in
Jncksonvllio
183-tfc
Monday from Tampn, after spending
Walter W. Rose, of the Rose In­ sevcrnl cinys thero in the interest of
vestment Co., of Orlnndo, and a woll his company. Ho will rcmnln in Jack­
known figure in the Florida League, sonville Bovernl dnys boforo return­
having been president of tho league ing to New York.
During most of Mondny ho wns In
for two seasons, was in tho city yosterday on business. Mr. Rose has his conference with Henry G. White, gen­
eye on Homo Sanford real CBtata and eral agent of tho Clydo Steamship
thinks this city has a wonderful fu- Co., In Jacksonville, Tho two discuss­
ed tho situation gcnernlly In Jackson­
turo.
ville nnd other points In the state.
Mr. Kelly came to Jacksonville for
Princess Pat?
tho
purposo of organizing nnd IncrenH*
183-tfc
ing freight shipments north, ho said,
nnd believes thnt this line this
Hupmobile makes fin­ winter nnd in the future will enrry
al reduction, open mod­ more freight than ever before.
els, $1250, Detroit.— B. Ho was deeply interested, in tho
river line opernted by the company
O. M OTOR CO., San­ from Jncksonvill to Snnford and beliovca thnt when the daily sailings nre
ford.
188-tfc innugurnted ' will prove n valuable
nsset to the fruit growers nnd truck
And always remember that the San­ fnrmors throughout tho stnte.
Hundreds of persons who have nev­
ford Horntd Is the plnce to gut re­
sults. It goes into the homes of tho er beforo visited Florida nre coming
peoplo nnd the people read the ads. this winter and nt present tho Clydo
They also note tho merchants that Lino, operating three Hnllings n week
ore making a bid for their trade. If betwen Now York nnd Jacksonville
you don't believe it juBt try an ad­ nre booked to capacity nnd have been
vertisement nnd quote prices nnd see this wny for several weeks, Mr, Kelly
how quick your store will fill with pointed out.
customers.
Conditions nre gradually chnnging
in the east nnd the depression is be­
Hupmobile makes fin­ ing lifted, ncconllng to the assistant
general manager, who bus kopt keenly
al reduction, open mod­ in touch with tho situation in his of­
els, $1250, Detroit.— B. fices in New York.
Florida is in better shape than
&amp; O. M OTOR CO., San­
other Htates, Mr. Kolly Htnted, nnd
ford.
from viewing the conditions in Jack­
188-tfc sonville nnd at Tampa, he thinks
Jacksonville will enjoy n prosperous
HANK ON BEER
year.
TO RHINO HUGE
Mr. Kelly, while In Tumpn, where
8 UM IN TAXES. ho went to view tho damage done by
tho recent tropieul hurricane that
WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.— Revenue struck tho cigar city, several dnys
exports today hanked on beer as a ago, talked to hotel nnd business men
now revenue producer.
there who are optimistic over the
New rules allowing honvy with­ conditions for the coming year.
drawals of renl beer, revenue officiuln
Tho storm, although it. did some
said, will add many millions of dol­ damage to the Mallory Line clocks In
lars to tho treasury.
Tampa, has not handienpped the line
Bcforo tho dry era in 1918 heer and in making sailings and handling
other fom ented liquors brought $120,* freight consigned to hiH company.
000,000 taxes Into tho treasury. Rev­
Mr. Kolly came directly to Tampn
enue records today showed that this from Now York nnd stopped over in
year tho taxes from that source wore Jacksonville onrouto to New York.
practically nil—only $25,000.
Reports thnt wore exaggerated reach­
Medicinal beor sales may take on ed Now York concerning tho storm in
such volume, olTIcinls said, that a part Tampa and docka woro not as hndly
of the treasury's usual deficit may bo damaged as first reported.—Jackson­
offset by mn: liquors rovenucs.
ville Metropolis.

&amp;

JAIL DEBOER ON
MURDER CHARGE.
MIAMI, Nov. 2.—John DeBoer, a
Hollander, Is In the county jail to­
day In connection with tho murder
of John Beat, a painter, whose body,
weighted down by a heavy baance
wheel, was found in Blacayne bay
yestorday. Gest, whoso family resides
nt No. 416 Central Park, west, New
York, had been in Miami about five
montha. He apparently had been (Pad
about a week. His hend had been
cruabtd by a heavy Instrument.

,

S a n fo r d , F l a .

FIVE ROOM BUNGALOW
Located within fifty feet o f brick street to
be sold this week on very reason­
able terms.
See

A . P. C O N N E L L Y

C L A S S IF IE D A D S
Classified advertisements, .1 cents a line. No ad taken for lees than
25 cents, and positively no classified nds charged to anyone. Casa
must accompany all orders. Count five words to a line and remit ac­
cordingly.

FOR SA L E
FOR SALS—Best opportunity for
wholcsnlo and retnil fish market on
East coast Building, dock and ship­
ping platform. Address \V. I*. Wil­
kinson, Now Smyrna, Fla. 10-17-lm
MIRACLE CONCRETE CO.— Build­
ing nnd pier blocks, cement pockats,
cement sidewalks with guarunteo to
last nnd not brenk or crack. General
cement contracting. All work guar­
anteed. Elm avenue between Third
und Fourth street.—J. E. Terwllllger,
Prop. Phono 224-W.
178-lm-tfc

FOR RENT— Bed room, 311 I’ nrk ave­
nue.
178-tfe
CSI
FOR RENT—Suburban home,
107tfc
308-J.
F W RENT— Lower floor of rcsiMagnolia
203
donee, furnished,
185-Gtp
Ave.
Light
housekeeping;
rm
w vm
rooms Mrs. Baldwin, 210 French
189-Gtp
Avo.
FOR RENT— Bedroom nnd kltchenotto furnished. 300 Elm Avenue.
180-5tp

W A N T E D _______

FOR SALE— Eight young mules, all WANTED—Customers for fresh mlik,
good condition, good workers. Will
morning nnd evening deliveries,— R.
sell one pair of them at a grout bur- L. Garrison. Phono 3711. 109-St-To
guin.— G. F. Smith, Sanford or Her­
ald office,
180-tfc WANTED—Tcnm work. Apply M.
178-lStp
Hanson Shoe Shop.
FOR BALK— Beautiful Scotch Collie.
SHOW
CASE
Loves children. Cali 112. 188-3tc SECOND- HAND
Wanted. Herald Printing Co.
FOR 8 AL&amp;— One practically new
183-5tp.
Keo speedwagon, one new 5 passen­
ger Ford touring car with true!: body, WANTED—Show case, five or six
feet long. Herald Printing Co.
curtainu all around. Will sell elthor
183-5tp.
one.—Snnford Mattress Co., Snnford,
Fin,__________________________ 186-Otc WANTED—An ice box that will hold
100 to 1G0 lbs Ico. Notify Herald.
FOR SALE— 2Gi game roosters nnd
187-tfe
25 hens and pullets.— Code Hill,
Lockhart, Fla.

187-3tp WANTED— Two unfurnished rooms,
Hultnblo for light housekeeping,
FOR SALE— Have two small ornngo
close
In by couple without children.
groves nt u bargain, Will tako city
References
exchanged. Address "J.
property as part pay for one or both.
N."
enro
of
Horuld.
18fl-tf*dh
Reply to P. O. Box 134.
18-0tp

FOR SALE— Rough frnming lumber WANTED—A cash bargain in n rosidonee, fairly close In. Advise loca­
and hoards cheap. Also sn.no good
tion
and best price In first reply.— E.
sound mules.— II, S. Long, Osteon.
180-fltp
Phono 4811.
188-Gtp Clayton, care Herald.
FOR SALE—9 room house In good WANTED TO RENT— Residence, of
about six rooms, unfurnished, for
condition, 313 Magnolia uvc. Ex­
ono
year or longer. Reasonably close
cellent location. Price $0,000. 180-3tc
In, somo yard room desired. Give lo­
WOOD— Dry oak and pine, 2 strnn cation nnd price, In answer to P. O.
load $7.60, delivered.— D. W. Short, Box 719, Snnford.
189-6tp
Longwood, Fla.
189-3tp
WANTETTT0 KENT— With privilege
FOR SALE— Ladies1 second band
o f buying, u cottage or bungalow in
clothing In excellent corldition. Can good condition. Furnished or unfur­
bo Boon at MIbh Saints’ Drug Store, nished.— G. R. Snyder. Phono 5012.
Sanford Ave.
100-3 tp
189-2tp
FOR
fjALfe—
Ginnt-dwnrf
nuatur(
PLUMBERS STRIKE IN MIAMI.
tlum plants; also ferns. Mrs. H. N. [ DERELICT SCHOONER SALVAGED
190-2tc
MIAMI, Oct. 2.— Plumbers employ­ Lumley, 002 French.
JACKSONVILLE, Nov. 2.— A three
ed in nine union shops went out on FOR SALE—Favorite lo u r burner
masted
-schooner fount! drifting off
gas
stove
nnd
oven,
$25
cash.
Wight
strike today when tho employes refus­
Grocery Co.
100-tpc. the southeast coast o f Forida, was
ed to sign up for the old scale of wa­
towed to St. Johns bar today by the
ges. Tho plumbers havo beon receiv­
FOR
R
E
N
T
coast
guard cutter Yamacraw. Tho[
ing $50 for flvo days’ work, while un­
vessel,
supposedly a victim o f the
der a now agreement proposed by tho FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms.
Apply
1004
Elm
Ave,
152-tfc
cent
hurricane
,had not been identi­
employers thy would work five and
fied
today
and
nothing waa known
one-half days for $75,50. There are six FOR RENT—Two' large, connecting
of
the
fate
o
f
its
crew. The schooner*!
"open shops" in Miami. Four or five
rooms, suitable for couple, desiring
bottom
had
been
newly painted red.
union shops signed up for the old light housekeeping rooms. 219 Oak
scale.
Ave185-tfc
T »T A DAILY XXJULLB WAXT A A

�T H B a A lV V O R D O J U L T
had appeared both in good spirit* and
tB U C R L E C A S E
health and, in fact, was pictured as
."tripping from thgwom."
W I L L B E T R IE D
That threo-dunrteii.of an hour lal­
N E X T M d t f t iA Y ter Mrs. Bambino Delmont, friend of
Miss Rnppe, and Miss Zey PyvrbnPromisee Developments Thst Prevost, actress, knocked at the door
Have Not Come to Light
opd finally induced Arbuckle to open
It.
4 } PAN ^RA N qiSC O , Nov. 2. — 7*0
That "Fatty"- w is in a bnlhrobo,
® 'mfcrOBcope promises to bo n fateful
pajamas and slippers. , On the bed
.Invthfment In thb trial of Roscoe
lay Virginia Rappe, groaning with
“ Fatty" Arbuckle, set for November
pain. Sho was fully dressed but her
7. The film comedian Is charged with
hair was down,
the death of Virginia Rnppe, as the
as /
That Arbucklo. attempted to use
rosult of an orgy in his hotel suite
an ice application, and that the genon Labor Day.
oral belief was that she had either
What the microscope reveals of
become suddenly ill or had been
mu^e testimony jfrom. the floor and
drinking too much. Several remedies
furnishings of roo|n 1211], the cham­
wore suggested. In the meantime
ber whore tho flip* actress was in an
others of the partjf helped the strick­
hour transformed from a Jovial guest
en woman to disrobe and she was car­
to an hysterical woman with
the
ried to tho bathroom and given
.touch, o f death upon hor, may prove
plunge in the tub. She still groaned
as potent ns the talc o f any witness.
and shrieked with pain.
Edward 6 . Heinrich, noted crimin­
That she was heard to moan: "I'm
ologist and micoscroptat, has
for
dying. I'm dying. Ho hurt me," hor
weeks been subjecting that room to
words not being taken Beriously at tho
the minutest expert scrutiny,
and
time by fellow guests.
findings, says the prosecution, will
That when efforts to quiet her fail­
Constitute tho outstanding new devel­
ed, Arbucklo threatened to throw her
opment at tho trial.
out tho window if "she didn't shut
- Although District Attorney Mat­
up.'
thew Brady will not even hint at
That finally the house physician
the nature of this "surprise evi­
wbb called. That he suspected
she
dence" it Is known that the state
might havo suffered internal in­
thus expects to support its conten­
jury, and advised her removal to a
tion that Virginia Rappe received
hospital.
her death injuries as a result of viol­
That she wns taken to the Wake­
ence by Arbuckle, while the two were
field sanitarium and attended by sev­
alono behind locked doors.
eral doctors and several nurses.
Heinrich has been comparing a
That sho said to one of these nurs­
lock o f .Miss Rappo’s hair with
es, "Roscoe did it. I am going to
strands found in tho Arbuckle room;
die."
he had placed tho dead girl's cloth­
That examination showed a severe
ing under tho powerful lens; ho hns
hruiso on onrf arm and lesser bruises
examined filaments of lint, lncc and
on one leg and that post mortem ex­
other minuto objects fo r some reveal­
aminations showed a ruptured blad­
ing clue ns to what took place,
der.
By just such sciontific probing,
Heinrich beenme the sensation at tho
HIGH FREIGHT RATES
recent trial of Win. A. Hightower,
IS WHAT IS AILING
slayer of tho Colma priest, where his
COUNTRY AT PRESENT.
testimony proved n weighty factor in
conviction.
Mr. Moses Overstreet hns just re­
Any microscopic evidence which the
turned
from an extended visit to the
prosecution felt it expedient to pre­
sent would be designed to strengthen west, ami a survey of business con­
tho testimony of Zoy Pyvron-Provost ditions in that section led him to say
and AHco Blake, actresses and guests this morning, in an interview ,thnt the
at tho “ party,” upon whom it is nnswor to much of the business de­
known Brady now largely depends to pression now inflicting tho country,
maintain the assault and mnnslnught- is high freight rates.
“ The farmers throughout the mid­
er charge.
dle
west nro suffering and hoping."
Defense attorneys, guided by tho 1
shrewd Gavin McNab, uro taking said Mr. Overstreet, "but ns I analyze
counter precautions, for recent crim­ tho situation, thcro can be but little
inal trials hnvo demonstrated a grow­ hope ns long ns tho railroads main­
ing susceptibility of juries to this tain tho present freight rates.
character of evidence.
"There are thousands of tons of hay
With Heinrich’s expert analysis ns and nlfnlfn in Kansas and Missouri
tho only hinted new element in its that can not bo moved bemuse tho
case, the prosecution will rely large­ freight would ent up the profit. We
If anyone bore thought that IIowo's
ly upon testimony of witnesses al­ might consume a gront deal of it here Circus wus a small one-ring affair
ready hoard at the preliminary hear­ in Floridn, but tho producers nro pro­ that would bo an aggregation of Bide
ing.
shows and poanut stands, they were
hibited from shipping it here.
In substance this is:
surprised
this morning when the cir­
"I met n womns from Nebraska
That Virginia Rnppe left Los An­ who told me Hint com In that state is cus rolled In nnd had more cars, more
geles in good hcnlth, in tho company selling for sixteen nnd seventeen horses, moro wagons, more atVmals
o f Al Scmnachor, her munager. Hear­ cents a bushel, but coni is sixteen dol­ than any circus that hns been in San­
ing of the Arbuckle party at tho St. lars a ton. So the farmers nro going ford in many yonrs.
Francis hotel she remarked that she lo bum com as tho winter’s fuel.
Howe's Circus is n real circus in ev­
would "go up uml sec if it was worth
"What with freight rates nnd tho ery sense of tho word and best of ull
while.”
cost of hnndling them, hogs and cat­ is n clean aggregation that will give
That sho sat around with various
tle sold in market are netting the you vnluo received nnd is not looking
guests who came and went, taking
for a chance to tnko your money with
farmers next to nothing."
two or threo drinks of gin, but not
Mr. Overstreet was struck with the any two by four inothodB employed by
Bufficient to cause intoxication.
thrift nnd hustle of thcpeoplc o f tho some o f the traveling aggregations.
That after a time she went to a
washroom o ff room 1221, in the Ar­ middle western section, n c charac­
buckle suite, but finding it occupied, terized Kansas nnd Missouri, as the CLEVER CHECK CASHIER
CAUG1I WITH SMILE
started for a washroom off N». 1219, bread pan of the world. Ho vlBltcd
Chicago, St. Louis nnd Kansas City
SHE ALW AYS WORE.
Arbuckle’s room.
,..
while
ho
wns
away,
his
trip
lasting
n
That she was followed by Arbuckle,
CHICAGO, Nov. 2.— Dorothy Wil­
who closed and locked tho door be­ month.— Reporter-Stnr.
son, said by tho authorities to ho tho
hind thorn.
Sell it with a Herald Want Ad.
That up to this time Vlrginln Rappe
clovorcst chock forger in tho country,
is bing hold in Jail in default of $20,000 bond. Hor onchanting smile trap­
ped hor— tho samo smile that caused
everyone to hand hor tho cash without
qustion whon sho presented a forged
chock.
For moro than six months sho flit­
ted In nnd out of Chicago, Milwaukee,
KansnH City nnd scores
of small
towns. Bank cashiers, hotel clerks and
taxi drivers wore her victims.
Wishes to announce the opening of an office in Sanford for
"W o woro always a jump behind
the practice of Chiropractic or Spinal Adjustments.
hor," Baid Dotoctlvo Sergeant John
Noonan. "But today wo lonrnodi n
protty woman with n fetching smllo
had Just cashed sovcrnl checks. It wns
Dorothy, all right."
Hor hearing was set for November
4, nnd It was said sho would bo un­
The great and most remarkable strides that Chriopractic is
able to make bond fixed at $20,000
making are due solely to the wonderful good that adjust­
when sha was arraigned.
ments are accomplishing. Can you name any other science
"She changed the color of her hair,
that deals with tho healing of the sick and afflicted that se­
she woro dlfforont hats, changed her
cures restorative results in 90 per cent of caseB treated? You
name nnd was able to disguise ovrycannot. You ask, "How do you know this is true?” Sim­
thing but hor smile," said Noonan.
ply through observation and statistics gathered. To prove
"W o don't know her renl namo yet.
to your owu satisfaction tho truth o f this statement we can
Sho cashed chocks under the name o f
give you first hand facts; furnish you with names of people
Dorothy Wilson, Doris Wilson, Doris
in your own community who have.takon Ghiropratic adjust­
Clark and Doris Clamant*."

v,

nm v 1

.4*
_

-

, 1y&amp;-.

*■ii.yv -v

&gt;
..

Nellie Roth,* Chief _W om
an Wild Animal Trainer
if;
Howe’s Great London Circus
Howe’s Circus is spread out over tho
greatur part of the lake front today
nnd it Bhows in every detail that it is
an up-to-date nnd first class organiza­
tion with everything that a real cir­
cus should l&gt;o. The men connected
with tho circus are business men und
they believe in giving the public a
square deal in every particular. Their
pnrndo demonstrated tiiat Howe's had
the goods and circuses nro judged
largely by their pnradcs—in this re­
spect it would ho well to note that
Howe's Circus hus the longest, the
biggcHt and the best parade of any
circus eutour this season— this is nc-

cording to press reports from nil over
tho United States,
Tho animals nnd tho horses nro fea­
tured in this circus—in fact horses
make a circus if you want to get back
to old theories about a circus and no
circus is rcnl unless it follows the old
trnditions. Horses trained to tho min­
ute nnd almost human in inltclligence
and wild animals that arc trnined to
do all kindB of nets are tho outstand­
ing feature of Howe's CircuB. Howovor, you must not forget that tho
other purts of tho circus nro also right
up to tho minute. They hnvo won­
derful aerial artists, trapeze porfortn-

ors, wiro walkers nnd clowns, those
funny follows that also go to make up
tho real old time circus and Howe’s
clowns are the best in tho profossion.
However, go yourself and see this
circus, It will probably bo your only
chanco to see ono this season. Go
nnd take tho children if you need nn
excuse but go anyhow for regardless
of your ago you will enjoy tho ani­
mal shows under that premier trainer,
Louio Roth, the king of thorn all, and
his wife, Nolllo Roth, who is tho
queen of them’ all. You havo a real
circus In town today.

.on

D r. W m . K erm od ej
CHIROPRACTOR

See the

Demonstration.

of the
Mottletone System

THE WONDERFUL RESULTS FROMi
CHIROPRACTIC

ments and owe their present .state of health to them.
equally beneficial to young and old.

It la

Consultation and Spinal Analysis F R E E

WM. KERMODE, D. C.
DOCTOR OF CH IROPRACTIC
ima 14'in. J 1/

11.

Office Hours 9-12 a. m .; 1-6 p. m.
Sanford, Florid*
ftbom 1 , Garner-Woodruff Bldg.

TO SETTLE DISPUTES.
WASHINGTON, Nov, 2.— Railroads
of the southeastern territory and tho
four railroad brotherhoods today annoli need the establishment o f a joint
board to adjust disputes growing out
-i*}:
him vf vd r
a , t
of personal grievances or out o f inttrpretatlon or application 0$ sched­
ules ,praetioe* and agreement* which
cannot be aettled by direct conference.

a Factory Expert
room
X hom e w hich is not
tible to the subtle charm
tletoneing with Devoe
Finish.

in your
suscep­
o f M ot­
Velour

halls and other rooms a more
restful atmosphere,

sy

Mottletone Is simplicity In itself.
It can be done easily and econ­
omically over plaster, burlap or
wallpaper with D evoe Velour
Finish merely touched here and
there with a handful o f ordinary
wrapping paper.

Stic and durable decorat gives the bed-room *

Come In and do a te1
Mottletoneing yourself.

Its rich, w arm effect o f color
and texture makes the living
and dining-room more cheerful

B A L L H A R D W A R E CO M PAN Y
East First St.,

Sanford, Florida

�TO

'VAI'iV

THE SANFORD D A IL Y H

PRESIDENT OP RUSSIA

Wllicn WILL BE STAGED BY THE
W C AL POST OF THE AMER­
ICAN LEGION.
Tho following business concerns,
fraternities and Clubs, o f Sanford
£ v 0 Ubcrnlly subscribed their names
m ngreomont to enter a decorated
float or automobile to represent their
respective lines o f business. Names
will bo added from time toi Gmo and
from tho floats slresdy listed it will
be a parade'of magnitude never before witnessed In theclty:
American Legion.
Sanford Paint ft Wall Paper Co.
Woman's Club, Welfare Dept.
D. C. Marlowe.
Hopkins Shoe Shop.
'A. J. Losslng, (6 ).
&lt;3. A. Matthews.
Ball Hardwire Company.
Lloyd’ Shoe "Sforei
West Side Grocery.
Bryon-Whceler M ^ r Co.
Wight Tiro Co.
B. 4 0. Motor Co. (2 floats).
Sanford Cycle Co.
Haynes ft Ratliff.
City of Sanford.
Mobley’s Drug Store.
Routh pros., Bakery.
Cates’ Crato Co.
Coca-Cola Co,
Woodruff 4 Watson.
Hnlght A Welland.
Cates Grocery Co.
Deano Turner.
Newberry’s Drug Store.
Carter Lumbor Co.
T. J. Miller A Son.
Union Pharmacy.
Sanford Shoo A Clothing Co.
Hanson’s Shoo Repair Shop.
Roberts Grocery Co.
Bnumcl’s Specialty Shop.
RnfTcld-IIonlg Co.
F. P. Rines.
A. Knnner.
F. Schwarts.
Chero-Cola Co.
Rrown’B Market.
Caldwell Furniture Co., Inc.
L. C. Leonnrdy Moat Market.
Water’s Candy Kitchen.
Surprise Shoo Store.
Bandd's Emporium.
Seminoje Market,
Rivers’ Bros. (2 floata).
Pure Food Morkot.
Kent Vulcanizing Co.
Miller’s Bakory (4 floats).
Star Theatre.
Cle-Troc Tractor.
Gillon A Fry.
John T. Brady.
Porklns A Britt (2 floats).
R. C. Maxwell.
Ed. Higgins, Inc.
Hof-Mac Battery Co. (2 floats).
Sanford Steam Lnundry.
Wight Grocery Co.
Woman’s Club.
Mrs. J. M. Drcsnor.
Knights of Columbus.
Sanford Farmers’ Exchange.
L. P. McCullor.
Tho Yowoll Co.
American Fruit Growers.
Snnford Furniture Co.
Hill Hardware Co.
C. W. Stokes,
niackshcar Mfg. Co.
The Herald Printing Co.
Popular Market, two floats.
Frank Akors Tiro Co.
Sanford Truck Co.
Snnford Mattress Factory.
Tho Auxiliary of tho Sallio Harri­
son Chapter N. S., D. A. R. (Chlldron
of tho American Revolution).
Any one welcomo to enter a float
or decorated car. Suitable cash prizes
will bo nwurdod by the Flrt Notional
Bank, Seminole County Bank and Peo­
ples’ Bnnk of Sanford.
Anlerlcnn Agr. Chemical Co.
Elder Springs Wntcr Co.
W. S. Pnrkor.
,
T. W. Williams.
Camp Flro Glrle
Chnmbor of Commorce.
Chase A Company.
Rotary Club,
N. Do V. Howard.
Chapter of U. D. C.
Thrasher A Garner.
Bowers A Roumellat.
Social Dept., Woman,’s Club.
Znchary-Tyler Veneer Co.
Sanford Battery Service.
L. ,0. Jlevanij.
M. D. Barber.
Anyone wishing to enter call Lloyd’a
Shoe Store.
168-tf.
Affl(C FOR YOUR RECEIPT.
Subscribers to the Dally Herald
should ask for a receipt when the
carrier boya collect from you. It IS
the on)y protection yon hays In case
th*. carrier changes or there happens
t « v - - - Intake In the account. 1Each
-carrier boy I s ' supplied with receipt
hooka, and Is commanded fefl'gire a
• .tty*
*TiV*7
receipt by tho Herald. Sea that you
rot your receipt at tho end o f each
week if you sire paying that way.

AO

Michael Kalentii, president uf the
Russian soviet republic, delivering on
address to peasants nnd soldiers dar­
ing one of his many tours of ttib
.provinces. Katenin wns n fnnnor and
rob) Tftnltnr -before tno revnlntlrtn.' •Its
haa long been associated with tbs
radical movement In RtiHsla.
Ths Balkan States.
Tho Balkan states are Albania, Bul­
garia, Oreece, Montenegro, Rumania,
Sfcrlilii nnd Turkey, Allinnln has main­
tained an Independent government at
Tirana nines' September 2, 1014. Burls
Iff is king nf Bulgarin, Constantine of
Greece, Nlchulhs I of Montenegro, Fer­
dinand of l(nnmnta nnd Mohammed
VI Is sultan of Turkey. In Decem­
ber, 1018, Serbia wns proclaimed a
pnrt of Jtigo-Sbivln, new unitary Htato
of the Serbs, Croats nnd Slovenes.

NO CHANGE M ADE
IN B A SK E T B A L L
NEW YORK, Nov. 2.—That there
will bo no chnnges in tho rules of bnsketbnll for tho present at least wns
mnde evident at the meeting of the
Joint rules committee at Columbia
University Monday night. Tho com­
mittee,
comprising representatives
from the National Collegiate Athletic
Association, the Y. M. C. A. nnd A. A.
U., held a long interpretation session,
but mnde no suggestion of alterna­
tions in the existing code. It has
been reported that some changes were
contemplated, particularly one deal­
ing with the throw from foul.
The committee met at 8 o’clock in
the Schcriuerhorn building and dis­
cussed in detail the Interpretation of
vnrious rulcH for tho benefit of nbout
126 conches, players nnd officlnla who
attended tho mooting. Later they ad­
journed to the gymnasium where two
bnskctbnll teams were put into piny
to illustrate various plnya, while tho
members of the committco pointed
out tho various interpretations to bo
mnde of the rules under certain con­
ditions.
This method of explaining to those
who tnko pnrt in the game ns conches,
players nnd officials has accomplished
much in basket ball and has particu­
larly mnde the task of the officials
easier. It has resulted in better bas­
ketball nnd mnde the game more in­
teresting for tho spectators.
Willinm H. Bnll is chairman of tho
committee.

ROME, Nov. 2 &lt;—The Vatican has
announced that a conference of as­
tronomers will take place In Romo
next April under the presidency of
Cardinal Mercier with tho object of
reforming the calendar and fixing
Easter.
Tho occurrence this year of Eas­
ter Sunday on March 27, within five
days of its earliest possible date, re­
vived the proposal for a fixed Easter.
No fewer than lfl Enstors will happen
In March between now nnd tho cose
of this century—an nvorngo o f one
every five years—unless something Is
done to prevent the erratic wandering
of the festival between Mai^h 22 and
April 28.
Under the existing ecclesiastical
rule, Easter Sunday con fall on any of
36 dates. The present rule is that
Easter must be a Sunday and that tho
ecclesiastical full moon (which Is not
the same ns the real moonjupon which
It depends must occur on one o f the
seven days Immediately preceding It.
Thus, to havo Easter Sunday on it?
earliest date, March 22, tho ecclesiasti­
cal moon must be full on March 21,
which date must also bo a Saturday,
but So rarely are these conditions
satisfied In the same year that It tfl
ovor a century since Easter foil on
March 22 and it will not ngnin fall so
early until the yenr 2285.
Of Into years the inconvenience of
a movable EnBter ban Induced calen­
dar reformers to propose reforms
which will either mrtko Enstor a fixed
festival of greatly restrict its wander­
ings. One suggestion is thnt Easter
Sunday should bo ntisignod to (he
third Sundny nftcr the spring equi­
nox, which would give it a range of
eight days, between April 6 and April
13, according to the date nnd dny of
tho week on which the equinox falls.
Other proposals aim nt an Enstor
absolutely fixed to ono date. Thnt, of
course, would necessitate n radical re­
form of tho whole calendar, under
which the same wcekdny should al­
ways fall on tho same date.
Any such reform will probably have
to bo universal throughout Christen­
dom, for the moon-controlled Enstor
is common to nil civilized countries;
though, owing to the fnct that tho
Creek church still uses tho Julian cal­
endar, there aro nlwnyH nenrly two
Easter dnys every yenr, one the Grogorinn, observed by Romnn Catholics
nnd Protestnnts, nnd tho other tho
Julian, kept by thoso countries which
are in communion with the Greek
church.
WOMEN ADVISORS.

WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—The ad­
visor committee of tho American del­
egation to the disarmament confer­
ence ns announced today nt tho Whito
House, consists of 21 members, four
of whom nre women.
Ono cabinet member, Herbert Hoo­
ver, will be n member. Others nro
General Pershing, Under Secretary
of the Stnto Department Fletcher,
Admiral W. L. Rogers, President
Samuel Gompers of tho American
Federation of Labor, nnd Stephen G.
The world news the day It happens, Porter, of tho house foreign affairs
delivered nt your door each evening, committee.
IRc tho week.

a Bank Account
Start a bank account with us apd wo will help you make if
larger. We are equipped to care for your deposits with abso­
lute safety. There is no function o f a bank wo cannot p«
form. Every facility afforded to farmers and others foy
transaction o f their banking business. Accounts may b^
opened hy mail and monies deposited or withdrawn in this
way with equal facility. There are scores of young men tfl
Sanford who should start a bank account. The dipies they
throw away every month if brought to our-bank would make
them independent as they reach the noonday o f life. In fact,
every person who has a dollar should start a bank account.
Try it and you will always thank us for this advice.
9553

.» •1J i

SIMPLE TRIMMING EFFECTS
This scml-drcity model in coppercolor charmeuic shows what charming
results may be accomplished with
simple trimming effects. The surpliceHosing blouse has n ' deep collar and
cufis edged with accordion plaited
frills of self-material.
These frills
anpear again on the skirt atid nnronshaped tunic. A narrow band of fancy
ribbon is laced through the girdle,
which is also of charmcusc satin.
Medium size requires jM yards 36-inch
material, with
yard 36-inch lining.
Pictorial Review Dress No. 9583.
Sizes, 34 to Jo inches bust. Price, 35
cents.

i

*

Why This
Interests You!
fl Because, Mr. Farmer, you can use
our facilities
to
your advantage.
, |,,
. . t» T. &gt;•*&gt;
Our buying capacity enables us to
supply your Crates, Hampers, Insec­
ticides, Fertilizers and supplies at. a
saving in cost to you,
You don’t have to figure away in
advance what you ne,&lt;j&lt;). Our atnple
stock
will
take
care o f you.
I .
&gt; .
MM ••»•«*. -. •«
,*•'
Compare Our Prices
W E A R E A T Y O U R SER VICE

’’

Week of November 7-12 Set for Na­
tion-Wide Endeavor
i tJisi’J'ili*' 'hi j
"Subscribe tt&gt; your home town pnper."
This is tho slognn of n new nation­
wide movement backed by tho Nation­
al Editorial Association and other
agencies.
The movement hns back of it far
more than n selfish desire on tho part
of newspapers to acquire increased
circulation, for it is, in effect, a step
toward tho perfect unification of
America by tho strengthening of ties
thnt bind everyone to his nntive soil.
Tho cninpnign is, moreover, an ex­
cellent opportunity to boost the homo
town. Tho men nnd woman
who
were born und reared here have, somo
of tliom, been away for ninny yenra
nnd ninny important chnngcH have
taken placo—changes In which they
would bo greatly interested.
It is
more often the enso than not that
private correspondence overlooks these
changes, however carefully ono might
attempt to write "the news” in a let­
ter.
Tho newspapers, on the other hand,
prints ull the items of interest, large
and small, and is the ideal medium
through which to keep in touch with
in the old home town.
In order to stimulate this move­
ment wo nre this week offering nn
extra copy of Tho Weekly Herald to
every subscriber who calls or writes
for it, This extra can bo sent, with
a special subscription blank which
wo will furnish, to any member of tho
family who is awny from home. Or,
If preferred, wo will mail a copy freo
of charge to anyone you designate.

Glasses Designed

AUTO EXCHANGE

Henry McLaulin, Jr.

n P — iJ

OPT. D.

/ f ** M

Dependable Service
Practically New
Chevrolet .....

One 1919 Ford Touring Car, in
OPTOMETRIST I first class shape,
Graduate Northern Illinois College j at only ...................

OPTICIAN

212 East First St.

Snnford, Fin.;

______

Liberal Terms on Both these Bargains
Lake Wales is well pleased over thj
Repair Work by Experienced
opening of the new Lake Wales Bont
Mechanics nt Right Prices
and Cnnoo club house. The place Is
most attractive, and the membership
of the club is largo nnd growing. The 1
opening nfrnir wns enjoyable to the A t the Foot o f First St.
hundreds present, for tho public had
hoc’ - Invited, nnd tho water sports
were particularly pleasing and of
grent vnrioty.

J

— Get year Scratch Pads from The
Herald—by tho pound— 15c.

BROTHERHOOD
CO-OPERATIVE
STORES
If you want the best MEATS
and GROCERIES at the lowest
possible prices. Come to see us
at the old Depot Waiting Room,
South Railroad Avenue.

SEMINOLE
ABSTRACT CO.

Get A n Abstract Before
Buying Property

E. A . D O U G LASS, Pres.
Edith Lucille Ball
Teacher Piano nnd Harmony
Graduate Chicago Musical College
Residence 719 Oak Ave.

Phone 575-L-2
M RS. ID A A U S T IN

Phone 243

BANANAS BANANASJ

418 Magnolia Ave.
1 1 1” i 1 m l:

MAKER AND ALTERED o r ’
LADIES’ CLOTHES

WILL DO IT

A car lQad on A . C. L .
Dray Track

DOZEN “ 15c-20c
B U N C H .... $1.25 UP

Southbound
Arrive
Departs
Mako anything you want in tho
88_____ 2:86a.m .
2:46 su m mattross lino,— Sanford Mattress Co,
27...........
8:40 a.m.
183-6tc
80_
2:66 p.m .
3:20 p.m.
85......... 6:65 p.m . 7:10 p.m .
North Bound
SA N F O R D M A R B L E &amp; G R A N IT E W O R K S
Arrive
Departs
JOHN GOVE, Proprietor
No.
82......... 1:48 a, m. 2:03 a.m .
CEMETERY
WORK A SPECIALTY
No,
84______ 11:46 u. m. 12:06 p.m.
1018 West First Street
1018 Went First Street
No.
80......... 8:05 p.m. 3:25 p.m.
No.
28____ 10:00 p.m.
Trilby Branch
Arrive
Departs
•No. 100______
0:00 a. m,
•No. 24______
8:26 p. m.
#Na 168...........
7:00 a. ,n.
No. 22...........
7:36 p. in.
Leesburg Branch
Arrive
Departs
•No. 167........ 4:00 p. c .
No.
21......... 2:62 p.m.
•No. 101______6:30 p.m.
•No.
26______2:00 p. inNo.
22......... 7:00 p.m
Oviedo Branch
and “ above board” — that’ s the
Arrive
Departs
reputation we’ ve made in tjte
•No. 126______ 11:00 a.m.
•No. 127...........
8:40 p.m.
lum ber business and that’ s the
T a lly , except Sunday.
Wft/ WB
IV VVIIWIIUVI

Level

ASK FOR YOUR RECEIPT.
Subscribers to the Dally Herald
should ask fo r a receipt when the
carrier boys collect from you. It Is
ttie only protection you have in ense
Each

books, an&lt;^ la commanded to give a

....................................

Eyes Examined

TRAIN SCHEDULE

the account.

PHONE 586

o f Sanford

WILL BOOST HOME PAPER8

,
,
In Chinn talkative women nro dlPlans nro being formulated for tho von,e(L And 8tin wc 8Cnd ni|fl9i0nbuilding of a club house nt Dade City arles to Chinn.
for tho Legions o f thnt post.
— Get your Scratch Pads from The
No.
Herald—by tho pound— 15c.
Buy it with a Herald Want Ad.
No.
No.
No.
&gt;

T he Peoples Bank

get your receipt at tho end o f each
week If you *** jpcyjng thnt way.
Try * Herald Want Ad today.

When lumber took a big drop-dow n went our price*—to the
bottom. And you’ ll find us filling your order with the very beat
grade of ituff that your money can buy anywhere. Whether it'e
a clothei pole or a carload you can depend on full meaturc, good
quality, prompt service and low price,

HILL LUMBER CO.
S E R V IC E

Q U A L IT Y

P R IC E

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                    <text>Sanford
THE
“fitv Subriantial”

d
Sanfor
TMI
1. “City Substantia r
IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION

volum e

n

SANFORD, FLORIDA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1921

AMERICAN LEGION GATHER
THOUSANDS AT KANSAS CITY
COMD’R SCORES HARDING
Legion Names New Or­
leans Next Meet­
ing Place

B ib le f o r t h e A r m s C o n f e r e n c e

BODY OF MAN FOUND IN
HAY AT MIAMI TODAY.
( B f Th« Associated P re ia)

(B y T h . A * u cl* t* d Fra**)

ANGLESKA, N. J., Nov. 1.—Eleven
Hshemon were drowned In n storm off
tho const here earl today when two
small motor boats owned by a local
fishing compnny were capsized.

0VATI0NT0 GUESTS
(B 1 Til* Ai»*&lt;l»U4 F ra ra )

LYNCHING BILL A JOKE
VIOLATES THE CONSTITUTION
PUTS BLAME ON COUNTY
ELEVEN FISHERMEN DROWN
OFF NEW JERSEY COAST
WHEN IIOAT CAPSIZED.

MIAMI, Fln.# Nov. 1.—The body of
an unidentified man, weighted hy n
forty pound fly wheel, was found nenr
the municipal dock this morning. Tho
weight wbb attoehecj to tho waist, and
a strap buckled tightly around his
today c o n v e n t io n w il l h e a r
throat. The polteco believo four play
MARSHAL FOCH o f FRANCE
has been committed.
AND (JEN. PERSHING
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. 1.—The
National convention of tho American
I onion Inst night brought the opening
,|ay', Bcssion to « clone after receiv­
ing Admiral Earl Realty, commander
of the British grand fleet, and select­
ing New Orleans ns the 1922 conven­
tion city.
Today the convention will hear Mar­
shal Koch, of Franco, and C.oncrnl
j„hn .1. Pershing, nnd Inter participate
in a parade in which, officials esti­
mate there will bo 10,000 marchers.
The third week of October will he
the time. New Orleans hns raised
$100,000 to l&gt;rin gthe next convention

NUMBER 189

FLORIDA WAR MOTHER
IIAS IIEEN HONORED
WILL PLACE WREATH.

PINELLAS COUNNY WANTS
SPECIAL TERM CALLED.

And Widely Conflicting:
Views Put Forth on
on the Bill

DYER BILL IS UP
JUDICIARY COMMITTEE BRINGS
IN REPORTS ON ANTI­
LYNCHING BILL

WASHINGTON, Nov. 1.—Widely
conflicting
views on the nnti-lynching
ST. PETERSBURG, Fin., Nov. 1.—
hill,
now
before
congress, were pre­
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., Nov. 1.—
Mrs. J. F. Linscott, of this city, hend
sented
in
the
house
yesterday In ma­
The county commissioners of this,
of the locnl chnptcr of tho War Moth­
jority
and
minority
reports from the
Pinellas county, nrc expected to re­
ers of America, hns been soloctcd ns
judiciary committee.
quest Governor Ilnrdoe to call a spec­
ono o ft he ton Wnr Mothers of the
The bill, introdunccd by Represen­
ial session of the legislature to au­
contry to place n wreath upon tho
tative Dyer, Republican, Missouri,
thorize counties to Issue time war­
grnve of America's "unknown soldier" would undertake to wipe out lynching
rants to finnnee the rebuilding of
who will be buried In Arlington Nn­ hy heavy penalties to bo imposed on
highwnys nnd bridges destroyed by
tionnl cemetery nt Washington Arm­ persons participating nnd officers
last week’s storm.
istice Dny.
chnrgcd with enforcing tho pence.
Dr. George William Carter of the Now York Itlhle society, Is shown with the
Counties
in which persons nre put to
Hltdo which he will present to President Unrdlng for use at the world con­
Tampa Votes for
denth
by
mobs also would he subject
Miami
to
Own
ference on limitation of armaments. The volume Is printed In hlg type, nnd
to
heavy
fines
in the federal court.
Municipal Gas Con­
Is hound beautifully In morocco. An outside panel Is engrossed: "Tills Itlhle
Street Railway;
Citing tho demand in tho plntform
Is
presented
to
the
conference
for
the
limitation
of
nnnaments,
nnd
Is
dedltract Cancellation »uted to the promotion of good will umong the nations, by tho Now York Hlble
Voting Bonds adopted by the last Republican nnt­
society,
November
11,
1021."
ionnl convention to end lynching, tho
' KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. 1— Rc- Will Also Itntify Nomination of City
Will
|lu\
and
Equip
the
Defunct
plen
of President Harding in an ad­
reipt "f messages of felicitation from
Officials
Plant
dress to congress "to wipe out this
abroad and at home, a memorial scrbarbaric stain" and tho appenl of
vj,.. in honor of the late Frederick W.
(Djr Tho A tioclfttod F roai)
(B y Tho A ito c lttftd F r a ti)
President Wilson in 1018 to citizens
Galbraith of Cincinnati, former nat­ TAMPA, Nov. 1.—Voters here to­
MIAMI, Nov. I.—Property owners
to help stop mob law, the majority
ional commander nnd the usual organ- day will decide whether the contract
here are voting tmlny on $100,1)00
report, prepared by Mr. Dyer deelnr- _
iration routine preliminary to getting between the city and local gas com­
build iHsuo with a view to buying and
ed that these and similar appanls
down to work, consumed the opening pany for lighting streets he cancelled.
equipping the defunct street railway "have gone for naught nnd lynchings
si-' ion yesterday of tho Americnn Le­ Ratification of nomination of two city
system and on $.100,0110 bond issue for
continue."
gion's nntionnl convention. Adjourn­ commissioners in election assured.
enlarging the municipal docks.
“Congress must provide tho means
ment was taken into In the afternoon
AMONG
TIIE
ARMY
OF
UNEM­
CIGAR
FACTORY
WRECKEDfor
ending this cowardly crime," tho
ami the delegates marched to the sta­ DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
SUNSTRUCK, WRECKS TRAIN. report continued. "It is in punishing
PLOYED FALLS HEIR TO
MAY
HAVE
BEEN
INCEND­
tion to meet Mnrshnl Foch, of Franco,
INSTITUTES INVESTIGATION
FATHER'S ESTATE
IARY ORIGIN
those who talcT* part in it or who per­
and General John J. Pershing.
INTO RADICALS' ACTION.
PONTIAC, Mich., Nov. 1.—Henry mit it.
From Italy nnd Belgium came word
W. Gates, Ifty-nino, of Huntington,
:lty Th* A n o c liU d
(D r Th* A aiocU teil P r e ii)
"Tho prevalence in many states of
(B y T h . A iaocl.M d P r a u )
of faith in America and in tho Le­
YOUNGSTOWN, O., Nov. 1.— JACKSONVILLE, Nov. 1.—Dam­ Did., held here In connection with tho
the
spirit which tolerates lynching,
WASHINGTON, Nov. 1.—Inves­ Working in the parks here ns one of age estimated hy officials at between wreck of a Grand Trunk passenger
gion. President Harding Bent n mes­
accompanied
too often with inhuman
sage that nothing was closer to his tigation hns been instituttd by the De­ tho city’s unemployed, C. V. Virtus, $70,000 and $100,000 resulted today train nenr F.nPeer Inst Frldny night,
cruelty,
nnd
the inability of unwil­
heart than tho welfare of the formor partment of Justice into threats be­ 28, formor Cnnndiun soldier, hns been from a fire pronounced by detectives confessed today, according to rnilrond
lingness
of
the
public authorities to
service men. The American Federa­ ing ninde by radicals in connection informed he had become heir to his as apparently of incendiary origin detectives, thnt he loostned a rnll and
punish
the
persons
guilty of this
tion of Labor announced in cmphntic with the cnscs of Sacco nnd Znn- father's estate valued between forty which wrecked the factory of An­
caused the nrcident. The officers quote crime, threaten very seriously the fu­
terms that it stands behind the Le­ zetti, Italians convicted in Massachu­ and fifty thousand. A letter bearing tonio Martinez Cigar Manufacturing
Gates ns saying he ascribed the act ture pence of the nation. Lynching
gion' campaign against radicals and setts for the murder of a mill pay the information suid a will leaving Company at intersection Main and
to a mental lapse due to a sunstroke blots our fnir name as a nation for
that it will never tolerate the intro­ master.
the property to Fisk University, a Ashley streets.
The stock in four suflfored some time ago. Three per­ we cannot claim to be civilized until
duction into this country of sovietism
negro institution at Nashville, Term., retnil stores on the ground floor was sons were injured in the wreck.
our Inws nre respected and enforced
nr bolshevism in any form. Many mil­
had been found but as tho will had damaged by water. Detectives said
nnd our citizens secured against tho
itary organizations including the
not been witnessed it was not regard­ they found large quantities of wrap­
hideous cruelties of which we aro
1’nitod Confederate Veterans nnd the
ed as valid, under Canadian law.
ping paper and cheese cloth saturated
constantly
furnishing fresh examples.
Grand Army of the Republic, sent
with turpentinu.and parrafin wrapped
The
report
added that whiio it had
greetings, while good wishes came
LAUNCH SEAPLANE BY
about boxes, sacks and other articles.
been
impossible
to get accurate fig­
from Marshal Foch nnd Gcncrnl John
CATAPULT OFF A BOATures,
available
records
showed 3,224
•t Pershing.
ORLANDO BROKER IS
persons
hnd
been
lynched
in thu lust
Italy sent its message through Gen­
INJURED WHEN AUTO
PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 1.—A sen-1
thirty
years,
of
which
number
2,522
eral \rmundo Diaz, hero of the Plnve, UOMI! EXPLODED ON STAIRCASE plnne wns launched successfully today
CRASHES INTO TRAIN
wore
negroes.
Belgium’s greetings nnd her thanks
in testa at the Philadelphia nnvy yard,
-------OF EMBASSY AT
Declaring tho bill unconstitutional,
IN FRANCE WITHOUT COURT
for American aid during tho war wore
ofT n catapulting device, which sent
LAKELAND, Oct. 31.—R. II. Keene
LISBON
the
minority report presented by Rep­
MARTIAL
Olt
OTHER
extended hy General Baron Jacques,
the NC-9 two-seater craft into the air on Orlnndo broker, sustained
two
resentative
Summers, Domocrat, TuxTRIAL
who was responsible for tho delaying
( B r Th* A ito c liU d F rt* i)
nt a speed of forty-eight miles an broken ribs nnd numerous cuts and
ns,
contending
it would tend to de­
LISBON, Nov. L—A bomb explod­ hour from n standing stnrt.
at Liege of the Gorman drive west­
scratches when the uutomobilo he wns
(By Th* AlM cU W d F r**t)
stroy
the
sense
of local responsibility
ward during the first few days of tho ed this morning on the stirenso of the
Tho experiment proved, nnvnl ex- driving crashed into the express car
WASHINGTON, Nov. 1.—Investi­ without adding to protection of peoAmericnn consulate hare. No damwar.
ports declared, thnt nlrcrnft can he (,f tho S«nford "ahort" train on the gation hy a special committee into
•&gt; J
President Harding's messnge to tho ngo. The poiico attribute tho outrage lnunchcd from battleships equipped Atlantic Const Line railroad yesterday the charge of Senator Watson, Demo­ pi*.
"This
hill,
In
tho
judgment
of
the
to
agitation
in
connection
with
the
service men came through Vice-Presi­
with catapults on the turrents, nnd it morn,n*
Carter’s crossing. Geo. crat, of Georgia, that American sol­ minority, in without constitutional
dent Calvin Coolidgo.
George L. cnscs of Sacco and Vnnzctti, Italians 1 sproposed so to equip every bnttloBurden and tho MIhscs Thomas diers in France were hanged without warrant,” said the report. It Is defin­
Horry of Rogersville, Tonn., president under conviction of murder in Massa­
ship. Many high naval officers nnd n"(! Gn*e wcrc nl"° in tho cnr which court martial or other trial was order­ itely and directly i antagonistic to
"f the International Printing Press­ chusetts.
scientists witnessed the tests.
K*cln" twn" t,rivinK' Mr. Burden re- ed today hy the senate hy unanimous the philosophy of our system of gov­
men's Union, nnd n delegate to tho
cuivcd hut Hlight bruises and tho two vote. Senators Ilrandegee, Ernest, ernment nnd within tho limit of its
WASHINGTON, Nov. 1.—A dis­
convention from his state, spoke for
young women wero unhurt.
Kecno Willis, Overman and Pomorono wero effectiveness, if it should ho held con­
patch from Consul General Hollis ut DORRS HEADS EXPORT MOVE. was taken to the hospital here, but named as the committee.
the American Federation of Labor.
Watson stitutional, would he destructive of
The convention was aroused to the Lisbon was received today at the
the others were nblo to return to their charges in tho senate this morning thnt system.
BIRMINGHAM,
Nov.
1.—Samuel
greatest pitch of excitement during State Department reported tho bomb
produced heated dispute. He produc­
C. Dobbs, of Atlnntn, wob named pres­ homes.
"If enneted nnd operative It would
the afternoon session when General explosion in the consulate there. Hol­
ed photograph of alleged hanging nnd not add to the protection of persons
According
to
officials
on
the
train,
ident
of
n
million
dollar
cotton
export
Linz nnd General Jacques delivered lis said the Portuguese government
insisted his charges wero true. Sen­
was investigating energetically. Only concern organized hero yesterdnyy, Keene wns apparently attempting to ator Borah said ho had oxnmined the or general efficiency of government,
•lo ir addresses.
trifling damage reported. The mes­ which will bo known aa tho Wurrnnt speed with them to the crossing. Tho photograph and had been told hy two nor strengthen tho relationship be­
Export nnd Discount Corporation. The
Ka n sa s CITY, Nov. 1.—Marshal sage said a note protesting against purpose of the corporation, ns an­ only thing thnt saved the occupants former service men tho charges wore tween the federal government nnd tho
states. On tho contrary, this propos­
the
conviction
lif
Vanzettl
nnd
Sacco
T"&lt; h, principal guest of honor of the
nounced hy its officers, is to ship Am­ of the par from more serious injury, true.
ed intervention of the federal gov­
had
been
slipped
under
the
door
of
the
'I'ty, entered tho Americnn Legion con­
erican cotton to Europuan mills, sup­ they Bny is that the machine struck
ernment
directed against local power,
consulate
nnd
a
few
moments
Inter
vention hall from tho side entrance,
ervise its manufacture and make re­ tho truck of the express cnr, which PROSECUTOR STATES THE
supplanting nnd superseding tho sov­
the
explosion
occurred.
nm| went to his box amid cheering
CHICAGO POLICE IN WITH
turns to the owners of tho cotton af­ kept it from passing under the wheels.
ereignty of the states, would tend to
just ns the convention was called to
ORGANIZED VICE THERE destroy thnt sense of local responsi­
ter the cotton hns been pmnufactured.
The nuto was.nlmost a total wreck.
order today. H0 whb preceded hy a LOOKS LIKE WHITE
MAY
HE
OUSTED
CHICAGO, Nov. 1.—Chicago's po­ bility. * * *
guard of Americans, holders of con­
'This bill, challenging us it docs,
FROM CHAIRMANSHIP.
lice department, the subject of many
gressional medals of honor.
the relative government efficiency of
shnpeups during the past few months tho states and the integrity of pur­
(B y Th* Ai*ocUt«&lt;] run)
ATLANTIC COAST LINE
nnd said recently by Chief of Police pose of thoir governmental agencies,
ST. LOUIS, Nov. 1.—The refusnl
I’UTS ON SPECIAL TRAIN TO
of Goitre to resign to muke wny for
Fitzmorris to be "fifty per cent boot- placing tho federal government, as it
HAUL DAMAGED FRUIT. Long as successor to White wns an­
loggers" last night was in another doos, in tho attitude of an arbirtary
nounced nt noon. This left Cordell
turmoil ns tho result on an attack by dictator, assuming coorcive powor ov­
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., Nov. 1.— Hull, committeeman from Tennessee,
Robert E. Crowe, state's attorney. er the states, thoir officers and thoir
I&lt;&gt; assist in tho rapid movement of ns only man acceptable to all factions AND NEW YORK FOUND NO
FROM ITALY, ENGLAND ANI) Mr. Crowe, after conducting a series citizens in matters of local poiico con­
"lit slightly damaged by tho storm for tho chairmanship.
MILK AT TIIE DOOR THIS
of vice raids, announced that ho "ex­ trol, would do incomparable harm to
CHINA ARRIVE IN
MORNING
,*"1 week, the Atlantic Const Lino bcpected to Investigate the police de­ the spirit of mutuol respect and trust­
AMERICA
ST. LOUIS, Mo., Nov. 1.—Indica­
enn operating a special fast freight
ful co-operation botweeu thq federal
partment."
(B y Th* i u M l i t t i F r a n )
•rom st. Petersburg Monday. The tions this morning are thnt tho suc­
government
and the states essential to
A
statement
by
the
state's
attorney
(B
y
Th*
A
lio
c
ItU
d
F
r
a
n
)
NEW YORK, Nov. 1.—Approxi­
‘rain leaves St. Petersburg at 4 p. m.f cessor to George Whl‘o ns chairman mately eight million people in New
NEW YORK, Nov. 1.—Dolegntcs to chnrgcd tho poiico with making Chi- the efficiency of government."
“nil picking up carload shipment* on of tho Democratic Nntionnl Commit­ York and surrounding cities found no tho Washington conference on arma­ engo the "rottenust city in tho coun­
Mr, Dyor will ask for a rule to
‘he west coast delivers them at Tril- tee, might be agreed upon by tho va­ milk and cream on the dumb waiters ment limitation from Italy, Great try,” by giving protection to organised bring tho bill up for consideration
hy to n fast through freight for the rious party oloments before the com­ or doorsteps this morning.
probably this week.
Milk Britain nnd Chinn nrrivod In Ameri­ vice.
nnfth nnd oast. Tho special will be mittee meeta nt noon. Breckonrldgo wagon drivers union Is on a strike for can waters today on tho steamship
To theso charges, Chief Fltxmorrls
operated until the surplus fruit Ipui Long, of Missouri, former third as­ a wngo Increase of five dollars week­ Olympip from Southampton and aro replied that "the police could stand
The contract for the construction
sistant secretary of state, is said to
■’eon moved.
oxpectcd
to
land
shortly
ufter
noon.
Investigation
better
than
the
stnte’s
ly and annual vacation of two weeks
of about ten miles of road east, of
bo acceptable, but his selection Is con­ with
attorney's office," and that what vice Lake City on road No. 1 was awarded
pay.
j
Blnns are being formulated for tho tinent upon tho resignation of Edward
---------------- ------------j Work has started on tho first oil thoro was in Chicago, existed primar­
'"tiding of a club house at Dade City F. Goitre, committeeman from Mis­ The world news the dsy it happens, i woll by tho Florida Exploration Co., ily through "failure of the state’s at­ to J. Y. Wilson, Jacksonville, the
f°r the Legions of that post.
the Herald office.
near Fort Myers.
souri.
torney to properly prosecute esses,"
Sell It with a Harold Want Ad.

EX-SERVICE MAN .JACKSONVILLE
GETS FO R TU N E HAS BIG FIRE,
WHILE WORKING
LOOKS BAD

MORE BOMBS
FOR AMERICAN
AMBASSADORS

SEN. WATSON
BRINGS CHARGE
SOLDIERS HUNG

MILK WAGON
DELEGATES
UNION DRIVERS TO CONFERENCE
ON A STRIKE
ON ARMAMENT

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THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD,_■
MONDAY,
OCTOBER 81,
19S1
____________________________________1
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J ______

HALLOWE’EN
IS THE ORDER
FOR TONIGHT

FARMER ORGANIZATIONS ASK
REPEAL OF TWO R. R-, ACTS.

Following the rocent petition to the
Interstate Commerce Commission ask­
ing an immediate reduction in freight
rates of from 10 to 20 per cent plus
BOYS CAUTIONED TO GO SLOW suubsequent reductions based on all
An All-Star Special Cast in the Famous Old
savings in operating costs, the Wash­
WITH THEIR PRANK AND
ington offca of the American Farm
FROLICS.
Story
Bureau Federation was instructed to
Hallowe’en tonight, and the . small request Congress to repeal both the
boys nre looking r.t the front gates Cummins-Each law and the Adamson
nnd getting ready to soap the windows law. Explaining this action President
and carry off chairs and do all sorts J. R. Howard, issued a statement as
of things—only it might.turn out thnt follows:
tho pollco will not let them.
"Two legislative measures of war
Hallowe’en is the one night on the time aro preventing a speedy return
Also the Hallroom Boys in “Under Covers”
calendar when wild Bajfltt nre wilder to normal conditions. They aro tho
nnd It is seems ,thrft nottyhg 'short Transportation Act of 1020, known
Tomorrow—Dorothy Dalton in ‘‘Behind
of something real devilish, will suit ns tho Cummins-Each lnw, nnd the
Masks”; Fox News and Pictorial
tho smnll boy ,nnd the lnrgcr boy. Adamson law. Tho Cummlns-Esch law j
However, there is n kind of fun thnt was tho vehicle through which the
does not destroy pproperty, and yet railroads were returned to their own- \
Matinee 3:30 I*. M. Evening Performance Starts at 7:30
thrills the boys quite ns well, and this ers. It wns enacted after long nnd
is tho spirit that puts on masks find careful consideration by bith houses
puts "tick-tacks" on doors, nnd ring of Congress and after oxtended dclib.
door bells ,and nil of thpso many lit­ crations of conference committees.
tle stunts that are filled with fun Like many other laws, it was a com­ the Interstate Commerce Commission FIVE VOLUME HI8TORY
for the boys and girls, but do not en­ promise measure passed for the re­ and tho Labor Board.
OF STATE OF FLORIDA.
tail nny property loss.
turn of the roads under condition then
"The American Farm Bureau Fed­
Along with the real pranks of the prevailing.
eration believes thatthe CumminsTALLAHASSEE, Fla., Oct. 3j._
"One provision of this act wo very Esch Aca should either bo repealed in In the Interest of the publication of
boys, tho girls usually go in for par­
tita and dances, and Hallowe’en doings much objjectcd to nt tho time of its its entirety or at once amended to cor­ a flvo volume history of tho State of
nnd this is really the best nnd safest passage, namely, 15-A, or tho clause rect these serious defects.
Florida ,Mr. Harry Gardner Cutler
way to spend Hnllowo’cn. And then directing the Interstate Commerce
"The American Farm Burnu Fed­ of Chicago, is spending several days'
Hnllowo’cn, this yonr, comes on Mon­ Commission to fix railroads rates to eration has long been on record fav­ in Tallnhnsseo. Mr. Cutler represent*
day, nnd Monday is n bnd night, for produce a minimuum net return of oring tho repeal of tho Adamson Law. the Lewis Publishing Co. of Chicago
on Tuesdny comes the school bell, big B 1-2 per tent above all expenses and Our executive committee, with rep nnd in fact is the editor-in-chief 0f the
ns life, nnd twice ns natural, with tho taxes on the present value of Amor- rcsentatives from all sections of the proposed publication. Ho is the au­
stern visngo of tho school teacher lean railroads. Tho Fnrm Bureau be-1 country, declares that it is rcsponsl- thor of tho Pnnorama of Nations, and
looking them over the next morning 1loves this to bo paternalistic, class bio for tho unreasonable transports- the Encyclopedia of Illinois, and other
nnd wondering where "Willie" spent legislation, un-American and un- tlon rates, nnd, if continued, will nf- notable works.
pnrt of the night.
“° un4. feet all industries, including agricolMr. Cutler is organizing an editori­
"At tho time of tho passago of tho ture, toward increasing tho cost of al board whilo on his tour of the State.
Wc would enution Ihe boys nnd the
girls, thnt no foolishness will be tol­ Transportation Act wo urged tho pre­ production boyond'^n economic basis. He wil lvisit Jacksonville, St. Augug.
erated this yenr when It comes to tho servation of tho powers of tho several
"These two measures ,which were tine, Miami, Key West, Tampa, St.
destruction of property, such ns has stntes to rcgulato rates nnd practices tho crcsult of war-timo conditions, Petersburg, Clenrwntor, Orlnndo, pa.
occurred hero several times. Tho of tho carriers relating to interstato should, beenust of their effect upon lntkn, Leesburg, Gainesville, Lakeschool houses were tho special target transportation nnd dltsributlon of the business interests of tho country, Innd, and other points, nnd in each
for boys one yonr, nnd there wns a cars. Wo were told thnt this wns pro­ receive tho immedinto attention of city ho will appeal to leudlng citizens
ruthless destruction of property thnt vided for within tho act, but interpre­ Congress. Tho repeal ’ of both meas­ for certain contributions to the work.
enme from the tnx payers’ pockets, tations since its pnssnge hnvo taken ures would go fnr in hc-cstablishing Tho editorinl bonrd, ns arranged thus
nnd did nobody good. It would be those powers from the state authori­ pre-war relationships, which at this far holds such prominent men as
well for the parents of tho boys nnd ties.
time is highly desirable.’’
Judge R. F. Taylor, of tho supremo
girls to warn them ngninst soaping; “The provisions of tho net in sot­
court bench, Hon. H. Clay Crawford,
windows and breaking windows nnd ting up n Railwny Labor Bonrd did
Man’s inhumanity to man makes secretary of stato; Hon. Guyte P. Mc­
doing other stunts thnt nro a malic­ not properly take into account the countless thousands ripe for revolu­ Cord, mnyor of TnllnhaRseo; John G.
ious destruction of property and nre ntccssity for coordination ns between tion.
Ruge, of Apalachicola; J. II. Cook,
not classed among innocent amuse­ the Interstate Commorco Commission
Apnlnchlcola; Walter Kohoo, Pensa­
ments ,nnd this sort of stuff puts the which determines tho income of tho
cola, nnd J. B. Morrow, Ponsncoln.
perpetrators In the mnlfnctors class ronds, nnd the Railway Labor Board,
There is no complete history of
with n jail sentence or big fine to face which has control of tho largest items
Florida
in existence and this work
Mako anything you want in the
o fexpenditure. This seemingly pre­ mnttress lino.—Snnford Mnttrcss Co. which is being cnrefully. .propnred, will
in the morning.
vented tho proper functioning of both
183-Gtc supply a very real need.
GAINESVILLE GOLF
COURSE UNEXCELLED.

THE STAR TO-DAY

* “THE
KENTUCKY COLONEL”

There’s just one word thnt tells the story of these splen­
did Knyncc Frnt Shirts—nnd thnt is QUALITY.
Every detail thnt is so cnrefully nttended to in the finest
men’s shirts is embodied in this well known mnke.
The materials are exclusive—the fit of the neck nnd
shoulders are right and the sleeve lengths perfect. We’ll
tell you moro if you’ll call and look nt them. Sizes up to

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14V6-

♦

Sanford Shoe &amp; Clothing f
Company
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BUT PEOPLE WERE READY
FOR BLOW THAT FAILED

STRIKING AGAINST
DECISION OF BOARD
PUTS THEM OUT.

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W. P. Reeve, who represents R.
CHICAGO, III., Oct. 31.—The Uni­ F. Polk, publishers of city directories,
ted Stato Railroad Labor Board Snt- has just returned on tho Miami, of the
uurday, In effect, forbado railroad un­ P. &amp; O. line nnd reports humorous ex­
ion labor from striking without the periences nt Key West waiting for n
board’s permission, nnd declared thnt gale thnt novor mntcrinllzod.
According to offlciul weather fore­
all strikers who violated the order
costs
nnd the prognostications of !owould be cns8ed ns "outlaws who hnd
cnl
experts
the storm was scheduled
voluntarily removed themselves from
to hit the end of the state at 3 p. m..
the protection of the transportation
Monday. All preparations were made
act."
*
as tho advance notices said tho dis­
The lnbor bonrd, before detailing turbance was the worst in the history
the decision of both sides to nbide by of the Gulf. Houses wore barricaded,
the lnw snys "these facts render it signs taken down, people whose
unntcessnry for the bonrd to mnke homso looked unable to face tho
any further rollings about this matter;
took ^heUer'wl’th frlends’ln
nnd congratulate tho pnrties directly , mor(J Btnunc|l hoU9e9| 8upp||c9 of
interested, and tho public, most vital- f00(j were jnjj jn nml overy cmergonly nnd profoundly Interested on thin cy mcnBUro provided,
return to industrial pence, triumpph
"Personally," snid Mr. Rcevo, "I
of tho rolgn of lnw nnd tho esenpe | n|,j
n K„od stock of Tnmpn mado
from this nntional disaster.
cigars, sovernl boxes of crackers, a
"But, nt this time, nnd whllo tho jug of water nnd a copy of Robinson
mnttor i sso intcnsolly before tho Crusoe, thinking I might get some
Tho erection of n golf links in
minds of all, tho bonrd deems ti ex­ tips from Daniel Defoe in enso I was Gnincsvillo, which was a subject of
pedient nnd proper to make Its rulings washed out on n desert island. My discussion by tho progressive citizens
nnd positions on some of tho points landlord also came into my room of this city for n long time, nnd which
involved so clenr thnt no ground for with some cleats, a bng of nails and n finally resulted in the formation of a
nny misunderstandings can hereafter hammer, so thnt I could provido n strong golf club organization, is show­
oxist. First, when nny change of wa­ raft from tho flonting timbers if we ing quick results toward the comple­
ges, contracts or rules previously in blew out to sen."
tion of tho links on tho property pur­
And then the expected didn’t hnp- chased just west of tho city.
offeett nre contemplated or proposed
by cither pnrty, conference must bo, pen. The worst wind wns only 3f&gt; "A trip to this spot is a revelation,"
hnd ns directed by the transportation miles nn hour, just an ordinnry Key ntntcd a visitor who mnde a visit to
act and rules and decision ns to the West breeze. The people were so tho new link site Friday. Through
procedure profulgnted by tho bonrd, disgusted thnt they declared a holi­ tho wise leadership of Edwin Hamp­
and whero agreements nre not reach­ day Tuesday and closed up all busi­ ton who was chosen to head the local
ed tho dlsputo must bo brought before ness houses. Everybody wns pitying golf club tho organization will soon bo
this bonrd nnd no action taken or poor Tampa, which wns reported wip­ in possession of ono of the best con­
chnnge made until authorized by tho ed off tho map, nnd expressed tho structed courses in tho south and aro
feeling thnt they were cheated out of
bonrd.
signnlly fortunate in having securod
"Second, the ordering or authorizing something to which they were en­ one of tho best natural sites for golf
of a strike against decision No. 117 titled.
There is a standing legend accord­ links thnt the Stato of Floridn af­
(ho July 1 wage cut) of this honrd is
ing to Mr. Reovos thnt no ntorm over fords. It is doubtful if thoro is a moro
a violation of thnt decision. The bonrd hits Koy West nftor September. Ho beautiful landscnpo in tho entiro
desires to point out thnt suuch overt suid that tho greatest philosopher he southland than presents itself to tho
act by cither pnrty tending to nnd encountered during the frenzied pre­ visitor to tho Gaincsvillo course. Unthreatening nn Interruption of trans­ parations was nn old negro who was dor tho efficient hand of James Scott,
portation lines, the peaceful nnd unin­ henrd to remark: "If de storm comes who Is actively in charge of tho en­
terrupted operation of whlc hnro so who’s a gwino to stop it?"—Tampa gineering work on tho now links, benuabsolutely neccssnry to tho peact, Times.
tiful fairways and greens nro nlrendy
prosperity nnd safety of tho ontiro
a long way toward comppletlon nnd tho
people are in themselves, even when
whole aspect is being mado entranc­
TWO GIRLISH HIKERS.
they do not culmlnnto in a stoppage
ing and Inviting to tho oyo.
of trnffic ,n cause nnd boutco of great
Practical golfers who hnvo viewtd
Two pretty 18-yenr-old girls nro
injury nnd dnmngo.
tho
work ulrcady accomplished toward
walking from Cleveland to T&lt;os Ange­
"Tho board further points out for
tho
completion of tho Gainesville links
les. Thoy started from home Sept.
tho consideration of employes inter­
have
boon enthusiastic as to tho natur­
20, nnd within threo weeks hnd pnssed
ested that when such nctlon does re­
Knnsns City. They nro carrying sol­ al playing advantages of tho course;
sult in n strike tho orgnnizntlon, ns
dier pneks nnd wear knickerbockers. praising in tho highest terms tho
acting, has forfeiting its rights nnd
Wherever thoy stop they find only prospect of central Floridn hnving ono
the rights of its members nnd to tho
couteotis trenrtment. They accept oc­ of tho finest links that has over bcon
provisions and benefits of all contracts
casional lifts from passing nutomo- constructed in tho south.
thoretoforo existing nnd tho employes
When driving west of town it will
hiles, but nro pledged to tnko no
thcfselvcs have voluntarily removed
pay
you to run to tho top of tho hill
trains.
themselves from tho clnnscs entitled
overlooking
tho construction work now
It is plensing to hear thnt two
to nppnl to this bonrd for rllcf nnd
going
on
and
enjoy the happy prospoc
young girls can travel thus across
protection."
spread
before
tho oyo.
Amerlcn nnd hav eno unplensnnt ex­
It
is
expected
thnt with tho com­
periences. That is the sort of country
pletion
of
the
course
will como the
Ainericn is supposed to be, ut some­
development
of
a
golfing
fraternity in
how its fnir record hns becomo somathis
city
thnt
will
add
greatly
to tho
whnt blurred of lnte.
social
onjoyment
of
Gainesvillo
folk
Perhaps this hclpts to oxplnin mat­
nn
well
ns
tourists
and
visitors.—
ters: These young women mind their
own business sturdily a sthoy trudge Gaincsvillo Sun.
nlong. If they nccept a lift, it Is from
ASK FOR YOUR RECEIPT.
somo person of evident fitness, not
from sorno leering 'ho vamp' or group
Subscribers to the Dally Herald
of reckless hoys. The very businessllko way in which they go ahead should ask for a recolpt when the
lenves no doubt in nny mind ns to the carrier boys collect from you. It is
character of tho girls themselves, and th^ only protection you have in cate
this In their host protection.
Though thoro nro exceptions ter­ the carrier changes or them happens
rible enough, nn n rulo It is tho girl to bo a mistake in the account. Each
who In looking for trouble thnt finds carrier boy is supplied with receipt
books, and is commanded to give a
it.—Pensscoln Journal.
receipt by tho Herald. See that you
—Got your Scratch Pads from The got your rocoipt at tho end of each
week if you aro paying that way.
Herald—by the pound—15c.

J

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Rgr

WILL DO IT

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AND WILL CLOSE OUT OUR

Entire Stock
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Of Ginghams, Silks, Percales, White Goods, Linens, Organdie,
Voiles, Bleachings, Satins, Sateens, Nainsooks, Ladies’ Hose, Underwear,i Bed Spreads, etc.
This stock is all new stock purchased before the last raise in
market prices and we are going to sell it all to move it quick at
prices—

BELOW COST----- SALE BEGINS

Wednesday Morning
November 2nd

United Textile Stores Co.

W h a tis a

Mottletone

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wrc ARE

OPPOSITE POST OFFICE

SANFORD, FLA.

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�^AOK TWO

THE &amp;ANFOR&amp; DAILY HERAI.D, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1,1921
III i ■ —

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"Bccatlic" and "Love, Hero T* My
Heart." The bridal chorus from Lohen­
grin was rendered ns tho procession­
al, "O Promise Mo" was softly play­
ed during tho ceremony. Mendels­
sohn’s Wedding March wits used ns
tho recessional.
The bridesmaid^ wore frocks of
INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. l.Collection
tnITct in rainbow shndes and of Col­
onial design. Cnrrying bouquets of of funds of the United Mine Workers
is jealous of its reputation for Ser­
chrysanthemums, they entered oppo­ of America through tho "check off’
vice and seeks to justify it anew with
site aisles fro mthe groomsmen. They system, by which union membership
were
Misses Inez Wiggins, Erin Proc­ dues nre deducted from .miner's wngeach individual problem presented
tor and Essie Ellis. The groomsmen os by operators throughout tho coun­
to it.
were Messrs. H. N. Nelson, R. A. try, wore enjoined yesterday by Fed­
eral Judge A. B. Anderson. Further,
Taylor and Clnrence Martin.
The matron of honor, Mrs. Herbert his order enjoined nil union officials
The knowledge and experience of
Nelson, sister of the bride, was nnd members from seeking by “any
this bank is available to its friends
charmingly attired in a gown of two- and nil menns' 'to unionize tho Willinmsson coni field in West VirginTa,
and patrons at all times, regardless
toned orchid Canton crepo with trim­
where violence has marked the strike
mings of hnndsome satin flowers. She
of the size of their transactions.
that begun more than n year ago. Tho
carried an nrm bouquet of Ophelia order is n temporary one, but effec­
roses.
tive until changed by court.
Little Misses May Arltno Goddard of
The only comment on the order
Lakeland, and Dorris Virginia Year- from the minors side was a statement
wood of Plnnt City, wero fl6wer girls. by Ellis Searles, editor of tho official
Hiey carried baskets of rose petals publication of the union, who asserted
which they scattered for the cntranco the injunctio nwns "certainly joyful
of the bride. Tho groom attended by news for the United States Steel Cor­
Dr. Lynwood Evans, of Jacksonville, poration,” which he ndded was reput­
ns best man, met the bride at tho ed to be the largest coni land owner in
SERVICE
nltar. The brldo entered with her the strike zone.
::
PROGRESS
STRENGTH
fnther, Hon. C. H. Taylor. She was a
4% INTEREST PAID
picture of loveliness In her gown of Advisory Committee
ivory
moon-glow sntln with trimmings
&gt;*++++++++.{.++*++.5.4.+•!-++•}■■{•-fr-t-*++-;"j--!-+4”!--}-+-{-+++++++++++
of chenille lace and pearl hands. Her Armament Conference
veil of softest tulle wnB arranged in
Announced Today
here nt the Montezuma enroute to Mt. coronet fashion, caught up with orDorn, where they will spend tho win­ nngo blossoms. Her flowers were Consist h of Twenty-one Members,
ter.
bride's roses ami vnlloy lilies. The
Four of Them Women
only
jewelry
worn
by
the
bride
was
MRS. FRED DAH'.EH. Society Editor,
Mr. and Mrs. C. Kirkpatrick and n string of penrls.
(By Th» At.ocUt.J Pf*u)
__________ Phone 217.W
WASHINGTON,
Nov. I.—Advisory
two children, of Greenville, Ky., nre
Immediately after tho ceremony the
committee
of
the
American
delegation
spending
some
time
here
nt
the
Mon­
SOCIAL CALENDAR
bridal party repaired to tho home of
to the armament conference it was
tezuma,
the bride’s parents where the young announced todny nt the White House
TUESDAY—St. Agnes Guild will oncouple received the congratulations
Mrs. Mary Stubbs and Miss Doro­ and best wishes of their many friends. consists of twenty-one members, four
tertnin nt a Hallowe'en measuring
party nt the Parish House from 8 to thy Stubbs, of Cambridge, Mass., They left on a bridal tour of the onst of whom are women. One cabinet
spent several days here enroute to coast, going from here to Miami, by member, Hoover, will be a member.
11 o’clock.
Others included are Pershing, Under
TUESDAY—Mr. Hnwkins and Walter Daytona and Miami.
automobile. Mr. and Mrs. Mlckler will Secretary of State Fletcher, Admiral
Connolly will entertain nt n "Stag
make their homo in Tallahassee, the
Mrs. W. E. Watson returned home home of the groom’s parents, Mr. and W. L. Rogers, Samuel Gompers and
Dinner" comlimentnry to J. D.
Woodruff, whose marriage to Miss Saturday evening from n plensnnt Mrs, P. T. Mickler. Young Mr. Mlck­ Stephen G, Porter, chairman of the
house foreign affairs committee.
May Thrasher takes place Friday three weeks visit in Milledgeville, Ga. ler is connected with the State Agri­
evening at the Presbyterian church.
cultural Department.
An interesting feature of the gath­
Mr. Lawrence Fitzhugh, of KenTUESDAY—The Daughters of WesThe out-of-town guests Included, ering recently held in Gainesville was
ley will be entertained by Mrs. W. tuck, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Goddard and Mrs.
the second annual
meeting of the
A. Lester, and Mrs. Vance Doug­ George DeCottes.
M. D. Trier, Lakeland; Mr. and Mrs. Florida. State Beekeepers’ Associa­
lass, nt the home of Mrs. (’. 1..
II. N. Nelson, Ft. Myers; Mr. and Mrs. tion. The talks made by men of expe­
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Hodges announce
Goodhue, SOU, Magnolia nvenuo, at
P. T. Mickler, Tallahassee; Mrs. I. E. rience and the discussions brought on
the birth o fa daughter, October .11, at
7:110 p. m.
Rodgers, Savannah; Dr. and Mrs. | will be remembered by nil ppresent
Tuesday—Mrs. Charles L. Ilritt will their home on Palmetto avenue.
Lynwood Evans, Jacksonville; Mr. and and prove of value to those who are
entertain the members of the Mon­
Mrs. Alfred Liljn, Sanford.
| engaged in beckcping. Florida honey
Mr, and Mrs. A. W. Smith and little
day Bridge Club nt her homo on
J
Palmetto avenue, nt 3 o'clock.
daughter, Jaunita, returned home yes- j It is a wise man who knows when is always ia good demand, and the
Tuesday—Mrs. W, C. Hill will enter­ terdny from Tampa where they spent to "hold his peace" and when to i number of beekeepers is steadily inI creasing, and the product more gen­
tain at bridge at iier home on 1th tile week-end with relatives.
"speak his piece."
erally found in the markets

no MoMzM

i This Forward

Looking Wank

'■ ■ ■ ■ ■ a n

WEST VIRGINIA
FIELDS ORDERED

i|

LADIES FREE!

We nre adding to our Cleaning Establishment a Department
for Ladies’ Clothing
We have added another new HofT-Mnn Press, especially built ■
for Ladles’ Work, nnd for this reason we nre going to do
r

One Skirt or One Dress
“FREE OF CHARGE FOR EVERY LADY
IN SANFORD!”

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2
We will call for and deliver it FREE!
Send yours and tell your friends

The Seminole County ii
_Bank—

S O C IE T Y

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BJ( h ][e ]

® S " 0 fl(I][I][T ]

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MASONS ATTENTION.
Regular meeting of Sanford Lodge
No. 02, F. &amp; A. M., tonight. Work in
tho Entered Apprentice Degree will
bo conferred by a special team from
the floor of the lodge.
All visiting Masons nre invited.
Members expected.
PASTORS* ASSOCIATION.

H B B E U itllE

With every tire purcha
we will give free a eban
on

FORD CAR

To be given away
NOVEMBER 11TH
American Legion

” 3 8 Non:.. $10.25

30x3 NonSkill ...........

Q Hr

0 . 1O

FRANK AKERS
TIRE CO.
VULCANIZING
1st and Elm Avc. Phone 447-W

O i m i S H S I E l i H i a i U i H I Q H B I f f l ffl □ a tu

7 :3 0 P . M .

RALPH STODGHILL, Singer
u ][r ][c1[h1

o m a

street in honor of Miss May Feritj # # * * t*a mi Ra * * #
HALLOWE'EN PARTY.
rnn Thrasher at 3 p. m.
*
*
Tuesday—The hoard of the Woman's
#
Misses Ruth Henry, Cnniiotu Bar­
Club will have its monthly meeting ber nnd Claire Zachary entertained a *
#
Tuesday, November 1 nt 10 o’clock I number of their friends Saturday #
#
nt the Woman’s Club,
aa iu» * * # *
evening nt n Hallowe'en party at the mt
WEDNESDAY—Business meeting of
I homo of Miss Henry.
the Woman’s Club at the dub rooms
PARISH HOUSE CALENDAR.
| * The porch was attractive with its
on Oak avenue.
Tuesday,
Nov. 1, 8 p. m., "Measuring
' decorations of Jnck-o-’lnnterns, crepe
Wednesday—Mrs. Raymond Key will
Party,"
S. Agnes Guild.
entertain at an evening bridge par­ j paper featones, golden rod, and Hal- Friday, Nov. 1, G. F. S., Party, Mrs.
ty complimenting Miss May Fer­ j lnwe'en symbols.
John Leonard I, directress.
I Hallowe'en games were indulged in,
rari Thrasher.
Thursday—Mrs. W. J. Thigpen will ■later dancing and promenade were enSUNDAY SCHOOL CONVENTION
entertuin the members of the Ev­ 1joyed.
|
Refreshments
of
ice
cream
in
yclAT TITUSVILLE.
ery fWcek Bridge Club at her home
| low paper cups tied with black rib­
on Park avenue nt 3 o'clock.
The semi-annual meeting of the
Friday—Woodruff-Thrasher nuptials bons, nnd enko wero served. Balloons
Baptist Sunday school convention of
will be solemnized Ht the First were given ns favors.
The invited guests were: Doris the Seminole association was held at
Presbyterian church at 8 p. m.
Hand,
Clifford Shinsholsor, Camilla Titusville on last Saturday and Sun­
Saturday—The Children’s Hour will
Puleston,
Rebecca Stevens, Elizabeth dny, and was well attended. The pur­
be held at Central Park nt •! p. m.
Knight, Vlrgie Horne Hymnn, Mil­ pose of this convention is to increase
Dr. and Mrs. G. M. Randall, of Day­ dred Hand, Lena Bello llngnn, Emily interest in and to foster the work of
tona, spent the day here Sundny, nt ! Griffin, Mary Elizabeth Moye, Frank tlie Sunday schools and B. V. P. U.,
Chase, William DuBose, George nnd the reports show that great prog­
the Montezuma.
Knight, Arthur Zachary, Jr., Dutton, ress has been made along these lines.
Mr. ui.d Mrs. A. M. Beal, Hazel, Dean Turner, Jr., Horton Mabry, Al­
Rev. W, W. William, state Sunday
Marjorie, Howard and Ruth Beni, of bert Cnnnnlly, Briggs Arrington.
school secretary, was present and de­
Beloit, Wis., are spending n few days
livered a strong address on Sunday
MICKLER—TAYLOR.
school work, especially urging that
■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■
The following clipping from tho every school be thoroughly organized
Tampa Tribune will be of interest to and graded. Rev. A. B. Cnnnady told
the ninny friends of the bride, who, how to reach the people by census,
during her frequent visit to hor nunt, and Rev. II. S. Rightmirc outlined the
Mrs. Alfred Liljn, made many friends: best methods of putting life into the
Plant City, Oct. 2t&gt;.—Miss Rena Al­ home department.
On Sunday afternoon a large dele­
berta Taylor, daughter of Repre­
gation
from Cocon, seventy-five strong
sentative and Mrs, C. 11. Taylor, was
put
on
a B. Y. P. U., demonstration
married to Mr. Russell Theodore
meeting.
The evening service was de­
Mickler, of Tnllahassee, in the pres­
voted
to
organized
class work.
ence of a Inrge gathering of friends
Rev.
H.
S.
Rightmirc,
of Daytona,
and relatives at the First Baptist
was
elected
president
for
the ensuing
church here Wednesday evening. Dr
six
months,
A. M. Bennett performed the cere­
mony.
I Those attending from Seminole
LARGE
The decorations were very beauti­ county were: Mr. Lee McLain and
fully and nrtisticnlly arranged. Tho Miss Myrtle Jacobs, Chuluotn; Miss
STOCK
bridn) motif waa featured in the rain- Margaret Brain, Mis sCarrie Stanley,
how
color scheme. Stately palms form­ Miss Maude Jinkins, Mr. Roy McNnhb
BETTER
ed a dark background for the bright and Juo, D. Jinkins, Sanford.
The next meeting will probably be
colored flowers arranged upon pedest­
SERVICE
held at the Y. M, C'. A., camp at Iaike
als before the altar.
5 A program of nuptial music in Winona in Volusia county, in May or
charge of Mrs. Eunice Tucker, pianist, June.
preceded the ceremony. Mrs. Tucker
“Foot of First St.”
For office supplies, stationery, etc.,
was assisted by Mr. Roy Williams,
violinist. Miss Lorene Weaver sang cornu lo the Herald office.
I
I

MEETINGS

| H0F-MAC |
!BATTERYI
1 CO. 1
S

FREF

A new laundry nnd dry denning is
The City of Daytonn announce thi*
the Intest addition to tho town of
they
have now $5,000 available fur tht
Voro.
use of music for thu coming season.

Special Meetings at the Baptist Church
| cM

FREE!

—By the—
At a meeting of the Pnstors' Asso­
ciation held at the Baptist church on
Monday morning, it was decided to
hold a mass meeting of nil Sunday
school workers in the city, to plnn for
n general "Go to Sunday School Sun­
day,” on Wednesday night, Nov, 9th,
in the Baptist church. Every officer
and teacher is expected to be present.
A one hundred per cent attendance
is wanted from each school.
Let us see who can do the best.
Secretary of Association.

GEORGE HYMAN, Preacher
E D E l]

3
3

Phone 560
317 EAST FIRST ST.
SANFORD, FLA

E(Hj(y]lM][c]rH]

1 0 :0 0 A . M .

S

KNIGHTS TEMPLAR ATTENTION.
TO HANG FRIDAY THE 13TH.
NATION WILL GIVE
ROSEBURG, Ore., Nov. 1.—Dr.
SILENT TRIBUTE TO
The officers and members of Taylor
UNKNOWN SOLDIER. Richard Melvin Brumlcld was sen­
tenced toclay to he hanged Friday, Commandcry will hold a full dresj re­
WASHINGTON, Nov. 1.—The two Janunry 13th, for the murder of Den­ hearsal in the order of tho temple on
minute silent tribute in hosor of the nis Russell. Russell's headless body Wednesday evening, November 2. unknown American soldier which was found under Dr. Brumfield's 7 o'clock.
All Sir Knights with unif
President Harding has nsked the en­ wrecked automobile near here July 13.
tire nation to give on November 11
please attend in full dress equipn
According to the plans that are now
H. E. TOLAR
from noon to 12:02 should occur
Common 1
throughout the country on ens.ern well along in the making and prepara­
time. The United Press wna told to­ tions more extensive than ever be­
fore, the fourteenth annual Marion
PIANO OWNERS NOTICE
day by the war department.
Adherence ta one standard of time county fair will be held in November
Will he in town for a limited tiis the only way of making the tribute 22 to 25, inclusive, nt Ocnln. The di-'
For
immediate service phone—
simultaneous throughout the entire re tors of the fair association are very |
MACK THE TUNER
country, which is desired, the depart­ busy nt this time getting things in .
182ICtp
Valdez Hotel
shape ,nnd promise nil comers th a t1
ment said.
Tims people Tii The central time the show will he a very fine exposi­
-Get your Scratch Pads fr:n. '1
zone will stop work nt 11 o'clock, their tion of the productions nnd activities the Herald office,
time, there in the mountain region nt f Marion county folks in the year the Herald office.
10 nnd those on the pacific const at 9. past.
1231
GOVERNMENT TO SELL
81,000 TONS OF NITRATE

Investments

WASHINGTON, Nov. 1.—Approxi­
mately 81,00 Otons of sodium nitrate,
purchased by the war d/partment for
war purposes, will be offered for sale ■
■ The Safest. Soundest. Wisest nnd Most 1‘rofitnble Invest­
for commercial uses November 30, it H
■
ment in Snnford Todny is
■
was announced today by the director
of sales. Sealed bids will be received
a
by the ordinance snlvnge board for
a
.1
the nitrate which is stored at HopeAsk any of the people who have bought through us and they ■■
well, Vn.j Jacksonville, Fin.; Grand
will toil you that their investments in Real Estate have -«t
Rapids, Mich., and in smaller quanti­
u
gained for them a profit of between—
ties at seven other cities.
H
i
Z
&gt;
40 AND 10C%
X
A special dispatch to the Tribune
We have the following property for quick sale at prices a■
states that the stock of nitrate stored
■
that will net you n hnndsome profit:
here is not included in the order to sell
Four
adjoining
lots
on
Thirteenth
St.,
between
Mag­
issued yesterday by the wnr depart­
nolia and Palmetto Aves. These lots face city park.
ment.—Tampa Tribune.
■
Four adjoining lots on Park Ave. between 11th and ■■
■
12th streets.*
NEW ORLEANS CLUB BURNED.
Three
lots
on
Magnolia
avenue
between
12th
and
13tn
NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 1—Fire
streets.
starting nt tho dinner hour last night
Three lots on Snnford avenue between 11th nnd l-ta «■
destroyed the handsome homo of the
streets.
_
^
, ■
New OOrleans Country Club on Me­
City water, gas, electric lights nnd sewers to all this
tairie road. Tho building cast $250,:
property.
000 nnd the furnishings $75,000. Mem­
bers Inst virtually all their belongings
■
stored in the club.

SANFORD REAL ESTATE

S

s

An uptimist is, perchance, u mnn :■
who believes the present congress will "
some day revise the tax bill.

.. W . Knight

REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE

l

■
■

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1,1921

PAPER CAN BE SHIPPED
jTICE
FROM SCNADANAVIA CHEAPER
dayparade
THAN
AMERICA
CAN
FURNISH
'vSffigrSS?
ICAN LEGION.

i,.-inu buelneae concerns,
tlM and Clubs, of Sanford
4||y subscribed their namw
Maent to enter a decorated
„ 0tomoblle to represent their
lines of busines*. Namee
f*lded from time to time and
floats already listed It will
,de of magnitude never bel(Sjcd in thoclty:
an Legion.
J paint &amp; Wall Paper Co.
,i, club, Welfare Dept,
jlarlowe.
jji Shoe Shop.
.bossing, (6).

^ jlatthcws.
| Htrdware Company,
Ishoe Store.
ISide Grocery.
(.Wheeler Motor Co.
,1 Tire Co.
Io. Motor Co. (2 floats)
Cycle Co,
A Ratliff.
Sanford.
ft Drug Store,
i Bros., Bakery.
’Crate Co.
ola Co.
off &amp; Watson.
kt &amp; Welland.
i Grocery Co.
•••. (
i Turner.
•li
irry's Drug Store.
*r Lumber Co.
I. Miller A Son.
In Pharmacy,
ford Shoe &amp; Clothing Co.
on’s Shoo Repair Shop.
Grocery Co.
nd’e Specialty Shop.
hld-Honlg Co.
k Rines.
tanner.
(thwart z.

i Co.
i’a Market.

|lwel! Furniture Co., Inc.
Leonnrdy Meat Market,
r's Candy Kitchen,
prise Shoe Store.
il’s Emporium,
dnole Market,
era’ Pros. (2 flont.i).
Food Market,
nt Vulcanizing Co.
tier's Ilnkory ( I Hoots).
Lr Theatre.
v,
j-lrnc Trnctor.
lion &amp; Fry.
In T. Rrady,
Irkinh A Britt (2 Boats).
|c. Maxwell.
.Higgins, Inc.
Jf-Mnc Battery Co. (2 floats),
nforti Steam laundry,
fight Grocery Co.
Ioman'8 Club.
■
^ | '*
r J. M. Dresner.
lights of Columbus,
ford Farmers' Exchange,
I P. McCulier.
he Yowell Co.
Imerlcnn Fruit Growers.
Viford Furniture Co.
|ll! Hardware Co.
‘
W. Stokes.
r
|!ackshenr Mfg. Co,
he Herald Printing Co.
hpular Market, two floatn,
rar.k Akers Tire Co,
ztiford Truck Co,
anford Mnttrott Factory.
‘ Auxiliary of tho Snllio Harri| Charter \ \
D. A. It. (Childtoft
|he American Revolution),
Iny one welcome tq enter n float
Idecorate-i enr, Sultahlo cash prizes
ho awarded l»y the Firt Nfttionnl
hit, Seminole County Bank and Peo*' Sink of Sanford,
Aitrerienn Agr. Chemical Co.
EWer Springs W a te r

Co.

S. Barker.
,
W. Willinmn.
Ump Fire Girls
Chamber of Commerce.
[hasc &amp; C.iinpany,
otnry Hub.
■Do V Howard.
Chapter of U. D. C.
"hrasher &amp; Gamer.
“0Wm &amp; Roumcllat,
Dept., Woman's Club.
™ ry-T yler Veneer Co. •
anfc,r&lt;l Battery Service.
■0- Rovnnd.
D. Barber.
^yone wishing to enter rail Lloyd’s
fle Store.
168-tf.
ASK for y o u r r e c e ip t .,
(Subscribers to the Dally Herald
rou,(| “"h for a receipt when the
Prier h°y» collect from you., It Is
r 01&gt;ly protection you have In case
[* cnrr'or changes or there happens
hf1a mistake in the account. Each
■ier boy |fl supplied with receipt
c't5' nr»d Is commanded to give a
Mpt by tho Herald. See that you
Myour rocclpt at the cud of each
c* if you are paying that way.

The Sanford Herald is Using Paper That Was
Made in Finland

Eyes Examined

Glasses Deafened

Henry McLaulin, Jr.
OPT. D.

OPTICIAN

OPTOMETRIST

Start
a Bank Account
Start a bank account with us and we will help you make it

Graduate Northern Illinois Collegs
larger. We are equipped to care for your deposita with abso­
(tr TU AmmUM *mm)
u t First St.
Sanford, FIs.;
Que., $8.60; Ottawa, Ont., $7.60; Sault 212_ B________
_
*____ j
CHICAGO, Nov. 1.—It costs $2 Stc. Marie, Ont., $10.60; Three Riv­
lute safety. There is no function of a bank we cannot per­
less to ship a ton of newsprint paper ers, Que., $7.60.
RIDERS DANCE TO CULTIVATE 1 form. Every facility afforded to farmers and others for
from Scandanavia to New York City
"Maine-New York City rates arc
than to ship a ton of tho same paper not much better than the Canadian, GRACE ON GALLOPING STEEDS '
transaction of their banking business. Accounts may be
from Niagara Falls across the state the Livermore Fails rate being $6.40
opened by mail and monies deposited or withdrawn in this
One, two—one ,two—one—"
of New York, R. S. Kellogg, of New and MHHnocket $7.70. From Port
Long
rows
of
young
women
follow­
way with equal facility. There ore scores of young men In
York, secretary of the News Print Edwards, Wis., to New York City the
Service Bureau, told the Salesmen's rate is $11.30 per ton; to Philadel­ ing tho stepping of nn ngile young
Sanford who should start a bank account. The dimes they
Association of the Paper Industry phia $10.90, and to Baltimore $10.70. man. Over in the corner of a large
store room, a middle-aged man bangs
throw away every month if brought to our bank would make
here today/•
"America, even with tho best, fast­
"America's paper industry," Mr. est and most modern paper mills in a piano. This ngile young man halts
them independent as they reach the noonday of life. In fact,
the steps and explains, Then ngain,
Kellogg snid, "faces serious competi­
the world," Mr. Kellogg declared,
every person who has a dollar should start a bank account.
tion from foreign lands not alone be­ cannot successfully compote with the "One, two—one, two—”
Sounds
Hko
a
musical
show
rehears­
Try it and you will always thank us for this advice.
cause of tho fact that foreign paper Is prices of European paper made and
made by cheap labor, under depreciat­ shipped under these conditions. It is ing, doesn’t it T
It’s not. It’s the ballet of the
ed exchange conditions, but also be­ the publishers who will suffer in the
Howe’s
Great London Cticus and Van
cause of the cost of freight ship­ long run, for American mills cannot
Amburg's Trained Wild Animals hard
ments."
make paper to meet present European
Figures
showing
comparative prices, and Europe cannot supply Am­ ut it In winter quarters at Danver.
freights between foreign shipping erica’s permanent needs. The normal But not cnly tho girls of the ballet
of Sanford
points and American points, as evi­ result would be wide swings in prices are dancing. In their ranks i,it a
number
of
women
riders—bareback
dence of conditions confronting the which are always disadvantageous to
paper industry in general, were sup­ producer and purchaser alike in any queens—and one or two girl aorlalists
—all cultivating that grave of move­
plied by Mr. Kellogg.
commodity where price extremes are ment that is so necessary to the wo­
"The rate from Hamburg to New found.
York and other eastern ports Is $4 "It is better for the American user men of the clrcuB. Among them wo
per 1000 kilos or $3.64 per ton of 2,- of newsprint to have a dependable see Stella Moss, Alice Floyd of the
000 pounds, and $6 per long ton or source of supply at home at a price Famous Floyds, Daisy Howell and
Dependable Service
$5.36 per 2,000 pounds from Scandi­ which affords n reasonable profit to others well known In America and
navia," he said. “Compared with this th*e manufacturer and thus encourage Europi, equestriennes of tho first
Practically New
are rates from various important greater production than to have a rank. They are equestriennes of the
first
rank
beenuae
they
miss
no
chance
Chevrolet .....
American mills.
temporary supply from abroad at to improve themselves. So, early this
"The rate from Watertown and prices fixed by ruinous unfair compe­
If you want the best MEATS
Glens Falls to New York is $5.60 and tition, which will vanish when world season, when the Howe’s Great Lon­ and GROCERIES at the lowest One 1919 Ford Touring Car, in
don Circus and Van Amburg's Train­
from Niagara Falls, $5.70. The Wat­ conditions ngain approach normal."
first class shape,
(POOP
ed
Wild Animal:: winter quarters be­ possible prices. Come to see us
ertown rntc to Philadelphia and Bal­ The Herald received a shipment of
at the old Depot Waiting Room,
at only ........................ y u L i )
gan
to
echo
with
the
tumpty-tumtum
timore is $0.30. Typical rules from pnper from Finlnnd last week that
of dance music, these riders, nftcr South Railroad Avenue.
important Canadian shipping points
to New York are: Espanola, Ont., wns much chcnper than Amorican pa­ their daily workouts in the ring bnrns
Liberal Terms on Both these Bargains
Phone 575-L-2
transportation on their beautiful white horses, drift­
$10.50; Grand Mere, Quo., $7.60; Iro­ per after paying
ed into the ballet girls’ quarters and
Repair Work by Experienced
quois Falls, Ont., $9.60; Jonquiore, charges from Scandanavia.
took places in the lines of dancers.
Mechanics nt Right Prices
MRS. IDA AUSTIN
, , ,
, ,
.
And that is one of the rensons why
HEALTH BOARD URGES
day is charged for the use of camp, th(?y nre „„ nlluril|Jf n8 thuy pirouetto
418 Magnolia Ave.
CONTROL OF AUTO CAMP. this sum to go to a fund provided for on ^ bnck8 of (hc|r cuntorin(J hor8CS
the special service rendered the tour- |n jbe r|nR;i 0f nlt. |,]g show this sum- MAKER AND ALTERLf! ./F At the Foot of First St.
LADIES’ CLOTHES
JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Nov. 1.— ists in camp. Tho camp will operate In mcr. And when the Howe-Van AmThe state board of health hns issued strict accordance with regulations of burg Show comes to Snnfotd, Wednes­
the following statement regarding the the state board of health. Tho ordi­ day, November 2nd you will realize,
nance goes into a number of details, watching tlioBe riders, something of
supervision of tourists’ camps:
regulating
the conduct of the tourists the pains they take t keep at the top
"Tourist nuto camps arc nn insti­
and
the
orderly
maintenance of the of their profession.
tution in Florida. Whether tho camps
grounds.
In
every
way the ordinance
arc good or bad for tho community
is
complete
and
under
it the camp will Notice of Application for Tax Deed.
they arc here and must be supervised.
A car load on A. C. L. Get An Abstract Before
be
assured
of
decent
supervision.
More
Under Section 575 of the General
During tho winter season of 1920-21
Dray Track
Statutes, Laws of Florida
thert were many faulty camps in tho cittoH should follow in the steps of .
Buying Property
West
Palm
Beach.”
state, the faults however were not so
Notice Is hereby given that Charle*
much with tho enmps as with tho lack
D. Cary, purchnscr of Tax Certificate
No. 16, dated the 2nd day of Juno, A.
of supervision and management of FLORIDA AND CAROLINA
WILL BATTLE AT TAMPA
D. 1919, hns filed said certificate L
them by municipalities wherein they
E. A. DOUGLASS, Pres,
SATURDAY NOVEMBER 5. my office nnd has made application
were located. As a result of poor
for tax deed to issuo in accordance
municipal supervision many of the
Camps wero grossly criticised, con-, TAMPA, Nov. 1.—Seats wont on with Inw. Snid cartificntu embrace!
Edith Lucille Ball
domned and subsequently abandoned, sale today, and with enthusiasm over tho following described proporty In
Teacher Plano and Harmony
In several cities ordinances wore adop­ the Floridu-Carolina gnino hero Sat­ Seminole County, Florida, to-wlt: WVi
ted prohibiting any further municipal urday nt a high pitch because of Flor­ of SE 1-4 of SW 1-4 of SW 1-4 a t j
Mnke anything you want in the Grnduntc Chicago Musical College
ida’s magnificent showing against SW 1-4 of SE 1-4 of SW 1-4 nnd
camps.
mattress
line.—Sanford Mattress Co.
"Whnt wore the evils of the camps Howard, the early rush exceeded all NW 1-4 of SW 1-4 lying E of W lint
Rhone 24S
183-5tc Residence 719 Oak Atc,
of Sanford Grant (less 825 it, N and
last year? First, many towns adver­ expectations. Only end nuto spaces
S by 600 ft. E nnd W in SE corner and
tising camps and bidding for this class remain nvnilable, but ns thoro are less N. 7 1-2 ch.) Sec. 29, Twp. 19 S, BnnnBBaHHPHaHnnnaBBnnnnnnBaunaBEanBnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnBnn
600
box
sentB,
it
will
take
a
few
days
of tourist made no provisions for san­
Rnngo 30 E., containing 25 acres. The
O U V TV a
itary upkeep. Tho touriBts came and to clean them out.
said
land being assessed at the date ! THE GREAT TRAINED ANIMAL SHOW
In blanking the Alabamans, the
lived ns best they could in tho midst
of the issuance of such ccrtificato in
of Inadequate facilities; second, many Gutorn did whnt both Auborn nnd tho nnmo of Elizabeth Kissel.
of the campers Were winter laborers Alabama U., have been unable to do.
Also: Tax Certificate No. 18, dat­
who went forth )n tho respective com­ The Hownrdians scored a touchdown ed the 2nd day of June, A. 1). 1919,
munities bidding for employment, and against tho State U., and a field goal hns filed said certificate in my office
third, In several of the larger camps, against the powerful PlainBmnn ma­ nnd has made application for tax deed
THE REAL BIG CIRCUS
commissaries wore oatnbllshcd and chine of Mike Donahue.
to issue in accordance with Inw. Said
Against
Florida
they
woro
able
to
food sold to campers nt n price cheap­
certificate embraces tho following deer than In tho neighboring town. make just ono first down and wore ! scribed property situated in Seminole
These conditions could nil have been never endangering the Gator gonl County, Florida, to-wit: All NE 1-4
line.
In Snnfnrd Grant (less beg. 45 Iks.
regulated by the local authorities.
Florida's five touchdowns, and it W of NE cor. run W to intersection
"Why should the citizens of n com­
munity criticise n condition for which might hnvo been moro had not Conch of W line of Sanford Grant, SWIy
they themselves nre directly responsi­ Kline used two or three shifts, espec­ along Grant line 15.60 ch., E 4.08 ch.,
ble? (t Is truo that many enmpors ially using green men in tho final pe­ NEly 17.55 ch. to beg.), Sec. 31, Twp.
were careless, in different townrds riods, represents tho same offensive 19 S., Rnngo 30 E. 110 acres. Tho said
proporty and rights yet the errors of power thnt both Alnbamn nnd Auburn land being assessed at tho date of the
issuance of such certificate in the I
n few should hardly ho sufficient to displayed.
name
of Elisabeth Kissel.
Florida
showed
nn
impregnnblo
de­
condemn nil when municipal regula­
Also:
Tax Certificate No. 22, dut- J
fense
against
both
lino
plays
nnd
the
tions wero wholly absent. A town or
ed
tho
2nd
day of June, A, D. 1919, hns
heralded
weakness—forwnrd
passes.
city should not hid for nuto tourists
unless onch town or city Is willing to Carolina has n great passing team, filed said certificate in my offico nnd
he responsible for tho enmp mainten­ it is said, nnd this nows from Hownrd has made application for tax deed to
is especially good news to Gator Ihsuo in accordance with law. Said
ance.
certificate cmbrnccs tho following do"There were boiup excellent camps rooters. Cnrolinn meanwhile^ added scribed property situated In Seminole
moro
laurels
last
Friday,
wnlking
off
in Florldn Inst year. Tho camp nt
County, Florida, to-wit: Hog. NW
DcT.and was a model, nlso that In with the annual state championship cor of NE 1-4, Sec. 32, Twp. 19 S.,
gnmo
with
Clemson
by
the
comfortnDeSoto Park of Tampa. In the latter
Range 30 E. Run E 12 ch., S 20 ch
camp thero were nt nil times about ble margin of three touchdowns.
to S and L E ily Wly along same
1,000 campers under strict municipal
1% ch. N 20 deg. W 10.90 ch. W 10
ASK FOR YOUR RECEIPT.
supervision and everything went well.
ch, S 11.13 ch. NEly 23 ch., S 14 deg.,
"Thoro are going to be some bad
E 8 ch., S 64 deg., W to pt. 30 ch. W
Subscribers to tho Dally Hornld of E line of Sec. and 10 ch. N of S
enmps thiH yenr for rensons stnted
nbove, but ns fnst ns found these should ask for n receipt when the line of NE 1-4, S 10 ch. W to SW cor.
camps will bo condemned by the state carrier boys colloc^from you. It Is of NW 1-4 of Sec. N to NW cor. of
board of health. The state board of tho only protection you have in case See. E to beg. 167 acros. The said
health will not tolerate Insanitary, tho carrier changes or there happens land being assessed at tho date of thu
to be a mistake In tho account. Each issuance of such certificate in tho
poorly operated camps this season.
"Thu cities of West Palm Bench carrier boy Is supplied with receipt nume of Jacob Kissel.
nnd Brndentown have recently pro­ books, nnd Is commanded to give n
Unless said certificates shall bo re­
mulgated vory buslncss-Hke, compre­ receipt by the Harold. See, that you uuenuMi
10 law,
iuw, uix uuum , jj
deemed iiivutuiiiK
according to
hensive ordinances to handle camps. got your receipt a t the cnd.pf each will issue thereon on tho 30th tiny of h
The West Palm Bench ordinance de­ week if you r.re paying that way.'
November, A. D. 1021,
__
&amp;
Wltnoss
Witness my official signature and
and, ■
fines the limits of tho camp grounds;
The recent bond election hold by tho seal this the 25th
26tH day of October, A ,; m
It crontes nn office of camp suporlnD. 192i.
S
tenent with police nnd managerial city of Inverness was carried by a 5 D,
(SEAL)
E. A. DOUGLASS,
g
authority; It requires that all tourists to 1 majority for the bonding f their
Clerk Circuit Court, K
tcslring to enter tho camp apply to town for the sum of $76,000 for the
Seminole County, Fla! a
the superintendent, giving name of construction o fa water and sewer
10-25-Btdh By: A. M. WEEKS, D. C. ■
person In charge of party, number in system.
Tickets on Sals on Show day at Bower and RoumiUat’s Drug
party, permanent homo address, make
Store at same prices charged on Show Grounds
The
world
newe
the
day
it
happens
and number of automobile, length of
the
Herald
office.
stay In enmp. A foe of 25 cents per
■

T he Peoples Bank

BROTHERHOOD
CO-OPERATIVE
STORES

AUTO EXCHANGE

SEMINOLE
BANANAS BANANAS ABSTRACT CO.

DOZEN. . . . 15c-20c
BUNCH. . . . $1.25 UP
WILL DO IT

SANFORD
WED.

NOY 2

�f \ A' , A 4.

HPAGE FOUR

THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1 ,1921

!r*

—
to tag something nice about folks in*
stead of handing out a line of criti­
hUllto4 ITMJ iflMMN UMft
•i
n*
cism.
You can make or break a
l*nU ...........
......KacmIU I i m i
■■iMtae. 1ST
€€(
■SUn , i w L ________
youngster's life by constantly nag­
ging them, and being cross to them,
By Henry Clews &amp; Co.
and this Is also true of oldor folks.
__________ m m n u __________ It Is the kindly word and the big
R. J. HOLLY_____________ Editor hearted mannor of overlooking peo­ The nearer approach of tho Arms who believed that an early vote would
if. 3. LILLARD....Secretary-Treasurer ple's fadits that makes the world hab­ Conference at Washingtdn, nnd the bo taken, Adoption of the excess
increasing certainty that.that confer­ profits tax repeal hns, however, boon
t L A. NEEL.__.„......General Manager itable.
ence will necessarily deal with finan­ rendered certain through tho prelimi­
It would be fine if the gosslper cial questions Is tho moat Important nary vote of the sonnte, while other
ROBERT J. HOLLY, Jr„
cikoulation karaoke
would stop gossiping and join the factor of general significance to the measures of amendment have on tho
Phono 148 up to 8 P. M.
&gt; "Suhshino Club,” or tho “Smiles
AdTwtUliw R .c W.d. M..WU «■ Ar»U»4tUi Club,” or somo other club that would market now on the horizon. Not only whole been unsatisfactorily dealt
tho revision of our tax .system, but with. 'I t la now promised, however,
•akMftftlM rrlo* ia i i r u w
tmt
ss,oe make them see the error of their way the whole problem of tho funding of that tho conference committee will
A permanent Bank. Account will
'■*» Moatki ......................................... EM nnd mnkc them Rhino instead of cloud
the international indobtednoss may greatly rcduco tho surtaxos., A not­
\
D .llr .i.1 U CUty by OorrUr
Rbaa
Ouu up. And then Dr Walker says that largely be influenced by the outcoma able fc&amp;turo of tho Congressional sit­
insure for you your banker’s in­
Tk. bl# It* to
WMklv XmsU «► n gosslper gossips to hide their own of this meeting. It has become a fac­ uation hns beon the increasing favor
tlraty o m n BaaiMW Oeumty ta d D p u blU W
terest in your affairs and his
sins. If that is true, somo of them tor in the financial situation which granted to the Smoot sales tax pro­
m q r r i d t r . AdT»rtl«U# n l u o u i* k m
m MpUottlaa,
D om om tla ta p *UUm . R .M
must have an awful oast to hide nnd must be ranked nB of first import­ posal. Thero arc many who bcliovo
willingness to assist you to take
par T »». ulwoju la »4v*aoo.
that it piny yet gain at least a partial
they should stop right now for thoir ance.
Member of The Aseociated Presa
advantage of the daily opportu­
The calling off of the threatened foothold in the bill during tho confer­
neighbors will be nsklng nbout their
past history and will bo digging up railroad strike is a great moral vic­ ence between House nnd Sonata. Adop­
nities that arise.
tory for tho government nnd Is of tion of tho railway refunding bill is
some fnmily skeletons.
But cut it out. Shine on. Beighten course good for the railroads ns well again promised, but is apparently con­
Groat weather.
•ipi
lip, say something good, T‘se honey ns the whole country. Those in n ditional upon the making of conces­
Puts the old pep Into your system. Instead of vlneg r. Say g'&gt;o.| thr.gs position to know, however, have felt sion with regard to rates which the
nbout people c.*»n if they happen to that there could bo ' no other result ninnagors of tho roads believe should
--------- o--------Sanford merchants are putting on 11 had in snot*. In time, they will be for the renson that n number of affili­ not be granted. The House of Repre­
A COMMUNITY BUILDER
ated unions wore not in sympnthy sentatives has acted upon tho inter­
i ,
big sales and bringing in the people. good.
with the walkout, public, sentiment national debt funding measure and it
— — o--------F. P. Forster, President
was against it, and the great number is likely ther^ may bo nction on the
MENDICANTS, SOLICITORS,
Frbm now until the first of Januof people out of employment rendered bill by the Senate prior to the meet­
B. F. Whitner, Cashier
SNOWBIRDS.
nryyls the time to mnkc hny. Every­
the success of tho undertaking very ing of tho ArmB Conference. Mean­
body get busy. Lot's go.
Read the statement from various doubtful nt the outsat. This situa­ time the continued effort to put sonic
-------------- o -------------tion has, of courso, been well under­ portion of our largo gold reserves
The smnll boyH had their fun last cities regnrdlng the beggars nnd so­ stood by the union heads, nevertheless buck Into common circulation may suc­
night. As usual, the soap Hquad were licitors nnd mendicants of all kinds. they deserve grent credit for display­ ceed, nnd if so will result in lowering
out, and gummed up all the windows It demonstrates how other cities in ing good sense in rescinding their tho reserve ratio which for the sys­
nnd automobiles that were in sight. Florida handle this vexatious quest­ strike order, notwithstanding that it tem ns a wholo hns now reached n
ion nnd Sanford could undoubtedly was delayed until the eleventh hour. figure of nearly 71 per cent. With
Storms off tho Now Jersey const take a few pointers from this report. So far as the roads nre concerned, our bnnku steadily withdrawing from
arc taking thoir toll of life. When Florida will be the mqccn for nil kinds howeyer, it still leaves open the mat- foreign trade financing there hns been
one stops to consider storms, Florida j of salesmen, beggars, solicitors, etc,, tor of lower freight rates which the little ronBun for improvement in for­
Is undoubtedly tho most fortunate during the next nix months. There is rnilroads under present conditions enn eign exchange.
You Can Find the Name of Every Live Pro­
State in the Union. We have a few 1no reason in the world for Sanford ill afford to make so long uh operat­
Developments during the week have
smnll ones in September and October, standing for this horde of treasure ing costs continue nt their present appeared once more to show that liq­
fessional and Business Man in
nnd some times a rather large one, but seekes. We want new people nnd we high level, and these can only bo uidation is a thing of the past, oven
Sanford in This Column
they aro off then, nnd we need not want tourists nnd we wnnt home- materially reduced by a further re­ the prospect of o serious railroad
scckcss,
hut
we
do
not
want
to
tnko
adjustment in wages which the Labor strike having failed to bring out nny
fenr them again until next Septem­
care of the mendiennts from other Board apparently is not inclined to stocks of consequence, nnd without
ber.
stntes who should stny at home. We sanction for some months to come. this there is no renson for fearing
LAWYERS
CONTRACTORS
The Gninesvitle Daily Sun came out do not wnnt to give up our money to Pending the decision, not merely of any retrograde movement of import­
yesterday with 12 pages of a big solicitors who work Florida only in the strike, but of the wage nnd rate ance. To bo mire the goneral public
S. 0 . Shinholser
George A. DeCottes
fair edition, and it was some paper. the winter ami take tills money homo situation of tile roads it is not strange is inclined still, to hold aloof until it
Attorncy-at-Law
Contractor nnd Builder
Getting up a special edition of a with them. We do not wnnt our home that tile general public should have has been more fully demonstrated to
Over
Seminole
County
Bank
SANFORD
FLORlfl
weekly paper is not so bad, but a spe­ people and our tux payers to suffer held aloof from the market and espec- what extent business conditions are
FLORIDA
cial of a daily paper is a big job. The by these migratory birds who p a y ' inlly from railroad securities, fearful mending. The calling off of me rail­ SANFORD
special of the Sun was well arranged nothing in niaiy instances ami in^nf the consequences of the contro- road strike, which threatened to dis­
Sanford Constructs
rupt business in all sections of the
and well patronized. The Alachua' nthers a small license. The city of versy
country
is
of
course,
a
favorable
mar­
It is gratifying to note that general
HARTFORD BATTERY CONTRACTORS AND BUILD!
County Fair will be held oil Novem-; Sanford should shut down on many of
ket
factor
which
cannot
be
over-esti­
business
has
been
singularly
little
Planes nnd Specifications Cheorfi
iier 8, 0, 10, 11. Our old friends,! these people right now before the
“Battery
Insurance”
•
mated,
and
to
that
extent
the
market
disturbed
by
the
strike
prospects.
In
Furnished
Johnny Jones nnd Ed Salter will furn­ senson opens nnd we would not be
has
been
benefited;
still
it
is
very
some
parts
of
the
country
there
would
All
Work
Guaranteed
Sold and’’ Serviced
by
ish tho fun.
bothered by them any longer* Wo
■1 • •* *■
doubtful
if
a
sustained
upwurd
moveII.
T.
PACE
P. 0. Rox
seem
to
have
been
an
effort
to
produce
want to help suffering humanity ami
|mont
of
consequence
can
bo
expect­
Edw.
Higgins,
Inc.
nnd
ship
rather
more
largely
than
The Alachua County Fnlr sent the we do help them, but there is not a
would otherwise have been thu case ed nt the present time as the demand
Herald a complimentary ticket and beggar on the road today who has not bad there not been a prospect that for stocks will necessarily have to run
Builders &amp; Contract
Haight &amp; Wieland
we wish it could lie used. It was a home somewhere and he should lie the movement of freight would be well utiead of the supply before thiH
Sketches and Estimates Free;
some eighteen years ago that we in that home where lie is known in­ “tied up” at the end of the mouth. can legitimately take place. Looking
building too large and none too it
GARAGES
helped to hold a county fair at Gaines­ stead of “touring” Florida in the win­ Businas, however, in not n few branch­ ahend several months, however, the
-----ALL WORK GUARANTE!
ville, nnd nil the exhibits were placed ter and some summer resort in the es is still showing the continued re­ outlook is promising.
Smith Bros. Garage
Wilson &amp; Shorey
in n stable that stood nenr the old summer.
sults of the depression. The quarter­
Pino
nnd Gnrland Sts., Orlando,
Expert
Repairing
Sun office. Wo thought it was a
ly report of tho U. S. Steel Corpora­ AUTOMOBILE LICENSE TAGS
OIL, GAB and ACCESSORIES
ONE REASON FOR THANKS­
wonderful exhibition at the time, nnd
tion, although exhibiting an improve­
TO BE READY DECEMBER 15.
Oak and First
GIVING.
PURE WATER
maybe it was, but now the Alachua
ment for September over the preced­
County Fair is one of the big events
ing August and July, is a favorable
TALLAHASSEE, Fla., Nov. 1.—
An additional cause for thankful­ factor, notwithstanding that the com­
of Florida, nnd lias grounds nnd
Elder Springs Wate
Automobile
license tags for 11)22 will
Geo. W. Knight
ness in this coming Thanksgiving bined figures aro had when compar­
buildings ami everything.
be
ready
for
distribution
December
99.98% PURE
month is to lie found in thu fact that ed with previous quarters of this
-------------- o-------------Real Estate and Insurance
15
th,
according
to
the
State
Automo­
Phone
311-W
Hnnford,
the great ruilrund strike which threat­ yeur. The showing made by Central
SAY THE KINDLY WORD.
SANFORI)
FLORIDA
bile
license
bureo,
while
the
bureau
ened awful disaster to the whole coun­ Leather may lie regarded as a moder­
expects the flood of applications for
Dr. Walker in bis sermon Sunday try lins been called off and will not ate improvement. In the oil indus­ tngs to begin about December 1.
LORD’S PURITY
.. Employment Bureau..
night tnlkcd about the gosslper nnd take place. We have come to thu try Mexican Petroleum's large report­
Officials
desire
especially
to
im­
WATER
the scandal monger, nnd he (layed point in this country where adequate ed earnings have naturally been tak­ press upon the owners of trucks the The vocational committee of the Busi­
transportation
between
widely
separ­
ness
and
Professional
Women’s
Club
en as a helpful element. Continued importance of huving their earn
them right and left, and he did not
AS GOOD AS THE HBST
say a word too much or a word to ated sections is almost ns vital a firmness on the part of the copper weighed In order to avoid delays and requests all young women desiring Daily Service
Phontl
strong about them. We consider the necessity ns tho nir we breathe or shares has been an encouraging unnecessary confusion in registering employment to register at the First
gosslper mid the scandal monger and tho food wo eat. The grain grown on phase of the week’s developments, nl- their vehicles. The weight of trucks National Bank.
AGNES G. BERNER, Chairman
the character-assassinator the vilest the Dakota or Kansas prairies, makes j though it is still uncertain just how must be given when license is applied
SANFORD N0VEL1
the
bread'that
is
etttoil
IttNow
York
1
much
real
improvement
him
taken
creature in tho world. And nnothcr
for.
tiling he said, that was true, was ami Boston. Much of thi! meat con­ place in thu copper business itself.
D. F. SUMNER
WORKS
about speaking a kindly word Instead sumed in Florldn and other southern Excellent, reports from textile and
A large number of the counties hnvo
PAINTER
of the censure, nnd help people to a states grows lip on thu ranches of thu leather industries continue to support already secured their spuco nt the
V. C. , COLLER,
Prop.
the
belief
that
thosu
lines
of
trade
far
west
and
is
fed
in
tho
corn
statts,
*
* .r
LET ME FAINT YOUa HOUSE
better understanding. Thjoru Is ho
Florida
State
Fair
in
the
agricultural
have
been
fairly
thoroughly
readjust­
Will Contract or Toko Job by tho Hour
much in what he nnid along this line, slaughtered In the groat packing hous­
General Shop and Mi
building for their exhibits.
PHONE 119
in LAUnEL AYE
that everyone should practice uttering es of Chicago or KnnsnH City, and ed, Particular encouragement is to
be drawn from the fnct that prices
Work
the kindly word. It goes a long way shipped u thousand miles or mure in
havo apparently been more fully stab­
refrigerator
cars
to
the
ultimate
con­
townrd making a dark day bright, nnd
you can not
Sanford Machine
CONTRACTOR and BUILDE
ilized. Current index numbers show
u
..
a rough life smooth, and taking away sumer.
dry
your
that
tho
average
level
is
now
either
517
Commercial Street Sanford, i
Foundry Co.
Tho coal dug from tho hills of
the thorn from the pathway of life.
Laundry
in
tho
sun
when
it
la
rain­
holding its own or else advancing. The
It means so much that If everyone Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia, definite determination of the strike ing. So call the SANFORI) BRANCH General Machine nnd Boiler Works
generates
the
steam
that
pulls
heavy
TRANSFER
would practice it there would lie a
threat ought to confirm the greater LAKELAND STEAM LAUNDRY, Automobile Flywheel Steel Gear
heaven hero on earth in a few short trains over the Rockies ,uml feeds 9 confidence of business in tho outlook. they can dry it, rain or shine. All
bands in stock
“WE DELIVER THE (1001
Crank Shafts lie-turned
months. We could never see why million factory furnaces all over the
Tho failure of congress to adopt the work cnlled for nnd delivered tho 3rd
day,---------------r.IVE
US
A
TRIAL
people do nut bund out mure sunshine land.
tax revision hill during the past week
Quick Service Transff
No community lives to itself alone.
down here where sunshine Is mndc.
has tieun a disappointment to those
Sanford
Steam
Laundry
Storage Facilities
Wo have so much to be thnnkful for in The prosperity of the country dupends
If
we
please
you, tell others; it
FOR SERVICE
Florida, wo hnvo ho many bright and upon the unhindered and rapid ex­
tell
us.
Phone 49H
YOUNG
HOYS
ARE
BUYING
plonsnnt days and life holds so much change of products from one com­
LIQUOR.
Call
146-J
in storo for us and means so much munity to another. That Is why the
PHONE 475
SANFORD, FLA.
HOTELS
W. RAWLING, Prop.
to us that ovoryono should hnnd out prospects of an indefinite tie-up of all
There
was
never
so
much
liquor
be­
the kindly word—tho human sunshino transportation was regarded with ing ([rank by young boys when the
Hotel Montezuma
to gladden the hearts of men a n d , universal dismay. Should transporta­ open saloons were here as there is
tion
he
completely
broken
down
for
a
Acteylene
Welding
make tho world a hotter jilnco In
right now in Hnnford. You can go
“Stanford's New Hotel"
OF ALL KINDS
which to live. How much better it Is period of two weeks, three-fourths of down the streots of Sanford any night
91.50 Up Per Day
the inhabitants of this country would
« tho y()UllR boyg nru fi|Ied up on
Sanford Welding Co.
suffer from cold and hunger, «u\tl moonilhlno „ (,uor nm, reoling around
many would suffer with the rest, p e r-. the „trootl, deml drunki The of(lccrH
Located In Eagle Bldg., 205 .Oak Ave.
HEINZ
haps more, for tho deprivation of tho nrrost thcm but can do nothing more,
•ufiijmi
4A'IH
accustomed wage would lie a hard Sumlny night Officer Walker arrested
Before buying your Phone 175 Fourth and Sanford Av»
blow to them.
ItW(&gt; youngsters not over fifteen years
It will bo a much more Joyous 0f ng0( boib H0 drunk they were nl*
New Era Printery
Thanksgiving Dny, now that the ni(jBt helpless. He could only nrrest
G. Bassett Smith, Prop.
strlko order hns boon recalled, than it j them, however, and beyond paying a
Dne of the many delicious Heinz
COMMERCIAL AND
could have boon bad It remained ia (file there is nothing done about it. If
products is the cooked Spaghet­
JOB PRINTING
force. Nom If tho labor board, or tho these young boys nre to bo allowed to
ti in a tomato sauce with cheese.
interstate commerce commission, or byy liquor as they are buying it, then {Come in and look over
All that needs to lie done to pre­
DRINK
whatever body hns it In chnrgc, w|ll | prohibition has played n sorry trick
pare tho dish is to heat the can
3i
our line
bring nbout n reduction in freight (on Sanford for it seems that tho boys 1
Elder Springe Water, (ta 99 98-100
IS minutes in boiling water be­
rates, tho country will have something , will not tell wheru they purchase !
fore opening.
ur cent pure. Phono 31!L
to bo really thankful for. That Is tho , liquor and there Is no way of finding j
next thing ‘to bo fought for.—Tampa out. It is only ono of the signs of
Office supplies of all kinds at The
Times,
the times that there is more liquor b e-i
Herald Printing Co. When you want
---------- o----------; Ing sold now and tho rottenest kind i
anything In this lino see Thu Herald
0.
S.
Mills
has
boon
awarded
the
, nnd sold more to young boys than ’
We have it or can get i t
Pfcaoaa 4*7-494
contract for tho Inylng of tho grading over before. What are you going to do
WBLAKA BLOCK
Phone 442
Park Av«
of tho streets for the town of Venice.' about It?
Try a Herald Wnnt Ad today.

SANFORD DAILY HERALD

OUR Wm

ly

b u sin ess r e v ie w

THE HERALD PRINTING CO., Inc.

Opportunity Looks
for You When You
are Worth

PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS
DIRECTORY OF SANFORD

i

IT’S A FACM

* ‘

&amp;

T. A. BUTNER

J

COOL WEATHER IS
COMING

SPAGHETTI

HEATING STOVE

Deane Turner

LA

THE BALL HARD­
WARE COMPANY

GILLON &amp;
FRY

Electrical Contractors
111

�-Tf*y

sr "v

Tjtfla Happenings
Mention of
•.fallen) In Brief
,&gt;rsonal Hems
of Interest

THE 8ANF0HD DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1,1921

In and A bout
« £ The City &lt;£

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Kur Florida: Fair tonight and *
Wednesday: cooler in South #
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WEATHER

W w. C. Smith, of Ocala, spent the
week-end here on business.

Have your watches and Jewelry re­
paired at McLaulln's. Two first class
watch makers. Prompt service.
140-tfc
u. M. Tedder, of A. C. L., is trans­
uding business here today.
The Temple Pipo Organ Cftib Will
hold its Christinas Ilasaar November
2fith. The place to bo annonced lat182-Mon-Thur-tfc
er.
It. V. Motile, of West Pnlm Beach,
is among the business visitors .hero
today.

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Born, to Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Hodg­
es, October Hist, a girl baby, ,JHcr
name will be Lois Henrietta.

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SANFORD'S
TEMPERATURE
Feels wintry again but the
thermometer only registers 8-1
and that can hardly be called
winter. However, tho cool
weather is fine and seems to
have stopped tho rain. It wll
also make business pick up
and do wonders for all concorned. Lot winter come on
even if it cntchos us in our
B. V. D.’s,
.
5:40 A. M. NOVEMBEU 1
Maximum ....................... 84
Minimum ......................... 62
Ilnngo ............................ 50
Barometer ..................... 29.90
Bain ...................
02
Culm and clear.

The bodies or the Episcopal Church
will hold their Bazaar and Supper,
December 1st and 2nd in the Parish
House.
171-tfe

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Party finding button In O. K.
Princess Pat?
BBEAD
will receive 50c.
During
18&amp;-tfc
week there will be a special button
Virgil Smith has gone to Orlando' put in O. K, Bread worth $1,00 to
finder. Your grocer will give you the
where he will be connected with
money. There will be a button in
Wight Tire Co.
one loaf each day.
188-lwc
Party finding button in O. K .1
Quito a lot of development are be­
BREAD will receive 50c.
During
week there will lie a spccini button ing made at Melbourne Beach recent­
put in (). K. Bread worth $1.00 to ly. Several of tho streets aro being
finder. Your grocer will give you tho graded and put in first class shape.
money. There will ho n hutton in They nlrendy have a 24-hour light
&lt;me loaf each day.
188-lwe service.
Tin* new iec plant which has recent­
ly been installed at Melbourne hns
started operation nnd they arc now in
position t*i supply tho local demand
sufficient ire at a very small cost.
“ EXIDE" BATTERIES—Our Pull­
man ears, airplanes, submarines,
telephones and great 7,000 mile wire­
less stations are equipped with tho
master “EXIBE" batteries, the bnttcry is the life of your car, get the
best. We recharge ami repair all
makes. Bay Brothers, Phono 548.
176-tf-c

Princess Pat?

ltta-tfc

J. F. Donnelly will erect at Mount
Dora n one-story business building.
It Is expected to hnvo it completed
within sixty days.

Hupmobile makes fin­
al reduction, open mod­
els, $1250, Detroit.—B.
&amp; O. MOTOR CO., San­
ford.

188-tfc

Announcements aro mndu that tho
storm the [last week did not do the
damage to a great toxtent ns first
thought to the fruit and industrial
business of the southern part of tho
state.

I'un tirally all of the space in the
industrial show building nt the State
Fair has been taken. A lot of new
industries for the State will bo seen
fur their first time.

BATTERIES—America’s first car
was regularly equipped with start­
ing and lighting Batteries in 1911,
this battery .was an “EX IDE”, today
the master battery of the world. Do
not be misled by the so-called just ns
For olfice supplies, stationery, etc., good.—Bay Brothers, Phone 518.
175-tf-c
come to the Herald office.
■ lu iu iD a iia iia iiia iiM ia iiiiim a iiiiiH iis n a iia iii
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&amp;

188-tfc
Stops are being taken for tho build­
ing of a now $20,000 church building
at Dixieland. Tho building committee
has nlrendy boon appointed and they
aro to got right in bohlnd tho move­
ment.

Princess Pat?

Hupmobile makes fin­
al reduction, open mod­
els, $1250, Detroit.—B.
&amp; O. MOTOR CO., San­
ford.
188-tfc

Mrs. S. G. Kennedy, of Lakeland,
was visiting friends here last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Kennedy lived in Snnfod for several years before moving
to Lakeland.
WILL BOOST HOME PAPERS
Week of November 7-12 Set for Na­
tion-Wide Endeavor
"Subscribe tti your homo town pnper."
This is tho slogan of a new nation­
wide movement hacked by the Nation­
al Editorial Association and other
agencies.
The movement hns hack of it far
more than a selfish desire on the part
of newspapers to acquire increased
circulation, for it is, in effect, a step
toward the perfect unification of
America by the strengthening of ties
that hind everyone to his native soil.
The campaign is, moreover, an ex­
cellent opportunity to boost the home
town. Tho men and women who
were horn nnd reared here have, some
of them, been away for many years
nnd many important changes have
taken place—changes in which they
would he greatly interested.
It is
more often the enso than not that
private correspondence overlooks these
changes, however carefully one might
attempt to write “the news" in a let­
ter.
The newspapers, on the other hand,
prints nil the Items of Interest, large
nnd small, and is the ideal medium
through which to keep in touch with
in the old home town.
In order to stimulate this move­
ment wo are this week offering an
extra copy of The Weekly Herald to
every subscriber who calls or writes
for it. This extra can he Hent, with
n special subscription blank which
wo will furnish, to nuy member of the
family who is away from home. Or,
if preferred, wo will mail a copy free
of charge to anyone you designate.

Southbound
Depart!
Arrive
I No. 83.......... 2:88 a. m. 2:40 a. m
3 No. 27_____
8:40 a. m
3:20 p. rn
No. 89_____ 2:55 p. nt.
No. 85............... 0:55 p.m. 7:10 p. m.
North Bound
Depart*
Arrive
No. 82________ 1:48 a.m. 2:03 u. nt.
No. 84............... 11:45 a.ri». 12:05 p. m
No. 80............... 3:05 p.m. 3:25 p. m.
No. 28_______ 10:00 p.m.
Trilby Branch
Depart*
Arrive
0:00 a. m.
•No. 100.......... ,
3:25 p. m
■ •No. 24.........
■ #No 158..........
7:00 a. «n.
■
7:85
p. m.
No.
22..........
■
■
Leesburg Branch
Depart*
Arrive
■ •N&amp; 157.......... 4:00
■ Nb. 21....... 2:82
8■ •Nb. Vttt-.-— . 8:30
■ •Nb. jfc .'J.... 2.1)0'
8■ No. 22.....:-.... 7:00'it. A
Oviedo Branch
I■
Arrive
Depart*
TNo. 128..— .11:00 a.m.
3
8:40 p. tit
■ •No. m ~ —
■ •Dally, except Sunday.

Astigmatism]
■

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a
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8

8

some special shirts and neckwear for our young men to wear that
night. They are fine values—appropriate patterns. And the new suit
you want for that night—just you come and look at what we have for
you.

183-tfe

TRAIN SCHEDULE

■
■

And don’t you know that even wooden indians move on Hallowe’en?
Last year in a neighboring* town a wooden indian left his cigar store
post to be found next morning walking in a movie. Everyone goes
somewhere on Hallowe’en.

Hupmobile makes fin­
al reduction, open mod­
els, $1250, Detroit.—B.
O. MOTOR CO., San­
ford.

I

s the direct cause of more eye strain than all other errors of refrac­
tion. This being true the inventivo ingenuity of tho Optical Profesuon, for many years, has been centered upon the construction of an
.nstrument that would detect and accurately measure astigmatism.
The UNIVERSAL OPHTHALMOMETER is the most gratifying lnitrument of these efforts. Scientific and accurate in every respect It
'peaks the last word in the efficiency of Optical Science.
Having added a UNIVERSAL OPHTHALMOMETER to my re­
fractive room instruments I am better prepared than ever to render
tho service that your eyes deserve.

TOM
Optometrist-Optician—Opp. Postoffice

\r
TO SEE BETTER SEE MOORE

FlVfc

H ^ L L O W E T E H

The contracts have been nwnrdod
to Cnrmon Co., for the building of tho
factory nt Sarasota for the Sarasota
Princess Pat?
183-tfc Fruit Co. A lot of the mntcrin! is
nlrendy moving nnd the building will
he
finished by tho first of the coming
An Irishman’s explanation of why
year.
the waves are wild is “Britannia rules
tho waves.”
*

o k

B. A. Howard, of Paholcoe, is In tho
city on n visit to his family.

Summary of the
Floating Small
Talks Succinctly
Arranged for
Herald Headers
#

W

I

9

9

r t f sr&amp; /? £ r w

r /s

Sanford, F la.
ROMANCE OF RIVER LIGHTS
Flashlight
Messages
Fly
Between
Gob* on the Hudson and Girls
Ashore In New York.

FIVE ROOM EUNGAL0W
Located within fifty feet of brick street to
be sold this week on very reason­
able terms.
See

Sluing In their apartment windows
on warm mimiucr nights trying to
gel eoul, many girls along Riverside
drive amuse themselves by “blinking'*
messages by llashllglit to the sailors
ou the navy craft anchored in the
Hudson, the New York Hun slntes,
“Oil, I wish I him something to
read. I wish t had something to read,”
was the message which some quartermaster was blinking away aimlessly
the other night when:
"WIi at do you like—ro nut nee, love,
mystery, sen adventure or detective
stories?" came the barely discernible
twlnkh from the eleventh Hoar win­
dow of a big npnrthicnt Ionise lit Hie
mis,
“llomnnee," flashed back the gob.
"Real Hill IT."
| Classified advertisements, 5 cents n line. No ad taken for leas thae
And then the first chapter of a won-, 25 cents, and positively no classified ads charged to anyone. Cask
derfnl romance was blinked off and the
must accompany all orders. Count five words to n line and remit ac­
second chapter was being enjoyed'
cordingly.
when the mist and fag descended *&gt;n
the river.
FOR RENT—Lower floor of resi­
“Sorry, hut can't read any longer
dence, furnished, 203 Magnolia
tonight,” blinked the gob. who al­
185-fitp
ready Imd met the young womiiii of FOR SALS—Best opportunity for Ave.
wholesale and retail fish market on
tlie blinker romance, which Is inking
a serious turn.
East coast Building, dock and snip­ FOR RENT—Half of store, fine dis­
play window, new building. En­
“You wait and sec," predicts one ping platform. Address W. P. Wil­
young Indy who Is Intercepting the kinson, Now Smyrna, Fla. 10-17-l:n quire of \V. II. Treadwell, East Sec­
ond street, near Sanford avenue. New
messages each night. "Those messages
187-tfe
are endearing and, nb, well, wluit girl MIRACLE CONCRETE CO.—Build­ DeForrest Bldg.
ing and pier blocks, cement pockets, FOR RENT—Light
Wouldn't enjoy being courted so rt&gt;housekeeping
cement sidewalks with guarantee to
mtiutlciilly?"
rooms, Mrs. Baldwin, 210 French

A. P. CONNELLY

FOR SALE

EASY

last and not brenk or crack. General Ave.

189-ntp

WAY TO GET MONEY cement contracting. All work guar­ FOR
IT RENT—Bedroom and kitchen­
anteed. Elm nvenuo between Third

Indianapolis Youngtter Preferred Good
Time at Law n Fete to Poaoetsion of T w o Teeth.

This yuuiig limn of eight years has
been suffering the loss of Ids first
teeth, and Ills mother bus had Idm lit
the dentist chair several limes. As
the teeth show an Inclination to part
company with the hoy, the dentist's
bill is running* up. Until last week
the hoy positively refused to permit
Ids mother to pull his teeth. She told
him finally tlml lie could pull them
and she would give him GO cents for
each one. Me thought It over and doelded to pull two Rinse ones himself
It was easy nnd lie got $1.
A lawn felu was to be given in tlm
neighborhood the other night, and the
boy wished to go. Tin* day before tlm
affair was scheduled lit* brought four
Icetlt in his mother and demanded $2.
Ills mother wns shocked, examined
Die teeth and found they were sound
amt would have lasted a long time.
The youngster siild he needed the
money, us lie expected to iiltetid the
lawn fete. Me got It.— Imllamipolls
News.

Mud Pie Census.

and Fourth street.—J. E. Terwllllgor,
Prop. Phono 224-W.
178-lm-tfc
FOR SALE—Eight young mules, all
good condition, good workers, Will
sell one pair of them at a great bar­
gain.—G. F. Smith, Sanford or Her­
ald office.
‘
180-tfe
FOR SA I,E—Beautiful Scotch Collie.
Loves children. Cali 112. 18H-3tc
FOR SALE—One practically new
Boo speedwagnn, one new 5 passen­
ger Ford touring car with true!: body,
curtains all around. Will sell either
one.—Sanford Mattress Co., Sanford,
Fin.
185-Ctc
FOR SALE—25 game roosters and
25 hens and pullets.—Code Hill,
Lockhart, Fla.
187-Iltp

ette furnished.

300 Elm Avenue.
189-5tp

WANTED

WANTED—Customers for fresh milk,
morning and evening deliveries.—R.
L. Garrison. Phono 371L 109-St-Tu
WANTED—Team work. Apply M.
178-13tp
Hanson Shoo Shop,
SECOND HAND SHOW CASE
Wanted. Herald Printing Co.
183-5tp.
WANTED—Show case, five or six
feet long. Herald Printing Co.
183-5tp.
WANTED—Ait ice box that will hold
101) to 150 llm ice. Notify Herald.
187-tfc
WANTED—Two unfurnished rooms,
FOR SALE—IIlive two small orange
suitnhlo for light housekeeping,
groves at a bargain. Will take city close in by couple without children,
property as part pay for one or both. References exchanged. AddroHs “J.
Reply to P. O. ilox 131.
18-0tp N." care of Herald.
18fl-tf-dh
FOR SALE-Rough framing lumber WANTK|) _A L„ H,, |&gt;ar~ in ln " reai.
and boards cheap. Also some good
fn|r)y d(M0 ,n AdvU(] |ocft.
sound mules.- -II. S. Long, Ostemi.
tint* ami best price in first reply.—E.
188-Dtp Clayton, care Herald.
Phone 4811.
lH9-0tp
FOR HALE—9 room house in good WANTED TO RENT—Residence, of
condition, 313 Magnolia ave. Ex­ nhout six rooms, unfurnished, for
cellent location. Price $0,900. 189-3tc
one year or longer. Reasonably close
WOOD—Dry oak and pine, 2 strati In, sente yard room desired. Give lo­
load $7.50, delivered.—1). W. Short, cation nnd price, in answer to P. O.
Longwood, Fla.
l89-3tp Box 710, Sanford.
189-Otp
FOR SALE—Fine Duroc Jersey sow, WANTED"TO EEflT -W U h privilege
of buying, u cottage or hungnlow in
weight about 250 pounds, $35. Also
some durk Musconie Drakes for breed­ good condition. Furnished or unfur­
ing at $3.50 each. Flock of layiqg nished.—G. R. Snyder. Phone 5012.
, ■
180-2tp
Jipns cheap.—D. W. Short, Longwood,
^ Ih*
. i d * ,-*■■■** |, t. ■"
,

Ilnelnr Russell, wlm tells us that III
a spoonful of good ambit* land Micro
nro more living organisms limn there
are people In the United Kingdom,
bus probably not wasted bis little
making an accurate count, but there
Is no doubt lie Is well within the murk,
observes the London Chronicle.
A Frehch Imeierlologlst recently
caught his tittle son playing with a
mull pie. ami, borrowing a small por­
tion, of Qlv picture,.carefully analyzed
It In his laboratory, lie found It
teeming with microbe*, but only t.sik
•I census of ihb harmful vnrletlH.
lie foiniil when he Intel finished Ill's
labor Mint the little hit of the "pie"
lie dealt with contained Mu* following FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms.
germs: Diphtheria,
; megslett,
Apply 100-1 Elm Ave.
152-tfc
2(W ),ono; smallpox, Dob.oWi; loot Jaw,
Ca\\
H.ntkUHtO; dysentery, 900,000; plica* FOR RENT—Sbbhrtnn home.
nmtiln. 603,000; tiiliercilloslri, 1120,000.
308-J.
107tfc
And the total of nearly 11 mil Hun was FOR REt^T—bed room, 311 Park nvoonly a percentage of tlm organisms lu
nue.
.
178-tfc
the delicacy.

FOR RENT

LOST

LOST—The auto Jack (ticked up on
west First str ct about two mllos
from Sanford early Saturday morn­
ing, should bo brought to the Herald
fflce.
187-3tp.
LOST—White pointer dog. Ono eye
and ono ear brown. Liberal reward
offered for re*um to W. J. Thigpen.
RTl— RENT-Two large, connecting
*r .
... ... .
187-3tc.
rooms, suitabia for couple, desiring
Post cards—local view*—le each at light housekeeping rooms. 219 Oak
Pest cards—local views—lc each at
For office supplies, stationery, etc.,
Herald—by the pound—1Sc.
the Herald office.
Ave.
185-tfe rums to the .Herald office.

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                    <text>Sanford
TM1

“ City SabstantiaF
IN THE HEART OP THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION
NUMBER 188

SANFORD, FLORIDA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 31,1921

VOLUME n

TWENTY-THREE ARE DEAD
IN CANADIAN FLOOD
THAT SWEPT BRITTANIA
Half of Houses in the
- Valley Go Down
jp Flood

V iew s of the New Navy Building in Washington

GOOD WILL
MESSAGES
SENT OVER

NOTED ENGLISH AUTHOR
WILL HE IN JAX
VISITING OLD FRIEND.

.*4/'W

Famous Leaders of Eu­
rope Side by Side with
Americans

(B y Tkc A u o cU U d F ra u )

WARNINGS^ FAILED

JACKSONVILLE, Oct. 31.—H. 0.
Wells, noted British author, will spond
a week In Jacksonville after tho Wash­
ington disarmament limitation con­
Waters Came Down Side ference
as guest of John Othcn, ad­
Com. Emery Called the
Mountain and Spread vertising manager of tho Florida Me­
Convention to Or­
tropolis. Mr. Wells and Mr. Othen
Over the Town
der Today
wero class mates in n grammar school
In England, and have not seen each
VANCOUVER, B. C., Oct. 81.—Tho other in thirty-eight yoars. They have
(B y The A uo aU tcd Pr i l l )
KANSAS CITY, Oct. 31.—Tho meatoll of lives lost In tho flood which kept up a correspondence, however,
sugc of greeting from the veterans
plunged down the mountainside Fri­
begun In their school dnys.
of other Allied nrmics brought by fa­
day evening virtually wiping out the
mous lendora of European fighting
town of Britania Beach on Howo
men wuh the outstanding incidents of
Group
of
Experts
Sound and pnrtlally Inundating Fras­
Front Mint rem views of the new navy building In WiiHliIngton. The two i near wings shown In the renr view tho threo day program of the Ameri­
ier valley Just cast of here, reached
Working Out Plan
have been given over for use os olllces for the urniM conference.
can Legion convention opening today.
thirty-six tonight. Tho property loss
Limit
Armaments
Genernl Diaz, of tho Italian armies;
is estimated nt several million dol­
Genernl Baron Jncquos, of Belgium;
FLORIDA
SCHOONER
lars.
,
Will Meet With American Delegates
Vice-Pmident Coolidgc, who is repre­
FOUND CAPSIZED
to
Conference
senting
President Harding, were
VANCOUVER, B. 0., Oct. 81.—
OFF DRY TORTUGAS.
among
the
spectators and speakers
Twenty-three persons are kgown to
(D r The A u o cU U d P a u l
I
B
r
Thu
A
u
o
cU
U
d
Praia)
todny.
Admiral
Earl Betty, of the
bo dend, thirteen and perhaps more
WASHINGTON, Oct. 31.—SocrcBritish grand fleet, wns expected to
arc missing and fifteen are nursing
nrriyo this nfternoon and Marshal
serious injuries ns tho result of tho Donby, Admiral Koontz, chief of na­
Andrews, Fin., to Portorlco, with a Foch nnd General Pershing tonight.
disastrous flood which plunged down val operations, nnd n group of nnvnl
cargo of lumber, wns found dlsmnstcd Nntionnl Commander Emery called
n steep mountain sido Friday night experts nre working out nn American
proposal
ns
to
limitation
of
nrniacnpslzed forty miles olT Dry Tor- tho convention to order nnd the Invoand transformed tho modol copper
In His Address Today at the Third Annual Con­ nnd
ments
ngnin
will
meet
today
with
tugns,
nccording to ndvlccs received ention wns pronounced by Rev. John
mining setlement of Britalnln Bench
vention
Being
Held
in
Kansas
City
Amerlcnn
delegates
to
conference.
It
in
n
tologrnm
todny to J. W. Somor- Rinzor, of Chuttnnoogn, National
into n scene of desolation and ruin.
was
assumed
tho
genernl
theory
of
vlllc,
of
Gulf
Port,
owner of tho ves- Chnplnin. Memorial services for F.
Fully half of tho 110 neat, froahly
(Br Thi Ailoolatid Prau)
... .tho fnco of ndverse industrinl con-j BCl, No mention wns mndo of tho W. Galbraith, wus tho noon-tinio fea­
"in
painted cottages wero carried away limitation of nnvnl nmmments which
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 31.—The (|UionH which hnvu hit the ex-service fnt0 0f tho crow. The messngo stated ture while nt the nfternoon sosslon
on tho crest of the flood. Othors woro this government believed might be
successfully
applied
had
been
com­
issue
of nutionnl adjusted componaa- mnn hnr(Ior thnn any othec class, the thnt tho VC8Sel wn8 found by tho Diaz nnd Jacques wero to nddress the
smnshed to pieces by the force of tho
pleted
nnd
npproved
nt
previous
meet­
tlon
for
the ex-service man has not LcR|on has gnined in strength nnd its conBt „unrd cuttcr Tallapoosa, which convention.
onrushiug waters and most of the re­
ings
of
nnvnl
experts.
Nnvnl
prob­
been
nt
nil
settled, John G. Emory, fimulc|n| position hns steadily imtowing her to Key W est Tho
mainder were still pnrtlally submerg­
lem, however, generally understood nt national commander of tho American pr0VC(j **
Somervillo carried n ccrw of nino Dagoes Raise Cain
ed.
Legion, declared here todny in hlB ad- ( Ho SUKCBtoj thnt tho political
Four children are dead and ten oth­ most difficult one to come before ap­
men.
dress opening the third nnnunl con-(c,nugo |n th(J L i o n 's constitution,
Over Syndacalists
ers nre reported to bo missing. Ten proaching conference.
vention of the Legion.
which "will not permit nny who holds
Who Are on Trial
of the dend and all of the injured
"Such menns ns were used Inst or Is seeking snlnrled elcctivo public
wero brought to Vancouver on the
summer to bent adjusted compensa­ offico to hold office in the Legion or
Thrcnts Agninst General Crowder an4
steamer Cnpltnno. All tho Injured
tion ennnot ultlm ntely succeed," Com* In nny dopnrtment or post thereof.”
AmericanLcgation
are expected to recover.
mnnder Emery told tho Legion.
bo extendod to Include nppointivo of­
An energetic Bcnrch for the missing
"Nothing is settled until it is set­ fices. Ho ndded thnt he felt thnt "no
(B y Tho A u o cU U d F ra u )
was made today, but tho work was
tled
right.
HAVANA,
Oct.
31.—Throata
person
In
public
life,
In
community,
necessarily slow because of the diffi­
"The Amerlcnn people nre the court stnte or nntion, should ho allowed to
against
MnJ.-Gcn.
Enoch
II. Crowder
culties in clearing nwny tho wreck­
of Inst resort nnd wherever tho Amcri- speuk for tho Legion, nnd thnt tho
nnd
tho
United
Stntcs
legation
In Haage in the sea of mud nnd water. It
nn people hnvc by the ballot passed Legion must he nllowod to continue OF DEMOCRATIC PARTY AND vnnn are contained in n proclamation
is considered doubtful if tho bodies of CONFERS WITH HARDING AND
KNOWS NOTHING OF
judgment on the mntter of ndjusted to spenk for itself when issues Involv­
distributed here In connection with the
WANTS HENRY FORD TO
some of the missing will ever bo roCHANGE
compensu'cm thnt judgment I ns been ing service men nro concerned, nnd
Sncco-Vnnzettl case. The posters de­
MEET
HIM
covored, ns they nro believed to have
nn endorsement of the Legion’s stnnd. then In terms which nil the world will
nounce Genernl Crowder as a "repre­
(B y Tho A u o cU U d F ra u )
been washed into the muddy waters
"I cannot conceive of n congress sj understand.”
(B 7 The A uocU U A F ra u )
sentative of tho American bourgeois’*
ST.LOUIS,
Oct.
31.—Gcorgo
White
of Howe sound.
derelict in its duty, so unmindful of
WASHINGTON,
Oct.
31.—Secre­
and threaten "tho dagger of vengoon
nrrlvnl
here
todny
for
tho
Demo­
Commander Emery pnid high trib­
Manager J. Donahue, of tho Britits Just obligation to those who serv­
tary
Weeks,
returning
today
from
nn
nnce”
against the Americans.
cratic
Nntionnl
Committco
mooting
ninin mines described tho efforts
ed their county nt great finnnclnl loss, ute to tho Into Commnnder Frederic
Tho police, however, nro taking
made by those on duty nt tho mines inspection of Musclo Shonls, Ain., ni­ or so blind to the wishes of our people W. Gnlbrnith, Jr., who wns killed in tomorrow denied reports ho would re­
sign tho chnirmnnshlp. White said prompt action. Last night they ar­
property, three miles bnck from tho trate nnd power plants, conferred with ns to be misled nguiti into refusing to
nn
automobile
nccident.
Ho
snid
his
President
Hnrding
nnd
announced
ho
he knew nothing of tho definite char­ rested ten persons at the headquart­
beach to warn tho residents of tho
ndjust tho economic bnlunco between one nim hnd been to enrry through acter which could cotno up at tho ers of a syndicalist labor organisation.
hnd
requested
Henry
Ford
to
come
to
danger. When tho railway fill, which
tho mnn who went to wnr nnd the mnn
A number of terrorist proclamations
tho grent program which Commander meeting.
caused the accumulation of water in Wnshlngton for a conforcnco rolntlvo
who
did
not.”
to
Ford's
offer
for
tho
project.
wero
found on tho premises. Other
the hills gave way, nnd released a
Commnnder Emery reported thnt Gnlbrnith hnd left unfinished.
nrrests
nro expected.
FOUR
IRISH
WOMEN
roaring torrent Into tho creek, a wnrnREMOVAL
OF
HODIES
OF
Tho
prisoners
will bo given prelim­
ESCAPE
FROM
PRISON
ing of tho disaster to come was sent
YANKS TO AMERICA HAS
MOST DARING IN HISTORY. inary hearings todny in a special court
over the private telephono lines of tho
which Is Investigating tho terrorists
NOW BEEN COMPLETED,
mines. This messugo was recoivod by
(B y T)m A u o cU U d F ra u )
agitation.
v
-------Miss Ellen Pattorson, telephone opera­
DUBLIN, Oct. 31.—Four Irish wo­
(B y The A u o cU U d F ra u )
tor on duty nt tho compressor plnnt in
men, politico! prisoners in Mount Joy
RICHMOND, Va., Oct. 31.—Ray­
ROME, Oct. 31.—Various radical
the vlllago. She promptly rang ev­
prison here, esenped last night. A organizations hnvo renowod tholr agi­
mond Nolson, who hns been superin­
erybody connected by telephone, re­
ropo ladder wns thrown ncross tho tation In behalf of tho Italians Sacco
tending much of the work of tho dls- j
laying tho miners’ message.
prison wall nnd tho fugitives clamber­ nnd Vanzotti, undor ^conviction for
Interment
nnd
forwnrdlng
to
this
"For God’s sako get out of your
ed down tho steep embankment and murder in the United Statos. Largo
country
of
bodies
of
Amorlcnn
soldiers
houses; flood coming down tho
IN WEST VIRGINIA WHERE MIN­ TO TAX REVISION OPENED TO­ senped, completing tho most daring posters with tho photographs of tho
killed
In
tho
world
war,
hns
returnod
creek.”
DAY BY SENATOR
ERS ON STRIKE FOR ,
Jnll delivery In tho history of tho two men nro being displayed on bill­
Before the warning could' bo under­ to his homo hero.
NEW
I’A8T YEAR
prison.
boards.
Tho
work
of
bringing
the
bodies
of
stood nnd circulated about the town,
Amorlcnn
soldlors
has
been
practically
A committee, headed by tho com­
(B
y
Tho
A
u
o
cU
U
d
F
ra
u
)
the waters crashed down ,tho moun­
(B y Tho A u o cU U d F ra u )
WASHINGTON,
Oct.
31.—Republi­
BANK
RESOURCES
DECREASE.
munist
Deputy Bombaccl, was receiv­
completed,
nccording
to
Nelson,
and
INDIANAPOLIS,
Oct.
81.—Injunc­
tain sldo swcoplng away transmission
ed Inst night by tho Marquia Dells
lines and plunging tho village into tho bndlos remnlnlng In Franco will bo tion directed nt stopping of tho Unit­ can fight on the Reed soldier bonus
brought together In four grent ceme­ ed Mino Workers from efforts to un­ amendmont to tax revision bill open­ WASHINGTON, Oct. 31.—Aggro- Torrotta, foreign minister, who said
darkness.
,
teries In different patrs for the fa­ ionize tho Williamson coal field in ed today by Senator Now who raised gate resources of 30,816 bnnks in tho overythlng wns bolng dono to see that
West Virginia whero tho miners hnvo tho point thnt tho amendment wns un­ country, amounting to $10,688,830,000, tho men received justice.
cilitating of tholr care.
RANK OF AMBASSADOR
been
on a strlko for more thnn n yenr, constitutional. New said tho amend­ declined by $3,300,260,000 during tho
GIVEN TO DELEGATES
SAVANNAH HANK CLOSES \
wns
issuod today by Federal Judgo ment proposed to tax ono class of pnBt fiscal year, nccording to a state­
WEEKS
WEATHER.
APPOINTED ,tlY HARDING.
Anderson on tho ground the union citizens fo rthc-benefit of anothor nnd ment of bnnks’ reports for Juno 80,
( B r T )u A u o cU U d F ra u )
that this at lenst was in violation of 1021, issued last night by Comptroller
(B y t h e A u o cU U d P ra u )
was Booking to restrain trade.
(By Tho A iioclfcU S F ra u )
SAVANNAH,
Oct. 31.—Stat eBank
tho
constitution.
Democratic
lenders
of
tho
Currency
Crissingor.
Tho
8,164
WASHINGTON, £fct. 31.—Tho rank Weather Outlook for the Period Oc­
Examiner
T.
R.
Bonnett
took over tha
snid
today
nccount
reported
plan
of
national
banks
reporting
Bhowcd
a
re­
tober 31 to November 5, Inclusive.
TEXAS RAIL STRIKE
of ambassador wns /given today to tho
affairs
of
tho
Amorican
Bank and
Republicans to lny tho Reed amend­ duction in resources of $2,803,801,000,
MAY BE ADJUDGED AT
South Atlantic nnd Enst Gulf
American delegates appointed by
Trust
Co.,
of
Savannah
yesterday.
Ac­
CONFERENCES TODAY. ment on tho tablo. It would not bo
President Harding to represent tho States: Unsettled and rain begin­
cording
to
tho
examiner’s
report,
a
offered until thoro hnd been freo dis­
Any good paragraph may have to
United States at the armament con. ning of week nnd generally fnlr thoroportion
of
the
paper
held
by.
the
insti­
appear in print ns original mattor at
HOUSTON, Oct. 31.—Outwnrdly cussion.
nftor; normal tompernturc.
feronce.
J
tution was considered doubtful.
least eighteen times.
tho strike situation on tho Internat­
UNION
CHIEFS
AWAIT
ional and Grent Northern railroad re­
INJUNCTION AGAINST
mained unchanged last night. Tho six
ORGANIZATION TODAY.
hundred tralnment who wont on strike
Saturday, Oct. 22, still wero out and
(B y Tho A u o cU U d F ra u )
no adjustment leading to their return
INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 31.—Issu­
to work had been made. Tholr strlko
was authorised somo tlmo previous to, ance tomorrow of Federal Jud^e A.
and put into effect after, the recent B. Anderson’s Injunction d’rected to­
permission for a national strlko by ward stopping efforts of tho Unittd
One of Administrative Reforms in Activities Rec­ the big flvo brotherhoods. The I. &amp; Mine Workers of Americn toward or­ Preliminary Preparations Being: Made Into Final
G. N., strike was unaffected by tho ganizing the Williamson coal field in
ommended *
Stages for B ig Meet
genera lstrike recall.
West Virginia, was awaits-1 today by
union ehtefp, coal operators and law­
A member of the German rolch- yers with anxiety and uncertainty as
(By The Aaaociated Press)
(By Tha Aaaociated Preoa)' *
WASHINGTON, Oct. 81.—Cancellation by the Veterans’ Bureau of all stage for forty-four years has never to the probable scope of tho order.
,
WASHINGTON,
Oct.
81,—With the formal opening of the Internationa)
contracts with tho state, municipal nnd private hospitals not established prior addressed that body. Respectfully re­
Tho only devolpomont, I o ^ e’er, wns Conference on Limitation of Armament less than two weeka away, prelimi­
to July 1st, 1017, and with all others found to be unsuitable, included among ferred to congress.
a conference of defense lawyora in­ nary preparation! swung Into final stagea today. Tha American delegation
tho administrative reforms In veteran relief activities recommendod by the
terested
In the ca» t and It ended with­ is scheduled to hold another of Its sessions at the State Department and Indi­
In
China
talkative
women
aro
di­
special senate committee Investigating the subject In its report published to­
out
any
announcement as to their cations are tho tochicnal advisers would be ready with practically complete
vorced.
And
still
we
send
mission­
day, the socohd compiled by the committee In its yet uncompleted task. Tho
reports bearing on general subjects embraced in conference agenda.
plana.
scammended an appropriation of $16,400,000 for this purpose. aries to China.
committee rec

3-DAY

PROGRAM

EX-SERVICE MEN’S COMPENSATION
HAS NOT BEEN SETTLED SAYS
COMMANDER EMORY, OF L E G I O N . St:

GEORGE WHITE
WILL NOT QUIT
CHAIRMANSHIP

SEC. WEEKS
INVESTIGATES
MUSCLE SHOALS

IN JU N C TIO N REPUBLICAN
FIGHT ON
TO STOP UNION
BONUS BILL
EFFORT AT MINES

VETERANS RELIEF BUREAU
CANCELS ALL CONTRACTS
WITH MUNICIPAL HOSPITALS

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INTERNATIONAL
LIMITATIONS OF
LESS THAN

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Man and Wife Held
Polk Co. Grand Jury
For Murder in 1916,
Holds School Heads
Freed at Hearing
Incapable of Duty

HUNTERS FIND
WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 29.—
Florida boasts more ducks and geese
and shore birds than cyer before, accbMIng to a survey just completed by
expertk of tho U. 8. Department of
Agriculture nt the opening of the
gunning sonson, which shows that
game Is more abundant than in many
ycn*-s.
&amp; M *hl Shirts
The survey shows that quail, wild
turkeys, and deer, are reported also
to be more nbundunt than for Sev­
ern! yenrs. There nro also a num­
ber of bears scattered over tho Btatc
nnd littlo trouble is anticipated for
tho deer or bonr hunters who desires
to got tho limit nllowed him under tho
law. There is a possibility, howovor,
of tho largo quantities of ducks and
•&gt;
♦ geese in tho northwest section of the
»4 .f4 »4»»»+ -M »»-M-» + + » » 4 4 » » 4 4 state being scared away ovomlght,
ns they wore last season, by an air­
ship. Tho migratory birds do not take
Dozen Gridiron
the presence of the birdman kindly
nnd leave just as soon after his ar­
Battles on Today
rival ns they can rise and fly.
on Southern Fields This is to be a banner season for
the American sportsman. Game of
ATLANTA, Oct. 20.—Tho old witch the sort usually hunted is more plen­
who used to divide herself into na tiful, generally speaking, than It has
many parts ns she pleased will be been for many years. In some locali­
the envy of southern football fans to­ ties there are more ducks and geese
day, for the last Saturday in October thnn the oldest Inhabitants ever saw
Will furnish a dozen gridiron contests before. East of tho Mississippi river
that no follower of the great college migratory birds are making their
southern flight in unprecedented num­
game wants to miss.
To begin with, Centre plays Har­ bers. The quail, or bob white, is
vard again in the Cambridge stad­ present also in numbers not equaled
ium, and Goorgia Tech meets Penn for years. And tho deer is not so
State at the Polo Grounds, New York; scnrcc, apparently, ns it used to be.
All told, tho 5,000,000 hunters who
Virginia invades the lair of the
wounded Princeton Tiger and Tulnno will carry a gun into the field or to
tackles Detroit Univorslty on tho Int- lake or river between now nnd New
Yenr's are apt to find the happiest
ter’s field.
hunting
grounds of many yenrs, ac­
The quartet of inter-sectionnl bat­
cording
to
reports tb the Iiiologicn!
tles that arc sure to produce color­
Survey,
United
States Department of
ful gnmes whatever the outcome, are
in no whit surpassed in interest l*y Agriculture, from United States gnnie
several strictly southern struggles. wardens stationed from Mnine to
Georgia and Auburn engage in their Floridn and from tho Atlantic to
annual clash today at Columbus, Go.; the Mississippi. The department re­
Vanderbilt and Tennessee meet in cently set a letter of inquiry to each
Nnshvilic; Alabama and Louisiana warden nnd n summary of their re­
statu play in New Orleans and Se- plies Is given below:
In Maino there are a number of lo­
wance and Kentucky state face each
other in Louisville. Among the oth- cations for deer hunting where indica­
or big games will bo tho Washington tions point to good sport. Ducks nro
and Lee-Virginin Polytechnic Insti­ reported very abundant from num­
tute contest nt Lynchburg, tho Vir­ erous boys, with coot shooting good
ginia Military Institute-North Ca’ro- all along tho const. PhcnsantB were
Hnn stnto game nt Raleigh, tho North not very abundant but ruffled grouse
Carolina University-Maryland match were reported plentiful all over tho
on the latter's field, and the Furman- stnto, particularly in tho northern
Citadel bout in Greenville. Another portions. Wild geeso do not stop in
important South Carolina match was Mnine on thoir flight south but mny
docided yesterday when tho Stnto bo found in good numbers in Gront
South Bay, Now York.
University bent Clcmson 21 to 0.
Through tho ducking grounds of
Many games between evenly match­
Virginia
and North Cnrolinn there
ed tennis of the smnllcr institutions
will bo moro ducks nnd geese this
complete an interesting schedule.
season than there hnve ever been be­
fore—oven measured by the memor­
PLANT CITY WAS
Ruffled
FORTUNATE IN STORM. ies of oldest inhabitants.
grouse, pheasants, deer nnd bob white
PLANT CITY, Oct. 29.—Conditions are reported plentiful. In Virginln
in Plant City arc assuming a normal! state authorities have requested all
aspect after tho storm of the first part county game wardens to report avail­
of tho week. The damage in this com­ able accommodations for hunters, an­
munity wns mainly to tho citrus nnd ticipating a big movement to the field.
Vegetable crops, trees, poles and wlreB.
That tho dnmngo to the citrus crop trees was damaged from thorn pricks
and trees will in no place around and excessive rain; but this damage
Plant City exceed 26 per cent of tho it is thought, wil inot exceed 5 per
valuo of tho crop, seems to bo a con-. cent. A largo portion of tho grape
friut hud bten picked before tho storm.
servntivo estimate.
Growers were busy Wednesday nnd Tho loss is not as great ns was nt first
Thursday gathering and preparing for supposed.
shipping fruit from the ground. Ship­
It is said that Plant City was the
pers aro co-operating with tho grow­ only place of sizo in this entire sec­
ers to disposo of tho fallen fruit. tion between Orlando and Tampa to
They wero paying fifty cents n box have electric service Tueday night.
for it yesterday. Much of this fruit Part of tho city had lights all night
had to bethrown out ns culls or im­ uesday night ,aml tho Courier plant
mature. Some of tho fruit loft on tho was in the fortunate class.

|

Sanford Shoe },
and Clo. Co. ii

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''The Affairs of Anatol”

AT THE PRINCESS TONIGHT

Mottlefone

nrermni

nm

Is it any wonder th a t we have to tell it again and
again? How could one in possession of this
priceless knowledge rem ain silent? The very
stones would cry out I

Representing International Bible
Students’ Association

Approximately 2,000 white peoplo will attend Church in
Sanford Sunday. A good army of people who will seek food E ■
for their spiritual lives and have their ideals uplifted. You E
will be welcomed w hether you go to the—

I

s
"

s

We ere a great brotherhood seeking strength to do the right ;
and to live worthy lives
-

You can by no means afford to let business or
pleasure or anyone deprive you of the solace nnd
benefits enjoyed by those who have investigat­
ed this timely and h eart cheering message. The
opportunity is provided in the lecture by JEdw. Grimes, of Jacksonville, at—

J. EDW. GRIMES,

s

s

5

LIFE, perfect, lim itless; w ith a regenerated race;
on a restored e a rth ; w ith a corrected climate
and life-perpetuating food; under a government
which will satisfy the righteous desires of ev­
ery living creature. And it’s HERE, at the
door I The portals of the new age are swinging
open and many will en ter and never die.

/

■

RAPTIST,
CATHOLIC,
CONGREGATIONAL,
EPISCOPAL,
METHODIST.
PRESBYTERIAN.

im

“millions now living
will never die’’-Judge Rutherford

■

HE © M E © F T H E

THE STAR TO-DATf

WAUCHULA, Oct. 29. — F. J.
LAKELAND, Oct. 29.—The Polk
county grand Jury, in session at Bar­ Townsend anil wife, arrested several
tow, before adjourning without data days ago on a chargo of murder in
Tuesday, reported to Circuit Judge connection with the killing of T. J.
CECIL B. DeMILLE’S PRODUCTION
John 8. Edwards, that on investiga­ Leo here in 1918, were released after
a
preliminary
hearing
yesterday.
ting tho. mattor of the alleged short­
Lee was killed by. shots fired thru
age in the county school board office, —
said to total approximately $14,000, his window. His son was arrested at
It has found the shortage to bo due to j tho time, but released when ho prov- j
nn “utor lack of capacity to perform cd his innocence. With tho release
Wallace Reid, Gloria Swanson, Elliot Dexter, Bcbe Dan­
tho duties of their offico on the port of tho Townsends tho authorities said
iels, Monte Blue, Julia Faye, Wanda Hawley, Theodore
of tho former superintendent of pub-1 they had no clue to tho slayers of
Roberts, Agnes Ayres, Raymond Hatton, Polly Mornn and
lie instruction, John A. Moore, nnd Lee. •
Theodore Kosloff.
chairman of this board, G. B. Murrell,
............. ....
nnd wo further find that neither the SOVEIT GOVERNMENT
Hoot Gibson
WILL RECOGNIZE DEBTS
present superintendent of public in­
in “Action"
OF IMPERIAL REGIME.
struction, C. A. Parker, nor any mem­
________________ ALSO A COMEDY------ber of tho present bonrd hns prompt­
(Or 7h« AiioollUd Pnu)
ly nnd thoroughlp performed tho du­
RIGA, Oct. 29.—OfTlcinl confirma­
ties of their offico in such a way as tion that Russinn soviet government
Mattinee Daily a t 3:30
Evening at 7:00
to safeguard tho interests of tho citi- has agreed under certain conditions to
sons of this county in this matter."
recognize foreign debts of tho Imperi­
Tho grand Jury further recommend­ al Russian government, was received j
ed to Governor Hardoe, that the pres­
hero today through the official Bol­
ent superintendent of public instruc­
Clayton and Mitchell, Thomasville, ed contract for tho construction WI
tion and school board be suspended shevik news agency.
Ga., was successful in bidding on pro­ wood bridgo near Lloyd’s In JtfTtZ
from office pending an investigation. MILLIONS FOR GOOD
jects numbered 11, 21, 22, 23 and 24, county on state road No. 1. Tb*Z
Tho alleged shortage in question
ROADS IN FLORIDA drainage structures covoring about tract price wns $3,837.00.
is said to have been caused by Joseph
fifty-two miles of road in Duval, Nas­ J. D. Donahoo, Perry, was
(OodIIoomI from P i t . On.)
D. Woodward, clerk for the past nine
sau, Baker and Columbia counties. contract for tho excavation of
conjunction
with
county
funds
now
years to tho school board.
It is
Contract prices: Project No. 11, $23,­ age canals of tho Chattahoochee ih»'
on
hand
in
repairing
road
from
Woodcharged his irregularities extending
662.04; project No. 21, $4,408.30; pro­ bridge. Tho bid being $32,000.
over tho Inst four years of diverting villc to Wakulla county line.
ject
No. 22, $5,013.03; project No. 23,
The contract for tho conifaa^ I
Resolution passed authorizing the
school funds to his personal use.
chairman to ndvertiso for bids for sur­ $10,887.32; and project No. 24, $8,- of about ten miles of rond east g
Lake City on road No. 1 was ■»—y
face on state rood No. 1 from Colum­ $697.10.
Railroad Labor
bia county lino to tho end of brick
Clayton and Mitchell, bI bo, were to J. Y. Wilson, Jacksonville %
road
west
of
Jacksonville
and
nlso
awarded contracts for drainage con­ contract calls for three-inch a
Board Decision on
for surfaco on project No. 18 between struction work on projects Nos. 20, pacted rock baso. Tho terms of tb
Strike Question Cisco nnd the Volusln county line In nnd 32. These projects covor a dis­ contract: Cash, $255,033.90, «
Putnam county and tho section of tance of about twenty-one miles in lumbia county bonds $274,179.00; W
Says Union Going on Strike Will For­ state road No. 3 in Volusln county Columbia and Nassau counties and is df award one-half cash and »
feit All Rights and Contracts
between Putnnm county nnd and De­ tho contract price amounts to, No. 28, half bonds. This road extends fna
Lake City to the Baker county Bm.
Leon Springs, also for surface on pro­ $11,835.60; No. 32, $35,480.88.
(B7 Th. AmocUUS Tnu)
ject No. 33 in Alnchun county between
Luton Bridgo Company,
York,
CHICAGO, Oct. 29.—Tho Labor Burnett's Lnko nnd Gnlncsville.
Buy it with a norald Want Ai
Pa.,
was
awarded
tho
contract
for
Board today issued its decision on
Resolution pnssed appropriating
the henring to determine tho respon­ $250,000 of the first federal aid avail­ drnlnago construction work on project
sibility for the general strike threat­ able to be used in the construction of No. 33, Burnette’s Lake to Gnlnesi vllle, amounting to nbout twelve nnd
ened by tho big five railroad unions,
the road in Escambia county.
one-hnlf miles of rond for $20,534.07.
making three findings, the third of
Resolution passed authorizing $10,­
which held "Thnt nny union going out 000 to be used in construction that
This flrhi nlso wns nwnrdcd tho con­
on a strkc will forfeit its right and part of state nid road No. 109 between tract for droinngc construction work
rights of its members in nil existing
Perry and the Lafayette county line in Volusia county from DoLcon
contracts and lose all benefits accord­
Springs to the Putnnm county line,
in Taylor county.
ed by transportation net."
Resolution pussed authorizing the for $20,219.
Tho Florida Engineer nnd Construc­
construction of bridge across the Kis­
The citrus fruit growers may con­ simmee river on stnto rond No. 8 be­ tion Compnny, of Oviedo, wns nwnrd­
sole themselves with the reflection tween Highland and Okeechobco coun­ cd contract for drainage construction
that they will not have to give up so ties and the chairman insti acted to work on project No. 18, covering a
much to tho transportation companies. have prepared plans nnd specifications distance of nbout 12.8 miles for $19,­
Maybe the water lines will bo able to for the work.
789.40.
movo tho fruit left on tho trees.
W. P. Kennedy, Quincy, wns award­
Contracts were awarded ns follows:

STAR THEATRE
SANFORD, FLORIDA

Sunday, October 30th
7:30 P. M.

7:30 P. M.

7:30 P. M.

1

E
Jf.

This lecture has comforted m ultitudes
the demand th a t it hag been amplified _
to hear the lecture may have a copy by

P ir@ slfc)yfl© rnainn O a n n rd la
11 A. M.------------------------------------7:30 P. M.

Auspices International Bible Students Association, Organised by tho late
Pastor Russell. Judge Rutherford, New York City Bar, Preiidcilt.

Seats Free

No Collection
m iiiiiiiu u i

uuu

HUAI

�P

THE SANFORD DAILY
WE ARB GLAD TO A ftN O tN C*

Ida. We must meet readjustment o4
conditions face to face.—Orlando Raporter-Star.
Every town excopt Sanford. We
know of a dandy now home furnished
renting for $100 per month which is
some different from Orlando. Not be­
ta a tourist town in every sense of
the word Sanford is not in the high
price class. Come to Sanford, you
tourists nnd got cheaper rates. How­
ever we aro limited on rooms ns it
seems tho whole world wants to come
to Snnford this wlntor.
■---------- o----------HIGH SCHOOLS ARB FOR LIGHT
WEIGHTS.

That tho striko la off. For the past
thirty days Sanford especially has
been talking about the striko and
what it would mean to so many of our
people because so many Sanford citi­
Mi J . H O LLY _____________ Editor zens are railroad people—either offic­
E . J. LILLARD—Beeretary-Treaiurer ials or employees and Sanford was
WL A . NEEL
.General Manager bound up in the strike ns only a rail­
road center can be bound. Wo wanted
tho men to get what was coming to
them and wo wnntod tho railroads to
iwlU»tU function and wo wanted tho railroads
to reduce the freight rates in order
that we could do business nnd live. It
was ono of those perplexing questions
that are like family rows in which an
outsider would hesitate to take a part
Comparing tho football team of the
ntM u i i
—only In this case tho public ceased Orlando high school with those of
tm h UOm.
to be an outsider nnd beenma very Plant City nnd Lnkelnnd an observor
Member of The Associated Preea
much engaged in tho controversy. Wo is struck with tho dissimilarity of
know tho rnilrond men of Snnford and physique. Tho Orlando boys seem to
wo know thnt several yoars ago the be mere youths while the players on
lenders hero snid publicly that strikes tho Lakeland nnd Plnnt City teams
Governor Ilardoe has no fonr now on tho rnilronds were a thing of the seems to bo of mature years, they aro
of anarchists, bolshevtsts or boll woc- past. However, it seems thnt strikes older, bigger and brawnier. Football
Ho has appointed his personal are not things of tho pnst when they Is not a game of brain, it is n game
of Lieut. Colonels and has four wage disputes nnd other matters. The of brain plus weight. Weight is quite
svtspaper men on It which should are called up frequently to settlo essential, not heavyweight, but weight
hold him for a while. It also shows truth about thu present strike tins not with Bpeed under tho body. Ono Or­
th a t the governor appreciates the come out nnd mny nevor bo mndu pub­ lando father wns heard to romnrk thnt
newspapers and we can assure him lic and if it should be mndo public it he did not care to have his frail six­
th at thfc newspapers appreciate him will put n different phnso on the mat­ teen year old boy plnytag with "men"
and are standing by him. Governor ter. There is much to be said for nnd of older yenrs and stronger bodies.
Hardco is a real man and a real gov­ against tho striko and hut few people The comparison of teams might indi­
know tho Inside workings of rnilronds cate thnt high school boys south of Or­
ernor.
-----------o----------or the problems of thu men. No one lando are built like juggernauts from
In anothor pnrt of this issue is an unless they have been in tho ranks or tho eyebrow down but featherweights
article about the golf course recently in the executive positions know just in the dome. At any rate south Flor­
erected ftt Gainesville by Gnincavllle what happens in railroad circles. Like ida high schools have been scouting
people. It is high time that Sanford our own business thnt wo know best about for football timber nnd Orlando
people took up this important matter the railroad business is n ramification hns not. If Orlando high school is
and Instead of talking about It did of many divergent lines nnd interests going in for a winning football team
something. It is the best thing that nnd there are wheels within wheels we think the athletics directors should
Sanford ever tackled and will do more nnd inside information thnt never begin nn early cnrnpnign next summer
foir the city than any movement ever reaches the enrs or the eyes of the for "men" who can pulverize tho op­
fostered. It seems strange the peo­ public.
ponents lino by sheer weight of beef.
ple hero cannot sec It when other Much can bo said for either side Thnt la, such procedure is necessary
towns hnvo no trouble in putting it nnd much can be said against either if O. H. S. is to win in footbnll. If not
side but nt this time the public cared n winner in this line better refrain
over.
but little who was at fault. All the” from football nnd go in strong for
Congratulations to the Orlando public knew about it was that they baseball, track and basketball.—Or­
Sentinel. It came out yesterday on had been gouged outrageously by ev­ lando Sentinel,
tho new press, eight columns and six­ eryone during thu war and after the
You are right. Some of the big
teen pages and a big city paper in ev­ war and they had reached tho limit. stiffs that Florida High Schools hnvo
ery respect. Both Orlando dailies arc They did not purpose to stand for any hired to play football should he back
now printed on weh presses mid while more gouging from any source what­ in the boiler factories where they be­
they are much faster and get the pa­ soever and this means all the differ­ long, Sanford, Orinndo, Pnlntku nnd
pers to the minute wo cannot say that ent lines thnt in the past three years a few more teams are plnying only
they print as well as the old two rev­ have raised the price on every neces­ High School boys. Other tennis are
olution such ns the Herald still em­ sity of life until the man of ordinary hiring men over 21 years of ago to
ploys. It in only a question of time means cannot exist. There is always play our light weight lads. It is un­
until the Herald will hnvo to follow a getting bnck to first and this is the sportsmanlike nnd unfair.
--------------- o --------------suit and got a fast weh press to keep time thut big changes will occur. The
up with our circulation lint nnd get entire country must get down to n
SHIP BY WATER.
the pnpern on tho street within thirty more stable basis, thu gradual ensing
minutes after the presses start. The down of wnges to follow the ensing
Is tho slogan that will givo Florida
Sentinel prints, folds and counts 10,* down of the high cost of living. Ono cheaper transportation rates. There
000 pnpers an hour. Wonder how follows thu other and all must cornu
seems to be no other method thnt of­
long it takes them to print their whole down. It has been decreed and tho
merchant, or thu corporation, or thu fers any relief. Tho railroads have
edition?
employees of any firm thnt ennnot sco determined to ndd on ns long ns the
patient public will stand it. Appeals
"Sanford is developing into a fac­ the change will have a heavy Jolt com­ to the Interstate Commerce Commis­
tory town,” declares tho Herald, and ing to them.
The people will rule and not any sion have given nn relief. The high
while some places might not under­
railroad officials insist that they must
stand nnd fear that things were not men or set of men.
still go higher with freight rates, al­
Improving in Sanford, it is evident
though no wofforing to reduce rates,
FACING FACTS
that the Herald means the best nnd
if they get further wage reductions.
most desirable impression to ho car­
However,
the fact thnt they hnvo not
It is our firm belief, Orlando in par­
ried. Now factories are locating nt
given
reductions
to correspond with
Sanford, nnd additional wholesale ticular, and Florida in general, will tho wngt reductions already given
firms, nnd ull of these things means have a prosperous seuson. But there them mnkes this statement sound like
more payrolls and bettor business all nro certain fucts that must bo faced, a scheme to aid them in winning a
around. Declaring that “we can which if they are not will in our opin­ strike, nnd not n sincere desire to
hardly hope to have any of tho larg­ ion add materially to lessening the in­ givo the public better service nnd rtnest factories from the North, but flow of money to thin community.
sonnble rates. Then the remedy in
Wu speak of exorbitant rents.
Sanford offers n location second to
sight
seems to bo water transporta­
There is no use to try and get
none, In tho State, for certain manu­ around tho fact that times in the tion nnd nothing else. The most care­
facturing plants, that can he loented north are hard. They hnvo been felt ful estimates seem to prove thnt by
In Florida." The newspaper points by the rich as well ns tho poor. To bo water we can handle freight from
out tho ndvnntngcous offering of rnil sure tho poor feel the stringency of here nt about hnif the present rniland water transportation ,nnd other the conditions to n greater degree rond rates, nnd yet make good divi­
Inducements. There arc many attrac­ thnn the rich. It is felt proportion­ dends on the money invested in tho
tions at Sanford, and tho place Is cer­ ately by tho moderately well-to-do. stock of the boat company. The bont
tain to grow wonderfully In the* next It Is from this clnss thnt Orlando and line being organized here nt tho pres­
few yonrs.—Tlmcs-Unlon.
vicinity draws its tourist trade. The ent time is the greatest opportunity
-----------o----------present is n time when even the va­ that this city and county has ever
cationers arc economizing, there is no had to mnke a real gnln. The stock
EIGHT, BROTHER MILLERI
telling how long conditions, us they should ’ he subscribed In two weeks
Newspapers should net be consider* nre in the north, will InHt, nnd while ami if we have good luck in getting
cd objects of charity by business men the situation remains as it is people boats thnt nro satisfactory wo may
of the community in which they are will continue to economize.
have nt least one bont In service by
In view of which fact it in ridiculous December 1st, or very soon there*
published. Occasionally advertising,
on n smnll scnle, is contributed in or­ to think people are coming down nnd after. Another bont, nnd then ns
der to assist a publication in wenth- pny some of tho exorbitant rates ask­ soon ns possible another, will he ad­
urlng the storm of depressed busi­ ed for rooms, apartments nnd furnish­ ded.
ness periods. Advertising is nhsoiutuly ed houses in Orlando and other towns,
The establishment of a bont line to
n business proposition and no business Wo will lie kicked nnd cussed by a few the outsido world from Manatee nnd
man should use space In a periodical p t our fellowmon for these few words, Sarasota counties will help every in­
for any other renson than the returns but it in bccnUHu these few are either dividual in both counties. Every citi­
aiding the present high-priced condi­
he mny obtain on the investment. A
tion or hnvo a wrong impression ns to zen who can should take a little block
newspaper that cannot produco rich what just criticism will accomplish. of Htnck in the boat company wihout
returns to tho Judicious advcrtlsor Just criticism nevor injured nny town, delay. Now Is the time for action.
Is unworthy of perpetuation.—Kustis it might have injured some individual This is no time for procrastination.—
Lake Region.
who had gone off on tho wrong track, Brndentown Joumnl.
hut in thnt it benefited tho town.
We know of bungnlows, scarcely CITY MANAGER FOUR! OF GOVERNMENT IN ORLANDO.
worthy
of the name, thnt uro being
HEINZ
held for $1,000 for the season. One
Tho city mnnngers in Tnmpn nnd
thousand dollnrs for approximately
Miami
seem to be getting along sat­
twelvo wcekH1 rent, on nn Investment
of not more than three or four thous­ isfactorily. After the presont Orinn­
and dollnrs. It is ‘ridiculous. Other do Administration leaven office wo
One of the many delicious Heins
properties aro priced proportionately hope Orlando will hnvo tho snnie form
products Is the cooked Spaghet­
high. It means hundrods of visitors of government. And wu hnvo no
ti in a tomato sauce with cheese.
will remnin nt homo or return nfter a doubt but the present administration
AU that needs to be done to pre­
few days’ stay, rather thnn pay their would an soon have a city mnnngor n
pare the dish Is to best the esn
whole vacation money out for a roof few mohths prior to tholr farewell In
15 minutes in boiling water be­
over tholr head. To bo true, not alii order thnt thing* could run smoothfore opening.
prlcea for accommodation aro In the «r. This Is something for the people
extortionate class, but there aro | to think ubout and take action In acenough to domand the active work of cordance, with legal requirements.—
every civic organization in a cam­ Orlando Sentinel.
paign against such ruinous rates.
As we say, this condition docs not
Tho grand wizard collapsed, and it
Phone* 497-414
only
exist
In
Orlando
and
vicinity,
won't
be long before tho whole thing
WBLAKA BLOCK
but In practically every town In Flo*- follows his example.

SPAGHETTI

Deane Turner

&gt;, MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1921
...

SYSTEMATIZED CHARITY.

Lakeland's winter dependents are
among the most faithful of our vis­
itors. They disappear every spring, It
is true, and their whereabouts through
the warm weather months aro un­
known to us, but wo hardly know that
winter Is hero before wo have thorn
bnck—the blind, tho crippled, tho
fatherless, the jobess, and that most
familiar flguro of nil, tho person who,
after reaching hero, finds himself
suddenly out of funds nnd unable to
go eothor forward or back.
Charity Is a noble vlrtuo, but wo
wonder if our lemoncy nnd generosity
with many of theso regular applicants
for our winter charity, nro not plain
"easiness." Surely, theso people bolong soniowhoro. Surely there nro In
the world somewhere people who nro
In a position to know whether their
claim on tho pity of tho public Is le­
gitimate. They como to us from no­
where, live on our generosity, which
mny thus be drawn from more worthy
cases among our own people, nnd in
the spring vanish ngnln Into tho no­
where until next autumn.
There Is n lazy sort of charity that
will not take time to Investigate, nnd
it is on this that our winter depend­
ents rely. The Red Cross mnkes It
a mntter of business nnd common
sense to find out both tho worthiness
of tho object nnd the wisest way to
render assistance. It Is wiser and
fairer to support the Red Cross and
let it caro for all clnsses not known
to us personally. In this way, wo
enn be assured thnt the needy, but
worthy stranger will be cared for, nnd
thnt tho professional mendicant will
not bo allowed to live off the com­
munity.—Lakeland Telegram.
ORANGE OUTLOOK NOT HAD
With apples scarce and high in
price this fruit is practically elimin­
ated as a competitor of oranges. This,
together with the fact that n less
number of boxes of oranges will be
shipped this year than last, should
have n good effect on the market for
Florida oranges. The one disturbing
feature is thnt of small sizes. How­
ever, with lowered freight rates, which
seem to be n possibility, the orange
grower seeniH to be in a fair way to
realize a paying price for his pro­
duct.
Time was when financial panics nnd
depressed conditions in tho country
meant demoralization in the citrus
business. Tho distribution area was
small, small commission handlers nr
cash speculative buyers knew but a
few markets nnd continued piling up
of fruit in these few markets meant
a smash in prices, Present-day meth­
ods of selling by large interests, coupl­
ed with the better carrying quality of
tho fruit because of better packing,
and tho openng of new markets and
increased consumption in old markets
through advertising campaigns, hnvo
all tended to put the citrus industry
on a business basis.
Depressed conditions should not in­
terfere, nnd do not, with the steady
shipment of fruit. The shipper who
comcB out best in the end is the ono
who has n stendy supply in markets
day after day, taking tho bad with
tho good. The wlso ones who ship
only to high markets nre more often
caught with low ones. Taking tho
mnrkct day after day is what winH
out.—Floridu Grower.
If he lives up to his name tho new
Hcnntbr from Pennsylvania should bo
able to make trouble for tho agricul­
tu ra l bloc.

“Opportunity Looks
far You When You
are W orth Finding*
A permanent Bank Account will

insure for you your banker's in­
terest in your affairs and his
willingness to assist ^ou to take
advantage of the daily opportu­
nities th at arise.

A COMMUNITY BUILDER

F. P. Fowler, President
B. F. Whitner, Cashier

PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS
DIRECTORY OF SANFORD
You Can Find the Name of Every Live Pro­
fessional and Business
Man in
*
Sanford in This Column
LAWYERS

CONTRACTORS

George A. DeCottes

S. O. Shinholser

Attorney-at-Law

Contractor and Builder

Over Seminole County Bank
SANFORD
SANFORD
FLORIDA

HARTFORD BATTERY
“Battery Insurance”

CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS
Plnnes and Specifications Cheerfully

Sold and Serviced by

All Work Guaranteed
H. T. PACE
P. O. Box 2*1

Edw. Higgins, Inc.
Haight &amp; Wieland
GARAGES
Smith Bros. Garage

HEATING STOVE
Come in and look over
our line

THE BALL HARD­
WARE COMPANY

Sketches and Estimates Free; no
building too large and none too smalL
-----ALL WORK GUARANTEED-----

Wilson &amp; Shorey

OIL, GAS and ACCESSORIES
Oak and First

PURE WATER
Elder Springs Water

Geo. W. Knight
Real Estate and Insurance
SANFORD

99.88% PURE
Phone 3I1-W
Sanford, Fla

FLORIDA

..Employment Bureau..

LORD'S PURITY
WATER

The vocational committee of the Busi­
ness and Professional Women's Club
AS GOOD AS THE BBST
requests all young women desiring
Dally Berrlca
Phone 197
employment to register at the First
National Bank.
AGNES G. BERNER, Chairman

D. F. SUMNER
PAINTER
LET MB PAINT YOUR MOUSE

Will Contract or Toko Job by tho Hour
PHONE US

IIS LAUREL AYE,

&amp;

FOR SERVICE
Call 146-J

T. A. BUTNER

Before buying* your

Builders &amp; Contractor*

Pine nnd Garland Sts., Orlando, Fla.

Sanford Steam Laundry

COOL WEATHER IS
CONING

Furnished

E xpert Repairing

IT’S A FACT’

SANFORD, FLA.

FLORIDA

Sanford Constructs Co.

•you can not
Sanford Machine
dry
your
Foundry Co.
Laundry In the sun when It In rain­
ing. So call the SANFORD BRANCH General Mnchlne and Roller Worktt
LAKELAND STEAM LAUNDRY, Automobile Flywheel Steel Gear
they can dry it, rain or shine. All
bands in stock
work called for and delivered the 3rd
Crank Shnfts Re-turned
day.---------------- GIVE US A TRIAL

PIIONE 475

-:-

SANFORD NOVELTY
WORKS
V. C. COLLER, Prop.

General Shop and Mill
Work
»i/*j 4* i

\

BUILDER
CONTRACTOR and BUIL1
517 Com ^erelaTStrttt

Sanford, FIs.

NSFER
G
“WE DELIV ER THE GOODS"

Transfer
Quic:k Service Tra
StoraWe Facilities
If we please ywu, tell otheri
tell us\ Phone 498

If no

W. RAWLING, Prop.

Acteylene Welding
OF ALL KINDS

Hotel Mbntezuma
“Sanford’s yNew Hotel”
11.50 U p &gt; w Day

Sanford Welding Co.
Located In Eagle Bldg., 205 Onk Avc.
Phone 175

Fourth and Sanfard Av«

New Era Printery
G. B assett Smith, Prop.
COMMERCIAL AND
JOB PRINTING
DRINK
Elder Springs Water. It* 09 08-JOC
or cent pure. Phone R1JL
Office supplies of all kinds at The
Herald Printing Co. When you want
anything In this lino see Thu Herald.
We have it or can get i t
Try a Herald Want Ad today.

GILLO
FR1
Phone 44 2

�MONDAY, OCIOBEH Si m ,

in p fflu
flRkANJJp, Qct. 31.-rTiwenty-fi.ve
whoesale grocers ,©f Inland Florida
met in this city Saturday, and organ­
ized
the Interior Wholesale Grocer*’
Taking College to the Farm
I
CHIP8
|
Association, for the purpose of pro­
(Join* Into tho groves, track patches ‘ * " £
ta, “ nlr° ‘1,d1 b». moting cooperation and understanding
and (laid, with tho farmer,, s e l e c t i n g w',h llm' - ' ulrhur ■"lutlon., in their Industry. Orlando, Kissim­
apedmena of the diseaaes and Insect
„A
* *#
j
, . 1mee, Palatkn, Lakeland, Bartow, Braenemies pointed out by tho farmers' . A
**? f °r dentown, Arcadia,. Fort Myers, Lake
aa being trouble makers, nnd then J f t " *
* tho motto of 80™ Wales, Sanford, Fort Pierce, nnd
gathering the farmers Into groups forf * thc coU ty fair"Plant City, were represented a t tho
tho purpose of discussing these cnc.... . . . . .
. tneoting.
mlo. and Insect., I, tho mothod prnc Cl'™ lir0"'cr*
1 , nd
’’l'
B. 'A. Brown, of Lnkelnnd, was
Hood by tho otaff. of tho Florid. Ex.
doad , » ””d
elected president of tho association/
porlmont Station and Agricultural E x-, ‘J ' 1" '* thc dr°'”’1" '' » ' frolt wl11 b*
Other officers are; Vice-president, B.
tan.lonDlvl.lon.
/odneod.
W.
Williams, Brndcntown; secretaryAn instance of this manner of field
„*, ,
. , .. .
.,
treasurer, L. C. Hefner, Orlando; nnd
Instruction was n trip into Hillsboro,1
^ T “
‘i! ?°&lt;
Pasco nnd Polk counties by District “JJ" \ r°Uf * tbo * lntcr Cfin b« * * I thc executive committee is composed
Agent E. W. Jenkins; County Agent
m
}\
much bc*, of J. L. Williams, Leesburg; J. Gib­
son, Lakeland, and R. F. Willis, Or­
E. F. DeBusk, Lake colmty.... f)r. 0 F. f°re th° -Prlng workbegins.
lando.
Burgger plant pathologist, andProf. ( Swcct potatoC(1 shou]d bo d
be.

WHICH WILL
.nCAL POST OP THE AM1KL° a
ICAN LEGION.
The following business concerns,
fraternities and Clubs, of Sanford
S n b e m l l y • u b - l ^ i ^ r jarna.
“ agreement to enter a decorated
L t or automobile to represent their
respective lines of business. Names
bo added from time to time and
j l f t . « ..tt .lr..d y Itatod It will
be a parade of magnitude never before witnessed in theclty:
American Legion.
Sanford Paint 4 Wall Paper Co.
Woman's Club, Welfare Dept.
D. C. Marlowe.
Hopkins Shoo Shop.
A. J. Lossing, (0).
C. A. Matthews.
Ball Hardware Company.
Lloyd Shoo Store.
West Side Grocery.
Bryan-Wheeler Motor Co.
Wight Tiro Co.
B. 4 0. Motor Co. (2 floats).
Sanford Cycle Co.
Haynes 4 Ratliff.
City of Sanford.
Mobley’s Drug Store.
Routh Bros., Bakery.
Cates' Crate Co.
Coca-Cola Co.
Woodruff 4 Watson.
Haight 4 Welland.
Cates Grocery Co.
Deane Tumor.
Newberry’s Drug Store.
Carter Lumber Co.
T. J. Miller 4 Ron.
Union Pharmacy.
Sanford Shoo 4 Clothing Co.
Hanson’s Shoe Repair Shop.
Roberts Grocery Co.
Bnumcl’s Specialty Shop.
RafTeld-Honlg Co.
F. P. Rlnes.
A. Kanner,
F. Schwarts.
Chcro-Cola Co.
Brown’s Market.
Caldwell Furnlturo Co., Inc.
L. C. Lconnrdy Meat Market.
Water’s Candy Kitchen.
Surprise Shoo Store.
Bandcl's Emporium.
Setnlnole Market.
Elvers' Bros. (2 floats).
Pure Food Market,
Kent Vulcanising Co.

it m e i

niiA iiPim n if s iiT i

r y,to n th0 fr0!lt ha8
‘he vines as CURFEW AND POOL ROOM
,7°” f f ' thoy wiH kc°P much better. Select
ORDINANCE IN EFFECT
Jevery
Z v .nl!
n gathered
m
Let before
them
IN JACKSONVILLE.
Instance
in appreciable ,|c ofthcBun8b,na toto ddig. wcll
numbers. Farmers wore asked to pick [Btorln
out or point out diseases nnd Insects;
‘
_____
Juvenile Jacksonville hied itself to
which gave them trouble. After a
tho
family domlcllo last night before
Sows bred early in November will
tpur through the grove or field, all bring pigs in the spring at a time ten o'clock, and juvenile Jacksonville
gathered and the specialist, ook each wh&lt;!n tbero wl„ bc )fttlo d
of will continue to seek the shelter of
disease or nsect up, one at a tim e,' tholr being ,nJured , co,d and flt „ the paternal roof before 10 o’clock
and told all about i t - what It is, Its timo when
)s
and Undcr, every night hereafter. For—like a wol
life history, and how It might be con___
advertised brcnkfnst food—“there’s a
trolled.
. . . .
I Much soil fertility is lost every wln- renson.”
The instruction, or thc school, does tor by 80„ w„ htng or er08ion&lt;
And the renson Is thnt Jacksonville’s
not end here. These parUes carry a Btop to it by kcoping thc hm land8 curfw law, fathered by Councilman
along w th them lantern, and stereop- in flod| p!anUnjr ft covor cr
provid. George J. Gnrcln, nnd passed by the
tkort slides, whereby the entire life ,ng un(]er(| rain|.gC| fill|ng the gullies city council, went into effect last
histories of tho diseases, and Insects wi*i. bp,..i.
night, thc police receiving orders to
might be shown and understood. And,!
, P W ®lc’_____
clear the streets of all persons under
since soil preparation, cultivation and; Brood sows expected to farrow sixteen years of ago, unless they are
fertilization are Important phases of ahouId bo k t !n a healthy coridition.
crop culture, those subjects a ways p]cnty of BUCCU,ont fecd nhpu)d be accompanied by a parent or guardian,
or some one designated by a paront
come In for their share of the discus- provided for them. Nothing ir Letter
or gunrdinn to act as an escort.
slons nnd illustrations.
' than an out, rye or rapo pasture sup­
The new bill provides thnt children
plemented by o little grain or shorts. under sixteen years of age who aro
_____
Preparing Show Animals for Bxhlbi-.
found on the street, after 10 p. m.,
t*on*
i One thing tho modern housekeeper are subject to arrest. Pnrents *r
An nnimnl cannot bo fitted for show in thankful for ns Thanksgiving npgunrdinn of children npprohended will
ovor night nor can it ever he expect- pronches is thnt nowndays it isn't
be subject to a $10 fine or ten days'
ed to obtain a sleek coat and good fin- good taste to load the table full of i
ish on tho open range. It takes work so many kinds of food that no one is imprisonment.
Tho bill, introduced and fought for
nnd care to put an nnimnl in show able to make even a pretense of eat­
by
Councilman A. E. Adamson, pro­
condition, nnd severnl weeks should bo ing it.
viding
thnt poolrooms shall close nt
taken for the preparation,
midnight
nnd not reopen until 7
Tho county commissioners at their
A great ninny deserving nnimnls are
o’clock
tho
next morning, also beenmo
placed on exhibition with poor coats, last meeting at Bartow awarded tho
a
Inw
yesterday.
Chief Roberts has in.
A rough, shaggy coat is against thc contract for work on roads of Specint
animal nnd may ho the deciding fac­ Road nnd Bridge District No. 0, nnd stmeted bis men to sec thnt this par­
tor in awarding the first prize to an­ accepted thc bids of August Hecchs- ticular law is strictly enforced. The
other animal. The curry comb and cher, L. II. Cramer nnd J. A. Byrd, bill nlso provides thnt pool rooms shall
brush should be used daily, according for thc 340,000 bond Issue to covor close at midnight Saturday and not
reopen until Monday morning. Each
to John M. Scott, animal industralist tho costs.

S ta rt a bank account w ith iis.and we will help you make it
larger. We are equipped to care fo r your deposits with abso­
lute safety. There Is no function of a bank wc cannot per­
form. Every facility afforded to farm ers and others for
transaction of th eir banking business. Accounts may be
opened by mail and monies deposited or w ithdrawn in this
way with equal facility. There are scores of young men In
Sanford who should s ta rt a bank account. The dimes they
throw away every month if brought to our bank would make
them independent as they reach the noonday of life. In fact,
every person who has a dollar should s ta rt a bank account.
Try it and you will always thank ua for this advice.

The Peoples Bank
of Sanford
PERSONAL STAFF
IS NOW COMPLETE.

AUTO EXCHANGE

TALLAHASSEE, Fla., Oct. 31.—
Dependable Service
Governor Hardeo hns completed the
appointment of his personal staff, the
personnel of which was announced to­ Practically New
Chevrolet .....
day, as follows:
Adjutant General Charles P. Lovell,
St. Augustine; chief of staff, and the One 1919 Ford Touring Car, In
following, each to have the rank of
first class shape,
if O O C
lieutenant colonel:
a t on|y ....................... tp u u O
Frank Shutts, Miami.
W. F. Stovall, Tampa.
W. M. Igou, Eustls,
Liberal Terms on Both these Bargains
A. A. MPurphree, Gainesville.
Repair Work by Experienced
P. C. Eldred, Fort Pierce.
Mechanics a t Right Prices
M. B. Hcrloong, Jacksonville.
Jno. W. Henderson, Tnllnhnssco.
R. L. Swceger, Quincy.
At the Foot of First St.
Lewis O'Brien, Kissimmee.
Charles H, Brown, Tampa.
D. B. McKny, Tnnipn.
A. Livingston, Madison.
Edith Lucille Ball
J. E. Hardee, Mndlson.
S. A. Hinely, Live Oak.
Teacher Piano and Harmony
M. M. Fisher, Pensncoln.
Graduate Chicago Musical College
Pest cards—local vlows—lc each at Residence 719 Onk Are.
Herald—by tho pound—16c.

Phone &gt;48

ic M v ll

S p e c i a l M e e t i n g s at tH e B a p t i s t C h u r c h

10:00 A . M .
GEORGE HYMAN, P reacher
m ip ia iD in iH ia

l

a B an k A cco u n t

OCTOBER 30th —
NOVEMBER 6th

[ c lf H if U M lM

RALPH STO D G H U A , Singer

BMI] HEEBlIimSl B E f f llB l.

_

EASY TO DARKEN
YOUR GRAY HAIR

nt tho Florida Experiment Station.
For best results it will bo necessury
to keep the animal blanketed.
It is not advisable to make nni­
mnls over-fat but they should have a
good finish of smooth, oven flesh. YOU CAN BRING BACK COLOR
Cattle nnd horses may receive a lib­
ANI) LUSTRE WITH SAGE
eral qunntity of cottonseed menl, JenTEA AND SULPHUR
nut meal, or linBecd meal. These feeds
will put a gloss on their coots which
When you durkon your hair with
could not be had In any other way. Sago Tea and Sulphur, no ano can
These feeds will also make the skin tell, because It’s done po naturally, so
soft nnd pliable.
evenly.
Preparing this mixture,
animals
Many Btockmon let their nninialsitbou^
at bomo |„ n ^ a y and troublerun on tho range even wheni they
Bomi!. At little cost you can buy nt
feeding them for show. This Is not nny dnlg Btgre tho rcady-to-uso prepndvisablo Binco tholr coats cannot b e ; aratlon| improVod by tho addition of
kept clean and freo of burs. It is best
jngr0luentB called “Wyeth’s Sago
to keop thorn In the lot or on culti- •and gu]pbur Compound." You Just
vnted pasture and givo them plenty of dampcn a Bp0nge or soft bruph with
feed and care.
it and draw this through your hair,
taking one small strand nt a time. By
“Florida Honey Week"
morning all gray hair disappears, and,
It seems thnt we
wo aro beginning to nf tor nnothor application or two, your
realize thnt Floridn honoy^ is pretty :ba|r becomes beautifully darkened,
good stuff. According to tho Floridn g]088y ond luxuriant.
State Beekeepers’ Association wo can
Grayt fadod h&gt;
alr( though no ,iisbuy it hero at home much cheaper grac0f ,g Q B|gn „f „ld age, and as wo
nnd bettor than to wnit for it to bo all desire a youthful nnd attractive
shipped out of the stnte, mixed with appearance, get busy at once with
other honeys, put into fancy packages Wyeth's Sago and Sulphur Compound
nnd sent back to us for three or four and look years younger.—Adv.
times tho origlnnl price.
One cannot ent tho fancy pnekngo;
nnd railroad freights nnd middleman’s COUNCIL REGULATES
FISHING AT DEFUNIAK.
profits “butter no pnrsnips"; so,
whoroin is tho sense of it all, this
DEFUNIAK, Fla., Oct. 31.—Fish­
spending of our money for things thnt
ing
may be enjoyed two days In thc
possess no real value to us as con­
week In Lake DoFunink, under certain
sumers?
At any rate, these things aro what restrictions, It was made plain In the
we are to hoar about during “Honey resoluutlon which pnssed tho city
Week," which, according to plans, will council recently. No person mny
catch more than ten flsh per dny, and
be the week before Thanksgiving.
Florida beekeepers, and other good all flsh caught four inches or under
friends of Florida, aro going to “shgw In size must bo thrown back Into the
us," and wo think they have a good | water. 9ome large bass have of late
been seen in the water and a few of
and wholesome story to tell ua.
To paraphrase James Whitcomb Ri­ these have been caught.
ley: “The frost is on the ‘punkln’
and tho corn is in tho shock; the pan­
Bartow’s pavlpg program, author­
cakes are a-cookin’ and there's honoy ized t)io latter part of May, Is being
In the pot, or, if it isn’t there lit ought completed. Street commissioner J. E.
to bo."
Childs, assisted by R. H. Brown, coun­
Let’s get tho decks cleared for ty road foreman, with the county road
Thanksgiving, and pancakes, and force, has had charge of the work.
“Florida-First Honey."_______
Two mllqs of asphalt street have been
The world news the day it happens,
delivered at your door each evening, The world newa the day It bappena, a^ded to the city’s pavtd street sec­
tion.
the Herald office.
16c the week.
Miller’s Bakery (4 Boats).
Star Theatre.
Cle-Trac Trnctor.
Gillon 4 Fry.
John T. Brndy.
Perkins 4 Britt (2 Boats).
R. C. Maxwell.
Ed. Higgins, Inc.
Hof-Mac Battery Co. (2 floats).
Snnford Stoam Laundry.
Wight Grocery Co.
Woman’s Club.
Mrs. J. M. Dresner.
Knights of Columbus.
Sanford Farmers’ Exchange.
L. p. McCuller.
The Yowell Co.
American Fruit Growers.
Snnford Furniture Co.
Hill Hardware Co.
C. W. Stokes.
Blnckshcar Mfg. Co.
The Herald Printing Co.
Popular Market, two floats.
Frnnk Akers Tire Co.
Snnford Truck Co.
Snnford Mattress Factory.
Tho Auxiliary of the Sallte Harri­
son Chapter N. S., D. A. U. (Children
of the American Revolution).
Any one welcome to enter a float
or decorated car, Suitable cash prises
will bo awarded by the Flrt National
Bank, Somlnoio County Bank and Peo­
ples’ Bank of Sanford.
American Agr. Chemical Co.
Elder Springs Water Co.
W. S. Parker.
,
T. W. Williams.
Camp Fire Girls
Chamber of Commerce.
Chase 4 Company.
Itotnry Club.
N. Do V. Howard.
Chnpter of U. D. C.
Thrasher 4k Garner.
Bowers 4 Roumellat.
Social Dept., Woman’s Club.
Zachary-Tylor Veneer Co.
Sanford Battery Service.
L. O. Revand.
M. D. Barber.
Anyone wishing to enter call Lloyd’s
Shoe Store.
168-tf.

7 :3 0 P . M .

two offenses of this law cnrrics a flno
and n third offense will bring about
tho revocation of license.
Policemen Inst night did not mako
nny nrrests of minors found on tho
streets but instead informed them of
tho now lnw nnd warned them not to
bo out after 10 o’clock again without
being accompanied by some older porson.—Tlmes-Union.
TRAIN SCHEDULE
Southbound
Depart*
Arrive
2:46 a. m.
No. 88_____2:80 a. m.
8:40 a. m.
No. 27..........
3:20 p. m
No. 89_____ 3:65 p. m.
No. B5.......... 6:66 p.m. 7:10 p.m.
North Bound
Departs
Arrive
2:03 a. m.
No. 82_____1:48 a. m.
No. 84_____11:45 a.m. 12:06 p. m
No. 80.......... 8:05p.m. 8:26 p.m.
No. 28_____10:00 p. m.
Trilby Branch
Arrlv#
Departs
6:00 a. m.
•No. 100..........
8:25 p. m.
•No. 24..........
7:00 a.m .
#No 158..........
7:36 p.m.
No, 22..........
Leesburg Branch
Departs
Arrive
•No. 157.......... 4:0(1 p. r .
No. 21.......... 2:52 p. m.
•No. 101_____ 0:30 p.m.
‘No. 25_____2:00 p.m.
No. 22.......... 7:00 p. m
Oxledu Branch
Departs
Arrive
•No. 120..........11:00 a.m.
•No. 127..........
3:40 p.m
’Dally, except Sunday.
ASK FOR YOUR RECEIPT.
Subscribers to the Dally Herald
should ask for a receipt when the
carrier boys collect from you. It la
the enty protection, you hove In case
the carrier changes or thoro happens
to be a mistake In tho account. Each
carrier boy (s supplied with receipt
books,'nnd la commanded to give a
receipt by the Herald. Sea that you
get your receipt at th ; end of each
week if you nre paying that way.

ROGER RARSON TO
SPEAK AT DAYTONA.

Tom Moore

DAYTONA, Fla., Oct. 31.—Roger
BabHon, world-renowned statistician
and educator on business subjects, will
nddress a combined meeting of the
Kiwnnis nnd Rotary clubs in thla city
the Are week in February, according YOUR SATISFACTION
to an announcement mado this week.
IS MY SUCCESS
Mr. Bobson has been secured as a
speaker at the Florida Forum ond As­ Office Opp. P. O.
Phone 1 »
sembly, at Daytona Beach on the first
Sunday of thnt month, nnd at ‘the To See Better See Moore
samo time Robert S. Holmes, presi­
dent o fthe forum and a Rotation,
secured Mr. Robson's promise to addres Bsuch a meeting of business men.
The invitation to address the Forum
here was the only one of fifty similar
Invitations Mr. Babson received, which
ho accepted for the coming winter.

OptometristOptician

SEMINOLE
ABSTRACT CO.

In Circuit Court, Seventh Judicial Cir­
cuit, Seminole County, State of
Florida.—In Chancery.
DIVORCE—CITATION.
Cecil I. Moonoy, Complainant,
vs.
Alma Bernice Mooney, Defendant.
To Alma Bomlce Mooney, care Callle
V. Cato, 813 W, Marshall St., Rich­
mond, Va.:
It appearing from tho affidavit of
tho complainant horeln that you aro a
resident of a state other than the state
of Florida; that you ore a person over
tho age of twonty-one yours and that
there is no porcon within the state of
Florida servlco of a summons in Chan­
cery upon whom would bind you, lt la
hereby ordered that you appear to the
bill of complaint filed herein against
you on tho Rulo day for November,
1021, to-wlt, 7th day of November,
1921.
And It is further ordered that tbli
citation be published in tho Sanford
Dally Herald onco each weak for four
consecutivo weeks.
Witness my hand and official seal
at Sanford, Seminole County, Florida,
this tho 24th day of September, 1921.
(SEAL)
E. A. DOUGLASS,
Clerk of Circuit Court
SCHELLS MAINES,
Solicitor for Complainant. 9-24-6tc

Get An Abstract Before
Buying Property
E. A. DOUGLASS, Pres.

■

:: A NICE ASSORT.
MENT OF

HALLOWE’EN
GOODS
;• Such as Hats, Caps,
;; Hoods, Masks, Domi:! noes, Decorative Pa­
per, Place Cards and
invitations at—

MOBLEY’S
DRUG STORE

�DAILY DaBALD; MONDAY. OCTOBER SI. 1H1

This Forward
is jealous of its reputation for Ser­
vice and seeks to justify it anew with
each individual problem presented
to it.
The knowledge and experience of
this bank is available to its friends
and patrons at all times, regardless
of the size of their transactions.

T h e Sem inole C ou n ty
...B ank....
STRENGTH

::
PROGRESS
::
4% INTEREST PAID

S O C IE T Y
MR8. FRED DAIGBR. Society Editor.
__________ Phone 217-W

_

SOCIAL CALENDAR
MONDAY—The Gleaners Class of the
Presbytcrlnn S. S., will meet with
Mrs. Fred. T. Williams, at her homo
on Oak nvonuo, nt 7:30 p. m.
Monday—Tho Business and Profes­
sional Women's Club will havo n
board mooting at tho Woman’s Club
Monday night nt 7:30 o'clock.
Monday—Men’s Club will give a
Hallowe'en Dance at tho Parish
House.
TUESDAY—St. Agnus Guild will en­
tertain nt a Hallowe’en measuring
party nt tho Parish House from 8 to
11 o’clock.
Tuosday—Mrs. Charles L. Itritt will
entertain tho members of tho Mon­
day Bridge Club at her homo on
Palmetto avenue, at 3 o’clock.
Tuesday—Mrs. A. P. Connelly will
entertain at a "Stnlg Dinner” com­
plimentary to J. D. Woodruff,
whoso marriage to MIhb May
Thrasher takes place Friday even­
ing nt tho Presbyterian Church.
Tuesday—Mrs. W. C. Hill will enter­
tain at brldgo nt her homo on -1th
street Jn honor of Miss May Ferrnn ThVnshor nt 3 p. m.
Tuesday—The board of tho Woman’s
Club will hnvo its monthly meoting
Tuesday, November 1 at 10 o’clock
nt tho Woman’s Club.
Wednesday—Mrs. Raymond Key will
entortain nt an evening bridge pnrty complimenting Miss May Fcrrnn Thrushor.
Thursday—Mrs. W. J. Thigpen will
entertain tho mombers of tho Evory Week Bridge Club nt hor homo
on Park nvonuo nt 3 o'clock.
Friday—WoodrulT-Thrnahor nuptials
will bo solomnizcd at the First
Presbyterian church nt 8 p. m.
Saturday—Tho Children’s Hour will
be held nt Central Park nt 4 p m.
R. T. Thrasher returnod homo Inst
evening from Tampa where he hns
been tho guest of his sister, Mrs, Fred
Dniger, Sr., for soveral days.
Lieut. H. A. Bivins, of Arcadia,
spent tho week end the guest of Mr.
and Mrs. B. W. Herndon.
W. M. Brown, of Genflvn, wns a
business visitor horo todny.
Mr. arid Mrs. G, L. Loucks loft in
their car this morning for their grove
at Dunedin, whore they will stay until
Thursdny. Mrs. Hope, a Bister of

SERVICE

Mrs. Loucks, will accompany
home.

them

HALLOWE’EN PARTY
Tomorrow evening tho members of
St. Agnes Guild will entertain nt a
Hnllowo’en party nt the Parish House
from eight to cloven o’clock.
There will bo n delightful musical
progrnm, followed by games, contests,
fortuno telling nml other foaturcs In
keeping with the Hallowe’en soason.
Refreshments will nlso bo served.
The public is most cordially invited
to nttend.

top score prise a pink chiffon sash
was won by Miss Adelaide Higgins.
Mrs. C. R. Kirtley won second prise,
and was also given lingerie. In cut*
ting for the consolation Mrs. Ed.
Betts was the fortunate one ind re­
ceived a vase.
Following several progressions, the
tables were laid with dainty hand­
made covers and delicious refresh­
ments of chicken salad on shredded
lettuce, olives, hot rolls and nuts in
baskets wore served. Later the guests
were invited in the dining room for
coffee, the table had as Its center­
piece a largo wedding cako gaily dec­
orated with a "Lolly Pop" bride, sur­
rounded with bride’s maids, and other
attendants, around the cake were
"Lolly Pop" dolls as spectators.
Miss Thrasher was most becoming­
ly gowned in brown canton crepe with
hat to match.
Mrs. Galloway was assisted in en­
tertaining tho guests by Mrs. D. L.
Thrasher and Mrs. R. E. Nowman.
Mrs. Galloway’s guests includod
Miss May Thrasher, Mrs. D. L.
Thrashor, Mrs. R. E. Newman, Mrs.
Bon Caswell, Mrs, C. R. Kirtley, Mrs.
Joe Chittenden, Miss Adelaide Hig­
gins, Mrs. Ed. Betts, Misses Sara and
Geroldlno Muriel, Mrs. Robert Hines,
Miss Agnes Dumas, Mlscs Fern Ward,
Mrs. Dick Brown, Miss Daphno Wimbish, Miss Mario Teague, Mhs Flor­
ence Henry, Mrs. Karl Schultz and
Miss Mary Elizuboth Pulcston.

V

BIRTHDAY PARTY
Little Irvin Floischor, tho young
son of Mr. nnd Mrs. M. Fleischer,
cclebrntcd his ninth birthday anniver­
sary Saturday aftornoon at his homo
on Tenth street, which was onjoyed by
nbout fifteen of hiH small friends.
The house wns artistically decorat­
ed for the occasion, quantities of red
roHcs nnd fern being U Bod . In tho
dining room tho table had as its contcrpiece, the wonderful birthday cake
topped with nino burning tapers.
All kinds of games were played
during tho nftornoon. Mrs. Floischor
wns assisted in entertaining the
young guests by Miss Esther.
Refreshments of ice croani, enke,
candy nnd fruit, carrying out tho col­
or motif of red and green, were serv­
ed.
Tho young host wns tho recipient
of ninny pretty birthday gifts nnd
best wishes for many hnppy returns
of tho day from his friends.
Among those enjoying this lovely
party were: Leonnrd Miller, CInudo
Herndon, Jack Ayeock, Jim Higgins,
Frederick Stanley, John Stanley,
Sherwood Harvard, Evans Spencer,
Milton Robbins, Murry Kanner, Billy
Bnll, Billy Morse, Kinchcn Powers,
Teddy Morse nnd Lelsch Morris.

G. F. S. HALLOWE’EN PARTY.
Tho members of tho Junior Chap­
ter G. F. S. wore most delightfully
entertained nt a Hnllowo’en purty Fri­
day evening nt the homo of Mrs. John
G. Leonnrdy.
Tho house wns artistically decornted with golden rod and bright yellow
daisies. The guests all woro ghost
costumes, and enjoyed bobbing for
apples in a tub and biting them from
a string; witches stocking wnH nlso
plnycd, nnd Inter the guests assembled
on tho porch in tho dnrk nnd told
ghost stories. In guessing tho conun­
drums littlo Miss Camilln Puloston
guessed tho most correctly nnd was
awarded "Cnpt. Kid’s” Trcnsuro
Chest.
After the contests Mrs. Loonnrdy
served ico cream snndwiches with
bnnnnns nnd nuts, each topped with n
witch riding on a broom stick, with
candy, cakes nnd apples.
The members who nttended this
pleasant occasion woro:
Elizabeth
PARISH HOUSE KALENDAR.
Whitncr, Camilla Pulcston, Penrl Rob­
Monday,
Oct. 31, Night. Holy Cross
son, Ben Howard, Mary Helen Morse,
Men’s
Club
danco.
Mary Wollnnd, Marguerite nnd Helen
Tuesday, Nov. 1, 8 p. m., "Measuring
Edwards.
Party," S. Agnes Guild.
Frldny, Nov. 4, G. F. S., Party, Mrs.
V
FOR MISS THRASHER
John Leonard!, directress.
Miss Mny Thrasher wns tho charm­
ing honor guest nt ono of tho most
RALPH STODGIIILL HERE
delightful pnrtios of tho early fall
season, Saturday afternoon when Mrs.
Mr. Rnlph Stodghill, haratonc sing­
E. M. Galloway entertained nt bridgo
er of Alabama, is here. He is in charge
nt hor lively country home.
Tho Galloway homo wns prettily of the singing at the Baptist Temple.
decorated in n color schema of pink Alrcndy Inrge audiences are in ntund green carried out with quantities tedanco. The solos of Mr. Stodghill
of Mexican pink vino and pink roBos. hnvo pleased his hearers. A large
Three tables of players onjoyed a chorus is organized. Dr. George Hy­
spirited game. Tho tallies woro ar­ man is tho preacher. The meetings
tistically nnd appropriately designed will last only one week. Closing next
In miniature brides In full wedding Sunday.
attire nnd dainty brido’H maids.
Tho honoreo was presented a love­
For office supplies, stationery, etc.
ly piece of Goorgotto lingorio, while come to the Herald office.

MEETINGS

In v e s tm e n ts
The Safest, Soundest, Wisest and Most Profitable Invest­
ment in Snnford Today Is

HOF-MAC
BATTERY
CO.
LARGE
STOCK
BETTER
SERVICE

SANFORD REAL ESTATE
Ask any of tho people who havo bought through us and they
will tell you th a t their investm ents in Heal E state have
gained for them a profit of between—

40 AND 100%
We have tho following property for quick sale at prices
th at will net you a handsome profit:
Four adjoining lots on T hirteenth St., between Mag­
nolia and Palmotto Aves. These lots face city park.
Four adjoining lots on Pnrk Ave. between 11th and
12th streets.
Threo lots on Magnolia uvenue between 12th nnd 13th
streets.
Three lots on Snnford avenue betweon 11th and 12th
streets.
City water, gas, electric lights and sowers to all this
property.

Geo. W. Knight
“Foot o f First St.”

REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE

AMERICAN MAGAZINE
CONTRIBUTOR HERB.
*’ Among the prominent visitors to
the city today, were Dr. and Mrs. G.
M. Randall, who are touring the
State. Dr. Randall is a globe trotter,
and has travelled from Greenland to
Mexico in North America, and seen
all the foreign lands. Ho went Into
tho world war at .the Mexican border
and remnined until ho had seen Bor
lin, being with the medical corps. He
was with tho first Perry orpedltion
to Greenland, and the Arctic Circle,
and when ho speaks about that coun­
try, ho speaks authoritatively. He
said this morning that he had never,
in all his travels ,seen any country
that had the possibilities of the San­
ford section, and he intends to w t R o
an article soon for the American Mag­
azine abouut this part of Florida. He
wns taken around tho farming sec­
tion by Secretary Pearman and fell In
love with Sanford and tho farming In­
dustry ,and above all, the sub-irriga­
tion system as practiced here by the
winter truck growers.
’ Snnford, just passing through the
big storm, and able to take care of tho
flood of waters caused by threo days
of rain and showing but small effects,
tells tho story, and the dry senson of
tho entire summer and fall told the
rest.

BASKET
BALL
SHOES
T H E 5J.
m o M OT)
N ew Three
'Buckle S traps
Delightfullydesigned,
just as W alk-Over al­
ways excels w ith astyle
in high favor.

Patent Leather

HARRY WALSH IS COMING HOME
The following from Hnrry Walsh,
at Detroit, Is self explanatory:
Detroit, Mich., Oct. 27, 1921.
Friend Boh:
First of nil, excuse pencil, ns that
Is about the only handy writing outfit
I enn And.
Upon receipt of thlg note, kindly
discontinue mailing that up to date
pnper of yours to Pontine, Mich., ns
we nre leaving for homo, (Snnford
Fin.,) very shortly. Expect to drive
our car to Baltimore, Md., nnd then
take the Merchants &amp; Minors’ hont
for Jacksonville. Expect to sail No­
vember Rth.
We will tnke up our rcsldcnco nt
the Onk avenue house I purchased
some time ago. I believe tho num­
ber is 705.
We have hnd a very onjoynblo B u m ­
mer in tile north, but how wo long to
be back in Snnford. In fact, the town
looks better to me every yenr.
Hoping this finds you anil) your
good family In tho best of health, I
beg to remain,
Your frlond,
HARRY L. WALSH.
CHRISTMAS SEAL SALE.

S A N F O R D , FLA
First Nat’l Bonk Annex

"The Family Shoe Store"
8 E E 0 U R W ,N D 0 W

ATTENTION SPANISH
WAR VETERANS.

BROTHERHOOD
CO-OPERATIVE
STORES

All veterans of the Spnnish wnr are
requested to roport to mo ns to
whether they can bo in tho pnrndo on
Armistice Day.
R. A. TERHUNE,
Post Office. If you want the best

MEATS
and GROCERIES at the lowest
HALLOWE'EN DANCE TONIGHT. possible prices. Come to see us
at the old Depot Waiting Room,
Among the many social affairs of South Railroad Avenue.

tho onrly senson Is the Hallowe’en
dance nt tho Pnrish house tonight by
tho cMen’s Club. For two dollnrs, you
enn bring your Indies nnd enjoy n
dance to good music; enjoy favors nnd
refreshments nnd night of fun. Tho
Mon’s Club are putting on this dance
to assist in building the new nddltlon
to the Pnrish House nnd they invite
ull thoso who love to dnnee, nnd es­
pecially those who would like to help
tho Parish House, to purchnsc tickets
for tho dance tonight.

Phone 575-L-2

There is n very definite relationship
between the snlo of Christmas Seals
MRS. IDA AUSTIN
and tho death rate from tuberculosis
through the country. Utah hns tho
418 Magnolia Are.
lowest consumption denth rate In tho
MAKER AND ALTERED
United States and In 1920 sold the
largest por capita of seals of any
* LADIES’ CLOTHES
State except New York. Utnh sold
0.1 scnls for every man, woman nnd
child, of tho Stnte In 1920, nnd hnd n
death rate from tuberculosis of only
45 por 100,000 of the population.
PIANO OWNER8 NOTICE
Among other States hnving tho lowost
rates of death on account of consump­
Will bo In town for n limited time. A car load on A. G. L.
tion, arc Wisconsin, Michigan, MlnnoDray Track
sotn, Oregon and Montnnn. Thoso For immedinto sorvlco phone—
MACK
THE
TUNER
States hnv cnlso hnd n relatively large
18216tp
Vnldcz Hotel
snlo of Christmns Senls.
Dr. Israel L. Knpplnn, president of
Nutions will find something to fight.
______
the Florida Public Health Association
in commenting on the relationship be­ for as long ns they have nnything to '
tween the snlo of Seals and tho tuber­ fight with.
culosis denth rntc, says: "There seem
to mo to be two fnctors In this rela­
tionship. First, in connection with an
nggronsivo Seal sale there goes forth
n lot of publicity rtgardlng tho nnturo
of tuhcrrulosis nnd Its prevention thnt
Is o fvnlue to the gonoral population
ir avoiding tho disease nnd a great
deni of hopo to those who hnvothc dis­
ease by tho slogan ’consumption is
curnblo.’ In connection with overy
Seal snlo there hns been a grent deni
of Information disseminated In re­
Because, Mr. Farmer, you can use
gard to food preparation and living
nnd sleeping In tho frpsh nlr. Tho
our facilities to your advantage.
other factor in thiH low denth rate in
stntes where the strongest snlcs of
Senls hns been conducted is tho fact
Our buying capacity enables us to
tlint thore Is thuo more money for ed­
supply your Crates, Hampers, Insec­
ucation nnd hospital provision and
consequently more adequnta support
ticides, Fertilizers and supplies at a
of institutions maincn'nc l by tax­
saving in cost to you.
ation.
Floridn stands among tho states
with both u medium death rate from
You don’t have to figure away in
consumption—105 per 100,000 of tho
advance
what you need. Our ample
population and a moderate Christmas
stock will take care of you.
tuberculosis Christmas seal snlo In
1020, 2.0 seals por capitn. The num| bor of soals sold In 1017, the yenr of
Compare Our Prices
organization of tho association, was
.7 per capita and tho death rate 110
WE ARE AT YOUR SERVICE
per 100,000 of tho population. Tho
I total aalos Increased from $7,000
' worth In 1017 to $20,000 worth In j
1020, and tho total death from tuber-;
culosis decreased from 1,085 In 1017
to 1,010 In 1020.

BANANAS BANANAS

DOZEN 15c-20c
BUNCH.... $1.25 UP

Why This
Interests

Chase &amp; Co.

How to ketp tho roaming boys on
tho farm and tho roaming cattle off
seems to be one of the Florida fam- [
ers’ problems.

PHONE 536

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 81,1981

Utils HiPP«rin*#
Mention of
Matters la
Personal Items

:

In and A bout
The City

Summery ot the
Floating S bb II
Talks Succinctly
Arranged for
Herald Readers

the wea

;
:

probably in - E - t
Cooler In
# North and Central portions to­
ft night; Tuesday generally fair.
*

portion tonight;

Don’t forget tho dance at the Parish
House tonight. Good music.
Ilsve your watches and Jewelry re­
a re d at McLaulln'i. Two firat class
watch makers. Prompt
’ Mr. and Mrs. Claude Rauloraon, of
Geneva, were among the visitors to
the city today.
The Temple Pipo Organ Club will
hold its Christmns Bazaar Novomber
?fith The placo to bo nnnonccd lat(T '
182-Mon-Thur-tfc
Dr. and Mrs. G. M. Randnll, of
Maine, were In Ihe city last night and
today, going to tho cast coast this af­
ternoon.

Well, the wenther seems to be
an unsettled question like tho
peace conference, politics and
city government but nil things
will bo settled some time oven
the undertaker’s bill and wo
suppose the weather will take
its course. One cannot expect
a sudden calm after such a big
storm. And anyhow n few lit­
tle showers aro always wel­
come, The tempernturo is just
right and everything Ib sitting
pretty. And Amilstlco Day
is approaching on spiral put­
tees.
OCTOBER 31, 6:40 A. M.
Maximum ....................... 84
Minimum ....................... 02
Range .............................. GO
Barometer ..................... 20.03
Rain ..................................... 13
Calm and cloudy.

Princess Pat?

finder. Yj&gt;ur grocer will give you the
Party finding button in O. K.
money. There will bo abutton in
ISKI-'Ai) will receive 50c.
During
one loaf ouch day.
188-lwc
week there will bo a special button
put in O. K. Bread worth $1.00 to
Hupmobile makes fin­
finder. Your grocor will give you tho
money. There will bo a button in al reduction, open mod­
one loaf each day.
188-lwc

“EXIDE" BATTERIES—Our Pull­
man cur., airplanes, submarines,
telephones and great 7,000 mile wire­
less stations are equipped with tho
master “EXIDE” Butteries, tho bnttery is tho life of your car, get tho
best. Wo rechnrge and repair all
makes.—Rny Brothers, Phono 548.
17C-tf-c
Word comes from Miami, that Dick
forhenu, Jr., is quite a horn. It B o o m s
that the rushed into a burning home
down there one day Inst week and res­
cued a young girl from the smoko
and flnmcs nnd is now In lino for a
Camegio medal. Dick Is a Sanford
hoy, nnd tho Son of Mr. and Mrs. R.
A. Terheun, of this city.
BATTERIES—America’s first car
was regularly equipped with start'eg and lighting Batteries in 1911,
this bnttery was an "EXIDE", todny"
the master lmtlcry of tho world. Do
not tie misled by tho so-called just as
good.—Rny Brothers, Phono 548.
175-tf-c

FREE!

FREE!

With overy tire purchase
wo will givo free a chance
on

FORD CAR
To be given away
NOVEMBER 11TH
—By the—

American Legion

$10.25
8.75
FRANK AKERS
TIRE CO.

30x3 J/j Non-

Skid ...........

30x3 Non-

Skid .........

VULCANIZING
l»t and Elm Ave. Phone 447-W

Ideal New York Trystlng Plaoe Pound
to Be In the Midst of the City's
Busy Whirl,
Publish It not In Hie streets of Ascabin nor whisper It to old Mrs.
Grundy, hut Dan Cupid finds a wny
oven In the prosaic Jungles of lower
Manhattan to provide youthful lovers
with a place to spoon, observes a New
York Sun writer. The top of a Fifth
avenue bus timy do for those who nro
burdened to the ways of the great city,
hill there are munc. Indeed many, who
Just can't say sweet nothings to enrn
other with the rest of the Intertill'
tlonal world looking on,
For these kind, architects have provldcd a quiet sput In practically every
ufllce building lu New York, uni) ll
only remained for the sweet young
tilings to And ll. They have.
It’s a fact that the average New
Yorker, business man or woman, mes­
senger or stenographer, has no use for
the stairway. They, he or she,* ride
la the elevator, even If It's only one
lloor. As a result, the stairways have
all the seclusion of a quiet nook, hours
away from Broadway on the sunny
side of a hill, only the light In most
stairways Is provided by a few candle
power globe of varying degree of In­
tensity, depending upon the cobwebs.
And as a trystlng spot, well, there
was evidence In some that they were
nbu used as a place In which to en­
joy c Iltt&gt;e luarh, while discussing the
proposition to begin housekeeping In
u lltt'u Cut up Harlem way, or out In
IlroohDo T..o evidence being crumbs,
cigarette ashes, and an occasional hair­
pin.

And don’t you know that even wooden indians move on Hallowe’en?
Last year in a neighboring town a wooden indian left his cigar store
post to be found next morning walking in a movie. Everyone goes
somewhere on Hallowe’en.

some special shirts and neckwear for our young men to wear th at
night. They are fine values—appropriate patterns. And the new suit
you want for th at night—just you come and look at what we have for
you.

y # £ s w f f f r / / / j r / s j /f f e w H l

Sanford, Fla.

183-tfc ASSERTS HE HEARD SHERMAN

The I ndies of tho Episcopal Church
Mr. Edgar A. Ball, who arrived
•will hold their Bazaar and Supper, hero Inst week with his family, Is now
December 1st and 2nd In the Parish
living at 710 Oak street and will give
House.
171-tfc
lessons on nil band Instruments. Mr.
Dance at the Parish House tonight Bnll wnB instructor for n number of
and you nro invited. Good music, re­ years at the Shirman Indian College,
freshments, favors. $2.00 yourself Riverside, Cal., under Roosevelt’s ad­
ministration, having chnrgo of tho
and indies.
muslcnl department, and would liko to
organize n class here for the purpose
P rin c e ss Pat?
183-tfc of training them so that In the near
future they con take their place In the
Harry Neel and LcClalro Irwin, of Sanford municipal hand.
the Herald Printing Co., loft yester­
Pnrty finding buttonIn
O. K.
day fnr Okeechobee Cfity, whort they
BREAD will receive 50c.
During
will look over the plant of the News
week there will be a special button
and expect to return tomorrow.
put In O. K. Bread worth $1.00 to

W, A. Snyder, of New York, is in
the city looking over tho plant of the
Bel-Jnr Coffee Co., and attending to
the advertising mntter. lie has charge
of the publicity end of tho buslnoss
and is an experienced advertising and
publicity expert. He likes Sanford
very much and expects to spend much
of his time here while ho is In Flori­
da.

SPOON ON THE STAIRWAYS

els, $1250, Detroit.—B.
&amp; O. MOTOR CO., San­
ford.
188-tfc

Father Henncsey nnd Father A.
fMninvillo paid tht Herald office u visit
today nqd were surprised at tho mag­
nitude of the office and the equip­
ment. Father Mainvillc is looking af­
ter the mission work in this diocese
under Father Hennesey, and has beon
hero for several weeks. He is origi­
nally from Canada, nnd is n FronchCnnadinn by birth. Being at one tlmo
a teacher of printing in onu of tho
Canadian colleges, ■ Fathor Malnvlllo was very much interested In the
new linotypes nnd other up to dnta
machines of tho Herald officu. Ho
likes Snnford mul Florida very much
und will pprobnbly spend tho entire
.winter In this section.

Civil War Veteran Waa Preaont When
Famous Soldier Declared That
“W ar la Hell ”

John Kooltioek, seventy-tilm*. Ihe
only living mini who henrd lieu. Wit
Bain T. Sherman's famous oxelama
Bon, "War Is hell," now lives In Den
ver with Ills grandson, John Kuolheok.
Before Ids death General Sherman
tried to recall the Incident of the ut­
terance, but failed. John Koolheck
remembers where, when, why and how
the statement was made. Ho tells the
Btory:
“After Vicksburg, Joe Jackson retrented across tho I’enrl river at Jackson, Miss. Sherman was In com­
mand of our army. I was with Oen.
B. F. Winslow ns aide-de-camp. My
regiment was tho Fourth Iowa cav­
alry. We were after tho enemy und
tho Infantry had J uki gone over the
pontoon bridge across Pearl river.
"General Sherman sat on his horso
at tho edge of tho river, apparently
lost In thought. Just as tho cavalry
started over, tho hoofs of tho horses
clattering against tho loose planks,
Hherninn looked up and called out to
us, 'Boys, war Ih hell I'
"I was at tho head of tho lino with
Winslow. So I heard him clearly.
Sympathy for his tired troop*
prompted him."
General Winslow and all other mem­
bers of his HtnfT arc dead. Mr. Kuolbeck wub the youngest of tho parly.—
Denver Times.
Has at Least One Virtue.

Whatever else may he said about
Chnrles Holmes, negro, no one can say
thnt ho Is not frank.
Holmes, recently convicted on «
charge of burglary, apeared for sen­
tence before Superior Judge Harold
Loudcrhnck.
"Holmes, what did you do for a
living before you got Into Bits trou­
ble?” asked the court.
"Jes' steolln' nnd gamblin', Mlstnh
Judge." answered the defendant. "Jes'
stentin' nnd gamblin', sir. and Ah was
considered proficient and professional
In both lines."
“Your frankness Is refreshing," re­
marked the court, and gave the dePrincess Pat?
fcmlunt an Indeterminate sentence In
183-tfc San Quentin.—San Francisco Chron­
icle.
The remarkable thing about • furn­
ished apartment is thnt nnybody
Sympathetic Childhood,
should ho able to collect so many use­
Irately, In a garden not fnr from
Boston, the lord of tho manor set a
less pieces of furniture.
trap to catch the woodchucks Hint
were monopolizing Ills vegetables. In­
Hupmobile makes fin­ stead of serving lls purpose, the trap
a neighboring family cat by the
al reduction, open mod­ cniight
pnws, nnd nobody dnred to release the
els, $1250, Detroit.—B. agonized animal—until two little chil­
ennui along. Hearing the cries
O. MOTOR CO., San­ dren
of the cat. one of the children gently
potted the cat, while tho oilier opened
ford.
188-tfc the Jaws of the trap and released pour
kitty. The Incident serves to Illustrate
the fearlessness of sympaBietlc child­
If the strike talk has resulted In a hood In relieving distress.
reduction of freight rates, ns some of
tho leaders claim, It lins been « good
Novelist Lott Vogue.
thing, even If it did givo tho country
During Bio deluge of "realism” Mrs.
n good senra.
Bouthworth’s vogue ns a novel-writer
declined, but the older generation, or
the older generations, remained faith­
Princess Pat?
183-tfc ful to her and her books Hold well.
Mrs. 8outhworth had furnished much
entertainment for young and old peo­
Tho reason people place vory little ple for more tbnn fifty years, but there
value on ndvico is because thoy don't cuine a time when age forced her to
have to slip out after night and break restrict her output. At least two at
her novels were published nfter her
a law to got it.
death, and during her life and after
Its close many of her stories were re­
Hupmobile makes fin­ published, and thpr® were numerous
"ntw editions."

WII.I. BOOST HOME PAPERS
Week of November 7-12 Set for Nntlon-Widc Endeavor
"Subscrlbo tt) your homo town pa­
per."
*
This is tho slogan of n now nation­
wide movement hacked by tho Nation­
al Editorinl Association nnd other
agencicH.
The movement has back of it fnr
more than n selfish desire on the part
of nowspnpers to ncquiro increased
circulation, for it is, in effect1, a step
toward the perfect unification of
America by the strengthening of ties
that bind everyone to Ids native soil.
The campaign is, moreover, nn ex­
cellent opportunity to boost tho homo
town. The men nnd women who
were born and ronred here have, some
of them, beon nwny for many years
nnd many important chnngcs have
taken place—changes In which they
would bo grcntly interested.
It is
more often the case than not thnt
private correspondence overlooks these
changes, however carefully one might
attempt to writo "the news" in n let­
ter.
Tho newspapers, on the other hand,
prints all the items of Interest, Inrge
and small, and Is the ideal medium
through which to keep in touch with
in the old home town.
In order to stimulate this move­
ment we nro this week offering an
extra copy of The Weekly Herald to
every subscriber who ealls or writes
for It. This extra can be sent, with
a special subscription blank which
wo will furnish, to any member of tho
family who is nwny from home. Or,
if preferred, wo will mnil n copy free
of charge to anyone you designate.
TAX RETURNS TO I1E
OPEN TO CONGRESS.

WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 31.—
Income lux returns made to the treas­
ury by corporntloss und individuals
would be open to Inspection at the re­
quest of either houso of congress un­
der a provision of tho tnx revision bill
udopted todny by the senate without
a record vote.
Senator Hofflin, democrat, Alabama,
conferred with southern house nnd
senate members on the possibility of
raising rqyenuc by Imposing a tax
on certain cotton futures contracts of
the New York and New Orlenns ex­
changes.
A provision of this kind will ac­
complish onu of two good thins, said
Senntor Hofflin. It will either rnlso
several million dollars of revenues or
prevent trading In certain cotton fu­
tures contrnctB that are very Injuri­
ous to the cotton producers of the
United States.
Tho first concrete action of the day
wns tho ndoption of a compromise
nmtndment striking out the provision
Imposing u lax of 50 cents on aurey
bonds and on all pollclos of gunrnnty
nnd fidelity insurance, Including poli­
cies guaranteeing titles to renl estate
and mortgage guarantee poicles.
Scantor Calder, republican, Now
York, offered an amendment to the
corporation tax section exempting
from the IB per cent corporation tax
corporations
"organized exclusively
al reduction, open mod­
for co-operatlvo homo ownership."
els, $1250, Detroit.—B.
Going Up.
The amendment was-urged by New
"Mildred's
flnneo
In the avia­ York representative of such corpora­
&amp; O. MOTOR CO., San- tion oervlce during was
tho war, was ho
tions, who conferred today with re­
not?"
f0 rd '
_____
188-tfc
“Yea, and I'll, wager that he will publican leaders.
uuhllah a now record for altitude
About the only placo whero the flights when he discover* how much . It has been discovered at the
speed laws aro not vlolted l» the road tt costa to keep Mildred In clothes."— '/peace" c o n fe r e e -that acme -Irish­
lo d g e .
men have no horns.
back to normalcy.

&amp;

FIVE ROOM BUNGALOW
Located within fifty feet of brick street to
be sold this week on very reason­
able terms.
See

A. P. CONNELLY

C L A S SIF IE D ADS
Classified advertisement*, 5 centa a line. No md taken for le u than
*25 cents, and positively no classified ads charged to anyone. Cash
muat accompany all orders. Count five words to a line and remit ac­
cordingly.
FOR RENT— I room bungnlow with
garngo; also lnrgo gnrden lot and
FORD TRUCK for sale.—West Side chicken yard. E. A. Moffet, Celory
Grocery.
104-tfc Ave. Phono 107-W.
188-2tc
FOR SALA—Best opportunity for
WANTED
wholesale and retail fish market on
WANTED—Customers
for frosh mlik,
Must conr.t. Building, dock and ship­
morning
and
evening
deliveries.—R.
ping platform. Address W. P. Wil­
kinson, No\^ Smyrna, Fla. 10-17-lm L. Garrison. Phono 3711. lCO-St-Tu
MIRACLE CONCRETE CO.—Build­ WANTED—Team work. Apply M,
Hanson Shoo Shop.
178-13tp
ing and pior blocks, cemont pockets,
cement sidewalks with guarantee to SECOND HAND SHOW CASE
Inst nnd not brenk or crack. Genera)
Wonted. Herald Printing Co.
cement contracting. All work guar­
183-5tp.
anteed. Elm avenuo between Third WANTED—Two unfurnished rooms,
and Fourth street.—J. E. Torwilliger,
suitable for light housekeeping,
I'rop. Phono 224-W.
178-lm-tfc close In. References exchanged. Ad­
FOR SALE—Eight young mules, nil dress, "J. N." enro of Herald.
180-tf-dh
good condition, good workers. Will
sell one pair of them at a great bar­ WANTED—Show case, five or six
gain.—G. F. Smith, Sanford or Her­
feet long. Herald Printing Co.
ald officu.
lHG-tfc
183-6tp.
FOR SALE—Beautiful Scotch Collie. WANTED—An ieo box that will hold
Loves children. Call 112. 188-3tc
100 to 150 lbs Ice. Notify Horald.
FOR SALE—Ono prncticnlly now
Rco speedwngon, ono new 5 passen­
ger Ford touring enr with truck body, WANTED—Two unfurnished rooms,
suitable for light housekeeping,
curtains all around. Will Boll either
close in by couple without children.
one.—Sanford Mattress Co., Sanford, References exchanged. Address "J.
Flo.
185-Gtc
N.” caro of HornUl.
FOR SALE—25 game roosters and
25 hens nnd pullets.—Code Hill,
Lockhart, Flu.
187-3tp
INC. TRADE. ONE THAT’S NOT
FOR SALE—Hove two small orange AFRAID OF A LITTLE WORK.
groves nt a hnrguin. Will take city APPLY AT THE HERALD PRINTproperty ns pnrt pay for ono or both. INC. COMPANY.
Reply to P, O. Box 134.
18-fltp
LOST
FOR SAtiF,—Rough framing lumber
nnd hoardH cheap. Also some good LOST—The auto jack picked up on
sound mules.—H. S. Long, Osteen.
west First str et about two miles
Phono 4811.
188-Dtp from Snnford early Snturdny morn­
ing, should bo brought to the Herald
FOR RENT
office.
187-3tp.
FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms. LOST—White pointer dog. Ono eyo
Apply 1004 Elm Ave.
152-tfc
nnd ono ear brown. Liberal reward
FOR RENT—Suburban home.
Call offered for return to W. J. Thigpen.
187-3tc.
308-J.
107ifc

FOR SALE

WANTED- ”

•ZS.

GOOD LOCATION for a moat market. Byes Examined
Glasses Designed
Apply to 300 First street. 174-tfc
Henry McLaulin, Jr.
FOR RENT—Bed room, 811 Park aveOPT. D.
nue.
178-tfc &gt;
FOR RENT—Lower floor of resi­
dence, furnished, 203 Magnolia
Ave.
185-5tp
FOR RENT—Two large, connecting
rooms, suitablo for couple, desiring
light housekeeping rooms. 210 Oak
Ave.
185-tfc OPTICIAN
OPTOMETRIST
Graduate
Northern
Illinois College
FOR RENT—Half of Btore, finn dis­
211
Bast
First
St.
Sanford, Fla.
play window, new building. En­
quire of W. H. Treadwell, East Sec­
ond street,- near Sanford avenue. New
Post cards—local views—lc each
DoForrest Bldg,
187-tfo the Herald office.

�m s

-iO *

w in

At Madison, Wis.: Wisconsin, 35;
M i^^sota, 0.
At Lafayette: Iowa, 13; Purdue, fl.
At Urbana, III.; Mich.Kan, 3; Il­
linois,'0. . ) At Dalton: Miami, 21; Denison, 0.
At Soufti Bethlehem: Lehigh, 21;
West Virginia, 14.
At Allentown, Pa.: Swarthmore, fl;
Muhlonbu^-g, 7.
At Npiw York: Boston College 0;
Fordham, 0.
At bfiddlotown, Conn.: Wesleyan,
l*j; Tufts, 14.
At Nashville: Vanderbilt, 14; Tennerace, 0. * .
At Louisville: University of Ken­
tucky, 0; Sewannee, 0.
At Raleigh, N. C.: State, 7; V. M.
I., 7.
At Wake Forest: Woke Forest, 28;
Guilford, 0.
At.'Evanston, 111.: Northwestern,
34; Depauw, 0.
At Chicago: 35; Colorado, 0.
At Akron, 28; Mount Union, 14.
A t Indianapolis: Indiana, 7; Notre
Dame, 28.
At Atlnnta: Oglethorpe, 7; Chatta­
nooga, 0.
At Montgomery: Florida, 34; How­
ard, 0.
,•
At Birmingham: Birmingham Sou­
thern, 0; Mississippi College, 27.
At New Haven: Yale, 45; Brown, 7.
At Milwaukee: Michigan Aggies, 0;
Marquette, 7.
At Lincoln, Neb, Nebraska, 44
Oklahoma, 0.
At Now Orleans: Alabama, 7; L.
S. U., 7.
At Schenpctady: Union, 7; Hobart,
21.
At Lynchburg, Va.: Washington and
Lee, 3; Virginia Lolytechnic, 0.
At Bristol, Vn.: King Colege, 7;
Roanoke, 0.
At Spartanburg, S. C.: Newberry,
83; Wofford, 21.
At New York: Penn Stnte, 28; Geor­
gia Tech, 7.
At Marietta, O.: Marietta, 20; West
Virvinla Wesleyan, 0.
At Philadelphia: Pittsburgh, 28;
Pennsylvania, 0.
At Cambridge: Centro, fl; Harvard,
At Princeton, 34; Virginia, 0.
At New York: Williams, 20; Columbln, 0.
At Birmingham: Colgate, 7; New
York University, 7.
At Detroit: Tulnno, 10; University
of Detroit, 14.
At Annapolis: Navy, 21; Bothnny,
At Syrncusc, 10; Washington nnd
Jcffeison, 17.
At West Point: Army, 53; Susque­
hanna, 0.
At Hoboken: Trinity, fl; Stevens, 0.
At Amherst: Vermont, 14; Massa­
chusetts Aggies, 7.
At Boston: Boston University, 14;
Rhode Island State, 0.
At Lewiston, Me.: New Hampshire,
14; Bates, 0.
At Baltimore: Johns Hopkins, 44;
Western Maryland, 0.
At Eastern, Pa.: Lafayotte, 35;
Rutgers, 0.
At Lewlsburg, Pa.: Bucknoll, 41;
Catholic University, 0.
At Ithaca: Cornell,9 59; Dartmouth,9

s ftu Mtl'Ttv. r .r ^ s c r . r

Three Inseparables
One for mildness,VIRGINIA
One for mellowness,BURLEY
One for arom a, TURKISH
The finest tobaccos perfectly
aefed an d b len d ed

At Washington: Georgetown, 28;
George Washington, 0.
At Amherst, 20; Hamilton, 0.
At Wntervilc, Me.: Colby, 3; Malno,
At Cleveland: Wooster, 7; Western
burn, 0.
At Emory, Va.: Emory nnd Henry
21; Lynchburg College, fl.
University of Maryland, 7; Univer­
sity of North Carolina, 10.
At Greenville, S. C.: Furmnn, 42;
Citadel, 0.
At Cambridge: Muskingum College,
35; Dayton University, 0.
At Dolnwnrc, O.: Obcrlin, 21; Ohio
Wesloynn, 0.
At Westerville, O.: Otterbcln, 7;
Kenyon, 7.
At Cincinnati: Wlttemburg, 7; Uni­
versity of Cincinnati, 2.
At Cincinnati: Creighton, 35; Saint
Xavier, 7.
At Huntington, W. Va.: Marshall
College, 14; Transylvania, 0.
At Chester, Pa.: Franklin and Mar­
shall, 41; Pennsylvania Military Col­
lege, 14.
At Hiram, O.: Ohio Northom, 35;
Hiram, 0.
At Salt Lake City: Utah, 17; Idaho,

kotn University, 38; ,North Dakota BOSS “BULL" MAN
Aggies, 3.
|
TALKS ABOUT HIS
At Donver: University of Denver,
ELEPHANTS AND PEANUTS.
0; University of Wyoming, 9.
|
-------At Spokane, Wash.: Gonzoba, 7; • It’s a good thing they had a $12,Montnnt State, 2.
000,000 pennut crop in Texas this
At Durham, N. C.: Trinity, 0; Elon year, said the boss "bull’’ man of
College, 0.
Howe’s Great London Circus nnd Vnn
At Richmond, Vn.: University of Amburg’s Trained Wild Animals,
Richmond, 14; Davidson, 14.
coming to Sanford, Wednesday, NoHigh School Gamea.
■vembor 2, “for these durn elephants
At St. Petersburg, Fla.: Duval, 39; will ent just about thut amount of
St. Petersburg, 0.
■goobers boforo the long hnul back to
At Gninesville, Fla.: Gaincsvillo, 28; | winter qqunrtors.
Every timo that
Hillsborough, 0.
ninth ’bull’ over there hears a whlsAt Tallahassee, Fla.: Leon High, tie ho thinks it’s n peanut stnnd.
27; Thomasvile, Ga., High, U.
| When tho 5 o'clock whistles go I have
At St. Augustlno, Fla.: Florida Deaf ( to plead with him to keep him from
and Dumb School, 10; Palatka High, 0. ( walkin’ away with the menagerie top.
At DeLand, Fla.: DeLand High, 22; And that after he’s oaten all the peaOcala High, 18.
' nuts that several thousand people
----------------------—*
I
have fed him before nnd aftor the
Missouri, fl
Thero is noting like going "out” t o : matinee.’’
mako tho republican party get togoth-; “Doesn’t it slow up their perform­
er. When thay are “in” they quarrel Bnce .eating all these peanuts?” the
llko rats and dogs imd tha nation’s fcyji man was asked. "Eatin' never
business Buffets.
slowed any of tliese three herds, es------------------------pocially eatin’ goobors. Tho ycung
You can't judge by appearances, ones and the old ones are alike when
66; Rico, 0.
The bald man Is seldom a hard-boiled it comep to the peanuts. Sack after
sack ■&gt; the crowds pour by and never
At Grand Forks, N. D.: North Da •g f.

FIFTH
AVE
NEW YORK C IT Y

a bull that hus enough. There was
once an elephant that lived in captlvity to the fairy ripe old ngo of 130.
They say the sick room was stacked

with punsy Bocks of peanuts during
“You take those ‘cats’—the lions,
the Inst illness and that the poor old tigers, leopards, panthers, jaguar*—
pnehydorm wrnppod his trunk around the gorillas, tho baboons, tho hippo,
three sacks as ho died.
thoso freak beasts in that lino of
sages across tho tent and even the
camels ,the bison, the gnu and all of
’em—well, catln’ makes ’em loggy,
but tho ‘bulls’ can oat tholr weights
in goobers and dance like Pavlowa.
Watch Mona Thompson and the other
women trainers glvo ’em the word to
do ‘the Death of the Swan’ dance in
the rings today. They’I be chockfull
o’ thoso peanuts, but they will float to
tho music—simply float.”
*

ASK FOR YOUR RECEIPT.
Subscribers to the Dally Horsld
should ask for a receipt when th*
carrier boya colloct from you. It i*
the only protection you have In e*»*
the carrier changes or there happso*
to be a mistake.In tho account Each
carrier boy is supplied with receipt
books, nnd is commanded to giv* *
receipt by tho Herald. See that you
pet your receipt a t the end of each’
week if you are paying that way.

�, ....

fr/Hfrnr./
,t—

•8

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yxkmw a DA'
PAGE SEVEN

OCTOBER 31, 19*21
water of life freely.”—Revelation 21:

IS OUT AGAIN

1-6.

S u b le t of Lecture at S tar T heatre Last Night by J. Edward
Grimes

, nor Gnrtlm'i', i;alir«»mlu,» nmll linnm, e sc a p e d tVoni McNeill’s Island fed-.
S i prism, recently. This Is the third
-grtpp of (Inrdnrr. In April, ll'-O. In
saii Dtepo, Gardner held up nnd
Ibbetl ii United States mull truck of
mpoii (iml wns serving 25 years when
w 'Wni, „ ninnher of other prisoners,
jade u dash for liberty during a base*
bill same at the federal prison. Two
of the prisoners who tried to esenpn
„ith him were shot while Gardner
•leaped.

ADVERTISING WILL HELP RESTOKE NORMAL BUSINESS
Advertising is more nccussary to­
day to manufacturers and retailors
than ever before. It can bo used to
help restore the proper bnlnnce of
trade, produce more work through
emptying the dealers' shelves.
The
sooner any business—and especially
the retail business—price their pres­
ent Inventories so thut the public will
rush in and buy, the sooner salesmen
who now have goods to sell will have
an opportunity to get real substantial
orders from retailers.
Orders from retailors will help the
manufacturers make up tholr minds
to help sell their goods to the consum­
er through advertising. Such adver­
tising-provided the price and the
quality of the merchandise are right
—will help the retailer sell the con­
sumer at less cost thnn through any
other means.
When you stop to consider that an
advertiser may use a national or lo­
cal newspaper campaign at a cost of
1-10 of n cent per home reached, you
can readily understand why newHpnper advertising pays so well.
If advertising can be used to restore
proper buying by the consumer—nnd
I know it can if properly used—then
automatically the
unemployment
problem will be solved nnd solved
quickly.
So let us all get about to see what
we can do to help solve this unem­
ployment problem by getting behind a
"Every American build a homo” cam­
paign—nnd also through our efforts
to help the retailers clear their shelv­
es through energetic and persistent
advertising nnd salesmanship.—Wil­
liam H, Rankin.
Sifting Out the Fleas.
It Is known Hint plague la carried
from one person to another by fleas
•ml that these fleas nftnially live on
mis. hilt Major K, \v. (.'rngg of the
Central Resenreh Institute. Knsaull,
India, asserts Hint only certain species
of liens are to li'nmc, and he Is now
making u special study of all the varie­
ties of duns In India In an oudouvnr

to find which Ih renlly the guilty one.
Is it not about time for those Irish
conferees to ask the public not to ex­
pect too much from their meetings

Speaking beforo a large, audience In
the Star Theatre last evening, J. EiL
wart! Grimes, of Jacksonville, repre­
senting the International Hihlo Stu­
dents' Association, urged a most lit­
eral interpretation of his subject,
"Millions Now Living Will Never
Die.”
"I have tho pleasure to bring you
the grandest message it was ever a
mortal's privilege to convey to his
fellowmnn," he declared, nnd proceed­
ed to quote scripturu upon scripture
in support of his contention that tho
tlmo Is coming when the humnn fam­
ily will enjoy everlasting life on
earth, and thnt thnt time will come in
the llfc-time of the present genera­
tion. Tito suliHtancu of the lecture
wns ns follows:
All Christians ^believe thnt the IIIbio ip God’s word and truth.
All
cbristians, Catholic and Protestant,
agree that the Bible tenches that
God created the first mnn purfect;
thnt this man sinned nnd was sentenc­
ed to death before he begat any chil­
dren; thnt he wnB driven from Eden,
ami later exercised Ills divinely given
functlous to beget children, nnd that
his children wore all "born in sin nnd
shnpen in iniquity" (I’snlnt 51:4); nnd
that for this renson every one of the
humnn race has been born imperfect,
inheriting this imperfection from the
first man—Adam.—Romans 6:12.
All Christians further agree that
God made n promise to redeem man
front death (Hosen 16:11); that he
promised Abraham: "In thy seed shall
all the families of the earth he bless­
ed" (Genesis 12:3); thnt Inter Jesus
came to earth; thnt Jesus wns bap­
tized in the Jordan; thnt he wns nfterwnrds crucified upon the cross nnd
arose from the dead and ascended on
high.
For the past nineteen hundred yenrs
Christians hnvc been preaching those
doctrines. If they nre true, then the
penitent question Is, Why has God
permitted the carrying out of such
arrangement ns above mentioned?
What is his real purpose In It? Oth­
er Scriptures answer this question
conclusively, thnt his purpose is to
provide for tho restoration of mnn to
his orlginnl perfection nnd thereby
grant to mnn cverlnsting life on the
earth,—Acts 3:1!&gt;-21.
Every ono of the prophets of old
foretold thnt it wns God’s purpose to
grunt restoration blessings to the hu­
man race. (Acts 8:24). Only a few
persons will go to heaven. Jesus Bald
thnt there would be but a little flock.
(Luke 12:62) What, then, will become
of the other millions of earth’s popu­
lation? Tho answer is, God will give
them nil opportunity to be restored to
perfect humnn conditions. If restora­
tion of the humnn race is not true,
then tho promise made to Abraham
must be void; tho promise to redeem
the hunym race from death could not
be true, nnd the death and resurrec­
tion of Jesus would bo wholly useless.
Wo know these are all permitted for n
purpose and that the perfect wisdom
of Jehovah devised this arrangement
and he has been carrying It out for
tho express purpose of blessing man­
kind.
Jesus plainly said: "I am come
that they (tho people) might huvo
life nnd have it more abundantly."
(John 10:10). Again ho said thut he
enmo to give his life n ransom, n purchaso price, for man. (Matthew 10:
28). Again we rend: "God so loved
tho world, thnt ho gave his only be­
gotten son, thnt whosoever beliovoth
in him should not porish, but have
ovorlasttng life." (John 3:10) Again,
that Jesus gnvo his lifo n ransom for
nil, to bo testified to all In duo timo.
(1 Timothy 2:5, 0) Unless, then, tho

I

In tho book "Millions Now Living1S
Will Never Die” each of these points a
Is treated in detail and proven by the g
Scriptures, more thnn 600 Scriptural
texts being cited.

THE GREAT TRAINED ANIMAL SHOW

SANFORD
WED.

NOV2

opportunity comes to mnn to know
the truth, to obey It, and when obedi­
ent to live, these promises ore a
mockery and Christianity a failure.
No Christian will admit that Christian­
ity Is « failure, because he knows It
will not he. God's word must ac­
TAKE A TABLESPOON FUL OF
complish Its purpose.—Islnh 55:11,
SALTS IF BACK HURTS OB
This being true, then, all must ad­
BLADDER BOTHERS
mit thnt a time will como when this;
opportunity for life everlasting will
We nre a tuition of meat enters nnd
be offered to the people. The ques­
our
blood is filled with uric acid, Bays
tion is, When is thnt time? Upper­
a well-known authority, who warns ub
most in the minds of the Lord's dis­
ciples was this question. They ex­ to be constantly on gunrd against kid­
ney trouble.
pected tho Messianic kingdom to b6
Tho kidneys do their utmost to free
set up somo time. He hnd told them
tho blood of this irritating acid, but
it would happen at the end of tho
become weak from tho overwork; they
world. He told them ho wns going
get' sluggish; tho eliminative tissues
away nnd would return again for
clog und thus tho wnsto is rotalnod in
them; and because they were so anx­ tho blood to poison tho cntlro system.
ious to know when tho blessings prom­
When your kidneys ache nnd feel
ised to Abraham would begin, they ltkd lumps of lead, nnd you have
propounded to him this question:
stinging pains in tho back or tho urino
"Master, tell us how ntny wo know
is cloudy, full of sediment, or tho
of your presence anti of tho end of blnddcr is Irritable, obliging you to
the world,"
B e c k relief during tho night; when you
Jesus did not answer tbis_ question have severe headaches, nervous and
by telling them that when the duo dizzy spells, sleeplessness, acid atomtime arrived God would bring forth nch or rheumatism in bad weather,
some strange phenomenon in
tho get from your pharmacist about four
skies; but his answer shows that tho ounces of Jail Salts; tnku a tableevidence would be such that when tho spoonful in a glass of water beforo
time does nrrive every thinking per­ breakfast each morning nnd In a few
son could understand. Hence he an­ days your kidneys will act fine. This
swered that the end of tho social and famous suits is mado from tho acid of
political order existing then, and still grapes and lemon juice, combined with
existing in a measure, would begin llthin, and has been used for genera­
with n world wur, followed by fnm- tions U&gt; flush and stimulate clogged
ino nnd pestilence nnd revolutions in kidneys, to neutralize the nclds in
various parts of tho earth. (Matthew urine so it is no lunger a source of ir­
24:7). These things hnd the begin­ ritation, thus ending urinary nnd blad­
ning of tlieir fulfillment in 1D14. der disorders.
According to Bible chronology, the
Jml .Salts is inexpensive nnd can­
gentile times ended there, and chrls- not injure; ninkcs a delightful effer­
tinns expected the trouble to begin, vescent lithin-wnter drink, and nobody
as indeed it did. The fnniinc hus can make a mistake by taking a little
■ Tickets on Sale on Show day nt Bower und Uoumillnt’s Drug
como; the pestilence has afflicted the occnssionnlly to keep tho kidneys
”
Store nt same prices charged on Show Grounds
earth; revolution has upset many clean and active,—Adv.
■■■■■■■■■HKHraimec. .'■r.usMauaaansaaAaaBMHaHBBHBHHBaBHH
governments and is now threatening
all the social fabric of the world,
A newspaper item says Admiral
Jesus furthermore said that at that
Hints
has declined to make n speech,
timo there would be grent distress in
SANFORD MARBLE &amp; GRANITE WORKS
but
those
who know the admiral nro
the earth, men's hearts failing them
JOHN GOVE, Proprietor
for fear of what they see coming on almost positive he has been misquot­
the earth (Luke 21:26, 2ti); nnd now ed.
CEMETERY WORK A SPECIALTY
wo sco this fulfilled.
1018 West First Street
1018 Wnst Firat Street
Things are not so bud ns they
Ho further Htutes that as it was In
the days of Noah, so should it bo at might be. We ’ aven’t henrd any wo­
Aninn’s only a mnn,
the end of the world. In Nonh’s day man reciting
hut
a
good
cignrettc's
a smoke."
thoro were giants in the earth. At
the present time there nre ginntH. The
giants In Nonh’s day were typical of
tho giants of this time. At present
there nre ginnt corporations which nre
absorbing all the smaller ones and
controlling all the business interests
of the world. The big ones are swal­
lowing up the little ones.
Jesus furthermore said thnt the
Jews would return to Palestine and
that would bo conclusive proof. They
have returned.
According to the Jubilee system,
which wns typical of the reign of
Mcssinh when tho blessing of the
world should begin, tho time is here.
Tho Jubilee types niUHt of necessity
end In 1026, at which timo earth’s
shall ccnso and the blessings of life
NEW L. C. SMITH (Cash or Terms) f o r ...................................$100.00
begin to bo offered to the human race.
There are millions of people now on
USED UNDERWOOD (cash) f o r ......
.................................25.00
earth who will surely ho living at
thnt time; hence if they are obedient
USED MOLLE, PORTABLE (cash or T erm s)........................... 50.00
to tho Messianic kingdom then to ho
established, they shall live nnd not f
'_____________________________________________________________
die.
v
Without a doubt that is the timo
We are agents for the new PORTABLE REMINGTON TYPE­
Jesus referred to when he said: "He ?
?
thnt liveth and helieveth in me shall
WRITER—the greatest machine on the market. It is a big type­
never die". (John 11:20) And again: ?
writer if you want to use it on your desk. It is a little typewriter if
"Verily, verily I sny unto you, if n
man keep my Baying, he Hhnll never
you want to can y it with you anywhere. Can’t be hurt, built like a
see death.’ (John 8:51) The appli­
cation of Christ's mgrlt will lift the
battleship, few parts, simple of construction, will never wear out.
curso from mankind; and then, ns tho
Scriptures show, ho will tench men Y Come in and see it. Standard keyboard.
how to think, how to act, how to enre
for themselves, what is proper food;
and gradually they will bo regenerntWe have also taken the agency for the new FORT PITT Machine
o 1 in hotly and in mind, and thus
continuing until nil of tho humnn race
—the wonder of the ages in the typewriter world. A standard
who arc obedient, will reach a state
typewriter th at will do any class of work, will do it better, will do
of human perfection nnd continue to £
live nnd not die. Then will be ful­
it cheaper, will stand the strain longer, easy running, makes no
filled tho prophetic words of tho Mas- j
(or spoken through John tho Revela- **♦ noise, built on the proper lines and the cheapest machine on the
tor: "And I saw a new hcavon nnd n ♦&gt;
market.
now earth; for the first heaven nnd
the first earth wore passed away;
and there was no mom sea, And I
John saw the holy city, new Jcrusnlem
coming down from God out of heav­
en', prepared ns a bride adorned for
her husband. And, I heard a grent
voice oiii of heaven saying, Behold,
’
*
,.
1 iff-' ;
*
r -r'
'
tho tabernaclo of God is with men,
Everything is coming down—so are typewriters. Don’t be mislead
and ho will dwell with them, pnd
they ahall bo his people, and God him­
on this subject. Let us show you how you can save money on this
self shall be wi^h them, and bo their
6tJJb .And God-.dull wipfl nfray'all
necessary adjunct to your business office.
tieara from UmI / eyas)!and thofe shall
1}o no mow deatp, neiOieb forfjw, iiof

MEAT INJURIOUS |[
TO THE KIDNEYS [

| TYPEWRITERS'
! oAll Kinds — - oAll iMakes

x

%

%

X

ATI

This funny looking little guy
with the big nose apd bald
head has got to face the music.
The determined attitude of
the Mrs. tells us that she is absolutely through seeing r e n t money
Handed over to Mr. Landlord. She wants a brand new home at
her own. She’s cot the plans, and she knovlra where the lumber is
coming from. Ual
;
.
, , u.. ,W .
There's another bald-headed m in'in this towfi who »•&gt;“ “i w ii
going to build this year. If he doein't get busy' pretty soon wa II
•et his wife on him!
NIWJ

LUMBER Cff.
SERVICE

Q U A L IT Y

PRICE

passed away. And he that aat up tho

tK

now. And ho; said unto mo, Write,
for those words are true and faithful.
And he said unto mo, It ir. done. I
am Alpha and Omega, the beginning
and the end. I will give unto him
that la athirst of the fountain of the

J ( f he
ALL KINDS OF TYPEWRITER RIBBONS, PAPER, SUPPLIES

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                    <text>Sanford

f Hi

S4»u«»r

rav SntoMii«l'
IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION

’1

NUMBER 187■/ ’■&gt;

SA N F O R D , FL O R ID A , S A T U R D A Y , OCTOBER 29, 1921

VOLUME n

American Food Supplies Pouring Into Russia

GOOD ROADS
IN FLORIDA

TO HONOR MARSHAL FOCH
GIVING HIM GLAD HAND
Paying Brief Visit to
Capital Enroute to
Kansas City

TOKUENTIAL RAINS
IN GAUTEMALA DO
GREAT DAMAGE.

GUEST O F LEGION
e r a l o f t h e a r m ie s

(By Th* AitocUUd Fr***)
GAUTEMALA CITY, Oct. 29.—
Torrental rains inf western Gautemala dona great damage to property
and caused floods In which eighteen
persona lost their lives.

State Road Department
Let Out Contracts
Yesterday

t K '. t*

HALF O F IT NOW
SOUTH FLORIDA GETS SOWrf
HUT ROAD NO. 1 RECEIVES
THE MOST

U N I X H •'*

Evelyn Nesbit Thaw
Took Morphine
When Rent Due

TALLAHASSEE, O ct 29.—Auth­
orizing close to 21,009,000 worth a t
The work of the Amerlcun relief udmlnlHirutlnn In starving llusslu Is well under way. SlUpload after sb ploa stato highway improvements and let­
Marshal Began Moving Out Furniture of United suites products nro pouring Into ..... . Rnssbtn centers. This photograph 4u«t received from Riga "bows ting contracts for another half million
the unloading of ships, mill the re-limillng of freight ears with foodstuffs.
dollnrs worth, tho State Road DoWhen Hill Unpaid
pnrtment hnd Its busiest session lh
(By Tb* iMMliUi Frau)
months here yesterday afternoon. Tho
SEVERAL
DROWNED
NEW YORK, Oct. 29.—Evelyn Ncsprincipal projoct let was tho hard-surPROPERTY DAMAGE
blt Thaw reported today almost whol­
BY NAPLES FLOOD. fncing of the Lnko City to Baker
ly recovered from the effects of an
county section of tho JacksonviUoovordosc of morphine swallowed yes­
Pensncoln rond, which will cost $255,­
(By The AmmUW4 Fr*«»)
terday when tho city marshal began
NAPLES, Oct. 29.—Several persona 033.
to movo furniture from her apart­
Practically every section of tha
wore drowned, nnd exenslve property
ment nnd tea room because she hndn’t
damage was caused by tho flood of state will draw some of tho author­
paid rent.
Schcto river Thursday night.
Tho ized work or of the contracted jobs.
Among the principal projects au­
inundation was caused by n sovere
thorized
was the bridge ovor tho Kis­
storm which lusted twclvo hours.
4l
simmee river in tho cross-stnto high­
way, and Joining Highland nnd Okee­
FORRES WILL VISIT
NOTABLES IN NEW YORK
chobee
counties; completion of Mar­
Heaviest
Loss
Was
in
JAX IN NOVEMBER TO
AMERICAN, ENGLISH, FRENCH.
ion county's part of the state road
INSPECT
CAMP
SITE.
GATHERING ON OUR SHORE.
Pinellas and Hills­
No. 2, supplementing thnt county’s
borough Counties
WASHINGTON, Oct. 29—"You may $150,000 with whatever funds aro
NEW YORK, Oct. 29.—Fnthcr
needed; finishing the various gaps in
state thnt I positively will visit JackVolusin and Putnnm county on tho
STREETS BEING CLEARED OF Knickerbocker held four “nccs" today:
son/illo next month," said Col. C. R.
Marshal Foch, supremo commander
east const road to Jncksonvillo; nnd
DEBRIS AND OTHER SIGNS
Forbes, chief of the veternns bureau,
of the allied nrmies In the world wnr.
calling for bids on the road botwten
OF IMG STORM
to
tho Metropolis correspondent toGeneral Pershing, commander of
Columbia county lino and the Duval
IN HILLSBOROUGH AND UP TO dny. "I am going to Kansas City to brick rond.
tho Amorlcnn Expeditionary Force.
(By Th* AitocUUd Frau)
attend the American Legion conven­
TAMPA, Oct. 29.—City Manager
SEVENTY PER CENT IN
Admirnl Bentty, commander of the
Following adjournment nt 6 o’clock
tion nnd expect to return hero nbout lust night the following summary o£
If all said today thnt most of tho British bnttlo cruiser squadron In the
PINELLAS COUNTY
Nov. 4 Tho trip to Jncksonvillo will the dny’s work was nvnllnblo:
streets wore cleared of debris but hun­ battle of Jutland.
(Br
The
AitocUUd
Prtul
bo the noxtthing in order. From tho
dreds of loads of trees nnd material
Admirnl Rodman .commnnder of the
Resolution passed to finish stato
TAM I'A, Oct.
29.—Reports
remained to bo disposed of. He has American naval forces In European
present outlook I think I shall be In road No. 2 within Marion county, sup­
from the storm stricken area to
advertised for bids for rebuilding waters durring tho world wnr.
Jacksonville nbout Novcmbc- 9.”
plementing tho bond funds amounting
the Florida Citrus Exchnnge in­
about 000 feet of sen wall.
to $450,000 which Marion county wih.
dicate the damage to the crop
put on tho project. Tho work will
!i8.3G0 IN NORFOLK IN
will be approximately eight per
AUGUSTA BANK CLOSES;
begin a t once and a convict camp will
GAINFUL OCCUPATION.! cent, according to C. E. Stewart,
DEPOSITORS TO BE PAID.
be moving within tho next week to be­
Jr., general mnnngcr. The heav­
gin operation.
WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 29.—
iest loss, nrcording to Mr. Stew­
WILL SEEK WAGE CUT T1ROU01I
AUGUSTA, Gn., Oct. 29.—The There wero 58,360 persons 10 yenrs of
Resolution passed authorizing tho
art, was In Hillsborough and
RAILROAD HOARD
Merchant’s Bank und Its Plaza hrnnch nge nnd over In Norfolk, Vn., engaged
chnirman
to ndvertho for bids fo r
Pinellas counties, 50 per cent in
ANYHOW
closed yesterday, nnd nffnlrs were put In gainful occupations In 1920, confour
forty-fot
spans reinforced con­
Hillsborough nnd from 50 to 70
in chnrge of deputy state superinten­ stltuuting 50.4 per cent of the city’s
crete
for
use
on
the western approach
per cent In Pinellas. No report
CHICAGO, Oct. 29.—Tho strike of dent Cagle. The bank will open today
NORTH
DAKOTA
PEOPLE
HAVE
of
tho
Apnluchicolu
rivor bridge.
hnd l&gt;een received by the Ex­
COO trainmen of the I. nnd G. N. ruil- for tho collection of duo pnper. A total population of 115,777, the census
TASTE OF RECALL
Resolution
passed
authorizing tho
change from Lee county.
rond operating In Texas, has been full statement will bo made Immedi­ burenu announced today. Of the gain­
ELECTIONS
appropriation
of
$5,000
to be used In
called off by tho general chairmen of ately nftor Investigutins now In pro­ ful workers 40,721 wero males and
(Continued on I’l f t Bis)
VETERAN ENGINEER OF
the road, according to n telegram re­ gress nro completed. Bank officers ns- 14,639 were females.
(Br Tho AitocUUd Proof)
SOUTHERN IS KILLED.
ceived here lust night by W. G. Leo, sert thnt depositors will be pnid dol­
FARGO, N. Dak., Oct. 20.—R. A.
chief of the Brotherhood of Railroad
Nestos, Independent candidate for Miami Officials
lar for dollar.
COLUMBIA, S. C., Oct. 29.—Del G. governor in yesterdny’s recall elec­
Trninmen.
April Fool Selves
McAllister, potentate of Omar Tem- tion continued onrly today to hold
For Public’s Benefit
HANK CLOSES DOORS.
plo of tho Shrlners and veteran en­ n 25,000 vote lead over his opponent,
CHICAGO, Oct. 20.—Railroad hands
gineer of the Southern railway was Governor Frazier. Returns nvailnblo
last night declared tho nntlon’s car­
HAWKINSVILLE,
Gn.,
Oct.
29.—
Instantly killed hero last night when from nbout one-third of tho precincts Munlclpnl Judge Finea Himself and
riers would go right ahead with their
Also Another Official
tho engine of n pnssenger train ho in tho state nnd wore from Independ­
plans to seek new wngo cut through The Hnwklnsvllle Bank nnd Trust Co.,
fifty
years
old,
closed
Its
doors
yester­
was driving backed Into a freight ent strongholds.
Railrond Labor Bonrd hearings de­
(By Tb* Au**Ut«4 Tnu)
spite the announcement from tho un­ day. Tho state bnnk examiner wnB DERAILED FIRST SECTION OF train nnd was overturned near tho
MIAMI, Oct. 29.—T. E. Price, mu­
GRAND TRUNK PASSENG­
ions that thoir action in calling off asked to take charge. The bank’s re­
union station.
ST. AUGUSTINE JEWS
nicipal judge, today fined himself $5
ER TRAIN
PLANNING SYNAGOQUE. for driving his automobile without a
the striko scheduled for October 30 serve got too low to accept deposits
hnd been influenced by tho bonrd’s it was stated.
SOUTH FLORIDA
tall light and H. G. Ralston, director
(Br Th* AitocUUd Tnu)
announcement that pay reduction pe­
GETTING BACK
ST. AUGUSTINE, Oct. 29.—Boforo of public safety, was fined $25.00 fop
LAPEER, Mich., Oct. 29.—Sheriff s
titions for any class would not bo Showery Weather
TO OLD ORDER. so very long the locnl Jewish colony speeding.
possso and railroad detectives arc
considered until working conditions
will have Its synagogue, a movement
searching tho countryside today for
First of Week,
for thnt class had been settled.
ST.
PETERSBURG,
Oct.
29.—Ex­
having been Htnrted to raise $5,000 LAKB OKEECHOBEE
men who fled from the scene
Fair Afterward Given
"The calling off of tho striko will
cept
for
tho
dnmngcd
watorfront,
St.
for tho erection of n building whore
BOATS ARE DAMAGED.
last night of derailment of tho first
have no effect on the plans announced
Petersburg
Is
back
to
normal
today,
services
may
bo
hold,
and
which
may
section of tho Grand Trunk passenger
(Br Th* AwooUUdJ u s )
by tho carriers October ^4 to seek Im­
OKEECHOBEE, Oct. 29.—Followtrain. The men are belfeved to bo with street cars In sorvice on all lines, also be used for a Hebrew school.
WASHINGTON,
D.
C.,
Oct.
20.—
mediate wngo reductions so that rates
and
all
oxccpt
a
few
small
sections
of
For
some
time
past
tho
JJews
of
this
in
tho wako of n weak of rain, th e
train
wreckers
who
removed
the
rail
could bo reduced,” said Samuel Fel­ Showery wenther tho first of tho
near Elba with the result that tho en­ the city provided with olectric lights. city have owned n lot on South Cor- a to m broke over the Okcpchobee-s*eweek;
generally
fair
thereafter,
wjth
ton, president of tho Chicago Great
Tho locnl loss from the storm of dovn street, which I snow paid for, tlon on Mondny night. A southeaaterb
normal temperature is the forecast tire trnln.excopt one pullman was
Western nnd chairman of the Asso­
uesdny
will be less than tho estimates nnd toward the building fund $1,750 gale created havlc among the fishing*
ditched. Throe persons wero serious­
ciation of Western Rnilrond Execu­ for Florida for tho week beginning
of
half
a million dollars, and most of has been raised this week.
camps on tho north and weat shore*
ly injured.
Sunday.
tives.
.
tho damage has already been repair­
of Lake Okeechobee, washing up onto
“I don’t know how long under tho
ed.
tho beach nnd dragging amall boat*
MISS
FLORENCE
REA.
bonrd’s ruling it will take to roach a
Immediate reconstruction of the old
and equipment from their mooring*
FORMER
FLORIDIAN.
decision on any pay cut petition but
recreation pier nt tho foot of Second
SUCCUMBS
IN
MOBILE.
and
piling them among the hyacinlli
these petitions undoubtedly will be
avenue, north, has been ordorod by
on
the
shore.
presented in a very short time. It
the city commission and the work Is to
MOBILE, Ain., Oct. 29.—Miss Flor­
Roads in nnd out of Okeechobse am
will bo up to the board then to dccido
be started In a day or two. This Is to
ence C. Rae, 77, a former resident of
mpaasable, on account of mud and
when action should be taken.
b«
for temporary uso only until a new
Jacksonville
and
Tallahasee,
Fla.,
washouta, but will be repaired sooi.
"I want it made plain, however,
All wire connections to the norA
thnt wo will seek these reductions in died here Thursday. She was bom in SENATE LEADERS DESPAIR OF pier can bo built. I t is proposed to
TO
UNIONS
AND
OPERATORS
IN
build
a
pier
of
concrete
and
steel
to
Tal!ahasaoc,
nnd
ia
survived
by
throe
were
blown down Tuesday night.
accordance with the law, posting no­
PASSING tT THIS
WE
8T VIRGINIA COAL
cost
half
a
million
dollars
and
plans
nieces,
Mrs.
W.
R.
Batchelor,
Mrs.
J.
tices of cuts, then discussing them
WEEK
FIELDS
havo boon ordered drawn for this.
with the employes and if no agree­ J. Walter, and Mrs. H. A. Dolbear. Tho
TREE BPRAYING.
Floods of telegrams poured into the
ment la reached, appealing to the funeral took place in Mobile, Friday.
.
(By Tho AuMintid V isa)
(By Tb* AmooUWS VrtM)
board to settle the dispute.”
WASHINGTON, Oct. 29.—Republi­ city today with th erostor'atlon of
Tho m atter of compulsory spray­
INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 29,—AfflMr. Felton’s statem ent was achoed Impounded Cattle,
can senate leaders conceded today no service by the Western Union, which davits designed (t b ‘establish the ex- ing of cltrua trees was given pulte lib­
by Samuel Dunn, editor of Railway
possibility of passing the tax revision has several wires working now. Tele­ Istcnce of unlawful conspiracy be­ eral consideration a t the late Semit *
Lakeland Officer
Age, who in an address a t a lunch­
bill this yreek. /A lso indicated little gram s came from all parts of tho
the union coal minors and oper and the concensus of opinion waa
eon of the local railroad executives
Gets Pounded prospect of maintaining quorum for country from persons who have rela­ tween
ators was introduced today in federal a t the next session of legislature
tives in St. Petersburg and wanted
declared that "the unions’ action set­
night session of senate tonight.
court hearing on application for tem ­ ueatlon muat be given attention. _
to know If they a r e ' still alive, as porary injunction restraining the un­ does not taeem aa though there cougl
tles only one thing—th at there will be
A LBAGUg QF NATIONS.
greatly exaggerated reports of storm ion in It* efforts to organise the Min be any opposition to inch a proposi­
no strike.”
"It does not settle the question of charging assault f H » l
damage were published in northern go coal field In West Virgnta.
tion, a t leaat by fhtr minded people
further wage reductions or of rate A. J. Morgan, member of the elate
Several years ago an inquiry in • papers. Another flood of messages
who
have a consistent regard fo r this
legislature.
He
Is
charged
with
B
rib­
reductions,” he continued.
third-grade room of a Miami public went out to relatives assuring them
rights
of their h tfftb o n . The qumk
ing
W.
E.
Browning,
city
Impounding
IT
OUGHT
TO
WORK.
"The roads are going right ahead
school revealed the fact th at among St. Petersburg was little damaged.
-tion
should
be kept alive by extenaWh
officer,
during
an
argument,
over
Im­
with the plana to get further pay
the forty-aeven children enrolled
newspaper
publicity.—DeLand
New*.
The
beach-borer
can
be
put
to
route
The
only
competitors
wltn
the
avia­
cuts end thus reduce ratS i,'but If the pounding cattle owned by Morgan.
nineteen states and four foreign coun­
.♦ *
Interstate Commerce Commission re­
tors who are trying to break the alti­ by uaa of para-dichlorobenzene.^ I
tries
w
e
re
’represented.
How
i»
th
a
t
Some people !!▼• to a ripe old.age,
"TJie .Grand Gobbllnx” get -you, I t
duces rates arid the Labor Board re­
for evidtnoe o f the cosmopolitan popu­ tude records are rants, coal, freight th at doea not do the work,-you writ*
and
aome
yam
to
s&amp;VWbat
shed
do
you
don't wateh out.
the prescription.—Plant City Courier.
fuses to reduce‘W h g ts ,th r e a d s will
.
lation o f ’Miami?—Miami Metropolis. rates and taxes.
when
wide
open.
he h r a disastrous condition.”
d r Tb* I h n Ii M Tm*)
WASHINGTON, Oet. 29^-Offldal Washington w u eager to­
day to express to the fullest Its
sentiment of heartfelt welcome to
Marshal Foch of France, who U
paying a brief preliminary rlalt
to the national capital enroute
to Kannas City where he will be
the guest of the American Le­
gion at Us annual convention
there. Foch, who wa* greeted
enthusiastically qn his arrival
here lost night from New York,
faced a busy program today of
official colls, and courtesies, In­
cluding luncheon at the White
House ns the guest of President
and Mrs. Harding.
Marshnl
Foch planned to pny his respects
to Secretary I)enby at the Nnvy
Department nnd Acting Secre­
tary Wnlnwright nt the W ar De­
partment. He will nlso receive
calls nt his hotel from General
Pershing in his official enpneity
ns general of the armies nnd
chief of stafT, Admiral Koontz
nnd other high army nnd naval
officers.

TAMPA STARTS
BIG CAMPAIGN
TO CLEAN UP

REPORTS FROM STORM AREA
CUT DOWN BIG LOSSES
CITRUS DAMAGE 8 PER CENT

FIFTY PER CENT

RAILROADS
LAY PLANS
TO REDUCE

INDEPENDENT
CANDIDATE
WINS OUT

TRAIN WRECKED
BY R O B B E R S
IN MICHIGAN

TAX REVISION
BILL FAILED
IN PASSAGE

&lt;

UNLAWFUL
CONSPIRACY
CHARGED

ti!r -ii

lAUiMiAj’.L..&amp;»•

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1921

Fathers’ and Sons’
Banqueted Last
Night, 150 There
Men and Boys Enjoyed a Moat De­
lightful Occasion
I I I !

Worn by men who know
Good Clothes
You can pick him out of a crowd—the
man who knows good clothes.
Often you say “that's a suit I’d like to
own,” and just as often the label inside reads

g w ie tij U rm th (E U itljra
$ 4 0 to $ 5 5
Sanford Shoe and Clothing Co.

Several Railways
Not Affected by
Strike Order
International nnd Great Northern
Traimen Went out Last Week

—Got your Scratch Pads from
JAPANESE STEAM EH
Herald—by
the pound—16c.
SANK IN HURRICANE
OFF CAPE FLATTERY.
(Dr Th. Aiim UU4 FrMt)
SEATTLE, Wash., Oct. 28.—The
Japnncso stcahship, Fukul Mnru sank
four hundred miles off Capo Flnttcry
at midnight last night in a hurrlcano,
but all passengers nnd crow wero
picked up by the freighter, West Ivnn,
according to a wireless. West Ivnn
wns gound for Jnpnn nnd will con­
tinue to tho Orient, tho message said.

(BJ Tb. I um UM Ti m )
CHICAGO, Oct. 28.—I t wan learn­
ed today the code word calling off
tho railroad strike hns not been sent
to the International nnd Grcnt North­
ern trainmen who went out last Sat­
urday. Calling off their striko was
deferred pending a determination of WIND-FALLEN CITRUS
their opportunity to return to work.
FRUIT WILL BE SENT
THROUGH UNINSPECTED.
BLANTON, IN TEARS,
LEAVES HOUSE AFTER
TALLAHASSEE, Oct. 28.—Tho
RECEIVING REPRIMAND. commissioner of agriculture today no­
tified tho several citrus fruit inspect­
WASHINGTON, Oct. 28.—Saved ors to pass nil shlpmcntr of wlndfrom being thrown out of tho liouso fnllon citrus friuut of recent storm
of roprosontatlvos by n bnro margin regardless of color or acid test. The
of eight votes, Thomas L. Blanton, shippers wore advised to mark nil
a Texas domoernt, was publicly repri­ such fruit "wind-fallen."
manded Into today by Speaker Gilllctt,
In accordance with a resolution of HUY A BIG FLAG
FOR ARMISTICE DAY.
consuro, against which no mnn cast a
voto.
The civic cominittco of tho Woman’s
Then ,n moment Inter, ns ho walked
out of tho chamber with all eyes upon Club, of which Mrs. G. I. Loucks is
him, he toppled over In a heap. Somo chaiman, is fostering n strong move­
o f his colleagues who had voted to
expol him, picked him up nnd plncod ment to plnco n flag of permanent
him on a lounge, but ho did not stay vnluo In every home In Sanford for
thoro long. Rousing himself, he Armistice Dny. Tho flag of our counstumble^ out, the tears streaming ery should bo honored, nnd proudly
down his cheeks, nnd ns ho went away displayed on every holiday, nnd sa­
ho was henrd to express tho hopo thnt credly taken care of between times.
ho might novor see the house again. It shows vory little forethought when
There wns not doubt of tho fact, ns ono decorates with tho cheap printed
mombers expressed it, thnt tho Toxnn affairs that nre faded nnd ruined by
wns utterly crushed nnd worn by his tho first sprinkle o frnin, so byy or­
•xporicnco of tho day, an cxporiencco dering n largo numbor, tho Civic
thnt seldom comes during the life of Commltteo hns procured a lino ngfl
a man In congress. For an hour and o fwool bunting, with sowed stripos
ten minutes, with hostile eyes upon nnd tho correct number of stars, to
him, ho fought to defend hlmsolf from soil a t $1.76 each. Ordors may bo
tho charge th a t he had transgressed telephoned nt once to Mrs. Henry
the law by putting into tho Congres­ .Wight, Mrs. R. J. Holly.
sional Record a document described
Having reduced the glaro in head­
as "unspeakable vile."
lights, tho traffic authorities are now
Some men think they know It all. seeking to reduce it in crossing offiand somo try to holp their twelve- core,
year-old children work school prob­
Buy it with a Herald W ant Ad.
lems.

Tho Fathers and Sons Banquet at
CECIL B. DeMILLE’S PRODUCTION
tho Pariah House last night was one
of tho most delightful as well as one
of tho most interesting affairs of tho
season. There wore ovor one hun­
(dred
__ nnd fifty
_ sat down to tho long
tables nnd disposed of a fine banquet
thnt had been arranged by tho Men's
Wallace Reid, Gloria Swanson, Elliot Dexter, Bebe Dan­
Club and tho Brotherhood classes of
tho Parish House.
/
iels, Monte Blue, Julia Faye, Wanda Hawley, Theodore
Tho idea of the Fathers and Sons
Roberts, Agnes Ayres, Raymond Hatton, Polly Moran and
banquet was originated by Father
Theodore
KoslofT.
Peck, who waa anxious to have tho
fathers of,"his boys" ns ho calls them,
know more 'about what the Parish
House wns doing for tho boys and
Evening at 7:00
Mattinee Daily at 3:30
tho kind of place where they wore
spending their spare time.
A fter tho banquet followed by ice
cream and cake and cocoa and coffee
had been disposed of President Whitwish to assist in making a place where graphers had refused to authorize %
nor called tho assemblage to order and
the youth of tho city can be housed strike.
called upon a numbor present to
nnd given those Innocent amusements
The labor board hearing wns held
speak a few words about the work—
desired in an environment th a t will yesterday. It adjourned when tho an.
those who bolonged to the Men's Club
prove beneficial instead of Injurious. ions, a t the instigation of the board,
to tell of the work and those who did
The Parish House is doing this in requested permission to confer with
not to toll how they felt about tho
Sanford.
their chairmen. These conferences led
work of, the Men’s Club and tho P ar­
up to the "big five" final action.
ish Houso Brothorhoods. Those call­
On last Saturday .howover, six hun­
ed upon who responded with many Railroad Strike Has
dred
trainmen on tho Internationa)
fine talks were Hon. Georgo A. DeBeen
Called
Off
by
and
Great
Northom began a strike.
Cottes, Billy Holden, H. C. DuBose,
This
strike
had been authorized pre­
the
B
is
Five
Unions
Judge Housholder, S. O. Shlnholser,
vious
to
tho
"big fou" strike call.
Hon. Forest Lake, Mayor Stovens, R.
W
hat
the
settlem
ent thoro will be Is.
J. Holly nnd Father Peck.
(Continue! from P m * On*)
A sextette of tho Men’s Club gnvo crafts unions—publicly announced not yet known.
many vocal selections during tho ev­ that ho "would fight tooth and toe
ening and the songs compiled by the noil to avert a walkout by tho eloven EFFECTS OF BIG STORM
Club wore printed and put in book standard unions."
BEING REMOVED RAPIDLY,
A few days after the "big ftvo"
form In order thnt everyone could
DEATH LIST INCREASED
join In tho chorus. With songs nnd strike call, the United States Labor
speeches and a general good time the Board stepped into tho situation. Tho
(Con 11mini from P*s* On*)
meeting wns adjourned by President three mombers of its public group were any lives lost.
A number of
Whitner with tho request thnt all of who had been summoned to Washing­ houses were destroyed by wind and
those present take a tour of inspec­ ton to confer with President Harding, w ater nt Passngrlllc nnd Annnmaria
tion and sec just what comprised tho announced their plan to nvert the Island, nnd a t Cortez, Indian Beach,
Parish House plnnt. Tho visitors were strike—no furthor reduction of wages Clonrwter Bench, Indian Rocks, and
nstounded a t tho fine plnce that has and immediate reduction of rates by thcro wns somo dnmngo to wooden
, been improved nnd added to from time tho ronds nnd acceptance of tho July buildings on Egmont and Mullet Keys,
to time and it looked like Father i 1 wngo decrcnso by tho unions. Both whero Forts Dndo nnd DoSoto nro lo­
Peck had stored up "much honey" at , ronds nnd unions immediately declar- cated; nlso at St. Petersburg Beach,
various times and also thnt those who od tho plan impossible. Tho board then Sarasota. Siesta Key and Longboat
attended tho meeting last night would ' called tho union chlofs into a confer­ Key, on tho uppor const; at Fort
in the future assist in making more ence a t Chicago, and, ponding this Myers, Sanlbel Island, Usoppa Island,
honey for tho boys to enjoy in tho fu ­ conference, the eloven "standard un­ Boca Grande and somo other points.
ture.
ions deferred action."
There nre muny big improvements
Nothing developed nt this confer­ LAKELAND C. OF C., INSTALLEDj contemplated nt the Parish Houso and
ence nnd tho bonrd then-formnlly an ­
tho addition to the big auditorium is
LAKELAND, Oct. 28.—Tho largest
being started now thnt will menn so nounced thnt it "assumed full juris­
meeting of its kind ovor hold wns tliat
diction"
ovor
tho
rail
crisis
nnd
or­
much to tho entire citizonship of San­
of tho public installation of the bonrd
ford. Tho Parish House will hnvo a dered tho unions not to striko pond­
of directors nnd officers of tho Lake­
ing
a
bonrd
hearing
to
dotermlno
If
gallery nnd place to scat mnny hun­
dreds of people who can see n good tho transportation net had been vio­ land Chambor of Commerce last night
a t tho Auditorium theatre. Officers
entertainment now and then, a movie lated in tho striko activities.
wero
awarded modnls whllo the differ­
Tho activities of tho shop crafts,
show, a basket ball gnmo and athletic
ent
teams
were given sorvico bndges.
events and the Parish House will bo representing 600,000 men, thon an­
Mayor-elect
H. C. Pottowny adminis­
a ronl community houso in every re­ nounced thnt they would not authorize
tered
tho
oath
to tho directors and
a walkout. This was tho "first break"
spect in the near future.
Secretary
T.
J.
Appleynrd
administer­
The Men’s Club is doing a great nnd others followed rapidly until every
ed
tho
citizens'
oath
t
otho
audience
one
of
tho
eleven
"standard"
unions
work in the community nnd deserves
a
t
large.
except
tho
Order
of
Railway
Tele­
n helping hund from all those who

&lt;Do You ^Pjeed a Coat Suit or Coat?
’CAUSE IP YOU DO NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY.
We are Offering Our Entire Stock of Coats and Suits at

Special Reductions for Saturday and SMonday Only

COAT SUITS OF
INDIVIDUALITY

FASCINATING
COATS

Sumptuous Suits in luxur­
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fine fabrics in tailored
models that emphasizo the
smart lines of the new
Fall Fashions. Fur trim­
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models.

Strikingly attractive mod­
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Sup­
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SATURDAY AND
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Specially priced for,
SATURDAY AND
MONDAY ONLY

All $29.75 and $32.50
Coats, Special $24.50

All $29.75 and $32.50
Suits at........... $24.95
All $35.00 and $37.50
Suits at ..........$29.75

All $32.50 and $37.50
grades a t .......$27.00

Better Grades Also Sub­
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Others, all materially re­
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It will prove very profitable to take advantage of these substantial reductions, and it will
show good judgment to buy now
“WHERE STYLE
REIGNS”

BAUMEL’S SPECIALTY SHOP

“WHERE STYLE
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�-

•v

*VV -T. • 1•

PAG* TWO

U iis Forward
Looking'yBank
I ' I cP ka

|;fe S
I'riaJ

3

S'

is jealous of its reputation for Ser­
vice and seeks to justify it anew with
each individual problem presented
to it.
The knowledge and experience of
this bank is available to its friends
and patrons at all times, regardless
of the size of their transactions.

The Seminole County
Bank....
STRENGTH

SERVICE

PROGRESS
4 % INTEREST PAID

Ednn Chittenden, Mnrllu Brown, Edith
Magee, Ethel Korscy, Mrs. W. A.
Lester, Mrs. Sorrell: Messrs. Stewart
Dutton, \ Alfred Robson, Leo Pock,
MRS. FRED DAIGBR. Society Editor, Tom Terry, Albert Bcurdon, Vance
Phono 2I7-W ‘
Douglas and W. A. Lester.

SO C IETY

;Vv
Rif

SOCIAL CALENDAR
S aturday—Mrs. E. M. Galloway will
entertain at Bridge, complimentary
to MIbb May Thrasher an attrac­
tive brido-clcct of Novombor.
Monday—Tho Business nnd Profes­
sional Women's Club will havo n
board meeting at the Woman’s Club
Monday night ut 7:30 o'clock.
Tuesday—Tho board of tho Woman's
Club will havo its monthly mooting
Tuesday, November 1 at 10 o’clock
a t tho Woman's Club.
MONDAY—The Gleaners Clnss of the
Presbyterian S. S., will meet with
Mrs. Fred. T. Williams, at her homo
on Onk nvonue, at 7:30 p. m.
TUESDAY—St. Agnes Guild will en­
tertain at a Hallowe’en measuring
party nt tho Parish liouao from 8 to
11 o’clock.
Mr. nnd Mrs. J. II. Gny, of Jack­
sonville, arc spending sonic time hero
a t tho Montezuma, heforo going to
other plnces of Interest In tho south­
ern part of tho stato.
W. II. Wood, of Concord, Mnss.,
G race Ruckle, of Concord, Mass.,
'Clara C. Messes, of Cnmhridgo, Mnss,,
rare spending the day here today en.route to St. Petersburg.

f.

W. R. Frier, of Douglnss, Gn., 1b
spending several days hero ns tho
guest of friends.
W nrren E. Eigelmnnn, of Charlotte,
N . C., arrived last night and is the
guest of his sister, Mrs. Fred Dnigcr,
Jr.
Daughters of Wesley will bo en­
tertained by Mm. W. A. Lester nnd
Mrs. Vance Douglas, nt 803 Mngnolin
avenue, at 7:30 p. m.

ft" i ;:

“Hffc

/ O’V .V'T/t .••

m yrT V 1

'V*- *v—liXf-u;;-,-i■■1 X.J’

WRjKSV
*■,. .._•

THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER » , 1021

•&gt;

■5

•-w -Uimv,-V31-M'',1 ’~ 'T

•

IN HONOR OF MISS KERSEY.
Mrs. Vance Douglass entertained
most dolightfully at an informal dancp
la s t evening nt her homo on Mag­
nolia avenuo, complimenting Miss
Ethel Kersey.
Tho decorations were carried out in
tho Hntlowc’cn suggestions, witches,
cats, Jack-o’lnnterns nnd other novel­
ties being used.
Dancing was enjoyed until n lnte
hour when Mm. Dougins served re­
freshm ents consisting of n snlnd
courso, coffee nnd candy.
Among thoso enjoying Mrs. Doug­
las’ charming hospitality wore: Misses

C. E. ENTERTAINMENT FOR MISS
MAY THRASHER
The Presbytorinn C. E. entertained
with a Hallowe’en party Inst evening
nt tho church pnrlors in honor of
Miss Mny Thrasher, a populnr brideelect, nnd J. D. Woodruff. Tho guests
assembled downstnirs in n dim room
downstairs where they were blindfold­
ed by ghostly figures nnd conducted
up n stairway to u dark, lonely tower
where they clasped a cold, clnmniy
hand, while chnins rattled nnd clnnked.
They then were led by their ghost­
ly guides, onu by one, up and down
stairs till they came to a dimly light­
ed room whero their blindfold was re­
moved, while the air resounded with
gronns nnd shrieks. Thu sight thut
met their eyes was blood-curdling.
In tho center of the room stood a
skeleton clothed in whito nnd around
it dnneed two black imps with horns
and tails.
Next the guests were invited into
thu church parlors and the folding
doors to nnothor room were opened,
disclosing a witch bending over n
caldron, reciting strange spells.
Around her danced ghosts nnd imps.
She drew from thu caldron a fortune
for each guest present which the
ghosts distributed.
Thu lights were turned on nnd n
jolly marshmnllnw contest nnd n pea­
nut race followed.
Then the boys nnd girls in turn
were nented and guessed tho owners
of the shadows which pnssed before
them on n shoot.
Miss Gayle Marshall next present­
ed Miss Thrasher, tho honorce, with
the official C. E. wedding gift, n sil­
ver tomato server.
Delicious cocon, snndwichcs and
doughnuts were then served by the
Social Committee.
Tho dccorntions for tho occasion
wore tho regular Hallowe'en effects,
black and yellow pumpkins, cats,
witches, etc.
The pnrty closed with tho C. E.
benediction nnd sonio C. E. Bongs.
The committee responsible for this
delightful entertainment wore: Mrs.
Brownlee, Mrs. Greene, Mr. nnd Mrs.
Donald Whitcomb, Misses Florence

Henry, Mao Holly, Anna DuBom ,
Gayle M arthall, Hermlna Lehmann
and Rodman Lehman, Paul Dooley
and Hampden DuBoie.
FOR MISB MURIEL.
One of tho prettiest partlee enjoyed
this season, was the delightful Hal
lowe’on affair a t which Mrs. R. Ernest
Tolar and Miss Sara Mtirlel enter­
tained last evening in honor of Mies
Gerardino Muriel.
Quantities of golden rod and marchenlel roses adorned the lower floor
which was oponed on suite. Lights
shaded with yellow crepe paper,
witches, bats, black cate, and ghosts,
indicated th at tho evening was to be
a spooky one.
Various games, including heart dice
and fortune telling were the order of
the evening. Later, a real witch ap­
peared to read tho futuro o f each
young guest. A fter the lively yarns
nnd the reading of humorous questionarles, the prise for tho questlonnries was awarded Mr. W alter Con­
nelly.
The hostesses served a dainty ice
course which carried out the color
scheme of orange and black.
Assisting Mrs. Tolar and Miss
Muriel in serving, were Misses Bessie
Zachary and Ida M. Gray.
About twenty young people enjoyed
this delightful affair.
* # # #

# * * #

MEETINGS
PARISH HOUSE KALENDAR.
Monday, Oct. 31, Night. Holy Cross
Men’s Club dance.
Tuesday, Nov. 1, 8 p. m., "Measuring
Party,” S. Agnes Guild.
Fridny, Nov. 4, G. F. S., Pnrty, Mrs.
John Lconurdl, directress.
RESOLUTIONS BY THE
WESTMINSTER CLUB.
Whereas, Our Heavenly Father, in
Ills Providence, half called to tho
homo above Mrs. Mary Ransome
Woodruff, our friend nml fellow mem­
ber, the first treasurer of our club,
Thereforebe It Resolved, By the
Westminster Club, thnt wo express
our Borrow nt tho loss of her pesencc nt our meetings, nnd from asso­
ciation with us in our work.
Wo Hubnilt to our Heavenly Fnthcr
in His lovo, knowing thnt “nil things
wok together for good to thorn thnt
lovo tho Lord.”
Wo express our sympathy to her
husband nnd other loved ones and
commend them to tho Comforter nnd
IHh words of tondor ministry.
POEM IN ITSELF.
A near poet regrets thnt there is no
word to rhyme with orange. There is
no need for such n word if it is an In­
dian river orange; thnt is n poem In
itnclf.—Cocoa Tribune.
"Millions Now Living Will Never
Dio"—Free Biblo Lecture, S tar Thontro, Sunday, October 30, 7:30 p. m.
180-2tc

BANANAS BANANAS
A car load on A. C. L.
Dray Track

DOZEN..... 25c-30c
BU N CH .... $1.25 UP

Investments

* * * *

* * *

•

*

!■ C iieatt C .ir t • ( the S .v .a th JaSleUI
ClNflU e l the K a te o i Florida.
I . b U i Ii COBItf.

THE CHURCHES

ACTION r o l l DIVORCE)
CITATION
Lew Hamburger, Complainant,
va.
Mnrlo Hamburger, Defendant.
To Marie Hamburger, Itye, New York:
It appearing from an affidavit filed
In thin cause that you are a non-resi­
dent of tlie State of Florida, you are
hereby ordered to be an appear before
our said court at the Court House In
Sanford, Florida/ on the First Monday
In Deaembor, A. D. 1BI1, tho same being
tb» 5th day thereof, and a rule day of
this Court, to answer the bill of com­
plaint filed herein agnlnst you, else the
same will be taken aa confessed and
followed by appropriate decree.
It la further ordered that thla ord
be published In the Sanford Herald, a
newspaper published In Seminole Coun
ty, Florida, once each week for four
consecutive weeks.
Qlven under my hand and the seal of
said Court, thla the Ilth day of Octob­
er, A. D. 1921.
(SEAL)
B. A. DOUGLASS,
Clerk of Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida.
. Dy: V. B. DOUGLASS, D. C.
B. F. HOUSHOLDBIl.
Attorney.
IIT-Sto

* * * * * * * * *
METHODIST CHURCH.
Flrat Methodist church, corner Fifth
street and Park avenue, S. W. Walk­
er, D. D., pastor.
Sunday School, 0:80 a. m.
Preaching, 11 a. m., and 7:30 p. m.
Subject, morning sormon, "The Uiecsb Prcnchcr."' Evening, "The Town
Gossip.”
Epworth League, 0:30 p. m.
You will receive a cordial welcome
to all these services.
HOLY CROSS CHURCH.
Church services for the 23d Sun­
day after Trinity, 30th October, will
be:
Low Celebration, 7:80 a. m.
Sunday School, 0:45 a. m.
Morning Service, 1 la . m.
Vespera, 7:80 p. m.
The music for this Sunday will
again be of very high order; the full
choir, assisted by Mr. H. J. Wilms
hurst, of DeLand, in solo. Quartet
and chorus anthem work.
Tuesday, November 1 st, being All
Snints’ Dny, church services will bo:
Celebrations at 7 and 0:30 a. m.
Wednesday, Novombor 2d, being All
Souls’ Day, church services will bo:
Requiem Celebrations nt 7 and 0:30
a. m. Names for commemoration at
the altar of parislonors, relatives and
friends to bo handed to tho Rector.
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH.
There is . an increasing interost in
our biblo school. Como and help us
to make It an agency of great power
in tho lives of our children. This is
foundational tvoik for tho best of
character. This Is work thnt is per­
manent. Let us do good work.
At the morning Bcrvicc the subject
will be, "Christian Fellowship, Its
Bases, Its Joys, Its Rewards.” Every
member of the church and congregntion should henr this helpful discourse.
At night, tho pastor will present
something entirely new. His subject
will be, "A Parable of Our Modom
Annkim or Man’s Greatest Creation."
Men who arc interested not only in
the salvation of the individual but'desire nlso tho salvation of human so­
ciety, from tho curso of greed nnd all
kindred evils, will be interested in
this pnrahlo of modem life. Bring
your thinking machine nnd soo if we
cannot give It something to do thnt
will help you to bo n bettor man.
Service begins promptly nt 7:30 p.
m. You will be welcome.
ALL SOULS’ CHURCH.
Tomorrow Is tho 24th Sunday after
Pentecost. Services in All Souls’
church will bo ns follows: .
Sunday School for every child in
tho Parish, 0 a. m.
Mass nt 10 a. m., with sermon.
Benediction after Mnss.
Monday, tho Vigil of All Saints
(Hollows) Dny .commonly called Ilnllowo’cn, will bo a fast day. Low
Mass a t 7 nnd 8 a. m.
Tucsdny, All Saints’ Dny, o* Obllgation, Low Mnsn at 7 and High Mass
nt 8 a. m.
Wednesday, All Souls’ Dny, titular
of this church. Low Mass at &lt;1:30, 7
nnd 7:30 a. m., nnd High Mass at 8
n. m.
Masses nil the rest of the week nt
7 a. m.
Strangers welcome. Sittings free.
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
The pnst week has been a busy one
socinUy among Presbyterians. There
have been socials for women, young
men nnd women, nnd Intermediate
children. Wo expect to have a large
crowd at church services Sunday.
Wo Invite you to tho following:
Sunday School, 0:45 n. m.
Prenchlng, 11 a. m.
Intcrmedlnto C. E., 2:30 p. m.
Senior C. E., 0:30 p. m.
Preaching, 7:30 p ,m.

The Safest, Soundest, Wisest nnd Most Profitable Invest­
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SANFORD REAL ESTATE
Ask nny of the people who havo bought through us nnd they
will tell you that their investments in Real Estate have
gained for them a profit of between—

40 AND 100%
Wo have the following property for quick sale at prices
that will net you a handsome profit;
Four adjoining lots on Thirteenth St., between Mag­
nolia and Palmetto Aves. These lots face city park.
Four adjoining lots on Park Ave. botween 11th and
12th streets.
Three lots on Magnolia avenue botween 12th and 18th
streets.
Three lots on Sanford avenue between 11th and 12th
streets.
City water, gas, oloctric lights and sewers to all this
proporty.,

Geo. W . Knight
“Foot of First St.”

REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE

•

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
SERVICES

*
•
•
SUNDAY, October 30,
•
Subject
•
EVERLASTING PUNISHMENT •
*
Sunday School...10:00 a. m.
•
Church Sorvico__ 11:00 a. m. •

NOTICE OF INCOMI’OltATION
N otice Is h e r e b y giv e n , t h a t th e u n ­
d e r s ig n e d I n te n d to a p p l y to t h e H o n ­
o r a b l e C a r y A. H a rd e e , Governor of
th e S t a t e of* Florida, at Tallahassee,
F lo rid a , oni the 10th day of November,
A. D. 1921,, for
t o r Letters
s e t t e r s Patent
1 'a te n t IncorIn co r­
p o r a t i n g , Q U ICK HBJHVICH
F IL L IN O
STATION, INC., u n a y r t h e f o llo w in g
p ro p o sed c h a r t e r , t n e o r ig in a l of whloh
la now on file In t h e o f f f c e 'o f th e Sec­
r e t a r y of S ta te , a t T allah u sa eo , F lo rid a .
o e o ., w . Mc L a u g h l i n ,
It. U.* W IG H T ,
A R T H U R F. LANDBTIIBKT.
I 'l t o r o N K i )

* or
I t ATKIN O F

a r t ic l e

in c o iip o -

QUICK NHItVICH FILLING NTAVION,
INC.
We. tho u n d e r s ig n e d , h a v e ng ro ed to
a s s o c ia te o u rselv e s, a n d do h e r e b y b e ­
com e a s s o c ia te d fo r t h e p u rp o so of
f o r m i n g n body p o litic a n d c o r p o r a te ,
u n d e r a n d by v i r t u e of t h e lnw a of t h e
S l a t e of F lo rid a , a n d do h e r e b y n dopt
th e f o llo w in g a r t i c l e s of I n c o r p o ra tio n :
A rtic le I.
T h e nnino of t h i s c o r p o r a t i o n sh a ll
he QUICK S E R V IC E F IL L IN G S TA ­
TION, INC., n nd Its p r in c i p a l plnco of
b u s in e s s sh a ll be a t S a n fo rd . F lorldu,
h u t It m a y h a v e n nd ea ln b liah o th e r
plncoa of b u s in e s s a s t h e H oard o f D i­
r e c to r s m a y fro m tim e to tim e d e t e r ­
mine.

Article II.

Tho g e n e r n l n a t u r e o f tho b u s in e s s
to be t r a n s a c t e d a n d c o n d u c te d by said
c o r p o r a ti o n s h a ll ho u s follow s, tow it:
To a c q u ir e , buy, own, sell, m a n u f a c ­
t u r e n nd o t h e r w i s e deul In a u to m o b ile s,
n u to m o h llo t i r e s und a u t o m o b ile a c c e s ­
s o r ie s o f a ll k in d s und d e s c r ip tio n ; to
buy, sell n n d d ea l In p a in ts , oils, g a s o ­
line a n d o th o r m o to r fuel; to ow n, e s t a b ­
lish. m a i n t a i n n nd o p e r a te g a r a g e s an d
a u to m o b ile r e p a i r sh o p s fo r tho r o p a lr
a n d s t o r a g e of a u t o m o b ile s a n d o th e r
v eh icle s; to ow n, e s ta b lis h , c o n d u c t nnd
m a in ta in s t o r a g e b a t t e r y sorvico s t a ­
tions. p a i n t s h o p s fo r th e p a i n t i n g n nd
r e n o v a t i n g o f a u to m o b ile s a n d o th e r
vehicles, a n d v u lc a n is in g p l a n t s fo r t h e ,
r e b u il d in g o f a u t o m o b ile tir e s ; to g e n ­
e r a l l y e n g a g e In, c o n d u c t n n d c a r r y on
tho b u s in e s s of d e a le r s In all k in d s of
goods, w a r n s an d m e ru h n n d lso of ovory
c l a s s a n d duHcrlptlon; to a c q u ir e , own,
lease, re n t, soil a n d o th e r w i s e doal In
re a l e s t a t e ; to b o r ro w m o n e y a n d noeu ro th e snm o by m o r tg a g e s , d e e d s of
t r u s t , bonds, o r o t h e r o b lig a tio n s t h e r e ­
for, n nd to do a ll su c h o t h o r a n d f u r ­
t h e r t h i n g s n s m ny bo n e c e s s a r y o r e x ­
p e d ie n t to he dono for th e s u c c e s s fu l
t r a n s a c t i o n o f th e b u s in e s s of tills c o r ­
p o r a tio n . a n d to have, exorc ise nml ontoy all t h e r ig h ts , p o w e r s nnd p r lv le g o s In c id e n ta l to c o r p o r a ti o n s o r g u n xed a n d e x i s t i n g u n d e r tl
Htnte o f Florldu.

Article 111.

T h e a m o u n t of tho cnpltn l sto c k of
th is c o r p o r a t i o n sh a ll ho Ton T h o u s ­
a n d D ollars, to he divided Into Ono
H u n d re d s h a r e s o f One H u n d re d D ol­
la r s each. T h e cnpltn l s to c k o f th is
c o r p o r a ti o n m ny he p a y a b le In, Issued
n r use d for th o p u r c h a s e of p r o p e r ty ,
e i t h e r rea l o r personnl, o r fo r tho p a y ­
m ent of la b o r or services, nt a Just
v a l u a ti o n th e re o f, to ho d e t e r m in e d by
th e H oard o f D irectors.

Article IV.

T h is c o r p o r a ti o n sh a ll c o n t in u e an d
have fu ll p o w e r to e x e rc ise Its c o r p o r ­
a t e r i g h t s n nd f r a n c h is e s for n porlod
of n in e t y - n i n e years, from a n d a f t e r
th e c o m m e n c e m e n t of Its c o r p o r a t e e x ­
istence.
A rticle V.
T h e b u s in e s s of th is
c o r p o r a ti o n
ahull he c o n d u c te d by th e f o llo w in g o f ­
fice rs: a P re s id e n t, a V ic e - P r e s id e n t, a
.Secretary n nd T roaim rcr, w ho m a y ho
onu a n d tho sum o person, n nd n Hoard
o f D irec tors, o f not less th n n th r o e n o r
m o re t h a n five persons, w h o m u s t he
s to c k h o ld e r s
U ntil th e f ir s t m e e ti n g o f t h e s t o c k ­
h o ld e rs h e r e a f t e r p r o v id ed for. th o o f ­
fice rs of th is c o r p o r a ti o n s h a ll bo: It.
It. W ight, P r e s i d e n t : Geo.
W.
MoI. u u g h iln , V ic e - P r e s i d e n t a n d A r t h u r
F. L a n d s ! reet, S e c r e ta r y a n d T r e a s u r ­
er. T he Iionrd o f D ir e c to r s s h a ll ho
It. H. W ig h t, Geo. W. M c L a u g h lin und
A r t h u r F. L a n d s tre e t.
T he f irs t o r o r g a n i s a t i o n m e e t i n g of
th e s to c k h o l d e r s shall ho held In tho
t 'l l y of Hunford, S em inole C ounty, F l o r ­
ida. on tho 16th d uy of N ovem be r, A. D.
1921, for t h e p u r p o s e of n d o p tln g b y ­
la w s a n d c o m p le t in g th o o r g a n i s a t i o n
of th is c o r p o r a ti o n , a n d nlso fo r th e
p u r p o s e of e l e c tin g s u c h o f fic e r s of
t h e c o r p o r a t i o n ns a r e h e r e in a b o v e p ro vlipil for, n nd t h e r e a f t e r t h e a n n u a l
m e e ti n g of th e s to c k h o ld e r s of th is
c o r p o r a t i o n s h a ll ho hold on th o f irs t
T u e s d a y In N ovom bor of e a c h a n d e v ­
e ry y e a r.

Article VI.

T h e h ig h e s t u m o u n t o f I n d e b te d n e ss
o r lia b ility to whloh th is c o r p o r a ti o n
ahull s u b je c t Itse lf sh a ll bo a n a m o u n t
not to exceed th e a m o u n t o f th e cnpltnl
sto c k of t h is c o r p o r a tio n .

Article VII.

T h e n e m o s a n d re s id e n c e s o f th e subs c r ib i n g In c o r p o ra to r s , n nd th e u m o u n t
of th e c a p ita l s to c k su b s c rib e d by each
a r e a s follows, to - w lt:
Shares
It. II. W ig h t. Hanford. F l a . . ......... 29
Goo. W. M c L a ughlin. S a n fo rd . F la .. 1
A r t h u r F. L a n d s t r e e t, O rlan d o , Fin. an
IN W IT N E S S W H E R E O F th e subs c r ib i n g I n o o rp o r n to r s hnvo h e r e u n to
sol t h e i r b u n d s on th is tho 27th d ay or
O ctober, A. D. I M j ;
Tl. H. W IGHT.
OEO. W. MCLAUGHLIN.
A R T H U R F. LANDHTIIEBT.
S T A T E O F FLORIDA,
COUNTY O F SEM INOLE, as.:
I H E R E H v C E R T I F Y t h a t on th is
d a y b e f o r e m e p e r s o n a lly a p p e a r e d II
II. W i g h t und (Ino. W. M cL aughlin, to
ine woll k n o w n to be tw o of th e perm o d i nnm vd In fttia w ho
PubMcrlhod
t h e i r tinmen to th e f o re g o in g nrtlclun
of In c o rp o ra tio n , nm l th e y did ntworiil|y a c k n o w l e d g e befo re me th u t they
e x e c u te d th e nam e fo r th e
purpoxe
th e r e i n •x p re M e d .
W IT N E S S m y h a n d a n d Heal a t Han­
ford. In t h e C o u n ty of Seminole. Htate
of F lo rid a , on th le th e 27th duy of Oc-

• ‘" ( S E A L ) 0 ’ , 9 , LBOLA W. P O W E L L

N o tn ry Public,

My c o m m is s io n e x p i r es Deo. 21. 1921.
Women’s Club Bldg., Oak Ave. •
All Am Welcome.
• S T A T E O F FLO R ID A .

"MUllona Now Living Will Never
Die"—Frco Bible Lecture, Stnr The­
atre, Sunday, October 30, 7:80 p. m.
•
186-2tc
PIANO OWNBRB NOTICB

COUNTY O F ORANGE. as.:
I H E R E B Y C E R T IF Y t h a t on this
d ny b e f o r e tn# p e r s o n a lly a p p e ared A r ­
t h u r F . L a n d s t r e e t. to mo well k now n
to be on e of t h e p ersona nam ed In nnd
w h o s u b s c r i b e d h is nam e to th e f o r e ­
g o i n g a r t i c l e s of Incorporation, who
a c k n o w le d g e d b e f o r e m e th a t ho e x e ­
c u t e d t h e sa m e fo r tho p u rp o ses t h e r e ­
in o 'lir s e s e d .
. '
W IT N E S S m y . h a n d a n d seal a t O r ­
la ndo. C o u n t y o f O ra n g e und S ta te of
F lo rid a , on^Ujla t h e 27th day of Ooto-

b*&lt;ilBAL) 19DELLA MULLINNEAUX.

N o ta ry Publta.
My c o m m issio n expire s Fob. 12, 1121.

ip j £ a
? 4 \

__
** •

With every tire purchase
we will give free a chance
on

FORD CAR
To be given away
NOVEMBER 11TH
— By the—

American Legion
30x314 Non*
(Pi A OCT
Skid ...............tp lU .Z J )
30x3 Non*
g ypj
Skid

FRANK AKI RS
TIRE CO.
VULCANIZING
l i t and Elm Ave. Phone 447-W

T o m M o o re
OptometristOptician
YOUR SATISFACTION
IS MY SUCCESS
Office Opp. P. O.

Phone 19]

To See Better See Moore

BROTHERHOOD
CO-OPERATIVE
STORES
If you want the best MEATS
and GROCERIES at the lowest
possible prices. Come to sec us
nt the old Depot Waiting Room,
South Railroad Avenue.

Phone 575-L-2
MRS. IDA AUSTIN
418 Magnolia Ave.

MAKER AND ALTERLf. &lt;jt
LADIES’ CLOTHES

WILL DO IT
Make anything you want in tho
mattress lino.—Sanford Mattress Co.
183-5tc
l
«k

Edith Lucille Ball
Teacher Piano nnd Harmony
Graduate Chicago Musical College
Residence 719 Oak Ave.

Phone 243

A NICE ASSORT­
MENT OF

HALLOWE’EN
GOODS
;: Such as Hats, Caps,
:: Hoods, Masks, Domi•; noes, Decorative Pa:: per, Place Cards and
l invitations at--

DRUG STORE
AUTO EXCHANGE
Dependable Service
l’rnctlcnlly New
Chevrolet .....

$575

One 1919 Ford Touring Car, in
first class shape,
$225
at only
Liberal Termi on Both these Bargain*

Repair Work by Experienced
Mechanics at Right Prices

A t the Foot of First S t

Will be in town for a llmltod time.
A Princeton professor claims he
_____ | | M
For immediate aorvlce phone—
cannot live on hi ameagro salary of
For office supplies, stationery, etc-,
. MACK THE TUNER
Itrike° PCf ***** bUt h®k not u ,k ,n *
com* to &lt;h« Herald office.
182lfltp
Valdes Hotel
iaL

sat

V r ,r ^ '

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2», 1M1
* OF COKRBDBBACt AS AN. '
SPU C A TIO tU I. QVJA^IZATION.

WBICfl W IU. D B O T ^ r o B T T H .

" lOCAL POST OP THE AM D^

a

T l. W towlnt W r t—
ft.U n.IM Cluta. ^
luve liberally subscribed t W r u i w

fore wUneiiedW thaeity:

Woman’*CiuBf w tiw m i

D. C. Marlowo.
Hopkins Shoe Shop.
A. J. Lossing, ( 8).
C. A. Matthews.
f
Ball Hitdwaprf(la»PW»y.
Lloyd fehde
*

^ 1 W*
Ormond, on thd
•aat eoaat, ii spending a weak of he*
roeatiow with her coualn, Mrs. Aim*
Niece, of thla place, and visiting othea
friends in the neighborhood and in

*V0'J*| 11»V
iaq Mi )
ill W ill JSrtA *tiH PlW l
h*M '» «t
universities throughout the ..U nit*}, ty;0!*
trees, dpwn.
, c»* * S ta ta Srpm, Vaaaar q atyacM a J te w J J m*P eking hou&gt;ft% lM *n ju ic in g
5(tgrt;* hink account with us lan^ w-wlU’Jial^^ou m ^ ^
Yo^k. i m ^ to* thoaf/'of prominence {
wce* packing g r a p e f r u it.*
larger r,W e ai^.evuippad to care for yojvr.jJfi^tawitHftbBOTreat pf.thg Mississippi )pto ..Texas. I •.«*.
t a f j j j . f l^ v y .T f h o jpant
• Thrwoyk.of education ip not limited M»fl anw nw rfo Nfw York, returned
lute safety! Thet^ fg no1function of'n bank wc^c^.nOtJpfer:
to Rcola|)ihip^ but, .everything th a t nomo l ^ t F ^ a y V /T k e y ,^ ^ aUying
foritu,i, Eyory(: facility.,afforded to farmer^ and gthtra for
tpi^a to the, educational. Hpiift oif, the wiJ" M«*i U vy;e( fa.tljer,
tMfisaCtionvof.'thelr banking buglnau, Account#, may r*bg
C ^ ^ u n lty .com e#'w i^Jn.iouj 'proYl*
Hannah ,f wi)q
tM fefta N fW 'SW h^i on Friday deticp. ■We, age a an eduvatlpnaj f^rqij h^ve Ifyijdln.G torgU the past .year,
opened by.mpil and^monieg depogitod or, withdrawn in.tws
eryl tl* wMk:end with Mr. and Up we accomplish a definite work) jtf.
If- r e tu rn e d ^ hie home, along ,th*
w«yt withHeoualriaeilUyirrTharo4rw€agMs of youW m ea in
*H0obli| 'or th i t tuetfc
oordd- in »lx- figures, and;* hecaiis^ St. Johns Mven v '* j~
• T^W’S^hing 1seetp1 U l i t good; our. yearly we-pome nearer, realizing 9V,ft
Sanford who glipul^btaftA baida'acemfnt. &gt;The dimes ♦hey
“I®” ?" aPent ! , , t f t 1!:
neighbor* took opt .fourten trout or anjbitipn qf gjving Uvvfygeat poasJ[He tyx- night with Mre, J .(JH ^P r^v aft,;;
throw PWW eveyy monthif.brousikt to .our bank wouldtMdte
M t k tJ e li- e . tre ‘ noi*tlfemers call. education , to.avery uouthern boy and ,;
mF* r^tur^ed hom&lt;?
th«m'independent ad*they!re a c h the noonday vMtfe. In fact,
ltfc&lt;fW lM ,T',V9u r *nd.» hBlf. «-od again gji;}—we haye as Intercut ,and p^ffr
"Ronding-t^Q- sym p)^
on Monday, 11 .
lege in expressing ourselves In a l|fed9r in; Texas and Ohio* She ia making
dydry pVMorywho had a dulidr ahould a ta rt a hahk account.
This has been so far, a very stormy cational subjects for advancing edu- her home with her sister, Mya. Groyqr
Try it and you will alwaya thank ua for this advice.
W*fk. A. little rain ell dgy, Sunday, catlon;‘,T1lN,U nit4d'DaflfcKtfefil-ttf the Lofilea.
asige oonf Jfifondef and o a TAesdey a Confederacy are a cooperative organ!*
Mr. apd.tyra, J , JfrLU U ei wad famtegipigr gild, «n&lt;j our bkrometera gave tatlqn'in.evpry community, wJUj'flhelr
Osteen, spent Sunday with
*M,lowest .figure I have ever seen it echools.Hod colleges, and* alt organise* tboir daughter,
W. .Prevatt.
«gftrWr,l&lt;aV3-' p. m., It w u at 29.«0, tlonl Interested' in 'the educational Mr/y, £1 W f r / , ,d a r t e r , # p t p t t^a
o f VHu.viiJfi
and &gt;y nine It had fallen a trifle be- work of the youth of the country, town TT^k.ylr* Mjf^'jl^wYatt. &gt;
.
Ww ^S.^g. and then began to rise and .state. , , w r n - .'' -v '. ♦ -P:| Miss’Alexlp Mees spept Wednesday
I i * .»
dgWn. *!S(Mi8Where near, there was enThe following.figures.merk the ed-* wjth.Mrs. Jpobley. ,
’f
**
awful storm. The wind shifted from vanee along educational lines In'-the
¥*•. **J?
fcBf ,Qirijt$t was ip
U. D. C. The* Florida Division mainF^day pit buetnesa,
f.. ••
tains eleven1'scholarships a t the two ’Mrs. Wakefield was shopping in NO WINE'OR BEER IN atiji- *
state universities with a total of f l,- Sonford, Saturday,
FLORIDA SAYS' WHEELER
a b b a s F ^ H ^ ff 6tui&lt;liy,* dmokg them 950. »&gt;jt* ►■:'!• M ' •'
» ' 't
I
tT~7',1~r-T : 'f . .',
.
NEW RULING DOES NOT APPLY.
tlfeif M etlV n ffcnn'Senfotd, Her fath*
The general organliatlon and dlvis- SCI,WAn W jI^B E T ^ , Ui ..
i
err from - Orlando -end 'Mr. and Mrs. Inn maintain* nv«r JIRfl arttnfarahtna.
EVBRY DOLLAR ON ‘ *'
TALLAHASSEE; E ia./'O ct, ^9.—
Campbell and phUdrsn of this place.
AMERICAN INDU8TR1T. (Special)—"T hf Florida state law ’is
yMbe''*70;fl38j hdvb
vetiou’s
Rev. G. J, Albertson writes us that atfidils anVeollelres adsffctrfhte Id the
absolutely air tight kgelnst wind and
Rev. R. W. Edwards has left us, Vetbe of $4,'t?)9.38;'dsstslanco ^ 'l i b NEW YORK, Ott. 29,-ChSrieS'M . beer salCe'f'roto: drug stores on physlwhich all will be.sorry to hear, and
jlresent^d Vbturtltt to Schwab, addressing- th e annual &lt;*m- iclena’ presdHptfdhk,” sald 'C. W. f Cbuiity fifty! Your ibid in tided'Of
VlO ft nTft'llHifnew dh lie liAVe AH dllia tHe R ubber of 1354 tdllbraVles, Valued vention of the National Paint nnd V a* Crooke, sO^eidnl’eridcritr'bf th e ‘ Anil- catarrh disappears. Your clbggbd noh*
4 t | l , 558^8; have aVvarded‘237 prises nl"&gt;» Association last night,' sad he Saloon League 'bf 'Florida, at’the Leon trils will opeii, the a ir passkRes'-df
itlid m edalstd'stlld^nts fn various col-, was-not alarmed about business do- hotel, today, when asked 'a b o u t‘the your head will clear and you bah
new regulations issued from Wash­ breathe freely. No more snuffling,
Ith an evening’’ service, Saturdny Ikges and universities; gifts to 'schoo!s&gt; presslon.^ 11 • " »•
• ‘ r
hawking, mucous discharge, dryHkss
ening at Lake Mary. . „
| $3,031.50. Total expenditures for edu - 1 “Wo have been on a great business ington yesterday.
or headache, no struggling for breath
MV .and Mrs. Cramer and children, cational purposes from November 1919 sjlrec and we are now in the old gray
Wayne B. Wheeler, general counsel a t night, rf)
v
ia p1!
urc guests of Mr.fand Mrs. Coller, In to Novembefi1920, $81,539,78. ‘
dawn of the morning after. The bitsi- of tho National Anti-Saloon League &gt; Get (n small bottle of Ely's Cream
and Itlvers IL Buford, attorney gen­ Balm from ’your druggist and apply a
inford on Saturdny, nnd Chnrlic on j Besides this cdilcntlonnll work nnd ,,ca,, depression will place us In n
mdny while his wife spent the day sehblnrshlps the U. D. C., maintain Ormcr, surer position.
eral of Florida are of tho samo opin­ little of this fragrant antiseptic cream
1th a friend, Mrs. Battle.
whnt 1s known ns the “Hero Fund" In
"An long ns I can borrow money I ion, said Mr. Crooko. Wheeler, in a in your nostrils. It penotratos through
We love the birds and our place memory of the world wnr soldiers, tho am going to bet every dollar of which statement in Washington, today, said: every air passage of tho head, sooth­
is always been a refuge for them Interest from this fund of $50,000 Is I hnve control on American industry, 'No beer can be mada or sold legally ing and healing the swollen or in*
^ fi.
flamed mucous membrane, giving you
id no gun is ever UBed except for n used for cducatlonnl scholarships for I believe that this great nation of in Florida."
uplo varieties of hawks. Little Jen- tho sons nnd grandsons of Confederate hum Is going to be the workshop of
Mr. Buford, when seen nttho office Instant relief. Head colds and CatarHt
r Wren has arrived now, with her Veterans who served in the world war. tho world.
of the attorney genornl, this morn­ yield like magic. Don't stay stuffedoldlng note to keep the phebdc Com\ great many books have been plac“We are on the eve of tho greatest ing, stated that In his opinion tho up and miserable. Relief ia sure.—
iny, but not the hobo ns the misprint
| n tTio Bodleian library, England, devolpomont In our history. If I had regulation* Issued by the secretary'of Adv.
id it.
‘
nnd Library of Parliament, Ottawa, to live my life over again I would the treasury of tho United tSates, will
i Whatever the spirit ot universal
Wo note th a t’ Mrs. Anna DoForest Canada, by tho United Daughters of chooso the present day for beginning not apply In the State of Florida.
peace
may b4,' it isn’t the kind th t
Ho to
said:
• » '\
'
ib arrived
homo aftet having
Bpont the Confederacy. Our interests arc a
career. Wc have alii learned
live • &gt;
“The 'manufacture, salo, barter or bootlegger sells.
e summer
in the north.
far reaching, we are travelling over extravagantly, but It does not mean

H lm lf f lE

RALPH STODGH1LL, Singer

GEORGE HYMAN, P reacher
a i p a i o d s a a aMB
im
EMU (IBEBIIHIS
Miller’s Bakery (4 fioate).
Star Theatre.
Cle-Trac Tractor.
Glllon A Try.
John T. Brady,
Perkins A Britt (2 float*).
R. 0. Maxwell.’
Ed. Biggins, Inc.
* r.
IIof-Mac Battery Co. (2 float*)
Sanford Steam Laundry.
Wight- Grocery Co,
Woman's Club.
Mrs. J. M. DreanWV/
Knights of Columbua.
Sanford Farmers' Exchange.
L. P. McCuller.
The Yowall Coi
**
American FruK Growers.
Sanford Furnftdha Co.
Hill Hardware Co.
C. W. Stokes.
Blackfltfe^Mf^fcb’.
The Herald Printing Co. '*
Popular-Market, two floats,
Frank Akers Tire Co.
Sanford Trfack'Co. *^M .'*
Sanford Mattress Factdiy, ■ .*i , ’
Tho Auxiliary of the Sallle Harrl,on Chapter NTS., D. A.* U*. (ChUdren
°f the American Revolution).
Any one welcome to 'e n te r a float
or decorated chf. Suitable cash pHae*
will be awarded by tha j4 r t National
Saak, Seminole County Bank and Peopl*s' Bank 6f Sinfdrd.’i -•&gt;
American Agr. Chemical Co.

wd"
t.

001

w.‘ wniiiHo;;
Camp Fire G l r i s ^ Chamber of CoHmerce.
Chaw A Company.
Rotary CInhj/•V'lr
N. De Y. ‘H iywaM.^
Chapjdr offlf;' O ' C,

m ia iH 'ti]

the sea for n U. D .C., chapter was
AMERICAN LEGION
&gt; ;
organized
last year in Paris, France.
MEETING AT ST. LOUIS
MRS. F .L. EZELL,
WILL BE IMPORTANT.
Fourth Vico President Florida Division
U. D. C.
KANSAS CITY, Oct'. 2D.—When the
rtprtsUhtatlves of ’iiearly '* million
melnbcrt of the- Afherlcah Legion NIGHT CLASSES OPEN
ON TUESDAY NIGHT.
g a th e r'a t KatiSaa vCity’; October 81,
fo r' tho ‘ annual national cottv'entibh,
many problems of the cV-sotVleo men
will ba brought up for settUih'eht.
One issue upon which Legionaries
everywhere seeftt tb be at oneMa that
of adjusted compensation. Moat state
convention* df the ' 1Lbglon have ex­
pressed' regret-('and many have .’de­
nounced‘Ih®-*action of• the senate in , —y j i v iiSLyv ■
recommitting the federal adjusted | SaAfOr dW ih J c » f
compensation measures, and it-la ex- OfTtred
tbp
pected ttiat; the i^tiorusj Chnverttion I budding'trad
'will be asked to urge the reconsldora- t h ^ # U^g* WipW
tlon and early"paslagb’ bf tW. bill.
I ***"
•Another Mg problem th at will^be two hour P « H ^ ;
dealt With 'W that of unemployment. I Bc^cdule rrf^cT a^l
A recent survey‘conducted from tho ( tlid elw # Jpwewra
Legion’s |natlortkl headquarters re- 1 It^ tt pianriid tb
veated th at between 800,000 and 700,-1
apd I
000 Sgoridrwar veteronV vrfre. but-of
work, many in actua'l want. The L eg -,
ion malntaiii* '''welfilrA' 'departments
and employment ^Uftaus and action ? F 1
ia expected to be taken th at will help i
widen the' scop* of these departments
JW &lt;
In giving relief to the service man in
eoletaly free to tradesmen,
nW(|
-f
f ’ ,.| *
Many 1re^btnmfcndktlohs WltHbd offered in the' elrfvehtton.'^The Iowa
delegation^ wH*' (af Irth o f
w
a m
«

anything. I don't give n rap for mon­
ey except insofar us I can u«o it to
circulate it through my plants and
develop them."
Discussing industrial conditions,
Mr. Schwnb said: “Where ever I go I
hear the theme that labor and capi­
tal ahould co-operate, but I have je t
to find a man who can tell me how it
is to be done."

men'may oe'-rashlonable next year.
Milton Gazettf. %!; v ,w ,

la a ft f s s js .
i*ustin*
•w e e a r

JVOTICU TO C.-ONTIIACTOHS AND

nm i.titnuair

Utds tor laying oonaretAifloor la an*
pthatering walliTand nailing of Sanford
High School basement wllllbai reo«|v«4
by tho Hoard of Public! Instruction on
oS- bofdre^alevan o’clock Tuesday-mint*
afienkrln the emh of . twenty-flver^doln
lore. a«|d twenty-five dollnre to be roturned-'.to hny uneucceseful bidder or
f M r .r J n '? '.0roa t1\ u r , , , ^ h , ' w
• :Irar speclflcatlone call on the county

M i ! ^ tend*nt ° f ,ohoo,^Afl *,Vl) c*“r&gt;
m i.it.a

T' s i i b ^ S J t M n r

W nY WORRY?
v C a n s ’ll rip* t Cfangaa;
etc,/ Will dp to 'cat;' there’s plo'hty of
'U ters, fish are .bitin’ fine' and thq
Huntin’ season will soon be’ here'. W hit
are* you worrin’ about?—Hastings
Herald.
Post cards—local View*—lc each at
Iferald—b y ;th p .pound—15c. *
.,ni

nA v s m w ’La
,

exchange of all alcoholic or intoxicat­
ing liqdors and bevefageU Is coiitrolled in this State by Article 19, of the
Constitution and the Statutes bf the
S tate' df-'Florlad, exacted under tho
provisions o f Article
of'the Ooniitl*
tUtl'dn', which aite 'e’MWced'fW'&amp;edtlbh
8468 to, 6490, Inclusive;' Revised Gen­
e ra l'Sthtute* of Florida. ThCte^xtalul«V ate ndt ''tfuipfthSed or made In­
operative bV'any' rejrulatfon’iksued bjl
this1AttethCy General of the United
Stit^a baled* ttpbrf hik cAnlirudthih 6f
the Federal Pfihlbitioh'Law^cclhimonly known as the 'Volstead A ct'."

Get AjK Abstrac^Bffore
Buying: Property

E . A. DOUGLASS, Pno&gt;

,

85....... 7:10

Arrive
will’ uqjo
'TvTlf
national pTganlaation to include all
•X-SCSV&amp; n ien 'cf the United States
and allied countries. ’ • ”*vr M
^ i
Indiana tegiadaH ea w U .eskthe conAnybne wishing to enter call I
vention toJtoflfWilly approve “Hello,
Alt' *s .» salutation between men of
the leg!™.
^
“GLORIOUfl" S PBR CENT.
Five cities are contenders to r the
h
;• i - - v &gt;
;1922 Cenvention and ' the ^
V ^h Less than tw d 'p er dentho* boptleg ably will ba 'a bdt due- 8sn' FA iich&gt; W t f fit to drink;;**&gt;*" a &gt; -v e rn - co and New Orleans are two strong
• , U ,,|. , *1- —-■ . « v r ' . . . atre, Sunday, October 80, 7
offle*-. f t f i a t r t s W he puHa Uh- contsndera.
•«1 in conceding 'A i t ahy of It la At
O m tm .v r
TfoT I w l .V.." 1 1 100 a. m.
to drink.—Kay We«t C ltiun.
A CKiflr up, Christmas Eve tells on •No. T*7r— . . 1 v •
)- ir_jlrt 11 VV &gt; Jr*' Stiin ^
•Daily, except Sanday.
payday.
Sell It with a Herald W ant Ad.

Wib'D

if

IfROM THE -FQRE8T TO' YOU-m m v
q ^ t h i g *a]fil o f the 'Vroate," over h a lf 'h t this iaboV,
J 'thV
tta h ’i profits and by delivering a home on record time direct
is forest td you r ‘ ** *“ " 1
,*-&gt;ri r r v i r j—

•J PutTreirieRdousSa

.if Q^xy, etipae.tWfl,, substantial,- duy
bungalows
' * aaaAvJ U .
--- .1
■. - - , ......... • of
. - .house
- v- t V _______ •
the
bast af materials, at a ufe^.aayjng. Their economy lo worth invaatid'th'Es,,!, i u • u
j
WRIT* FOR OATALOqUll
Departs
showing ip n a tu re
^ a c tiv e ,
homes.
; ; 5.,

l u m p

.W

€ ^ .a 0 •

QUICKBUILT-BUNGALOW, D ep t 18-K
ENTOM
VxeJ d-ovr |*ti

\

'~r£ '

i*
1

’

-

■

‘*^

’

BROTHERS

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1921

The third quarterly bulletin for
the year, Compiled and issued by the
commissioner of agriculture, Hon.
W. A. McRea, has come out i n ' a
new and attractive dress. Printed
R. J. HOLLY_____________ Editor on heavy book paper, and elaborately
If. J. LILLARD—Secretary-Treasurer illustrated, the pamphlet will prove of
K. A. NEEL............ General Manager Inestimable vatue to the state as an
advertising medium. Mr. McRae did
ROBERT J. HOLLT, J r „
a o o ta a n o x maxaaxx
Phans 148 up to 6 P. M.
IsR StU a

Everybody in cht’rch tomorrow.

Sunday morning is a good morning
to sleep with those who have to get
up early through the Week, but get
up anyhow.
We are glad to note that every
home In Sanford will soon have a reg­
ulation Dag to float in the breezes
Whenever there is some occasion for
I t The old Dag is our greatest an­
chor.
Postmaster General Hayes was
h u rt in a railroad wreck Thursday
morning and tho strike was called off
a t midnight that next night. They
should have shaken Billy Hayes up a
little sooner.
We expect to give old.man Foch a
great welcome to America today when
he arrives in Now York. America
owes much to Frnnce and France
owes much to America. Wo wish tho
goneral would visit Sanford while ho
is over here but suppose ho will bo
too busy to more than read the San­
ford Herald.
PUBLIC OPINION SETTLED THE
STRIKE
Public opinion settled the railroad
strike.
Cancellation of the goneral strike
order is neither a victory for the rail­
roads nor the unions, but a victory for
the great American public.
L. E. Sheppard, president of tho
Order of Railway Conductors, admit­
ted this when he anld: "Tho strike
was called off bccnusc of the growing
public opinion that tho strike would
bo against the labor board, and conse­
quently against the government, and
not ngninHt the railroads.”
The government is an organization
representing tho general public, and
the unions are to bo commended for
recognizing this, since the general
public wua looking to its government
for a settlement of this strike.
I t is possible that the railroad ex­
ecutives and the union officials reach­
ed Homo agreement which has not
been announced. Each side had argu­
ments in its favor, but the public
rightfully assumed a position of aelfdefense and defeated the striko by
failing to lino up solidly behind cith­
er fuctlon and by demanding continu­
ed transportation service, which nat­
urally required co-operation between
the executives atul employees.
A general railroad strike wnud have
paralyzed this country. The "outsid­
ers'' would have suffered more than
either tho railronds or unionH—and
know it. This knowledge and emphas­
is of it caused tlu&gt; strike to bo culled
, Thero 1h a significant sign in the
outcome. The unions, and doubtless
tho railroads, too, have awakened to
the importance of the great majority
nnd its power. "We won’t be the
‘goat’ " was a generally hold solitlntont. "Tho point is not whether tho
railroads or the unions are right, but
whether tiio great American majority
should bo forced to suffer" attitude
wus voiced on nil sides, und the oppos­
ing groups dared not turn deaf ears
to this expression of self-protection.
The whole country is glad thu
strike has been called off, particularly
alncp the country hnH won a great vic­
tory.—Jacksonville Metropolis. ■

By the Ladies of
EPISCOPAL
GUILD

SATURDAY
D ea n e T urner
WBLAKA BLOCK
Phones 497*494

With tho aid of tho commercial
secretaries of the state, much of the
material was collected for publica­
tion in this bulletin, and oach county
has its share of detailed information
and Illustrations. Not even the sev­
en new counties have been alighted,
and the wonders of each section are
told In such plaasing style, that all
will find it delightfully 'readable”
and of compelling interest.
When asked about the circulation
of tiie volume, Mr. McRea stated that
the secretaries of commerclsl organi­
sations throughout the state had fu r­
nished names and addresses of those
inquiring about the various sections
and that from the list thus compiled
morn than 2,000 copies would be mail­
ed to people outside of tho state.
In the closing pnges of the book,
Mr. McRea points out that "Florida is
first:”
In diversity of food products.
In value per aero of farm products.
In united area that is tillable.
In number of growing days.
In phosphnte production,
In naval stores production.
In fuller's earth production.
In fishing industries.
In area of standing timber.
In muck soils.
In length of coastline.
In variety of trees.
In variety of fish.
In variety of birds.
In vnriety of hay crops.
In winter-grown truck products.
In cocoamits.
In bnnunos.
In enmphor.
v
1 *
In sisal.
That Florida is:
The orchardist's Lotus land.
The trucker's opportuniyt.
The farmer's three chances a year.
The stockmen’s living world.
The fishorman's Galilee.
The lumberman's last stand.
Tho dairyman's flowing bowl.
The heenmn’s land of milk and hontouriHts'a land of promise
sportsman’s rendezvous,
yachtsman's paradise,
film-maker's dream,
home-seeker's goal,
manufacturer’s future,
citizen’s cornucopia.

pend on transportation for every bite,
Even without railroads we can feed
our population with the help of the
roads and the waterways.
If th e r, is nny moral *-u thW o'ont
it is that the country th a t can feed
Itself is best able to take can ' of itself
in time of dlaturbance and th a t trans­
portation is the second great essential
of modern civilisation. We have food
for this emergency and the area under
cultivation is constantly being in­
creased. So fa r so good. We can
muddle through now with our very
meager transportation facilities, but
unless they aro extended in propor­
tion to the growth in population and
settled territory, there may come a
day when Florida will suffer fo r the
lack of them. I t’s an ill wind th at
blows no good but it ought not take
niore than the threat of a strike to
sta rt us looking more intelligently a f­
te r our transportation needed—Palm
Beach Post.

that women must pay the 'poll tax
like th t me naffer November 1, aa a
condition of voting, aeta a t reat varioua construction! upon the Florida
law1. The poll tax must be paid after
November 1, or there will be no fran­
chise privilege for the women of the
state who wish to cast their baltot at
elections.
The Committee of fifty appointed ro*
cently to see th a t a full registration
of all Daytona women is secured re ­
ported Monday evening, considerable
work having already been done.
In his decision the attorney general
says th at 'Hinder the act of the legis­
lature of 1021 no person who became
eligible to qualify as a voter in the
year 1920 is required to pay a poll
tax for th a t year to qualify to vote.
Therefore until taxes become due for
the year 1021 women will not be reqinuerd to pay poll tax.”—Daytona
Journal.

We strive to fill this institution with
an inviting atmosphere of friendli­
ness and courtesy, extending to each
and every customer our full facili­
ties to the limit of our ability, and
we earnestly invite you to make
yourself at home with us.

ASK FOR YOUR RECEIPT,

BUILDING PUBLICITY,
Building statiatlca from Florida
have become a regular newa feature
with the Associated Press. The news­
gathering agency was quick to see
the unusual in the Florida situation
and has been giving the state excep­
tional
publicity. St.
Petersburg,
ranking near tho top among Florida
cities, gets a big portion of the pub­
licity. How this news feature la a t­
tracting attention may be seen in the
following editorial appearing in the
Industrial Index, published at Colum­
bus, Ga.:
.
Florida continues in the news—the
real, worth-while news—the newa
that tells of constructive effort, and
of upbuilding.
Once more tho Associated Press
has carried n lengthy dispatch re ­
garding building in that state show­
ing wonderful construction records
during the month of September.
It may be said in pnssing that while
this dispatch is sent out ovor tho
country purely for Its nows value, yet
it constitutes n great compliment to
Florida, and a unique compliment,
too; for no other state In tho union is
at present so honored, as indicated in
the publication of general press dis­
patches.
The .September building statistics
In Florida nro a great credit to Flor­
ida and to the southeast.—St. Peters­
burg Times.

Subscriber* to the Dally Herald
should ask for a receipt when the
carrier boya collect from you. It (s
the only protection you have in case
the carrier changes or there happens
to be a mistake in the account. Ench
carrier boy is supplied with receipt
books, and Is commanded to give a
receipt by tho Herald. Scq that you
get your receipt a t th i end of each
week if you are paying that way.

A COMMUNITY BUILDER

F. P. Forster, President
B. F. Whitner, Cashier

IT’S A FACTT, - r

Laundry In ths sun when it la rain­
ing. So call the SANFORD BRANCH
LAKELAND STEAM LAUNDRY,
they can dry U, rain or shine. All
work called for and delivered the 3rd
day.----------------- GIVE US A TRIAL

PHONE 475

SANFORD, FLA

You Can Find the Name of Every Live Pro
fessional and Business Man in
Sanford in This Column
LAWYERS

CONTRACTORS

George A. DeCottes

S. O. Shinholser

Attomey-at-Law

Contractor and Builder

Over Seminole County Bank
SANFORD
SANFORD
•:*
FLORIDA

-:-

*:•

FLORIDA

Sanford Constructs Co.

Before buying your

HARTFORD BATTERY
“Battery Insurance”
Sold and Serviced by

Edw. Higgins, Inc.
Haight &amp; Wi§land

WOMEN MUST PAY
POLL TAX—BUFORD

Come in and look over
our line

In n communication from Rivers H.
Buford, nttornoy general of Florida,
the statem ent is mnde that “women
will ho required to pay a poll tax and
qualify ns voters under the same con­
ditions under which men nro required
to pay such poll tax, from nnd after
the day upon which taxes for tho year
LUCKY FLORIDA
1921 become due, which is November
first."
A railroad Htriko commencing the
The Attorney General’s statement
end of the week is neithor "unthink­
able" nor ‘inconceivable" Bince it hnH —
not only been thought of but planned B
and ordered. Tho country a t largo ■ THE GREAT TRAINED ANIMAL SHOW
aro thinking of little else these days. ■
The Pont fully realizing that such n 5
strike will b« a very serious m atter, J
refuses to become panicky in con- *■
temptnting the possibility, and hns ■
not yet given up hope that it will be £
THE REAL BIG CIRCUS
averted. If It docs conio tho situa- J
tion will have to bo mot.
A query received by the chambor of r
commerce servos to remind tho people 3
of this s"ctii n lh.it wo aro in a posh J
tion to meet the exigencies of tho oc- r
casino hotter than many othors. Tho a
letter referred to stated that the wri- *
ter is on his wny to Florida and ask- J
cd if it would ho wise to continue to a
West Palm Bench in view of tho c
threatened Btriko. lie wnntcd to know £
especially if there would bo any dang- Jj
or of food shortage.
A genera! railroad strike will hurt ir
Florida business a t this time just ns Jj
it will hurt overy other part of the *j
country. Trnvol will bo held up nnd
what is oven worso, freight shipments ■
will bo reduced to n minimum if U ot.J
completely halted. All business is g
hound to feel tho effects.
®
On tho other hand,’Florida can con-j g
gratulnto Itself thnt thero is no great J
food problem nnd no heating p ro b -; ■
lom. Hero Wo cannot starve und wo ■
cannot -/reoze. Both nro tremendous B
advantages Wo need no heat, a n d |5
nlthough wo might be deprived for n
time of tho variety wo aro accustom­
ed to in our diet and which is made
possiblo by shipments from outside
the state, thoro will bo plenty to eat.
As long ns tho ocean and rlvora and
lakes are tho home of fish, the soil a
provides vegetables and fruits and the £
poultry does not die ovornight it will ■
tako more than a strike to create nny- j r
thing opprojujhlpg a famine 'condition f
in Florida. Wo know th at w b have
tho seafood nnd the fru it of the so il.,
Wo have poultry nnd a fairly good I
supply of dairy products.
Wo do not realize how lucky wo aro.
Tickets on Sn’e on Show day at Bower and Roumlllat's Drug ■
A very short Btriko would work torrl*
Store nt same prices charged on Show Grounds
s
bie hardship in many center*, ospeoa rB in iM M M iM n n iu n
ialiy the great citioa which must de

SANFORD
WED.

GARAGES
Smith Bros. Garage

CONTRACTORS AND BUILDHR8
Plane* and Specification! Cheerfully
Furnished
All Work Guaranteed
H. T. PACE
P. O. Box III

Builders &amp; Contractori
Sketches end Estimates Free; m
building too large and non* too email
----- ALL WORK GUARANTEED-----

Wilson &amp; Shorey

Expert Repairing

Pine and Garland Sta., Orlando, Fla,

OIL, GAS and ACCESSORIES
Oak and Flrat

PURE WATER

Geo. W. Knight
Real Estate and Insurance
SANFORD

Elder Springs Water
99.98% PURE
Phone SU-W
Sanford, Fla

FLORIDA

..Employment Bureau..

LORD’S PURITY
WATER

The vocational committee of the Bualnesa and Professional Women's Club
AS GOOD AS THE BEST
requeata all young women desiring
Dally
Service
Phone It?
employment to register at the Firat
National Bank.
AGNES G. BERNER, Chairman

D. F. SUMNER

SANFORD NOVELTY
WORKS

PAINTER*

V. C. COLLER, Prop.

LXT XX PAIWT YOUR HOUSE
Will Oonlr.et or Toko Job by tho Hour

ju r 113

11! LAUREL AVE

Sanford Machine #
Foundry Co.
General Machine and Roller Works
Automobile Flywhcol Steel Gear
bands in stock
Crank Shnfts Re-turned

Sanford Steam Laundry
FOR SERVICE
Call 146-J
W. RAWLING, Prop.

Acteylene Welding
OF ALL KINDS

Sanford Welding Co.

General Shop and Mill
Work
CONTRACTOR and BUILDER
517 Commercial Street

Sanford, Flo.

TRANSFER
“WE DELIVER THE GOODS"

Quick Service Transfer
Storage Facilities
If we please you, tcR others; It no
tell us. Phono 498

HOTELS
Hotel Montezuma
“Sanford's New Hotel”
11.50 Up Per Day

Located in Eagte Bldg., 205 Oak Aw
Phone 175

Fourth and Sanford Are

New Era Printery
G. Bassett Smith, Drop.
COMMERCIAL AND
JOB PRINTING
DRINK
Elder Springs Water, (ti
ur cent pure. Phone s \\
Office supplies or ail kinds at The
Herald Printing Co, When you want
anything in this lint, see Th« Herald.
We have it er can uet 1L
Try a Herald Want Ad today

GILLON &amp;
FRY
Electrical Contractors
P hone 442

111 Park Ave.

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29,1921

(.N ile ll« P P « B lB ls

In and About

THE

w ea

For Florida: Partly cloudy tonilfht and Sunday} probably
jocnl rains In North portion;
warmer in oxtromo Northeast
portion tonight.

,I)o you think It will rain?
Another busy day In Sanford with
atoms all crowded.
S. R. Smith, of Miami, was attondiag to business hero yesterday,
Havo your watches and Jewelry ref u n i at McLaulin’s. Two flrat class
watch makers. Prompt service.
140-tfc
A. I* Dennison, of Tampa, ono of
the tmveing salesmen was In the city
jastardny aclllng on local customers.
-Millions Now Living Will Nover
Dk"_Freo Blblo Lecture, S tar ThoAtm, Sunday, October 80, 7:80 p. m.
180-2tc
Klmo L. Itlloy, of Jacksonville, rep­
resenting Clnrk-Suvis Co., was among
those transacting business hero yes­
terday.
Flags for Armistlco Day or any
other dny. Regulation Dag, 8x0,
| 1.75 —Civic Department, Woman’s
•Club.

MAYOR AND EDITOR
VISITING SANFORD FRIENDS.

Summary ef tha
Floatiag Saall
Talka Succinctly
Arranged for
Herald Readers
»

PAGE PKY2X

#

SANFORD’S i
TEMPERATURE :

W. R. Frier, editor of tho Douglass
Enterprise of Douglass Ga., Is In the
city visiting his old friend, J. A. Dean,
of tho Union Pharmncy, Aside from
being the editor of tho Enterprise and
engaging in other business, Mr. Frier
Js mayor of his town. He thinks San­
ford Is growing fast slnco his last
visit and likes Florida very much al­
though It Is natural that ho should
think Georgia the best State in the
Union. Mr. Frier says that his homo
Stato is rapidly recoveiing from the
depression due to tho low prlcfc.of cot*
ton, and business is picking up along
every line.

-------#
Almost like summer again #
with tho old bulb running the #
scale and over 80 for yestor- #
day. But nevertheless and *
notwithstanding we need a lit- #
tie sun to dry things off and # MEET WITH THE
SUNDAY MORNING CLUB.
mako ua feel like wo wore liv- #
ing in Florida again. And Old #
Tho Sunday Morning Club, a Sun­
Sol Is sure friendly today.
#
day
school class for men onlyt meets
8:40 A. M. OCTOBER 29
#
evory
Sunday at the Star theatre at
Maximum .............
81 #
9:30
a.
m. A large class with a
Minimum ........................ 82 #
splendid
teacher. The music for Oc­
Ran go ..........
00 #
tober
30,
will be In chargo of the no­
Barometer ..............
30.07 *
ted
slngor,
Mr. Ralph Stoghlll, of
Rain ....................................... 01 #
Alabamo.
Tho
class orchestra will
Calm and part cloudy.
#
accompany
all
singing.
A welcome
«
awaits you to join tho ltvest Sunday
» « # * # # # « «
school class in Sanford.

just a couple days from now. And don’t you know that even wooden
indians move on Hallowe’en. Last year in a neighboring town a wood­
en indian left his cigar store post to be found next morning walking in
a movie. Everyone goes somewhere on Hallowe’en.

lb s 3® ®

DDQ

some special shirts and neckwear for our young men to wear that
night. They are fine values—appropriate patterns. And the new suit
you want for that night—just you come and look at what we have for
you.

Princess Pat?

183-tfc FRANK AKERS A BOOSTER
FOR AMERICAN LEGION.
Special sale on coat suits today and
Monday at Baumel’s Specialty Shop.
To stimulate things for the Ameri­
Special sales are special features at can Legion, Frank Akers is giving
tht Specialty Shop all tho time. Road away a chnnco on tho Ford car that
tho advertisement In tho Dally Horald Is to bo given away by tho American
and savo money.
Legion on Armistice Day.
Whon you buy n tiro or $25 worth
"EXIDE” BATTERIES—Our Pull- of accessories, he will give you a
mnn cars, airplanes, submarines, chanco free, so bo sure nnd see Frank
telephones and groat 7,000 mile wire­ for your auto needs. Sorvico is
less stations nro equipped with tho Frank’s slogan, nnd ho sure knows
rnastor "EXIDE” Bnttcrles, tho bat­ how to serve you.
tery is tho life of your car, get tho
best. Wo recharge nnd repair all FLAG SALES RY CHILDREN
mnkes.—Ray Brothers, Phone 548.
WILL CANVAS ALL HOMES.
170-tf-c

“ Millions Now Living Will Nover
Die"—Free Bible Lecture, S tar ThoMr. asd Mrs. C. II. Piplar and son,
utre, Sunday, October 30, 7:80 p. m.
will
lenve Monday for Lakeland,
18G-2tc
whero Mr. Plplnr has been transferr­
Krrd C. Rlnlc, of Vineland, N. J., ed ns dispatcher. Mr. J. L. H art hns
was registered at tlio Montezuma yos- also been transferred to Lakeland as
tcnlny while attending to business In chiof dispatcher. This change was
caused by dividing tho district with
this city.
Tampa district.
The Ladies of the Episcopal Church
will hold their Dnzaar and Supper,
Princess Pat?
183-tfc
December 1st and 2nd In the Parish
House.
171-tfe
Clnrenco Woods, of Eustis, wns
among
tho prominent vlsltois to tho
Lloyd Shoe Store is giving away six
city
trdny
Clarence is one of tho
pairs of school shoos. Ask tho man
greatly
beloved
members of tho Flor­
•or read the advertisement inthe Dally
ida press although not now In
Hera id.
the publishing business, but Is taking
The Ladies of tho Presbyterian n woll earned vnctlon. Ho is ono of
X.linrch will hold their Christmas Ila tho finest gentlemen thnt over enme
w r . Dec. 2 and 8, 1921. 167-o.a.w.tfc from Kentucky which is snying some­
thing.
Orlando people nre coming to San­
car
ford now to trndc. This Is as It BATTERIES—America’s first
was rogulnrly equipped with sta rt­
should Ih\ Sanford should bo the
ing nnd lighting Batteries in 1911,
host shopping town in Florida.
this battery wns an "EXIDE”, today
tho master battery of tho world. Do
Princess Pat?
not
bo misled by the so-cnllcd Just as
183-tfc
good.—Rny Brothers, Phono 618.
17G-tf-c
imiCKEN DINNER, Sunday noon
»nd evening, Grny Gables, on tho
beach, Seabreeze, Fla.
Phono 401.
EVERY WEEK BRIDGE CLUB.
Free bath houses.
74-Frl-St-flm

The snlcs of flags movement of tho
Woman’s Club, is in tho hands of Mrs.
John Leonnrdl, for the Civic Com­
mittee o fthc Club. The snle of tho
flngs will be nindc by a houso to
houso canvass of tho school children
who have been organized by Prof.
McKay.
GEN. FOCI! CALLED
ON WOODROW WILSON
COULD NOT SEE HIM.
(By Tb. AmmUUS Fr*M)
WASHINGTON, Oct. 29.—General
Foch cnlled nt tho homo of former
President Wilson, but Brigndler Gen­
eral Connor, honorary aid to the Mar­
shal, wns told thnt Mr. Wilson’s phys­
icians had given instructions that it
would be inadvisable to receive any
visitors. General Foch thereupon left
his card.
"JUNEIIUG IN A BOTTLE.’

The management of tho enterprises
that are putting Florida forward at
such a rapid rate nro all made up of
men who plan nnd work hard. There
Is nothing that will tako tho placo of
.planning nnd working. Without plan­
ning, one mny work over so hard and
accomplish nothing. A wolf in n cage
works hard, but nothing is done. So
Mrs. Forrest Lake entertained In docs n junobug in n bottle.—Fort
hor usual charming nnd gracious man- Pierce News-Tribune.
nor yesterdny afternoon ,nt a bridge
IT DOESN’T MATTER.
pnrty, the guests including tho mem­
bers of tho Every Week Bridgo Club.
Some people would like to play poli­
The rooms where tho card tables
tics every day in tha yenr, but tho less
were nrrnnged, were effectively dec­
politics wo havo I Hardee county the
orated with crystal vases filled with
bettor the copnty will be. Why should
fragrant pink and whito roses.
wo wrangle over politics, What real
Of exceptional Interest was tho
difference docs it mako to tho averngo
game of bridgo played during the af­
citizen who is In office so long as we
ternoon. Mrs. C. M. Vorco making
have a clean, honest administration?
high scoro among the club membors
—Florldn Advocate.
nnd
, wns awarded a dnlnty vanity pow,,®r tpulT Tho guest prize ,n crcnm
The glorious sun Is Bhining once
pitcher, of Roynl English wnre, wns more. It is hard to realiza thnt out of
won by Mrs. John G. Leonnrdl.
this same bright Hky enmo tho recent
At the conclusion of the gnme, Mrs. frightful storm.
Lake served chicken snlnd sandwiches,
coffee and bon bons.

y # £ sr&amp; /? £ r / / / j r / s j /f r e p e k L

Sanford, F la.
ROMAN RECORDS IN AFRICA
Dlecovery It la Bellavad Will Throw
Much Light on Early Hlatory
of tha Empire.
A discovery which, It la claimed,
will form one of the fundamental
sources for a history of the Roman
empire under Augustus bus been made
recently by Doctor Ollverlo, nn Ital­
ian savant In Cyrano, the ancient
Orcek colony In Africa, founded In tho
Seventh century.
A Morning Post correspondent, writ­
ing from Gyrene, suya that excavations
at Bengasi—the ancient Berenice,
which stood In the midst of the Bur­
dens of tho Hesperldcs, near tho mouth
of the Illver Lethe—hnve resulted In
tho unearthing of a block of marble
eight feot long, one faco of which
benrs a flawless Greek Inscription of
over one hundred lines; the transla­
tion of n letter from Augustus on the
government nnd ndminlatrutlon of Jus­
tice In Cydetmlca, giving a wonderful
Insight Into the flnnnclnl and Judicial
conditions of tho country nt thnt time.
Other Interesting finds are a sanc­
tuary dedicated to Eastern divinities,
probably of tho time of Julian the
Apostate, with n remarkably well-pre­
served blsck tnnrhlo statue of nn
Egyptian goddess.
An extensive
Ptolemaic cemetery also Inis been lo­
cated. At Apollnnla, a Christian ba­
silica of the Fifth century Is being excavnted, nnd nt MerdJ, the nnolcnt
llnrce, some Cufle Inscriptions hnvo
been found which nre held to ho of
great Importance when the history of
the Arab conquest comes to be written.

FIVE ROOM BUNGALOW
Located within fifty feet of brick street to
be sold this week on very reason­
able terms.
See

A. P. CONNELLY

CLASSIFIED ADS
Classified advertisements, 5 cents s line. No ad taken for less than
25 cents, and positively no classified ads charged to anyone. Cash
must accompany all ordera. Count fivo words to a line and remit ac­
cordingly.

FORD TRUCK for sale.—West Sldo WANTED—Customers for fresh mlik,
morning nnd evening dollvcms.—R.
Grocery.
104-tfc
L. Garrison. Phono 3711. 109-St-Tu
FOR SALK—Best opportunity for
wholosnio nnd rotnil fish market on WANTED—Team work. Apply M.
Hanson Shoo Shop.
178-18tp
East coast. Building, dock nnd slap­
ping platform. Address W. P. Wil­ SECOND HAND SHOW CASE
kinson, Now Smyrna, Fla. 10-17-lm
Wanted. Horald Printing Co.
183-6tp.
MIRACLE CONCRETE CO.—BulKling and pior blocks, cement pockots, SALESMAN WANTED—An old line
cement sidowalks with gunrantco to
Lcgul Reserve Life Insurance Co.,
InBt and not break or crack. General hns contract to offor a high class
comcnt contracting. All work guar­ salesman In this and adjoining coun­
anteed. Elm avenuo botween Third ties. Address, stato managor, P. O.
nnd Fourth street.—J. E. Tcrwilliger, Box 1137, Jacksonville, Fla.
182-Otp
Prop. Phono 224-W.
178-lm-tfc
WANTED—Two unfurnished rooms,
FOR SALE—Eight young mules, nil
suitablo for light housekeeping,
good condition, good workers. Will closo in. References exchanged. Ad­
sell ono pair of them nt a great bar­ dress, "J. N.” care of Horald.
gain.—G. F. Smith, Snnford or Hcr180-tf-dh
nld office.
18G-tfc WANTED—Show case, Ave or six
feot long. Herald Printing Co.
Post cards—local vlowi -lc each at
the Herald office.
183-6tp.
WANTED—An
Ice
box
thnt
will hold
FOR SALE—Ono practlcnlly now
100
to
150
lbs
ice.
Notify
Herald.
Reo speedwngon, ono new 5 passen­
187-tfc
ger Ford touring enr with truck body,
curtnins all around. Will soil either
—BRIGHT BOY TO
one.—Sanford Mnttrcss Co., Snnford,
LEARN PRINT.
Fla.
185-Otc ING TRADE. ONE THAT'S NOT

Fight Plant Dlatasas.
Willie continual effort Is being mndo
to Introduce promising new plants Into
the United Rtntes, the various
branches of the Deportment of Agri­
culture are striving to nvotd mnklng
additions to the Imported Insects nnd
plant diseases thnt nro already coat­
Friends of R. W. Tum or will bo
ing millions of dollnra yearly. For­
• 'glad to know he is at home agoin and
eign countries have listed several thou­
improving daily. Mr. Turner was op­
sand lnaecta of troublesome kind, with
erated on at the Fnrnald-Laughlin
many plant dlsensen that nre not yet
Included among thcae Immigrants.
hospital some time ngo for appondlciBesides special quurnntlnes and plant
anil hafl since been under t|;o care
Inspections the further precaution la
of Dr. PuclHton.
being taken of restricting the numbers
of the plants Introduced nnd growing
"Millions Now Living Will Never
for a considerable lime In greenhouses
Die"—Free Blblo Lecture, S tar Thoor under conditions of Isolntlon, to
»tre, Sunday, October 30, 7:80 p. m.
make euro thnt all pests have heen re­
moved. After It Is mndo certain that
18fl-2tc
the plants are thoroughly freed from
Insects
nnd diseases, they nre props- FOR SALE—25 gnme roosters nnd
The Tcmplo Pipo Organ Club will
gnted more cxtenslxhly. nnd nre dis­
26 hens nnd pullets.—Code Hill,
J®1'* ,ts Christmas Bazaar Novombor
tributed In the usual way to growers
Lockhart,
Fin.
187-8tp
•b. Tho plnco to bo annoncod Intfor experiment.
*r- In enso of bnd weather, tho of—Got your Scratch Puds freni The
f*,r w'dl be hold indoors.
Aid for Struggling Authors.
the Herald office.
182-mon-Thur-tfs.
Here Is nn Item from the New York
Globe of Interest to Impecunious writ­
FOR RENT
Princess
Pat?
ers! "It la not generally known thnt
Millions Now Living Will Novor
71,0 Bub8t,tuo for «b8ent n' cn,bor8
tho Authors' league has n fund for FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms.
Die"—Freo Blblo Lecture S tar Tho- Woro’ Mr8, D&lt; Pl D^unlmonl,• M” '
Apply 1004 Elm Ave.
152-tfc
Ex-Secrctary Daniels calling on ex- authors who nre In distress. Re­
**»». Sunday, October 30,'7:30 p m . 1 Dumn8’ Mr8' J: ° ’ Shnron’ ,Mr8, J ° hn
President
Wilson,
found
him
In
excel­
cently
the
lenguo
learned
that
a
young
lRfl-2tr&gt;
Loonardl. The Club members were,
FOR RENT—Suburban homo.
Call
_____
l Mrs. Raymond Key, Mrs. G. F. Smith, lent health nnd spirits with "good col­ woman who hud wou considerable dis­
308-J.
107tfc
tinction nnd prominence ns n writer
THT * daily hehald wamt ad.
Mrs. W. J. Thigpen, Mrs. C. M. Vorco. or and sparkling eyes.”
had through a series of misfortunes and GOOD LOCATION for u meat market.
through Illness heen reduced to dire
Apply to 309 First street. 174-tfc
distress. A representative called to
so) hor and found her on the verge of FOR RENT—Furnished front rooms.
200 Park Ave.
182-Otp
s physical and nervous collapse, duo
to actual elnrvntlon. Immedlnte means FOR RENT—Large furnished 1bed
were supplied her, and In order to glvo
room.
Convenient to boarding
-SUBJECT 11 A. M. AT THEher an opportunity to regain her health
houso.
716
Magnolia ave.
180-0tc
nnd to get her hnck to her work a
substantial amount was raised among FOR RENT—Bed room, 811 Park avethe members to carry her through
nue.
178-tfc
Corner Fifth Street and Park Avenue
this period of enforced Inactivity.
FOR RENT—Lower floor of realdenco, furnished,
WHERE DR. WALKER PREACHES
203 Magnolia
Noise Eliminated.
Ave.
v 185-fitp
"You chargo more for board than
Men! Don’t Forget that Big Brotherhood Class
F 6 lt RENT—Two largo, connecting
you did last summer.”
"Tbs
place
offers
more
rest
ind
rooms, suitable for couple, desiring
At 9:30—Strangers Cordially Invited
comfort,” answered Fanner Combos- light housekeeping rooms. 219 Oak
COME AND BRING YOUR FRIENDS
"T here ain't any election for Ave.
185-tfc
guests to alt up nil night and argue
FOR RENT—H alf of store, fine dls
•bout."
play window, new building. En­
quire of W. H. Treadwell, East Soc
Poat car da—local vtewa -lc each at ond street, near Sanford nvenuo. New
the Herald office.
DeForrest Bldg.
187-tfc

•A. U s e l e s s

P reach er”

WANTED

FOR SALE

WANTED

AFRAlb OF A LITTLE WORK.
APPLY AT TUB HERALD PRINTING COMPANY.
tf

LOST
LOST—Tho auto jack picked up on
west First s tr et nbout two miles
from Snnford early Saturday morn­
ing, should bo brought to the Herald
nffico.
187-3tp.*
LOST1—White pointer dog. Ono eye
nnd ono car brown. Liberal reward
offered for rc‘urn to W. J. Thigpen.
187-3tc.
Eyes Examined

Glasses Designed

Henry McLaulin, Jr.
OPT. D.

FIRST METHODIST CHURCH, SOUTH

OPTICIAN

OPTOMETRIST

Gradual* Northern Illinois College
212 B u t F irst St.
Sanford, Fla,
...........
- 11 ■
■■Will ■■ -U
How to ketp the roaming boys on
tho farm and the roaming cattle off
seems to bo one of the Florida famerm’ problems.
thy a

n A ttt wimain w a n a&amp;

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! Tiv- ;'

The S anford Daily Herald

Sanford
THE

“ City Substantial’

IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION
NUMBER 186

SANFORD, FLORIDA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1921

VOLUME IT

■M

Railroad Strike Has Been Called O ff By 'Big Five
o f f ic ia l r e c a l l o f s t r i k e o r d e r s i s ­

Follow n g Greek Av;.;y in Anatolia

SUED BY SWITCHMEN, ENGINEERS, CON­
DUCTORS, TRAINMEN AND FIREMEN

repeal of s t r ik e o r d er comes

AS A SURPRISE BUT THE MEETING
YESTERDAY TURNED THE TIDE

EFFECTS OF BIG STORM
BEING REMOVED RAPIDLY
DEATH LIST INCREASED
PRESIDENT IIARDINO
RETURNS TO WASHINGON.
(By Th» AtwcUUd Ftiu)
WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct 28.—
President Harding returned to Wash­
ington at eleven o’clock today from
Atlanta.

R a i l r o a d Labor Board Will Today Announce its
F i n d i n g s as Result of Public Hearing Wednes-

,)ay__Oificial Washington Pleased With the
D e c is io n of the Labor Unions.
(By The Associated Pr«uO

A newspaper war correspondent inuy lead mi cxeltliiK life, but It's not n

WAY PAVED
FOR OPENING
BONUS BILL

Property Damage W ill
Not Exceed Five
Million

TAMPA IS NORMAL
OUTLYING DISTRICTS CLEANING
UP AND DAMAGE NOT AS
GREAT AS SUPPOSED.

one. Nc limousine for this chap. A bullock curt wns the best conCHICAGO, Oct. 28.—Official recall of the rail­ luxurious
TAMPA, Oct. 28.—Tnmpn hai
veyunco
could obtain to follow the Greek army on Its path throifgh Asln
emerged
from the hurricane of Tues­
road strike orders issued by Switchmen, Train­ Minor. He la James A. Mills, associate press correspondent In the Qreek-Turk
day
and
Tuesday night, to a point
men, Conductors, Engineers, and Firemen were war.
where
the
big storm bids fair to soon
SENATOR
REED,
DEMOCRAT.
dispatched today when leaders of the Big Five
be
nothing
more than n memory. Any
WILL BRING UP BILL
!
person
walking
or driving through the
AGAIN
flashed code messages to their general chairmen.
downtown section of tho city , would
Similar orders probably will be dispatched today
(By Tks AitooltUd Pr*M)
inve been hard put to find n trnco of
WASHINGTON, Oct. 28.—The wny storm damnge. To bo sure, a num­
bv the telegraphers. While these orders are be­
was paved today by Senator Reed, ber of sidownlk nwnings whoso friending circulated the Labor Board today will an­
Democrat, to force vote on soldier y shade wns sought In summertime by
nounce its findings as a result of the public hearbonus bill which the senate recently pedestrians nre missing; here nnd
laid on the table at tho request of there another nwning is supported by
in# Wednesday at which Union leaders and Rail­
President Harding.
temporary props nnd in a fow In­
road Executives testified.
Over the Railroads Operating in the State of Reed introduced an amendment to stances thore remains a pinto glass
the tux revision bill providing certain window to bo restored.
Florida
and
Rates
Were
Ridiculous
taxes be set aside iih special fund to
WASHINGTON, Oct. 28.—Word thnt leaders of the five
But all storm debris is gone, thanks

CHAIRMAN HUDSON BURR
TELLS SENATE COMMITTEE
OF USURPATION OF POWERS

railroad service unions had withdrawn authorisation for the rail­
(By The AlteeUted Frtli)
road strike to begin Sunday was received in official circles here WASHINGTON,
Oct, 28.—Further
with undisguised satisfaction. Officials directly interested, how­ complaints
against alleged usurpation
ever, decided to withhold comment until later.
by tho Intorstato Commerce Commis­

pny bonuses to former service men.
The amendment included the McCumher bonus lull, reported by the senate
■inance coinmiltco, providing five way
IcnufUs.

U j

I

to hnrd work done by tho city’s street
cleaning department, tho street car
crews and individual workers.
All
street lights wero on full blast down
town Inst night nnd )iovornl of the
sion of state poworn over rnilronds
"white wnys" wero ns bright as ever.
CHICAGO. Oct. 28.—Tho rail strike scheduled for October 30 made today to senate Interstate Com­
Street car service wns restored In
was averted last night when lenders of the Switchmen, Trainmen, merce committee on behalf of nat­
pnrt
todny nnd will reach furthor out
Conductors, Engineers and Firemen at a joint meeting wlonted a ional assocition of rnllwny nnd utili­
tomorrow.
Thore was somo extension
resolution withdrawing authorization of a
r a?- ties" commissioners. R. Hudson Burr,
also
of
light
nnd power for homos and
thc Railroad Telegraphers announced they would take ftimilnii at chairm an Florida Railroad Commis­
industrial
plants.
The telophono com*
tion These were the only unions which had authorized a strike. sion told the commltteo many state
pnny restored n great number of
T t a 7 o ie Mingo(T the strike was unan mouB by ^Bnn™ ; rates prescribed by tho Interstate
phones to working ordor. Both tolotioim W G Lee ^resident of the Brotherhood of Railroad irain Commorco Commission were ridicu­
S 'a 'm o m ,™ ': T h e official wording of the resolution adopted lous nnd after n statement of details
THOMAS AGENCY ESTIMATES graph companies set up more wires,
h i ,•£
so thnt Tnmpn was In communication
Chairman
Cummings
of
tho
commit­
was that "the strike bo declared not effective.
LESS THAN FIVE PER CENT
by ordinnry means to northern points.
Unofficial reports were that the wiremen s executives had tee observed, “It is quito apparent so
U r lfm
OF CROP ON TREES LOST
\k \u m \
Tho telegrnph lines nro still out of
fnr ns Floridn is concerned the Inter­
strenuously opposed adoption of the resolution. None of t I
dents would confirm this, however.
..
r*n,»i„Ptnr« state Commerce Commission did not
While reports received by the Me­ shape.
L. E. Sheppard, president of the Order of Railway Condi ctom, consider any nctunl enso of discrimi­
Tho Tribune got its first direct As­
tropolis from prncticnlly every pnrt
sociated Press Borvico last night since
said that the unions had decided to call off the strike because&lt;t nation.” Commodity rates mentioned
of tho crop producing section of tho Inst Mondny.
"the growing public opinion thnt the strike would be against the by Durr were those on cotton, phos­
state affected by tho Tucsdny storm
labor board, and consequently the government, and not against the phate, sand nnd gravel. Tho commis­
Trains nre running in normal fash­
tend to confirm tho heavy losses to ion to nearly all points in this section
r"'lr°It waa evident also that the entire Washington adminiatragrowing crops nnd proporty indicat­ of tho stnto. IIighwnys nro being
tion was opposed to us and that we have had little chance of.ga
ed by early reports carried by tho cleared of debris.
ing our objectives,” said Mr. Sheppard.
_____________
Reports from outlying sections in­
Motropolis, authorities on Floridn
dicate
thnt tho first estimate of losses
crop conditions nnd marketing ven­
were
overdrawn.
It is probable that
The force of the storm pnssed weBt loss nt $0,000 In n wrecked packing
ture tho bolief thnt tho loss In actual
M
1,1 Vl
tho
Tribune's
estimate,
published
of Puss-n-Grillc nnd St. Petersburg. plant in Lnrgo. L. S. Johnson, Lnrgo
money
values
will
ho
n
good
deal
less
St. I’eter.sburg gives evidence of not druggist, estimated the damage in
than Is no wnppnrent, especially so Wednesday morning nt $6,000,000
hnving had the high wind which visit­ thnt city nt less than $50,000. I)r. I*.
with’ respect to the fruit nnd truck totnl for tho entire storm swept sec­
ed Tampa. A survey of tho entire Phillips loHt approximately $3,000 in SMALL COMMUTE IS TRYING TO MADE FUNNY READING HUT IT crops.
tion, with loss of $1,500,000 to $2,000,­
MEANT MUCH TO
section indicates thnt tho storm swept tho total destruction of his packing
BRIDE UP THE "VA­
I! : .■
Statements issued by tho Thomas 000 In Tnmpn nnd Its suburbs will
THE MEN
inlnnd from a point near Clearwater, plant, Mr. Belcher says.
LERA GAP’’
Advertising
Servico,
advertising prove vory close.
f .L f
where Clearwater Beach suffered
Unqucstionnhlly
the
citrus
fruit
agontH
for
the
Floridn
Citrus
Ex­
(By Tk* AttooliUd Prtu)
HISTORY OF STRIKE.
(By T)m AuooUUd PmO
henvily, swept across tho narrow neck
f u j
CLEVELAND,
Oct. 28.— Secret change, nnd by Chase nnd Company, trees have suffered nnd there has been
Tho
decision
of
tho
United
States
LONDON, Oct. 28.—Tho Irish con­
of Innd striking Lnrgo nnd Groon
code messages concerning tho calling extensive, point out that tho rninB henvy loss of fruit. This loss rangta
Springs, crossed old Tampa Bay, Labor Board on July 1, authorizing ference seems to hnvo resolved itself
I jJ l* ■
accompanying tho high winds will from perhaps 50 per cent in Lee nnd
struck Oldsmar and Tampa. Tarpon the rnilronds to roduco wages of their into meetings of tho small committee off of tho striko sent out early today prove of immenso benefit to tho fruit Pinellas counties, down to 40 in Hills­
Springs, west of Clearwater, got loss employes an average of 121-2 per which wns appointed to find a formu­ from tho general offices here of tho left on tho trees; thnt most of tho borough, 10 in Polk to only trifling
*AMI
Hrothcrhods, "Art is long, life 1h
wind than did Clearwater. In thnt ent was tho ©vent in tho soricji which la ns a bridge between tho negotiat­
fruit
which
dropped
to
tho
ground
dnmngo in Lake, Orango, Pasco and
m
city there was no loss of life or ser­ led up to tho orders for n general ing pnrtlus. This Ib the method fav­ short,” rend one message. Some of was diseusod nnd therefore not of tho Hernando counties. Thoro wns con­
tho
others
read
"Pretty
heavy
for
ored by tho prime minister in nego­
ious injury though tho wind from strike by six unions.
first class; thnt tho remaining fruit,
So Boon ns this decision was ron­ tiations of a delicnto nnd critical nn- such light work"; "Where thore are which naturally forms tho great bulk siderable fruit loss in Mnnnteo coun­
11:30 n. m. until 3 p. m. Wednesday
ty .especially along tho const.
bees there is honey"; "Smith 1h a
has been estimated at from 80 to 00 ' dored, a mnjorlty of tho rail unions turo.
of tho crop, will no doubt bring a hot­
mighty
man";
"Your
accounts
hnvo
Tho denth list In tho storm stilt
Lloyd
George
called
a
meeting
of
j voted overwhelmingly in fnvor of a
miles an hour.
been audited nnd found correct" and ter price. Tho hotter price, bnsed up- stnnds nt fivo—throo nt Tnmpn and'
the
committee
unexpectedly
yesterday
o nlcsBcncd production nnd improvod two nt St. Petersburg.
An estimate of tho damago done by 1striko rather than accept a wage cut,
"More enduring than bronze."
the storm places tho total at $2,000,­ 1although on some lines, notably tho in his rooms nt the house of com­
quality will more than offset tho ap­
Not to exceed one hundred ncdl
000 in PinellnH county. St. Peters­ Ponsylvnnin thore wore dlvisons mons.
parent dnmugo from droppings, it was twenty-five persons wero rondezodi
BRADENTOWN
ALL
RIGHT
Tho meeting lasted an hour. Both
burg's municipal pier is estimated at , where groups of workers voted not to
pointed out.
MANATEE SECTION ESCAPES
homeless by tho storm in Tampa, and
sides are maintaining the same re­
» $73,000 loss, the A. C. L. pier at striko.
At tho offices of the Thomas Ad­
,
,
WITH SMALL DAMAGE.
ticence
ns
heretofore
observed,
hut
theso have been taken care of by nei­
Tho taking of tho ballot itsolf, how$0,000, tho Fountain of Youth plor at
vertising Service, it was stated this
It
is
bolioved
thnt
tho
chief
subject
ghbors and by the eRed Cross which
$20,000, the U. S. Naval Reserve pier • ever, developed somo signs of friction
BRADENTOWN, Oct. 28.—Tho tc- morning thnt Into advices from most promptly oponed two relief stations.
of
yesterday’s
discussion
wns
Ulster.
at $13,000, tho Braaf plor nt $10,000, ' among tho unions. W. G. Lee, presi­
A semi-official announcement, nmdo riffic wind and high water here Tues­ of tho heavy citrus producing sec­ Supplies of clothing and house furn­
waterfront damage other than tho dent of tho Brotherhood of Railroad
tions showed a decided tendency to
piers at $15,000; Bnyboro hnrbor In­ j Trnlnmon, sent out a soparnto bnllot last night, of arrangements for tho day caused considerable damago to lessen tho earlior estimates of dam- ishings as well as food havo been
premier's journoy to Washington 1h
cluding damago to boats, buildings to his mon when tho other unions in­
Gulf nnd bay towns In Mnnntoo coun­ ngo to tho grapefruit nnd orange made nvnilablc.
considered
a
good
augury.
Of the five or six ships which were
nnd wharves, $20,000, city parks nt cluded in tholr ballots such questions
ty. An unusually high tido in the' crop.
washed
ashore hore during the storm
$2,000. Gulfport’s damage Is esti­ ns rules and working conditions. Mr.
By reason of tho familiarity of
river, with a hnrd south wind, carried
only
ono
or two will bo lo st
The
mated nt $73,000, Pass-n-Grllle nt $30, Loo hold that it was Regal to voto on POSTMASTER HAYES
the water to tho north sldo of tho members of tho Thomas staff with the others can bo put back Into tho water.
AND PARTY IN WRECK AND
000, Clenrwator nt $80,000, Largo nt any thing but tho nlrendy authorized
citrus belt, they nro nblo to base con­
BADLY SHAKEN UP. Manatee river, backing water u phlgh
An odd eight is a three masted
$23,000, tho Bayou Bonita section at 1wage cut.
clusions ob to tho total loss on the
In Palmetto. Trees, telephone, electric
schooner
the Thomas B. Garland, high
$10,000, tho North Shore section In
telegrnphlc
reports
from
various
Loaders of the big four brother­
(By Th* Associated Prsas)
light nnd telegraph wires wore blown
St. Petersburg nt $25,000, tho Bny­ hoods—trainmen, conductors, engi­
and
dry,
with
a formes mine sweeper
points
and
tho
beliof
is
expressed
by
NEW YORK, Oct. 28.—Postmaster down. Windows In somo houses wore
boro section at $25,000, nnd gcnornl neers and firemen—met In Chicago to
thorn thnt in the final outcome it and a steel hulled bargo nestling
damage throughout tho central port docido what action should bo taken. General Hayes and a score of passen­ blown In. The damago to Brndontown, will probubly ho found that less than alonside tho schooner. Ail three will
. -a
Palmetto nnd Manatee, nnd in com­
of St. Petersburg at $30,000.
On October 15 it was announced form­ gers on the midnight express of tho munities located inlnnd from tho bay fivo por cent of the fruit on the trees bo snlvogcd nnd set afloat again.
I’ass-n-Grille bridge is estimated to ally that a walkout beginning Octobor Pennsylvania railroad, for Washing­
boforo tho storm hns been Tendered
The greator part of the damage was
have sustained at least a $80,000 ! 30 nnd extending progressively In ton, wore badly shaken up early to­ nnd Gulf 1s compnratlvely slight. unmarketable.
along tho southwest coast from Punt*
Thoro Is a great deal of cleaning up
dnmngo, Seminole bridge, a damago i four distinct movements until virtu­
Wayne Thomas was in Plant City Rnssa, where the gale attained a ve­
day
whe
nthe
oxpresa
crashed
Into
the
to do, but vory little real proporty (his former home) during tho gale,
of $20,000, the Seaboard railroad ally every road In the country wouhl
locity of 100 miles, to just north of
bridge at $50,000 and the Safety Har­ 'he covered, had beon authorized. TTio rear of a local train at Manhattan damage.
returning to Jacksonville this morn­ Tarpon Springs. A few mites back
Citrus groves suffered the worst, ing. Yesterday ho drove over a con­
bor bridge at $35,000. Pinellas coun­
tranafer in New Jersey, during n
fruit being blown from the trees, and siderable portion of tho Hillsboro and from the coast the damage ia much
ty’s fruit damago la entimated at $1,­ I Swithmnn’s Union of North Amor,&lt;j“ heavy fog.
000,000. W. F. Belcher, manager for ' immediately announced thnt It would
the trees in aome Instances being bro­ Polk county citrus territory. While less and tho path of the hurricane ap­
parently was not more than fifty mllee
1
Join
tho
big
four
while
B.
M.
Jewel
the John S. Taylor Packing Co., at
There was a time when you won ken. Truck and vegetable farm* lo­ in somo grovos the domagp was heavy wide.
president
of
tho
Railway
Employes
Largo, Thursday morning estimated
the world's respect by going to church cated far enough from tidewater to both to fruit and trees, and ail suf­
At none of the&lt;Gu!f coast reaorta
that nt least 50 per cent of tho grape \ Department, Americnn Federation of but now .you buy an eight-cylinder osenpe the high tides were not dam­ fered more or loss, Mr. Thomas found
'Labor,
which
is
comprised
of
the
shop
(Continued on Page Eight.)
fruit crop in his section is on tho
(Oaallautd on I’m* Tin**)
aged materially.
car.
(Continued on page 8)
ground. He placed his company’s •'
-D
sion, he snid, "Actually compelled
Floridn carriers to mnko rato ad­
vances they did not deBire." The com­
mission, he said, compelled Floridn
railroads to put advances Into effect
although they hnd not asked for
them.
Durr complained vigorously against
tho Interstate Commorco Commission
order permitting the abandonment of
the three mile rnilrond between St.
Andrews and Panama City, Florida.
Tho commissioners order, lie snid, did
not Ret forth nctunl traffic facts nnd
probably, he added, wns never review­
ed by commission but by some inex­
perienced clerk. Stnto commissions,
he snid, should have exclusive auth­
ority to decide whether the railroad
tracks within n stnto should ho torn
up.

IRISH QUESTION SECRET CODE
ALLOWS PREMIER CALLING OFF
TO COME TO U. S. BIG R. R. STRIKE

LATEST REPORTS
LESSEN DAMAGE
TO CITRUS FRUIT

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2 7 ,1

PAGE s n

W

1

__________________________

M. F. ROBINSON
HAS ANOTHER BIRTHDAY
RECEIVES FELICITATIONS.
M. F. Robinson, of this city, who
snys ho is only 78 years old, yet who
: has a birthday sovoral timos during
tho year, colcbrntcd another one last
week and whllo
few peoplo knew
about It several of his friends remombered It, nnd the following wiro was
received from Victor and Bollo Check:
"Wero wo editors today, wo would
get on extra out and say: ’Bononth
your handsome printed phiz, we wish
you all tho joys thero Is.’ P. S. Wo
: wish It nny way."
To which Mr. Robinson roplled by
return wiro:
"It would justify living for genera­
tions to receive your sweet congratu­
lations. P. S. I Intend to nny way."

5S

WOMAN’S CLUB MEETING.
f o r : k&gt;'

Ifi

Tho meeting of tho Literature nnd
MJLisic Departments of the Woman’s
Club on Wednesday afternoon, was
one of tho most interesting and enjoynblo in tho history of these two de­
partments. Tho subject for the year
being, Grand Opera, tho first number
on the program was “Foust,” by MVs.
T. W. Langley. Mrs. Langley told
the story of tho opora by Gounod.
This is tnken from tho poetic drama
of tho snmc name by Goethe, nnd has
Here is another new Royal Cake, so delicious and appetizing that
been ono of the most popular of all'
we have been unable to give it a name that does justice to its
operns In tho sixty years since its
production.
.
unusual qualities. It can be made just right only with Royal
After this interesting pnpor, Mrs.
Baking Powder. Will you make it and name it?
A. M. Phillips sang the "Jewel Song”
•
from Foust, in a most charming man­
ner.
•
Miss Idn Grny next gave n talk on
tho Schools of Opera, beginning in
Italy whero tho opera first dovolopcd,
then trncing its development with
Germnn, French, English nnd Ameri­
For the name selected as best,
can schools. I', is interesting to note
we will pay $250. For the sec­
from Miss Gray’s talk thnt Amorlca,
ond, third, fourth, and fifth
ns yet, has no school of opera, but
Use In ti meaturrmenti for all material*
thnt we have tho best audiences nnd
choice, we will pay $100, $75,
Vi cup .h o rtm ln g
tho best musicians, nnd RingerB, in
IHcupt.uBar
$50,
and
$25
respectively.
G rated rlitd o f H orango
the world, hero in our country. It
I egg nnd I Volk
has been prophesied thnt within ton
c u p . (lour
4 ttM poon* Iioyal Halting Pow der
Anyone may enter the contest,
yenrs we shall have a great school of
1 cup m ilk
blit only one name from each
l 1, tq u a re . ( I l l o ti.) o f
music.
u m w c clcn e d chocolate (m elted)
person
will
be
considered.
After Miss Gray’s talk, tho club
U ica .p o o n .alt
chorus gnve tho "Waltz Song,” from
C ream ihottenlng. A dd *ug*r and grated orange rind. A.IJ
beaten e ,g yolks. Sift together flour, .a lt and Roytl Baking
FouBt. Tho singers wero, Mrs. A. M.
I'owder and add alternately with the mlllci lanly fold In one
All names must be received by
Phillips, Mrs. J. Tncknsh, Mrs. Vnnco
beaten egg while. Divide baiter Into tw o pan*. T n o n e p i t t t d J
December
15th,
1921.
In
case
of
the chocolate. Put by tableipoonfuta, alternating datk and light
Dougins, Mrs. McAllister, Mrs. J. Kv
batter. Into three greated layer cake pan.. Bake In moderate
tics, the full am ount of the prize
Mettinger, Mrs. Newberry, Mrs. A.
oven 20 minute*.
will be given to each tying con­
Irwin, nnd Mrs. S. Mnines. Tho ac­
FILLING A N D ICING
testant. Do not send your cake.
companists for the two musical num­
3 tebleip o o n e m elted b u tte r
2 tnble.noon» orange Juice
3 cup* c onfectioner’* »ug*r
I egg w hile
bers, wore, Mrs. S. Mnines nnd Mrs.
Simply send the name you sug­
(Pow dereditigarm avbeu»edbut 3 tquare* (3 o n .l
doe* not make
»mooth Icing• u n .w ee len c d chocolate
R. C. Bower.
gest, with your own name and
G rated rin d o f h orango a n d p ulp o f I orange
All who wero present to licnr this
address, to the
Put butter, lugar, orange (ulee end rind Into bowl. Cut ru'n
wonderful progrnm, feel thnt they
from orange, tem ovlng tkln end *eed*. end edd. Beat all ti itth rt
until »mooth. Fold In beeten egg white. Spread thl* Icing on
ennnot afford to miss another. It Is
layer u»ed for top o f cake. W hile Icing le eoft, eptlnkle with
ROYAL BAKING POWDER COMPANY
hoped that the friends of the two de­
um w eetened chocolete ahaved In fine piece, with ihatp knlle
(u&gt;e H *quare). T o remaining Icing add 2M w u etei unsweetened
partments will tnko ndvnntnge of tho
128 William Street, New York
chocolete which f u i been melted. Sptcad thl* thickly between
progrnms, to bo given this winter ,nnd
layct. and on tide* o f cake.
thnt the mootings will bo well attend­
ed an nil guests nro welcome.
At tho next meeting, November 0,
the two operns, Robin Hood, nnd
Mignon, will bo studied, nnd musical
HERALD GAVE THE NEWS
STATE ROTARY CLUBS
selections or records from ench, will FLORIDIAN BUYS HISTORIC
ONLY PAPER IN SANFORD
BOSTON
PROPERTY.
POSTPONE
MEETING
TO
be given.
AVAILABLE YESTERDAY.
BE HELD IN ORLANDO.
Friends of E. II. Mote, prominent
SHOE DAY AT THRASHER’S.
Tho Daily Herald was tho only pa­
citrus nurseryman of Leesburg, Fin.,
Tho mooting of ail tho Rotnry Clubs
Saturday, October 20th, will be shoo will bo interested in tho following in Florida, to be held In Orlando to­ per in SnnforiJ yesterdny. A few
day nt Thrasher &amp; Gamer’s, nt which from n recent issuo of tho Boston morrow (Friday), hns been postponed copies of tho Tnmpn Tribune enmo to
time all shoes in the house will bo Globe concerning the transfer of n on nccount of the storm that mndo tho ncwsdcnltrs nnd woro quickly
sold nt ten por cent off the regular valuable business property, once the travel impossible for several days in gobbled up, nnd when tho Herald cams
price. This is done In ordor thnt the site of that city’s old Custom House; tho southern part of tho State, nnd out nt four o'clock, thero wns n rush
"Ono of tho largest sales in the would hnvo cut down the attendance mndo for them nnd tho entire edition
gencrnl public will investigate tho big
downtown
section, involving garage of the meeting grcntly. Tho Stato of oxtrns wns soon exhausted. Many
now stock of shoes nt Thrasher &amp;
property,
hns
just been effected in the meeting of Rotnrinns will bo ono of times durln gtho past yenrs has It
Gamer’s nnd And tho many good bar­
placing
of
final
papers to record nt the tho largest nnd best in the history of been demonstrated thnt Sanford need­
gains, tho many now styles nnd tho
Suffolk
Registry
of Deeds, conveying tho organization, nnd Orlando Rotes ed tho Daily Herald nnd needed it
wonderful stock enrried by this firm.
tltlo
to
thelnrgo
parcel
known ns the nro anxiouB to hnvo n largo attend- badly. It is the only medium through
Rend tho ndvortlRomcnt in todny’s nnd
Custom
House
Gnrnge,
numbered 12 nnee ,henco the chnngc of dotes. The which tho peoplo of Snnford can gel
tomorrow’s Daily Henrld.
big meeting will be held next Frldny, tho nows fresh from tho wires, and is
to 20 Cusotm House Street.
"he property wns owned by Owen November 4th, nnd it is hoped thnt from fivo to ten hours nhead of any­
According to the Key West Citizen,
tho cignr Industry hns shown renl F. Fnrley nnd Asa H. Weeks, trustees, by thnt time, the offccts of tho storm thing olso thnt gets horo In tho daily
Improvement during tho month of nnd is purchased by E. II. Mote, of will bo Bwcpt nway, nnd tho Rotes of lino. Yesterdny wns only ono of the
September. Every establishment is Leesburg, Fin. It is n inrgo brick nnd Florldn will bo nblo to got to Orlnndo. instances of your daily pnpor keeping
now understood to bo working full stone structure, standing on 4184 sq. Remember tho dnto hns been chnnged you in touch with tho outsido world,
timo, with nil hands employed for ft. land, tnxed for $00,000. Tho wholo from Friday of this week to Fridny nnd tho Daily Herald is tho only P4*
which they hnvo room nnd equipment. property is rnted nt $175,000, nnd tho of next week, nnd you will hnvo it per thnt you enn depend upon to girt
Tho Citizen, quoting E. II. Onto, Jr., price pnid wns n figuro fnr in excess right.
you tho frcBh news right from the
,
tells thnt there nro now six hundred of this nmount.
wires. In fnct, It is n renl daily P»*
"Tho building is erected on tho site
employes in the Onto fnctory, nnd ad­
per in every respect.
Sell it with n Herald Want Ad.
ditional men will be employed ns soon of tho old Custom House, ono of the
ns space is made for them. Holiday historic locntlons in tho city. Tho bro­
orders will soon bo coming in, nnd ker wns Alfred II. Howard, and tho
this is always an important period papers pnssed through the office of
in the cignr-muking induHtry.Theru tho Owen F .Furley Co."
wero more than fivo million cignrs
mado in Key West factories during NEW DISPLAY WINDOWS
iho month of September.
FOR HAUMEI.’S SHOP
ARE UP TO DATE.
Telling some of the things nbout
tho Minmt Bench dairy, tho Metropo­
Tho new displny windows recently
lis says that "Pritchnrd’s Jersey cows built for the Bnumel’s Specialty Shop,
WANDA HAWLEY in
nro browsing on Pnra grnss on tho nro now finished nnd beautifully dec­
rango north of tho city nnd increasing orated for tho occasion. Tho windows
tholr yield of milk.” Tho newspaper have been mndo much deeper and nro
goes on nnd talks about milking time, up to dnto, nnd show tho fino lino of
“whon sixty fino cowss nro milked by millinery and Indies ready to wear
olortricity, whilo being cooled from to much better advantage. Buumcl’s
Also a 2-Part Century Comedy
ovorhond electric fans. Mr. Pritch­ Shop has bcon handicapped for Bomo
ard Is pleased with tho dairy,” declar­ timo by the repnirs boing made in tho
es tho Metropolis, "nnd looks for a atora front, bull tho improvements
successful season. Automobiles nro fnake a big difference in this nifty
Friday and Saturday—Cecil B. DeMille’s
boing prepared for tho delivery shop whoro tho iadios go to admire
routes."
Production, “The Affairs of Anatol”
and to purchaso tho nowost creations
in
millinery
and
drosses,
coats
and
FATHER AND SON BANQUET.
At the Parish House tonight, tho suits.
Mattinee Daily at 3:30
Evening at 7:00
Father and Son banquet will bo hold,
For offico Buppllea, stationery, etc.,
nnd It promises to bo one of tho - ost
come to tho Herald office.
pleasant occasions of the season.

A M ystery Cake
Can you name it 1

i * V;

Copyright 1921 Hart Schaffner &amp; Mara

See ho'w
m
you
save thisfall

mV
m b -

K-

Clothing prices are
34% lower than a
year ago.
We’ve cut our mar#
gins of profit to a
point where we can
barely get by.

M,
■

Here’s an example of extreme
value: Hart Schaffner &amp; Marx
new fall Suits specially priced

D!;

$30 to $55

r t - j I.
[■?.' ;t

i

Sanford Shoe and Clothing
Company
The Home of Hart Schaffner &amp; Marx Clothes

•f;

Hi

in its path. Tho partially constructed
LOSS OF LIFE IN THE I1IO
bridge
over to Anna Maria was wiped
STORM NOW PLACED AT FIVE.
out.
Manatee apparently went through
(C ontlnaet] from B e t* On*)
the
storm unhurt. Tho bridge ovor
tho middle of tho state, reports about
tho Little Alalia river was destroyed.
$200,000 damage, mostly to crops.
Tho approaches to the brldgo over
Daytona had a slxty-mllo gale for
a short timo Tuesday morning, but tho Little Manntteo river wero washed
comparatively little damage wait done nway and tho bridge itself so loosened
thorc. St. Augustine experienced high thnt traffic over it is dangorous.
winds and somo damage. There is a
At Sarasota tho barometer rending
report that four fishermen in a boat at 11:20 n. m., Tuesday, was 20.2. Tho
wore lost, but this has not been con­ barometer stayed at this point until
firmed.
1:30 p. nt., when it commenced to
Iiartow, Lakeland, Wlntor Haven, riso. At 5 p. m., tho reading was 20:40.
Arcadia and all other towns in tho
Ruskin passed through tho storm
South Florida section suffered ntoro with little or no dnmage.
or loss, but tho inland cities did not
Tho party from Snrasotn reported
fool tho force of tho gale to tho ex­ thnt no lives had been lost nt nny of
tent that tho coastal towns did.
tho plnces through which they had
come on their way to Tamp, yester­
LOSS $500,000 FOR
day.
SARASOTA, ESTIMATED.
M. IT. Sheldon, residing nt No. 210
Cnrter street, wnH In Brndontown
Half of tho city dock at Sarasotu Saturday. Ho returned to Tampa
was washed i ml blown away, the esti­ yesterdny with tho report thnt Bramated damago over tho entiro city bo- dentown’s river front was badly dam­
ing pluced at $500,000, it was stated aged. Tho vegetable fnrnui suffered
lato last night by residents who mado heavily, ns did tho fruit trees. The es­
their way yesterday from Sarasota to timated damnge to tho fruit crop wns
Tampa. Tho entiro bay front with its placed nt twenty or twenty-five per
docks suffered tho heaviest damnge, cent of tho crop.
tho destruction in the business and
Terra Sola wns not badly damaged.
residence aoctionr of the city being Lack of communication with Anna
slight.
,
Maria has loft this town’s fate in
Parts of the SaruBota county court doubt. Buildings could bo seen on
housu was Mown in. Sevorul boats, Long Bench. West View wns appar­
docked nt the water front, v/oro piled ently completely wiped out.—Tampa
high and dry, throo miles in the woods Trlbuno.
around tho city. Tho railroad track
was completely washout out.
TAMPA, Oct. 27.—Reports from all
Tho party from Sarasota, on their sections tell of honvy dnmage to cit­
way to Tampa, passed through Palm­ rus fruit and truck crops, estimates
etto, Drndcntown and Ruakinj At ranging from n loss of fifty to sixty
Palmetto tho power plant and telo- per cent in tho coastal region of Pinel­
phono Borvico was wrecked
The las county, thirty to fifty per cent in
power plant at Brndcntov/n was also Hillsborough down to fivo to ten per
cent in Ornngo and Polk.
put out of commission.
Tho little town of Cortez was com­
—Gat your Scratcft Pads from Tht
pletely wiped out, tho fish houses and
docks boing swallowed by the storm Herald—by tho pound—15c.

$500 for them Best Names
How to make it

THE STAR TO-DAY
“qA Kiss in Time

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1921

ft. J. HOLLY _____________ Editor
X . J. LlLLARD....B*cretary-TrMLSurer
XL A. NEEL...____ General Manager
ROBERT J.fHOLLY, Jr,
CHOULATIOM IUIIAO■a
Phone 148 up to 6 P. M.

Apyllwtton

Member of The Associated Pi

All Is qulot on tho hurricano deck

sontlal. No town over attained a sat­
isfactory growth without the combin­
ed and continued efforts of its poopic, and when you see a progressive
community you can count on it that
thcro aro somo live wires in It that
are receiving the hearty support and
co-operation of a large majority of its
good citizens. No community over*
stood still. It is moving cither for­
ward or backward. You can't stop an
automobile on an upgrado if there
ore no brakes on it. Stall your en­
gine and you will roll back to tho
bottom or into the ditch.
Sanford is a fino town, with pros­
pects bright for a steady future
growth, but it must do more building.
Houses are needed to sholter those
who would make this their home. A
fow more houses would bring a few
more families. A fow more families
would create additional business and
add in every way to tho lifo of tho
community.
Speak up and make a noise like
progress. All tho good idens for our

One storm like that is sufficient for
the next twenty years.
Florida is recovering and in a fow
weeks no one will know tho difference.
The Fathers and SonB banquet at
the Parish House last night gnvo n
lot of peoplo a better Idea of what
tho Men's Club is doing for San­
ford.
Wo take grunt pleasure today in
announcing that the railroad strike
will not bo called now. This is a step
lh tho right direction nnd will do
Much townrd ninking business condi­
tions more settled nnd getting the en­
tire country on n more stable bnsiH.
Strikes are a thing of tho past ns
fa r as big business is concerned and
never got either the men or tho em­
ployers anywhere nnd ns this paper
said boforo the public is heartily sick
and tired of the whole business. It is
up to tho railrandH now to roduco
rates nnd got in the good graces of
the public ns soon as possible. Then
wo can all work together for the
common cause.
There is work enough for every
ninn and woman in this world. God
never makes nny mistakes about thnt.
With overy man He brings into tho
world, He brings a job. "Hore it is."
Ho says. "Now take it nnd do your
best with it." The trouble is wo don't
do it. We want some other fellow's
Job nnd the pny thnt other follows get
And if we do get his Job away from
him, wo can't do it as it ought to ho
done. We rnttlo round like pens in
a milk can, and wc kick and we strike
and wo find fault nil tho time. Just
because wo w’on't got into our plnccs
nnd do the work which would bring
us true success. What fools wo nre.—
Farm Lifo.
THE NEWSBOY
Tho Reporter-Star seems to have
been thinking about tho nowsboys
paddling through tho rain nnd storm
this week and In a write-up of tho
storm nnd the circulating of tho pnper during the duress of tho huirlenn hnd tho following about tho hoyB:
Wonder if wo fully npprecint these
little fellows who carry tho paper to
us evening after evening even though
tho wonther 1h too Revere for us to
face It. Sometimes they miss us nnd
then we scold them thereby emphasiz­
ing the value wo set upon them nnd
what thoy hnvo to sell. Some times
thoy annoy us by their noise nnd mis­
chief, but how wo would miss them if
thoy censed to trouble us nnd please
us with their mischief nnd their music
ns they go about their business ill
sunshine nml In storm. Givo the lit­
tle fellows n good word now nnd then
nnd let them know thnt you appre­
ciate them after nil.

A Htrong combination of tho cltlzorrn of a community is necessary to
give nn impetus toward advancement
thnt Is always desirable.
It rests with you, Mr. Citizen, if
thero are improvements thnt will add
to the comfort nnd advance the in­
terests of the community, ns to
whether we will hnvo them or not.
Combined effort is deHirablo nml cs-

By the Ladies of
EPISCOPAL
GUILD

SATURDAY
Deane Turner
WBLAKA BLOCK
Phones 497-494

OUR FRIEND DONNELLY,
Last winter, a stranger came among
us unostentatiously and unannounced,
and the Chamber of Commerce,
through its active secrotnry, took him
in and gnvo him all the courtesies due
him as a guest of the city. This man
had tw’o beautiful yachts in Lake
Mionroo, hnd his estimable family
with him, mingled with the people of
this city, invited them aboard the
yachts, showed them tho wonderful
plan of an electrical propolled boat
that obtained its power from a central
power house on one boat that could
bo transmitted to any number of
bonts, thus bringing out most forcibly
tho "ship by wnter" Idea that after­
ward became our big question. Wo
looked on and marveled and wonder­
ed, nnd while not quite understandIsg nil the technical terms nnd phras­
es thnt rolled off tho tongue of our
guest, knew in our own mind thnt ho
wnH "some man," and afterward
learned thnt he was more than thnt
on his native heath, nnd that he was
a recognized authority everywhere in
maritime nffnirH, nnd nnvnl architect­
ure. Thnt he hnd builded some of the
Inrgest floating dry docks in the world
nnd hnd a hand in many of the big
things in our naval architecture boforce nnd during the wnr, nnd after­
ward, nnd hnd been recognized by tho
government'in ninny different wnys.
When he turned In nnd took nn ncUvo interest in our nffnirs and told
us what could bo done with the lake
front in tho way of improvements,
we wondered again and saw nt once
thnt we hnd here a ninn who not only
hnd a vision of a great city here on
the shores of Lake Monroe, but thnt
hero wnH a ninn with construct­
ive idens who knew what we needed,
nnd wns ready to help with compre­
hensive pinns. And then, again, this
man asked for nothing, wanted noth­
ing, expected nothing except thnt nt
some tlmo in tho future, when he re­
turned with his yachts, that Sanford
would perhaps hnvo a boat basin
wherein he nnd his friends could keep
their bonts nnd enjoy the possibilities
of our Inkos nnd rivers. This man
promised us n set of pinns nnd ldUo
prints of tho right kind of boat basin
and Improvements on tho lake front
—no makeshift nifnlr for the thno be­
ing—but n comprehensive plan for the
future and one thnt really meant
something. Ho went back to his big
olflco nnd big work In Brooklyn nnd
Now York, and regardless of his big
business nnd many affairs to take his
time anil attention, never lost sight
of little Sanford and her problems.
From time to time he hns sent the
Chamber of Conimerco something good
nnd one day this week the big plans
and blue prints for tho boat basin nnd
lake front arrived nnd thoy are the
renl thing/ This was W. T. Don­
nelly—Sanford’s big friend nnd broth­
er—member of the Sanford Chamber
of Commerce and Sanford booster
who wants to help us build a bigger
nnd better city. His plans should bo
followed, for thoy ore builded on the
unit systom and we enn add to tho im­
provements every year until at last
wo hnvo one of tho (Incst and most
complete pinna for the benutiflcntlon
of tho lnko front that any city in Flor­
ida will have and one of the best
working pinns for n yacht basin thnt
nny city In the country will hnvo.
We will have more to say about tho
plans later. This is just a little bouquot'for our Irish friond In whom wo
reeognlzo n fellow spirit, an unselfish
spirit and a spirit thnt knows no fail­
ure.
Welcome to our city any time, old
fellow.
We hopo to have you with us again
this winter.
Donnellys aro needed In Sanford.

OUTSIDERS ARE &lt;RESPONSIBLE
FOR RACE PROBLEMS IN SOUTH.
“I wish that both the tradition of a # i J l l X a l U i l l l i 1 I L
*
solidly Democratic South and tho tra- *
Vf A T T V T D L 'C ' *
dition of a solidly Republican hlack *
IIU L L 1
IR u E i *
rnco might bo broken up," President *
*
Harding declared In his address at
Birmingham today.
*
-------This la tho first time the President
You cat» brin* Bomo P80^ 8 UP u
has spoken at length on the race *be *ub bu* y°u can’t make 'em take n
question and his Hpooch is evidently
the rosult of careful analysis of con. , ,
,, J ,
**.
,, it_
ditions, because he chose to deliver
Advice wouldn't bo so cheap if those
It before an audience of Southern « M n * “ wer° fo” od * fol,OW l t '
T«k&lt;m broadly there i. nothin* In
, th,
„ u to
tho opoorh to which tho South can ^
nronnd tho h . 0„
object, since Mr. Harding placed
m
M
stfnng emphasis upon his opposition
w,Be to kcop your troubleB t0
to race equality or anythjni approachurBelf but ft fo o \ |B 8tIn whor­
ing lt, and equality is the very thing he doean.t haVe any.
the Northern Republican party has
M M
M
sought to cram down the throats of
\y0 may think we ars having a lot
white Southerners.
Qf trouble but when you look around
Race cquallity was never considered you it jfl caay to find a fellow who
in the South by either \vhite or black 0VVeB the bank more than you do.
until Ignorant outsiders openly advoMi mi
m
cated it. The very thought has causThe latest style in wedding rings
ed true-blooded Southerners to ,ro- jB to have them large enough to slip
volt even at the discussion of the idea, off easily.
President Harding expresses n fair
Ml Ml
IM
but impossible ideal in the following There were bravo men went forth
wordsi
to battle in the world war but they
Herein, then, is the truo conception had nothing on the young man who is
of intor-rolntlon of color—complete contemplating marriage nt tho presuniformlty in idculs, absolute equality ent price of bacon,
in the paths of knowledge and culMl Ml
ture, equal opportunity for those who
Everybody likes to do good, somo
strive, equal admiration for those like to "do" othcrB good, but few like
who qchieve; in matters social and *° bo K°°d.
rncinl n separate path, each pursuing
Fa Mi
his own Inherited traditions, preservWo alwnys did think the town in
ing his own race purity and rnco pride, wbich we lived wns tho best place in
equality In things spiritual; agreed tho world but we seem to have a hard
divergence In the physical and ma- time convincing others of this fact. At
jor|nj „
that there is a good train service hore.

is no measure of your permanent
prosperity, unless it is backed by
an ability to save, at least a small
amount each week or month
against the day when your earn­
ing capacity will be reduced.
Think it over seriously. Come
in and falk with us about a bank
account.

A COMMUNITY BUILDER

F. P. Forster, President
B. F. Whitner, Cashier

You Can Find the Name of Every Live Pro
fessional and Business Man in
Sanford in This Column

The Republican pnrty Injected the
. , ** ^
.
,
- * Left
,
i
negro ns a politicali factor.
alone
, . Jobs
.. for, everybody
, . i s the ndmin,
,, „ ..
| .,
istrntion slogan, but slogans do not
tho South rcgnrds the negro ns an „„ „
.
Z
&gt; ..
,
..
,
,fill dinner pails or buy Bhoes for the
LAWYERS
economic problem, and will so regard . . . . .
him in tho future if not forced to
11 t8,
^ ^ ^
study him through political eyes, as
,t
f|no for ,ho ct|Uor totc„ tho
George A. DeCottes
the Republican party has force, it to pcoplo to „ 0 to Sunday School overy
Attorney-at-Law
to do in the past, and is forcing it SumIny&gt; n ,. is llko tll0 t|octo r-h o
Over Seminole County Bank
to do at the present time. Tho thought doL&gt;an.t hllvc to tjlko h,B own medlSANFORD •!• -!- *;• FLORIDA
of racial equality hns never entered a |Cjnt&lt;&lt;
Southern mind except when suggested :
Fa Mi Mi
by a mind not familiar with tho charSomo peopi0 tnlk much, think little,
ncteristics of the black race,
and do less; some people talk less, HARTFORD BATTERY
Social equality will forever be a think much and do little; but the fol“Battery Insurance”
thirig impossible. The South will seo to low who talks little, thinks much and
Sold and Serviced by
this. The worth-while leaders of the „cts according to his thoughts is tho
negro rnce, however, oIbo plnco the fellow who climbs.
Edw. Higgins, Inc.
proper emphasis upon the Impossi-----------------------blllty.
,
i ,
Unfortunately putting up n "Post
Haight &amp; Wieland
The race problem Is not a sectional No Hills" sign won’t prevent them
one, but a national problem, as Presl- from coming through tho mails.
Notice of Application for Tax Deed
Under Section 575 of the General
Statutes of the State of Florida
Notice is hereby given thnt M. T.
Spivey, purchnscr of Tax Certificate
No. 55, dated tho 2nd day of Juno, A.
D. 1019, has filed said certificate In
my office, nnd hns mado application
for Tax Deed to issue in accordance
with lnw. Said certificate embraces
tho following described property sltunted in Seminole County, Florida, towit: Lot 0, Block 8, Tier D, Sanford.
The said land being assessed at the
date of the issunnee of such certificate
in the name of Unknown. Unless said
certificate shall be redeemed according
to law tnx deed will issue thereon on
tho 28th dny of October, A. D. 1921.
Witness my official signature and
senl this tho 23rd dny of September,
A. 1). 1921.
(SEAL)
E. A. DOUGLASS,
Clerk Circuit Court
Seminole County, Flo.
9-23-Gtc
By A. M. WEEKS, D. C.

IT’S A FACTS"

GARAGES
Smith Bros. Garage

SANFORD

-:-

-:-

FLORIDA

Sanford Constructs Co.
CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS
Planes nnd Specifications Cheerfntl;
Furnished
All Work Guaranteed
H, T. PACE
P. 0. Box lit

Builders &amp; Contractors
Sketchca and Estimates Free; m
building too large and none too small.
----- ALL WORK GUARANTEED----

Wilson &amp; Shorey

Expert Repairing

PURE WATER

Geo. W. Knight
Real Estate and Insurance
SANFORD

-:-

Elder Springs Water
99.98% PURE
Phone Sll-W
Sanford, Fla

FLORIDA

.. Employment Bureau..

LORD’S PURITY
WATER

The vocational committee of the Busi­
ness and Professional Women's Club
AS GOOD AS THE BEST
requoata all young yromon deairing Daily Service
Phone 191
employment to register nt the First
National Bank.
AGNES G. BERNER, Chairman

D. F. SUMNER
PAINTER
LET HE FAINT YOUB HOUSE
Will ConUtet or T.k. Job by th. Hour
PHONE 119
IM LAUREL AVE,

Sanford Machine Sr
Foundry Co.

SANFORD NOVELTY
WORKS
V. C. COLLER, Prop.

General Shop and Mill
Work *
CONTRACTOR and BUILDER
517 Commercial Street

Sanford, FU-

TRANSFER
“WE DELIVER THE GOODS"

Quick Service Transfer
Storage Facilities

FOR SERVICE
Call 146-J

If we ploase you, tell others; il a®
tell us. Phone 498

W. RAWLING, Prop.

HOTELS

SANFORD, FLA

Acteylene Welding
OF ALL KINDS

Scientists tells us the sea Is grow­
ing more Baity, a measure of protect­
ion, no doubt, against the fresh things
Grover Bergdoll now has a chance that inhabit the beaohea.
to ask the war department to let him
It Booms that Babe Ruth has de­
come back nnd run round the country
cided
that a home-run king can do no
1awhile, tn search of tho stolen records
wrong.
' of his cose.

Contractor and Builder

OIL, GAB aqd ACCESSORIES
Oak and Flrat

Sanford Steam Laundry

abatement," remarks tho Fort Plorco
News-Tribune. The newspaper sug­
gests thnt the permits for the past
week or so hnvc shown apartment
houses, flats and residences to bo con­
structed nnd considerable improve­
ments going on in various parts of
tho city. Fort Pierce hna boon atondlly at work during tho lummor, and
considerable progress has boon mado
In adding new accommodations for
business nnd homcseckora.

S. 0 . Shinholser

Pine nnd Garland Sts., Orlando, Fla.

Laundry In the min when It is rain­
ing. St. c::!l (lie SANFORD BRANCH General Machine nnd Roller Works
LAKELAND STEAM LAUNDRY,
Automobile Flywheel Steel Gear
they can dry it, rain or shine. All
hands in stock
work cnllcd for nnd delivered the 3rd
Crank Shnfts Re-turned
day.----------------- r.IVE US A TRIAL

PHONE 475

CONTRACTORS

Sanford Welding Co.

Hotel Montezuma
“Sanford's New Hotel"
fliiO Up Per Day

Located in Eagle Bldg., 205 Oak Ave

Before buying your

Phone 175

Fourth and Sanford Ave

New Era Printery
G. Bassett Smith, Prop.
COMMERCIAL AND
JOS PRINTING

Come in and look over
our line

ELECTRICAL
Contractors

DRINK

Phone 442

Elder Springs Water, fta 09 D8-1M
pur cent pure. Phone a n

111 Pa:k
Ave.

Office supplies or all kinds at The
Herald Printing Co. When you want
anything in this lino see The Herald.
We have It cr enn get it.
Try a Herald Want Ad today,

�tx llL y l3 ffu M
..................................

ASSOCIATION ERECTING
ITS 27TH ItOOSB.

W
NGW
flOO :

The Orange County Building and
Loan Association ha. begun the oroc*
*
*
*
*
* * *
* ♦
tion of Its twenty-seventh house in tho
i Mrs W, S. Entimlnger and city ,which 1. considered to bo amplo
i Mr'fV h to r Lucy, of Plant City, ' proof that this Institution is serving a
long-felt need and a worthy purposo
m - * « A,,m • " ,i
here.
j Secretory-Treasurer ]{, w. Barr, of
the organization, said today: “Half
tho cities in the United States have
* * * / . i nnewood. This waa quite boon built by building and loan asso­
j l r Muaantl'a Oldsmobilo ciations, and I think Orlando is go­
ing to prove n&lt;f oxeoptio nto tho rule.
t r u . «|9° dcstroycd by, flrc;„ k* There are 1,000 such Companies in the
f i n i s of MW O«o. Lewi, will be
to know she Ib getting "long , State of . Now Jersey, alone,
kdv since her operation, and cx- j "We have only been organized since
August 1, and wo are now erecting our
r*. to be out in a few days.
,
and Mrs. A. R. Sandlin, of fwisnty-sfcvonth house. It is our tlm,
J J a i , were visitor. 'In town on As it ie ttifc him df all such companies,
i to help the man of small means to
^ hIT Florence Hudson, of Orlando, help himself. Wo drgnnized the As­
nt the afternoon in town Friday. sociation to help flnanco tho building
■ Acall meeting of the U d e. Civic I up of Orlando, and tho results are
| utpue was hold Tuesday, October 18, very encouraging indeed."
j Mr. II. IT. Dickson is president of
iff, Entzminger and Bill Batcher , the association.—Oriandof Roportervisitors in Sanford, Saturday. &lt; Star.
■l
and MW J. S. Dinkel and Mis.
WILL MAKE SANFORD HOME■Olive, wero visitors In Orlando Satur-

lid

t,

Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Ball and twin
rMsuricc and Clyde Clou.er, o l o r ■undo, were In town Sunday after- daughters, have arrived In the city
from Mjsnkato, Minn., and wilt make
i T e . Phipps left Wednesday for it their future home. After looking
over tho State of Florida, they chose
Mliml for a several day’s visit.
Clsude lUnchcliff, Mrs. Roy Sours Sanford ns the fastest growing and
»nd Miss Nellie Baker formed a party best city in which to loeato. Mrs.
Ball is a graduate of the Chicago
storing to Sanford Wednesday.
Mrs. J. A. Blstlino and Mrs. A. Y. College of Music in piano and hnrmpuller will entertain Friday evening ony, and will bo ready to receive
^th an Hallowe’en party at tho 11- pupils shortly. Mr. Ball has just fin­
trsry. Every one !b invited and it Is ished a contract with Mankato City
hoped thcro will bo a big crowd as to furnish music fo rthe city park
this is the first entertainment that has ' and had a large band in Manknto and
ken had nt the library for several 1surrounding towns. Ho wnn nlso
| bandmaster of a large military hand
months.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Tice, of Or- j in the world wnr, and served in
lsndo. wore visiting Mrs. Tico’s par­ I Frnnce. He will organize a class nnd
j tench nil band Instruments. The Bnll
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Chaffer.
Kirby Fuller is expected to arrive fnmlly have secured rooms with Mr.
Saturday to spend some time with his nnd Mrs. Stone on Onk avenue, nnd
: they will prove a welcome addition to
parents.
The storm tho first of the week was Sanford In both musictnl nnd socinl
quite severe although no serious dam­ ' circles.
age was done.
Friends of Mrs. J. S. Dinkel will bo ^ DANCE AT PARISH HOUSE.
glad to know she is able to be out
I The Mon’s Club will have a Hal­
after a several week's illness.
lowe'en dance ntthc Parish House,
"Millions Now Living Will Never Mondny night. Good music, refresh­
J n ie " —Free Rible Lecture, Star Thc- ments, favors. Everybody welcome.
latre, Sunday, October 30, 7:30 p. m. Como out nnd enjoy yourself. Two
18G-2tc dollars for yourself nnd ladies.

iHllEl

[BllAllPlIfimiSllTl

mTT'.TJu.

ORANG1 COUNTY LOAN
LESSEN DAMAGE
TO CITRUS FRUITS

L.
B. Curry, of Now Smyrna, has
been the guest of his daughter, Mrs.
W. E. Prevntt, and family, this week.
Mrs. J. C. Vaughn Is In Green Cove
Springs visiting her daughter, Mrs. Friday:
7:30 p. m. The Temple Boy Scouts. 1
E.‘ J. Mulligan, nnd will visit cousins
In Jacksonville before returning home.
PARISH HOUSE KALENDAK.
Her cousins havo just returned from
Friday, Oet, 28, U. D. C., N. ,do V.
Englnnd, Mrs. Vaughn's girlhood
Howard Chapter, 3:30 p. m.
home.
Monday, Oct. 31, Night. Holy Cross
Frank Dnssell, formally of CnrthMen’s Club dance.
ndge, N. Y., 1s here spending somo Tuesday, Nov. 1, 8 p. m., “Measuring
time nt the W. W. Drossor homo, help­
Party,” S. Agnes Guild.
ing Mr, Drossor keep batch during Friday, Nov. 4, G. F. S., Party, M rs.!
O.he
Mrs. D.'s absence In tho north.
John Leonard!, directress.
Tho Snmuol Schwartz home on Lako
Golden w..s broken into nnd ransneked CANT SUE COLLECTOR’S! SUC­
O n t for m lldnM J,V IR G IN IA
by thieves recently nnd also a work
CESSOR.
O ne for m rilow neo, B U R L E Y
shop. It is impossible to know whnt
was taken, as Mr. S., Is not here.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 27.—Persons
O ne fo r a r o m a . T U R K I S H
paying
federal
taxes
under
protest
j
Mrs. Buyers arrived here from
The finest tobacco* p e r f e c t ^
Frankfort, Ky., Inst week, nnd was cannot bring .proceedings to recover
ag ed a n d b l e n d e d
met by Louis Klnnrd, and they were such taxes against a successor of the
collector
to
whom
the
taxes
were
paid
Immediately married nnd havo gone
to housekeeping in Mr. Klnard's home tho supremo court hold today in de­
in Cameron City, tho house formally ciding a case brought by tho Indiana
owned by Dr. nnd Mrs. W. A. Mlnlck. Steel Co. Justice Holmes, In announc­
Mrs. Klnnrd Is well known here as she ing the opinion stated that the action
was a resident on Besrdall avenue against the incumbent collector, be­
several years. They havo the good ing agninst him personally and not in
wishes of many friends. A large his official capacity it could not be
party from the west side came and maintained.
gave them a rousing chnrivari the
NIGHT CLASSES OPEN
LIBRARY MEETING.
next evening.
ON TUESDAY NIGHT.
Mrs. Margaret Marshall, in sending
Tho
Sanford
Library
Association
her renownl cnch year for her home
All carpenters, contractors, wood
paper in Edenburg, Scotland, receives will havo a business motting Monday
night.
Ail
members
and
all
thoso
in­
workers,
nnd masons, interested in the
a spray of Scotch heather os acknowl­
terested are requested to bo present. course in architectural drawing and
edgement nnd pleasant reminders of
blue print reuding, offered by tho Fed­
home, besides Scotland and Florida.
PIANO OWNERS NOTICE
eral Board of Vocational Education,
Mrs. M., has lived in Australia, Now
are requested to meet with the in­
Zealand, Englnnd, nnd sevoral points
Will be in town for n limited time. structor, D. D. Whitcomb, on Tues­
In the United States.
For immediate service phono—
day, November 1st, nt 8 p. m., nt the
The storm hns not done as much
MACK THE TUNER
Sanfor dhlgh school. This course Is
dnmngc here ns it was feared it might lR210tp
Valdez Hotel
offered free to those engaged in the
although thero is some had places
building trades, nnd it is to be hoped
seen In ninny fields where wntcr Is
The Inventor who sayB tho day is that n lnrgc number will be enrolled.
standing. Soil washed out In gullies
Classen meet twice a week for a
coming when congress will never as­
where the soil wns loose nnd covered
semble, tho members being able to two hour porlod, nnd tho weekly
newly set out smnll plants. Much
vote and debate by wireless tele­ schedule of classes will be decided by
work will have to he done over again. phone, forgets tho mileago allowance. tho class members on Tuesday night.
A good many telephone poles nrc
It in planned to make this course
down on Benrdnll nvenue, nnd n limb
ns
interesting nnd instructive ns pos­
A man claims to have discovered a
Mown off n large onk tree wns car­ weed that will euro the tobacco habit, sible, dealing nt first with the more
ried some distance nnn landed In front We know what it Is but wo don’t olcmentnry phnses of architecture and
of n house on B. J. Stenrling’s farm. know tho name. They make five-rent ndvnnees ns tho clnss progresses, In­
to details of lettering, masonry, fram­
Mr. Corley had n large clump of bn- cigars of it.
ing, interior nnd exterior finish, nnd
nann trees loaded with fn.it blown
“Millions Now Living Will Never construction, nnd oppllod designs.
down nnd some palms were uprooted Die"—Free Bible Lecture, Stnr ThcRemember thnt the course is nbat various places. Wo hnvo rain ntro, Sunday, October 30, 7:30 p. m. solotely freo to tradesmen.
180-2tc
186-2tp.
enough now for some time.

(Coatlnatd (mu Pic* Oto)
that the harm done was not oa great
ns he anticipated.
It appears from tho wires received
by tho Thomas people, from local rep­
resentatives of tho Florida Citrus Ex­
change in almost nil pnrts of tho cit­
rus section, that the loss of fruit has
been heaviest in the areas which
chiefly produce into varieties of grapefruit nnd oranges. To a consider­
able degree, the growth into larger
sizes of that portion of the crop re­
maining on the trees, by tho time it
is ready for market, may prove a com­
pensating factor of considerable im­
portance.
There is little doubt in tho mind
of Jefferson Thomas, he said today,
that growers who have fruit to sell
during the remainder of tho season
will obtain materially hotter prices
than might otherwise have been se­
cured, In conscquonco of tho losses
due to the gale. The most recent esti­
mates on the grapefruit and orange
crop, made before tho storm, indicat­
ed a total production for the state,
little, is any, larger than than that of
last year.
Consuming demand un­
questionably will be increased, owing
to tho scarcity of deciduous fruits.
With the reduction in tho crop due to
the storm, supply Is likely to bo much
under demand and prices accordingly
higher for citrus of good quality, pro­
perly packed and Intelligently market­
ed. Offering to consumers of damaged
stock will react unfavorably on the
price situation and it is likely the
leading marketing agencies will refuso
to handle “drops."
At noon, Frank Ray Anderson,
manager of tho Tampa office of tho
Thomas Advertising Service, telogrnphed that today thero Is a decid­
edly optimistic feeling in citrus circles
thero as to the hurricane dnmpigo,
Mr. Anderson's wire stated that C.
E. Stewart, Jr., business manager of
the Florida Citrus Exchange, return­
ed this morning from n motor trip
down the enst coast, going into Tampa
through Volusin, Orange, Polk nnd
Hillsborough counties, all henvy pro­
ducers of grapefruit nnd oranges. Mr.
Stewart now estimates that tho total
loss to the exchange holdings will not
exceed three hundred thousand boxes
nnd expresses himself ns believing
that oven this low flguro will probnhly ho reduced by later reports. As
it has been expected thnt the exchange

ThreeInseparables

2 0 fo rI5 *

*111 ’JEULIK*-

m a e r n m o n E

[CllHHullRlICltSl

llO.'OO A . M .
[m E E E ts ira

m

7:30 P. M.

Special Meetings at the Baptist Church

RALPH STODGHILL, Singer

[GEORGE HYMAN, Preacher
m u

«.

■J3EEL t u n a

[c m B itc iE )

HALLOWE’EN DANCE—I1IG TIME.
IKIWAMS CLUB
ENDORSE FLAG DAY.
Tho Ilnllowo’en Dance at the Par­
Mrs. Henry Wight proposes through ish House Monday night, promises a
Ithe civic department of tho Woman’s good time for everybody. Good mu­
Iflul) to conduct a flag enmpnign In sic, refreshments, fnvors. Two dol­
lorder that a (lag may float from cnch lars yourself nnd lady. All are wel­
Iresldcnco and business house on Ar- come.
| misticc day.
The Kiwanis Club endorsed this
HOY SCOUTS MEETING.
Imovemcnt and pledged loyal support.
Troop three, Temple Boy Scouts,
The Popular Market will move to will meet atthn Baptist Temple, Fri­
jthej new building on Park nvenuo day night. The meeting will begin nt
riicre they will have two telephones 7 o’clock sharp, instead of nt 7:30, ns
Jto take care of tho business nnd glvo previously reported. This is an im­
Ithe people good service. They have portant meeting, ns there nrc only
■marked down prices on nil their gods two meetings before Armistice Day.
IMting ready for this move. 188-ltc All tho boys of tho Baptist Sundnyy
school between 12 nnd 17 years of ago
If you are not careful of your enun- are urged to be present.
FAY LOSSING.
Iciation, it sounds ns though you wero
p rin g this is n freak country.
Wed. &amp; Fri.

ROASTED, GROUND AND PACKED

FRESH DAILY AT SANFORD
In One Pound Tin Cans
-BY-

Bel-Jar Coffee Co. |
FOR SALE BY ALL GROCERS

would market this year approximate­
ly fifty per cent of the total crop nnd
its holdings therefore would be be­
tween five nnd six million boxes, the
manager’s estimate of loss would indiento that n five per cent figure for
the entire state is conservative.
Tho following statement wns is­
sued by Chnea &amp; Co., carlot distribu­
tors of citrus fruits and vegetables,
Jacksonville:
Tho reports that reach us from all
over the principal citrus and vegeta­
ble sections of tho state indicate thnt
the loss and damage to the crops ns n
whoje, have been greatly exaggerated
From reports now nt hand, wo under­
stand that the greatest damage to
citrus interests is confined to n limit­
ed territory in the immediate vicinity
of Tampa, which appears to have been
the hardest hit by the storm.
As the Btorm mnde its path across
tho state, the percentage of damage
diminished, and wo now have advices
from some of tho largest producing
sections that there has been no dam­
age to tho fruit by the wind) and the
greatest amount of good has resulted
from tho needed rain.
In tho Snnford territory, which is
tho largest producing vogotnblo sec­
tion of tho state, it is estimated thnt
about 16 percent of tho early lettuce
plantings, have been damaged nnd
some damage to tho celery fields.
However, the growers are replanting,
nnd there will be no shrinkage in the
acreage or tho output. The only possi­
ble dnmago in some fields will, be
caused by a loss of fertilizer, due to
the heavy rainfall, and it may be ne­
cessary to uso additional fertilizer to
replace this loching.
The loss to the track growers will
consists of the cost of the additional
fertilizer, plus the cost of labor and
replanting. The benefits of the rain
to the citrus interests will no doubt
moro than offset the average dam­
age from w in l—J. C. Chase, in Jack­
sonville Metropolis.
“Mliliona Now Living Will Never i
Die"—Free Bible Lecture, Star The­
atre, Sunday, October 30, 7:80 p. m. '
180-2tc |

I

fTM'f-rv*

Hallowe’en night iB the night to em
joy yourself nnd you could not enjoy
yoursclf nny better than by attending
the Men’s Clug dance nt the Parish
House. Good music, refreshments,
favors, tho Hallowe’en spirit and the
spirit of the dance. Everybody wel­
come.

AUTO EXCHANGE

MARATHON RACE.

DANCE HALLOWE’EN NIGHT.

The Boy Scouts nre to have a MnrnDependable
thon Rnco on Armistice Day. An nrrungement will bo mnde with the city
for tho uso of certain streets. -Two
Practically New
mileH will be tho ran. Six valunblo
Chevrolet .....
prizes will bo given. Only registered
Scouts may enter.
RALPH STODGniLL, COMING.

Service

One 1919 Ford Touring Car, In
first class shape,
(POOC
at only ........................y u u v

SPECIAL MEETING
AT BAPTIST CHURCH.
it is with plcnsure wo announce the
-------| coming to Sanford for ten days of
Liberal Terms on Both these Bargains
There is to bo an 8-day special meet-j Mr, Itnlph StodghllL He Is one of
ing begninnig Sunday, October 30, and Alabama’s best singers, a groat cho­ Repair Work by Experienced
Mechanics at Right Prices
closing November fl. Dr. Hyman will*rtfs lender, haratono sololBt. Ho will
be the prencher nnd Mr. Rnlph Stodg- j assist Dr. George Hyman nttho Baphill, of Alabama, will havo chargo of , tist tempe in n meeting beginning
the music,
■next Sunday.
At the Foot of First St.

Economy Grocery
319 FIRST STREET, BISHOP BLOCK

R egular Weekly List ol Genuine B argains
SUGAR, WITH ORDERS, PER LB...... ................................................... 5c
NEW FLORIDA SYRUP,
per gallon ................................
BEST SELF RISING FLOUR,
24-lbs for .‘................................
PILLSBURY’S BE^T FLOUR,
24-lbs. for ...............................
BEST SELF-RISING FLOUR,
12-lbs. for .....;...........................
FRESH GRITS and fyEAL, 3c,
or 10-lbs. for ...........................

s

PILLSBURY’S BEST FLOUR,
12-lbs. f o r .................................
10-lbs. IRISH OR SWEET
POTATOES, for .....................
15-lbs IRISH OR SWEET
POTATOES, for .....................

..75c
$1.25
$1.45
..68c
25c
..75c
..45c
..58c

MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE, per
OA_
lb., Saturday only .............................. 04C
CREAMERY BUTTER,
Per lb.
BEST WHITE BACON,
Per Ib.
BEST SMOKED BACON,
Per Ib.
PICNIC HAMS,
Per lb.
GOVERNMENT CANS OF
BACON, 12-lbs. net ..........
REGULAR HAMS,
Per lb.
V. C. TALL CREAM,
Per can

REGULAR 5c SOAP, 10 BARS for only

50c
14*c
22c
19c
$2.33
29c
12*c
25c

i

�— , •«s " .:

. 'V

&gt;ao&gt; four

»V

" v , :

DAILY 1

BUY A FLAG
;*This Forward
MOVEMENT
IS ENDORSED
Looking Wank ij
ENDORSED BY BOARD OF GOV­
ERNORS OF THE CANFORD
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

is jealous of its reputation for Ser­
vice and seeks to justify it anew with
each individual problem presented
to it.
The knowledge and experience of
this bank is available to its friends
and patrons at all times, regardless
of the size of their transactions.

Sanford will be appropriately dec­
orated on Armistice day if tho move­
ment outlined by Mrs. Henry Wight,
representing tho Civic Department of
tho Woman’s Club, receives the sup­
port of the citizens of Sanford.
It is the Intention of tho Woman's
Club to purchase two hundred Ameri­
can flags, 3x6, and sell them through
a house to house campaign. These
flogs will be of government bunting,
the stripes and stars sewed In. A
very attractive price of $1.76 has been
secured and individuals will have the
opportunity of purchasing one of
theso flags for this price.
This commendable movement re­
ceived the unanimous endorsement of
the Board of Governors at their meet­
ing today, and it was voted to assist
the Woman’s Club In placing these
flags in tho homes of Sanford people.
Sanford has been conspicuous by Us
lack of this outward evidence of pa­
triotism, and tho failure to display the
nntionnl colors on important holidays
hnB been the cause of comment on the
part of strangers from sections where
Old Glory is flown to tho breezo on
every occasion. This outward evi­
dence of patriotism on tho pnrt of tho
etzens of Sanford wns partculariy notccnblo on Flag Day nnid tho Fourth
of July. A count of tho flags dis­
played on these days showed there
were but two outsido of tho one which
is raised dnily over tho fedora] build­
ing. The appnrcnt reason for this con­
dition Is duo to the fact that very few
families in tho city own a flag, It
is a mighty fino thing when tho ma­
jority of citizans in a city own and
display nn Amoricnn flag. Tho Wom­
an's Club of Snnford nro to ho com­
plimented on this patriotic mova and
it is hoped that every citizen, when
nppronched, will avail thcmselvcB of
the opportunity to purchase a good
flag at n most reasonable figure. Ar­
mistice day will ho a most appropri­
ate occasion to fling the grand old
emblem to the breeze.
The Board of Governors, realizing
that patriotic ideals aro more forcib­
ly instilled during the enrly stages of
life, rccommcnne.1 to the Educational
Committee that steps bo taken with
tho proper schol authorities to have
the nntionnl nnthem sung nt tho be­
ginning of the dnily school exorcises.
There is, in all probability, a lurge
per centngo of our population that do
not know tho words of tho national
air. Thu inculcation of patriotic
ideals in the minds of tho young peo­
ple nnd respect for the emblem nnd
traditions of the nation in a positive
antidote for any Bolshevik or radical
propaganda with which they mny
come in contact.
Tho buy-n-flng
movement is also endorsed by tho
American Legion, and tho local Roy
Scouts will assist tho Woman’s Club
in mnking the canvns.

IT he Seminole County ij
Bank

*

M-

• STRENGTH

::
PROGRESS
4% INTEREST PAID

SERVICE ;;

b it

SO C IE T Y
MRS. FRED DAIGER, Society Editor,
.
Phone 217-W

SOCIAL CALENDAR
Friday—Mothers’ Club will meet at
tho Parish House at 3:30 p. m.
Saturday—Children’s Story Hour will
be hold at Central Park at four
o'clock.
Fridny—Christian Endeavor of tho
Presbyterian Church will entertain
at a Hallowe’en pnrty in honor of
MI sb Mny Ferran Thrasher nnd Mr.
J. D. Woodruff, ut tho social rooms
at tho church.
Friday—N. de V. Howard Chapter U.
D. C., will meet nt tho Parish House
at 3:30 p. m.
Friday—Mrs. Forest Lake will enter­
tain tho members of tho Every
Week Bridge Club nt her homo on
Park avenue, at 3 o’clock.
Friday—Mrs. It. E. Tolar and Miss
Snrn Muriel will entertain nt a
Hallowe'en pnrty for Miss Geral­
dine Muriel, at tho homo of tho
former on Mngnolin nvenue, at
8:30 p. m.
Saturday—Mrs. E. M. Galloway will
entertain nt Bridge, complimentary
to MIhh May Thrashor an nttrnctivo bride-elect of November,
Monday—Tho Business and Profes­
sional Women’s Club will have a
■board meuting at the Woman’s Club
Monday night at 7:30 o’clock.
Tuesday—Tho hoard of the Woman's
Club will have its monthly meeting
Tuesday, November 1 at 10 o'clock
at the Woman’s Club.
HON TON BRIDGE CLUB
Mrs. Robert Hines was the charm­
ing hostess yesterday afternoon when
ahe entertained the members ut the
Bon Ton Bridge Club at her home on
Park avenue.
Tho Ilailowe'en suggestions were
bcnutifully carried out in the decora­
tions. Pumpkins, cats, witches and
Jack-o’-lanterns wore much in evi­
dence.
Several rubbers of bridge were play­
ed during (lie afternoon and the prize
for high score, two Maderla Dollies,
were won by Miss May Thrasher,
The Hallowe’en idea was carried
out In the refreshments rervctl at the
conclusion of the card game. Apples,
stuffed with salad, cheese sandwiches,
hot chocolate ami tho favors were
wltchc.1' bonnets, filled with salted
nuts, concealed in each bonnet was
the guest's fortune.
Among those enjoying Mrs. Hines
cordial hospitality were: Mrs. Ed.
Butts, Miss May Thrasher, Miss Nor­
ma Herndon, MI sh Agnus Dumas, Mrs.

A. R. Key, Mrs. Ben Caswell, Mrs.
Fred Wight nnd Mrs, C. R. Kirtloy.
ST| AGNES GUILD ENTERTAINMENT AND MEASURING
PARTY
The members of St. Agnes’ Guild
will give nn entertainment and “Waist
Measuring Party” Tucsduy evening,
from 8 until 11 o’clock nt tho Pnrish
House. Invitations hnvo been mailed
to a number of folks in which tiny
aprons had been inclosed. Those who
hnvo fniled to recelvo one of these
aprons will he provided with same at
tho door.
A very interesting program has
been arranged by Mrs. Julius Tnknch, who will he assisted Ity Mrs. New­
berry reader, and members of the St.
Agnes’ Guild.
Games and other features of spec­
ial interest are in charge of Mrs.
Clifford Peabody, assisted by Mrs.
Raymond Key. Refreshments will
he served and n good time assured all.
A most cordial invitation is extended
to the public, to attend this delightful
evening's entertainment.
FOR BRIDE-TO-ItE
Mrs. W. C. Hill will entertain nt a
bridge party Tuesday afternoon at 3
o'clock nt her homo on Fourth street,
complimenting Miss Mny Ferran
Thrasher, whose engagement to Mr.
J. D. Woodruff was recently an­
nounced, and whose marriage will he
an event of Friday evening.
Mr. nnd Mrs. P. J. Foitner, of Os­
ceola, wero in the city yesterday.
Mrs. Feitnor ans just nrrived nt Os­
ceola from Now York, nnd will spend
tho winter there.
Mrs. W. F. Blackman, of Woklwn
Ranch, wns In tho city today.
The many friends of R. A. Terhoun
arc glad to sec his smiling fnco at the
postoffice again, although Dick is not
smiling much. Ho hns been in bed
for Bcvcrnl days with a badly Bpraincd hack, received in slipping off tho
step nt his home nnd falling, striking
the step with his hack. Ho will not
he able to step as lively as usual for
sonic time, hut ho is glad to ho out
again.

AITOINETD TO STATE
BOARD OF OPTOMETRY.

jg g g g g a g " !".'"^—»i

|i i i

" s a iis B s s s s s K — s s —

HAS MADE HEW PROFESSION

Pair School Shoes /

Philadelphia Woman Make# Excellent
Living Arranging Detail* for Ama­
teur Entertainments.

n

6FREED

A pin-money career, for one Phila­
delphia woman, was the outcome of
her refusal to drill some children for
an Easter program. On previous oc­
casions she bed “thrust upon her” the
responsibility of planning and prepar­
ing various kinds of entertainments,
home-talent plays, cantatas, etc., for
different organizations. As this work
required much time and strength, she
was offered remuneration for her serv­
ices and accepted the money. Now
she hns work ahead tn that line all the
jeer round. She assumes the responsi­
bility of miscellaneous programs, plays,
ate., for all ages, for Sunday schools,
lodges, dubs, etc. She arranges time
and place of practice, end assigns
parte to each on* In drills, plays, dia­
logues, cantate, solo, duet, quartette,
chorus, etc. Superintendents In the
schools often call en her to help In
such lines, and various organizations
of tho city. Much of the work, as the
practicing, la done In her own home.
She receives from 20 to 40 cents an
hoar. Free-will offerings from a
church organization hnvo also been
generous, ns the manner of paying her.

RULES

ON MONDAY, AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 31
A t noon, three representatives of the store
will visit the School and distribute number­
ed tickets that read as follows:
Find the girl or boy with a num­
ber the same as yours and both
come to our store and each of you
will get a pair of .........................

SCHOOL SHOES FREE
DISCOUNT
ON A L L KREIDER
“ P O L L Y ANNA ”
SCHOO L SHOES

Duetlese Glands In Collage.
Ductless glands, said to he responsi­
ble for epilepsy, feehlo-mlndedness,
cancer and other diseases, will be the
subject of special study at the Uni­
versity of Pennsylvania. A chair In
endocrinology, Hie branch of medical
science denting with ductless glands,
hns been endowed nt the university,
and It Is said to be the first ever es­
tablished in the world.
Experiments will tie conducted at
the ear, eye, nose nnd throat hospttnln
of Philadelphia, the various clinics
under control of the university medi­
cal school and other places.
So Important do the physicians of
the American Therapeutic society regnrd this step that the chairman of
tho soclety’a council was Instructed
to appoint a committee to formulate
a curriculum for tho teaching of en­
docrinology to grnduntea nnd post­
graduates In every medical school in
the United States.
*

STARTING MONDAY, OCTOBER 31

S A N F O R D , FLA.
First Nat'l Bank Annex
"T h e Family Shoe Store”

fa d r-A t*

SEE 0U R W ,N D 0W

Comforting.
A Booster minister's wife was get­
ting ready to go to the hospital for HURRICANE STILL
HOING BUSINESS
an operation. Her husband and chil­
OUT IN ATLANTIC.
dren lind been solicitous of her nil
day, everything around the house had
been very quiet until late that evening,
WASHINGTON, Oct. 28.—The trop
when sbe heard tho soven-ycnr-old
ical
storm hns continued to move ensttwins qunrrcltng. She asked her hitsj
ward
and it wsb apparently central
band to see wlmt It wns about, nnd he
summoned them Into the room to glvo , last night about latitude 28 degrees
them a lecture on worrying their and longitude 31 degrees, the weathor
mother.
bureau reported.
“It was all your fault, daddy,” Florn
retorted.
Floyd a (aided his bend nnd the min­ FIND ROUSE GUILTY
ister asked what he hnd dime. Im­
OF MURDERING MAN.
agine the feeling when Floyd replied:
“Mr. Long said ho didn't hcu where
SNOWHILL..N. C., Oct. 28.—Guil­
you would gel another wife if mother ty o fmurder In th cflrst degree, wns
dh , mid 1 said you would want Miss
E, nnd Flora said you would want the verdict of n jury In the case of
her Sunday school teacher because Wright Rouse, negro, charged jointly
you called her your helping hand nil with Mrs. Sarah Whitley of Wnltonthe time.”—Indianapolis News.
burg nnd Thomas Hnys with murder
In connection with tho killing of tho
S t o p p e d at L a s t .
woman’s husband, several months ago.
As little Harry came in tin* hack
Judge Daniels has not yet sentenced
door, he wus saying to himself, "Well,
Rouse.
I got the heat of him that time."
Ills mother happened to he In the
kitchen. "Hurry, have you and the
The unemployed might be set to
neighbor hoy been lighting again?" work to And normalcy.
she asked.
Hurry was quick to reply: “Not
this lime. You know when he was
over here last week we made a kite
and you made me let him take It
home with him. Yesterday we made
a birdhouse and he got to take It
home. So iiiilny we dug holes and
lie didn't lake them home with him."

|

%£*-&lt;btkr

SPECIAL
To Reduce the Cost
of Motoring

30^ ’ Non:.. $10.25
30XA ....... 8.75
These Tires nre Firsts and
Carry the Factory
Guarantee

FRANK AKERS
TIRE CO.
VULCANIZING
1st nnd Elm Avo. Phono 447-W

LOOK FRIENDS, REAL MONEY

TALLAHASSEE, Oct. 28—Tho gov­
ernor this morning appointed the fol­
lowing to he members of the state
board of optometry: J. II. Keen,
t I’AII) for CITY I.OT or LOTS in DESIRAIll.E LOCATION
4*
Jacksonville, to succeed himself; H.
F lig l.to of th e F u tu re .
if you Itave a bargain see me at once
W. Grady, nmpn, to succeed H. H. ;
"I to you tuTevr the mi!i&lt; •&lt;,*,’|e Is
Lough.
the lust novd in U'liuspotitiieni?''

|$$$ CASH DOLLARS $$$

"No,” rep"* d the far--t’gl.ted

-III*

W . V. W H E E L E R

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Symes, of Winter xen. "Some of iliese days wo are
Park, were In the city today on busi­ all going l&lt;&gt; wear wings outdoors and
115 I'urk Avenue
*
Phono 554-W
M t s . T. W. Prcyntt nnd mother, ness ami visiting friends.
hung ’em up on tin* Imttuck In the
Mrs. Littlcr, of Geneva, wore In tho
ball when we are not going anywhere +&lt;•+++•;•■!■ +&lt;•♦+•&gt;❖ ++♦* 4*•F+r *++++*M"fr+'4*+++♦
*♦♦♦4"♦'
“Millions Now Living Will Never lit puiileulur."—Hl{'inlngluim Agecity today.
Dio”—Free Ulblo Lecture, Star Tho- Hcridd.
Get your ticket for tho Haltnwo'on atro, Sunday, October 30, 7:30 p. m.
180-2tc
Known hero to "unknown hero."
Dnnco nt the Parish House, nt tho
“How do you do it? ”
store of T. J. Miller &amp; Son.
The mnny friends of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald
Whitcomb nro giving them a
That agricultural bloc is apparent­
SIX PAIRS OF SHOES
warm
welcome
homo
after
nn
nhsonco
ly
a whole forest.
GIVEN AWAY AT LLOYD’S
of several montliH in Illinois where
WHERE YOUR PATRONAGE IS APPRECIATED
Lloyd’s Shoe Store has an adver­ they spent their monoymoon,
■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a tisement in this issue calling attention
417 Snnford Avenue
Phone 122
“Millions Now Living Will Never
to tho fact that they nro giving away
six pairs of school shoes to school Die”—Free Bible Lecture, Star The­ :: A NICE ASSORT- !
children next Monday, This Is some­ atre, Sunday, Octobor 30, 7:30 p. m.
MENT OF
18fl.2tc
HERE’S A FEW OF OUR REGULAR EV­
thing to rend about nnd you should
look Into tho ninttcr at onco. Sco tho
The honeymoon is ovor when he boERYDAY PRICES
ad and get tho shoos.
gins to hint that she looks just ns
BEST FLORIDA MEATS, SIRLOIN AND •
O C«
well in cotton stockings.
PORTERHOUSE STEAKS, per lb...............................Li*)l
CHEAPER MEATS.
ROAST, EXCELLENT QUALITY,
1 CThere comes a time in tho life of
Brown’s Market bus an advertise­ every man when he wishes somebody
Per lb................................................................................ l i l t
ment in this issuo that will make tho would steal his car nnd get snfoly
BEEF RIBS,
or
:: Such as Hats, Caps,
housewives sit up nnd take notice. All away with it.
2
lbs.
for
.........................................................................
meats are quoted at prices that will
Hoods, Masks, Domifill Brown’s mnrkct with ardors Satur­
For ofTlco supplies, stationery, etc, :: noes, Decorative PaWe have been in business* jj day morning. Read the ml in todny's come to the Herald office.
Fine Venl Cutlets, lb...35c
Corn-fed Florida Pork
:: per, Place Cards and
paper end savo monoy.
Chops, lb....................23c
Fine
Veal
Chops,
lb....
30c
one month and we have
Teasing prohibition agents mani­ * invitations at-Western
Pork Spare
Fine Veul Roast, lb.....25c
CHEAPER GROCERIES,
fests a low form of humor. It is al­
done fine. We thank you ■
Ribs,
1b.......................20c
ways heartless to ridicule tho impo­
Fine Veal Breast, lb....15c
Smoked Country Sau­
Economy
Grocery,
in
tho
Bishop
tent.
Western
Pork Chops, lb 30c
for your part in it.
sage, lb.
............... 25c
block, hns an advertisement in this
Frankfurt
Sausage,
lb.
..25c
Sausage,
lb....................
15®
issuo quoting prices on groceries that
Post cards—local views—lc each at
,
will make the pooplo sit up nnd take (Iornld—by the pound—16c,
-FINE FAT FRIERS
notice. Read tho advertisement and
Wo aro paying, also, too much tq
Prompt Delivery and Service that Will Please You
“Foot o f First St.»
go to tho Economy Grocery In tho
wet our whlitle.
Bishop block.

I

HOF-MAC
BATTERYI

BROWN’S MARKET

HALLOWE’EN
GOODS

MOBLEY’S
DRUG STORE

illfaW

. r : i id u tWVki
fe te *

�h r

-1
Ultl#H*ppeBJB!«
Mention of

Matter* I* Brief
pwiobiI Item*
•f latoreet

In ana About
S Hie City &lt;£

Dr. end Mrs. L, D. Rhodes and
family, of Tennllle, Ga., arrived yes­
terday and will make Sanford their
home. They are at the Montezuma at
present.

S i a u r r of the
Floating Small
Talka Succinctly
Arranged for
Herald Reader*

The Ladles of the Presbyterian
Church will hold their Christmas Basaar, Dec. 2 and 3, 1921. 167-o.a.w.tfc

* * # *

:

th e w e a th er

I For Florida: Generally fair
* tonight and Saturday.

* : SANFORD’S :
: TEMPERATURE :

*
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#

I a o » * * * » * *
Army p e e r s ' ahoea just received
, t Thrasher &amp; Garner’*.
183-4tc

C C. Beasley, of Lakeland, waa in
tie city yesterday mingling with
friends and attending to buaineaa.
Have your wntchea and Jewelry re­
tir e d at McLaulin’a. Two first claaa
,watch makers. Prompt aorvlce.
140-tfc
Calloway Gillian, of Tampa, was
among the out-of-town viators In this
city yesterday.

Army rain coats at Thrasher &amp;
Carncr’s.
183-4tc
Sun is out. Glorious Florida weath­
er again. Whnt a difference from tho
London fog of tho last few days.
Kings for Armistlco Day or any
other day. Regulation flag, 3x5,
$1.75.—Civic Department, Woman’s
Club.

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---

Mrs. J. W. Roe and little daughter,
Lesley Sonia, arrived Monday from
Miami, for an extended visit to tho
formers’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. A.
Torhoun.

«

Looks Ilka wenther was clenrIng up but wo hate to mako
any moro statements about
what it Is going to do i - ovcry tlmo wo say tho weumei is
clearing it rains and every
timo we say it will rain it
does not. However, as we pen
these lines just after a big
breakfast of bread and water—mostly water—wo can sea
whero tho sun used to shine
and it looks like it might
shine.
5:40 A. M. OCTOBER 28
Maximum ....................... 80
Minimum ....................... 04
Rango ..........
08
Barometer ..................... 30.05
Rain ......... ........................... 10
N. W. and cloudy.

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Princess Pat?

183-tfc

Tho many friends of Mrs. J. B.
Colder will be glad to learn that she
is recovering from an operation at a
hospital at Orlando and will soon ho
able to como home.
“EXIDE” BATTERIES—Our Pullmnn cars, airplanes, submarines,
telephones and great 7,000 mile wire­
less stations are equipped with tho
master “EXIDE" Batteries, tho bat­
tery is tho lifo of your car, get tho
best. Wo rcchnrgo and repair all
makes.—Ray Brothers, Phone 548.
170-tf-c

______________________ ._____________

The effig Water Battle
is something that every one in Sanford has not seen. It will be a treat
to those that have never witnessed one to see how these two teams bat­
tle with one another using the large fire hose, with the full pressure
turned on. It’s thrilling.

oAndIt Is Just As Wig A Treat
to walk into our store and look at the nice new suits and the nice new
hats and see the nice new price, especially if you have been looking
around any before coming to our place.
WE CATER TO THE BEST—THAT WANT THE BEST—AT POPU­
LAR PRICES.

Mrs. Dick Fox (ncc Annie Leo
Caldwell) nml attractive little daugh­
*
# ter Evelyn, arrived Inst evening from
# # # # # # # # # #
Dallas, Texns, and will spend Borne
time here with her pnrents, Mr. and
Buy your flngs for Armistice Day Mrs. D. A. Caldwell,
from tho Civic Department of tho
Womnn's Club. 3x5 regulation flag,
$400 cash and balance
$1.75.

Army pnntn for $1.00 pair.—
Thrasher
&amp; Garner.
183-4tc
Cnll and sen our lino of nrmy gods,
complete line.— Thrnshor &amp; Garner.
Ernest Moore, of Marshvillc, N. C.(
183-4tc
arrived last night nnd is the guest
Dennis Ford, of Lakeland, repre­ of his uncle nnd aunt, Mr. nnd Mrs.
senting the Central Shoo Co., of S t W. J. McBride at their homo on Pal­
Louis, was in the city yesterday call­ metto avenue.
ing on his local customers.
Tho Pipo Orgnn Club will hnve n
Hallowe’en Lawn Supper with Miss
Princess Pat?
183-tfc Martha Fox nnd Mrs. Forrest Gatchel, hostesses, nt their homes, corner
Miss Mnyme Mero has returned Onk nnd Eighth, Thursday, October
182-4tc
from Orlando where she spent a week 27th.
as the guest of Miss Mildred Dickson
CHICKEN DINNER, Sunday noon
nt Jefferson Conrt,
nnd evening, Gray Gables, on tho
Phono 491.
The Ladies of the Episcopal Church beach, Seabreeze, Fla.
Free
bath
houses
74-Frl-St-0m
will hold their Bazaar and Supper,
December 1st and 2nd in tho Parish
House.
171-tfc
Princess Pat?

%EDUCTIO^i
EFFECTIVE TODAY, OPEN MODELS
•J

jk*pe

ip

"•'ii
____

Saturday only, brooms extra good,
80c,—Populnr Market.
180-lte

With Simmons, Rndcliffo nnd Vnssar
collectors all in the field nt once,
182-tfc
mnny n woman must feci compensa­
tions in having n college education.

MAKE FINAL

____

Sanford, F la .

Mr. nnd Mrs. Fred Dnigcr, Sr., left
this morning for ^helr homo in Tam­
pa after spending tho past ten days
hero with relatives. They were ac­
companied homo by R. T. Thrnshor.
182-tfc The Dnigor homo in Tampa was dam­
aged considerably by the recent
The Men’s Club of the Parish House storm.
cannot sing without their hooks and
Fresh cranberries, celery, lettuce,
if those folks who have any of those
books will bring them back it will cucumbers, etc.—Popular Mnrkct.
180-lte
again give to the world those mag­
nificent voices thnt compose the Sex­
Fable: Once upon a timo there was
tuple Sextette.
a man who ncquired the daily lmth
habit nnd didn't brag about it oc­
We have a few used casionally.

HUPMOBILE
ii —

r/sf sratff r///jr /s j /ffepeHl

in 10 monthly install­
ments for Chalmers 5
passenger, 1920 model.
—B. &amp; O. Motor Co.

cars that we are offering
at Real Bargains. Call
and look them over.—B.
&amp; O. Motor Co.

"

SM tA Uv'

250

—

P. O. B. DETROIT, MICH.

With this Reduction and latest improvements, the HUPMOBILE now
stands atI the very peak of good motor* car values.
TOURING C A R .......................................................... $1,250
ROADSTER .............................. ................................. $1,250
SEDAN ....................................... ................................. $2,150
COUPE ........................................ ................................. $2,100
AU Prices F. O. B. Detroit, Mich

&amp; O. Motor Co.
i

HUPMOBILE

FIVE ROOM BUNGALOW
Located within fifty feet of brick street to
be sold this week on very reason­
able terms.
See

A. P. CO NNELLY

CLASSIFIED ADS
Classified advertisements, 5 cents a line. No ad taken for less than
25 cents, nnd positively no classified ads charged to anyone. Cash
must accompany all orders. Count five words to a line and remit ac­
cordingly.
______

Tho Temple Pipe Orgnn Club will
hold its Christmas Bazaar November
m
20th. Tho plnco to bo nnnonced lat­
FOR SALE
er.
In
enso
of
bad
weather,
tho
af­
FORD
TRUCK
for snlo.—West Sldo
:
fair will bo hold indoors.
Grocery.
104-tfc
182-mon-Thur-tfa,
FOR SALA—Best opportunity for
wholesale and retail fish market on
Everything will come out nil right
East coast Building, dock and sidpnt the Washington conference, if the ping platform. Address W. I*. Wil­
yellow races uct white and tho white kinson, New Smyrna, Fla. 10-17-lm
races don’t act yellow.
MIRACLE CONCRETE CO.-Uulliling and pier blocks, cement pockets,
Fresh lino of White Rose and Heinz
canned goods received this week.— cement sidewalks with guarantee to
Populnr Market.
186-ltc last and not break or crack. General
cement contracting. All work guar­
The civil war is over nt InHt, Few anteed. Elm nvenuo between Third
southerners hn\M been heard to re­ and Fourth street.—J. E. Terwilligcr,
178-lni-tfc
joice nt tho defeat of tho "damned Prop. Phono 224-W.
Yankees” in the world series.
FOR SALE—Eight young mules, all
good condition, good workers. Will
sell
one pair of them nt a great bar­
Princess Pat?
183-tfc gain.—G. F. Smith, Sanford or Her­
ald office.
180-tfc
A reformer says he will Inovc heav­
Post cards—locnl views—lc each nt
en nnd earth to enforce prohibition. the Herald office.
He would get better results by mov­
FOR SALE—One practically new
ing Canndn.
s
Reo Hpecdwagon, one new 5 passen­
ger
Ford touring car with truck body,
BATTERIES—America’s first enr
curtains
all around. Will sell either
was regularly equipped with start­
ing nnd lighting Batteries in 1911, one.—Sanford Mattress Co., Sanford,
185-Otc
this battery was an “EXIDE”, today Fla.
tho mnster battery of tho world. Do
—Get your Scrntch l ads from The
not bo misled by the so-called just ns tho Ilcraid office.
good.—Ituy Brothers, Phone 018.
For office supplies, stationery, etc,,
175-tf-c
mine to (lie Hcrnld office.
A nice assortment of Hallowe'en
Post cards—locnl viewi -lc each nt
Goods, such as Huts, Caps, Hoods, tho Herald office.
Mnsks, Dominoes, Decorative paper,
Place Cards, and Invitations at Mob­ Thu world nows ttic day It happens,
ley’s Drug Store.
18fl-3tc delivered at your door each evening,
15c tho week.

s

s

$450.00 Cash and bal­
ance in 8 monthly in­
stallments, gets the best
used car in Sanford—
Studebaker Special Six.
Looks and runs as good
as new.
Cord Tire
equipment.—B. &amp; O.
Motor Co.
182-tfc

SANFOBD, FLORIDA
Distributors for Seminole and Lake Counties

'

■T-r i^1** ' ini" ■ ■ ....... .. t w i 'i ■Imi-1

■

“Millions Now Living Will Never
Die"—Frde Bible Lecturo, Star Theatro, Sunday, October 30, 7:30 p. m.
180-2tc
Rnvcnwood Coffee is soiling fast ns
It is a good coffeo and tho premiums
are worth while.—Popular Market.
180-ltc
Try s Herald Want Ad today.

WANTED
WANTED—Customers for fresh milk,
morning nnd evening deliveries.—R.
L. Garrison. Phono 3711. 100-St-Tu
WANTED—Team work. Apply M.
Hanson Shoe Shop.
178-13tp
SECOND HAND SHOW CASE
Wanted. Herald Printing Co.
183-5tp.
SALESMAN WANTED—An old lino
LegnI Reserve Life Insurance Co.,
has contract to offer n high class
salesman in this nnd adjoining coun­
ties. Address, Btato manager, P. O.
Box 1137, Jacksonville, Fla. 182-fltp
WANTED—Two unfurnished rooms,
suitable for light housekeeping,
close in. References exchanged. Ad­
dress, "J. N." care of Herald.
180-tf-dh
\V7\NTED—Show case, flvo or six
feet long. Herald Printing Co.
183-Gtp.

WANTED- ”

ZVr°

ING TRADE. ONE TIIAT’8 NOT
AFRAID OF A LITTLE WORK.
APPLY AT THE HERALD PRINTING COMPANY.
tf
Eyes Examined

Glasses Designed

Henry McLaulin, Jr.
OPT. D.

THY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD.

OPTICIAN

FOR RENT

OPTOMETRIST

Graduate Northern Illinois College
FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms. 212 East First St.
Sanford, Flo.
Apply 1004 Elm Avo.
152-tfc
FOR RENT—Suburban home. Call
Edith Lucille Ball
308-J.
107tfc
GOOD LOCATION for a meat market. Teacher Plano and Harmony
Apply to 309 First street. 174-tfc
Graduato Chicago Musical College
FOR RENT—Furnished front rooms.
182-Otp Residence 719 Oak Ave.
200 Park Ave.
Phone 243
FOR RENT—Largo furnished bed
room.
Convenient to boarding
houso. 715 Magnolia ave.
180-0tc
Nations must learn to make re-’
quests.
We have had too much de­
FOR RENT—Bed room, 311 Park avomandatory
control.
nue.
178-tfc
Man learns from bitter experience
FOR RENT—Lower floor of resldonco, furnished, 203 Magnolia that tho rout of all evil is tho one
4
Ave.
185-5tp the dontlst has to excavate for after
breaking off tho tooth.
rooms, sultablo for couple, desiring
Methodists salaries have been re-,
light housekeeping rooms. 219 Oak duced, butthe ministers have not Bet
Ave.
185-tfc a date for aa strike vote.

Ov
4 W ** •We r - w- r W

' V .v

«

' H. -

t

v

a :■.

.

�/

TOO

—

OF TOWN AND FARM

ANOTHER

Statistics Supplied by Department
of Agriculture Rtvsal Rural Con*
dltlins Notably Satisfactory.

Secretary of State Hughes, like
111 Pres
Went Harding, la fond W golf, but be
la not ao often photographed on the
link*. Indeed, thla la the first photo*
graph made of the secretary In hla
golf outfit.
How 8oap la Made Prom Clay.
Clay In the "colloidal form," when
suitably prepared, may be sntlsfactorUy substituted for a largo proportion
(op to about 60 per cont) of the fatty
adds In soap. Matter may roughly he
■aid to be in the "colloidal fonu" when
It Is in nn extremely fine state of sub­
division. As clay la cheap and soap
relatively dear, the substitution of clay
in this form for fatty acids produces
a notable reduction In cost. The clay
Is a real substitute for soap, and not
an adulterant. Hot solutions of colloi­
dal day soap form Jellies on cooling
and thuB this soap not only resembles
ordinary soap In nppeurance, but In
cleansing properties It Is said to be
•Ten better than puro soap. Develop­
ments of thlM Interesting discovery will
be awnltod with Interest.—London Dis­
covery.

THIS RIDE A REAL THRILLER
Ascsnt by Elevator to Summit of
Alpine Psak Worth Going Long
Journey to Take,
For years one of tho most thrilling
Incidents of a visit to the Alps has
been the ascent of the Jungfrau on
the cog-rail mad that stnrtH from
Klelne Scheldegg, at an elevation of
6,711 feet and climbs the mountain­
side st the startling grade of 28 per
cent, or an angle of nhout 22 degrees,
till It reaches Jungfrnujocli, at on ele­
vation of 11,680 feet.
In an Illustrated article In Popular
Mechanics Magnetite la told how It Is
now proposed to add to this wonderful
experience In mountain climbing a still
further thrill, by comparison with which
the former will nppear quite Insipid.
From the present end of the track the
mountain soars another 2,200 feet to
the summit at an elevation of 111,817
feet. Hy means of excavations nnd
tunnels the track will be extended un­
til It reaches a spot In tlis center of
the conical summit directly below Its
highest point. From the end of this
tunnel a shaft will be bored vertically
to the summit Itself, nnd In this shaft
passenger elevators will be Installed,
so that Alpine mountaineers will end
their long thrilling railroad climb with
■n elevator trip like an exaggerated
ride to the top of the WoolwortH
building In New Tork city. The climax
will find them landed at the extreme
summit of one of the highest peaks In
the Alps, with a view of u world of
■now-clad, craggy mountain tops
around them.
'

Use for Exhaust Gss.
At Its point of Issue from the cylin­
der the exhaust has a temperature of
from 800 degrees to 1,000 degrees F„
and consists almost entirely of carbon
dioxide—a colorless and odorless gas.
These properties make U suitable for
carbonising wood, that Is to any, mak­
ing churcosl, and It la now being
utilised for that purpose In France.
The hot gases are caused to traverse
A specially constructed oven, In which
the wood la suitably arranged, by
which rneana the temperature of the
wood lsr raised to about 800 degrees,
which carbonises without burning or
Igniting It. Msny ovens of this type
were Installed during the 'war, In
Algeria and Tunis, with the object of
furnishing ■ substitute for anthra­
cite coal, which was very scarce nnd
dear, for use In enriching low-grade
gas for motor purposes.—Popular
Mechanic* Hugastne.
"Good Neighbors,"
Mrs. Merrlweather and her four
■mall children lived In a little house
In .------ street, where the neighbors
were exceedingly friendly over the
back fence, and made, many back-door
calls. Mrs. M. began to worry about
the children and their surroundings
as they grew older, and moved to an­
other part of the toWn. Shortly after
nfoVtng fcwiy uWUdfhe met oHi of
the old neighbors who Inquired as to
how she llkfid her new home snd the
neighbors. Geraldine, being only .unto

K

ou^l*iJeV horde all Vlght,
but we haven't any good neighbors
noww-they all stAy homa and mind
tbolf own business."—Indianapolis
Mews.
-

.v t ■

""Ilmv are the folks on the farm
faring?" N n &lt;|UCHtlni&gt; that Is nnswerad
with a "Very wall; thunk you," by the
Department of Agriculture at Wash­
ington. Looking Into tho average
American farm method of living, the
depart tnciit llmls that the runners are
Us generously supplied with meat ns
any other class of people, observes
Ous Knrgcr In the Cincinnati Times*
Star. Strnugcly enough, they don't uso
eggs as nlmndnntly ns the folks else­
where, hut they use iimro milk, even
where there Are fewer than the aver­
age number of children.
Rtcept tn Southern states, where
"quick" breads are often preferred,
wheal bread Is the staple. A relath toly large proportion of starchy vegeta­
bles Is consumed and a relatively
stnnll quantity of the green and suc­
culent kinds, In spite of tho fact that
farm families have the host opportun­
ities for growing vegetables at home.
The studies of the home economics
division of tbs Department of Agricul­
ture "bear out the general Impres­
sion," the report states, that on the
average the farmers' fnmlllcs have an
Abundant diet, with enough different
kinds of food to Insure good health.
Whether the food la well cooked and
Attractively served the studies do not
show. The fset that almost twice ae
much cooking fat wna used by the
farm famlllee at by the general aver­
age Indicates that farm housewives
are Inclined to cook too many foods hy
frying. The only recommendation Is
Hint It would be well for the farmers
to use more eggs, more coarse cereals,
and a greater variety of vegetables
and fruits, especially more green
vegetables.

FINEST TRAINING FOR YOUTH
Business Man Tills Why He Would
Hsvs His Son Get Full News­
paper Experience.
"Journalism tenches that results
alone count, that excuses nml equivo­
cations nre failures," writes Henry
Scott, vice president of a paper com­
pany, "Thore Is u discipline In big
newspaper offices Hint does not exist
In the average huslnrss, nnd that dis­
cipline Is based nn the motto, 'No ex­
cuses.' It Is accepted In ordinary
business that when n man Is told to
do something he usunlly expects de­
tailed Instructions. ‘Where do I go.
what do I do, how do I do It, wlint do
I ask, nml wlint will l do then,' are
the questions that show tlielr utter
helplessness and lack of action.
“On the other hand n reporter gets
tills training ns no one else does. He
lenrns to leun on Ills own Initiative.
He gets nn assignment, pinna his cam­
paign and then carries It out without
asking any questions. When un ob­
stacle comes up In the path of the
average young mnn he slops nnd yells
for help. Hut n newspaper man
learns to either go through It, knock
It down or skim around It In n hurry.
He hna teamed that excuses can't be
cashed st the hank.
"If I had a hoy ami wanted to give
him a rigid business training In or­
der that he might hrlng distinction to
himself some day In his profession,
whatever It might he, I would like to
give him nhout two years muter a flrstclnss city editor, the kind Hint comhilts mental murder three or four
times n night."

.i____ ____ '

s

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_ .

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•

•’

:

SHOE DAY
AT

Thrasher &amp; Garner’s
The object: To express In terms of DOLLARS and CENTS our APPRECIATION of your
past business, and also to induce new customers to our store. Our stock of Shoes is marked
in plain figures and on on HONEST margin of profit, and we believe our Shoe prices, as a
whole, are lower than the prices of most shoe stores. Nevertheless, for

One Day Only,
SATURDAY,

"Millions Now Living Will Never
Die," is the subject announced for a
free blblo loeture to bo given in the
Star theatre, Sunday evening, October
30, beginning at 7:30 o’clock. Tho
spenker will bo J. Edward Grimes, of
Jacksonville, who comes to Sanford
under tho auspices of the Internation­
al Bible Students Association.
This topic ,unusual and startling as
It may mo,. Is not a catch-phrase, bible
students ssy, but a most serious de­
claration, claiming as its basis bible
prophecies said to be fulfilling at the
present time. It has been presented
in nearly every city and town in this
country, Canada and Europe, during
the past year, nnd is in harmony with
the teachings of the Association for
more than forty years that the estab­
lishment of God'a kingdom on earth
will be an event«of the near future.
Thoy clnlm that the purpose of that
kingdom Is to abolish death and Btart
the humnn race on tho road to henlth,
happiness nnd unending life,
Tho speaker Sunday cvonlng promiscs to produce evidence, both from
Scripture nnd current events, that wo
today nre witnessing the establish­
ment of the kingdom of God, and that
it is only n matter of n few more
years until tho ' existing order of
things will give way to the new order,
which tho Scriptures declare will bo
"the desire of nil nntions." It is said
that be will demonstrate from tho
Scriptures thnt the reign of righteous­
ness will bo fully ushered in by the
year, 1025.
Mr. Grimes is said to be nn interest­
ing nnd enthusiastic speaker, nnd tho
local class of Bible Students cordlullly invites the public to henr his dis­
cussion of this timely topic. Seats
will bo freo nnd no'collection will be
taken.

Our entire stock of Shoes will be on sale at (10%) TEN PER CENT less than regular prices.
In other words, If the regular price of an Army Officer Shoe 1* $6.00, on Saturday It will be
$5.40; a $10.00 Fiorsheim Shoe will be $9.00; an $8.50 Red Cross Women’s Shoes at $7.65,
and so on. Give us a call. Courtesy, Service and Satisfaction guaranteed at—

Thrasher &amp; Garner’s
Daily Fashion Hint

Rsvtsled by Extenslvs Kxesvstlens
en Bites of Revolutionary Gsmpa
#n tho Hudson Haights.

Light Wet Crowd
Yesterday’s Shoot

In spite of tho rain, about two
squads of mnrksmcn wore at tho
Rod and Gun Club trap on yester­
day afternoon nnd took their turns in
tho rain. Tho scores wore not so
good as the week before, as a rule,
although several improved their Ben­
son’s percentage hy considerable,
Following is tho score, only thoso
shooting in October contests being
Claims to Transplant Eyss.
published:
New eyes for old can be given blind
YcHt. Season
creatures, claims a young Hungarian
Score
Pet.
geologist. He saya he can transplant Gibbs, L. H..... .*........
.730
sound eyes from living creatures to
.735
others that nre blind. Ileforc the Knight, G. W...........
.720
Vienna Biological society ho said that Allen, R. L............ . 25-18
.080
he had experimented first with Ashes Thigpen, W, J ........
.072
and frogs, snd then with rats, moles Stringfollow, W. A. ..
and other small nnlmnls. He had ob­ Kennedy, K.............
.048
served that fishes which had lost their Herndon, O. P........
.042
sight sometimes tost also the coloring May, L. U...............
.040
of their bodies. By replacing their Stevens, R. E......... . 75-43
.037
blind eyes with sound ones tnken from
Whitncr,
Chas........
.035
another living creature, he had re­
.029
stored their sight nnd their coloring Uruniley, John ___ . 25-14
.024
too, Frogs, when they became blind, Puloston, S.............. .. 50-32
.020
gave up seeking food, hut with tlielr Nowntan, R. A........
new eyes were ns diligent nn over In Hardin, Roy ........ . 25-20
.012
this respect. Professor Koltner de­ Hand, W. S............ »»
.505
clared that he had examined some of Howard, C. C...........
.580
the eyes trnnsivJantPd hy Koppanyl un­ Walthour, Robt........ «•
.580
der the microscope nml had found
.
50-28
Hill,
W.
C...............
.577
them normal.
Woodruff, J. D....... . 50-27
.577
Cheney,
A.
B...........
.500
Toastad a Dead King.
Hickson,
I).
C...........
.650
Now that tho city fnlhers of Paris
.540
have got hack from tlielr trip to Mobley, E. D...........
.543
Rrnndtnnvln, they nre telling a mean Maxwell, R. C........ »■
story on M. Lb Corhelller. who. as Smith, H. P............ . 76-47
.542
president of the municipal council, In Hawkins, P.............. *■
.640
nhout ns close to being mayor of Higgins, Ed............. . 50-20
.534
I’nrlq anybody can he for Paris has I’urdon, Jno.............
.533
no mnynr In the American sense.
„
.530
M.
Le Corhelller was called upon,Kennedy, L...............
Herndon,
B.
W........
.450
at n Stockholm banquet, to respond
.440
..
76-32
Connelly,
L.
H........
to the toast of "I.n Bello France," the
.400
president of the republic, and so forth. Tolar, J. N............... «•
.254
Tlnlsliig his glass of applejack, he Fox, Monde ...........
replied:
.240
Puleston, Will .......
"T drink to the health of King Oscar,
to that of the royal family, to the min­
A New Role for Baby.
isters."
Johnny—Mother,
may I take out the
"There was only one thing wrong."
his friends will tell you maliciously. perambulator? I want to play with
"King Oscar has been dead for the It for u little while.
Mother—Well, Johnny, I should
Inst ten years,"—New York Sun.
think you might ask to tuke baby,
too,
Canadian Furs.
Johnny—Oh, yes, he shall come;
Furs tnken In Cnttndn In the Will1K2n season were valued nt more than bu'll make a splendid llruiunu. Billy
■;!1,000(too, Ontario contributed the Uubblus bus his mother's clothesline,
greatest share, with Quebec In second the carriage will be the lire engine,
place. The muskrnt furs were firm and there'll bo about twenty boys to
pell.—The Scotsman.
‘h Value, uinomitlfig to nearly JO.CMO,cHKI, Heaver, marten, mink, BlJver fox
People have lost moat of their 11red fox. ermine and skunk followed
lusians, but they still buy special de­
In this order.
livery stamps.

FACTS OF HISTORIC INTEREST

FOR TIIR JKUNNE PILLE
This is a fascinating model for the
girl in her teens.
It is develo|H-d in
fine pink and white gingham, with
collar, eulTs and |x»ckcl facings of wiiite
organdy, The waist closes in front and
has kimono sleeves. There is an applied
front whose lower ends are cut ill one
with the sash, tied at the back. Pockets
may lie omitted, if preferred. This
model is also attractive in silken fabrics.
Medium size requires
yards 36-inch
gingham, with ?£ yard white organdy
and
yard lining for underhody.
Pictorial Review Dress No. 6 4 ,1 3 .
Sizes, 13 to 17 years. Price, 35 cents.

Three years of excavating on sites
of Revolutionary camps In the Hud­
son highlands, near West Point, has
enabled a commission of the New York
Historical society to establish Inter­
esting historical fncts that have long
been in dlsputp.
The chief source of Information
has been refuse heaps of the armed
camps of Washington, and many fncts
have been learned merely from ex­
amining the buttons In the old dumps.
Examination of cooking utensils and
cutlery, broken pottery and other Im­
perishable articles has aided the com­
mission. The buttons, still showing
the Insignia after a century and n
half, show thnt ten Massachusetts
regiments. IHM from Connecticut nnd
one from Rhode Island, occupied the
main fortress In the highlands. Hut­
tons worn In one ramp by Connecticut
soldiers bore nn Imprint In honor of
tho birth of the French dauphin, ahowIng thnt tho soldiers were In camp
after 1781.
Similar Investigation on the sites
of Hrltlsh camps show their troops
lived In much more luxury than the
men who won independence for Amer­
ica. Sliver buckles, chtnn, and much
broken glnss from rum containers tell
the story of the Invaders' rntlons. The
Revolutionary troops used hnnd-forged
forks, pewter spoons, and left no bro­
ken glass.
The exrnvatlons have also revealed
the extent of certntn fortifications,
and forts have been discovered of
which there wns no record.
When tho inhcritnnt-tax collector
gets through with him you might call
him a bobbed heir.

"Millions Now Living Will Never
Dio"—Frco taiblo Lecture, S tar The­
Tho only collnr thnt galls tho free
atre, Sunday, October 30, 7:80 p. m. American is tho one tho laundry has
18fl-2tc tried to convert Into a saw.

Tom Moore
OptometristOptician
YOUR SATISFACTION
IS MY SUCCESS
Office Opp. P. O.

Phone 19|

To See Better See Moore

BROTHERHOOD
CO-OPERATIVE
STORES
If you want the best MEATS
and GROCERIES at the lowest
possible prices. Come to sec us
at the old Depot Waiting Room,
South Railroad Avenue.

Phone 575-L-2
MRS. IDA AUSTIN
418 Magnolia Are.

MAKER AND ALTERED
LADIES’ CLOTHES

WILL DO IT
Mnko anything you want in the
ninttrcsB line.—Sanford Mattress Co.
183-5tc

And another inference that might
be drawn from tho court ruling as to
that libel suit on the part of Chicago
ngainot the Chicago Tribune is that
it is not posalblo to libel Chicago.

QUALITY is Our Tailsman------------------- PRICE is Our Salesman

:

s

Special on Dresses $14.98

:■
■
■
■
■

VALUES TO $27.50

s

We nre presenting charming mod­
els in Dresses and Coats for the
cool days, which are coming. Our
display is rich in style and quality
and In tho variety which Ih shown.
In short, we are showing a won­
derful assortment, just brimful of
this season's newest and best
styles for fall and winter. Don’t
loose a minute in making your se­
lection for these items nre priced
to soil in the next few days.

■

§■
■
■
■

■

■

Special on Coats

$14.98
and up
i?

See Window Display

J. M. DRESNER
“The Store With a Personality”

214 E. First St.

S

Sanford, Florida

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1921

Modem Agitator* Work Along Lines
That Would Rid Orlont of
“dinging VInoa"
WILL HB STAOBD BY THE
OCA^POST OF THE AMURL°
1CAN LEGION.
The following businoaa concerns,
, , ,-nltic* and Clubi, of Sanford
i r vo Mborally subscribed their names
£ nKr cement to enter a decorated
L or automobile to represent their
respective lines of business. Names
" n be added from time to time and
from the floats already Hated it will
be a parade of magnitude never before witnessed In theclty.
Amorlchn Legion.
Sanford m ini * W.U P*PW &lt;*&gt;•
Woman’s Club,.W«lf»r. D apt
D. C. Marlowe,
*
Hopkins Shoe Shop.
A. J. Loaalng, (8).
C. A. M atthew s.
Ball Hardware Company.
Lloyd Shoe Store.
West Side Grocery.
Bryan-Wheeler Motor Co.
Wight tiro Co.
B. A 0. Motor Co. (2 floats).
Sanford Cycle Co.
Haynes &amp; Ratliff.
City of Sanford.
Mobley’s Drug Store.
Routh Bros., Bakery.
Cates’ Crato Co.
Coca-Cola Co.
WoodrolT &amp; Watson.
Haight &amp; Welland.
Cates Grocery Co.
Dcano Tumor.
Newberry’s Drug Store.
Carter Lumber Co.
T. J. Miller A Son.
Union Pharmacy.
Sanford Shoo A Clothing Co.
Hnnson’s Shoe Repair Shop.
Roberts Grocery Co.
Baumcl’s Specialty Shop.
RalTcld-Honig Co.
F. P. Rlnes.
A, Knnner.
F. Schwnrtz.
Chcro-Cola Co.
Brown’B Market.
Caldwell Furniture Co., Inc.
L. C. Lconardy Meat Market.
Water's Candy Kitchen.
Surprise Shoo Store.
Rnndcl’s Emporium.
Seminole Market.
Rivers’ Bros. (2 floats).
Pure Food Market.
Kent Vulcanizing Co.
Miller's Bakery (4 floats).
Star Theatre.
Clc-Trnc Tractor.
Gillon A Fry.
John T. Brndy.
•
Perkins A Britt (2 floats).
R. C. Mnxwoll.
Ed. Higgins, Inc.
IIof-Mnc Bnttcry Co. (2 floats).
Sanford Steam Laundry.
Wight Grocory Co.
Woman’s Club.

Airs. J. M. Dresner.
Knights of Columbus.
Snnford Farmers' Exchange.
L. P. McCullor.
The Yowell Co.
American Fruit Growers.
Snnford Furniture Co.
Hill Hurdwnie Co.
C. W. Stokes.
Blnckshenr Mfg, Co.
The Herald Printing Co.
Popular Market, two floats.
Frnnk Akers Tiro Co.
Snnford Truck Co.
Snnford Mattress Factory,
The Auxiliary of the Salllo Harri­
son Chapter N. S., D. A. U, (Children
of the American Revolution),
Any one welcome to entor a float
or deenrnted cnr. Suitable ensh prizes
will ho nwnrdod by tho Flrt National
Rank, Seminole County Bank and Peo­
ples' Bank of Snnford.
American Agr. Chemical Co.
Elder Springs Water Co.
W. S. I’nrkcr.
,
T. W. Williams.
Camp Fire Girls
Chamber of Commerce,
Chase A Company.
Rotary Club.
N. Do V. Howard.
Chapter of U. D. C.
Thrasher A Garner.
Anyone wishing to enter call Lloyd’s
Shoo Store.
108-tf.
ASK FOR YOUR RECEIPT,
Subscribers to tho Daily Herald
should ask for a receipt when the
carrier boys collect from you. I t la
the only protection you have in case
the carrier changes or there happens
to be a mistake in the account. Each
carrier boy tg supplied with receipt
books, and is commanded to give o
receipt by the Herald. See that you
Vet your receipt a t tho end of oach
week if you are paying that way.

K1

■L
: )W m

;
r

' ~
„

v' -mWtiV •y
■:';v

Jk

Start a bank account with us and we will help you make It
larger. We are equipped to care for your deposits with abso­
lute safety. There Is no function of n bank we cannot per­
form. Every facility afforded to fanners and others for
transaction of their banking business. Accounts may be
opened by mail and monies deposited or withdrawn in this
way with equal facility. There are scores of youpg men In
Sanford whp. should start a bank account. The dimes they
throw away every month if brought to our bank would make
them independe^ as they reach the noonday of lif^. In fact,
every person who has a dollar should start a bank account.
Try it and you will always thank us for this advice.

of Sanford

HAY FEVERITES MADE TOWN

W ALLACE R.ETD"
WALLACE REID, one of the fourteen stars appearing In “THE AFFAIRS
OF ANATOL” which will he at tho STAR THEATRE, TWO DAYS,
FRIDAY and SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28TII and 29TH
M’RAE GIVES ESTIMATE
OF STORM DAMAGE
TALLAHASSEE, Flu., Oct. 28.—
Tho following statement regarding
storm damage throughout the Htuto
was Issued this morning by Commis­
sioner W. A. McRae, state commis­
sioner of agriculture, on advices from
L. M. Rhodes, state marketing com­
missioner:
North line of storm extends from
tho north lino of Pinellas county on
tile Gulf to about Daytona, on tho
Atlantic, south lino from Fort My­
ers on tho Gulf to Cocuu on the At­
lantic, the entire Btorm area being
a strip about 100 miles, while the
principal ‘damage occurred over nn
nren about fifty miles broad.
The estimated dumngo to fruit and
vegetables is less than 10 per cent,
many groves nnd fields being only
slightly damaged, while others suf­
fered considerable. Much fruit may
bo saved if prompt action is taken.
Property damage in tho whole nren
will probnbly exceed not seix million
dollars. Tampa, St. Petersburg nnd
Clenrwnter wero hit hardest, Tumpa
damage placed nt three million, St.
Petersburg ono million.
Only five
lives reported lost to dnte.
Slight dnmage Is reported nt Plant
City, Brudcntown, Lakeland, Bartow,
Wnuchuln, Arcadia, Orlando, Klsslmmeo, Snnford, linytonn, DoLnnd, Fort
Myers, nnd Puntn Gorda. The latter
suffered slight dnmage to the city
nnd some small damage to shipping.
At Tltusvlllo there was considerable!
damage to property, smnll boats sunk
nnd some dnmngo to tclcphono nnd
tologrnph wires.

Mrs. W. P. Carter and Mrs. J. II.
Leo, Sr., returned Tuesday from Donvor, Col., and points in Georgia.
Quito a crowd of young pcoplo
from the Oviedo Christian Endeavor
went to Snnford Friday evening to
meet with the B. Y. P. U., and other
young people's societies of Seminole
county. They ruport a most helpful
progrnm, and a most delightful even­
ingMiss Ellznbeth Lawton Bpcnt tho
wook-end at homo,
R, M. Sturdivant, of Selma, Ala.,
arrived Wednesday nnd is permanent­
ly located with his aunt and uncle,
Mr .and Mrs. Frank Norris, nt tho
Womhle place.
Mr. nnd Mrs. C. S. Lee visited Or­
lando, Thursday.
A. J .McCulloy and Carl Dowl spent
Saturday In Snnford.
Mrs. W. M. Wright nnd Mrs. C. A.
Brannon visited Orlnndo Friday.
Mr. nnd Mrs. S, W Swopo nnd R.
M. Sturdivant visited Winter Park
and Orlando, Saturday nfternoon.
Dan Downs, of Ocoee, has opened
n barber shop in tho Marshall building
next to tho drug store. Tho shop seems
to bo a welcome addition to Oviedo, ns
It Alls n long felt need.
Edward McCall spent tho week-end
with his parents, returning to Stetson
Sunday nftornoon.
Tho storm of Tuesday night did lit­
tle damage to Oviedo. Soino of tho
telephone wires wero blown down nnd
a few trees and limbs. A grent deni
of fruit was blown front tho trees but
tho amount, of dnmngo to the fruit
nnd vegetable cropH can not yot ho
estimated.
Rev, J. N. Thompson Is spending
tho week in Tnmpn and Plant City.
G.
S. Bernrendor, of Jacksonville,
spent Sunday iw Oviedo, tho guest of
It. W. Lawton.
Mrs. R. W. Lawton, Sr., of Jack­
sonville, returned to her homo Wed­
nesday nftor a visit of sovoral weeks
to her sons here.
Mrs. Mnry Young, of Jacksonville,
arrived Tucsdny to ho tho guest of
her nephew, W. E. Young, nnd his
family.
Andrew Aulin spent Monday in Or­
lando.)
Mrs. L. A. Sheldon spent Tuesday
In Sanford, tho guest of her daugh­
ter, Mrs. C. J. Marshall.
*No.
E, A. Farnell and son, Alton, spent No.
Monday in Kissimmee.
•No.
*No.
No.
ASK FOR YOUR RECEIPT.

Subscribers to the Dolly Herald
should aak for a receipt when the
carrier boys collect fronj you. It la
the only protection you have In case
th e carrier changes or there happena
to be a mistake in the accpunt. Each
carrier boy ia supplied with receipt
books, end Is commanded to give a
William Hohcnaollem went about receipt by tho Herald. Sco that you
realizing his dream of power In the
wrong way. He should have waited
»od become private secretary to Hifgo
Stinnes.

About tho only tiling of modern
times to which Chins has not laid
claim as holng so old In Unit country
Hint It was outworn and discarded
miturlcs ago, Is tho now woman with
n magazine of her very own, pub­
lished In the interest of her develop­
ment. This publication, observes the
Pittsburgh Dispatch, called the New
Woman, baldly states ns Its object tho
reform of the old society to give a
more honorable place to women, unil
flic new woman Is described ns “a
Joyous being, of honest occupation,
complete personality, free, Independ­
ent and mutually helpful."
Yet the new woman of China cpmes
In for some criticism, for among, the
things she Is exhorted to cultivate nre
plain living nod dressing, which, the
writer goes on to say. was the rule
In old Chinn, but that now women
wish to keep up with the styles and
wear Jewels. They are reminded that
the chief thing about good dressing Is
to to wear clean clothing. Another
admonition to the new woman of
Chinn which might Indicate she Is
prone to err, Just like the new woman
of any other land. Is that she put far
away from Itnr the desire for empty
glory of "facej'
In other respects the thlngH com­
mended for tile new woman seem to
he along the snme lines ns In other
lands—the cultivation of strength of
will to go outside the home nnd mingle
with others nnd take pnrt In public
nffnlrs, and to discard the clingingvine linhlt of looking to the tnon for
everything.

...Start...
Bank Account

Interests You!

Chinee Discovery Had Great Effect
on the Building Up of
Petoekey, Mich.
A most unwelcome visitor Is hny
fever. With Its advent a vast army
nf hay favorites move northward;
Nome to the Maine woods, some to
Mnt’klnne Inland nnd points farther
north, and many to ivtnnkey, Mich.,
or Its Immediate vicinity, which
seems to tie a most popular camping
ground for sufferers from the "hny."
We met a renl old Indy thero a few
summers ago, who told us that she
believed she was the first person to
discover that the I’etnskey atmos­
phere had a curative effect on Imy
fever; she was n sufferer with that
disease herself nnd more thnn fifty
years ngo, she said, she nnd her hus­
band were on route by boat from flilrngo to a point much further nnrtti
when they were driven by a violent
storm Into the hay at I’etnskey, where
they remnlned for two or three days,
during which time she policed that
she was entirely free from liny foxier.
At thnt lime the medical profession
was giving hny fever nn extensive
study, so when this Indy nnd her liushnnd returned to Chicago they relat­
ed their experience nnd suggested
that ns Tetoskey was so accessible to
Chicago, the hny favorites form n
colony nnd Iry nut the plnco the next
summer, which they did. They found
Petnskor n straggling Indian village,
with positively no accommodations for
visitors, hut ns time went on nnd i&gt;en.
pie continued to go there ench year
for hny fever. It gradually grew Into
n flourishing up-to-date tnwp with sev­
eral thousand Inhabitants.—Cleveland
Plain Denier.

Harassing Wheat Peete,
Plnnt pests cause the loss of mil­
lions of Imshels of wheat In tho
United Stales, and If nil Iho wheat
now* destroyed nnminlly by these |s&gt;sls
could he snved nnd made into flour the
United Stntcs Department of Agricul­
ture says It would ndd approximately
2fl.KVt.7dO barrels to (lie yearly output of tho notion. The annual pro­
duction of whent In this country for
tho four-year period 101fl to 1AI0. Inelusive, was 7fVt.Rlfl,flflO bushels. The
TnAIN SCHEDULE
anntinl loss from disease during this
period was H7.IUR.fl00 Imshels. While
Southbound
It Is not possible entirely In eliminate
Arrive
Doparti whent disease, It Is possible to much
2:80 a. m. 2:46 a. m reduce the toll. One hrnnch of In—
8:40 a. m vest Igal Inn In the bureau of plant
Industry Is to work out Iho preven­
__ 2:65 p. m. 3:20 p. m
..... 0:65 p. m. 7:10 p. m. tive menHiires for the diseases of nil
eerenl crops.
North hound
Arrive
Doparti
Tree Saved by Washington.
An oak whose life Washington
— 1:48 a, m. 2:03 a. m
__ 11:45 a.m. 12:05 p. in snved In 17»1 Is still flourishing on
..... 8:05 p. m. 8:25 p.m. tho Hampton plantation. Santoe river,
South Carolina, and has been nomi­
...10:00 p. m.
nated for u place in the Hull of Fume
Trilby Branch
for trees with a history tlint Is being
Arrive
Deports eompIlRd h.v the Amerlrnu Forestry
0:00 a. m. association. The nomination Is mnde
8:25 p. m by J. Dnilforth Hush nf Wilmington,
7:00 a. in. Del., who Informs tho nssoelntlnn Hint
7:35 p. m. Iho host of enro Is glvon tho famous
tree by Col. Henry Rutledge, the
Leesburg Branch
owner of iho plantation. The honiitlArrive
Departs fill old homo was hullt hy Dnnlel
167.......... 4:00 p. r \
riorry, a French Huguenot, nhonf
21......... g;fi2p.m.
17110. Washington persuaded Mrs.
101--------6:30 p.m.
Ilofry to abandon bor plnn to cut
down tho tree.
25------- 2:00 p.m.
22...... 7:00p.m
Puritan's Well Uncoyfred.
Oviedo Branch
An old well, now dry. which Is boArrive
Departs
)|pved to have belonged to Oov. John
•No. 120.......... 11:00 a.m.
Kndlcott of the Massachusetts bay
•No. 127..........
8:40 p.m. colony, was discovered recently when
•Daily, except Sunday.
a policeman kicked a brick loose In
the sidewalk on Fremont Row In the
The latest campaign is for the sup- downtown district of Ilostoh.
Tho sidewalk slipped In for several
pression of prohibition jokes. The
feet and Investigation showed the well
next will bo for the suppression of itbniil ton feel and partly fllled. His­
jpkes on the suppression of prohibi­ torians said- the well was of the typi
tion jokes.
used hy tho I'urlliius. (hn if nor Mud’
cott. In t'KW, occupied an estate in the
Tho world navr* tho day It happens, vljlully.
tho Horald office.

Because, Mr. Farmer, you can use
our facilities to your advantage.
ff Our buying capacity enables us to
supply your Crates, Hampers, Insec­
ticides, Fertilizers and supplies at a
saving in cost to you.
If You don’t have to figure away in
advance what you need. Our ample
stock will take care of you.
Compare Our Prices
WE ARE AT YOUR SERVICE

PHONE 536

A car load on A. C. L,
Dray Track

Get An Abstract Before
Buying Property
E. A. DOUGLASS, Pres.

Hit the Nail
on th e
Head

SERVICE

QUALITY

PRICE

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H erald

Sanford
THE

“fiiv Substantial"

S

Sanford
THE

"City Substantial*

IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION
VOLUME

NUMBER 185

SANFORD, FLORIDA, THURSDAY, OCTOIIER 27, 1921

n

Loss of Life in the Big Storm Now Placed at Five
hooper of labor board
goes to the big meeting
railroad unions today
Visit Was Thought to
Be Final Appeal
For Strikers

1

What Is the Strange Sea Monster?

BRIDGE ACROSS OLD TAMPA BAY
WASHED AWAY, SMASHING INTO
SEABOARD BRIDGE WHICH GAVE WAY

CALIFORNIA RETS A
BIT OF STORM TOO.

SACRAMENTO, ,Cal„ Oct. 27.—
Scores of houses were unroofed .hun­
dreds of windows were broken out
and other damage, the full total of
which con not ho estimated at pres­
ent, wa Btho result of a strong wind,
nppronching tho force of n tornado,
^CUTS^OR^RULEMCHANGES^ striking this vlcinty yesterday after­
noon.
HE CONSIDERED
Accompanying the storm, a torren­
tial
rain fell land added to tho havoc
&lt;Bt Tb* AwoflUUd T n u )
CHICAGO, Oct. 27. — Ben wrought) by tho wind. The .deluge
Hooper, member of the L^Uor poured into houses as the roofs were
Board, went to the Masonic Tem-! lifted or twisted out of place and
nle this morning where presi-' thousands of dollars’ damage wns
Sent*, general chairmon and ex- done to household furnishings.
centlve committees of five big In the outlying districts the dnmnge
unions were in session. Hooper will bo ns severe comparatively ns
expected to make final appeal on within tho city, nnd the full scope of
behalf of government for calling the storm is now known. Wire com­
off the threatened strike. I ho munication is poor to neighboring
Board’s proposal, it is reported, communities nnd it is impossible to
is a guarantee that neither wage
anything approximately a cor­
cuts nor rule changes be consid­ secure
rect estimato of tho loss.
ered until all pending cases are
business houses were flooded
disposed of. Hooper’s presence nndMany
stocks dnmngcd, adding to the
led to reports that W. G. Lee, trouble of estimating losses.
of the trainmen, was backing the Very little, If any, tornado insurpeace move. Hooper said before
going into the meeting room ho annneo wns cnrrled in any of the in­
was making the call unofficially stances of losses here.
and that he had vague possibil­ If the scope of the storm wns wider
ity for settlement in mind which thnn this immediate vicinity, tho dnm­
he would outline to the union nge to vegetation will be .'another
men. There has been much dis­ heavy factor to be reckoned with hut
cussion in the union and railroad it Is believed here thnt tho disturb­
circles as to the possibility of ance wns purely locnl nnd It is not
the Labor Hoard putting out an nntlcipntcd thnt tho losses will cover
order that the strike is illogal territory outsido of this county.

PROPERTY LOSS WILL RUN INTO MILLIONS
IN THE VICINITY OF TAMPA AND ST.
PETERSBURG, WHICH SUFFERED MOST

Estimated it Will Be Ten Days Before the Sea­
board Trains Can Reach St. Petersburg; All
Highways Badly Damaged; Will Be Several
Days Before Definite Information Can Be Had
on Effects of the Hurricane.

NO G U A R A N T E E

(By The Associated Press)

ST. PETERSBURG, 9:00 p. m., Wednesday— (By mnil to

When Oils non mounter xvuh cant up by the waves on the New Jersey shoro Jacksonville) .-N o loss of life was reported at Pasai^aGriUe, a
near Cape May, not the oldest sailor on the coast could say what manner of Gulf resort Southwest of here ns a result of tho nurrl&lt;»ne
flsh It wns. They thought It looked like a cross between n whnlo aud* a sea
property damage probably less thnn $50,000. 1 ho death list here
cow. It was 70 feet long and had two huge tusks.

SANFORD ESCAPED
YACHT BASIN
PLANS COMPLETE SERIOUS DAMAGE
BY DONNELLY IN THE BIG STORM

tonight remained at two and property loss estimated between half
and one million dollars. Six piers on the waterfront, including
the municipal recreation pier and the Atlantic Const Line railroa
pier were swept away with a loss of a quarter of a million oollara
and at least fifty small boats were sunk. The streets were cleared
of debris today and electric power, off since Tuesday, wns restored
in the down town section. High tide and rough seas here Tues­
day afternoon backed the water from two to threo blocks into the
.city, flooding the low places.

TAMPA, Oct. 27.—Property damage in that section of the
BLUE PRINTS ANI) SPECIFICA­ WIRE SERVICE WAS HIT HUT
neninsuln
swept by the hurricane was roughly estimated at live
PROMPTLY REPAIRED BY
TIONS SENT TO CHAMI1ER
million
dollars
by insurance men hero who have been analyzing
LINEMEN
OF COMMERCE

reports reaching Tampa from other sections, damage in Tampa

Snnford was certainly lucky, again. was estimated at between one and one half nnd two mdhon dol­
William T. Donnelly, well known
When wo count up our losses In the lars but it will be several days before definite figures can b&lt;e ob­
marine engineer, bus fulfilled tho
promise to furnish complcto plnns nnd vegetable Holds that con he replaced tained. The known death list early today still 8to^ * t ^ ; n
specifications for tho proposed yncht by another planting nnd then rend of in St. Petersburg, three in Tampa and vicinity. The Seaboard
Air Line trackH from Tampa to St. Petersburg are blocked. Tho
basin on tho Inko front. This promise the serious loss of life nnd property
highway
bridge across the head of old Tampa bay near^ofety
was made to the Hoard of Governors In other places we ennnot help hut
Harbor
washed
away and crashed into the Senbonrd bridge tear­
think
thnt
in
all
the
various
storms
at the time of Mr. Donnelly’s visit to
ing
down
a
portion
of it. It will ho ten days before trams will
Snnford
hns
been
lucky
indeed.
Sanford Inst winter on board his yncht
aide
to
go
through.
Highways everywhere are damaged. No wire
Almost
every
city
in
Florida
with
the Dawn nnd New Era. Thu plans
us furnished by Mr. Donnelly nre very but few exceptions hnd to shut down connections to Pinellas county.
comprehensive nnd if the yucht basin their utility plants nnd spend days
and ordering it be called off. The
TAMPA, Oct. 27.—Littlo news
is built in accordance with these plnns fixing up the wires nnd poles nnd Bank’s Vice-President
board members would not dis­
trickled
through from outlying points
it will without doubt, be ono of the. kept the cities in darkness for twentycuss the report this forenoon ex­
yestordny
nnd Inst night, tho first
Committed
Suicide
finest in the stntc. A specinl commit­ four hours or moro.
cept to say no such order had
wire service secured being n slnglo
The
Herald
wishes
to
congratulate
After Bank Closed wire which the Western Union got
tee of tho Chamber of Commerce is
been prepared.
Manager Morse, of the Southern Util­
now
working
on
the
projects
to
be
in­
Hooper remained with the
about 8 o’clock Inst night. For tho
eluded in n proposed bond issue and I ities Co., nnd his force of men for Merchants Hank at Augusta, Gn., greater part of the day thore was a
union officials some time and af­
it is the intention of this committee their prompt attention to the fulling
Closed by the Stato
ter leaving lie said the strike
single W. U. wire out of Plant City,
wires nnd breaks in the electric ser­
to
include
this
improvement
In
the
was not yet settled, that settle­
nnd the messages from Tnmpa wore
(Hr Th* AltocUUd ?r*»»)
lines. Mnnager Morse waited ns
ment could hardly be expected GOES TO ATLANTA FOR AD­ proposed Issue. The initinl cost of vice
taken there by nutom-ib'le nnd relay­
AUGUSTA,
Oct.
27.—Following
tho
this yncht basin will ho within the long ns possible before cutting the
while he was at the meeting. Un­
ed,
nnd n few messages were receiv­
DRESS THIS AFTER­
posting
of
n
notico
on
the
door
of
the
finnnclnl means of the city nnd nny service on Tucsdny night ns he did
ion meeting broke up soon after
ed
for
Tnmpn the r.nmo wny. It wus
NOON
money expended on this project enn not wnnt to deprive the people of the Merchants Bunk here Inst night stnt- the only touch this city hnd with tho
Hooper left, with the announce­
be considered ns nn investment thnt | lightH hut when the danger from live ing the hunk would ho closed todny outHidu world, ns all long distance
(B f T h . A iu c U U d P r .i i)
ment that the five organizations
falling in the Htreets became so nnd Its nffnlrs turned over to tho
would hold separate meetings at COLUMBUS, Oct. 27.—President will pny hnndsome dividends to the | wires
grant
wns forced to cut the juice Georgia Stntc Banking Department, telephone lines were down, nnd still
one o’clock and a joint meeting Harding nnd party arrived here thlH city In thnt It will attract owners of off at ho
the plant until Wednesday Eugene Rosehorough, vice-president nre down.
morning from Birmingham to spend pleasure craft to Sanford. As condi-,
at three.
Puntn Rnssn seems to have heon
nnd director of tho bnnk, committed
several hours inspecting Cnmp Bcn- tlons nre todny sninller bontB will not morning. It Inconvenienced the Dnfly suicide here this morning.
virtunlly
wiped off tho mnp. The
nlng. He goes to Atlanta this after­ venture to visit localities where there Herald nnd other manufacturing
storm
raged
there from oarly Monday
nre not provisions available for pro­ plants but we could not kick because
noon to speak thore Into today.
night
until
Into
Tuesdny night. The
tection from henvy windstorms such this work is absolutely necessary nnd
gnic
nt
that
point
nt tlmeH reached a
ns nre experienced on Lake Monroe. w h s not made through tho fnult of
force
of
100
milos
an hour, swooping
WEATHER AND CROP
The yncht bnsin will afford ample pro­ tho plant hut was caused by the
away
houses
nnd
bringing
a veritable
tection from the strong winds that storm nnd it would probnbly he well
tidal wave nlong with It.
Conditions in Florida for the Week often sweep across the Inkc nnd in for the public to remember thnt when­
Boca Grande suffered severely, but
Ending October 25, 1921.
addition will servo ns a recreation pier ever n severe storm occurs nnd thore
the
extent of tho dnmago is not
Tempernturo:—Tompcrntures wore for tourists who might enro to enjoy is danger from wires falling that the
MONDELL SAYS
STATEMENT
known.
plant
will
he
shut
down
until
the
generally irtodorate to nbovc the sea­ the beauties of our lako. Thu building
WAS VILE, FOUL AND
Fort Myers nnd tho outlying Islands
of a yncht bnsin along tho plnns laid trouble is repnired. When one consid­ DEMAND SURRENDER OF FORM­
sonal nvorngo during the wcok.
OBSCENE
were
in tho path of tho storm. There
ER
EMPEROR
CHARLES
ANI)
ers
that
every
tlmo
nn
employee
of
Proctpitntlon:—Rninfnll wns heavy down by Mr. Donnelly will ho the most
was
much
dumugo there.
REPARATIONS
to cxcesslvo during much of the week important permanent development tho Southern Utilities Co. takeH his
(ny T h . A iM c lit.d r r . i t )
At
Hrndcntown
and vicinity the
WASHINGTON, Oct. 27.—Resolu­ over the southeast portion, extending that hns over heon mndo on the lake life in his hnndB on n polo or tree re­
principal
damage
wns
to tho citrus^
(Dy
Th*
Aiioeltud
*»••»)
tions for the expulsion from tho houso northward during the latter part, inci­ front with tho possible oxcoptton of pairing tho lines with the juice turned
LONDON,
Oct.
27.—Littlo
Entcnto
fruit
crop,
but
thore
wns
somo d*mof representatives of Congressman dent to tho enstwnrd movement of tho tho bulkhead. Unlike tho bulkhcnd, on their work can bo better appre­ composed of Rumania, Czecho-Slovia
ago
to
buildings.
Anna
Marla key
Blanton of Texas, wbb called up today tmplcnl storm of tho 24-25. Tho cen­ howevor, it will immediately bring re­ ciated.
nnd Jugo-Slnvin sent a note to Hun­ wns swept by the Btorm nnd there was
The
Herald
wishes
to
thank
tho
by Republican Leader Mondell. Adop­ ter of tho storm nppronchcd the State turns on tho money invested In it,
gary demanding tho surrender of fortion of resolution wns asked by Mon­ between Tnmpa nnd Codnr Keys, nnd once it hns become generally known mnnager of tho Sauthorn Utilities, mor Emperor Charles, demobilization considerable damngo to tho buildings,
doll, who declared while it wns proper entered the Atlantic between St. Au- nmongst ynchting enthusiasts that The Southern Bell Telephono Co., and of the Hung, rinn army nnd repara­ nnd to tho dock there.
Pnssn-nGrUlo caught much of the*
to inform the public of reasons for gustino nnd Titusville. Twenty-four Sanford hns n yacht basin. Lnke the Western Union Telegraph Co., nnd tions sufficient defray tho oxpenHo of
storm’s
forco. Rumors thnt Uvea wem
what the house was called upon to do rninfnll of 3 to more thnn 5 Inchts Monroe is a gold mine to Snnford. Be­ their men for their prompt work on the little entente's mobilization. Un­
Inst
there
proved untrue. Tho pass
"the publication which is bnsls of occurred over northern nnd ccntrnl fore gold hns hoen extracted from any Wednesday morning In restoring ser­ less Hungary replies satisfactorily
wus
cut
off
from tho mainland when
vice
after
ono
of
the
worst
storms
charge is of such character it cannot portions of tho pcnlnsuln during tho fluid intensive development is neccswithin
tr/o
days
the
littlo
entento
the
brldgo
fniled,
but yesterday mo­
thnt
hns
struck
the
state
in
years—
snry. In order to ronlizo tho greatest
be presented on the floor." Mondell
troops will enter Hungary.
last
day
of
tho
week.
torboats
from
St.
Petersburg
reached
nnd
Snnford
seemed
more
fortunnto
benefits
from
our
priceless
asset
it
is
characterized objectionable words In
Condition of Crops:—Tho foropnrt necessary that wo begin at once to de­ thnn sc mnny other cities in the state.
the
Island
with
provisions
and
cloth­
«n affidavit inserted In the Congress­
EX-ARMY SUIIGEON IS
of
tho
week
was
too
dry
for
fnvoring
for
such
ns
were
In
need.
Thoro
By
thlH
prompt
service
the
Dnily
velop
our
lnke
front.
ional Record by Blanton ns "unspeak­
FOUND GUILTY DEATH
was much proporty damage thore.
The following quotation from Mr. Herald started to work nt elovon
ably vile, foul, filthy, profnne, blas­ nblo growth of truck in tho northern
OF
WIFE
YEARS
AGO
portion
of
the
csoction,
except
whore
Tho Gulf and Southern steamship
Donnelly’s letter is vory interesting o’clock with telegraph wires working,
phemous nnd obscene."
locnl showers had occurred, but rains nnd proves tho valuo of an efficient with telephone working nnd with tho
Truxillo Is reported to havo loft New
RICHMOND, Va., Oct. 27.—A ver­ Orleans Snturdny with pussengers and
bccamo moro gonornl ns tho week ad­ organization:
electric lights nnd power working nnd
dict
of guilty of murder In tho first freight for Tampa, and should havo
Harding’s Address
vanced with heavy rains over most
"It will further bo understood that we never missed nn issue.
degree
wnB returnod by n Jury In arrived here Monday or Tuesday. I t
of tho northern nnd ccntrnl portions, insofar ns I have prepared tho plans
is Criticised Today
Henrloc
county circuit court hero yes­ has not yet been heard from. The
revived truck, strawberries, and done any preliminary work in JAPS ARE COMING IN
By Sen. Harrison which
terday
nfternoon
in tho enso of Dr.
cane, sweet potatoes ,and cltruB trees. connection with this undertaking,
COMPROMISE SPIRIT Wllmnrth A. Hadley, former United Truxillo carries no wireless equip­
_
~i—
ment.
Nnys It Should Not Have Been Deliv­ Rain is still needed west of tho Su- that it has been dono purely in a vol­
States army surgeon, who was charg­
Tho Mallory Llnq steamship Lake
untary
capacity
for
the
Chamber
of
wnnnoo
river,
whero
all
fall
work
Is
BULLETIN—ABOARD
STEAM
ered In the South
ed with tho murder of his wife, Mrs. Fillmore was duo to arrive hero from
backward .The planting of oats was Commerce nnd without expense to SHIP KASH1MA MARU, Oct. 25.Sue Knthlocn Tinsley Hadley, whose
resued In portions of tho central and them."
(Dy Th* AuooUUd Pr»M)
(By radio to the Associated Press)— body was found in the James rlvor Now York with general cargo Tues­
Mr. Donnelly Is now on a return That tho Japanese delegation to the
WASHINGTON, Oct. 27.—Hard­ northern divisions, but the work Is
day, but has not yet appeared.,
near here about three years ago.
ing's address in Birmingham on the still much behind In woutern counties. trip to this section of the stato.
Key West was not struck by tho
Washington conference on limitation
Tho verdict was returnod after tho storm, contrary to tho wild rumors of
race question was criticised In a state­ Truck on low lands was damaged by
of armnmonts and Far Eastern ques­
ment today by Sonator Harrison, of honvy rnins In portions of Rrcvnrd MINE WRECKED BY DYNAMITE. tions Is coming In a ’Spirit of accom­ jury had keen out less thnn forty min­ grout devastation thore. Tho storm
utes. Tho verdict carries with it a
Mississippi, "Tho president’s speech and Dado counties. The week closed
modation nnd compromise” was tho sentence of death in tho electric chulr merely s id o B w ip e d the Island City. A
(■y Ik * Am m UUA F n u )
was unfortunato but to havo mado It with tho soil In much bettor condition
wireless received at tho St. Peters­
statement today of Vice Admiral ToPITTSBURGH, Kas., Oct. 28.—Tho mosaburo Knto, his first public uttor- ut the state penltontlnry hero.
in the heart of tho South whore In In the northern and contral counties,
burg station from Key West yester­
Homo states the negro population pre­ but too wot in much of tho Bouth, and Gray Wolf mino near Gross, Kansas, anco sinco he waB appointed a mem­
day stated that there was no storm
It’s a queer logic that strives to damage thore.
was wrecked by two charges of dyna­ ber of tho delegation.
dominates was unfortunate In the ex­ too dry west of the Suwnnneo rlvor.
lossen the social evil and mokes no
mite shortly before mldni&amp;ht last
treme," said* Harrison.
Center Hill, in Sumter county, in
offort to lessen the divorce evil.
night.
'
(OoatlnuMl on t'lf* Bit!
THY
A
DAILV
HXHALD
WAJfT
AD.
For first class Job work—th* Herald
t h y a DAILY HXXALD WAJfT AD.

PRESIDENT
AT COLUMBUS
INSPECTS CAMP

RESOLUTIONS
FOR EXPULSION
OF BLANTON

LITTLE ENTENTE
SENDS IN NOTE
TO HUNGARY

• * .{

�'T:*

m **■

THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1931

■q.vj
i n , r ■ r r r . L - i . . . . ■ .'.-T .v .'-1.. ttttt
iniHNiliNlllillMlllllllHIIMlIHHHHnmMH" too much about the labor vote, tho THANKSGIVING DINNER
FOR FIVE SHOULD COST
business voto, tho Iriah vote, tho Scan­
NO MORE THAN 97.50.
dinavian vote, tho Italian voto and so
on. But the demagogues who would
CHICAGO, 111., Oct. 20.—Thank*
array class against class and group
against group, havo fortunately found giving dinner for a family of five
little to reward thoir efforts. This is should coat no more than |7.60, ac­
bocauso, despite tho demagogues tho cording to Charles Spiels. Spiels Is a
Idea of our brionosa as Americans has «otcd chef and said his bill of fare
risen superior . to every appear to calls for the best on the market.
ALICE LAKE in
moro class and group. And so I
Horo It Is, with tho prices:
would wish might bo id this matter Fruit cocktail with whipped
of our national problem of races. I
i•
1
cronm________ _______ ___ 9 *30
would accept that a black man cannot C elery------------.20
bo a white mnn, and that ho does not Cream of pea soup with crou
"5180" ia a blue serge
need and should not osplro to bo as
tons_____________________ .50
that has been selected
much liko a white man as possible, in Young turkey, (fl pounds)------ 3.50
Also “His Lying Heart,’’ a Mack Sennett
especially for its Rearing
order to accomplish tho best that is Raisin stuffing.......... ........
Comedy
qualities. Over the aver­
25
possible for him. Ho should seek to
age weight, it serves t
Cranberry s a u c e ...........- ...............20
be, and ho should bo encouraged to be,
nicely for an .all-yearthe best possible black man, and not Bnked sweet potatoes------------- .25
round suit.
Probably
the best posslblo imitation of a whito Mlnco plo_____ _____________ .50
mdre suits of this partic­
Pumpkin plo------------------------ .' .35
Tomorrow—Wanda Hawley in “A Kiss in
man.
ular, serge material, No.
CofTeo--------------------------------- .25
"It
is
a
matter
of
tho
keenest
nat­
Time”; also a 2-part Century Comedy
51^0, are sold than of
Bread, butter and spices--------- .00
ional
conscience
that
the
South
shall
any one qther nuinber
Evening at 7:00
Mattipee Daily at 3:30
not bo encouraged to make its colored
made. Joirt the iroiip
.97.30
Total.
population
a
vast
reservoir
of
ignor­
who aro saving many
! ance, to bo drained away by the pro­
dollars on their clothing
cess of migration into all other sec­ PRICE OF WIVES IN
costa.
. il'iA
tions. That is what has been' going
AFRICA IS GOING UP.
yyuivu a mini
on in recent years at a rats so accen­
tuated that it hns caused this question
NEW YORK, Oct. 20.—The price
of races to bo, as I have already said, of wives has gone up from 95 to |0 in
no longer ona of a particular section. Africa, according to Oscar Olson,
.♦♦♦I
Just as I do not wish the South to be moving picture photographer who ar­
politically entiroly of one party; just rived hero today.
as I boliovo that It is bad for thb
Before the war, he said, a good wife
South and for tho rest of the country might be got for 93.50, whllo those
os well, ao I do not want tho colored not so good wont under tKe hammer
peoplo to bo entirely of one party, I at 92 even.
wish that both the tradition of a sol­
THE CLOTHCRAFT STORE
Start a bank account w^h us ai\d we will help yoq make it
idly Democratic South and a tradi­
TO
SEND
ROPE
TO
tion of a solidly Republican black race
larger. We are equipped to pare for your deposits with absoRAIFORD BEFORE THE
might be broken up. Neither politi­
Iqte safety. There is po function of a bank we cannot per­
END OF WEEK.
cal sectionalism, nor any system of
is fit to vote; prohibit the white man rigid grouping of tho people will, in
PRE8. HARDING'S ADDRESS
form. Every facility afforded to fanners and others for
voting, when he is unfit to vote. Es­
AT BIRMINGHAM TODAY
Commitment papers for John H.
the long run, prosper our countr^.
transaction
of their banking business. Accounts may be
TAKES U ? RACE PROBLEMS pecially would l appeal to the self ro"With such convictions' one must Pope, sentenced to the prison farm
spoct of tho colored race. I would in­ urgo tho peoplo of tho South to take at Ralford for tho remainder of his
opened by mail and monies deposited or withdrawn in this
culcate in it the wish to improve it­
(Oootlnood hwa P#*o Ob#)
advantage of their superior under­ natural life, will probably reach the
way witfi equal facility. Therq qre scores of young men in
fusing to giro thought to thorn. self ns a distinct race, with n horidlty, standing of this problem and to as­ county jail Tuesday, according to Jail­
tat is not tfie'Ametfcari way of ap­ a sot of traditions', and nrrny of as­
Sanford who should start a bank account. The dimes they
or Hess.
proaching such issues. Mr. Luggafd pirations all Its owri. Out of such sume an attitude toward it that will
After tho necessary papers are re­
deserve the confidence of the colored
throw away every month if brought to our banfc would make
to his recent essay, after surveying racial ambitions nnd pride, will come
ceived, officials at Rnlford will be no­
people.
Likewise
I
plead
with
my
them independent as they reach the noonday of. life. In fact,
tho world's problom of races con­ natural segregation, without narrow­
own political party to lay aside every tified nnd will send a nn to this city
ing any rights, such ns arc proceeding
cludes thus:
every person who has a dollar should Btart a bank account.
program that looks to'lining up the to nccompnny Pope to tho prison
" 'Herein then, is tho true concon- In both rural and urbnn communities
idack mnn ns a mere politicnf adjunct. fnrm. This Is oxpocted to require throe
Try it and you will always thank us for this advice.
tion of innor relation of color—com­ now in Southern states, satisfying
Let there be nn end of prejudice and
plete uniformity in ideals, absolute natural Inclinations and adding not­ of demagogy In this line. Lot the or four days.—Florldn Metropolis.
equality in tho pnths of knowledge ably to happiness nnd contentment.
South understand tho mcnaco which
Be it snld to tho credit of tho great
and culture, equal opportunities for
“On tho other hand, I would insist lies in forcing upon the bidek rnco an
commnnder,
General Pershing hns not
thoso who strive, equal admiration for upon an equal cducntlonnl opportunity
nttitudo of political solidarity.
Imitnted
tho
Chnplin walk in front of
thoso who nchiovo, in matters social for both. This docs not moan thnt
"Every consideration, it seems to tho enmern, with tho orlglnnl Chnrlio
and raclnl, n Hcpnrnto path, each pur­ both would becomo cqunlly educated
of Sanford
me, brings us back at last to tho looking on, ns so many contemporary
suing his own inherited traditions, without a generation, or two genera­
question of education. When I speak notables in Englnnd nt tho present
preserving his own raco purity nnd tions, or ton generations. Even the
of education ns a part of this race
race pride, equality in things spirit­ sumo rnco doos not accomplish such
time havo done.
education, I do not want the states or
ual; ngrt'od divergence in tho physic­ nn equnlity ns thnt. But, thoro must
tho nation to nttompt to enable pcoal nnd material.'
bo such education among tho colored plo, whether blnck or white, into
"Hero, it has scorned to mo, is sug­ peoplo ns will onnblo them to dovelop
something they aro not fitted to be.
gestion of tho truo way out. Politic­ their own lenders, cnpnblo of under­
I hnvo no sympnthy with tho halfally nnd economically there need bo standing nnd sympathising with such
linked altruism thnt would overstock
no occasion for great nnd permanent a differentiation botwoen tho races as us with doctors nnd lawyers, or what­
differentiation, for limitation of the I have suggested—lenders who will
ever color, nnd leave uh in need of
A &gt;
indlviduni’n opportunity, provided that inspire tho rnce with proper ldcnls of
peoplo fit and willing to do tho man­
on both sides thero shnll bo recogni­ raco pride, of nntionnl pride, of nn
FLORIDA
ual work of a work day world. But
tion of tho absolute divergence in honorable destiny, nnd important par­
r
jj
I would liko to sco an education thnt
a s s e t )
things social and racial. When I sug­ ticipation in tho universal efforts for
would fit ovory man, not only to do
/
f
i
i
n
T
gest the possibility of economic equal advancement of humanity as a whole.
his particular work ns well as possi­
LAgricultur Ej
Ity between the racoa 1 mean it
: Hnciiil amalgamation, that cannot be ble, hut to rise to a higher plane, if ho
Live Sto Cm
precisely the same way and to tire Partnership of tho races in develop­ deserved it. For that sort of educa­
same extent thnt I would mean it if I ing tho highest aims of all humanity, tion 1 havo no fenrs, whether it is giv­
spoko of equnlity of economic oppor­ tlie must lte, if humnnity, not only en to a black mnn or a white mnn.
tunity ns between members of tho here but everywhere, is to nchiovo tho
Front that sort of oduention I bo­
snmo rnce. In ench case I would menn ends which wo have set for It.
WEDNESDAY, Nov. Kith—Governor’s and
liovo* black men, whito men, tho wholo
SATURDAY, Nov. 12tli—Opening Day.
equality proportioned to the honest
Press Day.
"I can say to you peoplo of the nation, would draw immensurablo
MONDAY, Nov. lttli—Children’s Day.
THURSDAY, Nov. 17th—All Florida Day.
capacities and deserts of tho individl South, both white nnd blnck, thnt the
benefit.
FRIDAY, Nov. IHth— Klwnnls Day.
TUESDAY, Nov. llRh—Shrine Day.
uni.
time hns passed when you are entitled
"It is probable thnt ns a nation wo
ltUh—Auto Races.
SATURDAY,
Nov.
“Men of both races may well stnnd to assume thnt this problem of races have come to tho end of tho period of
uncomprisingly against every sugges­ Is peculiarly nnd particularly your
Tho fifth Florida 9tato Fair nnd Exposition at Jacksonville, much onlargod
very rapid increase in our population.
and Improved, rnnkH with tho greatest fairs In tho South. Tho state and fed­
tion of social equnlity. Indeed, it problem. Moro nnd moro it is be­
Restricted immigration will reduce
eral governments are participating extensively and many fair attractions, of
would bo helpful to hnvo tho word coming a problom of the North, more tho increase, nnd it is for us to look
moro than usual merit have boon provided for your interest nnd entertainment.
'equnlity' eliminated from this con­ and moro it is a problem of Africa, of buck upon our older population to
sideration, to have it accepted by South America, of the Pacific, of
find people to do the simpler, physic­
both Bides that this is not n question the South Sens, of tho world. It Is
ally Imrder, mnnunl tasks. This will
of social equality, but a question of the problem of Democracy every­
require some difficult adjustment. In
recognizing a fundamental, oternal where, if wo menn tho things wo say
untiripntion of such n condition tho
nnd incscnpnblo difference. Wo shall about Democracy as tho idonl political
South may well recognize his worth
hnvo mode real progress when we de­
stnto.
nnd that we are likely to continue
velop an attitude in tho public and
"The one thing wo must sedulously these drafts upon tho colored popula­
community thought of both rnccs
avoid
is tlie doveopment of group nnd tion nnd if the South wishes to koop
which rocognir.es this difference.
class
organization in this country. its fields producing and its industries
"Take tho political aspect. I would
still expanding It will hnvo to com­
any, let tho black mnn vote, when ho There hns been times when wo heard
pote for tho services of tho colored
man. If it will realize its need for
Tho world’s greatest sensation. Auto Polo, h ns been secured as tho premier nmusemont
him, nnd deal quito fairly with him,
attraction ovory afternoon nnd night, exclt Ing horso and nutomobllo rnces, thrilling
thu South will ho nblo to keep him in
freo acts, athletic contests nnd mnny other’ forms of nmuBcmout nnd entortulnmont will
AN EVENING OF
such numbers ns your activities make
bo of absorbing Interest.
desirable.
The truck and tractor display TRUCKS
Enlarged exhibits of all the ac­
VARIED
"It is not possible, then, thnt in tho
is
representative of the best TRACTORS
tivities
summed
up
under
this
INDUS­
long ern of readjustment upon which
types
of these machines. Ma- FARM
classification.
TRIES
WITH THE
wo uro entering for tho nntion to lay
chinery
displays cover practi- MACHINFlorida's rapid development in
aside old prejudices nnd old antagon­
LIVE
cally all agricultural equipment. ERY
isms nnd In the broad, clear light of
3 iu x .iv
^'v c
*, o c ^
i n d u s t r y •**
STOCK
INDUSTRY 8f“phically shown in the pens
nntionnlism enter upon a constructive
Florida’s State University in a
of fine stock.
policy in dealing with thesu intricate
IN SENSATIONAL
special building displays its re­
issues? Just as wo shall provo ourPOULTRY Fanciers of Florida and other
markable
development and
solvcs cnpnblo of doing this wo shnll
AND PET states feature extensive exhibrepresents
the
advantages ob­ UNIVERinsure the industrial progress, the ag­
ST0C K
its of fine poultry, pet stock,
tained
from
its
courses in en­ S1TY OF
ricultural security, tho social nnd po­
BOYS' AND rftLhits. etc.
gineering,
etc.,
and
its value to FLORIDA
litical safety of our wholo country re­
Florida Boys' and Girls' Clubs
the state in its research and ex­ EXHIBIT
GIRLS'
gardless of rnco or sections nnd along
of all kinds have exhibits of
perimental work and other de­
CLUB
tho lino of ideals superior to every
great educatiqnal value.
partments.
WORK
consideration of group, or class, of
-AT THEF
o
r
f
a
r
t
h
e
r
I
n
f
o
r
m
a
tion addrraa
rnco or color or section or prejudice."
B . K . I I A N A F O U I t U H , S r c r t l i r r and I t e a r r a l N i u n r .

CLOTHCRAFT
CLOTHES'

THE STAR TO-DAY

“5130”

Blue Serge Special

y
&gt;
“ Uncharted Seas

i

$32.50

SanfordShoe&amp;
ClothingCo-

S

I

ii
W
M

The Peoples Bank

i*

SEVEN RED-LETTER DAYS
OF PLEASURE AND PROFIT

BT/

ii;

FLORIDAST1\TEFAIR

JACKSONVILLE NPV.I2-I9 1921

Aulo Races

AUTO POLO

Horse Races

GENUINE SPO RT
ROD and GUN

Hunting and Fishing
Motion Pictures

Princess Theater
Thursday, Night, Oct 27th
Under tho Auspices of the

Men’s Club of the Congregational Church

GOOD MUSIC
A dm ission........................... ........... an&lt;* 30c

S U D ral-U p ch u rch B id s.

ONE niHGHT THOUGHT.

J n tkoon vlllo, F la .

Special Low Fares and Liberal Stop-Over Privileges Are Allowed on All i.l«e tr

,Tho possibility of a general strike
on tho rnilroads will bo in all prob­
ability acccclernto the movements of
thoso who nro stirring nbout, making
preparations to spend ths winter in
Floridu. Then old JacR Frost will toko
a nip nt thoir heels and fingers and
tho coal man will fire In a circular
quoting the season's prlco of fuel nnd
tho exodus to the Land of Sunshlno
will bogin.—Haines City Herald.
vt rv»&gt;r*f Mfr »»«»n

A
m
■Ur..... ■&gt;., ^iL'V

�PAGE TWO

THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1921

..................-......... ........ rr

This Forward
,
Looking ^Bank
is jealous of its reputation for Ser­
vice and seeks to justify it anew with
reach individual problem presented
to it.
The knowledge and experience of
this bank is available to its friends
and patrons at all times, regardless
of the size of their transactions.

IThe Seminole County i;

Bank

•♦ ••♦ j

::
PROGRESS
4% INTEREST PAID

* STRENGTH

BSu

Mrs. E. M. Galloway will entertain
ut bridge, and Mrs. Raymond Koy
will glvo n bridge pnrty for this popu­
lar bride-elect next Wednesday eve­
MRS. FRED DAIGER, Society Editor, ning. Thero nre scvcrnl pre-nuptial
Phone 217*W
n(Tnirs to bo given noxt week.

SOCIETY
SOCIAL CALENDAR

t5 .

SERVICE

^ • ’Tsdny—Pipe Organ Club llnllo•wo’en Lawn Supper with Miss Mar­
tha Fox anti Mrs, Forest Gntchel,
hostesses at their homes Oak and
Eighth.
'Frldny—Mothers’ Club will moot at
'tho Parish House at 3:30 p. in.
Saturday—Children’s Story Hour will
bo held nt Central I’nrk nt four
o’clock.
Friday—Christian Endeavor of the
Presbyterian Church will entertain
nt a Hallowe’en party In honor of
Miss May Fcrrnn Thrasher and Mr.
J. I). Woodruff, at the social rooms
at tho church.
Friday—N. dc V. Howard Chapter U.
D. C., will meet at the Parish House
at 3:30 p. m.
Friday—Mrs. Forest Lnko will enter­
tain 'tho members of tho Every
Week Bridge Club at her homo on
Park avenue, nt 8 o’clock.
Frldny—Mrs. It. E. Tolar and Miss
Sara Muriel will entertain at n
Hallowe’en party for Miss Geral­
dine Muriel, at tho homo of tho
former on Mngnolln avenue, nt
&lt;B:30 p. m.
Saturday—Mrs, E. M. Galloway will
'ontortnln at Bridge, complimentary
to Miss May Thrasher an attrac­
tive bride-elect of November.
Mrs. W. C. lllll has returnod home
from a delightful trip to Georgia and
Tennessee.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Whitcomb re­
turned homo Tuesday evening from
«n extended visit with relatives In
Illinois.
Mrs. C. It. Klrtley returned homo
’Saturday from u pleasant visit with
Tolntlves in Georgia.
Mr. and Sirs. Carl Fcrrnn, of Eustlss, wore tho guests of tho former’s
sister, Mrs. I). L. Thrasher. Mrs.
Ferren was among the out of town at­
tending tho "shower” given Miss
Thrasher yosterdny afternoon by
Mesdames A. P. Connnlly and S. Puleston.

RON TONS TO IIE ENTERTAINED.
Mrs. Robert Hines Is cntertnlning
the members of tho Bon Ton Br’dgo
Club this afternoon nt her home on
Park avenue.
SOCIAL DEPARTMENT
BRIDGE PARTY.
Mrs. Ed Lane was the charming
hostess for the members of tho Soeinl
Department of the Woman’s Club,
Tuesday afternoon, at tho club rooms.
Tho club house was beautiful with
its decorations in keeping with tho
"Hnllmv’on Season." Jack-o'-lanterns
covered the lights, while black cats,
witches, and other Hallo wo’on feat­
ures wore used. Tall wicker baskets
filled with yellow elder, the handles
tied with huge hows, were effectively
placed In the rooms whore tho card
tables were arrnngd.
Of exceptional Intorost was the
game of bridge played during the af­
ternoon. High score being made by
Mrs. W. J. Thigpen, she was awarded
a lovely box of stationery. This was
nlso a ‘'Box Ton,” and prizes were to
be given for tho most attractive box.
There were two exceptionally attract­
ive ones; those of Mrs. Vorco, nnd
Miss Irvin. Mrs. Vorcc’s was a box
beautifully covered with black and
gold crcpo paper, with all the Hal­
lowe’en symbols on It, nnd tied with a
large how of gold ribbon, while Miss
Irvin’s box was more of a basket form.
It, too, curried out the Hallowe'en sug­
gestions. In cutting for tho prize,
which was n Mnderin Trny cover, Miss
Irvin was tho fortunnto one.
After tho card game, refreshments
were served picnic Htylo nt a long ta ­
ble, covered with dainty covers nnd
centered with yellow flowers.
There were four tables of players
nnd several guests came In for re­
freshments,
Mrs. Lane was assisted In enter­
taining the guests by Mrs. K. J. Hol­
ly, Mrs. W. T. Langley and Mrs. A.
R. Key.

PARTIES FOR MISS THRASHER.
Miss May Fcrrnn Thrasher, a
charming brldo-olect of November, is
being delightfully entertained. Among
the parties to be given her will bo tho
•one Friday evening, by the C. E., nt
tho church social rooms. Saturday,

I H0F-MAC [
j BATTERY[
i
We have been in business
one month and
done fine.

we

have

We thnnk you

'for your part in it.

“Foot of First St.”

■■■

prizes, a hnndpalnted box, filled with
bon bona, was won by Mias Sara War­
ren Eansterby.
After the contests, Miss Thrasher
was asked to sit In the "seat of hon­
or,” It being beautifully decorated In
white clematis and asparagus fern,
with a back ground of tho whlto and
green forming a pleasing effect. Llttlo Misses Georgia Mobley, Camilla
Puloston, and Olivo Newman, dressed
In dainty frocks of crepo paper, with
tulle bows In their hair, their cos­
tumes carrying out the color motif of
green, pink and lavendnr, delighted
the guests with their artistic dancing,
ns each maiden danced into tho room
sho placed tho gifts at tho feet of the
honorce. These gifts were opened und
greatly admired by tho guests. Miss
Thrnsher was tho recipient of many
beautiful gifts of silver, cut glass,
linen, nnd Hngerio.
Tho refreshments, of pink nnd
green block Ice cream with Individual
cakes, Iced In lavendnr, with coffee,
wore served by Mesdames Connnlly,
Puleston, D. L. Thrasher, E. M. Gal­
loway; Misses Camilla Puleston,
Georgia Mobley and Olivo Newman.
This was Indeed a charming social
courtesy, nnd one of n series of pre­
nuptial affairs with which Miss
Thrnsher is being honored.
Among those enjoying tho cordial
hospitality of Mrs. Connnlly and Mrs.
Puleston, on this occasion, were: Mrs,
F. L. Miller, Miss Esthar Miller, MIhs
Sara Wight, Miss Norma Herndon,
Mtn. George DeCottes, Mrs. A. R.
Key, Mrs. E. M. Gnllowny, Mrs. Ed
Betts, Mrs. Allen Jones, Miss Daphne
Wimblsh, Mrs. Dick Brown, Mrs. Fred
Wight, Mrs. Robert Hines, Mrs. C. E.
Henry, Mrs. R. J. Holly, Miss Flor­
ence Henry, Mrs. J. M. Wnllace, Mrs.
Joe Chittenden, Miss Frances Chap­
pell, Miss Adelaide Higgins, Mrs. S.
M. Lloyd, Mrs. C. R. Klrtley, Miss
Agnes Dumas, Miss Mario Teague,
Mrs. Fred Dnlger, Mrs. Archie Betts,
Miss Snrn Warren Ensterhy, Mrs.
Carl Fcrnn, of Eustis; Mrs. Henry
Mcluiughlin, Mrs. E. D. Brownlee.
Mrs. Forrest Lake, Mrs. R. It. Dense,
Mrs. It. E. Newman, Mrs. W. C. Hill,
Mrs. Ralph Goodspeed, Mrs. Claude
Herndon, Mrs. Karl Schultz, Mrs. D.
I,. Thrasher, Mrs, F. E. Roumlllnt,
Miss Lottie Caldwell, Miss Mnble
Bowler, Mrs. George Knight, Mrs,
Don Whitcomb, Mrs. Ed. Mobley, Mrs.
Geo. Bishop, nnd others,

HALLOWE’EN PARTY
The Baptist Hallowe’en Intermedi­
ate party that was to have been held
at Mrs. F. L. Miller's home will be
held at tho homo of Mrs. A. J, Less­
ing Friday night at 7:30,
#

MEETINGS

*
#
pm * # rm # # 1*4

#
#
# * m» # •# pm

■

the

Thursdny;
3:30 p. m. Jennie Spaulding Circle,
with Mrs. Holland.
5:00 p. m. Pipe Orgnn Club Sup­
per onGntchel-Fox lawn.
Frldny:
7:80 p. ni. The Temple Boy Scouts.

PARISH HOUSE KALENDAR.
Thursday, Oct. 27, 7 p. ni. Fathers
nnd Sons banquet.
Holy Cross Men’s Club, and B. S. A.
Friday, Oct. 28, U. D. C., N. tie V.
Howard Chapter, 3:20 p. m.
Mondny, Oet. 31, Might. Holy Cross
Men’s Club dance.
MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER
Tuesday,
Nov. 1, 8 p. in., "Measuring
FOR BRIDE-ELECT.
Pnrty,” S. Agnes Guild.
One of the prettiest parties of tho Friday, Nov. 4, G. F. S., Pnrty, Mrs.
season wns that given yesterday af­
John Leonard!, directress.
ternoon by Mrs. A. P. Connnlly nnd
Mrs. Samuel Puleston, nt the attract­ AUTHOR WON WAGER:
ARTIST WON IIUSRANI).
ive home of the former, on Magnolia
avenue, when they entertained at a
“A KIhs in Time,” the latest Wamln
delightful
miscellaneous
shower,
honoring Miss May Fcrrnn Thrnsher, Hawley release, which comes to the
one of the most popular autumn bride- Star theatre tonight, is adapted from
a story by Royal Brown, which ap­
elects.
The guests were met at the door by peared in McClures Magazine, under
Mrs. R. E. Newman, who wore n he the title "From Four Till 11:30.”
It is the story of a story about a
coming costume of blue georgette and
wnger
that n man met nnd kissed a
Ince. In the receiving lino wore
Mesdames Connnlly nnd Puleston, nnd girl within four hours. A man writes
Miss Thrnsher.
Mrs. Connnlly wns the story, and the magazine which
beautifully gowned Ifl blue taffeta buys it sends it to a girl illustrator,
over cream Inco, Mrs. Puleston wns who promptly sends it back, raying
attired in black canton crcpo, nnd that sho absolutely refuses to illus­
MIsh Thrnsher wore for the occasion trate such nn impossible ynrn.
Grcntly piqued when be hears this,
an exquisite gown of hlnek canton
crepe, with trimmings of ostrich, hor tho author makes n wager with him­
hnt wns a picture model of black with self that ho will kiss tho artist within
feather trimmings; her flowers were four hours after ho meets her, and
he sets about tho task. Of course, ho
yellow chrysanthemums.
The decorations wore elaborate and wins both tho wngor and tho girl.
\s played by Wandn Hnwiey and
beautiful, anti featured with dainty
T.
Roy Barnes, with Waltor Hlers on
color motif of pink, Invondar nnd
green. French hnskets filled with frag­ hand, In tho rolo of nn amateur dorant pink roses nnd asters wore nr- tectlvt to complicate tho fun, this
tintlcnlly arranged with lovely effect. comedy promises a real treat. Tho
Muslcnl numbers woro rendered by picture wns directed by Thomas‘HeffMiss Mnblo Bowler, accompanied by ron.
Mrs. R. R. Dens.
Tha world news the day It happens,
An Interesting "word contest” nb
the
Herald office.
sorbed the attention of the guests, the

i

.

ANOTHER OPPORTUNITY TO REDUCE THE COST OF UV1NG

SHOE DAY
AT
■ ___

IThrasher &amp; Garner’s

g

The object:

To express in terms of DOLLARS and CENTS our APPRECIATION of your

I past business, and also to induce new customers to our store.

Our stock of Shoes is

marked

| in plain figures and on an HONEST margin of profit, and we believe our Shoe prices, as a
" whole, are lower than the prices of mo9t shoe stores. Nevertheless, for

1O n e D a y O n ly ,
[SA TU RDAY ,
■
■

OCT. 29

{ Our entire stock of Shoes will be on sale at (10%) TEN PER CENT &gt;less than regular prices, ■
| In other words, if the regular price of an Army Officer Shoe is $6.00, on Saturday it will he J
5 $5.40; a $10.00 Florshelm Shoo will be $9.00; an $8.50 Red Cross Women’s Shoes nt $7.65, ]
{ nnd so on. Give us a call. Courtesy, Service and Satisfaction guaranteed at—
£

!Thrasher &amp; Garner’s!
■

2

DRAMATIC RECITAL
NEWSPAPER CONTEST
WAS WELL ATTENDED
AT FLORIDA STATE FAIR.
AT TIIE HIGH SCHOOL
Bristow Adams, who is to jjudge
The drnmntic recital given on Mon­ tho Univorslty of Floridn NewBpnpor
dny evening, nt the High school by contest, which will bo put on by the
Miss Ora Williams, reader, was well General Extension Division, during
attended in spite of the bud weather. tho Stnto Fair nt Jacksonville, No­
Miss Williams, who is tcncher of ex­ vember 12-10, hns had much experi­
pression nt the High School, is a ence in these contests, having judged
grndquatc of Brcnaw and tho Curry similar ones for States of New York,
School of Expression. She gnvo the Minnesota, and Kansas,
He is professor of agricultural jour­
four net comedy, “Mice nnd Men,” by
nalism nt Cornell University, nnd hns
Madeline Riluy.
From hor opening sentence she had a long experience in newspaper
held the audience enthralled. Her in- work. He Is editor of the Cornell ag­
le rr’&lt;titl'on throughout wo* charac­ ricultural publications, nnd wan, for
terized by the delicate sympathetic a number of years, in charge of the
touch of the finished artist.
Miss nows services and publication work
Williams wns assisted by Miss Daph­ of tho United Stntes Forest Service.
ne Wimblsh in "The Dance of Youth," He ha s u I bq done slmilnr work for the
and nn "Oriental Dnnce," both of Fedcrnl Dopnrtmont of Agriculture,
which sho gave with Indescribable nnd Inst year compiled thee Depart­
grnco nnd charm. Miss Julin Lning ment’s Agricultural Almanac. His
presided at tho piano and gnvo sev­ newspaper experience lias been gained
eral enjoyable opening numbers. This on bith the Atlnntic and Pacific coasts.
recital wns given under the auspices
He is familiar with Florida condi­
of the Business nnd Professional Wo-1tions, because during his service with
men’s Club.
the government ho made n number of
forest plantations in this state.
For office supplies, stationery, etc.
come to tho Herald office.
TRY A DAILY HERALD WANT AD.
9BUI

THURSDAY
Father and Sons’ Banquet nt
Parish House Thursday night.

r inr t

! STAR THEATRE

Oliver Murrell
Was Exonerated
Oliver Murrell is homo todny for a
few days visit with his parents and
his many friends are congratulating
him upon the outcome of his recent
trial at Wnuchulln this week when af­
ter two hours deliberation the jury
brought in n verdict of not guilty. It
will be remembered that Attorney
Murrell was indicted for stealing au­
tomobiles as an accessory after the
fact being charged with lhnking bills
of sales for those autos that it seems
were stolen by people in Wnuchulln.
It was brought out nt tho trial that
Attorney Murrell was nn innocent
party to tho nITnir nnd knew nothing
of the nature of the hills of sale. The
verdict Heems to have given general
satisfaction nt Wnuchulln and other
points where tho ense attracted con­
siderable attention. The men who
were guilty of the theft of nutos were
convicted and several of them have
been sentenced to five years in the
penitentinry.
—Get your Scratch Pnda from The
Herald—by tho pound—15c.

inaiis

STAR THEATRE

AT THE
TWO BIG DAYS

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, OCT. 28TH-29TH
Matinee Daily at 3:30

Evening at 7:00 and 9:00

un ail sta r cast including

★
★
★
★

Wal lace Reid
Elliott Dexter
Monte Blue
theodore Roberts
Iheodore Kosloff
★ Raymond Hation

't o

Gloria Swanson ★
Bebe Daniels ★
Wanda Hawley ★
Ajnes Ayres ★
Pol ly Moran ★
J u lia Faye ★

Cecil B,
P R O D U C T IO N

f

s
■

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1921
COTTON DROP IB AWAY OFF
ORLANDO ROTARIANS
BAYS LATEST REPORT.
GIVE SILVER CUP
TO AQUATIC MEET.
WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 2 7 ,Cotton of thin year's growth ginned
That the Orlando Rotary Club is
prior to October 18 amounted to 6,- interested in every good thing, is giv­
477,397 bales, exclusive of, linters, en proof in the following letter re­
compared with 3,754,682 bales last cently received by R. W. Greene, di­
t0C
ICAN I.EOION.
year and 4,920,104 bales in 1919 to rector of student activities at Rollins
that date, the census burcauu an­ College;
nounced today,
Mr. R. W. Greene,
Round bales included, numbered
Rollins Coliego,
r u
rally subscribed their name. 09,371, compared with 140,009 last
Winter Park, Fla.
b»v° lil,crnJ , enter a decorated
year; American Egyptian included
Dear Sir:—Throughout the world
? n t^r automobile to represent their numbered 7,498 balcB, compared with ROTARY stands for everything that
flont tive lines of business. Names 14,312 last year; and sen island in­ rnnkes for better citizenship, and the
cluded number 1,204 bnlcs, compared Orlnndo Rotary Club is no exception
S
T floats
* ' trom
2"ttIt im
. mt .th0
already Hated
will with 334 last year.
to tho rule.
The glnnl greport included n para­
We hnvo vlowed with considerable
witness.'! In theclty.
graph stating:
interest the great efforts you and
American Legion.
Tho department of agriculture on your colleagues are'putting forth to­
Ssnf.nl m int 4 Wall P»P« Co.
October 3, 1021, estimated that tho ward mnking Rollins College one of
Woman's Club, Welfuru Dept.
condition of tho cotton crop on Sep­ the grentest educational Institutions
D. C. Marlowe.
tember 25, wob 42.2 per cent of a In the South, nnd want you to know
Hopkins Shoo Shop.
normal, tho lowest condition ever re­ thnt you hnvo the henrty endorse­
A. J. Losslng, (5).
ported, which forecasts a total pro­ ment of this organization nnd thoso
C. A. Matthews.
duction of about 0,537,000 bales of whom wo have the honor to represent.
Ball Hardware Company.
600 pounds gross. Reports indicate Such high Ideals, complemented with
Lloyd Shoe Store.
that a targe proportion of the crop your untiring efforts ennnot but re­
West Sldo Grocery.
hnB been ginned.
sult in the achievement of your great­
Bryan-Whcolcr Motor Co.
Tho heaviest ginning on record, est ambitions.
Wight Tire Co.
Wo think the Intcrscholastic Aqu­
prior to this year, wns thnt of 101(1
B. &amp;0. Motor Co. (2 floata).
when 7,303,180 bales or 04.3 per cent atic meet inaugurated by you two
Sanford Cycle Co.
of the crop were ginned prior to Oc- yenrs ngo to be especially worthy of
Haynes &amp; Ratliff.
.tiber 18. The next largest ginning prominence, for it is typically a Flor­
City of Sanford.
to that date wns in 1018 when 0,811,- ida event. Your success in mnking
Mobley's Drug Store.
351 bales, or g7.2 per cent of the Eu- the spirit of fnir play tho all pervad­
Routh Bros., Bakery*
ing thought In theso meets has not
ropo wore ginned.
Cates' Crate Co.
missed
our appreciation.
Tho statement follows by states:
Coca-Coin Co.
In
testimony,
therefore, of our ap­
Alabama, 420,512; Arizona, 88,057;
Woodruff &amp; Watson.
Arknnsns, 440,481; California, 4,012; preciation, wo desire to offer a. silver
Haight &amp;Welland.
Florldn, 8,127; Georgln, 037,119; Loui­ Loving Cup to be awarded to the win­
Cates Grocery Co.
siana, 195,116; Mississippi, 512,007; ner of the highest number of points
Dcnno Turner.
Missouri, 40,333; North Carolinn, 444,- in tho 1022 Intcrscholastic Aquatic
Newberry’s Drug Store.
004; Oklahoma, 347,140; South Cnro- Meet to bo hold nt Rollins College in
Carter Lumber Co.
linn, 494,201; Tennessee, 158,000; April.
T. J. Miller &amp; Son.
Wishing you every success, nnd as­
Texns, 1,740,700; Virginia, 7,605. All
Union Pharmacy.
suring you of our desire to cooperate
other states, 3,070..
Sanford Shoe &amp; Clothing Co.
A large per centage of the coun­ with you whenever you may hnvo oc­
Hanson’s Shoe Repair Shop.
try's cotton crop hnd been ginned to casion to cnll upon us, wo nre,
Roberts Grocery Co.
Rotnrlly yours,
October 18 this year than hnd been
Enamel's Specialty Shop.
THE ORLANDO ROTARY CLUB.
ginned in any other year in the his­
Rnffeld-Honlg Co.
tory of cotton growing, tho census By S. Kendrick Guernsey,
F. P. Pines.
President.
bureau’s ginning report issued today
A. Knnner.
indicated. A total of 6,477,307 bales
F, Schwartz.
bad boon turned out by ginneries
Chcro-Coln Co.
j which total is 83.7 per cent of the
Brown’s Market.
I entire crop ns estimated by the doCaldwell Furniture Co., Inc.
| pnrtment of nerlculturo in its fore­
L, C. Lconardy Meat Market.
cast of October 3, this year. The pre­
In tin* dressing rooms of the circus
Water's Candy Kitchen,
vious heaviest ginning to October 18, there are certain aisles where the
Surprise Shoo Store.
was in 1010, when 04.3 per cent of the clowns make up. They constitute
Bnmlel’s Emporium.
crop had been ginned.
what i sknown by the performers nnd
Seminole Market.
In issuing its ginning report tho the funny fellows as "clown alley."
Rivers’ Bros. (2 fb a ti).
census bureau included n paragraph
In “clown alley” there isn't so much
Pure Food Market.
giving tile department of agriculture's hilarity as one would imagine; in
Kent Vuleonizin' Co.
| latest forecast of the crop, which was fact, one flnds the clowns busy writing
Miller’s Bakery (4 llontsL
, 0,537,000 hales, Deduction of the letters, mending costumes, reading
Star Theatre.
number of hnles ginned to October 18 and studying current events in search
Cle-True Tractor.
from the estimated crop leaves 1,059,- of material for stunts. For tat's wher
Gillon &amp; Fry.
003 bales remaining to be ginned.
the majority of the really big clown
John T. Brady.
hits come from—the day to day sto­
Perkins &amp;Britt (2 llonts).
WALLACE REID RUNS AMUCKl ries in tho newspapers. With Howe's
R.
Maxwell.
BIFF. BANG! 830,090 GONE!
Great London Circus nnd Van AmFd. Hiudns, Inc.
burg’s Trained Wild Animals there
Hof-Mae Battery Co. (2 flonts).
areewloc
producing clowns—funsters
Sanford Steam Laundry.
who
produce
their own laugh skits.
Wight Grocery Co.
They
will
be
seen
on circus day, Wed­
Woman's Club.
nesday,
November
2, when the great
Mrs. J. M. Dresner.
tents
will
bo
raised
in Sanford, as the
Knights of Columbus.
central
figures
in
many
an ttpronrlng
Sanford Farmers' Exchange,
in his Paramount production, "The pnntimimic comedy. But, after pa­
L. P. MeCullcr.
Affairs of Aiintol," which will lie rade and between 'lie nftciin on nnd
The Vowel 1 Co.
shown nt the Star theatre next Fri­ night shows, Ihey’ss ucnr the doilies
American Fruit Growers.
day nnd Snturdny.
carefully for new stuff, A producing
Sanford Furniture Co.
Tho setting in question serves ns a clown must alwnys work nt his art—
Hill Ilnrdv/nie Co.
background for n part of tho story nnd do not thin* that renl clowning
C. W. Stokes.
portrayed by Wallace Reid, Gloria is not nn art—or his offering! soon
Rlnckshcar Mfg, Co.
Swanson, Elliott Dexter, Bebo Daniels fnH behind in the race for laughs..
The Herald Printing Co.
Wanda Hawley, Theodore Roberts and Besides, tho lifo of n guod clown skit
Popular Market, two floats.
other nll-tnr plnycrs. It is nn ultra- is only one season, and even then it
Frank Akers Tiro Co.
luxurious npnrnmcnt nnd Howard Hig- must bo polished and altered as the
Sanford Truck Co.
gin, production manager for Cecil B. months go by, shaped to suit different
Sanford Mattress Factory.
DeMillo productions, was instructed to sections of the country and adapted to
The Auxiliary of tho Sallle Harri­ spnro no expense.
the moods of thepcople crowding the
son Chapter N. S., D, A. U. (Children
Tho result was nn attractive suite- great seven pole top.
of the American Revolution).
dcsignedt by Paul Iribo—furnished
Any one welcomo to enter a float with appproxlmntoly $30,000 worth
or decorated enr. Suitable ensh prizes of furniture. This included n valu­
will lie awarded by tho Firt Notional able set of Louis XVI chairs, n mag­
Bank, Seminole County Bank and Peo­ nificent carved photograph case of
ples' Bank of Sanford.
unlquo design, n grand piano, lamps,
American Agr. Chemical Co.
mirrors, tables, n desk, loungo, pict­
Kldor Springs Water Co.
DARKENS BEAUTIFULLY AND
ures nnd bric-a-brac.
W. S. Parker.
,
At tho climax of this episode, Wnl- RESTORES ITS NATURAL COLT. W. Williams.
OR AND LUSTRE AT ONCE
rlncc Roid wns instructed to run
Camp Fire Girls
amuck, smashing everything brenkChamber of Commerce,
nblo In tho set. The orders were com­
Common garden sage, browed into
Chose &amp;Company.
prehensive nnd Reid obeyed them to n heavy tea, with sulphur nnd alcohol
Rotary Club.
tho letter. Not ono stick of furniture ndded, will turn gray, streaked and
N. Do V. Howard.
remained in its original shnpo when faded hair beautifully dark and lux­
Chapter of U. D. C.
tho vandalism wns complete- Using uriant. Mixing tho Sago Tea nnd Sul­
Thrasher &amp; Garner.
tho small pieces of furniture ns blud­ phur recipe at home, though, Is troub­
Anyone wishing to ontor call Lloyd’s geons, Reid shattered everything in lesome. An, easier way Is to got tho
Shoe Store.
168-tf. sight while the camera clicked Just out rendy-to-uso preparation, improved
of range of his blows. Mirrors, lamps, by the addition of other ingredients,
ASK FOR YOUR RECEIPT.
chairs, phonograph nnd piano were n large bottlo, a t little cost, at drug
demolished ono by one. As a conclus­ stores, known as "Wyth’s Sago and
Subscribers to the Dally Herald ion to tho scone, tho husky star seized Sulphur Compound," thus avoiding a
lot of muss.
should ask for a receipt when the
While gray, fadod hair Is not sin­
cnrrlcr boys collect from you. It Is
ful, wo all dcsiro to retnin our youth­
tho only protection you have in case
ful appearance and attractiveness. By
the carrier changes or thero happens
darkening your hair with Wyeth's
Sage and Sulphur Compound, no one
to bo a mistake In tho account. Each
can
tell, because it does it so natural­
carrier boy is 'supplied with receipt
ly, so evenly. You just dampen a
books, nnd la commanded to give a
sponge or soft brush with it and
receipt by the Herald. See that you
draw this through your hair, taking
one small strand at a time; by morn­
Ket your receipt at the end of ouch
ing all gray hairs have disappeared.
week if you Rro paying thnt way.
After unother application or two your
hair becomes beautifully dark, glosBy,
A woman is as old aa she looks
soft and luxuriant, and you appear
thiiu being entirely unlike tho "bot
years younger.—Adv.
tied In bond" hootch you buy now.

* • f r t s a r - 's a

r : u * ■&gt;»

M,er b"

Sail it with a herald Want Ad.

EAT LESS MEAT, ALSO TAKE
GLASS OF SALTS BEFORE
EATING BREAKFAST
Uric acid in meat excites tho kid- \
neys, they become overworked; get j
sluggish, ache, and feel Hko lumps of •
load. The urine becomes cloudy; tho j
bladder is irritated, and you may be [
obliged to seek relief two or three &lt;
times during the night. When the !
kidneys clog you must help them |
flush off the body's urinous waste or •
you’ll be a renl sick person shortly. '
At first you feel a dull misery in the \
kidney region, you suffer from back- j
ache, sick headache, dizziness, stom- •
nch gets sour, tongue coated and you !
foci rheumntlc twinges when tho ;
weather is bad.
••
Eat less meat, drink lots of water; !!
also get from any pharmacist four
ounces of Jad Salts; take a table- ••
spoonful in a glass of water before !!
breakfast for a few days and your ||
kidneys will then net fine. This fa- •;
mous salts is made from the acid of . !
grapes nnd lemon juice, combined with j )
Hthla, and has been used for genera-);;
tions to clean clogged kidneys and X
stimulate them to normal activity, =
also to neutralize the acids in urine, H
so it no longer is a source of irritn- ■
tlon, thus ending bladder weakness. 1
Jnd Salts is inexpensive, ennnot in- J
jure; makes a delightful effervescent ■
lithln-wnter drink which everyone ■
should take now nnd then to keep tho J
kidneys clean and active. Druggists *
here say they sell lots of Jnd Suits to ■
folks who believe in overcoming kid- J
noy trouble while it is only trouble. J
—Adv.
t

♦♦♦Start♦♦♦
Bank Account
Stnrt a bank account with ua and we will help you make it
larger. We are equipped to care for your deposits with abaoluto safety. Thero is no function of a bank wo ennnot per­
form. Every facility afforded to farmers nnd others for
transaction of their banking business. Accounts may be
opened by mail nnd monies deposited or withdrawn in this
way with equal facility. There arc scores of young men in
Sanford who should start a bunk account. The dimes they
throw away every month if brought to our bnnk would make
them independent as they rench the noonday of life. In fact,
every person who hns a dollar should start a bnnk nccount.
Try it nnd you will alwnys thank us for this advice.

of Sanford

THE GREAT TRAINED ANIMAL SHOW

n D P TT C !

lllluUlJ

SANFORD ATA U
WED.

9

HUV. L

THE REAL BIG CIRCUS

Highwaymen are infesting lonely "
roads in the eastern part of the State J)
smith tif Pnlntkn and reports of mid- r
night robberies are daily reaching r
Daytona, Bunnell and DeLnnd, nc- £
cording to C. M. Lowry, real estate J*
nnd bond broker, who returned today n
from a business trip to Orlando and a
Kissimmee.
jg
"These fellows take advantage of JJ
the stretches of had road,"
Mr. Lowry
R
r
*
IT,
declared, "and jump on the running u
boards of automobiles that are forced "
to drive slowly because of the bumps. *
Everywhere along the line, from De- n
Land tip to Pnlntkn, garage men told u
me that holdups were being perpe- £
t rated frequently. Thero are nppnr- *
entlv* no officers on read duty. The K
*
sheriffs of tho different counties a
should cooperate with each other In £
putting nrmed deputies on the ronds
to protect the motorists nga'nst the n
highwayman, if they don’t check the n
situation now, what will it amount to JJ
when the tourists really begin to pour *
in?
!■
Three robberies have been reported a
in tho past two weeks from Turnbull "
Hammock, bet weep Daytona and Co- ■
eon, Mr, Lowry said. Between Hast- ■
ings and Pnlntkn on* man wns held *
up thee times the sumo night recent-, jj
ly. The Turnbull Hammock road is ■
In poor condition nnd motorists nre i ■
forced to drive through slowly. There | ®
nre no habitations nearby and the ; ■
place offers an excellent opportunity ■ Tickets on Sale on Show day at Dower and Itoumiltat’s Drug 5
Store at same prices charged on Show Grounds
i
for hold-ups.
n
■
While In the territory between £ ■■■■ ■■■■■■ ua K rr ■n is uc u rn r a s !!■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ ■■■■■&gt;■■■■
Pnlntkn and Hastings gangs of men _
hnvo recently beaten up residents of
ASK FOR YOUR RECEIPT.
TRAIN SCHEDULE
the section, the present crime wave
there is not attributed to local pcoSouthbound
Subscribers to tho Dally Harold
plo^MT. Lowry has been told.—Jack­
Departs should ask for n receipt when the
Arrive
sonville Metropolis.
_
.. 2:36 a. m. 2:46 a. m. carrier boys collect from you. It Is
8:40 a. m tho only protection you hnvo In case
NO TRESPASSING
3:20 p.m the cnrrlcr changes or there happens
No. 89.......... 2:55p.m.
No, 85.......... 0:55 p. m. 7:10 p. m. to he a mistake In tho nccount. Each
The clipping wns wns evidently ta ­
cnrrlor boy Is supplied with receipt
North Bound
ken from nn Arknnsns paper; a re­
Arrive
Depart! bonks, nnd Is commanded to glvo a
production of n notice posted on an
No. 82______ 1:48 a.m. 2:03 a. rn receipt by tho Herald. See that you
Arkansas farmer's Innd:
No. 84...........11:45 a.m. 12:05 p. rn get your receipt nt thi end of each
NOTICE
No. 80.......... 8:05 p.m. 3:26 p. m. work If you arc paying thnt wny.
IF ANY MANS OR WOMANS
No. 28..........10:90 p. m.
IIORZ OR COW
Trilby Branch
TRESPASES ON THIS HERE
Arrive
Depart*
LAND
•No. 100..........
6:00 a. m,
HIS OR HER HED OR TAIL
3:25 p. m
•No. 24..........
WILL BEE CUT OFF, AS THE
7:00 a. &gt;n.
#No 158..........
CASE MAY BE
7:35 p. m.
No. 22..........
Leesburg Branch
Miami Bench Is expecting n lot of
Arrive
Departs
people down for the shrf bathing nnd •No. 167.......... 4:00 p. c*.
Get An Abstract Before
bench promennding this coming sen- No. 21.......... 2:52 p. m.
Buying Property
Hon. Tho Metropolis snys thnt tho •No. 101............ 6:30 p.m.
bath hodso men hnvo been renty busy •No. 25______ 2:00 p.m.
No. 22.......... 7:00 p. m
during tho summer, nnd will bonblo
Oviedo Branch
to nccommo&lt;lnto throe thousnnd peo­
Departs E. A. DOUGLASS, Pres.
Arrive
ple nt a time with suits nnd rooms. •No. 126..........11:00 a.m.
Thore nro, of course, lots of people •No. 127..........
who como to tho bench nil rendy for •Daily, except Sunday.
tho surf or tho snnds, but n gront
throng is always anxious to rent suits
The Cocoa Tribuno shows a picture
and bath rooms. The lure of tho sands of n project hnlf-mililon-doMar hotel
and the sea is admittedly almost ir­ to bo built nt Cocoa. In construction A car load on A. C. L.
resistible and the provision made by It will bo of native coquina rock with
Dray Track
enterprising men for tho accommoda­ Tennessee marble trimmings. A flno
tion of tho many visitors nt tho bench golf course is to be laid out on Meris commendable.
rit Island to be run In conjunction
with the hotel ,which will be called
A project is on foot to havo an ag­ "The Floridian."
ricultural oxhibit the year round at
tho state fair grounds at Jacksonville.

. 25c-30c
$1.25UP

�F * Q * FOOT

THE EANFORH DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27,1921

SANFORD DAILY HERALD
u w( m «

a m

■utU NMIm , 1*7 Kimlii At

_____

•I

gMiHC IUr3*

THE HERALD PRINTING CO., lac.
■. J. H O LLY _____________ Editor
N. 1. LILLARD....Secretary-Treasurer
H. A. NEEL— ___ General Manager
ROBERT J. HOLLY, Jr,
atacvwTio* u i u i i
Tbone 148 op to 8 P. M.
Tw

K k M rtf tie s M m t t A4».

.•A M

M n i * i *i» ‘oitr 'if Omiw
'•a * ....................» ............t* Paata
fh a Me IS* *a lAfaca Waakfar MmM • »
M r aatan la a lu U Oaaatr aa4 U paVUakad
m w ? rrtta r.
AdtartWae ntaa mU* kMwa
m » flliit1 ii
DamaatmUa U paMtiaa. MM
PM raw, alwapa la ttw o w .

Member of The Aeeociated Frees

JLooks like sun would shlno again.
We wero wanting n change In the
weather nnd we seem to hnve it.
After the debris has been carted
sw ay and business resumes in south
Florida, It will bo found that tho dam­
age Is less than first reported.
-----------o—
—
And Florida can recover from a
catastrophe moro rapidly than many
of tho other states. We have such
diversified interests that nothing less
than the country going Republican
makes us despondent.
Nevertheless and notwithstanding,
we would not order up any moro
storms this season. But it seemed
that this one juat had to come to give
tts a break in the weather, and now
that It is over, we can go ahead look­
ing for something else.
,
The big meeting of the Rotarians
at 'Orlando has been postponed until
Friday, November 4. The Rotarians
will come from nil parts of the Htotc,
and on account of the storm damage,
they could not possibly get there this
week, hence the postponement.
•---------- o----------SOUTH FLORIDA SUFFERS.
South Florida seems to have felt
the blow of tho recent storm more
honvily than other parts of the State,
although at this time, reports from
Key West arc meagre, nnd nothing
definite Ih known of the damage in
that part of the peninsula. These
equinoctial gales can be anticipated
evory ten yenrs or more, and espec­
ially at the close of a long hot slim­
mer. It scorns that if tho September
Scales are forthcoming on time, hut.
little dnmnge is done aside from a
severe blow accompanied by rain. But
In the event that the Htornis are de­
layed until October, they are usually
accompanied by wind and heavy rains
*thnt are damaging in many ways.
This in the latest storm of this nature
recorded in Florida ft ninny yenrs.
About ten or twelve yenrs ago, the
Statu was visited by a late October
Kale that came about the tenth of the
month, nnd Insted for two dnys, blow­
ing nnd raining so heavily tliut peo­
ple could hnnlly get out to attend to
business. This deluge damaged the
eelery fnrms considerably, hut the
a to m this yuur was not accompanied
liy so much ruin, and Imt little dam­
age was done in this section. It is
rumored that lower Houtii Florida has
miiTcrod greatly by the damage to the
citrus trees, and our sympathy is ex­
tended to thorn. Florida has so few
catastrophes of this kind, that we
hnrdly realize a hurricane of any kind
could happen, and in this instance, it
acorns that tho damage to crops nnd
property, will run into the millions.
Uowovor, the loss of life is small,
compared to the extent of the sweep
of the storm, and what might have
hnppunod, and the people of the entire
state enn congratulate themselves
thnt it wns no worse. There is noth­
ing quite as laid as a heavy wind and
rnln sweeping upon people, plunging
whole cities Into darkness, ami in a
fow minutes placing a well ordered
comomvonlth bnck to tho first degree
of disorder. But Tampa and all of
the other communities nru quick to
‘respond to the call of law and ordor,
.■and to take up the work of recon­

— B aas

SUGGESTIONS FOR SERV­
ING DEL MONTE SPINACH
Season Spinach well, mix
with dill pickle nnd pack in
molds. Chill, turn out on let­
tuce and servo with mayonflnlso.
Servo pouched eggs on Spin­
ach instead of toast for a break­
fast or luncheon dish.

1

Deane Turner
WELAKA BLOCK
Phones 497-494

struction, and In a fow weeks the ef
fects of tho storm wilt hardly be
noticeable in tho quick going and
building cities and communities of
south Florida.
Tho loss of life is deplored, but in
the face of the worst storm that has
struck Florida in many years, it is
marvelous that tho loss was not great­
er. Monetary losses can ho made
good, and while sympathising with
those who have suffered financial loss,
wo cannot help but feel that it could
hovo beon infinitely greater and de­
spite tho toil of property loss entailed,
nnd the set-back to many flno groves
nnd farmers, we are thankful that It
was no worso.
AND THE PEOPLE PAY.
If thero is any doubt about whoro
the Republican pnrty stands in its
relations to tho poor man, let them
keep up with the daily nowHpaper re­
ports of the actions of the Republi­
can congress when it comes to n ques­
tion of placing tho burden of war
taxos. The Democrats endeavored to
cut the tax from the poor man, nnd
let tho rich mnn pay out some of his
ill gotten gnins made during tho war,
whlto the poor man was starving to
death. But tho Republicans must pro­
tect the rich, for It wns the rich cor­
porations thnt put up the slush fund
with which to elect tho Republican
congress nnd president. As the Jack­
sonville Metropolis aptly says:
One of tho fundamental principles
of the Republican pnrty is to make
the "small citizen" hear the burden
of taxes.
This is truo because tho Republican
’puxt.y j» the judUicol J&amp;qI .of the capi­
talistic interests of this country.
I t is not surprising, therefore, that
the Senate approved normal tax rates
of four per cent on the first $4,000 of
income and eight per cent on all over
that amount Tuosdny.
The Democratic members' of the
Senate wore opposed to n continuance
of these rates already in force, but
being in the minority they were help­
less in putting over amendments. Per­
haps the reason Senator Trammell
did not introduce his three promised
amendments was because he wns as­
sured beforehand they would bo
thrown out without serious considera­
tion.
The Senate and House, both Re­
publican controlled, are doing ail in
their power to relieve the big inter­
ests, hut nothing is being done to
lighten the burden of tho smnll tax­
payer. Ho Is the "goat" as usual.
The average American receives less
than $1,000 ns compensation for hlH
labors in the course of a yenr. In
fact, the average salnry is far below
$4,000, nnd legislation under thiR
margin is enacted against the mas­
ses, not against the classes. The fact
thnt incomes over $4,000 are taxed
eight per cent does not establish a
fair proportion. Where tens earn $4,000 or more in a year tens of thous­
ands earn less than this amount.
The average citizen realizes that he
must pay his share of the nation’s
burden, but he cannot see why he
should lie required to hoar the major
part of the burden—nnd the Senate
has again decreed that this is wlint
he must do. is it any wonder thnt din
satisfaction is widespread in tho coun­
try?
The administration ennnot escape
the responsibility of Its nets.
The
pendulum of public sentiment is al­
ready swinging, and the approval of
this law will add to its impetus.
DON’T ADVERTISE—SAVE YOUR
MONEY.
Don’t ndvtrtise if you believe you
are wasting money. Ix’t your compet­
itor waste his money on advertising,
and perhaps in this way you will put
him out of business. Fix his clock
for him. Just stand buck and laugh
at him when you see him squandering
his money for ink. Once there was a
boy named John; we helievo it wns
Wannmuker. Maybe it wns Money­
maker, Anyhow, it was John, with
some sort of a maker attached to his
last name. He owned fifty yards of
calico, three pairs of jean pants, half
n dozen pairs of good home-made
socks nnd five pairs of hoots. Ho call­
ed thin a dry goads store through a
Philadelphia newspaper nnd offered
to soli a pair of socks for HO ccntH.
The dldn’t-heilevo-ln-ndvortising mer­
chant laughed. Young John spent $flf»
with the Philadelphia Ledger to ad­
vertise Just one time nnd hnd lesB
than $100 worth of goods. Ho wns
cautioned by tho merchant who "know
it didn’t pay." It was from "sympa­
thy," they said, "for his poor mothor
that they offered advice." But John
didn't listen to them, nnd went and
blew his money foolishly, and today
John f.eon the result of his inlsdolngH.
Ho haH bo many
lnrgo dry goods
stores that he can hardly find tlmt to
study his Sunday school lessons.—
Snfety Ilnrhor Herald.
--------------o-------------G*t your Scratch Pods from The
the Herald office.

NO NEED FOR A STRIKE.
It Is rather a curious phenomenon
that, in tho presence of a great men­
ace to tho public comfort and hoalth,
so many individuals and organiza­
tion leaders are declaring that they
would tike to havo tht great strike
come now, nnd bo "over with."
There are two classes of persons
that would like to havo tho strike
colled on timo, but they havo differ­
ent points of view and different rea­
son sfor wishing this calamity to be­
fall the nation a t once, rather than
have it averted now, to cotno ot some
later period.
Tho view of one of these classes,
the innocent bystanders, the public,
which feels that it is going to be the
chief sufferer in any ovont, is that
the sooner the blow falls tho qponer
the country will recover from its ef­
fects; and this feeling Is accompani­
ed by a vngue hope that it will thus
he.gotten ''out of our system," like
the sedimonts of somu lingering dis­
ease. This view is well expressed by
a correspondent of the Now York Tri­
bune:
"As one atom in this country, I
would say, ‘Let’s have the railroad
strike; let’s have tho strike and get
through with it ono way or tho other.’
We nro turned upside down once or
twice every yenr by threats and more
threats from tho railroad employees.
It Is about timo we found out where
we arc. If they arc supreme in this
country tho sooner wo find it out the
better nnd govern ourselves accord­
ingly. So lct’B have a strike and got
It out of our system."
Tho other class is composed of
some of the railroad leaders, who
think that a strike would clear the
air, wipe off tho slate, nnd give them
nn opportunity to start over ngaln
nnd restore tho old pre-wnr system,
with more fnvornble regulations nnd
conditions.
But why invite n disaster thnt will
he terrible in its offeetH, no matter
which side wins or looses? There is
no more reason—not so much reason
—for n genernl strike ns there is for
war. And n genernl strike IS war, nnd
the wars of the future, nt lonst those
within empires nnd states, will he in­
augurated by general strikes.
But
why hnve a strike, when everything
thnt may lie gained or lost by the
strike, may he gnined or lost through
the same sort of arbitration (thnt
must cncvitiihly follow tho wreckage
and wastage of n genera lstidkc?
Why not resort to arbitration in the
first plnce? The world of industry
has certainly advanced far enough to
utilize nil the machinery of arbitra­
tion and to call into play all the pre­
ventive forces nnd devices thnt have
been worked out through long nnd
painful experience.
And having the strike now, instead
of later, will not help things. It will
make things worse.
Every strike,
like every cither evil stop, makes tho
next one easier, broadens nnd per­
fects the path or ’{channel," and tends
to Bet lip n entumion, in place of
chance or occasional incidents.

On the other hand, every time a
disaster is averted nr postponed, it
mnkes the next threat less terrifying
nnd less of a peril. (lt ts like the
truce of Ireinml, which is bringing
both siduH to a realization of the
blessings of tranquility as contrasted
with the alarms nnd wnstnge of wnr,
A little more pence, and a resumption
of the murderous fighting will he im­
possible.
Prevent this strike, through n
calm appeal to nrbitrntion—thero
must lie Just means of reaching a
Just agreement—nnd a great nnd long
stride will hnve been taken toward tho
establishment of better nnd more re­
ciprocal relations between capital and
labor.
Thero is no need to invoke the cal­
amity of a strike, nor tho selfish pur­
pose of wiping off objectionable rules
and regulations, or for getting the
virus of strikes "out of our system.”
The best cure for strikes is to stop
them—next, of course, to preventing
them by means of Justor relations be­
tween employers and their men.—
Palntka Nows,
SENATOR TRAMMELL SEEKS
REDUCTION.
Senator Park Trammell has intro­
duced nn amendment to the tax hill,
providing for tho repeal of tho tax on
freight nnd passenger charges. Ho
has boen working for Bomo timo to
have this tax discontinued. It is ono
of tho wnys in which ho is endenvoring to bring about some reduction in
tho oxccsslvo transportation charges.
Ho introduced a hill , In tho senate
ujion the subjject early In May. In tho
tax hill ah it passed tne house the
transportation tax was repealed to
take effect Jnnuary 1, 1D22. Tho sen­
ate committee, however, proporos that
this tax shall not bo repealed. Senator
Trammell’s amendment proposes that
tho tar be discontinued from the date
of the passage of the revenue meas­
ure.—Floridn Grojvcr.

IS FLORIDA UNFAIR TO
HUNTERS?
A sporting magazine, "Field and
Stream," is cudgeling Florida's game
Jaws editorially. The main theme and
object of abuso is that we are charg­
ing a license of $25.00 a season for
non-residents for each county shot
over. Hy. S. Watson, the editor,
grows qulto eloquent over what ho
terms our profiteering ways. "How
is anyone to know where the county
lines are? And if a hunter fiUBhes a
covey of birds that fly over tho coun­
ty line must he drlv^forty miles to a
county seat, secure another license
(for $25.00) and come back In the
hope of still finding the birds?" We
have no defense *of our game laws,
except that we believe they should be
made on a par with Canada’s and a
state license Issued. Mr. Watson
knows enough of Forlda to be aware
of tho fact , that not all of our coun­
ties furnish the best of game hunt­
ing. Those that do give the hunter
real thrills are pretty ralg, and even
so, it would be unfair to turn the
hordes of slayers loose la them with­
out some ntttmpt to prevent overcrowdinw and utter decimation of all
our wil dlife. Our hunting season is
a Ion gone—too long, we think. Hunt­
ing licenses are for game protection.
Florida’s incomparable "winters” at­
tract many who could hnrdly go any­
where else for their sport in this lino.
We must protect our game or thiH line
of nttrnctlon will disappear. Still, wo
are for a stato license.—Floridn Grow­
er.
AS THE SECRETARY SEES IT.
Tho wise commercial secretary
knows thnt tho best picking is where
he does the most scratching.
Seldom have I found nn nthietic
mnn strong enough to servo on a
standing committee.
Even a dog-catcher wil ltnko point­
ers.
Just ns soon ns a man gets famous

“The Best Preparation
for Good Work Tomorrow
is Good Work Today”
The men of to“day, who will be the
successes of tomorrow, are those
which turn the opportunities as they
come to their future advantage,
through enthusiasm to work and a
willingness to save the very maxi­
mum their incomes will permit.

First National Bank
A COMMUNITY BUILDER

F. P. Fonter, President
B. F. Whitner, Cashier

PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS
DIRECTORY OF SANFORD
You Can Find the Name of Every Live Pro­
fessional and Business Man in
Sanford in This Column
LAWYERS

CONTRACTORS

George A. DeCottes

S . O . S h in h o lse r

Attorney-at-Law

a lot of felloWH hob up who used to
smoko m aple-leaf cigars with him.

Over Seminole County Bank
SANFORD
FLORIDA
The reason women’s clubs arc more
active than those of the men is that
talk never delays anything else n wo­
HARTFORD BATTERY
man is doing.
A mollycoddle is the mnn who in­
“Battery Insurance”
variably goes to tho movies the night
Sold and Serviced by
the commercial club meets.
Iwould rather moot n grumbler
Edw. Higgins, Inc.
than ono who nlwnys agreed with
everything I said.
Haight &amp; Wieland
You hnve not failed in llfo until you
nro dead.
GARAGES
My best friend is thd eno who
knows ail about me and is still my
Smith Bros. Garage
friend.
Expert Repairing
A busy man seldom goes wrong.
The man who gives in when lie is
OIL, GAB and ACCESSORIES
wrong is n wise man; hut he who gives
Oak and First
in when he is right is married.
No chon is stronger than its weak­
Geo. W. Knight
est link, but a town can lie as strong
as its strongest citizen.
Real Estate and Insurance
A city is more than an accidental
SANFORD
FLORIDA
group of buildings.
If the town is what its inhabitants
make it, the inhabitants are apt to bo .. Employment Bureau..
whnt the town mnkes them.
The vocational committee of the Busi­
When your auto gets stuck in the ness and Professional Women'a Club
Hand you dig it out. When your town requests all young women desiring
gctH in a rut you put it to the other employment to register at the First
fellow to dig it out.
National Bank.
AGNES G. UERNER, Chairman
Just because a man has money suf­
ficient for ids needs and tries to block
the wheels of progress don’t follow
D. F. SUMNER
Mr lead.—W. II. Powell, Secretary
Lake County Chamber of Commerce
PAINTER
in the October, 11)21, Nation’s Busi­
LET H E PAINT YOUH HOUSE
ness.
~ W ill C o n ti.ct or T .k . Job b? t h . Hour
rH O N E 411

l i a LAUnEL AYE.

IT’S A FACT-

you ran not
Sanford Machine &amp;
dry
your
Laundry in the sun when it Ih rain­
Foundry Co.
ing. So call the SANFORD BRANCH Genernl Mnchlno nnd Boiler Works
LAKELAND STEAM LAUNDRY,
Automobile Flywheel Steel Gear
they can dry it, rain nr shine. All
hands in stock
work cnlted for und delivered tho 3rd
('rank
Shafts He-turiiud
day.---------------- GIVE US A TRIAL

Sanford Steam Laundry

T. A. BUTNER

PHONE 475

SANFORD, FLA.

COOL WEATHER IS
COMING
Before buying your

HEATING STOVE
Come in and look over
our line

THE BALL HARD­
WARE COMPANY

FOR SERVICE
Call 146-J
W. RAWLING, Prop.

Acteylene Welding
OF ALL KINDS

Sanford Welding Co.

Contractor and Builder
SANFORD

FLORID!

Sanford Constructs Co.
CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS
Planes nnd Specifications Chcerfolly
Furnished
All Work Guaranteed
H. T. PACE
P. O. Raz lit

Builders &amp; Contractori
Sketches and Estimates Free; m
building too large and none too smalL
-----ALL WORK GUARANTEED-----

Wilson &amp; Shorey
Pine nnd Garland Sts., Orlando, FIs.

PURE WATER
Elder Springs Water
99.98% PURE
Phone Sll-W
Sanford, FIs.

LORD’S PURITY
WATER
AS GOOD AS THE BEST
Dally Service

Phone 197

SANFORD NOVELTY
WORKS
V. C. COLLER, Prop.

General Shop and Mill
Work
CONTRACTOR and BUILDER
517 Commercial Street

Sanford, Fla.

TRANSFER
“WE DELIVER THE GOODS"

Quick Service Transfer
Storage Facilities

If we please you, tell others; If oo
tell us. Phone 498

HOTELS
Hotel Montezuma
“Sanford’s New Hotel”
$1.50 Up Per Day

Located In Engle Bldg., 205 Oak Avc.
Phone 175

Fourth and Sanford Ava

New Era Printery
G. Basaett Smith, Prop.
COMMERCIAL AND
JOB PRINTING
DRINK
Elder Springs Water, Its 99 98-10’
pur cent pure. Phone 811.
Office supplies of all kinds at The
Herald Printing Co. When you want
anything In this line see Thu Herald.
We have It or can get i t
Try a Herald Want Ad today.

GILL0N&amp;
FRY
E L E C T R IC A L
Contractors

Phono 442

111 Park
Avc.

�- ' -

' I.

T&lt;r.j

THE BANFORD DAILY HSKALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27,1921

Utile Hepp*»*te|*
Mention of
Matter* la Brief
Personal Item*
of Interest

In and A bout
The Citg

«£

MANY BIG SALES BRINGING
PEOPLE TO SANFORD TO TRADE

Summery of the
Plotting Smtll
Talks Succinctly
Arranged for
Herald Headers

» * » * * * * l # » * # * # # * « «

i

.

:
J

th e w e a t h e r

For Florida: Partly cloudy to* night and Friday.

# # #

4 #

♦

*

: : SANFORD’S :
* : TEMPERATURE l
*
---*
4 Fine wonthor after tho

*
Roy Symmes, of Winter Park, la *
in this city today attending tc butl- *
*
ncss.
_____
*
Army officers’ shoes Just received *
*t Thrasher * Garner’s.
183-4tc 4
*
J. R. Cole, of Pnlatka, was among *
those hero yesterday transacting bus­ *
4
iness.

4

Prank Clark, Jr., of Miami; was 4
hero yesterday the guest of Capt. and 4
Mrs. K. R. Murrell, at the Mootesuma. *

4

Have your watches and Jewelry re­ *
paired at McLaulin's. Two first class

4
4

watch makers. Prompt sorvice.
140-tfc *

4

Army rnin conts at Thrasher &amp; *
flamer’s.
183-4tc *

4

big
storm.
Looks like
clear
weather now nnd cool weather
and after that big blow and
wind and ruin maybe tho
weather man will relent and
give us a flno winter season.
The old bulb hangs around tho
70 mark now instead of tho 00
mark and It will not got hack
to the high stuff until next
summer and wo doubt if it
over goes that high ngnin in
many summers. But we nro
so lucky hero In Sanford that
wo have no cause for anything
but thanksgiving. Tho weathor Is all right. Everything is
nil right.
3:40 A. M. OCTOBER 27
Maximum ....................... 74
Minimum ....................... 03
Range ............................. 08
Barometer ..................... 29.04
Rain ............................
12
Northwest nnd cloudy.

4
*
#
#
#
*

4
#
#

4
4
4
4
4
4
#
*

4
*
*

4
#
#

4

*
*
4
W. Oliver Murrell, of Wnuchuln,
4
spent several days hero with his par­ 4
4
4
4
*
*
*
*
4
4
4
ents, Cnptai nnnd Mrs. K. R. Murrell.
Mrs. R. II. Fnlrcloth has returned
The ladles of the Episcopal Church to her homo in Lakeland after spend­
-will hold their Dusaar and Supper, ing n week hero ns tho guest of Mrs.
December 1st and 2nd In the Pariah J. L. Fnlrcloth,
Rouse.
171-tfc
Tho Tomplo Pipe Organ Club will
Mr. nnd Mrs. B. W. Herndon re­ hold ita Christmas Bazaar November
turned home yesterday afternoon 20th, Tho place to ho nnnonccd Int­
from Tnmpn, where they spent sever­ er. In enso of bad weather, tho nfal days.
fnir will bo hold indoors.
182-mon-Thur-tfs.
Army pants for $1.00 pair.—
Thrasher &amp; Garner.
183-4tc

Princess Pat?

183-tfc
The Pipe Organ Club will have «
Hallowe’en Lawn Supper with Miss
Mrs. Lawton, president of the Wo­
Martha Fox and Mrs. Forrest Gntehman’s Club at Oviedo, was in tho city
el, hostesses, at their homes, corner
yesterday afternoon nnd attended the
Oak and Eighth, Thursday, October
27th.
182-4tc meeting of tho music nnd literature
department of the Sanford Woman’s
Club,

Princess Pat?

183-tfc

J. ,S. I’axton, of Chicago, mndo his
headtiuimrters at the Montezuma yostetriay while In the city transacting
business.
ATTENTION CELERY GROWERS!
We have just received a carload of
Yellow Jacket sprayers, price of samo
cash, 12 per cent below Inst year’s
prieea.—Mnhonoy-Wulkor Co. 180-6tc
Call ami see our line of army gods,
complete lino.—Thrasher &amp; Garner.
183-4tc
Miss Clara Phillips has returned
after an extended visit to New York,
and Boston, and Is now ready to re­
sume work at her studio.
We have in stock different sizes of
Pipclcss Round Onk Furnaces, also
automatic nnd instantaneous hot wat­
er heaters.—Mnhoney-Walkor Co,
180-Ctc

Princess Pat?

183-tfc

BATTERIES—America’s first car
was regularly equipped with start­
ing and lighting HaVories in 1911,
this bnttcry was an “EXIDE", today
tho master battery of tho world, Do
not ho misled by tho so-called Just ns
good.—Ray Brothers, Phone 548.
17G-tf-c

Princess Pat?

183-tfc

BEAUTIFUL SILVER CUPS
DONATED FOR ARMISTICE
DAY PARADES AND RACES.
In tho window of Perkins &amp; Britt
are jfour beautiful silver cups ,for
Armistice day events. Throe of tho
cups were donated by tho three hanks
of Snnford, the First National, the
Seminole nnd the Peoples hanks, for
the three best decorated floats In tho
big parade hero on November 11. The
clip donnted by Harry Heorcn will bo
given to the winner of tho canoe rnce,
or the yacht race, as It may happen to
he run. Tho cups nro beauties, nnd
nre being greatly admired hy tho
public. The prizes will stimulate tho
entrees In tho parade, and the bout
rnces to great efforts, ami the day
promises many surprises in the vari­
ous events.

"EXI HE" BATTERIES—Our Pull­
man cars, airplanes, submarines,
telephones and great 7,000 mile wire­
less stations nro equipped with the
master "EXIDE” Butteries, tho bat- HOLD CAR THIEVES
tery is the life of your car, get tho
STEAL CAR IN DAYLIGHT.
best. We rcehnrgo and repair nil
makes.—Ray I(rot hers, Phone 548,
G. C. Follows, who resides on Snn170-tf-c for avenue, Snnford Heights, had his
Cole eight car stolen Tucsdny by n
l’cst cards—local vIowb—lc each at
pair of nervy thieves. Mrs. Fellows
Herald—by tho pound—15c.
was using the enr nnd had stopped it
in front of her house for a few min­
utes, nnd while she was In the house,
two white men stepped in tho car and
drove it o(T. No one saw them take
the car, hut several saw these men
To Reduce the Cost,, on the rnilrond crossing that morn­
ing.
As tho storm came up nnd
of Motoring
knocked out tho service, Mr. Follows
30x314, Nonhns not been able to catch up with the
Skid .........
thieves yet. It wns one of the nerv­
30x3,
iest steals yot recorded.
n ib ...........
ALPHA ZI DELTA.
These Tires are Firsts and

SPECIAL

$10.25
8.75

Carry the Factory
Guarantee

FRANK AKERS
TIRE CO.
VULCANIZING
1st and Elm Avo. Phone 447-W

PAW

Many big sales now going on or
contemplated for the next few days,
are bringing,, and will continue to
bring, people to Sanford to trade.
Snnford merchants recognize the fact
that tho weather has changed and peo­
ple enn now be Interested In buying
winter goods. They also rccognlzo
tho fnct that putting on sales Is tho
only way to stimulnto business nnd
help to make Sanford tho big trading
center for this pnrt of Florida.
In tho next week thcro will ho mnny
big advertisements in the Dally Her­
ald, and also the weekly edition, for
the many stores that are putting on
special sales. This Is the time to
watch tho store ads, and make your
dollar go furthor. Dollar sales nnd
all kinds of special drives nre being
inaugurated hero by tho various life
merchants who want to Blurt the buy­
ing of fall and winter goods. October
has always been the first rcnl start of
tho winter buying, but on account of
tho late Bummer ,nnd the hot weath­
er prevailing, trado has not been
brisk. However, winter1, is coming,
nnd people nro beginning to watch the
store advertisements ns rover before,
heenuso they rnllzo that In tho store
nows ns displayed In the Dnlly Hornld, they can save money. Frldny’s
Dnlly Herald from this time forward,
will be filled with tho market stories
about the big snvlng In the mnny gro­
cery nnd meat stores, nnd provision
depots. Watch the Herald.
CITRUS CHOI* OF WEST
ORANGE I1ADLY DAMAGED.

The Side Show
One of the main attractions at the Street Carnival takes place during
the Armistice Day Celebration will have all sorts of "freaks.” The
wild man, the bearded lady, the Siamese twins, the largest living frog
in captivity, the fat man and the fa t woman and lots more too numer­
ous to mention. If you knew exactly what this show is you would walk
five miles at least to see it.

And if you knew
just what nice things we have in store for you at our place all the
time you would be willing to walk more than five miles to get them.
Don’t buy anything in our line till you see what we have and investi­
gate our prices.

v/ f sr#/?£ rw jr / s v/m /rtH L

S a n fo r d ,

Tom Moore

Dnningo In West Orange, according
to reports reaching the Reporter-Star
this afternoon, was chiefly confined
to tho citrus fruit crop, which was
said to be hurt to the oxtont of twen­
ty-live per cent.
The Reporter-Star was in telephone YOUR SATISFACTION
communication with Winter Garden
IS MY SUCCESS
and Oakland at 2:20 this afternoon.
Office Opp. P. O.
Phono 191
Mnrshnl J. A. Ilfidnott, of Winter
Gnnlcn, staled that the storm was nt To See Better See Moore
its height from G to 8 o’clock; that the
electric light plnnt wns compelled to
MRS. IDA AUSTIN
shut down until noon today on ac­
count of fallen wires nnd Hint the
418 Mngnuliu Avc.
wind blow in the windows of tho pub­
MAKER AND ALTERED o f ’
lic library.
LADIES* CLOTHES
No one was hurt In west Ornngc,
so far as could he learned.—Orlando
Reporter-Star.

OptometristOptician

TRUCK CROP IN
' POLK TOTAL LOSS.

WILL DO IT

Make anything you want In thu
mattress line.—Sanford MnttroBs Co.
183-Gtc
* Fnll trucking in tho Wnuchuln sec­
tion will prohnhly he n total loss as
the result of the Gulf hurricane thnt
swept the southwest portion of tho
state, according to G. B. Skipper,
prominent I’olk county cattle man of
FOR SALE
Bartow, who arrived in the city on a
business trip. Cucumbers nnd squash,
On Geneva Iload
the principal crops there, were just
SEE BRIDGE KEEPER
coming up.
Mr. Skipper rnn into the storm on
his wny into Bartow hy motor. When WALLACE REID
BUYS SIXTEEN SUITS
he left the city the light plnnt was out
AT ONE TIME.
of commission nnd. the same condi­
tions existed in Lakeland, Plant City
With prices nt existing levels, how
nnd virtually every town In thnt sec­
mnny men will buy sixteen suits of
tion, lie said.
Persons from Ft. Myers told Mr. clothes nt one time? As fur ns can
Skipper thnt the trucking in Lee he learned, Wallace Raid, i? the only
county wns practicnlly ruined hy the man who enjoys this unlqi u distinct­
gale. Ho pincod no estimnte on the ion. His mark o fsixteen suits at one
money loss.—Jacksonville Metropolis. order is said to ho ihe record in this
respect. It was Jjust pnrt of the pre­
paratory work in connection with the
HOY SCOUTS MEETING.
Aiming of Cecil B. DoMIUo's latest
Troop three, Tomplo Boy Scouts, Paramount picture, “The Affairs of
will meet atthe Baptist Temple, Fri­ Aiiatol* 'which* will ho the feature at
day night. Tile meeting will begin at tho Star theatre Friday ami Saturday.
Mr. Reid plays the role of “Anutoi"
7 o’clock sharp, instend of at 7:30, as
In
the all-star enst which includes
previously reported, This is an im­
Gloria
Swanson, Elliott Dexter, Wan­
portant meeting, as there nre only
da
Hawley
,Bobo Daniels, Monte Blue,
two meetings before Armistice Dny.
Theodore
Roberts,
Agnes Ayres, Theo­
All the hoys of the Baptist Sundnyy
dore
Kosloff,
Raymond
Hatton, Julia
school between 12 and 17 years of age
Fnye
nnd
Polly
Moran.
“Anatol"
is a
lire urged to he present.
young
man
about
town,
of
consider­
FAY LOSSING.
able means and carelessly fashion­
Wed. &amp;Frl.
able In his attire. Tho screen ward­
robe for this role included sixteen
FROM NOW ON.
suits of clothes.
This collection includes a number
Du you ever get to Blinkin'
of
business suits, hunting clothes, mo­
'Bout them good ol’ days Imek homo
toring
clothes, fcshionnblo afternoon,
A’foru you left tho old homestead
dinner
nnd evening clothes, golf
And started off to roam 7
clothes
nnd several less important
Do you over think of mother,
costumes. Practically al lof tho suits
And the others dear to you ?
are of distinctive cut nnd pattern and
No—you can't nITord to go hack,
cannot he used for scrcen«wcar.
But I’ll tell you what to do,
Just write your Homo Town paper,
PIANO OWNERS NOTICE
A'foro them blues ,'in gone.
Say “Hero’s a check, Dear Ed.; hy
Will be in town for a limited time.
Heck.
For immediate service phono—
I'm subscribin’ from now on."
MACK THE TUNER
—Zob Jones.
18216tp
Valdez Hotel
MOTHERS CLUB.
A majority of the railroads of the
The Mothers’ Club will meet tomor­ statu announce that they will offer
row afternoon at tho homo of the cheaper rates to tho Florida State
president, Mrs. R. R. Dens, instead of Fair at Jacksonville the coming
tho Parish house, as first announced. month, This will moan a largo at­
tendance from all points In the state.
SOCY

WOOD TIMBER

About forty members of the Alpha
Zi Delta Fraternity of Stetson Uni­
versity nt DoLund, enjoyed dinner at
tho Valdez hotel last ovoning. This
ovenlng’s pleasure was in tho form of
a “Rushing" party, given In honor of
tho newly initiated members of tho
Fraternity. After dinner, songs and
instrumental music were enjoyed un­
til a late hour. Peter Schanl delight­
ed tho guests with o number of piano
WANTED—Show case, five or six
The fcovld news the dofr It happens,
selections.
foot long. Horald Printing Co.
delivered at yoUr door each evening,
183-Gtp.
tRc the week.
Try a Herald Want Ad today.

F la .

FIVE ROOM BUNGALOW
Located within fifty feet of brick street to
be sold this week on very reason­
able terms.
See

A. P. CONNELLY

C L A S S IF IE D A D S
Classified advertisements, ft cents a line. No sd taken for less than
23 cents, nnd positively no classified nds charged to anyone. Caafe
must accompany all orders. Count five words to a line and remit ac­
cordingly.

FOR SALE

WANTED

WANTED—Customers for fresh milk,
morning and evening deliveries.—R.
L. Garrison. Phono 3711. 1G9-St-Tu
WANTED—Team work] Apply M.
Hanson Shoo Shop,
178-13tp
SECOND HAND SHOW CASE
Wanted. Herald Printing Co.
183-Gtp.
MIRACLE CONCRETE CO.—Build.
ing and pior blocks, cement pockets, SALESMAN WANTED—An old lino
cement sidewalks with gunrnntoo to
Legal Reserve Life Insurance Co.,
lust and not break or crack. General hns contract to offer n high class
cement contracting. All work guar­ salesman in this nnd adjoining coun­
anteed. Elm avenue botween Third ties. Address, Htnte manager, P. O.
and Fourth stroet.—J. E. Terwilliger, Box 1137, Jacksonville, Fla. 182-Otp
Prop. Phono 224-W.
178-lm-tfc
WANTED—Extra salesladies. Apply
FOR SALE—1920 Modol, 5 pnssunger
Surprise Shoe Store,
185-ltc
touring car, in good condition. See
H. T. Steele, nt Wight Bros., Co.
181-Gtp.
FOR SALE—12lO Egg Buckeye Incu- 1NG TRADE. ONE THAT’S NOT
hntor, only used ono time. 710 Pul- AFRAID OF A LITTLE WORK.
metto avenue. Call 209-W. 181-Gtp APPLY AT THE HERALD PRINT.
ING COMPANY.
tf
FOR SALE—Cheap for cash, sound,
medium size horse, wagon and har­
1’OHt cards—local views -lc ench at
ness. See E. F. Lundqulst, at Crown tho Herald office.
Paper Co.
183-‘J tp
Glasses Designed
FOR SALE—One practicnlly now Eyes Examined
Reo Bpeedwngon, ono now 5 passen­
Henry McLauIin, Jr.
ger Ford touring enr with truck body,
OPT. D.
curtains all around. Will sell either
one.—Snnford Mattress Co., Sanford,
Fin.
18»-Gte
-Got your Scratch Puds front The
the Herald office.
For office supplies, stationery, etc,,
come to the Herald office.
OPTICIAN
OPTOMETRIST
Post cards—local views—lc each nt Graduate Northern Illinois College
tho Herald office.
212 East First St.
Sanford, Fla.
FORD TRUCK for sale.—West Sldo
Grocery.
184-tfc
FOR SAL.V—Best opportunity for
wholesale mid retail fish market on
East coast Building, dock ami strip­
ping platform. Address W. P. Wil­
kinson, New Smyrnn, Fin. 10-17-lm

WANTED- "

FOR RENT

•aI

Z£

I
M
' i ff

i

Edith Lucille Ball

FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms.
Apply 1004 Elm Avo.
lG2-tfc Toucher Pinno nnd Harmony
FOR RENT—Suburban home. Call Graduate Chicago Musical College
308-J.
lG7tfc
GOOD LOCATION for n mont market.
Call 46-J for Appointments
Apply to 809 First street. 174-tfc
FOR RENT—Furnished front rooms.
200 Park Ave.
182-Otp
FOR RENT—Largo furnished bod
room.
Convenient to boarding
house, 71G Magnolia ave.
180-Otc
FOR RENT—Bed room, 311 Park avonuo.
178-tfc
FOR RENT—Lower floor of rosldence, furnished, 203 Magnolia
Ave.
183-Gtp

PROPERTY OWNERS
If yau have a roof thnt leaks, needs
repairing or painting, it will pny you
to bco me. I have devoted sixteen
years to tho roofing business, nnd if I
fall to please you It will cost you noth*
Ing. I give every small job my personnl attention. Charges reasonable.
Best of refr-onces.
Satisfaction
guaranteed

rooms, suitable for couplo, desiring
W. E. DODD
light housekeeping rooms. 210 Oak
PRACTICAL ROOFER
Ave.
185-tfc Phone 444
* 109 Boat First 81

,

(j

■

-

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'

’5V j

;SfA
U

S a n fo rd

in i

“City SnbatiDtuT
IN THE HEART OF THE WORLD’S GREATEST
.

.

VEGETABLE SECTION
,

: ■

NUMBER 184

SANFORD, FLORIDA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1921
v o l u M®

P

;r r r

Barometer \ V e n t
Here Y e s ^ d a y T l i ^
Recent Y e a ts

is
EU S m i T 'o f F TO

New Way of Testing Gold

ing o f the 4e&lt;|th
three people In
that vicinity, dd'mage said to be In
tiia' neighborhood 6f hnir n million
dollars, store*' Vc t t unroofed, plate
llown in, walla of
„
_
the lower part of
Taihblj la under i x feet o f water. All
o f ‘ th« electric light globes and gas
globea were blown off along the
atxeirte. The atorm reached a velocity
o f 75 miles an hour and the barometer
reached 28.81. It was the high wind
blowing the high tides over the dty of
Tampa that caused moat of the dam­
age,men
putting
the utilities plant out of
t
commission and stopping all business.
The eablq station o f the Tampa Elec­
tric Co., located on the docks, was un­
der several feet of water, and |&gt;olea
blown down made It secretary to aever the live wires, putting the city
practically In darkness, adding to the
misery and suffering. The damage es­
timated In south Florida by the storm
yestrday, will reach between five and
ten millions, It is reported, and the
citrus crop suffered greatly.

PRES. HARDING'S ADDRESS
AT BIRMINGHAM TODAY
TAKES UP RACE PROBLEMS
HARDING AT IJIRM1NGHAM,
SEMI-CENTENNIAL THERE
(B r Th* A o o c U W d P t m i )

BIRMINGHAM, Oct. 20.— Presi­
dent Harding nnd his party arrlvod
here tills morning to attend Birming­
ham's semi-centennial celebration.

ll ^ r j '

Says No Such Thing
Social Equality of
Races

VOTES

MEMORIAL SERVICE
WHEN IIE IS FITTED TO V O T g
YESTERDAY AT REUNION
AND SAME RULE WOULD AT* '
CONFEDERATE VETERANS.
PLY TO ALL RACES. ‘
(B f Th» A**oclat*d P w u)

.

CHATTANOOGA, Tcnn., Oct..2fl.—
A memorla sorvlco In momory of
officers of tho southern organization
who hav edlcd during tho last yenr,
featured today's program of the Con­
federate
Reunion
hero. Services'
were condusted jointly byy tho Con­
federate Veteran’^ Memorial Asso­
ciation ond the Sons o f Veterans.

(Br Tit* AitocUUl Fr***)

Out of the » ” !*! etorml fhat.llM
BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Oct. 20.—'Th#
J c k Florid. M tfe
.... r
it
right of the Amorlcan negro
to
occurred yesterday when a gale hit
This mpqlilue has been perfected by thq bureau of r‘. unJunlH at WasUtngbronder political, oconomlc and educ
the coasts and for thlrty-alx hours
ton to provide u ajiectroHcnpic analysis of gold which will measure the ttnetlonal advantages, based on a pi
accompanied by a terrific wind and
ness of the metal more accurately than one part In a million. The method
of race but never on an asplratlort’
consists of stfinll electric spn'rkA featfliig.between two Mirks of gold, photorain storm the state had troubles with
social equality, was championed
graph's'of.'the Kpnrkf*' Iriken through h dljrneilbn gnitliig'allowing nt oim’o ttie
wire* being down ond high water
President Harding hero today in 4
presence o f the Smallest' pnrtlcleii o f hnser irietiils.
caused by the tides and rising o f wat7f •&gt;
'
aa
.
plainly worded' inundation o f hla
&lt;r* In the bays almost put several cit­
views on the whole American rae©
ies out o! commission. On account of
problem.
ISSUANCE OF PERMITS
the wires beirg down all day yester­
These nro some o f tho principles on
FOR HRBWBRIES TO BREW
day in the Southern pnrt o f the state
which the President appealed to
WILL BE MADE NOW.
and the heavy wlmj and raln maklne
nation to "lay aside old prejudices and
it im possible to lephir them but little
D
old antagonisms” -and give support to
(By T1|« Ah n U U I Fn m )
n-w* could bo gleaned from the storm
.\ys
a constructive policy o f racial folk*
WASHINGTON,
Oct. 2ft—Tho Is­
centers today.
tlonshlp:
JACKSONVILLE, Oct. 20.—With
Snnfnrd experienced n severe wind
t.
—Y 1 / I . )..* suance o f permits to brewers for tho
"Politically and economically, them
tho gulf hurrlcano apparently having
manufacture of medicinal beor under
at times yesterday and lust night nnd
passed Into tho Atlantic after swoop­ WILL ADD FORTY FEET TOWARD
Dr. J. P. Hilburn, presiding elder of tho new torasury regulations, will need bo no occasion for great and
early in tho evening the electric light
ing ncross Florida peninsula yester­
the Orlando District, and one of tho proceed Immediately, Internal Reven­ permanent differentiation, provided,
PARK AND HAVE A
wires coming in contact with trees
on both sides there bo recognition o f
day and last night In n Northeaster­
lending ministers in the conference,
STAGE
ue Commissioner Blair said today.
were torn apart nnd on account of tho
tho absolute divergence In things So­
ly direction cities nnd towns today arc
prenchcd nt the Methodist Church
danger to pedestrians and cars tho
cial nnd racial.."
Sunday
night,
Inking
his
text
from
taking stock of the dnmngo.
Wire
Under tho auspices of the Holy
plant was shut down at midnight and
“ I would say let tho black man
communication South o f here wns Cross Men’s Club, nt their last meet­ Romans 1:10, “ For I am not ashamed
remained out of commission tho grontvote
when ho is fit to vote; prohibit
still severed enrly today oxcopt down ing,
in It
ii was
wuo moved
uiu.cu nnd
...... adopted that ( of the Gospel of Christ; for It Is the
er part of today. Part o f tho city
tho
white
man voting when ho Is un­
tho East Const which was not effect­ the Club romodol, improve nnd on- power of God unto salvation to every
was out of lights lust night nt nino
fit
to
voto."
ed seriously by tho blow and only re­ lnrge Holy Cross Parish IIouso so ns one that believoth; to tho Jew first,
o'clock tho transformers being blown
"I wish that both the tradition o f
ports on conditions in South Florida to make tho building still more effec­ nnd also to the Greek." Ho spoko of
out at various places nnd the city was
n
solidly Democratic South nnd a
brought hero by train crows. Appar­ tive in its already largo nnd embrac­ the call of Snul when Snul asked God
In darkness but the pooplo have be­
truditlon
of n solidly Republican black
whnt
he
would
hnvo
him
to
do.
God
ently no lifo loss but meager reports ing work. Tho plnnB includo enlarg­
come accustomed to this nnd but lit­
rnco might bo broken up."
Indicated tho damago to tho| ornngo ing tho building toward Park avenue sent him to ono Annnlas who would
LOOKS LIKE EVEN RADIO STA­
tle Inconvenience wns suffered.
"I would insist upon equal educa­
crop nnd told of Inundation of low­ about 10 feet in length. * Insido on instruct him as to what ho should do,
TIONS ARE OUT OF
The Daily liernld, ns usunl, nlong
tional
opportunities for both.”
lands. Low parts of Tampa wore un- tho cast end, there Is to be erected n thus God docs his work through hu­
DUS1NESS
with other nmnufncturlng plnnts,
"Mon
of both races mny well stand
dor sevornl foot of wntor on account fifteen-foot stage, the whole width of man instrumentality nnd llo wants
were idle today nnd tho pnpor will be
uncomprlslngly
against every sugges­
of tho high tldo In Tampa liny nnd tho building, with two dressing rooms workers to keep busy In His king­
(U ; Tho AiiocUtod Fro**)
cut in the news columns. Roports
tion
o
f
social
equality.
This Is not a
tho Hillsboro rlvor. Some rnilronds adjacent. Tho stage will bo equipped dom. Adjust ourselves to His plan
MIAMI, Oct. 20.—The radio station question of social equality, but a
from tho farm* around Sanford nro to
nro under water causing trains to de- in an up-to-date mnnner with foot­ and not try to work our own will in here today was unable to ralao tho
the effect that tho wnter will dnningc
question of recognizing a fundament­
lights, etc. On occasions when an ex­ the matter. Labor wherever we arc radio stations at Tampa nnd St. Pet­ al, eternal, inescapable difference."
the growing crops to Homo extent b u t ' *our ovcr 0 lcr no8‘
tra largo stnge would bo advantage­ placed, he it a high or low, big or ersburg.
nothing aerioua.
“ Racial amalgamation thcru cannot
ORLANDO, Oct. 20.—Three known ous, provision In made for the larger small plnce.
be.
Partnership of the races in de­
Some say, “ If I were rich, how read-'
deaths from tho storm according to space. Beyond this, there Is to ho the
(Dr Tho AuocliUd Fro**)
veloping
tho highest alms o f all hu­
a four-page issue of the Tampa Trib­ regulation GO ft. clear floor space ily I would give," nnd they withhold
JACKSONVILLE. Oct. 2f».—
manity
thcru
must he, if humanity is
they
une printed at Plant City early today for the bnsket hall court. From that the little they have when if
The hurricane passed to sen be­
to achiovo the ends which we havo
which reached here nt 11 o’clock. A point hack toward tho west end of would give of the little they have God
tween St. Augustine nnd Titus­
set for it."
number of families rescued by boats. tho building, there Is to bo erected in would multiply it and great things,
ville about midnight nnd is now
"Tho black man should seek to bo,
The roof was blown off tho Tampa elevated tiers, permanent sents. When could he accomplished.
moving up the Atlnntic const.
and
ho should he encouraged to bo
Snul preached the gospel of which j
Times building. Tho Knight nnd Wnll tho basket hull court is not in use, for
Conductor Kelsey, of the Atlnntic
tho
best
possible black mnn and not
building wns inundated. John Row­ stnge plays, etc., tho floor spneo will he wns not ashamed. The gospel is 1
Coast Line train which left Tam­
the best possible imitation of a whit©
land, who arrived hero thiH morning ho provided with chnlrs. Underneath as old ns the race.
pa nt 9:30 last night snid he was
DAUGHERTY SAYS COURSE WILL man."
Tho gospel that would lenvo Jesus
from Tnmpn reported wnter yester­ tho raised scats opening o ff Park
in Port Tampa yesterday morning
HE FOLLOWED IN
Thu president's nddress, which bro’t
day afternoon on Bayshoro boulevard nVOnUO,
nvonuo, will
on one sido Christ
when the storm struck. He de­
Will bo
UU two
*WU rooniH,
lUUIIW, un
----- - - out
- - - would have been acceptable
STRIKE
him from Washington on his first oxwns over the top of tho lamp posts for tho priest's prlvnto uso, nnd the 'to the Jews. To leave the Divinity of
scribed the rising tide as a tidnl
tonded trip Into tho South sinco hla
nlong tho scnwall nnd franklin street other for committee room, meetings, Jesus out of the Gospel would ho to
(Br Th* AatocUt*J Fr***)
wave. Port Tnmpn City was
Inauguration, wns delivered at n semi­
was under four feet of wnter. Another otc. Shower bathH, toilets anil lnvn- destroy the power of the gospel,
WASHINGTON, Oct. 20.— Attor­ centennial celebration of tho founding
tpiickly under two to ten feet of
party who made thoir way back from lories arc provided so nB to mnkc the
Ho who honors my Lord and denies ney General Daugherty today Indicat­ of tho city of Birmingham. It wns
water.
Houses unroofed; tho
Tnmpn Inst night reported thoy had to Holy Cross Parish House a very com­ His Divinity makes him nn imposter. ed tho announcement on tho courso to
Const Line phosphate terminals
devoted almost exclusively to tho rnco
cut their way through eleven miles of plete plant, nnd ono of which tho Gospel is the power o f God unto sal­ ho followed by tho government In tho
damaged. Rather thnn have his
question, although Mr. Hnrding also
vation to every one that believoth. event of a railroad striko might bo oxfallen telephone poles.
train marooned at Port Tampa,
whole city will ho proud.
took occasion to pralso tho world loudTho Parish IIouso Is being used Nothing hut the power of tho Son of ported from President Harding.
he took it to Tnmpn during tho
ership of a reunited nation. IIo said
moro nnd moro by tho various organi­ God will ho sufficient In tho day of
day, with scores of Port Tnmpn
in pnrt:
zations of tho city, religious, frnter- Judgment.
FIND SUICIDE ON
residents. Tho lower portions of
“ The world war brought us to full
This gospel shall not pass away.
TRAIN AT MADISON. recognition thnt tho rnco problem la
mil, patriotic nnd social under tho di­
Tampa was flooded. Stores In
rection o f Fnthor Pock, rector of the How innny systems of religion and
the Franklin street retail district
nntlonnl rather thnn merely sectional.
Parish nnd with tho needed now fa­ ethics hnvo been Introduced but soon
LIVE OAK, Oct. 20.—Tho body of There nro no authentic statistics, but
was under cighten inches of wntcilities tho Parish House will fill the fade and die but the Gospel of Jesus John Doan, a trnvollng salesman who It is common knowledge thnt tho
er, the power house was flooded
grent need which is felt in Sanford Christ shnll Inst. There is no other Is snid to hnndlc goods for a Chicago world wnr was marked by a groat
at noon and all power cut off.
name under Heaven whereby wo may clothing house, wns found in
for such a place.
When the train left Tampa last
In ono of migration o f colorod pooplo to tho.
IN
BUSINESS
SECTION
BEFORE
ho
snvod. Tho Gospel shall not puss tho toilet rooms on the Sonbonrd Air North nnd West. Thoy wero nttraetnight the city wns without llghtB,
West,
IT WAS BROUGHT UNDER
In Franco a ruined lonscapo is one away. It is tho Gospel thnt Hnvos us Lino train No. 38, from River Junct­ cd by tho domnnd for lnbor nnd th©
or car service. Tho wires tho
CONTROL
whoro tho Gorman passed; over here hero nnd tho Gospel thnt affords us ion to Jacksonville, this morning be­ higher yrages offered.
greater part of tho distance to
it Is ono whore tho bill poster passed. delight throughout tho ages to come. tween Tnllnhnsseo nnd Madison. Ills
Jacksonville were down nnd tho
"It has brought tho question o f rae©
(Br Tho A»*ocUUd Pro**'
train felt its way and arrived on
thront
wns
cuut
from
ear
to
enr
nnd
closer
to north nnd west nnd, I boAIKEN, S. C., Oct. 20.— Firo early
time this morning. Kelsey re­
liovo
It
hns sorved to modify some­
tho
gnsh
reached
to
tho
neck
bono.
today In tho buslncHfl district, fanned
ported the storm left destruction
what
tho
views of thoso sections onA
razor
lnylng
on
tho
windowsill
by n high wind, threatened for n time
everywhere In Its wnke. Tho Senthis
question.
It hns mndo tho South*
showtd
thnt
the
denth
wns
by
sulcldo.
to destroy tho entire town but wns
hoard Airline trains from South
ronlizo
Its
Industrial
dopondenca an
Money
found
In
tho
pockets
of
tho
brought under control after n hard
Florida did not arrive hero late
tho
lnbor
o
f
tho
black
man
and made
dead mnn nlso boro out this thoory.
fight by volunteer flro fighters. I* ivo
thiH morning and the Coast Lino
tho
North
rcnllzo
tho
difficulties
bf
Bills amounting to moro thnn $300
buildings, including tho city Jail, were
•rain from St. l’ etercburg which
tho
communities
in
which
tho
two
nnd n ticket from New Orleans to
destroyed with n dnmngo estimated nt
has not been heard from since
Jacksonville, wero found In his pock­ greatly differing races aro brought to
$26,000.
yesterday morning had not reach­
sldo by sldo. I should say that
FISHING SCHOONER
Tell How Strike Order ets. Tho body wns taken off nt Madi­ llvo
ed Leesburg at ten o'clock toit
has
been responsible for a larger
CAPSIZES
TWO
LOST
OFF
son.
*
WATSON CHARGESf
•lay. It Is not known whether
charity
on both sides, a boginning o f
NORFOLK YESTERDAY.
W
as
Taken
and
the
MISREPRESENTATION.
Alonzo Smith, n negro who claims
•he train, which was due to leave
bettor
understanding;
and In th©
thnt ho wns In the employ o f Dean,
Ht. Petersburg last night even
Walkout Ordered
(B r Th* AiM cU U d Fr*»»)
light
of
that
hotter
understanding
per­
WASHINGTON,
Oct.
20.—
Money
In
wns In tho nogro compnrtmcnt o f tho
stsrted. The Western Union sueNORFOLK, Oct. 20.—Two mon
haps
wo
shall
bo
ablo
to
consider
this
train and know nothing of tho man’s
nctual circulation in tho United States
(B r Th* A**ocl*Ud Fr***)
ceeded In establishing its wire to
were last and thirty-four others nar­
problem together as a problom o f all
CHICAGO, Oct. 20.—Lenders of sulcldo until tho train reached Llvo
was sold by Senator Watson, demo­
I'lsnt City this morning accept­
rowly escaped off Thimble Shoals light
sections, and o f both races, In whoso
Onk nnd ho wns Informed bf It by
crat,
Georgia,
In
tho
senate
to
aver­
ing messages for Tampa subject
solution tho best intelligence o f both
last night when tho Ashing schooner six rnllrond unions which hnvo called
others. He left tho train here.
age only $25 po capita Instead of $r&gt;0
lo five or six hours delay. Re­
Margaret, cnpslzod. The vessel wns tho striko wero brought face to faco
must be enlisted.
From Smith, It was lonmed thnt
per capita ns generally stated. Tho
ports from Lakeland and Plant
“ Wo will bo wise to recognize it os
with railroad executives today by tho
caught in a storm.
Georgia senator accounted for tho dif­
Dean hnd been contemplating solfCity declsro onormous damage to
Railroad Lnbor Board for a public
wldor yet. Whoever will take th©
ference by citing moro than two bil­
destructlon for sovernl weeks. Ho said
the orange crop In five counties
hearing In an effort for a poacoful
timo to read and ponder Mr. Lothrop
MATHEWSON GETS
lions of dollars withhold frlm circula­
thnt ho know nothing of Dean’s homo
in that section. Many towns last
Stoddard's book on Tho Rising Tldo f •‘/A
.
$30,000 CHECK. settlement of disputes leading to the
bight without lights on account
tion by national, federal reserve nnd
or
tho
whorenbouts
of
any
o
f
hla
peo­
throatenod tie-up of railroads. Ben
o f Color, or soy, tho thoughtful r©of shutting down of power hous­
state nnd other banks to meet legal
(B r A * A»*o«l»t»d Ft***)
Hooper, member o f tho board, called ple.
vlow o f somo recent literature on this
es when tho wind threatened to
requirements of roserve.
NEW YORK, Oct. 20.— A chock for W. G. Loo, president o f tho trainmen,
question which Mr. F. D. Luggard
brenk transmission lines, endang­
NEWBERRY’ S RIGHT.
$30,000 wns sent to Christy Mathow- to the stand and questioned him about
presented In a recent Edinburg r«vt«W
ering pedestrians and other traf­
WE WANT MORE.
Bon who Is Aghting tuberculosis at tho striko order. , Loo told how tho
must realise that our race problem
fic.
Tho Houston Post1soya thnt Now- here in the United States is only ft m
Jacksonville iT grttlng some very Snranac. Lake. Tho omonoy wns paid strike vote was taken and the walk­
berry has the bant right to hla scat phase of a race Issuo that the wholft
Important industries. One will bo a by Now York bnsoball fans at a bona- out ordered.
THREE DEATHS IN TAMPA.
In tho United States senate o f any world confronts. Surely wo shall gain
At
gamo
for
tho
former
Giant
pitchor
All wires are still down between glass factory making nil kinds of
For office supplies, stationery, etc„ othor senator—ho bought and paid for nothing by blinking nt the faeta, by
at
tho
Polo
Grounds
on
September
south Florida points, and the Trlbuno glnsHwnro from Florida sand. Pnit.— Ocala Banner.
como to the Herald office.
(OonUiud M Ps«« III)
thirty*
e«me In today In' four page form, tell- Intkn Tlmes-Horsld.

PARISH HOUSE
BE REMOD m
AND

DR. HILBURN’S
SERMON AT THE
M. E. CHURCH

RADIO STATIONS
CANNOT RAISE
TAMPA OFFICE

ANNOUNCEMENT
OF GOVERNMENT
ATTITUDE SOON

BIG FIRE T0DAY
AT AIKEN, S. C,
DESTROYS MUCH

RAILROAD OFFICIALS CONFER
‘
WITH RAILROAD UNIONS
'
ON QUESTION OF STRIKE

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-gV W —S ^ ffy ^ w F W a a fcWW

THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER I t , 1M1

GIRL RIDERS CONTRIVE TO GET
N ATIO N AL COLOR IN COSTUMING

ELLIOT DEXTER in

ALSO FOX NEW S
Tomorrow— Alice Lake in Uncharted Seas*
“His Lying Heart” a Mack Sennet Comedy

Every mother should pride herself on having a boy who is hard on
clothes.

It shows he is normal and Is blessed with a wholo lot of

Mattinee Dally at 3:30

life. We have taken particular interest in tho boy’s needs, and can

Evening at 7:00

furnish him with the toughest and most durablo clothes that are
made. Let us help you solve the problem of clothing for your boy.

S ta rt...
B ank A ccou n t
Boys’ DUBBLEBILT Clothes

Start a bank account with us and we will help you make it
larger. W e are equipped to care for your deposits with abso­
lute safety. There is no function o f a bank we cannot per­
form. Every facility afforded to fanners and others for
transaction o f their banking business. Accounts may be
opened by mail and monies deposited or withdrawn in this
way with equal facility. There are scores o f young men in
Sanford who should start a bank account. The dimes they
throw away every month if brought to our bank would make
them independent as they reach the noonday o f life. In fact,
every person who has a dollar should start a bank account.
Try it and you will always thank us for this advice.

to avenues and tho whlto way for
both theso nvenues to be placed in
theso parkways. The plans also pro­
vide for n 10-foot drlvo way on both
sides of the pnrkways.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 25.—As un­
expected as a rain storm in a desert,
regulations permitting tho manufac­
ture and use of beer for medicinal
purposes wero issued today by tho
treasury department.
Withhold since March 3 Inst, when
formor Attorney Gcnornl Pnlmor hold
tho use of beer ns a medicine to bo
/ognl under tho prohibition laws the
Issuance o f tho beer regulations enmo
as n complete surprise to lenders of
tho dry forces who doclnred thero had
been no undrestanding with tho treas­
ury thnt tho now rules should not be
promulgated until the Senate had act­
ed upon tho ponding nntl-bcor bill.
Issunnco of tho beer regulations will
causo redoubled efforts to ofTect tho
passage of tho nnti-bcor measures,
Sonata lenders dcclnrcd, whllo Wayne
B. Wheeler general counsel for the
Antl-Snloon League, deserbed tho
treasury’s action ns less defensible
thnn at any other time.
Secretary Mellon, in announcing tho
Issunnco of tho beer regulations, de­
clared thnt “ the lognl right o f the par­
ties concerned being jilnln, the dcpartment is unable longer to delay the
issuance of theso regulations.”

Some o f tho materials for tho new
pavilion to be built undor tho auspic­
es of tho Tourist nnd Convention Com­
mittee of tho Sanford Chamber of
Commorco has been placed on tho
.bulkhead. Tho henvy rninB of tho
last fow days have held up the work.
The original pluns of tho committeo
were to havo had this work completed
by tho first o f Novombor. Tho pavil­
ion, when completed, will also servo
ns u band'stand and arrangomonts
hnvo been made with tho local bnnd
to give concerts twico a wock begin­
ning December first. An amount wns
provided for flic bnnd by tho Board of
GovornorB in tho now budgot and tho
music furnished nhould bo an ndded
featuro for the entortninmont of
tourists wintering in Sanford.
Tho Lnko Front Improvement Co.
has agreed to tho ubo of a portion of
thoir proporty for quoits nnd tho us­
ual outdoor rccreutions indulged in by
visitors in other tourist cities of the
■tato.
Tentative plans hnvo been drawn up
by tho Tourist nnd Convention Com­
mitteo nnd submitted to tho City
Commissioners providing for a drive
way .and sidewalk nlong tho bulkhead
which will connect Park and Palmet­
to avonucs. Tho city, will, in all prob­
ability, erect a white way nlong the
bulkhead and assurances havo been
given by tho owners o f the lake front
property that they will erect six
white way posts on Park avenue.

The beautification of our wator
front has long been neglected and it
In certain thnt through the activities
of tho Tourist and Convention Com­
mittee of the Sanford Chamber of
Commerce, the much talked of im­
provements will materialize.
In order to assure thoso who are in­
terested in a Golf Courso for Sanford
thnt something is boing done, it might
bo stated that the committee appoint­
ed for this purposo will have a report
o f a definite nature to make in tho
vory near future.
It is conceded that Sanford will hov­
er attain a reputation as a tourist rosort until such time as we have a golf
course. It will bo recalled that Presi­
dent Harding, during his rccont trip
to Florida, stopped only at thoso plac­
es which hnvo a golf courso. Tho most
influential men In tho country play
golf. It is their recreation and phy­
sical exorcise. Wo can nover hopo to

Tho ship by water movement which
wns inunguratod by tho Sanford
Chnmbor of Commorco, has already
reached such proportions ns to mnko
the Clydo lino officials begin tho daily
service enrllcr thnn intended. It will
bo recalled thnt Associated Press dispntchos announced thq congestion of
freight In Jacksonville, necessitating
tho City of Jacksonville making a
special trip in order to rellova this
announco thnt this boat is being ovorhnulod and will bo in dally sorvlco
by the first of tho month. Every morchnnt In Snnford nnd contiguous ter­
ritory should Issuo billing instructions
to Hhip via wntor and continuo to ship
thnt way oven though rail rates de­
crease. Tho Central Florida Water
Traffic Lenguo is gradually building
up an organization that will soon bo
in position to furnish full Information
as to tho rntos of freight where a
combination roil nnd water routing is
necessary. Membership in this lenguo
will also cntltlo tho motnber to tho
privilege o f having his frolght bills
audited nnd tho lenguo will handle
hlit claims for shortage and over­
charge for a much Rmallor fco thnn is
usually charged by tho different traf­
fic organizations who make this their
business.
Attention is again called to a pre­
vious request mado by the Snnford
Chamber of Commorco to list all avilnblo rooms with tho secretary. No
foo is chnrged for this service, but
thoso who list their rooms with this
organization aro asked to notify the
secretary in the event their rooms aro
rented subsequent to listing. All in­
dications aro for a heavy tourist trav­
el this winter, taxing our hotols to
their utmost.

Tho City Planning Committee of
tho Chamber o f Commerce will soon
begin the important task o f aoning
the eity into residential, manufactur­
ing, wholesale and colored sections. A
eity should be planned the same as a
house and built accordingly. Some of
Plana of tho Tourist and Convention our largest cities are now employing
Committee are to have a parkway on heroic measures to correct errors re­
the middle of both Park and Palmet- sulting from the lack o f city planning

Negotiations aro being carried on
with the Clyde Line endeavoring to
have that company defray the expens­
es of the erection o f a white way on
Palmetto ave.

Tho girl ridors with tho now consol­
idated circuses— Howe’s Great Lon­
don and Van Amburg’s Trained Wild
Animals, coming to Sanford, Wodnesdny, November 2nd,
Americnn,
English, Spanish and South Ameri­
can, and It is remarkable how each
mannges to effect a touch o f hor nat­
ional characteristics and Btyle In the
tnoro or less conventional garb o f the
Indy bareback rider. Thero Ib Just a
suggestion of tho hunt and tho park
in tho fluffy flounces of tho English
girls; thero is an airy nothing that
recalls tho castanets and the fandan­
go in tho dainty dress o f tho Spanish
girls, and thero is a certain stamp of
tho oxotic in thoso of tho girls from
Buenos Aires and Rio. nut for chlcness the American girls on tho white

of Sanford
selves. And that’s true of all circus
wardrobe, except thnt for parade and
opening spectacle, which the show
furnishes. Every costume for every
act 1s furnished by tho nets, and tho
women of tho circus make them dur­
ing tho long wintor months. Of courso
there’s many a fetching gown and bodico made in tho shndo of tho dress­
ing tent between shows. Thnt’s why
ono finds the women of tho big tops
ho often busy with nccdlo and thread.
It’o n habit.

when they were small. It is tho duty TO SPEND MILLIONS
of a Chamber of Commorco in tho
IMMEDIATELY TO AID
small cities to givo citizens vision, en­
NATION’S UNEMPLOYED,
abling them to preparo for tho big cit­
ies of the future.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 25, Expendi­
ture o f millions of dollars will be au­
Tho Good Roads Committco report thorized by municipalities within tho
vory favorablo progress in their cam­ noxt few woeks to aid in providing
paign for funds which it was neces­ Jobs for tho nation's approximately
sary to rftiso by popular subscription, 4,000,000 idle wngc-cnrn rs, accord­
in order to improve tho Titusvlllc-Go- ing to a statement issued by Col. Ar­
nova road.
thur Woods, hend o f tho central agen­
Recent roports to tho chairman of cy of tho National Unemployment
tho Good Ronds Committee from Go- conference.
nevn, Chuluotn, Oviedo and Longwood
Reports from tho mayors o f cities
aro to tho cffecct that thoso people in all pnrts o f tho country, Colonel
havo contributed liberally to this pro­
Woods said, ir iicate that prompt ac­
ject.
tion has been tnkon to make effective
the emergency measures recommend­
TO VICTOR BELONGS
ed by tho conference with tho com­
Si’OIL8— WOMAN GETS
pletion of plans for tho improvement
I'OSTAL AI’ I’ OINTMSNT o f tho sanitary conditions of cities,
construction nnd improvement of phbMiss Katherine Dorbyshiro has been lic works nnd assignment o f addition­
appointed postmistress at Kissimmee, al men to streot cleaning depart­
tho “ naming of the candidate not ly­ ments.
ing as has been tho custom in the
Colonel Woods nnnounced thnt the'
hands o f tho congressman for this
Standard Oil Co., of Now Jersey wns
district,” ns tho Kissimmee Gnzotto
preparing to re-employ nbout 5,000
points out “ but with tho victors to
on improvements. Among other re­
whom bolongB tho spoils.” Miss Der­
ports of efforts to relievo tho unem­
byshire had tho endorsement of the
ployment problom was ono recolved
Republicans of hor district, the most
by
Colonol Woods from Savannah, Ga.
prominent among whom wns Alex­
ander Ackerman, o f Orlando.—Orlan­
do Sentinel.
PERHAPS TWO,
About tho only thing wo can see in
tho ponding striko o f railroad em­
ployes Is lower transportation rates
and employment for men who have
bcon Idle. Railway employes havo been
better paid than any othor class of
labor, and a strike now will only cost
them their Jobs.— Eau Gallio Record.

PERHAPS A COLD
A Miami woman claims to have
caught a fish and then had a shark
bite the Ash, so that sho caught both
tho Ash and tho shark, and wo can’t
help wondering what wodld have hap­
pened if she had kopt) on Ashing.—
Lakeland Telegram.

rrs a F A crr,

GREAT FORESTS UNCUT
SPRUCE IN ALASKA
LAWRENCE, Has., Oct. 26.— Globo
trotter in the Bummer and professor
o f history at the University o f Kan­
sas In the wintor is tho program folfolewd by Prof. David L. Patterson,
who returned tho middle of Septem­
ber fro mn throe-months’ trip to Alas­
ka. Summer before last he circltd
South America .visiting a score o f the
cities nlong the west coast and back
tho cast coast nfter a trip across tho
Andes. Two summers before that, in
the early days o f the world war, he
visited tho battle fronts o f Europe as
a war correspondent for an American
newspaper.
On all theso trips Profcsso Patter­
son observed closely tho conditions of
tho countries through which ho trav­
eled, and from tho South American
nnd tho European trips brought back
largo numbers o f representative news­
papers for his library. His early news­
paper training impolled him, on his
Alaskan trip, to note the great forests
of spruce, as yet practically un­
touched.
Tho greatest o f theso Alaskan for­
ests, said Professor Patterson, are in
the southeastern part. They aro con­
trolled through tho United «-&gt; itos for­
est service, and but two permits to
papor pulp companies havo bcon is­
sued. Theso forests are extensive, nnd
need never bo exhausted if properly
safeguarded, Professor Patterson said
for they aro from a second growth in
thirty years.
Professor Patterson’s Alnsku trip
combined al Isorts o f transportation,
including tho Alaskan rallrond now
being constructed by tho United States
government, river stenmer and Pa­
cific liner, as well as plain “ mushing’’
as In the gold rush days. His trip
carried him through the Atlin Lake
country o f British Columbia, and ns
far as Dawson, Yukon Territory.

Notice o f Application for Tax Deeds
Under Section 575 of tho General
Statutes, Lnws of Florida
Notice is hereby given that Charles
D. Cary, purchaser of Tax Certificate
No. 1G, dated tho 2nd day of June, A.
D. 1010, has filed said certificate in
my offlco nnd has made application
for tax deed to issuo in nccordunce
with law. Said certificnto embraces

SPANISH REPORTED VICTORS
MADRID, Oct. 25,

.r

Laundry in the sun when it is rain­
PERFECT WEATHER,
ing. So call the SANFORD BRANCH
LAKELAND STEAM LAUNDRY,
October 15 was the end of the so- they can dry it, rain or shine. All
called hurricane season. From now till work called for and deliverod the 3rd
tho A n t o f June next year will be day.------------------- GIVE US A TRIAL
perfect weather 1 Florida, or as near
perfect weather as is found on this
earth.— Titusville Star-Advocate.
From present indications, brother,
you are off.
.
PHONE; 475

E. A . DOUGLASS,
Clerk Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Fla.
By: A. M. WEEKS, D. C.
Try a Herald Want M today.

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(7?5

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THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20,1921

rAGB TWO

METHODIST NOTES

»

• This Forward

iiiiu ia iim iiM H H iH ii

Mr, and Mrs. R. E. Etdridgo spent
a short time in Tampa last week.

Looking ^Bank ii

Miss Sorroll was in Orlando for
over Sunday visiting her parents.
Miss Kato Abrams and Miss Mortise Vernon, of Wintor Garden, spent
last week with the former’s sister,
Mrs. R. F. Crenshaw of Sanford.

is jealous o f its reputation for Ser­
vice and seeks to justify it anew with
each individual problem presented
to it.

s
:
■

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s

Dr. Coleman, father of Mrs. Will
Hoolihan, is back in Sanford. He
comes every winter and is much loved
by tho Sanford church and commun­
ity.

The knowledge and experience o f
this bank is available to its friends
and patrons at all times, regardless
o f the size o f their transactions.

R

i b

m

o m
INTO

'Your. D o

Mrs. J. D. Roberts is home again
after a pleasant and profitable visit
in North Carolina to friends and rel­
atives,

! T h e S e m in o le C o u n t y

Mn, F. E. Stolnmeyor, wifo o f a

former pastor, and well known and
loved in Sanford, was called here last
week on account o f the illness o f her
grandchild, little Kathleen Adams. :
Mrs. Steinmeyer has just been to
Jacksonville and Quincy attending the
SERVICE ■; executive meetings of the Woman’s
PROGRESS
STRENGTH
Home Missionary Society, returning
4 % INTEREST PAID
to Tampa just ns the messago came
i to come hero. The many friends of
Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Adams will
bo glad to icarn that Kathleen is
cently, and while hero was delightful­ much improved.
ly entertained.—Jacksonville Times*
Union.
Mr. Brady, guest of Mr. nnd Mrs.
Musgrnves, accepted tho invitation to
M R S . FRED DA1GER, Society Bditor,
WESTMINSTER CLUB
sing two solos nt Sunday night ser­
Phone 217-W_______ ____
Mrs. Robert Walthour entertnined vice which were appreciated and ontho members of tho Westminster Club joyed by nil present.
SOCIAL CALENDAR
most delightfully Monday afternoon,
nt
her home on Elm Avonuc.
Don't forget tho prayer meeting
Wednesday— Muse and Litoraturo De­
The nfternoon was pleasantly Bpent tonight, We hnd a very largo otpartment of tho Woman’s Club will
sewing for the Christmas bnznnr.
tendnnee Inst week. Are you faith­
meet at 3:30 p. m.
Lntc in the nfternoon the hostess ful in doing your “bit for tho Mnstor.
Wednesday— Mrs. A. P. Connelly and
served Jello and ice cream and cake There’s u vacant sent when you are
Mrs. S. Puleston will entertain at a
not there, No one can do YOUR work
miscellaneous shower, in compli­ nnd refreshments.
Owing
to
tho
bad
weather
all
tho
for
you.
ment to Miss May Ferrari Thrash­
e r, at the homo of tho former at •! members were not present.
PRES. ROSE WILL GIVE
o'clock.
HALLOWE'EN SUPPER
CUP TO FLORIDA HIGH
Friday— Mothers’ Club will meet at
An affnir which promises to bo a
SCHOOL BALL TEAMSthe Parish House nt 3:30 p. in.
Snturday—Children’s Story Hour will most pleasant and successful event of
The following letter was received
Ire held nt Central Park at four tomorrow, is the Hallowe'en Lawn
Supper
to
be
given
by
the
Temple
by
Mr. It. W. Green, from President
o ’clock.
Pipe Organ Club on the
spacious W. W. Rose of the Florida State LcnThursday— Pipe Orgnn Club Hallo­
lawns of the Fox and Gntchcl homes guo:
we'en Lawn Supper with- Miss Maron Oak avenue. Tables will lie ar­ Mr. R. W. Greene,
thn Fox and Mrs. Forest Gntchol,
ranged nmld attractive
Hallowe’en
Winter Park, Flo.
hostesses nt their homes Oak ami
decorations nnd n most pleasing pro­
Dear
Sir:— In tho Sunday edition
Eighth.
gram will be rendered throughout the of the Jacksonville Timea-Union .Oc­
Friday— Christian Endeavor of the evening.
tober 10, I rend thnt the oxecutivo
Presbyterian Church will entertnin
The weather mnn promises good committee of tho State High School
at a Hallowe'en party in honor of weather for tomorrow, but in case of
Miss May Forran Thrnshcr and Mr. rain the affair will be held just the Athletic Association nt their annual
J. D. Woodruff, at tho socinl rooms snmo except indoors nt tho places meeting at Gainrsville had decided to
district the state for high school ath­
ut tho church,
named.
letics and thnt plnns were being made
Friday—N. do V. Howard Chapter U.
to
have the ten lending hnskctbnll
D. C., will meet nt the Parish House
PLACE CHANGED FOR C. E.
teams
from theso districts piny n
at 3:30 p. m.
PARTY
tournament a
the University of
Friday—Mrs. Forest Lake will enter­
Instead of having the party Friday,
Florida.
tnin tho members of tho Every given in honor of Miss May Thrasher
The idea npponlcd to mo ns being
.Week Ilridge Club at her homo on and Mr. J. D. Woodruff, at Palm
a real improvement over the former
Park avenue, at 3 o’clock.
Springs, ns first nnnounml, it was
method of dctcminlng the champion­
Frirluy—Mrs. It. E. Tolar and Miss decided to have a Hallowe'en party at
ship of the stnte and I feel that tho
Sara Muriel will entertuin at a the Social rooms at tho Presbyterian
executive committee is to be congrat­
Hallowe'en party for Miss Geral­ church instead.
ulated on the notion taken.
dine Muriel, at tho home of the
While I am interested in nil the
PRELIMINARY LAW CLASS.
form er on Magnolia avenue,
nt
various branches of school athletics,
8:30 p. m.
The class in Parlimentnry Law, of
I am particularly interested in base­
Snturdny— Mrs. E. M. Gnllowny will the Woman's Cluh conducted by Mrs.
ball. Bnscbnll is our National game
entertain at Ilridge, complimentary E. M. Galloway, will have an open
nnd I believe that more people nrc in­
&lt;to Miss May Thrnshcr an attrac­ date Friday morning at ten o’clock to
terested in it than in tho other bran­
which the public is cordially invited.
tive bride-elect of November.
ches of athletics.
I would like to see a series ar­
* # # # Ha K«
Mr. nnd Mrs. John G. Lconnrdy mo­
ranged to bo played in Winter Park
tored to DeLnnd Monday where they
nnd I suggest thnt you invito tho
went on business.
winners of the district championships
in hnsclinll to send their teams to
John L. Bragg, of Statesboro, Gn„
Winter Park to engage in an elimina­
B. E. Ilrngg nnd II. O. Edcnficld are
tion series to determine the State
spending a few days here at tho Mon­
Championship.
THURSDAY
tezuma while touring the state.
I would he pleased to donatu a per­
Father and Sons’ Banquet nt the
petual
sliver cup for the high school
ftl. II. Tucker, of Jacksonville, A. Parish House Thursday night.
hnscbnll champions, this cup to be­
C. L. R. R. watch inspector, was in
come the property of tho high school
Thursday:
th e city yesterday.
3:30 p. m, Jennie Spaulding Circle, winning the cup three times. Florida
State High School Athletic Associa­
with Mrs. Holland.
Mrs. A. P. Connelly has returned to
f&gt;:00 p. m. Pipe Organ Club Sup­ tion rules to govern.
her home in Sanford, after "a visit
Assuring you o f my Interest and
per onGntehel-Fox lawn.
•with Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Murchison, nt
willingness
to co-opernte with you in
their home in Riverside. Mrs. Connel­ Friday:
any
manner
possible, I mn,
7:30 p, m. The Temple Boy Scouts.
ly was among the out-of-town guests
Very truly yours,
nt tho Murchison-Sprntt wedding reW. W. ROSE.
PARISH HOUSE K A LEND Alt.
Orlando Reporter-Star.
Thursday, Oct. 27, 7 p. in. Fathers
and Sons banquet.
Holy Cross Men’s Club, and B. S. A. FATHERS AND SONS BANQUET
■
Friday, Oct. 28, U. D. C., N. do V.
Many of tho cards sent tho members
Howard Chapter, 3:30 p. m.
1
of the Men's Club of Holy Cross Par­
Monday, Oct. 31, Night, Holy Cross
ish have been returned with thoitr ac­
Mon’s Club dance.
IS
ceptance to attend the banquet Thurs­
Tuesday, Nov. 1, 8 p. m., "Measuring
day evening.
Pnrty," S. Agnes Guild.
Kindly return your card if
you
Friday, Nov, 4, G. F, S., Party, Mrs. have not nlrcndy done so and advise
John Leonard), directress.
of your Intentions.

B ank,

Your Dollar
to

W ill Do
Double Duty

i

SOCIETY

MEETINGS

HOF-MAC i
I BATTERYI
CO.
We have been in business
one month and
done line.

we

have

We thank you

for your part In it.

"Foot of First St.”

________

DOLLAR DAY SALE

BLOCKING IMPROVEMENTS.

Rond the big advertisement in this
issuu of tho Yowelt Company—tho
Dollnr Day Snlc, beginning Thursday
nnd lasting throe days. The bargains
arc tho best that have been offered
here In ninny days nnd you must rend
the nd and nttend tho Bale. It will
save you monoy.

Holding city lots for speculation
should bo discouraged. Improvements
in front of vaennt lots should be made
for the accommodation of tho general
public, and the interest Hof the holder
should not bo nllowed to block im­
provements.—Clearwater Sun.

II. E. Tolnr has purchased tho new
bungalow
of M, Minnrik on Laurel
I
avenue, Tho snlo was mado through
Ed, Lane, tho real estate man,

S

S

TXT A DAILY HERALD WAJrr AD.

Thursday, Friday and Saturday
Ginghams
5 yards of Check
nnd new fnll Plaid
Dress
Ginghams.
Best grade, 35c val­
ue. 5 yards for—

$ 1.00

Nainsook
Yard wide, soft fin­
ish Nainsook, 20
pieces To sell only,
7 ynrds for—

$ 1.00

PERCALS
Best grade Checks,
Plaids and Shirt­
ing patterns,
five
yards for—

Red border and plain white.
Towels, 8 for—

Large size Iluck

$ 1.00

SCRIM S
Colored and Plain
Mnrquisett, 1 yards
for—

$ 1.00

LACES

Children’s Sox
Three-fourth length, White, Black, Brown and
Leather mixtures, 2 pair for—

$ 1.00
Bungalow

Men’s Sox
Black, Brown and Navy.
3 pair for—

Extra good quality.

APRONS
Made of the best
Precnl and Ging­
ham. New styles,
bought special for
these 3 days, for—

$ 1.00
Men’s Shirts

$1.00

Madres and good grade of percal, for—

Ladies’ Cotton

BLOUSES

Silk Hose
White, Black and Brown fine thread silk hose.
Special for, pair—

$ 1.00
Fancy Work
Scarfs, Runners, Table Covers stamped.
ial for, each—

Voiles nnd Organdy
Blouses. Some are
worth up to $2.50,
Special for—

$ 1.00

Royal Society
Spec­

GLOVES
White, Black, Grey,
Pongee Silk Gloves,
id) sizes.
Special
for—

Big table of Val and
Round Thread Lace
bought specially for
the dollar days. 12
yards for—

$ 1.00

Ladies’
UNDERWEAR
One big Table of
knit nnd muslin un­
derwear,
Teddies,
Gowns and Union
Suits. Special for

$ 1.00

Outings
Plain and fancy colors, dark and light, 6 yards
for—

$1.00

DOLLS

DAYS

Kid bodies nnd Bisque dolls that sell every day
for $2.00, for—

Company

WANTED—Show enso, flvo or six
feet long. Herald Printing Co.
183-5tp.
The world news the day it happens,
the Herald office.

Towel Sale

SANFORD,
£■■ ■ ■ ■■ ■ ■ ■ ■■ ■ ■ ■■ ■ ■ ■

PHONE 123

FLORIDA

�.y

,

THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1921

CECIL B. DeMILLE’S PRODUCTION

Cast of Characters

S c ^ S S “The Affaire of Anatol
a r m istic e
dayparade
ICAN LEGION.
The following busiMM concerns,
fraternities and Clubs, of Sanford
£ v e O r a l l y subscribed their name,
to agreement to enter a deco™ ^
float or automobile to represent their
respective lines of business. Names
will be added from time to time and
*
■—
be a parade of magnitude nevrt be­
fore witnessed In thecltyi
American Legion.
Sanford Paint &amp; Wall Paper Co.
Woman’s Club, Welfare Dept.
D, C. Marlowe.

Hopkins Shoe Shop.
A. J. Lessing, (6).
C. A. Matthews.
Ball Hardware Company.
Lloyd Shoe Store.

West Side Grocery.
Bryan-Wheeler Motor Co.
Wight Tire Co.
B. &amp; 0. Motor Co. (2 floats).
Sanford Cycle Co.
Haynes A Ratliff.
City of Sanford.
Mobley's Drug Store.
Routh Bros., Bakery.
Cates’ Crate Co.
Coca-Cola Co.
Woodruff &amp; Watson.
Haight &amp; Welland.
Cates Grocery Co.
Deane Turner.
Newberry’* Drug Store.
Carter Lumber Co.
T. J. Milter &amp; Son.
Union Pharmacy.
Sanford Shoe &amp; Clothing Co.
Hanson’s Shoe Repair Shop.
Roberts Grocery Co.
Baumel’s Specialty Shop.
RaiTeld-Honig Co.
F. P. Rines.
A. Kanner.
F. Schwarts.
Chero-Cola Co.
Brown's Market.
Caldwell Furniture Co., Inc.
I.. C. Leonardy Meat Market.
Water’s Candy Kitchen.
Surprise Shoe Store.
Bnndel's Emporium.
Seminole Market.
Rivers’ Bros. (2 floats).
Pure Food Market
Kent Vulcanizing Co.
Miller's Bnkcry (1 floats).
Stnr Theatre.
Clc-Trnc Tractor.
Gillon &amp; Fry.
John T. Brady,
Perkins ti Britt 12 floats).
R. C, Maxwell.
Ed. Higgins, Inc.
Hof-Mac Battery Co. (2 floats).
Sanford Steam Laundry.
Wight Grocery* Co.
Woman's Club.
Mrs. J. M. Dresner.
Knights of Columbus.
Sanford Farmers’ Exchange.
L. P. McCuller.
The Yowell Co.
American Fruit Growers.
Sanford Furniture Co.
Hill Hardware Co,
C. W. Stokes.
Blnckshenr M/g. Co.
The Herald Printing Co.
Popular Market, two floats.
Frank Akers Tire Co.
Sanford Truck Co.
Sanford Mnttresa Factory.
The Auxiliary of the Sallie Harri­
son Chapter N. S., D. A. U. (Children
of the American Revolution).
Any one welcome to enter a float
or decorated ear. Suitable cash prizes
will ho awarded by the Firt National
Rank, Seminole County Bank and Peo­
ples' Bank of Sanford.
American Agr. Chemical Co.
Elder Springs Water Co.
W. S. Parker.
,
T. W. Williams.
Camp Fire Girls
Chamber of Commerce.
Chase &amp; Company.
Rotary Club.
Anyone wishing to enter call Lloyd's
Shoe Store.
168-tf.

CHANGES IN MAPS OF WORLD

CLOCK CURED OF TOOTHACHE

Almost Impossible of Belief Hat Been
the Increase In Knowledge In the
CnrIV.ian Era:

Dantlst Carefully Inserts Two New
Tcsth and Faw Rods In Immense
London Tlmoplsce.

Mapmakers art having a busy lime
Id these days of everchanglng bound­
aries. Europe has regrouped Itself,
and the old map of our schooldays la
wrong from top to hot turn.
Hut what tremendous charges have
taken place In the Christian era. a
cximi&gt;aratlvely short time In the his­
tory of the world, observes a writer
10 Loudon Atiswets.
The Homan's
map or the world was the Middle sea
—the Mediterranean—and the lands
washed by Its wave*. To sail out of
the Straits of (Jlh.-altar—the Pillars
of Uercules—was as great an adven­
ture as being shot In a rocket to Mars
would be today!
For unother thousand years, after
the decline of Rome, very little prog­
ress was made. India » « « a sort of
fairyland. China—or Cathay—might
have been In the moon. Russia and Si­
beria were wholly out o f hounds.
America was not dreamed of. Aus­
tralia bad never been heard of. oo Eu­
ropean ship had ever sailed on the
Pacific ocean.
Then, quite suddenly, came the sge
of exploration. The Spanish and Port­
uguese navigators, followed by the
grdit English adventurers, doubled
the world's land area for the map
makers. But even then the maps were
fearful and wonderful. America was
a piece of all guesswork. The greater
part of Africa the same. Even Eu­
rope looked like nothing on earth, nnd
where they were at a loss they drew
fabulous t#aats and birds to fill up
the spaces.

The clock that hangs eight feet over
the Junction of the Strand and Fleet
street. London, from the east tower of
the law courts, has Just recovered from
an attack of toothache, London TitHits states.
The bells and the Intricate mechan­
ism occupy three stories at the top of
the tower, and constant service year
In and year out has caused the trou­
ble.
When the dynamo which winds up
the weights was put Into gear recently
there was a squeak from the winding
apparatus, and a couple of teeth were
wrenched from one of the essential
cogs.
A clock dentist was Immediately
called In. and after careful treatment.
Involving two fresh teeth and the re­
newal of a number of steel rods, ths
clock once more strikes the hoar with
unerring punctuality and has entirely
recovered from the weakness develoj*d during recent years.
The rods which have now been re­
newed bad not been touched since
1883, when the clock was first put up.
Few people In Ixmdon. probably,
know that In this clock at the courts
they have a mechanism unique In the
history of clot-k-muklng.
Invented by a carpenter on sn en­
tirely novel principle, it Is the only one
of Its kind In existence, an attempt to
make a duplicate for St. James palace
having proved a failure.
It Is so accurate that It does pot
lose as much us one minute In three
months.
The weight controlling the striking
mechanism weighs IV* tons, and hangs
on n wire S5 feet long from the top
of the tower into the foundations.

BRINGS BACK ACTION OF BRAIN
Remarkable Power of Smelling Salts
When the Seat of Reason Is
Violently Affected.
When Csrpentler sent that one ter­
rific blow against Dempsey’s chin In
the second round of their battle for
the championship, nnd Dempsey stag
gered, dazed by Its force, one &lt;&gt;f hl«
seconds applied a bottle of smelling
salts to bis nose.
When a woman faints, emelllng
salts are placed beneath her nose, and
■he revives.
The reviving effect of smelling salts
Is due to the ammonia they contain.
Aromatic spirits of ammonia have the
same effect. Ammonia Is a very powerful stimulant t&lt;» both the lungs and
the heart. In full »trength. the fumes
of ammonia are Intensely Irritating to
the lungs and throat, as any fireman
who has helped to put out a burning
factory In which ammonia was stored
can testify. In a very weak solution
It Irritates only sufficiently to stimu­
late. When Inhaled, the gas affects
the nerves ending In the nose, throat
and lungs; so quickly do these carry
the news to the brain and so Instan­
taneous Is the response by way of the
pneumogastrlc and other nerves that
the lungs expand to draw- In air and
the heart at once pumps more rap­
idly—Ruffa!o Express.
Dog Biscuit for Breakfast

Judge Jean II. Norris tells the fun­
niest true story of domestic difficul­
ties. Hero* It Is:
In the tragedy of mtsunderstand...gs.
ings. It Is a relief to run across a
case that Is strictly humorous. En­
tertainment of this sort was furnished
In one Instance by a husband, ar­
raigned for nonsupport, who declared
that he had left home because he had
been given dog biscuit for breakfast.
"That ain’t no foundation for a hard
day’s work!" he complained. "I alvvnys have nntinea I porridge In the
morning; but that precious pup was
sick and wouldn’t cat his regular fare.
So the missus gives him ray porridge,
and then breaks up his biscuit and
tries to pass It on to me. " a*n t that
enough to make any man leave homeT
Asked If she liked the dog better
than slip did her husband, the woman
hurst Into a peon of praise for her
spouse.
•'The dog’s n delicate little thing
nrnl nwfully fn «y about h!» food." she
explained. "I thought If the deg bis­
cuits didn’t hurt him they certainly
wouldn’t hurt
a strong man like
James."
The trouble ended In a comp ete
reconciliation.—American Magazine.
-Indophan Blue" a New Shade.

flLORIA IW AHIOII

nenr. p a r ie l h

WANDA HAWLEY
AUNKS AYERS
POLLY MOfl.tX
JULIA PAYE

Everyone Should
Drink Hot Water
in the Morning

This

Waafc aw ay all stomaeh, liver,
and bowal poleene before
breakfast.

Interests You!

To feel your best day in and day
out, to feel clean inside; no sour bile
to coat your tongue and sicken your
breath or dull your head; no consti­
pation, bilious attancks, sick head­
ache, colds, rheumatism or gassy, acid
stomach, you must bathe on the in­
side like you bathe outride. This is
vastly more important, because the
skin pores do not absorb impurities
Into the blood, while the bowel pores
do.
To keep these poisons aad toxins
well flushed from the stomach, liver,
kidneys and bowels, drink before
breakfast each day, a glass of hot
water with a teaspoonful of limestone
phosphate in it. This will cleanse,
purify and freshen the entire alimen­
tary tract before eating more food.
Get a quarter pound of limestone
phosphate from your pharmacist. It
is inexpensive and almost tasteless.
Drink phosphated hot water every
morning to rid your system of these
poisons and toxins; also to prevent their formation.— Adv.

H Because, Mr. Farmer, you can use
our facilities to your advantage.
Our buying capacity enables us to
supply your Crates, Hampers, Insec­
ticides, Fertilizers and supplies at a
saving in cost to you.
ff You don’t have to figure away in
advance what you need. Our ample
stock will take care o f you.
Compare Our Prices
W E ARE A T YOUR SERVICE

Chase &amp;
PHONE

536

SUGGESTIVE READING.

You will hear it said that such and
suuch a magazine prints suggestive
stories, meaning thatlhey present cor­
rupting ideas in an attractive dress.1
SANFORD MARBLE &amp; GRANITE WORKS
But there is a suggestiveness also of
JOHN GOVE, Proprietor
THEORY OF ORDINARY COLDS quite a different sort— the suggestive­
ness that quickens the reader’s sense
CEMETERY WORK A SPECIALTY
Doctor Maxwell Expresses Opinion of duty, stimulates ambition, gives
1018 West First Street
1018 West First Street
courage to face adversity, fortifies
Trouble Is Due to Development
of Bacterial Growths.
against yielding easily to temptation.
It is thio better kind of suggestive­
TRAIN SCHEDULE
1 have believed for some years that ness that you will find on almost every
common colds nre due primarily to page of the Youth's Companion.
Southbound
the development of bacterial growths
Which
of
these
two
kinds
of
suggestArrive
Departs
In the access- ry nas.tl s!nu*es and that
a. m*
No. 83____________ 2:88a.m2:46
.
this development Is caused by the ob­ ivness would you wish to have exert
8:40 a.m .
struction of the dralnagu of these an influence in your family life?
No. 27............
sinuses by the swelling of the nasal
The 52 issues of 1922 will be crowd­
3:20 p.m .
No. 89________2:55 p. in.
inurowa. writes Dr. G. M. Maxwell of ed with serial stories, short stories,
7:10 p.m .
No.
85............
6:55
p.
tn.
Roanoke. Vs. Strolling of the mucosa editorials, poetry, facts and fun. Sub- Get An Abstract Before
North Bound
u '"«■ lr
10 lrrt,* tlon f,rora “ me; scribe now and receive:
Buying Property
Departs
Arrive
foreign substance, such as dust, bac The Youth’s Companion—52 issues in
2:03 a. m.
No. 82............ 1:48 a. m.
teria ar.d pollen.
The bacteria are
1922.
No. 84.............11:45 m. m. 12:05 p. m.
those ordinarily found In the nasal
t y /Y T T Y s t 4 O O
ty
cavity and cause trouble only when All the remaining issues of 1921.
3:25 p. m.
No. 80............ 3:05 p. m.
the free access of air Into the field Is The Companion Home Calendar for £ u A . U x J U Lx I j A O O , r I*6S. No. 28......................10:00p.m.
prevented by the swollen mucosa. This
1922.
Trilby, Branch
opinion has been strengthened by the All for |2.50.
Departs
Arrive
fiart that continuous treatment or
Or include McCall Magazine, the
6:00
a. m.
•No.
100...........
-praying with a mild nonirritant as­
monthly authority on fashions. Both
3:25 p. tn.
•No. 24.............
tringent will In the majority of cases
publications, only $3.00.
7:00 a.m .
arrest an acute cold. When u cold
■*No 158...... ....
THE YOUTH’S COMPANION,
holds on for as much as n week l have
7:35 p. m.
No. 22______
car load on A. C. L.
nearly always found cloudiness In one Commonwealth Ave., &amp; St. Paul St.,
Leesburg Branch
or more of the sinuses, and get Imme­
Boston, Mass.
Departs
Arrive
Dray
Track
diate relief by washing out these si­ New Subscriptions Received at This
•No.
157.........
4:00
p.
c
.
nuses with a mitd alkaline solution.
Office.
No. 21_______ 2:62p.m .
•No. 101_____ fl:30 p. m.
The Cold Bsuth.
TO THE PUBLIC
•No. 25______ 2:00 p.m .
From the observations made with______
No. 22.______ 7:00 p. ra
in reo-i t years by Antarctic explorers; . . .
. ,
. __ , ..
.___
Oviedo Branch
there ha. been recalculate,] «he aver- IIavir*«
ch’* r«* of ^
age temperature of the southern ' nF
pressing business which has
Departs
Arrive
Hfmlipbfn* os cocrpared mith thi* be*n conducted by Mr. Geo. Waters,
•No. 128...........11:00 a.m .
northern, and the results differ. In you will find me there at all timvf
Pest cards— local views— Ic each at •No. 127______
3:40 p .m .
some respects, from those heretofore to look after anythin? you need in Herald— by the pound— 15c.
•Daily, except Snnday.
accepted. It Is found that the mean
above line.
temperature south of the equator, foi
j n addition I will run my tailoring
the entire year. Is about two and burners where you can hay clothes at
three-quarter degrees tower than reaJonable pricM and have them made
north of the equator.
equator. Hut
But the
the anan- in Sanford_ _ Ed. Randall, 123 First
nual variation of temperature In the
northern hemisphere Is twice at Street, Maker of Fine Clothes for
Phone 475, Sanford, Fla.
large as In the southern, our *unr
183-ltp
tner temperature being much higher
and our winter temperature percepti­
bly lower than those of the corre SANFORD LIBRARY
tponding seasons In the routhera hall
A S S O C IA T IO N .
of the globe.
$0j
There is called a special meeting of
is a b o y betw een

SEMINOLE
ABSTRACT CO.

BANANAS BANANAS

DOZEN..... 25c-30c
BUNCH. . . . $1-25 UP

A Little

Shaver

Religi sr

Defined.

The word religion 1* defined by the'
Standard dictionary as “a belief bind
Ing the spiritual nature of man to aj
supernatural being on whom he l»j
conscious that he Is dependent; also,
the practice that springs out of therecognition of such religion. Including
the personal life and experience, the
doctrine, the duties and the rites
founded on It: any system of faith and
worship, such as the Christian relig­
ion. the religloos of the Orient, etc."
The word catholic mesas “of or per­
taining to the whole Christian churo-h.
In accordance with the decrees of the'
•eTCQ general council#: not heretical;
not schismatic."

the Sanford Library Association for
Monday night, October 31, 7:30 p. m.,
at the library rooms, for a very imP«r!ar,t meeting,
The earier hour is askd on account
0f m any other rr.de4tr.gs that same
nigbt but ^ prompt attendance the
important library holiness can be
transacted and other engagements for
the same night met also.
Every member out- Most import­
ant.
A. S. PECK,
President o f Sanford Library Asso.

"Indopben blue” Is the name of the
novelty over which the dye men are
putting out their chests Ilk* pouter
pigeons and declaring that “ American
chemists are fully the aquU
ASK FOR YOUR RECEIPT.
Herman rivals In
Toe Bad.
the present In.isnce they have gone
An ardent angler took a friend hon­
Subscribers to the Daily Herald
beyond, for try «■ they have the Ger­ ing. He knew nothing about the gen­
ASK FOR YOUR RECEIPT.
mans have not obtained a b■=*
should
ask for a receipt when the
tle art. but was set up with all the
Subscribers to the Daily Herald type possessing all the desired p rof necessary tackle and a nice, comforta­ carrier boys collect from you. It is
should nBk for a receipt when the "T h e color Is brighter “ dsRghtJy ble seat oo the bank.
the only protection yoa have In case
The experienced hand started fishing
carrier boys collect from you. It le more violet than indigo and doeely re­
the carrier changes or there happens
a fi* v Turd* higher up the stream.
the only protection you hare In cane sembles broroe-tndlgn It* «**»*
Presently the novice Mid:
“ How to be a mistake in the account. Each
■1stonce to light.
£
much .!«&gt; those red things costT"
the carrier changes ot there happens
carrier boy is supplied with receipt
•ndlgo Itself.
"I suppose you mean the float T~ said
t° be a mistake in tho account. Ea^h lights the dyer, while It e q ^ ji
the angler. "Thai only coats about , books, and la commanded to give a
carrier boy la supplied with receipt In a number of other nwtoeagry testa. twopence.,1receipt by the Herald. See that you
Including
that
of
bojjlnt
books, and is commanded to give a
• J e ll. I owe you twopence- raid the (
^
a t the end o f each
This discovery will *• *” !*“ * * ” *
receipt by tho Herald. See that you annlsuse by textile manofactuma.
novice. -The one yoa lent me has
7
7
^
get your receipt at the end of each
sunk.- — London Tit-Bits.
week if yoa are F aying that way.
“ t * T A DAILY B U U
**
week if you are paying that way.
i

h

WALLACE REID
ELLIOTT DEXTER
MOKTE BLL’K
TIIEOUOHK ROBERT!!
THEODORE KODLOrr
IIAIMOM) IIATTO.1

{our and eight year*
old.

W hen

suddenly

yon

d itcov er

you haven’ t a b a b y
any more b u t a regular, sure ’ nuf! little shaver it’ * a pretty sure
sign y o u ’ ve got to d o some building.
ow n.

He wants a room o f his

M a y b e that meant an addition to the house.

A p layh ou se;

a d og kennel; a high board fence to shin o v e r ; and repairs!
D a d — he knows 1 D ad buys lum ber here.

Aik

H e’ s o n e o f ou r beat

custom ers.

HILL LUMBER CO.
SERVICE

Q U A L IT Y

PRICE

OFFICE SUPPLIES AT HERALD OFFICE
POST CARDS AT THE HERALD OFFICE

�^i'rn-v. *

THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1921
rain and aunshine ond if the pub­
SANFORD DAILY HERALD and
lic will always remember that they

■ « THE HERALD PRINTING CO., Inc.

iv iu n m
______
B. J. H O L L Y _____________ Editor
It. J. LILLARD....8ecretary-Tr*aaurer
H. A. NEEL....... ....Control Monitor
ROBERT J. HOLLY, Jr„
CmOtTLATIOM MAVAOim
Pbona 148 up to 6 P. M.
I

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1

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i

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takMrtjtlM M m ta M ra a
•k- VMf ...........................................
i■ Vfttll .........................................
MM* ta a t, br auitor
1 0m WmAXtaU
I ••••••*11a•*••***** ********M OMtS
'
Ska Mt l*. ta !»■*•«•
M i m m gtntrttli Oraat, lU U fiU kW
w » l rrUar. A4*arUM*f i»taa M ia *****
m aifUMtlw. Dttwratla ta fdltlaa. H.M
Mt Mat. always ta ainaaa.
Member o f The Associated Praaa

Dp •;
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&gt;

M
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!■ .

Lucky Sanford again.
Storm did no damage here—that is,
nothing to mention.
-------------o------------It seems to have spent its fury on
the lower east and west coasts, and
Mn reached up as far as Lakeland.
-------------o------------ The Herald has been prophesying
that a violent storm could bo looked
fo r after that long dry, hot spell this
summer.
-------------o------------And now that it Is all over, we look
fo r cool and wintry weather nnd a big
change in atmospheric conditions all
around. Let's got busy.
-------------o------------W o never miss tho water till the
well Tuns dry, and wo nover miss tho
electric lights until n storm puts tho
plant out of commission by falling
wires, etc. But it is all in tho dny's
work.
------------ o------------Chef In Chicago Bnys that we enn
have n real Thanksgiving dinner for
flvo people this yenr for $7.50. Now
if some one will lonn us tho $7.fi0, wo
will try it out, nnd lot the public seo
how It works. Or hotter still, send us
tho turkey nnd we will furnish the
trimmings.
— oTO OUR DAILY SUBSCRIBERS
Tho management of the Daily Her
old wnntH every family in Sanford
and in tho county to get cither the
Daily or Weekly Herald, Those tak­
ing the Daily Herald in the city lim
its where there is a carrier's route
olthcr pay at the office in ndvnnco or
thoy pay tho carrier hoys 15 cents a
week and get a receipt for Home. This
will obviate any mistakes over tho
question of whether tho subscription
is paid or not. We sell the pnpers to
tho cnrrlcr ixiys nnd they arc obliged
to get their money every week from
tho subscribers or they cannot obtain
their papers without loss to them. We
evolved this plan after trying several
others and find that by making the
boys pay for their papers they show
more disposition to carry every pa­
per to overy subscriber nnd it Ih n
more business-like arrangement all
around. Wo know thnt carrying pa­
pers on a rainy day or when the wind
Is blowing pnpors o ff the porcbos or
when other people are taking the pnpor In hullwnyn and other places nnd
reading It thnt the annoyance of miss­
ing your daily is enough to enusu
much discussion hut ns a rule our car­
rier boys are very good nnd we be­
lieve they honestly try to carry the
paper every night to every subscriber.
I f they do miss anyone it is your duty
to let the office know about it nt
once and you should also call the boy’s
attention to the fact nnd certainly
you should not pay the hoys if you
arc missing your paper. It is a ques­
tion of the hoys and the public nnd
the boys nre learning that they must
mnkc good If thoy expect to make any
money o ff the routes. They are mak­
ing a good salary each week when
they rustle and get a big route and
tho more subscribers they hnvo the
more they make and it is to their in­
terest to see that all the people get
tho daily.
Wo have also made arrangements
with two boys to carry tho cast nnd
west sides where no daily pnpors were
over carried before.
Thenc little
chnps curry tho paper over n mile
ench night in hot and cold weather

SUGGESTIONS FOR SERV­
ING DEL MONTE SPINACH
Season Spinach well, mix
with dill pickle nnd pack In
.noldB. Chill, turn out on let­
tuce nnd servo with mayon­
naise.
Servo poached oggn on Spin­
ach instead of toast for n break­
fast or luncheon dish.

D ean e T u rn er
WELAKA BLOCK
Phone* 497*494

are just boys ond only human we beHove that the public and the boys will
got along together fine. We think a
lot of tho newsboys on the Herold.
They cause us a lot of trouble, it is
true, but we believe in them and be­
lieve that a good nowsboy will make a
good citizen and wo hopo that every
subscriber to the Dally Herald will
believe us when we say that we ora
making greater efforts to distribute
tho Daily Herald than most dally pa­
pers mako and if there are any boys
Who wilfully neglects any subscribers
wo will lot them go and ondcavor to
get boys who will carry it satisfac­
torily. But gettings boys these days
is— well, try it yourself.
o------------REGULAR FREIGHT SERVICE
BETWEEN SANFORD AND
JACKSONVILLE.
Announcement of a dally passenger
and freight service on the St. Johns
river botween Jacksonville and San­
ford and Intermediate points means
further development of one of Flori­
da’s most important natural transpor­
tation facilities.
Henry O. White ,gcnoral agent of
tho Clydo StenmAhlp Company, In
making tho announcement said:
"Freight traffic between these two
cities Is rapidly Increasing and dur­
ing tho week just ended, because of
the largo amount of freight wo wore
called upon to haul, tho 'City of Jack­
sonville' was used for n special run.”
Tho inauguration of this new sched­
ule menns a grent deni for Central
Florida, nnd will nlso benefit Jack­
sonville nnd the surrounding terri­
tory, for It will bring the two sections
in closer touch nnd distribution of
supplies nnd produce both ways will
be much easier and chonper. In tho
past few months numerous meetings
have been held by the residents of tho
central section In an effort to cause
the establishment o f this regular ser­
vice, nnd this announcement by the
Clyde Steamship Company is proof
that their efforts hnvo not been in
vain.
Tho subject of transportation is re­
ceiving nation-wide comment at the
present time. Thu impending rail­
road strike has prompted this com­
ment. But strike or no strike, rail­
roads rntes in Foridn nro nigh pro­
hibitive nnd quickest relief will come
through development of tho nnturnl
water routes and tho construction of
permanent highways. Tho section be­
tween Jacksonville and Sanford nnd
beyond, will profit by this regular
boat service, for shipment by water is
cheaper thnn by land and it is rea­
sonable to predict thnt the Clydo
compnny will profit by this extension
of its service.
As tho Metropolis has said ninny
times before, to realize full profits
from her varied interests Florida
must utilize her natural wntorways
and build transportation feeders to
the ports. Good roads servo this pur­
pose. There nre good roads in the Snnford section and the intermediate sec­
tions nnd regular freight sorv’eo by
water is going to prove n real bless­
ing.—Jacksonville Metropolis.
HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS CELE­
BRATE VICTORY
Lakeland Imd all the earmarks o f a
college town (which it is since South­
ern College came to the city) last
evening, when the student hotly of the
Lakeland High School staged a snake
dance which lasted the better part of
an hour anti which surged up nnd
down the mnln business thoroughfores to the detriment of truffle and
pedestrians in general, hut which met
with the general approval of all with
whom they come in contact.
This is n harmless hit of fun, en­
joyed by the boys anti by all others
who have not forgotten that
they
were once young themselves, and compnretl with some of the stunts wo
have seen pulled in other plnccs af­
ter a football or baseball victory, is
mild to say tho least. The folks who
think that these boys are noisy anti
rowdy nnd lay too much Htress on n
game of football or baseball, ought to
take a visit to some of the larger cit­
ies and see what comes off after a
local victory—Atlanta, for instance,
after Georgia Tech has beaten tho
University of Georgia in a football
or hnschnll game. Tho town is not
big enough to bold them nnd the keys
of tho city nro theirs for several
hours after supper, whether tho city
fathers so will It or not.
Lot tho boys hnvo thoir fun. Any­
thing thnt sorvoB to keep their inter­
est in schooling, and fur thU purpose
nothing Is more efficient thnn a win­
ning baseball, track or football team,
csccinlly when the athletics o f the
school nro backed by tho faculty of
the Hchool nnd the citizens of tho
town. We hnvo n shining example of
this right hero in our own little high
school. This is the first ycnrHji a de­
cade when ‘nthletlcs hnve not been
more or less frowned upon by tho fag-,
ulty. This year the faculty is in en­
tire accord with tho boys and Is o
denvoring to assist the nthletlcs of

the school in every possible way, and
this feeling Is more than shown by
the successful football team which has
been developed this fall. For the first
time since the writer came to Lake­
land has there been ample and suit
able football material from which to
choose a winning eleven and this is
duo solely and entirely to the fact
that the school authorities from tho
local school board on down tho line
nro In accord with tho boys in their
wishes and desires and the boys and
girls In turn afo showing their appro
elation of' this spirit by turning out
on masse, not only for the team posi­
tions themselves, but in support of
the eleven on the grid; no small item
in Itself. The present school heads
are traveling along the right lines, at
least, or such at least is tho opinion
of ye scribe, and if this policy Is fol­
lowed out to the end we will have a
better lot of schools, students and
citizens in tho town than has been op
parent for somo time. Interest in
tho athletics of a school is bound to
be roflected on the study cards of the
students, for with something to look
forward to and to work for; an end to
attain; a goal to be reached; not a
student or a student in themaking, but
what will feel a little more pride In
bU .local, institution, and fccli tg this
pride, cause It to be shown by u little
moro interest in their class room work
and n consequently better per centago on their monthly nveruge cards.
— Lakeland Star.
NO CODE OF ETHICS FOR
ESCAPED PRISONER.
"You fellows Just keep running bo
hind mo," was the orders Roy Gard
ner, notorious train bandit, gave two
companions when ho planned an cs
enpo from tho Federal penitentiary
recently. The two men followed his
instructions nnd formed n screen for
Gardner. Today Gardner Is free nnd
tho two companions nro in tho prison
hospital with bullets in their bodies
Gnrdncr planned tho escape ond his
confederates obeyed the "muster
mind." Gardner let the other two men
take all the risk, lie needed thoir co­
operation in order to make his es­
cape possible. The fact that they
would probably be killed by the
guards was of no concern to the crim ?
Inal.
"You fellows watch me. I'll cut the
wire nnd run out llrst, then you two
run after me and keep behind me,”
ho told them. The two dupes were
willing to pull Gardner's chestnuts
out of the fire, They furnished n
shield for his escape until he got fnr
enough away from tile prison to dodge
behind a bunch o f cattle which took
the place o f tho men who had been
shot down.
There is all posed to be a code of
ethics even among convicted crimi­
nals, but Gardner seems to have been
devoid o f all knowledge o f fair play
His only thought wns to make his es­
cape from the prison walls. Even the
most hardened inmate o f the Federal
prison who has heard of Gardner's
escape and the way ho "double-cross­
ed his pnls” will turn tho cold should­
er to him when he is captured nnd re­
turned to his cell.
There nre men in every walk of lifo
who nre willing for tho other fellow
to be the goat. They do not consider
the danger thnt will be run by others.
Their only concern is their own
mangey hides. They are willing to do
anything if there is n chance o f per­
sonal gain, even though th man or
men who nmku it possible are called
on to pay with their lives.
"Tho master mind" of the criminal
world is the nngeroua character of
today, lie is the man who "cuts the
wires" and lets thu other fellow "run
behind” as a screen. Ho plans and
reaps the reward. Tho other man
carries out tho plans and pays the
price.— Florida Metropolis,
------------ o-----------CULTIVATE YOUR NEIGHBORS.

than good, Behind all these stands a
man and a woman. Get to know them.
There is absolute! nothing In life so
precious as the Intimacies of a neigh­
borhood. If the jealousies can bo kept
out— tho scandalmongers— it Is pos­
sible to enjay heaven enough right In
your own homo nnd tho homo of your
neighbor. Cut tho hlgh-brow stuff.
It’s a nulsanco. In tho neighborhood
bo just folks. You'll hnvo to bo that In
heaven if you get there. And If you
get to theother place— well, figure
that out for yourself.
A Bowling Green correspondent
apologizes for his Inability to send an
oppossum for tho autumnal season.
"But coon grapes nnd persimmons will
soon bo ripe,” he adds, "when Ihopo
to beablo to send you brother 'pos­
sum In fine condition," God boss tho
manl He knows whore the heart of
tho average conn American Is to bo
discovered. Think of possum and candied yams.—Tampa Tribune.
------------ o-----------ARE WE A MAIL ORDER STATE.
Postmasters and clerks will tell you
that a big percentage of our popula­
tion buy lavishly from mall .order
houses. Wo stood behind a woman in
a Tampa postoffice ono day who took
out 18 money orders to bo sent to mull
order houses in the north. This was
on exceptional case, but the clerk told
us It wan not nt all unusual. Tho
reason for such procedure Is not hnrd
to find—-wc do not advertise— or nt
least do not ndvcrtlsc enough to stop
to nny appreciable extent this tre­
mendous flow of money that daily
lenves tho state. Wo make but little
attempt to combat the glnmor of tho
gaudily illustrated mail order cata­
logue which sits In plain view of 99
out of every 100 homes In our coun­
try districts. It makes good rending
— it makes attractive rending. It is
interesting for the passing of timo on
n rainy day— or to bo rend by lamp­
light after the dny's work. A glimpse
in these homes will disclose little else
In the wny o f "literature"— or none
hnlf so Interesting ns the finshy il­
lustrated "bargains.”
The mnil order catnloguo is tho
greatest competitor our local business
houses hnvo. It is tho grent retard­
ent in the stnte's advancement in n
business way. What arc local busi­
ness men doing to combat it? Very
little, wo nre sorry to sny. Wo still
meet men who do not advertise, or
advertise so very little thnt it is hnrdly worthy o f tho nnme. Wo hnve
heard the catalogue of n ccrtnin mall
order house called the “ Crncker Bi­
ble.” This for the reason that It is al­
ways a conspicuous pnrt of the furn­
ishings of our country home. Aro
prices lower in these mail order hous­
es thnn those asked by the home mer­
chant? At times they are. In other
instances cunningly worded price li^ts
load one to believe they nre while
really they are not. Colored illustra­
tions attract to articles the buyer can
very well get along without. This is
n powerful weapon for tho mnil order
house and it is used unstintingly.
There is no remedy for tho homo mer­
chant but advertising—"meet fire
with fire,” ns It were. Tho buyer
must be shown and it is up to the
merchant to do it—by advertising.—
Florida Grower.
Next thing you know the senators
will bo voting themselves congression­
al medals of honor for ending the war
so satisfactorily. It might nlso be
appropriate for the German rcichstng
to order a shipload of iron crosses
sent over for distribution.

IT’S A FACT"

you enn nut
dry
your

Laundry in the sun when it is rain­
ing. So cull the SANFORD BRANCH
LAKELAND STEAM LAUNDRY,
they can dry It, rnin or shine. All
work called for nnd delivered the 3rd
day.-------------------GIVE US A TRIAL

The civic club bns over undertaken
as an Important a work ns that laid
out for the Rotnrians in ils get-ncquuinted-with-your-noighbor
move­
SANFORD, FLA.
ment. The Roturians propose having PHONE 175
an "All Florida Rotary Day" at Or­
lando on the 28th, for the purpose of
getting acquainted with each other,
that's fino. But tho force of the argu­
ment npplies to your neighbor next
door in town.
What do you know about the folks
next door? In nine cases out of ten,
absolutely nothing. For all you knnow
genius may be hiding there. And It’s
Before buying your
n hundred-to-ono shot thnt n darned
good man or woman, worthy in nil re­
spects of your friendship and confi­
dence, live along sido o f you. Yet you
chase ncross the city for human com­
panionship.
Come in and look over
This Is trngedy. Tho folks next door
our line
may belong to the Campbollito church,
whilo you are a democrat. But that
matters not. It will be good for your
immortal soul tounoet those folks and
know them as neighbors. Almost in­
stantly you will find
thoy are real
folks, your equals nnd worthy o f your
trust and confidence. Artificial ties
nnd affiliations do not lot more harm

“ The Best Preparation
for G ood W ork Tomorrow
is G ood W ork Today”
The men o f today, who will be the
successes o f tomorrow, are those
which turn the opportunities as they
come to their future advantage,
through enthusiasm to work and a
willingness to save the very maxi­
mum their incomes will permit.

First National Bank
A COMMUNITY BUILDER

F. P. Forster, President
B. F. Whitner, Cashier

PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS
DIRECTORY OF SANFORD
You Can Find the Name o f Every Live Pro­
fessional and Business Man in
Sanford in This Column
LAWYERS

CONTRACTORS

George A. DeCottes

S. 0 . Shinholser

Atlorney-at-Law

Contractor and Builder

Over Seminole County Bank
SANFORD
SANFORD -:*
FLORIDA

HEATING STOVE

THE BALL HARD­
WARE COMPANY

FLORIDA

Sanford Constructs Co.
HARTFORD BATTERY
“ Battery Insurance”
Sold and Serviced by

CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS
Planes and Specifications Cheerfully
Furnished
All Work Guarsnteed
H. T. PACE
P. 0 . Box 111

Edw. Higgins, Inc.
Haight &amp; Wieland

Builders &amp; Contractors

GARAGES

Sketches and Eatlmatea Free; as
building too large and none too amalL
------ALL WORK GUARANTEED------

Smith Bros. Garage

Wilson &amp; Shorey

Expert Repairing

Pine and Garland Bta., Orlando, Fla.

OIL, GAS and ACCESSORIES
Onk and Firat

PURE WATER

Geo. W. Knight
Real Estate and Insurance
SANFORD

-:-

*:•

-:-

Elder Springs Water
99.98% PURE
Phone 311-W
Sanford, Fla.

FLORIDA

.. Employment Bureau..

LORD’S PURITY
WATER

The vocational committee of tho Busi­
ness and Professional Women's Club
AS GOOD AS THE BEST
requests nil young women desiring
Phone 197
Dally Service
employment to register nt tho First
National Bnnk.
AGNES G. BERNER, Chairman

SANFORD NOVELTY

D. F. SUMNER
PAINTER

WORKS
V. C. COLLER, Prop.

LET ME FAINT YOUR HOUSE
W ill Contract or Tak. Job bjr tbs Hour
PHONE 413
113 LAUREL AVE.

General Shop and Mill
Work

Sanford Machine &amp;
Foundry Co.

CONTRACTOR and BUILDER
517 Commercial Btreet Sanford, Ft*.

Gcnernl Machine nnd Boiler Works
Automobile Flywheel Steel Genr
bands In stock
Crank Shafts Rc-turned

Sanford Steam Laundry
FOR SERVICE
Call 146-J

T. A. BUTNER

COOL WEATHER IS
COMING

-:-

W. RAWLING, Prop.

Acteylene Welding
OF ALL KINDS

TRANSFER
“WE DELIVER THE GOODS”

Quick Service Transfer
Storage Facilities
If we please you, tell others; II no
tell us. Phone 498

HOTELS
Hotel Montezuma
“ Sanford’s New Hotel”
11.50 Up Per Day

Sanford Welding Co.
Located In Eagle Bldg., 205 Onk Ave.
Phone 175

Fourth and Sanford Avt

New Era Printery
G. Bassett Smith, Prop.
COMMERCIAL AND
JOB PRINTING
DRINK
Elder Springs Water. Ita 99 98-104
per cent pure. Phone 81L
Office suppllea of all kinds at The
Herald Printing Co. When you want
anything in this line see The Herald.
We have it or can get It
Try a Herald Want Ad today.

GIRON &amp;
FRY
ELECTRICAL
[Contractors
L Phono 442

111 Park
Ave.

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26,1921
Mullet Roe.— L. P. McCullor, 183-2c
Ultle H«PP«B&gt;0I»
Mention of
Matters In Brief
Personal II* 11" '

of Interest

In and About
&amp; The City *£

Summary of the
Floating Small
Talks Succinctly
Arranged for
Herald Readers

Jones’ Dairy Farm Sausage.— L. P.
McCullor.
183-2U;
Still, men can discuss women's
clothes about ns Intelligently as w o­
men can discuss homo brew.

: the w e a t h e r :
1

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For Florida: Generally fa ir
tonight and Thursday ; coo or
in extreme North portion to-

#
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*

night.

£

J * # * * * # # # #
SUM raining.
But It is almost over and tho wind
is falling.

We seem to have had enough rain
to suit even tho strawberry growers.
Sanford can recover from a deluge
tetter than most any other section of
the State. But we havo had enough
rain for tho present.
Mrs. Schlorer’s Olivo Nniso.— L. P.
183-2tc
KcCullcr.
There Is no serious damago report♦tl here, not even any trees falling In
the city and damaging anything. Wo
understand that Orlando lost soveral
o f her line old shndo troos by tho
•storm.
Elatlerics at cut prices at Hof-Mac
Bat lory Co., "Foot of First Street."
170-fltp

TEMPERATURE
:
-----#

Ballard's Pan Cake nnd Buck­
wheat flour.— L. P. McCullor. 183-2tc

This little temperature column
was scared blue yesterday. Wo
havo been asking for a storm
to clear tho atmosphero and
all at oneo wo received tho
storm and it was some blow
all right—most too much of it
In spots but tho barometer la
rising today and this means
that tho storm Is over.
Thu
sun will shine again and all
will bo lovely. If you will note
the barometer was lower yesterday than It hns been In
years which betokens a storm
but it seems to bo over now
and nobody hurt. Now whon
tho weather settles it will bo
settled.
5:10 A. M. OCTOBER 26
Mnximum ..........
76
Minimum ........................
07
Rango ..............................
73
Barometer ...................... 29.64
Rnin .................................. 3.00
Northwest nnd ruining.
Barometer dropped to 29.00 at
10 p. m. Inst night, tho lowest
in years.

A New York pastor is preaching
"prismatic sermons." Perhaps tho
spotlight is used on thoBe who are
claimed by tho devil through Mor­
pheus.
|,

#
*

*
*
*
*
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft
*
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft
*
*
ft
-a
ft
ft
ft
ft
ft

"Dollar-Dny" Specials, Thursday,
Friday and Saturday.— Yowell Co.
182-2tc
No woman should be classed as
beautiful until sho has posed for a
picturo before breakfast— and of
courso unexpectedly.

“ Hollar-Day" Specials, Thursday,
Friday and Saturday.—Yowell Co,
182-2tc
Our observation hns been that most
of the "wild, wild women" are young
jenough to bo cured by broken doses
spanking.

1: with n Herald Want Ad.

SPECIAL
To Reduce the Cost
of Motoring
-10x3Vi, NonSkid
30x3,
Rib

$10.25
8.75

These Tires are Firsts nnd
Carry the Factory
Guarantee

FRANK AKERS
TIRE CO.
VULCANIZING
l«t and Elm Ave.

Phone 447-W

And there' 'is something else ve want to say
You know it’s a poor mule that can't kick both ways. When prices
went up— every suit seller the country wide, followed suit—had to.
Now that prices ARE DOWN—every clothier should come down—
whether he wants to or not. That’s how we reason it—you stood for
the advance— now it is your turn to sit down and LET SOMEBODY
ELSE HANG ONTO THE STRAP.
W E ARE SELLING FALL SUITS A T $35— SAME QUALITY was $65

Princess Pat?

’ •Aj k I

S a n fo r d , F la .
f—■

183-tfc

New Florida Syrup.—L. P. McCul­
lor.
I83-2tc

T om M oore
O p to m e tr is tO p ticia n

A cynic remarks tho Anti-Snioon
SANFORD
Rental batteries for any make of Yenguo caused tho eighteenth amend­
car at Hof-Mnc Battery Co., "Foot of ment to be written into the Constitu­
First Street."
179-Otp tion nnd tho bootleggers will fight
nny effort to erase it.
Dependable Service
Arcndin is to have a new packing
house. It will bo constructed by tho
Princess Pat?
United Growers. It is referred to ns
183-tfc Slightly used Bulck Six, rearing
to RO,
prospective million dollar plant.
only ............................. «Ptl I tl
"How do you use your money?"
Have your watches nnd jewelry re­ asks tho St. Petersburg Independent.
paired nt McLaulin’s, Two first class Wo don’t see why we should have to One 1919 Ford Touring Car, In
first class shape,
(j*OOP
watch makers. Prompt service.
answer when Congress refuses to toll
at
only
.....................
*p u u u
140-tfc what it does with other folks’ money.

AUTO EXCHANGE

Princess Pat?

183-tfc

The First State Bank, Nowo Port
Richey, first banking house, unnounco
tho opening of their institution with a
capital Btock o f $15,000.
Wo have in stock different sizes of
Plpclcas Round Oak Furnaces, also
automatic nnd instantaneous hot wat­
er heaters.—Mnhoncy-Wnlkor Co.
180-0tc
Tho Brooksvlllo Hotel Co., is a now
organization perfected at Brooksvlllo
and will start very soon on tho build­
ing o f a handsomo 35-room hotol.
Call and see our lino of army gods,
complete lino.—Thrasher &amp; Garner.
183-4tc
"EXID E" BATTERIES—Our Pull­
man cars, airplanes, submarines,
telephones and great 7,000 milo wire­
less stations are equipped with tho
master "EXIDE" Battorios, tho battory is tho Hfo of your car, got the
best. We recharge and repair all
makes.— Ray Brothers, Phono 548.
17fl-tf-c
Buy It with a Horald Want Ad.

FIVE ROOM BUNGALOW
Located within fifty feet o f brick street to
be sold this week on very reason­
able terms.

YOUR SATISFACTION

ATTENTION CELERY GROWERS!
IS MY SUCCESS
We have just received a carload of
Phono 19]
Yellow Jacket sprayers, price of same Office Opp. P. O.
cash, 12 per cent below last year’s To See Better See Moore
prices.— Mahoney-'Walker Co, 180-0tc

See

A, P. CONNELLY
C L A S S IF IE D A D S
Classified advertisements, 5 cents n line. No id tsken for less thin
25 cents, and positively no classified ads charged to anyone. Cask
must accompany all ordora. Count five words to a line and remit ac­
cordingly.
___________________ _________

W ANTED

FOR SALE

FOR SALE— Itoso No. 4 seed, Irish WANTED—Customers for freBh milk,
morning nnd evening deliveries.— It.
potatoes, per bushel $2.00.— L. A.
Liberal Terms on Doth these llnrgnins
L.
Gnrrison. Phono 3711. 109-St-Tu
131-tfc
Repair Work by Experienced Brumloy.
Mechanics at Right Prices
FORD TRUCK for sale.— West Side WANTED—Team work. Apply M.
Hanson Shoo Shop.
178-13tp
Grocery.
104-tfc

One case Hats, latest
style, $2.00 each, just re­
ceived.— Sanford Shoe
&amp; Clothing Co.
At the Foot of First St.
179-Otc
If Ring Lnrdncr would, only an­
nounce his intention of "writing up"
tho disarmament conference, with II.
G. Wells already scheduled to sit In
the press gallery, tho world would get
both sides of the parleyy.
BATTERIES—America’s first
car
was regularly equipped with start­
ing and lighting Batytorics in 1911,
this battery was nn "EXIDE", today
tho master battery of tho world. Do
not ho misled by the so-cnlled just as
good—Ray Brothers, Phone 548.
175-tf-c

Princess Pat?

183-tfc

STORM DAMAGES SOME GOODS.

MRS. IDA AUSTIN
418 Magnolia Ave.

FOR SALE—Best opportunity for
wholesale and retail fish market on
East const. Building, dock and ship­
ping platform, Address W. P, Wil­
kinson, Now Smyrna, Fla. 10-17-lni

MIRACLE CONCRETE CO.— BuirdMAKER AND ALTERED o v ‘
ing and pier blocks, cement pockets,
LADIES’ CLOTHES
cement sidewalks with guarnnteo to
last and not break or crack. General
cement contracting. All work guar­
anteed. Elm nvenuo between Third
and Fourth street.—J. E. Torwllliger,
Make anything you want In tho Prop. Phono 224-W.
178-lm-tfc
mattress line.—Sanford Mattress Co.
183-Bte FOR SALE— 1920 Model, 5 passenger
touring enr, in good condition. See
II. T. Steele, at Wight Bros., Co.
SOUTH ATLANTIC PORTS
181-5tp.
EDITOR IN SANFORD.
FOR SALE—New cottage. Apply to
J. W. Musson, 001 Palmetto ave.
E. R. Waite, editor of the South At­
179-fltp
lantic Ports, magazine, of Jackson­
ville, was In tho city todny and paid FOR SALE— Nice, small business at
109 Snnford Ave.
17lP0tp
tho Herald office nn appreciated visit.
Mr. Waito is doing a great work for FOR SALE—210 Egg Buckeye Incutho port cities nnd has enlarged his
bntor, only used one time. 710 Pal­
scope to tnko in the St, JohnB rivor metto nvonuo. Call 209-W.
181-Dtp
ports ns well and has given Sanford
some fine advertising lately in his FOR SALE— Cheap for cash, sound,
medium sizo horse, wagon nnd har­
widely distributed magazine.
ness. Seo E.tF. Lumlquist, nt Crown
Papor Co.
183-3tp

WILL DO IT

The storm damaged goods In some
of the stores last night, ns hardly any
building anywhere could withstand
tho onslaughts of tho driving rain and
wind coming with such n velocity.
Several stores report damago by wa­
ter, among them being tho Surprise
ORLANDO ALL RIGHT.
Shoe Store on Sanford avenue where
FOR SALE CHEAP— Popcorn Cristho water came in under tho floor
petto candy machine, brand new,
We uro glnd to hear tho cheery
and through the framing around the
Call
nt 123 West First Street, San­
voice of Billy Glonn, of the Orlnndo
windows.
ford
Brunch Lakeland Steam LuunSentinel this morning, and to know
dry. Phone 475. T. A. Butner,
thnt
our
sister
city
had
not
suffered
HERALD I,ATE TODAY.
183-2tc
nny dnmngo aside from trees being
For offico supplies, stationery, etc.,
Tho Dally Hcrnld will bo Into today blown down, etc. Editor Glenn called
come
to tho Horald office.
up
to
know
how
Sanford
was
faring
rh thoro was no powor until olovon
and
we
were
glnd
to
let
him
know
that
o’clock todny, necessitating a delay in
Post cards— local view* -lc each at
nil tho various departments of tho wo nro nil right, und still shipping by tho Herald office.
papor and cutting down tho slzo of tho water. BUI also said that Orlnndo
paper from eight to six pages. How­ Rotes were expecting Sanford Rotes
FOR RENT
ever, it is so much bottor than] it down thoro Friday, nil day, nnd not n
might havo been, that nono of ub nro half day, ns they wore depending FOR RENT— Two furnished rooms.
Apply 1004 Elm Ave,
152-tfc
kicking ,and wo hopo tho subscribers upon Snnford big. All the Rotarians
will not. And then, remembor, that in tho Stnto will bo thoro if tho hur­ iFOR RENT— Suburban home.
Call
tho little chaps who carry your paper ricane doos not Interfere with their
308-J.
107tfc
have to trudgo through tho rain and coming.
GOOD LOCATION for a meat market.
water to got it to your door, today.
, Apply to 309 First street. 174-tfc
PIANO OWNERS NOTICE
FOR RENT— Furnished front rooms.
Will bo In town for a limited time,
200 Park Avo.
182-Gtp
For Immediate service phono—
F01l RENT— Largo furnished 5o3
MACK THE TUNER
FOR SALE
room.
Convenient to boarding
18210fcp
Valdez Hotel
house. 715 Magnolia ave.
180-8tc
On Geneva Road
— Get your Scratch Pad* from The FOR RENT— Bod room, 311 Park avoSEE BRIDGE KEEPER
Herald—by the pound—15c.
nue.
178-tfc

WOOD TIMBER

AGENTS
WANTED— High
class
monthly life nnd monthly health and
accident policies. Address P. O. Box
1137, Jacksonville, Fin.
182-3tp
SECOND
HAND
SHOW
CASE
Wanted. Herald Printing Co.
_________________________ 183-6tp.
SALESMAN WANTED—An old lino
Legal Reserve Life Insurnnco Co,,
hns contract to offer n high clnss
salesman in this nml adjoining coun­
ties. Address, stnto manager, P. O.
Box 1137, Jacksonville, Fla.
182-Gtp
\\J

A W T E T k — 1BRIGHT BOY TO

W AIM1 M l

LEARN
PRINTING TRADE. ONE THAT’S NOT
AFRAID OF A LITTLE WORK.
APPLY AT THE HERALD PRINTING COMPANY.
tf
Eyes Examined

Glasses Designed

Henry McLaulin, Jr,
OPT. D.

OPTICIAN

• OPTOMETRIST

Graduato Northern Illinois College
212 East First St.
Sanford, Fla.

Edith Lucille Ball
Teacher Plano nnd Harmony
Graduate Chicago Musical College

Call 46-J for Appointments

PROPERTY OW NERS
I f you have a roof that leaks, needs
repairing or painting, It will pay you
to see me, I have devoted sixteen
years to the roofing business, ami it I
fail to please you It will cost you noth­
ing. I give evory small job my per­
sonal attention. Charges reasonable.
Best o f re fom ce s.
Satisfaction
guaranteed

W . E. DODD
PRACTICAL ROOFER
Phone 444
109 East First 8f
■

CTS.

w

M

Gelfond’s
mayonnaise
HOME
MADE snlad dressing.— L. P. McCul­
lor.
183-2tc

f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t f t

No matter what tho other fellow
People nov know that tho moon
Boca, we do hotter. Hof-Mnc Battery
[Jo., “ Foot of First Street." 179-Gtp isn’ t mado of cheese, hut they are
still innocent concerning tho compo­
Some men never have any experi­ sition of moonshine.
ence of great adventure except to go
The Ladies of the Episcopal Church
livvering by when the traffic cop’s
dgn says stop.
will hold their Ilnzaar and Supper,
'Dollar-Day" Specials, Thursday, December 1st nnd 2nd In the Parish
171-tfc
Friday arid Saturday.— Yowell Co. House.
182-2tc
Mr. Hnrding should worry about a
railroad
strike! Tho American people
T V golf craze will nover affect tho
spend
$609,000
annually keeping tho
Lntire population. Somebody must
keep working in order to manufacture Mayflower in service for him.
|ho Kalla.
Richelieu coffee.—L. P. McCuller.
183-2tc
A nny officers’ shoes just received
»t Thrasher &amp; Garner's.
183-4tc
The Persian government Is trying
l he Temple Pipe Organ Club will t oborrow money in the United States.
hold its Christmas Bazaar November Wo suppose a few prizewinning cats
&lt;!r'tli. The place to be nnnonccd lat­ will bo put up as security.
er. In case of had weather, tho a f­
fair will tic held indoors.
Tho Pipe Orgnn Club will have a
Hallowe’en
Lawn Supper with Miss
182-mon-Thur-tfs,
Martha Fox and Mrs. Forrest GatchConsidering the nmount of hootch ol, hostesses, at their homes, corner
he takes on his trip to Indln, wo can’ t Oak nnd Eighth, Thursday, October
182-ltc
understand why they call him J’ rlnco 27th.
of Wails,
Clover Hill Butter, tho best.—L. P.
McCullor.
183-2tc

, Y

Wo are unalterably opposed to mob
law, but prny tell what disposition
can be mado of a man who persists in
eating onions three times n day-

f t

Clark Ilohertson and sevornl o f his
Suggested sign for the
•co-workers are here today from Or­ lawn: "No buckpnssing,"
lando getting n shipment o f Rco cars
started for thnt city. All tho Orlan­
Army rnin coats at Thrasher &amp;
do dealers havo their cars como to Garner's.
183-4tc
Sanford and then run them down by
If it is in liquid form, somewhere Iti
road .saving thereby on tho freight
America
there is a stomach thnt can
rates.
handle it.
(Jet your hats cleaned and blocked
Army pants for $1.00 pair.—
[at the French Hat Shop, 109 Sanford
183-4tc
ave.
170-Ctp Thrasher &amp; Gnrnor.

will be the biggest event o f the morning on Armistice Day, if not one
o f the biggest events o f the day. The American Legion are now won­
dering-if the route they have mapped out will be long enough for all
that expect to take part in this parade. It is going to be a dandy.

Fat Mackerel.— L. P, McCullor.
'
183-2tc

Tho oLeglon of Ft. Lauderdale are
Capitol planning for the cnrly erection of nn
auditorium for their use in that city.

It takes courage to enforco lnw.
|Thc trouble
that most of tho teeth
Lin nnr laws are yellow.

The Big Street Parade

Nobody can tell' what thoi grain
market is going to do, except that it
is going to do tho farmer.

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                    <text>U ty

S u b s t a n t ia l’

IN THE HEART OP THE WORLD’S GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION
VOLUME

n

SA N F O R D , F L O R ID A , T U E S D A Y , O CTO BE R 25, 1921

NUMBER 188

Stevenson Hom e to Be Preserved

ite Laws A re Not
Equitable in Their
Present Form “

POSTPONE MEETING
INTERNATIONAL CONFAB
ON ARMAMENT.

W. C. T. u. PREPARES
TO FIGHT HOME BREW
TAMPA LADIES TO MEET.

(By Th* AmocUUA rrtu)
WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 26—
The postponement o f the opening
meeting o f the International confer­
ence on armament and far eastorn af­
fairs until the momlngg o f Novem­
DRIVERS ARE SAFER A t 1
ber twelfth, is estimated as probable
MILES AN HOUR THAN
today by high officials,
OTHERS AT 20.

O f Railway Executives
and Leaders o f
Brotherhoods

TAMPA, Fla., Oct. 25— The local
branch of the Women’s Christian
Temperance Union is preparing to
train Its guns on tho homo brew in­
dustry o f Tampo and has called ,o
mass meeting to bo hold noxt Sunday
PEACEFUL SETTLEMENT LOOK.
at which tho situation will bo dis­
ED FOR IN CASE THEY CAN
cussed by Judge Edmund Wirth, o f
ALL AGREE
ESCAPED PRISONER
municipal court, and others,
SURRENDERS HIMSELF TO
(By Tl&gt;4 AuooliUd rrtu)
STATE PRISON FARM
FATHER AND 80NS
CHICAGO, Oct. 25— Railway
The
Cal, In which tho noted PITTED AGAINST EACH OTHER
executives met here today and
i no Robert
iioi.cn Louis
i.ouis Stevenson homo
home nt Monterey, Cal.,
RAIFORD, Fla.,. Oct. 25 Bascom writer composed some of his most famous works, Is to bo preserved for future
• IN MIAMI COURT CASE.
leaders o f tho Brotherhoods In
Carlton, sentenced In St. Johns coun­ generations. It hr.s been restored.
Cleveland In final conferences be­
ty In 1911 to life imprisonment for
MIAMI, Fin., Oct. 25.— A father
fore their Joint appearance at the
murder, and who escaped from a tur­
Railroad Labor Board tomorrow
pitted against his two sons, the father
pentine camp on Dccomber 26, 1016,
which board hopes will lead to a
as the prosecuting attorney and tho
presented himself nt tho state prison
peaceful settlement o f the strike.
sons as counsel for the dofenso, was
here last week and surrendered. Ma­
nn interesting feature o f tho trial
rlon and Don Carlton, brothers of
hero last week In county criminal CHICAGO, 111., O ct 25— Chairman
Bascom, also were sentonced to life
Barton, o f the board, when advised to­
Imprisonment but Inter woro paroled.
day that Mr. Stono had advised his
general chairmen that they need not
It is understood they influenced their
brother to surrender, nftor ho had
respond to tho board’s citation to ap­
been nt liberty nearly six years,
pear hero tomorrow, said ho had no
One Official Said the Four Stolen Pouches Con
communication from Mr. Stone on the
tained One Million Dollars
subject ,nnd he could not understand
why such nn order should bo given.
"W e shall tako thlss matter up at one’
NEW YORK, Oct. 25.— (By the Associated Press).—Thrco bandits who
and correct It,” Mr. Barton said. "W e
held up a mail truck in lower Broadway Inst night escaping with four pouches
desire tho presence of general chair­
of registered mail, are being sought toduy. Officials Bay thoy nro unable to
men of brotherhoods ns well ns extocufix tho vnluo of tho stolen mail, which originated In Wall Street. One Inspec­
tlvo officers. There is nothing in
tor, however, la reported to havo told dctcctivea tho pouches contained nbout
ono million dollars in monoy and negotiable paper. Other estimates fixed tho
any of tho messages sent out by the
bonrd summoning labor men which
LOOKS LIKE ALL PARTIES MAY value at ono hundred thousand.
SETTLE THEIR DIF­
would be construed otherwiaeL”
1
FERENCES
INCOME TAX EIGHT PER CENT
ON ALL OVER THAT
CLEVELAND, Ohio, Oct. 26— Mr.
(By Th* AjimUUS Fnu)
AMOUNT
Stono today corboratod reports that
LONDON, Oct. 25— Tho vlow was
ho had advised tho genoral chalrmon
expressed nt tho Sinn Fein hoadffuar(Dr Th* AiweltUd Frau)
of engineers that thoy need not re­
WASHINGTON, Oct. 25— Normal
tors today that the crisis in tho Irish
spond to tho citation o f tho railroad
tax rates of four per cent on tho first
conference was over for tho present.
labor board to appear beforo the
four thousand dollars of incomo and
hoard In Chicago tomorrow.
eight
per cent on all over that amount
GEORGE M’ LAUGIILIN
The opening liny bo postponed on
SEVERE HURRICANE ON THE MAY UNITE AT BIG CONFER was approved todny by tho senate
MADE TRIP TO MIAMI FROM
ENCE TO HE HELD AT
SOUTHWEST COAST OF
account
of Armistico dny celebrations
without a record vote.
These aro
NEW JERSEY ON WHEEL,
FLORIDA
DETROIT
hero and tho hurlnl o f American un­
rates now In force.
known soldier.
MIAMI, Fla., Oct. 25— George Mc­
(By Th* AuoeUUd Fr***)
(By Th* AuocItUd Prau)
Judge Bnrton, o f tho labor board,
EX-MONARCH CIIAS. DEFEATED
Laughlin, of Atlantic City, N. J., hns
DETROIT, Oct. 25— Definite plnn
The following wire wns sent to
today telegraphed tho heads o f four
arrived hero to spend tho winter and Postmaster Elder (his morning by for the reuniting o f tho Southern nnd
BUDAPEST, Oct. 25, The army of brotherhoods and switchmen roltorNorthern Methodist Episcopul church­
hocauso of tho hlggh cost of'ridlng on tho Weather Buronu:
former Emperor Charles, which wns ntlng tho previous announcement that
es will be mado hero Immediately
the railroads mado tho trip on a bi­
"Jacksonville, Fla.,
marching on Budapest, for the restor­ all genoral chairmen nre expected to
of
cycle .traversing tho 1,406 miles In
"10:06 A. M., Oct. 25, 1921. preceding the world conference
ation of the ex-monarch, was defeat­ attend tho hearing starting hero to­
the Methodist Episcopal church thnt
eighteen days and walking only 22 "Postmnstor,
ed with heavy losses by Hungarian morrow.
opens November 14th. It wan an­
"Sanford, Fin.
miles of tho way becauso of sandy
government forces nt Tata Tovaros,
"Severe hurricane In Gulf o ff the nounced todny tho commission on
roads. The greatest distance travel­
35 miles west of Budapest Monday Stone Says Are No
ed by tho cyclist In ont dny was tho Southwest coast of Florida. Danger­ Methodist unification would hold a morning. Tho Cnrllst forces havo
110 miles botween Jacksonville and ous Easterly to shifting winds. Take session here to map out tho program fallen bnck to Komorn, 15 milos north
Hard Feelings as
for that purpose.
all possible precautions.
Dnytonn.
west of Tuta Tovaros. Tho pursuit
Other Unions Stick
"MITCHELL."
by tho government troops is continu­
TANKER IN DISTRESS
ing.
CLEVELAND, O., Oct. 25— War­
WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 2 6 ren
S. Stone, president o f tho Broth­
ST. PETERSBURG, Oct. 25— Tho
Reports to tho Woathcr Bureau early
erhood
o f Locomotive Engineers, last
todny showed that the Gulf hurrienne shipping bonrd tankor, Kowanoc,
night declared "there Is no open
bound
out
from
Mobile,
wns
reported
wns approaching the west const of
break” between tho "B ig Five” rail­
Florida near Tampa In a northeaster­ In distress 110 miles southwest of St.
road transportation organizations and
Petersburg
at
0
o’clock
yesterday
ly dlroctlon. High winds nro reported
tho organizations of shop crafts which
morning.
Tho
const
guard
cutter
Tal­
from Key West to Cedar Keys during
havo voted not to Join In tho strike
lapoosa left Tampa Bay at 10 o’clock
IN MODERATE INCOMES REPUB tho night nnd severe gales over the
to give assistance. Tho lntcst ad­
sot to begin Octobor 80.
entire Florida peninsula with high
LICANS WERE OP­
vices from tho Kownnco Indicate a
“ Thoro Is no open break. Tho sit­
tides on tho west const south of Cedar
POSED
loose propeller blndo endangering her ON ACCOUNT PUBLICATION IN uation Is very much overdrawn. Each
Koys nro predicted for this afternoon
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD OF
rudder. Tho Kowanoo lays comfort­
organization is free to use Its own
WASHINGTON, Oct. 25— Thrco and tonight.
OBSCENE MATTER.
ably in heavy seas at present
Judggment. Each organization pre­
soparato proposals carrying reduc­
Hurricano warnings will remain up
serves its own autonomy.” This was
tions In tho taxes on Individuals hav­ tho west const from Koy West to
(By Th* AuooltUd Frau)
ing moderate incomes woro voted Apalachicola. It is stated by the Bu­ Signalmen Will Stick;
* ^WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 25— Mr. Stono’s foply when asked If the
o f tho shops crafts in voting
down yesterday by tho .sonata by ov­ ronu thnt It Is too early to say when
Refuse to Go Out on Tho expulsion from tho IIouso o f Rep­ action
&lt;oust, n broad asphalt block road, as erwhelming majorities. Discussion of or In what direction the disturbance
resentatives Blnnton, democrat, Tex­ not to follow tho lend o f tho "big five’*
Strike; Stay on Job as, called for in a resolution intro­ indicated an open rupture o f rela­
smooth as gfUss nnd with tho few them led to a hot political fight would pass to son, but gales along the
curves very long nnd easy, la twonty- which culntinated In nn announcement coast as far north ns Hattcras nnd
duced todny by Mondoll, republican. tions.
Will
Not
Tnko
Plnco
of
Any
Other
Some o f tho subordinate brother­
nve or t,lirty miles nn hour. With by Senator Ponroso, of J ’cnnsylvnnla, rains throughout tho south Atlnntic
Ground for move to oxpoll wns tho
Railroad Men In Strike.
m
i«iiiria l/\n bill,
till!
n" other traffic in tho way thoro Ib Iin
charge .T
oT
f tl&lt;A
the tnw
tax 'revision
publication in tho Congressional Rec­ hood ofTicInls intimated .however, that
states during tho noxt thlrty-siv hours
m&gt; reason why tho avoriigo motorist that on Wednesday there would bo is predicted.
thoro wns a strong possibility In their
CHICAGO, Oct. 26 The threaten- ord by Blanton o fmntter characteriz­
mioul.l not run nt from forty to fifty submitted n resolution calling for
Judggmont
thnt many o f tho members
cd strike, if it takes place, will be ed by home house members as ob­
miles nn hour in perfect safety.
continuous twonty-four hour sessions
o
f
other
railroad
labor organisations
scene.
limitod to 475,000 train service and
‘ he action of Judge Morse In do­ of tho senate until tho rovenuo mcaswoul Join the members o f the "b ig
telegraph oporatoves. This became
' annK that unless a motorist wns uro finally was disposed of.
flvo” In the event they leave the ser­
ALLEGED BANDIT STRIED
known
Monday when th eslgnalmon
A "round-robin” pledging signers to
i ru inK recklessly or endangering
vice, regardlss of their leaden’ In­
followed the cxamplo of nine Othor
n ie ho would not fine him for cx- remnln continuously at the capitol, or
MEMPHIS, Oct. 25, Approximate­ structions to the contrary.
standard unfonH and voted to remain
‘ "''ling tho Bpood limit Is something within call, beginning Wednesday,
ly
100 witnesses were on hand Mon­
at work. By this decision approxi­
'"at othor countv officials. IncItuHnoday
to tostlfy in tho trial of T. T.
VALUE OF CO-OPERATION.
would bo felt in the central nnd mately 1,525,000 railway employes are
Harriss,
Edwin
Von
Stolnklrch
and
north portions o f Florida this after­ on record against tho strike.
Co-operation Is tho word to conjure
noon or tonight. No winds o f such
Tho Brotherhood Railway Signal­ Jobso and Orvillo Jones, charged with
murder
in
connection
with
tho
killing
with,
and from all accounts, that mass
high velocity Is expected in tho Inte­ men o f America will not Join tho
of
Polk
A.
Carraway,
a
policeman,
meeting
o f the farmers and bualneu
rior states. Wire communication to brotherhoods and switchmen In their
many points on the lower west coast contemplated strike President D. W. who was shot to death by bandits men held at the court house lest Sat­
who attempted to rob a paymaster's urday was the beginning o f bigger
is crippled today, but meager reportss Holt announced Monday.
clerk
hero August 10. Caraway and and better feeling amongst the eltfThe Brotherhood’s 15,000 members
indicate little damage anywhere. Tele­
H.
L.
Gamble, special officor, were sena o f this county and from now on,
phone communication on Pinellas pe­ wero instructed Monday to remain at
fatally
Injured whon acting as a guard we feel assured that the farm er and
ninsula and below Tampa, were sev­ their regular work, but to refuse as­
for
a
clerk
conveying payroll funds business man o f this county will be
ered during the night, but commercial signment o f any other dutiei which
.from a bank to the plant here o f the found working sldo by tide In every
they
might
be
asked
to
perform
on
wires ere working up to a late hour
account o f vacancies caused by strik­ Ford Motor Co. The clerk leaped undertaking to build up the Intervals
this afternoon.
from the automobile In which he was o f the county from every angle. Yes,
All wires to St. Petersburg are ers leaving the roads. The decision
riding and reached a place o f safety
was
reached
after
several
daya
of
co-operation will turn the Itrick—
could be depended upon to use com­ los^and the presa wide'to Tampa are
conferences by the executive officers. with the money satchel, but the two 8 uwannee Democrat.
•
mon sense. If he Is a driver whose Interrupted.
Tho brotherhood. has takon no strike officers were atruck by bullets fired
sole aim is to get to bis destination
by the robbers.
Vote.
George Wallace, o£ B^dentown,
regardless of consequents, he should
The machinery is on the ground fo r
w
ill
let contracts at onca fo r the build­
he dealt with to the full extent o f the the drilling o f ah oil well at OldsFor office supplies, stationery, etc, ing o f a buslneea building costing
law,”
’
the Herald office.
come to thw Herald efftes.
around $80,000.

ft;'

: ■% M ;

�SPORT WORLD

m

11

PRAISE FOB SEMINOLE
COUNTY OFFICIALS FOR
PROTECTING THE GAME

THE STAR TO-DAY

(OonUaMd fra® Put Om )
either ignorant of tho hablta of game
or he docs not believe in tho protection
o f game.
A permanent law for the proper en­
forcement o f laws that will really pro­
MYRTLE
DM AN in
tect our game atate-wido seems al­
most impossible at Tallahassee for the
aimplo reason that there aro already
a majority o f the counties of the state
Ocnla won the football game Satur­
flo le p n x t fH o s ie r y
so near depleted of big game that
day nfter they had put Ilcndorson and
thore is no interest taken in such coun­
McLucas out of tho gnmo by dirty
ties to onforco tho laws they already
tactics nnd had they played ns they
is here because
have. But should the counties in the
Btartcd Sanford would havo won the
Also “ Nonsense” a two-part Comedy
game but Henderson and McLucas
■tato which have sufficient seed left
we find it best
woro so good tho Ocala team started
to rebuild their game havo special
to put them out nnd succeeded and nf­
acts passed, as Orange county has
fitted to *
ter that tho quarterback position could
done, and form organisations among
Tomorrow—Elliott Dexter in “ The W itch­
not bo filled and the signals were not
the good sportsmen and hunters and
carry out the
given correctly nnd Ocala romped
ing: Hour” ; also Fox News
use every effort to eliminate the un­
homo with the bacon. Sanford has
scrupulous hunter from the woods in
quality and
Matttnee Daily at 3:30
Evening at 7:00
boon playing n good clean game nnd
closed season, also have their bags
Coach Ed. Mclsch and all tho facul­
value-giving
watched by tho wardens and deputies
ty of tho High School want them to
during the open season, wo can bring
continue to play a clean gnmo but it
ideals o f
bnck tho game which has been so un­
seems that other teams aro not so
mercifully slaughtered in the past;
this store.
conscientious nnd thereby lies tho tale
and if our county can and will do it,
of the players being knocked out.
tho adjoining countlos will seo where­
Tho Ocala correspondent of tho
by they can profit in tho same mannor
Tampa Tribune hnd tho following ac­
♦♦♦
and they will gradually fall In line, I
count in the Sunday issue:
bollovo,
and
In
tlmo
It
will
be
a
state­
OCALA, Oct. 22.— (Special).—In
wide undertaking.
tho first game of football played hero
Mr. Rogers’ motto "that the fellow
this sonson, the Ocaln High school dothnt
can’t tnko a drink without emp­
fcatod tho Sanford High school by tho
tying
tho entire bottle,” also applies
scoro of 25 to 0, in n pretty and woll
to
tho
one that will not resist hunting
played game.
Start a bank account with us and we will help you make it
ouo
of
season bocauso he thinks some
Ocaln seemed to havo hnd tho bet­
larger. We are equipped to cure for your deposits with abso­
othor fellow slips out and kills some­
ter training of tho two teams and
High School Football Results.
thing out o f season. I consider this
Sanford was often calling for time
lute safety. There is no function o f a bank we cannot per­
Tallahassee Loon High, 7; Thomaaa weak argument for one to put up if
out. Both Henderson, playing full
vllle High, 7.
form. Every facility afforded to farmers and others for
he really wants to have the gam® of
back, nnd McLucas, at quarter, were
Ocala High, 25; Sanford, 0.
Miami Suicide
his county protected.
transaction o f their banking business. Accounts may be
knockod out In ordor. When McLucas
• Duval High, 23; Charleston, S. G.,
Wild game will thrive and prosper
went out no one wns left that could
W as Not Bank
opened by mail and monies deposited or withdrawn in this
High, 8.
run tho team, hut Ocaln in her second
regardless o f the quantity o f var­
Palmetto,
0;
St.
Petersburg,
0.
Pres. Spurgin half, took out both Hall and Knight in
way with equal facility. There are scores o f young men In
ments thero might be raised in the
Orlando, 38; DeLand, 0.
the backficld and substituted Rawls
woods among them to destroy it, if
Sanford who should start a bank account. The dimes they
Who Absconded Prom Chicago— No nnd Blowers nnd "Little Ted" Drnko
tho man with the gun will let them.
throw away every month if brought to our bank would make
UNION IILUNDER AND A
Resemblance
one of tho smallest plnyors we ever
This has been proven in the past in
RAILROAD
CRIME.”
them independent as they reach the noonday o f life. In fact,
seen here in n uniform, took Field­
this county before the hunters started
( I ; Th« A n oct.t.d r n i l )
ing’s plnco nt left end.
on them. The great buffalo of the
every person who has a dollar should start a bank account
MIAMI, Oct. 24.— Whllo the body
Nolther side o f the railroad quarrel
Sanford chose to defend the north
west proves this. Whoro are they too f C. Hayden, who committed suicido
Try it and you will always thank us for this advice.
goal, Ocnla kicking to Sanford, Snn- is honest in its protensions. The rnll- dny nnd whnt exterminated them?
in a local hotel Friday night wan
ronds
are
an
wrong
in
charging
that
ford tried two pnsses nnd were held
Mr. Rogers says his trusty gun has
identified by one former Chicagoan
for downs. Smith made six yards and tho brotherhoods nrc moroly striking killed more destroyers of game thnn
as Warren C. Spurgeon, absconding
Hnll, first down. Williams then gain­ ngulnst the Government as the broth­
it has game. Leave thn*; trusty gun
Chicago bank president, othora who
ed four yards nnd Hall lost tho snmo erhoods nrc in giving tho 12 por cunt,
claim to have known Spurgeon nay
on tho rack, Mr. Rogers, during tho
amount. Smith gained six and then wage reduction of July 1 ns tho cause
there ia no resemblance between tho
closed Benson, you as well ns all other
carried tho hnll over for the first of their action.
dead man and tho missing banker.
o f Sanford
good sportsmon ,nnd go to tho woods
touchdown. They failed to kick gonl.
Tho motives sink dooper thnn this
Pending positive identification of tho
nnd
bo
true
to
your
bag
limit
in
tho
During the second quarter Ocala fail­ and go hack further. The railroads
man who loft no papers showing who
ed to gain nnd tho hnlf ended with the nro trying to break tho power o f the open season. Go to the woods with a
ho was or whero he came from, au­
warrant for tho fellow that won’t put
score, Ocnla 0, Sanford 0.
unions and havo hnd that purpose in
thorities are delaying burial of the
In Circuit Court, Seventh Judicial Cir­
Smith playing full for Ocaln, was mind ever slnco tho great triumph of his gun up, instead o f in search of ALL WIIO CATCH FISH FOR
body.
cuit, Seminole County, State of
easily tho star of tho game for Ocnla tho unions In tho Adamson net of con­ varmintB that destroy game nnd you
PROFIT MUST PAY LICENSE.
Florida.— In Chancery.
High. Ho made nil four of tho touch­ gress In 1910. Tho unions hnvo been will seo moro gnmo in your county and
MIAMI, Oct. 24.—Tho "man of
stato.
downs. Williams, at qunrtor, ran his mndo extremely sensible of this pur­
Allens or non-rosldonta of tho state
myaters," who committed suicido last
I havo no hnnd-shnke of approvnl or of Florida must pay a license tax of
team woll. Snnford opened tho third pose ever since the roads woro turned
DIVORCE—CITATIONThursday night, in n local hotel ,has
quarter by kicking to Ocnin’s twenty- hack to their owners under tho trans­ sympathy as Mrs. Rogtrs soys ho hns $10 if thoy engago in fishing by nny
boon identified ns Wnnvn C. Spurfor Mr. Walker of Auburndalc who In­ menns whatever unless tho fish tnken Cecil I. Mooney, Complainant,
five yard line nnd Williams brought
gen ,missing president of tho Michi­ the ball bnck fifteen yards. Smith portation act o f 1920 nnd think to vaded Seminole county’s best hunting
vs.
gan Avenue Trust Co., of Chicago, by made twenty and then they lost tho "bent them to It,” an they would say, forest o f benr, wild turkey nnd deor are fo r personal use.
Almn
Bomlco
Mooney, Defendant.
Tho osoctlon of tho law which will
W. F. Dennett ,of Miami, former Chi- ball on downs. Snnford failed to by this finnl tost o f whoso power Is with Hiich n hordo of men, guns nnd
bo of Interest to fishermen who cn- To Alma Bornlco Mooney, care Cnllleengo broker and intimate friend of muke first down and it was again the greater. And In either cnBo tho dogs. With nil respect to those genV. Cato, 313 W. Marshall 8 t., Rich­
gngo in taking fish ,pnrtly for plcnscontempt
o
f
consequences
to
tho
inno­
Spurgen.
Ocala’s ball. On the first play, Smith
tlomen nnd so-cnllcd sportsmen of Polk uro nnd pnrtly for profit, o f which
mond, Va.:
cent
third
party,
tho
public
in
equnl.
Bennett said that he could not be went fifty yards for u touchdown, but
county or anywhere else, should they there nro many, is ns follows:
It npponrlng from tho affidavit of
It
is
nppnront,
therefore,
thnt
both
mistaken in his identification, that ho failed to kick gonl. With the hall on
attempt to perpetrate such nn act in
"Whoever being nn alien or non­ the complainant herein thnt you nro a
sides
nrc
in
equnl
need
of
a
lesson,
nnd
often had been in Spurgin’a company, the twenty yard line and fifteen
Orange county they will soon find tho resident of this state, nnd who shall resldont of a stato other than tho state
had dined with hi mon numerous oc­ seconds left to play in tho third quar­ one administered short of tho stnrvn- sheriff, his deputy nnd wnrdcns hot
engago in tnklng fish or oystoro from of Florida; that you aro a person over
casions and had entertained tho for­ ter, Smith carried tho ball for the re­ tion of tho cities nnd the breakdown on thoir trnils if the Wild Life Lea­
tho salt wnters o f this stato fo r any tho ago o f twcnty-oiio years nnd that
mer banker in r *urn.
quired distunco around right end and of nil Industry which a general striko gue’s efforts enn use nny influence to
other
purpose other thnn his own in­ thero Is no percon within the state o f
would menn. The rnllronds have acted
Tho identification followed Den­ kicked gonl. Ocnla 10, Snnford 0.
bring them to justice.
dividual
uso, shnll bo required to pay Florida scrvlco of a summons in Chan­
nett's roading n local newspaper’s ar­
Ocala worked the ball up to Snn- badly. They hnvo refused to respoct
Tho Wild Life League Binceroly a lictnso tax o f $10 por annum." Ap­ cery upon whom would bind you, It i*
ticle commenting on tho romarknblo ford’s twenty yard line, Flolding mak­ thoso provisions o f tho transportation hopes thnt thero will be no occasion
plication for license must bo mndo to heroby ordered that you nppear to the
likeness of tho dead man to the miss­ ing a gain of twenty yards on tho act which affirm tho principle of col­ for nny such action, but they nro dctho
commissioner o f agriculture over bill of complaint filed herein against
From lective bargaining. The proof of this crmlncd to use every honorable mean
ing banker ns shown by pbotogrnphs only fnko run Ocnla tried.
you on tho Rulo day for November,
tho
applicant’s
own signature.
there Smith raced twenty yards to the is to be found In certain decisions of
o f Spurgin.
possible to stop tho unlawful hunting
1921, to-wit, 7th day o f November,
No
license
will
bo
required
o
f
non­
tho
railroad
labor
board
ngninst
tho
Bennett’s identification bus been final touchdown. Ocnla carried tho
in Ornngo county nnd protect &gt;tho residents who catch fish for thoir own 1921.
supplemented by those who havo bull to within three yards of another Pennsylvania road which tho rnllwny game. They ask tho loyal support of
And it Is further ordorod that this
usa only, but if fish nro sold or given
known tho dend man during his six touchdown but were held for downs unions nre circulating in lonflot form. every good Hportsmnn nnd Inw nblding
away, a Uconso must bo obtained.— citation bo published In tho Snnford
Thnt
Is
whoro
tho
Immodlnto
origin
of
nnd
Snnford
fniled
to
gain
on
tho
first
weeks’ stay nt tho hotel hero. In ev­
citizen In the county to help them in New Smymn Breeze.
Dally Herald onco each week for four
tho threatened Btrike cun bo found.
ery case they said that the features pluy nnd tho game was over.
every way they can within the law.
consecutivo
weoks.
The lineups:
Thnt is where wo must go to form nn
aa shown by Spurgin’B photograph nrc
Tho game in Ornngc county can bo
Witness my hand nnd official seat
Most o f tho gront natural resour­
Sanford ( 0) nccurnto judgment on the merits of protected and propagated If overy
identical with thoso o f "C. Hnydon,” Ocaln (25)
at Snnford, Semlnolo County, Florida,
ces
have
been
grabbed
off,
but
it
is
this
controversy.
And
tho
conclusion
tho nnmo tho dond man registered Stevens......... .......C .... ........... DuBoso
huntsman will do his full duty. Do
this tho 24th day of September, 1021undor.
Troxler, L. .. .....RG.... ............ Aycoek is thnt tho railroads on their pnrt not feur tho man who does not hunt. still possible to tnko a crack at tho
(SEAL)
E. A. DOUGLASS,
federal
treusury.
must
como
in
under
tho
transportation
Tho suicido had removed every Lunimus...... .....LG...
Gnmo will not suffer by him. It is tho
Clerk
of Circuit Court.
means of Identification previous to his Leak.............. ......RT.... ............ Denton act nnd givo evidence o f n purpose to sportsmnn nnd tho hunter, tho man
SCIIELLE
MAINES,
The
world
news
tho
day
It
happens,
death. Laundry marks, rotnil storo Troxler, J.... ......LT... . McAlcxnndcr stay there in good fnith.
who loves tho gnmo nnd this sport. Ho the Herald office.
Solicitor for Complainant. 9-26-5tc
The unions on their pnrt must do
and manufacturing labels hnd boon Fielding....... .......LE... .............. Moye
and ho nlono enn bring nbnut a suc­
carefully cut from all articles of Borland........ .....RE... .............. Stone tho same thing. They hnvo committed cess of these efforts, but ho must bo
MeLucns n hideous blunder in calling a strike,
clothing. Not u scrap of paper o f any Williams.... . . . 0 .... .......
truo sportsman nnd carry fnir nnd
cnrr&gt; ™ f , ,
...............
Holly particularly nt this stage of tho qunr- n tru° »P°r“ mnn
Knight..........
......RH...
kind has been found to give n clue
“ Wor
" ,llh W’
leading to possible information o f tho Hnll'............. .....LII... ......... Woodruff n l. Thoy hovo olio,vo,I Iho r a d . l„ brother■h°
sportsmen.
Do not weaken
man. Tho clothing wns expensive, the Smith.......... ......FII ....... H e n d e r s o n play them Into nn Impossible position by tho thought that because one un­
Anderson, refereed the game; An- so far ns justification for thoir action
artlclos bolng exceedingly high grnde.
scrupulous huntsman Mips out nnd
u
derson,
Riverside, M. C., umpire; R. to public opinion Is concerned. Thoy
"Hnydon” paid all hotel bills in $100
gets one, he must do tho snmo in or­
Anderson,
linesman.
hnvo
mndo
themselves
nppear
ns
strik­
notes.
dor to got hi*. Go after thnt fellow
ing ngainst tho 12 por cent, wage re­
Authorities here havo hnd photo­
with n warden instead of tho gamo
graphs mndo and finger prints tnken FOOTBALL RESULTS SATURDAY. duction o f July 1, which woh decreed with the gun.
by tho rnilrond labor board by duo
which ara being sent broadcast in an
This is my solution of rcnl gamo
process undor tho transportation act,
Tennessee, 9; Florida, 0.
effort to clear up tho mystery.
protection.
nnd thnt ns a reason for tho strike is
Gcorgln, 14; Oglethorp, 0.
(Signed) JAMES KINCAID,
absurd and they know it to bo absurd.
Suwannee, 17; Alabama, 0.
Vict-Presldont of Orango County Di­
DRANE MOVES TO GET
T h e man who never
Johns Hopkins, 7; University of Thoy cannot stand up n moment nt tho
vision of the Wild Llfo Longue, Or­
REDUCED RATES FOR
has built « houie
bar of public judgment with no moro
nngo County, Florida.
SOUTHERN LEGIONKR8 . Virginia, 18.
of a causo thnn that. Thoy, too, must
has m ined one of
Camp Donning, 7; Auburn, 14.
como
back
undor
tho
law
where
thoy
the greatest pleas­
Vnndorbit, 20; Texas, 0.
REDS HURL GRENADE
WASHINGTON, Oct. 24.— Determ­
A
had
boon
In
evident
good
faith
up
to
ures o f life. There is no fun to
Citadel, 0; Erklne, 18.
ined to leave nothing undono that
AT POLICE AND MARCH ON
this
fatal
jump
In
tho
air
with
striko
Wnshlngton-Lco, 33; Horrls-Hnrvoy,
compare with planning a home— watching it take shape under
would givo tho exsorvico mon of tho
TO AMERICAN CONSULATE.
orders.
southeastern states tha same rail­ 7.
the hammer and saw— and then moving into.it to enjoy Its 00m The country’s patience nears ex­
Davidson, 87; Wofford, 0.
road rates to the convention of tho
fort and shelter.
MARSEILLES, Franco, O ct 24.—
Willlntn-Mnry, 21; Wnko Forest, 14. haustion. It cannot live In peaco and
American Legion to be held at Kansas
comfort under this perennial menaco A grenadt, which failed to explode,
A good, substantial house is a splendid monument to a man's
Georgia Tech, 48; Rutgers, 14.
City, Mo.; as thoso from other sec­
o f a transportation tleup. Means must was thrown among tho police today,
usefulness. Add something to the city you live in. **Hit the
Arkansas,
0;
Oklahoma
Agglos,
7,
tions enjoy, that is, one cent a mllo
and will be found to end It-—New while efforts woro bolng made to or­
8awdust Trail* I
University
of
Chattanooga,
20;
and Pullman privileges .Congressman
ganist a procession for a march on
York World.
Howard
College
of
Birmingham,
3.
Drane took the matter up with T.
the American consulate to protest
Toulano, 7; Mississippi A and M., 0.
DtW itt Cuylor ,of New York, presi­
against tho conviction for murder of
Office
supplies
o
f
all
kinds
at
Tha
Center College, 08; Translvanla, 0.
dent o f the Association o f Railroad
South Carolina, 48; Presbyterian Herald Printing Co. When you wont Sacio and Yansettl.
Executives. Ho received a telegram
Tho grenade was thrown Immedi­
anything in this line see Th® Herald.
inreply statlngg that tht matter had College of S. O., 0.
ately
after a Sarco-Vansettl protest
We have It or can get It
Emory and Henry, 0; Trinity, 7.
been referred to the proper authori­
meeting. The .police prevented tho
Yale, 14; Army, 7.
ties with a rtquest for immediate con­
For office euppltea, stationery, etc., procession and arrested seventeen por- 1
Penna., 21; Virginia M. I., 7.
sideration. Mir. Dane want* no dis­
sons during the disorders. •
\
come to the Herald offloa.
Georgetown, 28; Holy Cross, 7.
crimination shown.

OCALA WINS
OVER SANFORD

m l
1'"'&lt;rf

Detriot, 28; Boston Collage, 0.
Brown, 0} Springfield, 0.
Lafayette, 28; Fordham, 7.
University o f Maryland, 10; Va.
Poly., 7.
Dartmouth, 31; Coumbla, 7.
Chicago, 7; Princeton, 0.
Cornell, 31; Colgate, 7.|
Ohio State, 14; Michigan, 0.
Lehigh, 7; Washington and Jeffer­
son, 14.
West Virginia, 0; Ducknell, 0.
Harvard, 21; Pennn. State, 21.
Pltaburg, 35; Syracuse, 0.
Now York University, 7; Wesyan, 7
Amhurat, 17; Mass. Agglees, 0.
Univorslty o f Maine, 7; Bates, 7.
Tufts, 0; Norwieh, 0.
Boston University, 14; Trinity, 0.
Wisconsin, 10; Ililnios, 0.
Notre Dame, 7; Nobrnska, 0.
University o f Cincinnati, 116; Ken­
tucky Woslynn, 0 .
Western State Normal o f Michigan,
4; Michigan Aggies, 17.
Kansas, 14; Iowa State, 7.
Washington Unlerslty, 13; Univer­
sity of Oklahoma, 28.
Hiram, 0; Oberlin, 38.
Case, 85 Wooster, 17.
Thiel, 0; Marietta, 22.
Denison, 14; Ohio University, 7.
Butler, 88; Anrlham, 7.
Indiana, 0; Minnesota, 6.
Akron, 20; Ohio Northern, 7.
Rose Poly, 0; Xnvlcr, 49.
Miami, 50; Ohio Woslynn, 0.
Kansas Aggies, 7; Missouri, 8.
Minnesota, 0; Indiana, 0.
Rollins, 18; Stetson, 0.

S a n fo r d
S h o e 8i C lo .
Co.

“ The Tiger’s Coat

Start

a Bank A ccou n t

The Peoples Bank

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Saw dust
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HILL LUMBER CO.

SERVICE

Q U ALITY

PRICE

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THE SANFORD;DAI^Y HERjALD, TUESDAY; p C lp p g R y
of the,dlfferant&lt;priMi:r Mra. Henry
Witte, first pr!«•, and H. James Gu
booby in tbo male contest. Ur. WH11am Burns won flrat prlae In the beat
'drawing, and S. H. Buchanan, the
booby’ In the dumb belt game.
Among those present were the fal­
lowing: U r. and U ri. Barclift and
family, .Mr. .and Mrs. Henry. Witte,
Mr. and Mre. Henry Nlchel and
daughter, Mr.’ and Mra. C. StocthofT
and ion, Herbert, Mr. and Mrs. Emil
Kalserman, Mr. and Mre, 1.. Stuns,
Mr. and Mra. J. D. Taib itt, Mr. and
Mre. George McCruinb, Mr. ard Mra.
B.-Lake, Misses Thnlmn and Catherine
Lake, Bernard Lake, Mr- Frad. Bolly,
Mr. T .'B olly, Mies Linda Miles, Mr.
William B un, Mr. and ,Mrs. S. H
Buchanan, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Outt,
M r .IL James jGutt, Mr. and i Mrs.
John Bolly, . Mr. Albert Bolly, and
daughter, Miaa Alice Bolly.

ThisForward
&lt;
Looking Tiank \
is jealous o f its reputation fo r Ser­
vice and seeks to justify it anew with
ea^ch individual problem, presented
tojfy
The knowledge and experience o f
this bank is available to its ,friends
and patrons at all times, regardless
o f the size of.their transactions.

M» ,C. Johnson, o f Clermont,1spent
Fa 'rfjt th^. day,her*’ yesterday attending, to
business
If

if
::
PROGRESS
4% INTEREST PAID

; STRENGTH.

M t t ; FRED DA1GRR, Society Editor,
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a—

SOCIAL
CALENDAR
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Tuesday—Social Department of the
Woman's Club will have nn after­
noon brldgo and box tea, at the
Club rooms at 3:80 p. m.
Tflesdny—Soclnl Department of the
Woman’s Club will hsve nn Aftornoon Bridge and Box Tea, nt 3:80
p&lt; m., with Mrs. Ed. Lano ns hos­
tess.
Wednesday— Muse and Lit era turn De­
partment of tho Woman’s Club will
meet at 3:30 p. in.
Wednesday— Mrs. A. P. Connelly and
Mrs. S. PulcHton will entertain at a
miscellaneous shower, in compli­
ment to Miss May Ferran Thrash­
er, at tho homo of the former at 4
o'clock.
Frlday^-Mothers’ Club will meet at
tho Parish House at 3:30 p. m.
Saturday— Children’s Story Hour will
be bold at Central Park nt four
o'clock.
Thursday— Plpo Organ Club Hallo­
we'en Lawn Supper with MIbh Mnrtha Fox nnd Mrs, Forest Gatchol,
hostesses nt their homes Onk and
Eighth.
Friday— Christian Endeavor of the
Presbyterian church, will entortnin
at n picnic nt Pnlm Springs in hon­
or of Miss May Thrnsher nnd Mr.
J. D. Woodruff, whoBU marriage
taken place Nov. 4.
Saturday— Mrs, E. M. Galloway will
entortuin at Bridge, complimentary
to MIhs Muy Thrasher nn attrac­
tive brldu-olcct of November.
Tuesday—Nellie Tumor Circle of the
Baptist Church will meet with Mrs.
Dorsey nt her home on Myrtle nvonuo nt 3:30 p, m.
Friday— N. do V. Howard Chapter U.
D. C., will meet nt tho Parish House
at 8;30 p. in.
Friday— Mra. Forest I.uko will enter­
tain tho memhurs of tho Every
Week Bridge Club nt her home on
Pnrk avenue, nt 3 o’clock.
Frldny— Mrs. U. E. Tolar and MIhh
Sara Muriel will entertain nt n
Hallowe’en party for Miss Geral­
dine Muriel, nt tho home of tho
former on Magnolln avenue,
nt
8:30 p. m.
BIRTHDAY PARTY
Yesterday being tho noventy-nlnth
birthday anniversary of Mrs. Jona­
than Peck (Rev, A. S. Peck’s mother)
n number of her friends decided to
give her a surprise birthday party.
A few of her friends dropped in to
chat in tha early part of tho nftor-

8

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aw

SERVICE

Tom P. Tarry, o f Pheba, Misa^ arritWd yesterday and haa accepted.: a
position with' the Zaring Grocery
; Company.

The many friends of Mrs. H. L. DeForrest will be delighted to learn that
she haa returned from New York
whero
she spent the summer, and will
*&gt; TtTtVV^ t r* * t•* *':
non while a number of tho others slip­ be at the Montezuma for tho win­
ped . In the back way to prepare the ter.
refreshments and arrango tho gifts.
Aftor all the guests had arrived Mra.
Frank Peters, of Cuba, spent the
Deane Turner made a delightful little day hero yesterday at the Montezuma
talk and presented Mrs. Peck with a enrouto to Genovp whore he will.spend
lonely tea cart, which wo a the gift o f osmo time,
a number c f her friends. On the cart
wore gifts of nil kinds, nnd among
Mr. Frank A. Storor nnd Mr.; Henry
them were two delirious homo made J. Wilmshurst, of DeLand, aro for this
cakes, sandwiches, candf, etc.* Mrs. vifefck guests at Holy Cross Rectory.
Peck was very much sutprlsed and de­ In Snnford, they aro met by many
lighted with her gifts nnd thanked friends.
the guests in her charming way.
Aftor congratulations wero made
ARTISTS ( ? ) PARTY.
the ladies served sandwiches, enke,
ten nnd bon-bons.
An expert decorator was engaged to
ST. AGNES GUILD MEETING.
The members o f St. Agnes Guild
wore most plcnsnntly entertained yes­
terday afternoon by Mrs. Julius Tacknch nt her homo on Eleventh street.
Plans were mndo and discussed for
the entertainment to be given Novem­
ber 1st at the Parish House, which
will be In tho form of n “ measuring
pnrty,” At tho conclusion of busi­
ness Mrs. Tnknch delightor her guosts
with several solos.
Refreshments of Ice cream and cake
wero sorvad by the hostess, assisted
by Mrs. Seth Woodruff.
In spite of tho bad wentehr, a num­
ber of the members wore present,
Among those were:
Mrs. Archie
Oettn, Mrs. Raymond Key, Mrs. S.
M. Lloyd, Mrs. Fred Dnigor, Mrs. M.
Mlnarik, Mrs. Geo. Welland,
Mrs.
Win.. Bolding,, Mrs. ChrJs Matthews,
Mrs. Seth Woodruff and Miss Takach.
CECILIAN CLUB
The Cecil inn Music Club gave a
very interesting program last Satur­
day afternoon at tho studio o f MrB.
Fannie Stcmbrldgo Munson. In addi­
tion to the usual piano numbers, Miss
Ada Wagoner, o f Kissimmee, gave a
delightful group of songs.
Tho entire progrnm covered:
Unrcnrollo ................................ Dondel
Georgia Mobley
Polonniso .................................. Schnoll
Hazel Pnckard
March of Fingnll’s Men.......Rnthbun
Louise Thrasher
Mazurka 3 r d .............J. Lewis Browne
Volmn Shipp
Allegretto ......
Haydn
Pearl Robson
Narcissus .................................. Ncvin
Mrs. R. W. Lawton
Norwegian Bridal Procession.....Grieg
Madeline Mullom
*
PnpillonB ............................
Lnvelloa
Charlotte Smith
DoIIh Dream and Awakcning..Ocstcn
Nozzio Stone
Little Folks numbers:
Heigh Ho’ March .........
Mnrston
Carmen Guthrlo
Hoy Scouts ............................. Lindsay
Helen Douglass
Tho noxt meeting of tho Club will
ho the second Saturdny afternoon in
November nt 3 o’clock.

HOUSE WARMING
AT HOLLYVILLA.
One o f tho most delightful nociul
functions of tho sonson wns the
“ house warming’’ given by Mr. and
Mrs, John Bolly, at their beautiful
^oBt side homo, "Bollyvilla," Friday
8 evening. The house was tnstofullly
decorated in cut flowors and ferns and
a bright fire In tho pretty fireplace
ggvo a touch of cozincBB to the large
living
room.
We have beou in business
[Jolly games wore played, many of
. one month and we haye
them being contestant games in which
prizes wore awarded. Afterwards the
[ done fine. We thank you
floor was cleared and a dance enjoyed
for the remainder of the evening,’
for your part in I t
Delightful refreshments were sotvIs ■»
cd'
twice during the evening, as Mr.,
llur
■
and Mre. Bolly, who are hospitality!
I
itself, are firm believers in the old
maxims, “ Eat, drink and bo merry.”
‘T o o t o f First St.”
The following guests were winner*
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MASTER
MASONS. NIGHT
J
A T MASONIC LODGE.
Arrangements have: been mads for
an interesting and novel feature at
the noxt meeting o f the local Masonic
lodge.
At this meeting, In addition to the
regular business o f the lodge, the
First Degree will be conferred upon
several candidates. Instead o f tho
regular officers of the lodge putting
on this work igi entirely new team
haa been selected who wilt put on the
degree from start to finish. No mem­
ber of this team is an officer o f the
lodge at this time and none have ever
held office.
The tocal lodge now haa a member­
ship of over 200 among whom Is to
be found excellent material for such
an event. Special rehearsals are be­
ing held and the work will be as good
aa the regular team as care is being
taken that the work shall be up to
ihe standard, set by the lodge in ev­
ery respect
This meeting will be held on the
Evening o f November 1st, at 7:30. A
large attendance Is expected at this
meeting.
Tho following have been selocted
for this work:
E. D. Brownlee, Master.
L. B. Hodglns, Senior Warden.
J. 11. Ferguson, Junior Warden.
Johnn Govo, Senior Deacon.
D. S. E. Starr, Junior Deacon
II. F. Kent, Senior Steward.
E. S. Ward, Junior Steward.
C. O. D.
The gentlemen down nt Oldsmnr
who is Bonding the Star oil well dopo
is respectfully informed that our ad­
vertising rates are flvo cents a lino;
oil stock not taken in pnymont.—
Ocnta Star.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC
IMPROVEMENT

prepare tho window display material
for advertising the Fox-Gntchel gar­
den supper, but nt tho last moment ho NOTICE UNDER SECTION 179,
CHAPTER 8361, LAWS OF THE
found that he was unable to do the
STATE OF FLORIDA, ACTS OF
work.
1919:
Tho Pipe Organ Club ,equal to any
emergency, marshalled three o f Its To Mclsch Realty Company, and nil
other owners of property abutting
members who possoss unusual artistic
on
Palmetto avenue between Tenth
ability ,nnd at a party held Monday
St.
and Thirteenth St.; Magnolia
night, theso talented ladies prepared
Ave.,
between Tenth St., nnd Thir­
some wonderfully attractive posters
teenth
St.; Thirteenth St., botwcon
which may be ndmlrcd in tho win­
Pnrk
ave.
nnd Snnford Ave.) Snndows o f tho following well known
ford
Ave.,
between Fifth St. and
firms:
Bower &amp; Roumlllat, Miller
Tenth St.; and West First Street
Furniture Co., and Ball ,Hardware Co.
from 130 ft. East of Poplar Ave.
During the evening o f work nnd fun
West to JnHinlne Avo.; in the City
delicious rosy cheeked apples nnd iced
of Sanford, Florida:
Elder Springs water wero enjoyed.
You nro hereby notified that the
City
Commission of tho City of Snn­
# # # #
Po * * * #
ford,
Florida, adopted on tho 10th dny
#
o f October, A. I). 1921, a resolution
requiring tho ownor or owners of
each lot or parcel of land abutting up­
on that portion of Palmetto avenue,
*
#Pa**
described ns beginning at Tenth St.
nnd extending to Thirteenth St., to
T U E S D A Y -,
construct, within sixty days from tho
, )Vosley.[Truth Seokors’ Class of tho
date of the service of this notice, a
Methodist Church will meet nt 3:30
pavement on said portion of Palmetto
p. m., nt the Church.
Avo., between Tenth St., nnd Thir­
teenth St., twenty-four (24) feet
Tuesday:
wide.
3:30 p. m. Nellio Turner Circle
And on Mugnolin avo., described as,
with Mrs. J. D. Dossey.
beginning nt Tenth St., nnd extend­
3:30 p, m. Knthlcan Mallory Circle
ing to Thirteenth St.; n pavement
with Mrs. W. T. When- Twenty-four (24) feet wide.
lisa.
And on Thirteenth.St., described ns,
7:30 p. m. Mattie Guinn Circle at beginning at Park ave. and extending
tho Tomplo.
to Sanford ave., a pavement sixteen
7:30 p. m. Roof Gnrdcn Club with ( 10) feet wide.
Miss Violn Booth, at 010
And on Snnford Ave., described ns
Onk.
beginning at Fifth st. and extending
THURSDAY
to Tenth St., a pavement Twenty-four
Father nnd Sons' Banquet nt tho (24) feet wide.
Parish House Thursday night.
And on West First Street, describ­
ed ns beginning nt a point 130 ft. E.
Thursdny:
of E, lino of Poplar Ave., nnd extend­
3:30 p. m, Jennie Spnulding Circle, ing West to Jnsmino Ave.; a pnvowith Mrs. Holland.
mont Twenty-six ( 20) foot wide.
0:00 p. m. Plpo Organ Club Sup­
Thnt said pavements shall he con­
per onGntchol-Fox lawn. structed o f material to be selected by
Frldny:
tho City Commission after getting
7:30 p. m. Tho Tomplo Boy Scouts. bids on tho various types of paving,
according to plans aiAl specifications
now on file in the office of the City
PARISH HOUSE KALENDAH.
Thursday, Oct. 27, 7 p. m. Fathers Manager,
Thnt prior to tho construction of
and Sons banquet.
said
pavement, thnt portion of snid,
Holy Cross Men's Club, nnd B. S, A.
Palmetto
Avo., Magnolia Ave,, Thir­
Friday, Oct. 28, U. D. C., N. do V.
teenth
St.,
Snnford Avo., nnd West
Howard Chapter, 3:30 p. m.
First
Streot,
heroin required to be
Monday, Oct. 31, Night. Holy Cross
paved,
shnll
bo
graded, nnd tho drninMon’s Club dnneo.
nge
provided
for,
in nccordnnce with
Tuesday, Nov. 1, 8 p. m., “ Measuring
said plans nnd specifications.
Party,” S. Agnes Guild.
Upon your failure to construct snid
Friday, Nov. 4, G. F. S., Party, Mra.
pavomont within tho tlmo named, the
John Leonard!, directress.
City Manager of tho City of Sanford,
Florida, will procood by contrnct, to
KNIGHTS TEMPLER, ATTENTION do said grading, provide for said
drainage, and construct said paving,
Officers and members of the Tay­ and two-thirds of tho said cost and ex­
lor Commandery are requested to pense thereof, including street in­
moet at 7:00 o ’clock Wednesday ev­ tersections will be assessed against
ening, October 20th, for rehcnrsal In the owner or owners of all tho prop­
the Ordfcr of the Temple.
erty bounding or abutting thoreon, ex­
H. E. TOLAR,
cept that In no evont will any por­
Commander. tion of the cost of struct intersection
be assessed against the property own­
A Hawaiian volcano erupted for the ers.
benefit of delegates to tho Press Con­
By or^er of the City Commission of
ference o f the World, byt a mere vol­ the City of Sanford, Florida.
cano does not excite an editor; he will
L. R. PHILIPS, .
explore one i f he thinks there is an
City Auditor and Clerk.
Dated October 20, 1921.
183-1 to
exclusive story In it.
4*"'t .
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Air

MEETINGS

M r

ited
in, Great Style

OptometristOptician

CAMPBELL-L0881NG POST WILL
PULL OFF ONE BIG STUNT.
Campbell-Loasing. Post American
Legion will have a grtot day ,here on
November lith , and, It begins to look
now as though the ’parade in the
morning; would be something like a
mile long as every;basinets and every
civic organization ;aiid every order la
the1city will have a float o f oome klm)
In the procession. The Legion boys
are wonting hard ovifr the program
and will soon have It ready for publi­
cation and it will
one o f the best In
tho State.
The Legion expects to build a new
horn*: some tim e'in the future, and
have been granted a lease on a fine
piece of property,on the lake front by
tho'(City CbmmlasWw^.'antl, every
tittle*.bit , added ,to jwhijt tfley. h^ve,
will soon ma|p. enough to start , tha
bullalhgl
l- /
Armistlfo
will not bp a profit*
to the local post; hut will be put on
for a big time for the local boys, and
the visiting boys, and fo r home folks
generally... It will Just be a big.day
for the purpose o f everybody getting
together for n big celebration o f tho
dny that is more Important to the
American public than the.grand and
glorious Fourth, of July.
For the purpose of paying some of
the expenses of the day, without ask­
ing the business 'n’ eresta of Sanford
for anything, the Legion boys aro giv­
ing nway a Ford car,, and If ypu want
to help them to make a small stake,
nnd have n chance to get a new Ford
car free, ask any o f the members of
the American Legion about the car.
And remember, don't go nwny on
November llth t, as Sanford will hnvo
tho biggest occasion In the Stnte.
ELINOR GLYN IN FILM.

YOUR SATISFACTION
J IS M Y SUCCESS
Office Opp. P. O.

Phone ]»}

To See Better See Moore
SANFORD

AUTO EXCHANGE
»1

Dependable Service
-

rearing
G'Hly 1

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at only .......................

— * »■
Liberal Tirma on Both these Barialne

Repair WorJc b y . Experienced
Mechanics at Right Prices

A t the Foot o f First St
MRS. IDA AUSTIN
418,*Magnolia
Ave.
** * * ■t

MAKER AND ALTERED oK
LADIES' CLOTHES

SEMINOLE
ABSTRACT CO.
Get An Abstract Before
Buying Property

Every render of novels knows Mmo.
Elinor Glyn, author o f “ Throe Woeks’’
nnd other novels of international
fnmo. She wrote tho story of "The E. A. DOUGLASS, Pres,
Great Moment," In which Gloria
Swnnson,rstars and during tho filming
of Cecil B. Dc Mills’s Paramount
production o f "The Affairs of Anatol" which will be shown at the Star
theatre Friday nnd Saturday. Mme.
Glyn wns induced to permit herself A car load on A. C. L.
to be screened with others In a so­
Dray Track
ciety scone o f which‘ there are many
in this remarkable nll-stnr photoplay.
The celebrated author is seated with
Lady Parker, wife of Sir Gilbert Pnrker, at a fashionable tea given at tho
homo of Anatol DeWitt Spencer, the
hero of the story. Only n momentary
glimpse of tht two indies Is given nnd
"It costs a fortune to hnng n man."
those who desire to study their faces
Wo
suBpcct nt times that it also costs
must loolt sharp. Wallnco Reid, Gloria
Swanson, Elliott Dexter, Boko Dan­ a fortune to hang a jury.
iels, Monto Blue, Wanda Hawley,
Theodore Roberts and Polly Moran WANTED— Show case, flvo or six
feot long. Herald Printing Co.
have tho lending roles in this great
183-5tp.
plcturt production.

BANANAS BANANAS

DOZEN..... 25c-30c
B U N C H ..., $1.25 UP

ONLY BIG CIRCUS COMING!
SAN FO RD
W e d .-, N o v . 2 n d

HOWE’S
I R C U S
GREAT LONDON

-AND-

VAN AMBURG’S TRAINED WILD
3 Rings------ 2 Steel Arenas------ Hippodrome
50------ Clowns------ 50

384 Arenlc Stars

4 trains o f double length Railroad Cara;.1,000 people; 500
Horses; 400 Jangle Beasts

Permanent Union o f the Amusement Giants
o f Old and New W orlds•&lt;
-Two. Mile Street Parade, at 11 A. Mi,2 PERFORMANCES DAILY, RAJfl O K SH I^E , 2 &amp; H I’ . M.
^Tickets on sale bn show day at Bowey,&amp; Rour^lOaCM -Dru8
Store at same prices charged oh show grounds
MM

2.VJU

�v f» i

THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1921

ARMISTICE
DAYPARADE
L0C
nn.

ASK HIM SOMETHING

■

ICAN LEGION.
/niinwins business concerns,

1110 ities and Clubs, o f Sanford
fr*tC liberally
mlcrnlly a
subscribed
names
have
^
#their
decorttfld
L f r . u t ”« b 1l . t . repMMnt th.lr

l l i f d 1.
parade of ■"«"&gt;*“ &lt;&gt;• ■&gt;"“ » fore witnessed In thecltyt
American Legion*
Ssnb'td mint 4 W.11 P n p « Co.
Women’. Club, Welfnr. D ept
D. C. Marlowe.
Hopkins Shoe Shop.
A. J. Lossing, (0).
C. A. Matthews.
Ball Hardware Company.
Lloyd Shoo Store.
West Side Grocery.
Bryan-Whcelor Motor Co.
Wight Tire Co.
B. &amp; 0. Motor Co. (2 floats),
Sanford Cycle Co.
Haynoa &amp; Ratliff.
City of Sanford.
Mobley's Drug Store.
Routh Bros., Bakery.
Cates’ Crate Co.
Coca-Cola Co.
Woodruff &amp; Wataon.
Haight A Wellard.
Cates Grocery Co.
Deane Turner.
Newberry’s Drug Store.
Carter Lumber Co.
T. J. Miller A Son.
Union Pharmacy.
Sanford Shoo A Clothing Co.
Hanson’a Shoe Repair Shop.
Roberta Grocery Co.
Baumel’a Specialty Shop.
Raffeld-llonig Co.
P. P. Rinea.
A. Kannor.
F. Schwarts.
Chero-Cola Co.
Brown’s Market.
Caldwell Furniture Co., Inc.
L. C. Lconnrdy Meat Market.
Water’s Candy Kitchen.
Surprlso Shoo Store.
Bandel’a Emporium.
Seminole Market.
Rivera’ Broa. (2 floats).
Puro Food Markot.
Kent Vulcanising Co.
Millor’ii Bakery (4 floats).
Star Theatre.
Cle-Trac Tractor.
Gillon A Fry.
John T. Brady.
Perklna &amp; Britt (2 floats).
R. C. Maxwell.
Ed. Higgins, Inc.
Hof-Mnc Bnttcry Co, (2 floats).
Sanford Steam Laundry.
Wight Grocery Co.
Woman’s Club.
Mrs. J. M. Dresner.
Knights of Columbus.
Sanford Farmers' Exchange.
L. P. McCulIer.
The Yowoll Co.
American Fruit Growers.
Sanford Furniture Co.
Hill Hnrdwnre Co.
C. W. Stokea.
Rlnckahenr Mfg. Co.
The llernld Printing Co.
Popular Markot, two floats.
Frank Akera Tire Co.
Sanford Truck Co.
Sanford Mattress Factory.
Tho Auxiliary of the Sallie Harri­
son Chnptcr N. S., D. A. U. (Children
of the Americnn Revolution).
Any one welcome to enter a float
or decorated car. Suitable cash prises
will bo awarded by the FIrt National
Bank, Semlnolo County Bank and Peo­
ples’ Bank of Sanford.
American Agr. Chemical Co.
Elder Springs Water Co,
W. S. Parker.
,
T. W. Williams.
Camp Fire Girin
Chamber of Commerce.
Chase &amp; Company.
Rotary Club.
Anyone wishing to enter call Lloyd’s
•Shoe Store.
168-tf.
ASK FOR YOUR RECEIPT.
Subscribers to the Dally Herald
should ask for a receipt when the
carrier boys collect from you. It Is
the only protection you have In case
the carrier changes or there happens
to be a mistake In the account. Each
carrier boy is supplied with receipt
hooks, and is commanded to give , a
receipt by tha Herald. See that you
Ket your receipt at the end o f each
week If you are paying that way.
168-Stp.

McLaughlin Says
“ Tell The W orld
£
All About Florida” X

i £wS»

Mi*anl I
f*ltr«o*4

“ Auk Dave, be knows," In whut Will
Hays, tho popular postmaster gen­
eral, Is saying to people those days,
for after a personal Investigation pic­
tured above he came to the conclusion
that David Garvey, whoso face smiles
at you through the window, knows
everything there is to know. So Will
fixed up this Job for David and visi­
tors to Washington find It mighty con­
venient. "Ask me something hard,"
says Garvey,
COMING OF THE
TELEGRAPH TO KEY WEST.
KEY WEST, Fla., Oct. 26.—The
coming o f the telegraph to Key West
Incident to the construction of the
first cable between the United States
and Cuba, was outlined by John W.
Adkins, in a recent address before tho
local Rotary club.
Tho first cablo was laid In 1807, Mr.
Adkins said, between Key WeBt and
Havana, a distance o f 125 nnuticnl
miles. Key West waB connected with
tho mainland by cablo at Punta Rassn.
An uncertain land wire was strung
through wooded sections to Lake City,
where contact was established with
the Western Union.
J. A. Scrymser, a votoran of tho
civil war, first conceived tho idea of
connecting tho two countries, Mr,
Alklns related. The work was car­
ried out by the International Ocean
Telegraph Company. Tho first two
years of operation o f the Hnvana-Koy
West cable proved unsatisfactory, ac­
cording to Mr. Adkins, and In 18G9,
n second cablo was laid. In 1872 «
third cabo was laid, and another ad­
ded in 1898, followed by the fifth and
Inst cable in 1{)17. Of tho five cnbles
laid, threo nre now In use, Mr. Ad­
kins told tho Rotnrinns.
The first message sent on the lino,
now in tho possession o f Mr. Adkins,
wns addressed to Gcnornl Smith,
president of tho International Occnn
Company at New York and Bigned by
W. E. Evorott. It said: "Thanking
all good fortune and forgetting bad
ones, we have just landed and tempo­
rary connection made. Monday will
mnko all right. Don’t you want to
send first message to Captain Gen­
eral T"
Only four cnbles were laid between
Key West and Punta Rnssn, according
to Mr. Adkins, and only one o f thoso
cables Is in operation today. In 1898
a cable, containing thro econductors,
was laid between Key West and Mi­
ami. According to Mr. Adkins, the
population o f Miami atthnt time wns
about 800.
TRAIN SCHEDULE
Southbound
Depart*
Arrive
2:46
a.m .
No. 88.......... 2:80 a. m.
8:40
a. m.
No.
27.........
3:20
p.
m.
No. 89......... 2:65 p. m.
7:10
p.
m.
6:55
p.m.
No. 85,.........
North Bound
Departs
Arrive
2:03 a. m.
82........... 1:48 a. m.
84........... 11:46 a. m. 12:06 p.m.
8:26 p. m.
80........... 8:05 p.m.
28........... 10:00 p. m.
Trilby Branch
Departs
Arrive
6:00
a. m.
•No. 100...........
8:25
p. m
•No. 24...........
7:00
a.m.
#No 168...........
7:86
p.
m.
No. 22...........
Leesburg Branch
Depart*
Arrive
•No. 167............ 4:00 p .B .
No. 21..........
2:62 p.m.
•No. 101_______ 6:80 p.m.
•No. 25_______ 2:00 p.m.
No.
22............ 7:00 p.m

Oviedo Branch
Arrive
•No. 126.......... 11:00 a.m..

Departs

The now Dlckson-Ives building at •No. 127---------•Dally, except Sunday. .
Orlando, has been completed by the
owners and tha occupants are busy
Between staging religious wars arm
lo v in g In.
preparing to entertain President
—Oat your Scratch Pada from Tha Harding, Birmingham la kept pretty
buay.
Herald—by tha pound—15c.

The following from C. O. McLaugh­
lin, formerly of this city, but now In
the Development Department of tho
Seaboard Air Line Ry.t is Interesting:
Norfolk, Va„ October 19, 1921.
Mr. R. J, Holly, Editor
The Sanford Herald,
Sanford, Fin,
Dear Holly:
Every time I rend an advertisement
that looks good I think of you and
Sanford.
I enclose a copy of The Peanut Pro­
moter, October, 1921, edition, for tho
purpose o f calling your attention to
page 48: "Let’s Tell tho World.”
"Telling the World" Is what gets
there. If a manufacturer tolls tho
world in a proper fashion about his
goods, he generally sells more than
his advertisement costs. If a state, a
county or a city has anything to tell
the world, and tells, the people will
be attracted to It. To provo this as­
sertion I am sending you an adver­
tisement published in the Fhotogrs
vure Section of the New York Times,
by tho City of San Diego, Calif. This
Is not the only advertisement these
people have published in this particu­
lar section of Tho Times; they are at
It constantly. For comparison, I am
also sending you an advertisement by
Jacksonville, Florida. I will appreci­
ate it if you will return these ads be­
cause they are a part of my file.
I f there Is any place in tha world,
that I know of, that actually has
something to tell the world It Is Sem
inote county and Sanford, Florida. The
county Is full o f things to tell, but we
must tell it exactly liko a man ad­
vertises his goods, or the product of
his factory,
There is not an Inland city In Flori­
da enjoying a greater blessing than
Sanford enjoys, by reason of Its loca­
tion on Lake Monroe at the head of
navigation. Your system of nrtesian
wcIIb Is filled with opportunities for
exploitation. Tho celery and lottucc
farms, from the breaking of tho
ground all through the period from
the seed bed to shipping, nre an op­
portunity for constant stories of hum­
an interest. The county Is full of
lakes and streams, and brick roads
run In ovory direction. Not a day
passes but I think of tho wondarful
opportunity for a good live advertis­
ing man to send out something about
Snnford.
C. O. McLAUGIILIN.
REASON WHY IIATTEIUKS
ARE SHORT LIVED IN
FORD AUTOMOBILES.
L. A. Ilennud, Local Vchtn Denier,
Describes VnriouH Bensons.
Since tho Ford cnb has been elec­
trically equipped a good many owners
have wondered nt tho erelntlvo short­
ness o f life of their starting batter­
ies.
The reason for this In found in the
rather rigid spring suspension of the
Ford and the fact that many owntrs
drive their cars rnpldly over rough
roads, together with tho short wheel
base and the light weight of the cur
itself.
Tho vibration sot-up under these
conditions quite naturally Is trans­
mitted to tho battery. This induces a
slight rubbing action botween tho
plates and separators, cnuslng rapid
deterioration of tho separator nnd
subsequent short circuiting of the bat­
tery.
There Is one battery, however, on
tho market whoso construction spec­
ially fits It to withstand thoso condi­
tions. That battery Is tho Vesta. Tho
plates In tho Vtsta battery aro locked
firmly apart by tho Vesta Indestructi­
ble Isolators, These "isolators" are
practically vibration proof, and there
is no way in which tho plates can
touch. Inasmuch ns the "isolators”
aro not In tho path of tho current they
In no way affect tho capacity of tho
for this reason thnt tho Vostn Batter­
ies nre exceptionally lung lived In
their cars.— Adv.

DADE CITY CIGAR
FACTORY TO BUILD
DADE CITY, Oct. 25,—Tho TnmpaCuba Cigar Co., under tho manage­
ment of Mr. Edwin DeLong, Is em­
ploying 100 hands and working over
time. Tho business has Incrcnscd so
much that tho company 1s contemplat­
ing an addition to tho present build­
ing. They have standing orders for
600,000 cigars a week; In addition
to this, they are filling a special or­
der for 800,060 of one kind of cigar.
Mr. Weller, o f Tampa, will give tho
making and packing of this order hta
special attention.
The company recently filled an ordor for 110,000 cigars which wero sent
to Yokohama, Japan. This Is consid­
ered a large export order.
The Dade City branch o f the Tampa-Cuba Co., was established here
about three years ago and has grown
to such an extent that it Is now ons of
Dade City's leading Industries.

-

FORDSON
T R A C T O RS
i

Sanford, Ha.
OCTOBER

From 10a.m . to 4 p.m.
Detailed Instructions in Use and Con­
struction of Tractor by Ford Experts.
Complete Line ot Implements in Actual
Use. Grist Mill, Wood Saw, Feed Grind­
er and other machines driven by Fordson
Tractor.
LUNCH

SERVED

AT

12

O’CLOCK

Demonstration to be Held
Corner Melonville &amp; Celery Ave’s

�nW$
* —
■—
***

i

&gt;. TUESDAY, $
n -iia

Lmatter, and much advertising—in
TacY, lb has* mora'adyi Using thaphny
papeVAf slmllaralso l the SUtp." E.
n UlAL.
I. .V."•__1
tr la
the man',ban
Ind the pWron
Jonent, and wa liMlnt to aa/tX at
I« Witing a good ©he. SucdittHo
&gt; * * oinent.

SJ

1

&lt;J Cl !

•»-*■■•*■»»'

TOE SANFORD DAILY %

P;V

u#

*■•-• - ■
*•• *-

53!

M e r r ill

pledged to extend its tenUclea into
this entire dlitirtet, fcn/WW^fraftolst^
ed by. aoibe o f the wholeaJAo grovera
of TanipC
j
The vtiHora'Visiting thd'kession o f
the aswclatiotf listened ,tb ' n expose
of the p
plana q f t e propos­
ed comb—
L’ o f the
als gro
T^d '-allp off" evoithtif gow^iMk th^ cere of iVmjJiL ‘ The de
were told
HT A. N
.......... ............
. by one'Weil kue*n in alt
very latest thmg { o f evening
wear,'
inesa cir
Ines,
wall,
we
l
c'c8
ju
t^kelkWlS—
and
aaygthe
fashlo^Tmajftfliinea,
w
t
rs were
” --------- "
___________ -•■
so fuil^r that c
hop^ Hot. Some df them» we akw i..fJ'explairied
last
ditor loft
1.
pH
i i f S p to c
year bad some o f there same tendenc­ the meeting firmly determined to
Ikielld— mat— M«o n—— — Jlwm»*«* ies, and wo are afraid for the result, make public the pianss and do his
beat through the columns o f his paper
if tho holdback strap breaks.
..............
— :-------o— ----- to
defeat the entire scheme; or, at
S e t f ^ 'h T &amp; w V &lt;&amp; &amp; '* "
[iw &gt; ............. . . . . . . ................ u
The storm seems to be here In all any rate, do the beat he could th pro­
its intensity, and while it seems to tect his own home wholesale gVocer.
rFriday.
tA aMjrn sHUsm.j'S
Jhave passed around us, and only giv­
It aeema that even wholesale groc­
nlM M O
ivIMUm Om . D w m 3 i la yaUtlM.
en
Sanford
a.
small
flood
of
rain,
you
ers
in Tampa havo formulated a
tlwyi la U wm *
can never tefl about the galea that scheme by whicl^tffe wholesale houses
Umber of The Associated Pi
blqw,from Y u o w m rt tfcttftUMtft the HhnmpKbuf;Flartdk',fr y bo wiped out
yeiV.’ However, we can feel safe in — after WMeb tbd Vri re trade would
skying that no more stohns Wiil blow •be hahdled hjr the
dlcato at the
•ptfeea whftfc' the
.'until
this time next year .1
Icate thought
' ‘la Professional Baseball Sport,4*
the -treflfle woPM
------- ;------ B - - mV ."
The plan,
n* in'the Literary* tfiJ
a|jis a headline
as
told at th
It
begins
to
look
as
though
th*
rely aeema to
1't ihurifr. Suppose yon
peat. We don't
riko would not materialize. We do be that the wl____
er of Tam*
qugfy OrlanABt'
not believe that the railroads, or the 'pf'atahd'raady'to
the grocere
and cities'
re want V ote*'S anford High and men, want a strike how’ that they1 In alt th«; s^ri&amp;ik'
flerhfr
have
sounded
out
the
public
pulse.
As
houses
located
jando High* t&gt;lay football here on
Thanksgiving day. We believe wo can this paper said in the beginning, the in various poirtiohg o f gotrth Florida'.
public intends to be 'haitibbiled** In • But underlying the ’ ^tW h scheme
promise thetn a good crowd.
this strike, and it will bo thdinbs there appears to be h plah tci%ipe out
— :— -—o----------Daily paaaehger service on the St. down fo r both sides. The public the wholesale grocers in the^ cltlos
Jojihs river between Jacksonville and knows when it has had ijjiOhgh nnd it o f South Florida; If this Taptya ag
gre’gation can succeed In seecuring tho
S&amp;riford, and a boat most every day is has been long buffering.
o — :— *
wholesale houses already ostablVshed
latabl
fnita Jacksonville north to Now York.
The Herald wants to see Bomo act­ there is no doubt 1^ will do so'; If it
Afctriko would not hit Florida so hard
ion on the- golf nnd country club. cannot do that It will cstablUh upon
after all.— Orlando Reporter-Star.
Tho Chamber of Commerce appointed its own initiative duplicate*—and at­
------------ o------ :----A \ the International Editorial A s­ a committee aomo tlmo ngo to take tempt to 'fjroeie out the‘ local houses
sociation held In Honolulu it was de­ enro of this project, and to start some by offering goods'at lower prices, and
cided that the future newspapers action on the same, hut since that making practically aa quick delivorwotlld be much smaller, Wc can vouch tlmo, nothing hns been heard of tho crica. That Is a regular Standard Oil
fot* the truth of that statement if pa- golHink*. It is tho most important trick. That company will soil oil nnd
par and wages go any higher.
questlbn that confronts the tourist gasoline in n certain community at a
/
-------------o------------ “
situation here today, and wo should losing rate until tho smaller com­
JJjhe circus is coming. It will he take it up nt once.
pany is compelled to close down or
thq^samc old program and the same
O '
dispose of its holdings nt any price
oU^everything—at least it usually is
Florida has so ninny bright days, tho greater corporation may ngroo to
the'sumo but the circus novor grows that when it rains nil day, it makes pny. Then tho prices go up—- u p old'to yodng and old alike. We might people feel blue. Now if you lived in up ; nnd the people pay.
add that we will be there on a front somo countries where this sort of
It Btnndfl every wholesale grocery
seat that night.
weather prevails more than hnlf of in South Floridn to enter an alliance
-------------o-----------the year, it would he time fo feel blue. —to co-oporntc, If that word is hotTampa soys a stranger got there nt Thcro nre only a few times that n
ker— against tho innovation nnd estnh0:10 a. m, and by noon owned a home, whole day is given over to rain nnd
’ishment which is being proposed by
That’B nothing, Orlando hns some clouds in Florida. And this little
strangers who nrrlve nt &gt;1:21 p. in. nnd storm will mnko us appreciate tho the seven Tnmpn Arms; tho sort of
by 4:22 they own the town.—Orlando bright Florida sun when It appears Seven Wonderful Sisters. Once thnt
aggregation shall obtnin a foothold in
Sentinel.
ngain." 1
nny
city it will mean ultimately
We hnvo others who get here nt
steady
increase in tho cost o f lining—
D:1B and at 9;80 they are in jait.
The Railroad Labor Bodrd warns and tne killing o f tho home ontofpriso,
— — -----o------------tho public to “ Rcfrhln from loose talk Thera cart bo no hnlf-wny course.
Florida is lucky ngafti. Tho big
nnd provocative languago"
about Every grocor, every retail grocer,
storm headed this way has been
either side of tho controversy.
Wo
should avoid the snatl of tho propnshunted off and all we get Is plohty
don't know just what the Labor Board
Tnndlst who may cleverly endeavor to
o f rnln and' colder wotithoif nftormeans by this hut tho board can bo
ward which Is just what tho farmers .assured' that the public will do some tlo up tho various Institutions which
'mvc boon established; othorwisb there
want and-tW merchants want nnd the
talking' nnd tho board will come in
will ho a considerable loss of cnpitnl
fallow Belling wood wants, So since
for its share of roasting along with
the majority Is satisfied it must bo the rest. America Is a froo country and a total annihilation of business
arogremm.
ail right and wo are lucky.
or was up to n few yenrs ago nnd wo
opine that citizens will continue to
When a merchant tnlks nbout “ af­ talk about their public servants Just
FAIR PLAY TO UNIONS.
fording advertising," ho is getting ns mucH us they wish. We admit thnt
ready for tho live merchant to take ovoryono should Use caution in the
A union railway worker suggested
hla trade nWay from him. People do strike and do their pnrt toward keep­
to tho Ncwa yesterday, by tclophonc,
not "nITord" advertising any more ing penco in the community but peo­
that H should remain neutral in tho
thann the man who needs a suit of ple will use their perogntivo nnd talk
present differences between the em­
clothes, or n dollar’s worth o f grocer- right on.
ployes and employers. Ho had ref­
it . “ affords" them. It is not u queserence to nn edltorinl in which we
tlbn of affording advertising. It is
Tho following is from n current note
predicted that whether there is n
a vital necessity.
on tho trend of women's wear:
strike or not tho roadB will be op­
“ Overnight— ono might sny— tho
“ Let’s Toll tho World" about San­ dresses of women have fallen from erated. Wo said not one word about
the jUHtico or injustice o f the nttiford, nnd in the telling let everyone the knees to the ground, and ure even
tudo of cither side. So If there is any
hayo n share by Joining the Sanford adding trains. Tho fluctuant knee-cap
Chamber of Commerce nnd making it hns regained its pristine sanctity; the doubt ns to our attitude we Htato it
unanimous. Tho Chamber of Com­ shapely cnlf t.nd the unshapely, calf plainly thnt we hetieve the railroad
merce is doing more for Snnford than nlong with it, has once more become man who belioves ho Ib not getting n
any other body of men within the cloisterer! nnd inviolate to human eye. sufficient amount of pay for the work
cqnftnes of tho city limits, nnd they Whether a Indy should roll her own or he is doing is justiAcd in walking out
should have the undivided support of piously cling to tho Ictnrlan garter, nnd seeking other employment. That
is a primary principle of free govern­
the entire citizenship.
is no longer nn appropriate subject
ment.
-------------a----for heated mnsculino debate. It ronlly
Wo have no enlarged perspective of
W e nro glnd to noto tho Yowell Co,, doesn't matter how she keeps ’em up
the weight thnt any expressed opinion
o f this city starting tho Dollar Day If they are no longer visible to tho
of this pnper will havo in the present
advertisement this week. The Dollar naked eye." All o f which is interest­
negotiations between employer nnd
Day campaigns are doing more to ing to nil interested in such things,
employee further thnn thnt it is in
bring people to town to trade than hut the women are going to continue
accord with tho majority expressed
npy form of advertising, and Snnford to wear what they want to wear, and
sentiment on the subject.
merchants could well afford to get roll their hosiery nny sort of fashion
Operation of the railroads is vital
together und run Dollnr Day adver­ that suits tho occasion. Women hnvo
to the life o f the nation. If ono not
tisements nnd Dollnr Dny Hales nt been rolling their stockings ever since
of men will not operate them for an
least once ench week. They nro trndo they wore compelled to givo up tho
agreed
stipulation nnd nnothcr set of
regular Eve regalia—there nro many
getters,
mon will— in tho emergency—there
women who hnvo Axed opinion that
-oshould he no interference with a new
Among thu new papers of the State anything thnt will produce pressure arrangement. Wo believe tho unions
is tho Umntilia Exponent, of Umatil­ enough to hold n sock or stocking, hnvo a perfect right to quit work
la, In the county of Lake, State o f will interfere with tho circulation of whenever they desire, thnt they have
Florida, and for n youngster of throe the blood. Skirts should enmo down tho individual right to domnnd short­
(flues, it Ih a lusty one. It contains n foot or two—ns much ns threo feet er hours and more pny. But we nre
«tght pages tilled with good reading on some forms— but if they do not stating no new principle when wo sny
want to wear longer skirts, that's
tho employer has nn equal right to
their business.
reduce pny nnd lengthen hours, tho
------------ o------------HAVE WE A GROCERY TRUST? matter o f agreement being between
both parties.
But this la aside from tha state­
It scorns that a grocery trust is in
ment made in this newspaper yester­
tho
formation
period
and
tho
press
!!
A deliclotfs and'flourishing saN
hns said something about It and tho day. Wa‘ touched on no phase of the
&gt;: ad ia made bjf filling the halved
South Florida Praaa Association took differences existing. We said the
i; of Pfff Morjto Fears with’ chopaction on It. But t^io now trust was minions o f American people dependent
ij ped nuts nrtd Dromedary Dates,
only Huppttsod to ranch as far noirth on the railroads will see that’ they are
fl Sprinkle *TtM grated chcuse and
operated ns the'first inw o f nature.—
as Orlando.
aarvo with French dressing.
i The I^lasimmoo Vallcy-Gnzotto, tho Pnlntka Nowa.
K
___
editor of'which publication was at tho
“ FRESH DILL PICKLES JUST
Babe Ruth thinks he is bigger than
mooting of tho Praia Association, has
&gt;.•'
RECEIVED
baseball,
but baseball waa here wh|n
tho following to say:
Ono « f tho thingi learned at' tho Babe waa practicing homo-run bat­
gathering o f tho Stmth Florida press ting on the sidek o f hla crib and will
AaiofelatloiV— In aifltjon to' tho fact be here after B ale’s record will have
WBLAKA BLOCK
that Lakeland is a mighty Ane pro­ been ao long forgotten that ambitious
gress! vo city— waa .tho insldo plans ■port writers will be looking it up
&gt;/■
Phones 497-494
of the achomo fathered in Tampa and In the World’s Almanac.

ILD

FRUIT SALAD

;; Deane Turner

p u B u f c r r r - t ^ X ji R r A

cwxm i n ­

vestm en t.

In levying a publicity tax. o f ona
half mill; the City at Ctermiortt has
been hut,keeping pact with many oi
the largger towns, who propose by
taxation^ Jwhich spams this equitable
way, to rats* revenues and to let peo­
ple know why Ufa is worth' living in
this community.
The money thus raised' will be ptaood-at the disposal of fhe Clermont
Board o f Trade and there is no doubt
as to the wisdom exercised in spend­
ing i t The E(9*rd of Trade is com­
posed, of .representative business and
professional .people o f the town and
they nte individually aqd collectively
Interested in.the. proclaiming to the
world the advantages and pleasures
to be secured by new settlers and visitors coming to Cierrhont
Boards o f Trade and Ghambere of
Comma ret 4re worthy organization*
add in many localities' they h*V« been
Jnstraniental tn I6catbig&gt; heW1 Hfdostries. With the 1‘mitsdfunda at their
disposal;'which usuaify icffumulates
in the collection bf lAtihbewdftp daw,
the levying o f a publicity
gives
to ev4rji dtitfeh'the privilege help­
ing in the deveto'pthehY of his b f hcr
comnfdnity’,— Clertri/ont' Lake Pr*rt.

. A A.

The Farmer's
i 1
- &gt; rtivr* -

;1

. t‘

n »» \

i

H W e pride ourselves
knowledge o f the farm er’s needs,
torching on all agricultural pur­
suits.
Your future success as a farm er
largely depends upoil yoUf selection
ofaban k, .
i
,
,
1f This bank can and does help the
f arihOr to the very limit o f its ability.
If Help us now and you nave the as­
surance o f the assistance o f this
bank when you later need it.

a

coM M tmirrY

b u il d e r

F. P. Forster, President'*
B. F. Whltner, Cashier

PARENTS SHOW WISDbM
I

: l i 'l i l '

PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS
OF SANFORD

In those days wh'An bo many par­
ents, int4ht!bhaliy or unintentionally,
contribute to lax ness In discipline of
bo jl) and girls, It is ‘ffratlf jdng . to
note the ohiedttie of a “ strike" of 40
high school boytf 'lh Augiitti,' Me. The
beys quit because one of the mem­
bers of the school had he«n punished.
You Can Ffottf thfc Name o f Every Live Pro­
Did the parctits of the hoys sympa­
fessional and Business Man in
thize with them as so many unwisely
do nnd try to fin'd reasons for con­
Sanford in This Column
demning the teacher for the exercise
of discipline? The record shows thnt
they did nothing o f the kind, but by
LAW YERS
CONTRACTORS
common consent they stood back of
the teacher.
When 40 boys wore informed by
S. O. Shinholser
George A. DeCottes
their parents that they must return to
Attorney-at-Law
Contractor and Builder
school at once, or tho alternative would
Over Seminole Connty Bank
SANFORD
FLORIDA
he the infliction o f corporal punish­
SANFORD
•:*
FLORIDA'
ment Huch ns wns given tho offending
pupil, they decided that school strikes
Sanford Construct’n Co.
were not ho attractive after all nnd
thnt attendance nt school promised HARTFORD BATTERY CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS
Planet and Specificatlona Cheerfully
more In tho wny of comfort to them­
"Battery Insurance”
selves.
Furnished
All Work Gnaranteed
The action o f theso hoys in quitting
Sold and Serviced by
H. T. PACE
P. 0. Box SM
school ns n protest ngninst tho auth­
Edw.
Higgins,
Inc.
ority placed over them is not surpris­
ing, but rnther It Is in keeping with
Builders &amp; Contractors
Haight
Wieland
tho spirit of tho timoH. They see dis­
Sketches
and Batimatea Free; M
regard for authority on all hands, nnd
building
too
larga and none too tmalL
it was only natural that they should
GARAGES
’ ----- ALL WORK
GUARANTEED----conclude thnt a strike could be made
effective.
Smith Bros. Garage
Wilson &amp; Shorey
The example of tho parents of Au­
Pine and Garland Bta., Orlando. Fla.
Expert Repairing
gusta may well ho tnken into the mem­
OIL, GAB and ACCESSORIES
ory of the parenfs o f other communi­
Oak and Fhrmt
PURE W ATER
ties. There may como the time in
almost any school when a tost of au­
thority presents itself. If parents nre
Elder Springs Water
Geo. W . Knight
inclined to sympathize with their chil­
99.98% PURE
Real Estate and Insurance
dren, right or wrong, a condition is
Phone Sll-W
Sanford, Fla.
created which can only mean trouble SANPORD
-:- FLORIDA
for all concerned.— St, Petersburg
Timos,

&amp;

r Employment Bureau..

LORD’S PURITY
W ATER

The vocational committee o f the Busi­
WEST PALM BEACH
ness
and Professional Women’s Club
BANK DEPOSITS.
A 8 GOOD AS THE BEST
requests all young women desiring
Dally
Service
Phone 197
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla., Oct. employment to register at the First
25.— Bnnk deposits in Wept Pplm National Bank.
AGNES G. BERNER. Chairman
Bench have increased from $1110,160.05
on July 1 , 1000, L) approximately four
nnd a hnlf millions nt present, Bays
D. F. SUMNER
a writer in tho West Palm Beach
PAINTER
Post, in dealing with the banking
progress sinco Palm Bench county
LXT MX PAIM-r YOUR HOUSE
wns organized in 1000. Tho number
Wilt O.Btr.ot or Toko Job by th. Hour
U* LAUREL AVX.
o f banks has increased front ono to PHOHE ill
three and the fourth is building,
The number of banks in the county
Sanford Machine &amp;
hns Increased from one in 1000 to
Foundry Co.
nine nt present. A building to quar­
ter the Kelsey City Bnnk and Trust General Machine and Boiler Works
Company hnH been completed at KelAutomobilo Flywheel Steel Gcnr
soy City, and tho bnnk is expected to
bands in Btock
open its doors nt nn early date, In
Crank Shafts Re-turned
addition to threo hanks inow doing
business here, Lake Worth hnH three, Sanford Steam Laundry
whilo Boynton, Delray and Stuart
huve one ench,
FOR'SERVICE
These institutions do not includo
Call 146-J
tho building loan ^assqclation^ i and
W. RAWLING, Prop.
similar institutions.

COOL WEATHER IS
COMING
Before buying your

HEATING STOVE
Come in and look over
our line

THE BALL HARD­
WARE COMPANY
_____

. ..__ _

Acteylene Welding
OF ALL KINDS

Sanford W elding Co.

SANFORD NOVELTY
WORKS
V. C. COOLER, Prop.

General Shop and Mill
W ork
CONTRACTOR and BUILDER
817 Commeteial Street

Sanford, Fla,

TRANSFER
“ WE DELIVER THE GOODS’*

Quick Service Transfer
Storage Facilities
li we please you, tell others; if nw
tell ua. Phone 498

HOTELS
Hotel Montezuma
“ Sanford’s New Hotel”
11.50 Up Per Day

Located In Eagle Bldg., 205 Oak Are,

Phone 17S

Fourth and Sanford Ava

New Era Printery
G. Bassett Smith, Prop.
COMMERCIAL AND
JOB PRINTING
DRINK
Elder Springs Water, fta 99 98-100
per cent part. Phone 81L
Office supplies or all kinds at The
Herald A n tin g Co. When you want
anything In this line ace Thti Herald.
We have It or can get It
Try a Herald Want Ad today.

G1LL0N
FRY
ELECTRICAL
Contractors

�P !F
Jr *

A T ' 1 'A v ,
'- W V - T ' ’-

THE SANFORD IM U Y HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTyBEB 25. 1 8 *
K d la t

lleatioa of
If attar* In
Paraosal llama
#fInterest

In and A b ou t
&amp; The C ity

Summary ef Ike
Pleating Small
Talks Sictlacllr
im a g e d for
Herald headers

P. HcCMlin, lS A tt

Too much rain to not quite at bad

Jonea’ Dairy Farm Sausage.— L, P,
McCuller.
188-2tc
Movement is on foot for the estab­
lishment o f a National park at St.
Augustine, the Ancient City.

# Old storm la here but not
* . fierce enough yet to. cause any
# uneasiness. Reports says 78
today and the, continued xaln
* win nlake it go lower before
» night Quits, enough rain now
# 'or a while and looking for the
Weather report says rain today.
# sun ta shine, tomorrow but we
And it is almost safe to say n ln to­ # a n not making the weather
* „ and therefore win taka it as it
# comes. At that Sanford Is
*
greatly Messed. And the gale
L
.
P.
Mrs. Schlorcr’s Olive Nall
188-2tc • was Sound to come hotb n vie
JfcCulIcr.
* . could have any settled weath♦ or. Goodbye gnats, you little
Batteries at cut prices at
Mattery Co., "Foot of Fiysl

*
*
*
The next big nlTalr will bo me i otnr and Son banquet nt the Parish
#
[oukc Thursday night.

#
Get your hats cleaned and blocked
Shop,
109
Sanford
T(t the French Hat
l-TP-Ctp

5:40 A. M. OCTOBER 25
Maximum
................. 78
Minimum
...................... 60

*
»
*
#
#
*
•
*
*
*
*
*
«
•
♦
*
#
#

Barometer ..........
.Rain .....................
East and Raining.

The high school football team will
not play Palatka high ns their sched­
.af pretty tally cards for all occasions
ule is filled. It Is well. With two of
.at the Herald office.
our boys crippled it would not bo fair
-Dtdlnr-Day” Specials, Thursday, to Sanford to pull any games until
Friday and Saturday.— Yowell
Cb. all the men are in trim again. Walt
until Thanksgiving,.
Thanksgiving Tally Cards, al| kinds

Army rain coatB at Thrnsher
The recent rains hnvo brought out
Gamer'll.
183
(he lawns in fine shape. There is
aolhing liko rain for that.
Rental batteries for any make of of stationery just received at the
ore at IIof-Mac Battery Co., "F oot of Herald office 7 And the now lino of
First Street.”
179-dtp Christmas cards and all , tho new
things that are on sale for tho holi­
days?
Not too early to bo thinking
Flexible bark composition books—
of
these
pretty favors. See them at
rib* kind the high school scholars havo
the
Herald
office.
'brvn wanting. Get them at the. Hcr-

The new Weklwa bridge which con­
nects Seminolt and Lake counties is
about finished and will be thrown
open to the public possibly during the
coming week.
BATTERIES— America’s first
ear
waa regularly equipped with startng and lighting Batteries in 1911,
this battery waa an "EXIDE'’, today
the master battery o f the world. Do
not be misled by the so-called just aa
good,— Ray Brother*, Phone 548.
176-tf-e

By the American Legion on Armistice Day is attracting the Dancing
Crowd's attention from all parts o f the state. There is no better floor
and the music—well, you just wait and see. A nd'the suit values that
we are offering—well, you'll just have to see them to believe. Especial­
ly those best ones at $4$.00.

W hich Reminds U s
o f the story o f the Auctioneer who was selling the horse. “ How much
am I bid?—W ill some o*e start it?” There was a pause— and then a
voice from the rear said “ Forty-five Dollars.” “ Gentlemen, gentle­
men,” protested the auctioneer “This horse is alive.” * And this is the
livest suit value we know o f in the city and it's only a question o f how
long this particular lot w ill last.
NEW PA TTE R N S-JU ST UNPACKED.

Clay county has sold bonds to the
extent o f $47,500 for good roads and
hqve let the contract for the building
of them to W. J. Bryson, of Jackson*
viUe, who will begin nt once.

$400 cash and balance
iq 10 monthly install­
ments for Chalmers 5
passenger, 1920 model.
-rB . &amp; O. Motor Co..

SW /?£

G^lfond’s
mayonn
MADE salad dressing.

Princess Pat?

as

new.

Cord

Tire

courago to xaco auvorBiwyp iwrumio
against yielding easily to temptation.
It Is this bettor kind or suggestiveness thnt you will find on almost every
pngo of the Youth’s Companion.
Which of theso two kinds of suggestivness would you wish to have exert
an influence In your family life?
The 62 issues o f 1022 will bo crowd­
ed with serial stories, short stories,
editorials, poetry, facts and fun. Sub­
scribe now and receive:
Tho Youth’s Companion—52 Issues in
1922.
All the remaining issues of 1921.
The Companion Home Calendar for

Having taken charge of the clean­
ing and pressing business which has
been conducted by Mr. Geo. Waters,
you will find me there at all tiring
to look after anything you need in
tho nbove lino.
In addition I will run my tailoring
business whoro you can buy clothes at
reasonable prices nnd hnvo them made
In Sanford.— Ed. Randall, 123 First
Street, Maker of Fine Clothes for
Men. Phone 475, Sanford, Fla.
183-ltp
SANFORD LIBRARY
ASSOCIATION

SPECIAL

30x3 Vx, Non(PI A O E
Skid ................
30x3,
O HE
These Tires are Firsts and
Carry tne Factory
Guarantee

{

VULCANIZING
lit and S|n A m . Phau 4«-W

179-flte

Haines City w i(fhave n new candy
.factory in tha near future.
Clover Hill Butter, the beat.—L. P.
McCuller.
18S-2tc

W e have a few used
cars that we are offering
at Real Bargains. Call
and. look them over.—B.
&amp; 0 . Motor Co.

Princess Paf?

Located within fifty feet o f brick street to
be sold this week on very reason­
able terms.
See

A. P. CONNELLY

Classified advertisements, 5 cents a line. No ad taken for le u than
25 cents, snd positively no classified ads charged to anyone. Cask
must accompany all orders. Count five words to a lino and remit ne*

1022.
AH for $2.50,
Or Include McCall Magazine, the
monthly authority on fashions. Both
publications, only $3.00.
THE YOUTH’S COMPANION,
Commonwealth Avc., &amp; St. Paul St.,
BoBton, Mass,
New Subscriptions Received at This
Office.

Thero is called a Bpoclnl meeting of
the Sanford Library Association for
Monday night, October 31, 7:30 p. m.,
nt tho library rooms, for n very Im­
portant meeting.
Tho eurior hour Is nskd on account
o f many other meetings that nnmo
night, but by prompt attendance the
Army officers’ shoos Just received
W. II. Beshers and bride, o f Mariet­
Princess
Pat?
important ilbrnry business can bo
»t Thrasher &amp; Garner's.
183-4tc ta, Gn., were In Sanford yesterday.
transacted and othor engagements for
They were on their wedding tour to
tho same night met also.
St. Petersburg, and othor west coasl
“ Dollnr-Dny” Specials, Thursday,
Every member out. Most Import­
points. Mr. Beshers is conncctoc Friday and Saturday,—Yowell Co.
ant.
182-2tc
with the McNool Marblo Co., at Ms
.
A. S. PECK,
rlottn.
P ru d e n t of Sanford Library Asso.
EXIDE*’
BATTERIES— Our Pull( man cars, airplanes,. submarinea..
telephones and great 7,000 mile wire­
less stations are equipped with the
master "EXIDE" Batteries, tho bat­
tery is the life o f your car, got tho
best. We rechayge and repair all
makes.— Ray Brothers, Phone 548.

r///jr/S y / F F ffffk r

SUGGESTIVE READING

You will hoar it said that such and
auuch a magazine prints suggestive
se
HOME stories, meaning thatthey present cor­
L. P. McCul- rupting ideas in an attractive dress.
183-2tc But there is a suggcetlveheas also of
quite a different sort— tho euggestivonpM that nuickons the reader’s sense

Wo havo In stock different Biases of equipment.—B.
&amp; O.
PlpeleBs Round Oak Furnaces,’ also
automatic nnd instantaneous hot wnt- Motor Co.
Robert Holly hns returned from er heaters,— Mahonoy-Walkor Co.
182-tfc
Cninesvlllo whero ho spent Sunday
180-Gtc
with his brother, Reginald. Ho likes
One o f th clnrgest business blocks
Gainesville nnd this was hiB first trip
of
Daytona containing seven Htorcs
Cnll nnd see our line of nrmy gods,
tn his birthplace since ho wnB iwo
and
numerous other businesses hns
mplcto lino.—Thrasher Si Garner.
years of age.
183-4tc recently been sold to C. F. Burgmnn.

To Reduce the Cost
o f M otoring

ALL SIZES

182-tfc

The Ladles o f the Episcopal Church
The bond election which was recent­
will
hold their Bazaar and Supper, ly carried at Green Cove Springs au­
The Temple Pipe Organ Club will
ifcdd Its Christmas Bazaar November December 1st and 2nd in the Parish thorizing the expenditure of $150,000
171-tfc to be used for street paving, sewers
•16th. Tho place to bo annonced lat- House.
182-Mon-Thur-tf-c
and repairs, tothclr present light and
Army pants foi
water plant.
Hullowo’cn Tally cards jfor .your Thrasher &amp; Garner.
Ilaltowc'cu card parties at thei Her­
New Florida Syrup, L. P. McCulThomas Emmett Wilson writes
183-2tc
ald office. Get them today, as they
from Phoenicia, New York, to change
are itoing fast.
his Herald to Sanford as he in coming
Fable: Once thero was a farmer who
"Dollnr-Day” Specials, Thursday, home about tho first o f November. didn't think be could move to town and
— Jle Wilson
it ■lOvii sends
otmuo us
u » some
ouiuu boautiful
m um uw sui
-Fruluy and Saturday.—Yowell Co. Mr.
run a grocery store and get rich.
182-2tc post cardss o f the Catskill mountains
and they look as though thero wore ATTENTION CELERY GROWERS!
St* our new line of stationery just many places whoro the cats could kill
Wo huvo Just received n carload of
Yellow Jacket sprayers, prlco of same
in from the manufacturer. You save if they wanted to.
cash, 12 per cent below last yenr’s
the profit on this stationery and get
Richelieu coffee, L. P, McCuller. prices.— Mahoney-Wnlker Co. 180-Ctc
iffw very latest things In. stationery.
183-2tc
'Get the best while they last nt the
Tho Elks o f West Palm Beach hnvo
Herald office.
The Pipe Organ Club will have a recently acquired n building lot nnd
Hnllowo’on Lawn Supper with Miss plans are being drawn for the early
No matter what the other fellow
Martha Fox und Mrs. Forrest Gatch- erection o f a handsome club house for
Area, we do better. Hof-Moc Battery
el,
hostesses, nt their homes, corner their use.
Co, “ Foot of First Streot.’’ 170-fltp
Onk and Eighth, Thursday, Octobor
27th.
182-4 to
The Sanford Rotary Cub met today
$450.00 Cash and bal­
-at noon and had a most interesting
ance in 8 monthly in­
Princess Pat?
session while disposing of a fine lunch
•'*t the Vnldez hotel. The Sanford
stallments, gets the best
Rotes will go to Orlando Friday If tho
The recent bond election of Brad- used car in Sanford—
1vtomi breaks up in time.
for county for good road bonds was Studehaker Special Six.
carried by a largo majority. $550,000
Have your watches and Jewelry re­
Looks and runs as good
tir e d at McLnulIn's. Two first class was the sum voted upon.
Prompt sendee.
140-tfc

The Court House Dance

Pat Mackerel,— L. P. McCuIlqr,
183-2te

. aW office.

watch makers.

rA ga m s.

DEATH OF MRS. LEAVITT

Died at Orange City, Florida, Oc­
tober 23rd, 1021, Mrs. J. F. Leavitt,
aged nlnety-nipe years and eight
182-tfo months,. only lacking four months of
reaching the century mark..
She has lived In Orango City for
forty-five yearn and' Is survived by a
son and* daughter, W. F. Leavitt, of
Sanford, and Mrs. Nellie Andrews, of
Orange City, her husband, W. W.
Leavitt having died at Orange City
in 1882.

FOR SALE

W ANTED

FOR SALE—Roso No. 4 seed, Irish WANTED— Customers for fresh milk,
morning and evening deliveries.—R,
potatoes, per bushel $2.00.— L. A.
Brumley.
131-tfc L. Garrison. Phono 3711. 169-St-Tu
WANTED—Team work,
FORD TRUCK for sale,
Hanson Shoe Shop.
Grocery.
FOR SALE— Best opportunity for
wholesale nnd rotnll fish market on
East coast. Building, dock and ship­
ping platform. Address W. P. Wil­
kinson, Now Smyrna, Fin. 10-17-lm

AGENTS
\yANTED— High
class
monthly life and monthly health and
accidunt policies. Address P. O. Box
1137, Jacksonville, Fla.
182-3tp
SALESMAN WANTED— An old Lino
SECOND
Wanted.

HAND
SHOW
CASE
Herald Printing Co.
183-Stp.

Legal Reserve Life Insurance Co.,
hnB contract to offer n high class
snlesmnn in this and adjoining coun­
ties. Address, state manager, P. O.
Box 1137, Jacksonville, Fla.
182-0tp

WANTED- ”

M

ING TRADE. ONE THAT'S NOT
AFRAID OF A LITTLE WORK.
FOR SALE—Now cottage. Apply to APPLY AT THE HERALD PRINTJ. W. Musson, 001 Palmetto nve.
ING COMPANY.
tf
179-fltp
FOR SALE— Nice, smull business at Eyes Examined
109 Sanford Avo.
17£P8tp
FOR SALE—210 Egg Buckeye Incu­
bator, only used one time. 710 Pal­
metto avenue. Call 209-W.
181-Btp

Glasses Designed

Henry McLaulin, Jr.
OPT. D.

FOR SALE— Chcnp for cash, sound,
medium size horse, wagon end har­
ness. See E. F. Lundqulst, nt Crown
Pnpor Co.
183-3tp
FOR SALE CHEAP— Popcorn CrisOPTICIAN
OPTOMETRIST
pette candy machine, brand new.
Graduate Northern Illinois College
Call ut 123 West First Streot, San­
212 Eaat Firet Bt.
Sanford, Fla.
ford Branch Lakeland Steam Laun­
dry. Phono 475, T. A. Butner.
183-2tc
Edith Lucille Ball
Fur office supplies, stationery, etc.
ome to the Herald office.
Post cards— local view*—lc each at
the Herald office.

Teacher Piano and Harmony
G ra d a te

Chicago Musical College

Call 46-J for .Appointments,
FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms
Apply 1004 Elm Ave,
162-tfc

PROPERTY OWNERS

FOR KENT— Suburban home.
808-J.

to i h me. I have devoted sixteen .
GOOD LOCATION foe n meat market. years to the roofing butt no is, and if I
Apply to 809 Pipit street. 174-tfc fait to please you it wilt cost you noth­
ing, I give every small job my per­
A .C u ban editor recently visited. FOB RENT— Furnished front rooms.
sonal attention. Charges reasonable.
I82-8tp
King Alfonso In Madrid. Who can say
Best o f reft-ences.
Satisfaction
the kaiser will not be touring the
guaranteed
United States on a lecture tour in the
1Mqkpn. anything you want ,t o . the course o f a few years! /
mattress line.— Sanford Mattrees Co.
PRACTICAL ROOFER
i88-5te
Buy It with a Herald Want Ad.
w ii

V . E. DODD

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Sufw d
TH1
“ City Substantial’

IN THE HEART OF THE WORLDS GREATEST VEGETABLE SECTION
NUMBER 181

SANFORD, FLORIDA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1921
VOLUME II

RAILWAY EMPLOYEES!
NOT IN FAVOR STRIKE
UNTIL FURTHER ORDERS

HALF

Will Await Decision V*
S. R a ilw a y Board on
Wednesday
-

AMERICAN LEGION
GETS DI8COUNT ON
GOODS IN ARCADIA.
(■r TB* AstoetoUd rn u )
ARCADIA, Fin., Oct. 24.—A ma­
jority of the retail merchants here
have airreed to give all American L o t­
ion members in good standing in Ar­
cadia, five per cent, discount. Tht
discount applies to cash purchases
and charge accounts that are settled
within thirty days.

Vhere Unknown American Soldier Will Be Buried

Entente Will Construe
His Move as Cause
For Action

W ns

AFTER EX-EMPERTC

tllEY TAKE VOTE
RESULT
(Br Th« A»**ol»U4
CHICAGO, Oet. N * - * \ Uroa*
Ubor Board announcjd today it
his "reason to hop® that
railroad strike act for 0ctol* r S®
would bo averted. In a formal
announcement the board warned
the public to “refrain from loooo
Ulk and prorogate lanfuofo
about either aide of the eootroreny.
____

Unknown American
Soldiers Chosen
in France Today
At Cholona Sur Mauro By American
Sergeant

CHARLES ACT
MIGHT BRING
MORE TALK

ONE

• ‘J t o i
UNO! « W O

I I I I I • I • ( I *

* * • » » « * * » »

i i i i t

Tin* memorial l» lliu unknown American soldier of Urn World war. who will ho hurled In
“T J
ten- on November 11, Armistice day, will he loentod directly In front of this main entrance to the 'y'd'^thcnler. The
body of tho soldier will he escorted to Arlington cumeteo' by a great olllclnl mourning party and there
M M m p M ™ ? &lt;o M,e
reremeny £ l , » .he nu.lon will .heerve for .he me,. wh„ l«.t ,helr lire, on th . h«tletlolds of France.

REPORT THIS MORNING
SAYS HE HAS BEEN AS­
SASSINATED

(By Th* AumIi U4 Vr*M)
LONDON, Oct. 24-—It was re­
ported In Vienna that the Britlah
high commission there haa de­
clared the entente will construe
presence of Charles In Hungary
ss casus belli.
/
PARIS,
Oct. 24.—Charles*
troops are closing in on Buda­
pest without meeting much re­
sistance from foreea opposed to
his restoration to the Hungarian
throne, according to Information
reaching the Allied Council of
ambassadors.

(Ur Tht MttoUUd Vim*)
CHALONS SUR MANRE, Oct. 24.
ELSIE LEADS BLUR
_America’s unknown aoldlers who
NOSE BY THE NOSE.
will Tost in Arlington, was chosen
CHICAGO, Oct. 14^-Foor Mg
hero this morning. Tho ceremony of
(I t Th,
Frtu)
brotherhood and Switchmen's anselecting tho casket in the city hall.
HALIFAX, Oct. 24.—The Elslo Is
Iona hare reiterated their warnSorgennt Edward F. Younger, of Chi­
leading Bluo Noso about one half a
In* to the railroad Labor Board
LONDON, Oct. 24.—An unver­
cago, was handed a smnll bouquet of
minute whon the schooners rounded
that only "satisfactory settle­
ified
report th at former Emper­
white and pink roses by the American
Sambro lightship, tho half-way mark.
ment" can prevent tho strike
or
Charles
of Austria-Hungary,
officors present and advanced to the
Tho Elslo rounded the third mark thlrtailed for Sunday morning, It was
had
been
assassinated.
Improvised chapel whore four caskets
tetn seconds ahead of Bluo Nose.
learned today.
were placed and evory one wns nBked
LONDON, Oct. 24.—An ultlto leave the chnpcl before Younger
HALIFAX, Oct. 24.—Tho Glaucesmatur
sent to the Hungarian
8T. LOUIS, Oct. 24.—President
entered. He walked slowly around
ter schoonor, Elsie, led Bluo Nose,
government
by the Czeeho-SloManion, of the Rnllroud Tele­
the caskets three times and then
by eight lengths in tho starting of
vakla
government
giving the
er
counties
now.
I
know
of
somo
who
graphers in a statement today to
stopped and plnccd tho roses on tho
Orlando, Fin., Oct. 22, 1021.
their second race today, in tho Inter­
former
forty-eight
hours
to se­
have
bought
game
killed
out
of
soason
the Associated Press, denied ru­
caskets fnclng tho entrance to the Editor Sanford Herald,
national fishermun’B series.
cure
the
removal
of
Charles
from
In
tho
pnst
which
undor
tho
circum­
mors that the telegraphers would
chamber.
Sanford, Fla.
Bluo Nose defeated tho Elslo In tho
that country says a Vienna dis­
stances
I
consider
n
little
worse
thnn
reconsider their decision to Join
Denr Sir:—I am inclosing to you
second rnco nnd won the sailing cham­
patch.
the strike Sunday. The tele­
clipping taken from tho Orlando Morn­ killing It unlawfully. I know that some pionship of tho North Atlantic.
graphers arc the only body of em­
of
them
hnve
killed
more
than
tho
un­
ing Sentinel of a letter written to that
ployees to decide to go out with
Irish Still Believe
paper by a Mr. E. G. Rogers, also a reasonably largo bag limit nnd boast­
the big five organisation.
reply to snmo by myself in tho snmo ed of it. Look ’em up, Mr. Klncnld.
In Their President
As to the Orange county law, I hnve
paper of the 20th.
Despite His M essage
CHICAGO, Oct. 24.—The presl*
Theso nrticlcB grew
out of tho not been Into tho woods In Ornngo
denis of five unions reaaerted to
posso of hunters thnt Invaded the county this summer because I do not
Many Think DeVnlcra Can Explain.
the Hoard tho stand they took nt
Woklwn swamp section in Seminole care to go into tho woods or on the
their conference with the Board
His Mistake
MOONSHINE CAUSE OK TROU­ county some weeks ago in which your wnter any time without n gun of some
last week when they Insisted they
sort—nnd
my
gun
in
tho
puHt
hns
b l e in t o w n o f o r a n g e
shorifT got mixed up with tho party
LONDON, Oct. 24.—Thero wns a
had no power to suspend or cnll
saved moro game by tho killing* of KEY WEST TO AI’I’ALACIIICOLA
YESTERDAY
ul all ended up ni
— ....... —
,
nnd
nt snmuru.
Sanford.
oil the strike unless n settlement
large
gathering In Trafnlger Squnro
Wo havo a progressive Longue for predatory birds and animals thnn i
WILL KEEL THE BIG
yesterday
afternoon to cclebrnto tho
In accordance with their demands
(By Th, AitoeltUd Frau)
BLOW
tho protection of gnrno in Orange the game it has killed.
RICHMOND, Vn„ Oct. 24.—Fenr of
anniversary of tho donth of Torronco
was reached. If the strike Is
"A
man
who
ennnot
ho
‘rusted
in
called Indications today strikers
MncSweenoy, lord mayor of Cork. Mcfurther troublo In Orange county ns county ,nnd nt the Inst legislature tho woods with a gun cannot be trust­
(Br Th, A»oclaU&lt;t Fr«u)
may find themselves without any
n result of the killing of Sheriff Wil­ hnd some special acts passed thnt hns ed without one." A man who cannot
WASHINGTON, Oct. 24.—H urri­ Swceney died in Ilrixton prison, whilo
directing lenders. As tho board
liam Bond nnd Julinn F. Boyer, town helped uc wonderfully along these resist tho tcmptutlon to kill game out cane warnings woro ordered displayed on n hunger strike.
None of the Irish delegates to tho
sorgennt of Orange, tho wounding of lines.
has summoned General Chairmen
nt noon todny from Key West to
season
uOur
u r amoinon
ro get
gee uu
.ik -of..........
— is- on
— n -pnr with tho mnn
h
ambition is to
nil ihijuiiii
adjoining
peuco
conference attended, hut Wll*
of the Unions to Chicago n pro­
seven prominent citizens nnd the
counties interested in this movement; who cannot leave the bottleMint ho Apnlnchicola.
Ham
Roth,
member of parliament for
longed hearing would leave the lo­
burning to death of Waiter Ware, ne
hns finished the whole quart, nnu l
cals without lenders. The strike
gro, who shot Bond nnd Boyer when in order thnt we enn preserve the bcliovo thnt such men nrc not plenty.
WASHINGTON, Oct.
24.—Tho Cork, wns among the speakers. F re­
cnll provided the general chnlrthey attempted to nrrest him on r gnmo In this section of tho state be­
Weather Bureau todny issued storm quent reference was mndo by speak­
I have mot hut very fow.
mrn should supervise the strike
moonshine charge, line! somewhat sub fore it is too Into.
A wisely administered state game wnrnigns saying tho tropical storm ers to tho telegram of Enmon DoTho Orange county division of the
Vnlcrn, to Popo Benedict, which wns
and he responsible for its con­
sided this morning. Tho shooting oc
department Is the only salvation of was control nenr tho extremo west
duct in territories within their
currod yesterday. Waro wns bumod Forldn Wild Life League Is planning Florida game, nnd a gamo rcsorve end of Cubn and wns slowly moving endorsed by the gathering.
Tho Sinn Fein delegates who are
jurisdiction, reporting eight night
to death whon the barn in which ho n grand got-to-gethor meeting nnd
thnt Is “advertised" will soon bo ex­ Northward. Dangerous gnlcs nnd attending tho conference with govern­
by wire the situation on their
had taken refuge was burned, he mak­ “banquet" to be held nt tho Chnmber
seas over tho East Gulf nnd Florida
ment officials in nn attem pt to bring
IlncH.
ing no attem pt to escape when tho of Commerce rooms nt Orlnndo, Fin., hausted.
Mr. Walker nnd his friends hnvo my Straits forecast.
about pence in Ireland woro In consul­
In the near future tho oxnct date will
flnmes surrounded him.
sympathy. I do not notice tho Semi­
tation yesterduy concerning today’s
he determined Inter.
CHICAGO, Oct. 24.—Officials of
nole people who invited him there ROTAIUANS WILL MEET
meeting. Porsons in closo touch with
i t is the dosirc of the League to
IN ORLANDO FRIDAY
unions with more thnn half of tho rull GIBBS REFUSES TO
LET POPE OUT ON
hnve n nUmbor of tho officers of the were fined, nnd it looks nH though it
FROM ALL FLORIDA. the Irish delegation nssert thnt none
employes of tho nation in their mem­
was
a
case
of
spite
work.
I
have
of tho delegates will do anything
BAIL DURING WAIT. | Qamo Protective Association of all
bership, Saturday night announced
heard othors complain of Seminole
tho adjoining counties to mnko a
that their men will not be authorized
All Florida will he represented nt which might bo construed ns n ropu?*
county
justice.
I
nm
likely
to
move
to
JACKSONVILLE,
Oct.
24.—Circuit
special effort to be with us on the
to join the big five organizations in
Orlnndo next Frldny when tho Itotar- dlntlon of Mr. DeVnlcrn.
Polk
county
boforo
long
and
should
It wns declared yostordny by per­
the strike called for October 30 in pro­ Judge Gibbs Into todny denied hall evoning set for this meeting, we
inns will hold a state convention nt
like
to
meet
Mr.
Walker
nnd
nt
least
sons
nenr tho delegates thnt though
test of wage cuts.
to John
Pope, locnl nttornoy, con­ wish to got In touch with the Secre­
that city. Orlando Roles have re­
Announcement that they would not victed two weeks ago o fmurdcr In taries nnd Presidents of theso organi­ get a chance to shake hands with him. quested thnt Snnfoid Rotes help them they uro plenipotentiaries, they recE. G. ROGERS.
join in a walkout entne from eight of tho first deggroe ,nnd sentenced to life zations in Osccoln, Lnko nnd Scmlin entertaining tho guests nnd Snn- ognizo DoVnlorn’s authority ns presi­
dent nnd nro convinced thnt his tefo—
the eleven "standard” rail unions Imprisonment In connection with tho nolo counties In order thnt they may
Klncnld’s Solution of Gnmo Protection ford hopes to mako it 100 per cent nt gram to tho Popo, though possibly
which for a week had been withhold­ killing hero last month of George H. ho Invited to attend, nnd tho date.
Orlando thnt day and night. Not all
untimely, represents tho sentimentsOrlnndo, Fin., Oct. 15, 1921.
ing their final strike decisions, nltho Hickmnn by Frank Rnwlings, durrlng
Would appreciate It If you will fur­
of iho bUBy Rotes can attend all day
of tho Dnlly Elronnn, which elected:
in most of them tho mombors had vot­ n robhory. Popo sought 1 berty pend­ nish us with tho proper offlclnls in Editor Morning Scntinol,
but tho mnjority of them will go down
Dear Sir:—In reply to Mr. E. G. in tho afternoon nnd put in a good them.
ed overwhelmingly to quit rnther than ing n decision of the state supremo your county thnt wo might take tho
While professing inability to under­
accept a recent 12Vi per cent wage re­ court on his nppenl for n new trial mntter up with thorn In ndvanc.
Rogers’ letter of tho 14th Inst., com­ half day nndtho greater purt of the
stand
why tho tologrnms hnve cnusodl
duction authorized by the rnllrond In- nnd his counsel cited, ns a precedent
menting
on
tho
treatm
ent
of
n
party
Thanking you In ndvnnco for any
night.
•rkt*
,
.
.
troublo,
it was assorted th a t tho dofo*
bor board.
of
huntera
recently
nrrostod
by
tho
tho nction of Judge Gibbs in grant­ Information or assistance you might
The tentative program has been a n -, ^
th,Bg n way out o£ tho situation
Only one of theso cloven groups now ing ball In n slmilnr ensn In Nnshun render us along these linos, I am,
Scminolo county officials, and his ap­ nounccd for tho All-Florida Rotary
.
. , ndmittlnsr that.
is determined to stand by the big five,
parent attitude townrd tho Orange dny by Kon Guernsey, prealdont of tho may bo found by their ndmlttlng that,
Very
truly
yours,
in 1014.
it was announced, but two others havo county
County Wild Life League, I think It is Orlnndo club, who says, "wo nro plan­ nlthough nlloglnnco to tho king now
JAS. KINCAID,
Rnwlings, who wns tried nftcr
not yet taken final action.
Truly, Mr. ning big things nnd want n big Is donlod, association with tho British
Pope’s conviction, nnd nlso sentenced Vico President, Orange County Divis­ very unsportsman-llke.
Following announcement by hends
Rogers, If a good sportsmen, cannot crowd." Tho program Is nbout like commonwonlth mny bo arranged In a
ion, Florida Wild Life Lenguo.
to life, wns taken to the stntc prison
confercnco on terms.
of the six shop crafts organizations
wish to persecuto tho Wild Life
a t Halford Into todny. It 1 sexpccted
this:
Oponion Inst night in London waa
(Cualhmrd on !'■(• Two)
Lenguo, oven If thoro nro somo unPraise for Mr. Walker.
thnt after undergoing the physical
Registration, 0 n. m., feo, $5 por- hopeful thnt tho crisis over Ireland
loynl members belonging to It. Those porson. 10 a. m., field sports, with
Editor Morning Sentinel:
examination ho will bo stnt to n road
PROMINENT CITIZEN
things will happen In tho best of or­ prizes for each winner. 10:30 n. m., will bo surmounted.
The
Polk
county
hunters
who
were
camp ns nn nbllo bodied prisoner.
OF ST. AUGUSTINE
recently fined In Seminole county ganisations, but I do believe that tho tug of war, Jacksonville vs. Tampn,
DIED YESTERDAY.
WEEK’S WEATHER
woro not ovon nccusod of violation of majority of tho Wild Llfo Longue prlzo for winning team. 11 n. m., bus­
OVER MILLION POST
tho gnmo U wb. Tho carrying of re­ members nro true Hportsmon nnd nro iness mooting undor direction of Dis­ Weather Outlook for the Period Oc­
CARDS SENT OUT OF
(By Th, l u K l t U i F r»«)
JAX
DURING
MONTH.
peating rifles Is equally unlawful In using their best efforts for tho pro­ trict Governor! John A. Turner of
ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla., Oct. 24.—
tober 24 to 20, Inclusive
season or out. I bcliovo It is a bnd lnw tection of game of this county.
John W. Davis, of this city, fo r sovTampn. 12:30 o’clock luncheon, enter­
Washington, Oct. 24.—South A t­
MY .Rogers seems to think the hunt­ tainment, In charge of Jacksonville,
JACKSONVILLE, Oct. 24.—Not­ because owing to tho fa c t that thero Is
cral terms a representative in tho
lantic and East Gulf stateu: Normal
ing
psrty which wont to,Somlnolo St. Augustlno and Gainesville, 2
legislature from St. Jo^ns county, ional post card week which closed to­ not a t present a good slnglo shot rlflo
tem perature, rains firs t p art of wsek,.
died htro yesterday after a long Ill­ night saw probably tho greatest de­ on tho market It operates against tho county, and of which Mr. Walker, of wviuva,
o’clock, »».»
golf tournaments
»&lt;••.—• - » - fo
—r both
----- fair thereafter. Tropical storm cenattainm ent of skill In marksmanship Aubumdnle, was npparently a mem­
ness.
luge of post cards from Florida to by tho pooplo. The law is not in any ber, consisting of somo ton or twelve men and women ,with prises; also Ural over western Carribean sea and
bridge and five hundred for womon, moving north northwestward will be
dtlos in the middle western stntas
men and a .pack of some eighteen or and continuous vaudevillo for those felt the firs t part of the week.
sonoe a part of the gnme law.
STATE ROAD CONVICTS ARE
ever mailed from the state. Figures
Mr. Kincaid had better look out for twenty doga, were Justified »and vio­
MOVED TO WORK ON NO. 2.
available tonight show th*t BJ*ck,0" ‘ some of his own Wild Life League. I lating no game law*. If he thinks this not playing gamos. Unique out-of­
About tho only way a pedestrian
door dinner a t 6:80 o’clock, held in
ville alone forwarded 1,100,650 cards
(By Th* luooUM Vi***)
know th a t some of the members have number of men and dogs, turned loose huge tent especially obtained. E nter­ can get oven la to buy a flivver apd
OCALA, Flo., Oct. 24.—Two gangs to the following cities in order leading unlawfully carried repeating rifles In In the swamp 'where deer and turkeys
tainment In charge of Tampa and St, take pot shots a t other podostriana.
of convicts to work on State road No. to points to which they w -re malied: the uast and I have not heard of any as well aa bear abound, will not mo­
2, will be moved from Putnam and Indianapolis* Dayton, Springfield, who proposed to do differently In the lest the game th at tho etate law says Petersburg, followed by dancing as
For offloe supplies, stationery, d a ,
long aa desired. Two bands hired for
Volusia countiu this week to Marion Battle Creek and Cedar Rapids.
future. I know that some of them aro ■hall not be chased or molested, he Is
coma
to tha Herald offtes.
all afternoon and night.
county. They will bo quartered nt
(0m U«q*4 m pm * sis)
hunting (unprotected animals) In othTry a Herald Want Ad today.
tho station.

PRAISE FOR SEMINOLE
COUNTY OFFICIALS FOR
PROTECTING THE GAME

Wild Life League of Orange County Will Assist
in the Good Work

OFFICERS KILLED,
NEGRO BURNED
IN VIRGINIA

HURRICANE "
, WARNINGS
UP TODAY

n.

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THIS SANFORD DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22,1921
nrtrte
SB

an

W I n . ■g=

Charge of railroad wages In the Adam­
son set. of approximately ff;4BP,000,"000 annually.
In the light of those figures; It Is
manifest that tho recent reduction ol
wages authorised by the labor board,
estimated a t from 10 to 19 per egot, In
no sense meets or solves tho problem
of labor coats, and In no way makes II
posalblo for tho railroads to afford
« reduction of thoir revenue,
Thousands Of Rates Already Reduced
Indeed, daring the past'year there
havo boon bolwocn four and five thou­
sand Individual reductions In freight
rates. On some railroads ,the reduc­
tions In rates havo amounted to more
than tho reductions In wagos so far
made, and on many other railroads the
reductions In wagos allowod no net
return on oporatltms, hut moroly pro*.
Tided against tho furthor accumula­
tion ot a doflclt.
The point Is ofton mado that agricul­
ture and othor Industries are also suf­
fering tho same Immediate difficulties
M the railroads. Why, therefore, do
not the railroads take thoir medicine
like anybody nlsof Tho answor Dos
In several facts:
L The railroads wore not permitted,
as were other Industries, to make
charges during the yoars of prosper*
Ity, making possible tho accumulation
pf a surplus to tide them over the pres­
ent extremo advorslty. According to
the reports of tho interstate commerce
commission, the rato of return In prop‘ r Investment of the railroads of tho
led States for the past several year*
been as follows:

RARR6M riAHTO
GETRATES BSWN
Propose To Redact Wt?e$ An! Rotarn
Ail Hit S o w By Ritactioi'
In Ctinges
FULL TEX TO F THE PROPOSAL
Statement Dy Thomas DeWItt Cuylor.
Chairman of the Association Of
Railway Executives, On
The Sltuatlsn

CORNERSTONE CASKET DATA
English Historian Suggests Most Use­
ful Things and Data to be
Placed In Cavity.
The manager of a huge building that
Is being erected In England has, says
the Manchester Guardian, been con­
sidering* the Idee of a foundationstone casket to bo Imbedded In the'
great mnss of fcrro-concroto on which
the building Is to stand. As n render
of Mr. Wells’ “Outline of History" ho
hns been struck by Mr. Wells’ dlfllculty, through lack of significant mft*
tcrlnl, In dealing- with tho world's his­
tory 8.000 years ago. As he was told
that the concrete foundations would
last* at least that time, he thought
that It might bo of use to the Mr.
Wells of A. D. 4021 If he found the In­
formation about our time neatly pre­
pared for him. Accordingly ho wrote
to Mr. Wells nnd asked him to sug­
gest wlmt would bo thb most useful
things or messnges to be placed In tho
cavity. Here- la Mr. Wells’ reply r
"Dlfllcnlt to inalco suggestions. Prob­
ably commonplace things with their
current prices will be. of as much
value as anything. Safety rasor, cotton
reel, bottle of plcklea and that sort
o6 thing, A mail-order catalogue, pre­
war medicines and what they profess
to cure. Dietary far. ordinary, citlsen; typewriter, a sewing machine, and
so forth- Dressing bag with fit­
tings. Current book on 'How to Be?
have.' A klncmn reel of'current events.
Whitaker’s Almannc and Bradshaw's
Continental time-tables (prewar and
poet war). Baedeker's England. Town
maps and plans.”

THE S T A R T O -D A Y
Adolph Zukor presents
THOMAS MEIGHAN
----------- IN-----------

“The Conquest o f Canaan”
An immortal American classic.

One of the biggest

Btories ever written, it gives the Good Luck Star the great­

est opportunity he ever had. Cast includes Doris Ken­
Now York. October 18.—Following n
meeting In Chicago. Or'nher 14. 1921
yon, Diana Allen, Riley Hatch. From the novel by Booth
of tho presidents of nearly all the lead
Tarkington. Sconario by Frank Tuttle. Directed by R.
lag railroads In tho country. Mr. Thom
William Neill.
as DoWItt Cuylor. chalrninn of the As
soctatlon of Railway Executives, made
ALSO A COMEDY
tho following statement:
At a meeting of the- Association of
Railway Executives today. It was doterm Inod by tho railroads of tho Unit
•d States, to seek to bring about a re
daotton In rates, and a» a means to
that end to seek a roductlon In pres
eat railroad wages, which have com
For Husky, Playful Lads
potted maintenance of the present
rates.
An application will be mado Immedl
Kay nee Blouse* are made for
Italy to tba United Staten railroad la
rough and tumblo boys who play
bor hoard'tor a reduction tn wages of
baseball, leap frog, roller skates,
train service employes sufficient to “R A T E O F RETU RN E A R N E D
climb trees, etc.
remove the remainder of the Increase
BY RA ILRO AD S OF T H E
made by the labor board's decision or
U N IT ED STA TES ON
They aro not ordinary blouses
July 30. 1820 (which would Involve t&lt;
T H E IR PRO PERTY
further reduction of approximately ter
but every detail on a Kaynee
per cent), and for a reduction In the
tylouse Is perfect—lock-stltched
IN V E ST M E N T .”
Start a bank account with us and we will help you mako it
wages of all other classes of railroad
soams, well cut collars, trim
COIN OF YAP VERY DURABLE
- 4.84‘
larger. We are equipped to care for your deposits with abso­
labor to the going rats for such labor
ithouldcr lines, strong button­
la several territories where, the car
lute safety. There is no function of a bank we cannot per­
holes and buttons firmly sewed
rlera operate.
4.20% Chltf Medium of Exchange Hsa Been
.
I
ta-Lints
atone
Wheels—Arduous,
on, neat ftnish a t the waist ln16 (fiscal yoar)...................
To Reduce Rotes As Wage* G° Dowform. Every facility afforded to farmers and others for
The foregoing action la upon the un 1916 (calendar year)------- - = H I
te Cash Check.
ataad of tha elastic or dangling
«*«.WI■■«■»«,»»♦&lt;—. 5-9§&lt;
demanding that concurrently with 26.9I
transaction of their banking business. Accounts may be
draw strings found on inferior
_ 381'
own* reduction la wages, tho benofr
If
any
payment
should
be
neces­
9.461
blouses.
opened by mail and monies deposited or withdrawn in this
a t the raducUon thus obtained shall i 92o “ZZ^ZSZZZZZ.'ZZ.ZZZZZZ... 0.39*
sary In tho readjustment at Yap be­
with the concurrence of the Interstate
It will thus bo notod that during the tween the United States nnd Japan,
way with equal facility. There are scores of young men in
A large choice of assorted
cotnmerce'cotnrnlsslon, be passed on to years when othor Industries woro mak­ the currency used would not be thnt
patterns, durable fabrics and
the publlo In the reduction of exist­ ing very largo profits, when the prices o f:the. picturesque Island In tba Caro­
Sanford who should start a bank account. The dimea they
ing railroad rates, except in so far of farm products nnd the wages of ‘la-*
colors th at can be boiled with­
lines;
although
the
coin
of
Yap
Is
not
throw away every month if brought :to our bank would make
as this reduction shall have booa tnntW bor were soaring to unheard-of heights;
out fading.
In the ' meantime. Tho managometu the earnings upon railroad Investment subject to fluctuation. In \klue, la ex­
them independent as they reach the noonday of life. In fact,
have docldod upon this courso In view In tho Unltod Staton woro hold within tremely durable, cannot be easily
of their realisation of tho fact that tho very narrow limits and that thoy havo stolen, nnd Is the despair of the coun­
every person who has a dollar should start a bank account.
With such an excellent
whoels of Industrial activity huve beon during tho past four years progrosehro- terfeiter.
Try it and you will always thank us for this advice.
medium of exchange nt hnnd one may
closed down to a oolnt which brings ly docllnod.
depression and dlilrutu to tho entire
wonder why President Harding would
public and thnt sorcethhg must he Roads Handicapped More Than Other Immediately decline a string of Yap
Business.
dono to start thorn again In opera­
coins, although the Inrge hole In the
3. Tho railroad** nro responsible to canter of each might facilitate a string­
tion.
Tho situation which confronts tho the public for providing adoqunte trans­ ing together like the Chinese "cash."
railroads Is oxtremely critical. Tho portation. Thoir churgos nro limited,
Possibly the dllllculty wllf be bettor
rallronds In 1920 reallxod a net rail­ by public nuthorlty, nnd thoy are, In understood when It Is stuted that
of Sanford
way operating Income of about 682,­ vory largo respects (notably tor labor)
000,000 upon a proporty Invostmont ol compelled to Bpond moaoy on a basis Top’s chief medium of exchange hns
over 119,000.000.000 und evon this flxod by public authority. Tho margin been Its limestone wheels which run
MAYBE HE IIAS A
amount of IG2.000.000 Included back within which thoy nro pormttted to up to 12 fcot In diameter. To cash a
“W HIFFLE POOF” mall pay for prior years received front oarn a return upon thoir Invostmont Ynp check would necesslnto a motor
the government of approximately 664,­ or to offor Inducements to attract now truck. There nro of courso, such other FALL MIGRATION OF BIRDS
ST. AUGUSTINE TAKES STEF
TO STOP SALE OF FORT.
COMING EARLIER THAN USUAL
MIAMI, Oct. 22.—Director Harold 000.000, thus showing, whou tho op capital for oxtonslons and hotterments media us pear shell und bugs of dried
orations of thnt yoar alone aro con Is extromaly limited. Howovor much coconut kernel; but to bo a pluto­
II. Dalloy, of the Miami Beach Mu- sldorod, an nctual doflclt beforo mak­ tho railroads might doslro. thoroforo. crat of the old typo you must ho nblu
ST. AUGUSTINE, Fin., Oct. 2 2 .Tho annual flight of wild game
soum and Zoological Gurden, whoso ing any allowance for either Intorost to roduco thoir chnrgos In tlmos ot de­ to point to your collection of great
Great
agitation is felt hero over the
birds southward from thoir breeding
dividends.
pression, It will ho porcolvod thnt the discs.
quests for rure birds and animnls, has or Tho
year ondod In tterlous depres­ limitations surrounding thoir uctlon do
grounds Ib on nnd is nhend this year Associated Press dispatchts from
carried him through an adventurous sion In nil branches of Industry, and not pormlt thorn to glvo affect to hrond
of tho usual tlmo such flights atart, Washington yestordny with regard
What Do You Mtan, Chloktn?
raarkod reduction of the mnrkot do and ol&amp;stlc policies which might very
career, has returned from Andros Is­ In
according to tho Biological Survey, U. to tho proposod Bale of Fort Marion
“A
blonde
chicken
I
b
on
uncertain
mand for and tho prlcos of basic com­ properly govorn othor linos of buslnous
und confusing quantity where n bru­ S. Department of Agriculture. Mnny nnd St. Francis Barracks, this city,
land, south of Nassau, with several modities, rosultlng In a vory serlour not thus restricted.
nette ono Is much more understand­
falling off In the volume of traffic.
live flamingoes.
It has boon urged upon tho railroads able," says un experienced nutoino- more thousands of birds nro now on together with other parcels of govern­
Roads
Forced
To
Defer
Maintenance
the wing, the department states, than ment proporty In this vicinity.
The birds, once plentiful on adjacent
thut a roductlon In rates will stlmuIn this situation, a policy of the most luto
traffic and that Increased traffic blllnt.
have
flown South for yonrs.
islands, have boon much sought by ho­ rigid
Pooplo of St. Augustine felt thnt
economy nnd of postponing and
"Whenever I see n while chlckon In
All indications nro thnt tho flight things had been safely Bottled, follow­
tel men for tho past sevcrul yenrs as cutting to tho bone tho upkoop of the will proloct tho cnrrlors from tha loss
the dlstnnco I Instantly slow down,
an attraction for tourists.
Director proportion was adopted by tho rail Incident to a reduction In rates, Tho ns they nlways flutter around In tho will not only furnish hunters excel­ ing rcnssurlng lettors from Senator
railroad
innnagomontH
cannot
dlsgulso
Iinilcy, who brought tho birds hero for rondo. This was at tho price of neg from thomsolvos that this suggestion Is road, running from side to side, seem­ lent sport, hut thnt thoro will hnvo to Duncnn U. Fletcher, who Btatcd thnt
educational purposes, set out in a looting and. for tho tlmo. doforr!pi| moroly conjocturul und thut an ad- ingly unable to determine which way bo little waiting nfter tho open Bonson an net of congress would be necessary
which must hereafter nnd. Ir
starts. No rcuflon Ih assigned by tho before tho war department could fake
ynwl from Nassau with a caro-free work
the near future, ho done nnd paid for verso result of tho oxportmont would to go, whereas the brunette hen calm­
flshcrmnn. They braved a heavy sen This Is Illustrated by tho fact lh«i ho disastrous nut only to tho railroads, ly chooses the side of safety nnd Blips department for tho onrllneBB of tho nction In this regard. Now it Is fonrSouthern flight. Only tho birds know. ed by some persons thnt Senator
for eight dnyB and nights, with sennt as of September 15, 1921, over 18 pel but to tho public, whoso supremo need off the right of way.
"Something very chnractetlstlc lu
Tho pintail and tho tool already are
provisions, before capturing tho birds cent, or 374,431 In numbor, of ttu Is adoquato transportation.
Consoquontly the railroad mnnago- tho action of these two types of bird." on tho wing. Tho mnllnrd, tho ennvas- Flotcher had boon misinformed, nnd
on tho extremo southern tip of An­ freight cars of the carriers were lo monts
thnt the w ar dopnrtmont enn hold tho
cannot fool Justlflod In placing
bnck, tho red-hend, tho widgeon, tho snlo by nuctlon without such formal
dros Island. On the return trip tho bad order nnd noodlng ropolra, at thoBO InstrumontnlltloH, so essential to —Columbus Dispatch.
against a normal of bad ordor cars o|
blnck hend and othor later emigrants preliminaries, so definite Is tho state­
woathcr woh so bad they had to leave not more than 160.000, as Is turthui tho public welfare, at tho hazard ot
No Hast* About I t
soon will ho on thoir way to w anner
several of thoir captives behind and Illustrated by the doforred nnd ln&amp;du Huch an experiment based solely upon
The burglar had Just Irngun bln term. climes. Reports from nlmost ovory ment made by tho dispatch.
oven ono of the birds thoy brought quale maintenance of other equipment such a conjocture.
Adjutnnt General Lovell hnd re­
Farmers Especially Need Lower Rates Near him wu* an oldish man, who Bcctlon toll of tho great size of tho
nlong, died from exposure. It wns im­ and of roudwny and structure*.
studied
him
Intently
and
seemed
to
be
ceived
no definite advices a t the stato
It
Is
ovldont,
howovor,
that
oxlstlng
Even under those conditions. nn(
flights already under way.
possible, according to Director Dailey,
nrscnnl
(tho old St. Francis Barracks)
with thV» large bill charged up against transportation charges boar In many nwaltlng an opportunity to Hay some­
From tho sandhills of Nebraska
to prepare food while enrouto because the future—which muat soon be pro cases a disproportionate relationship to thing.
nnd
Immediately
wired Senator
of the henvy sons, and they hod to run vlded for and paid If the carriers art the prlcos at whloh commodities can
"How long are you In fort" he whis­ como reports of larger number of Fletcher with refytrd to tho matter,
duckB
than scon for years. Little
Into cover and Bet ashore whenover to perform successfully, tho transpor bo sold In tha market and that exist­ pered.
Utlon duttos—the result of oporatlom ing labor and othor costs ot transpor­
"Twelve yenra," replied tho newcom­ Gooso Lake in South Dakota, visited ho hoard of trade took Immediate ac­
thoy wanted to cat.
for the first olght months of this year tation thus Imposod upon Industry er.
recently by a representative of tho tion, wiring Scnntor Fletcher, urging
the latest available figures, has beet and agriculture generally a burdon
The veteran looked around nervous­ Biological Survey, was reported to he the senator's closest cooperation. Ad­
at u rate of net railway operating In greater than thoy should boar. This
ly
and thrust a letter Into the burglar’s literally alive with ducks. From al­ ditional information wns also asked
como. before providing for Interest ot Is ospoclally truo ot agriculture. Tho
hnnd.
most every section of Iowa ducks aro for by wire.
rntlroud
manngomonts
are
tooling
sen­
dividends amounting lo only 2.8 poi
"Pm In for life," lie said. "Post till* reported to bo plentiful. In tho Green
St. Francis Barracks is unde • lease
cent por annum on the valuation o' sitive to und Bymputhotlc with tho dis­
the carrier properties mado by the In tressing situation and desire to do for mo when you get out."—London Bay section of Wisconsin there are to the state of Floridn, ns nn nrsennl,
toratato commorco commission In th( overythlng to assist In rellovltig It that Tlt-mts.
said to bo more ducks than over be­ nnd the dense stil lhns sovornl months
recent rato caso, an amount not suffl is computlblo with thoir duty to fur
foro. Mnny more blnck ducks are re­ to run.
olent to pay tho Intorost on their out nlsh tho transportation which tho pub­
Back to the Picture Language.
ported In Mnlno than wuro seen last
llo must havo.
standing bondB.
A liuwspaper for English tourists Henson. Along the New Jorsoy const
Roads' Earnings Far Below Reasonabli
At tho tnoinont railroads, In mnny abroad
FEDERAL COURT NOT
haw a very Ingenious scheme there also has been a big Increase.
Returns.
casos .aro paying 10 coats an hour for
TO GET SOLDIERSfor
showing
exactly
wlmt
attractions
It Is manlfost. from this showing, tha unsklliod labor, wlion slmllur labor Is
certain
hotelx
have
lo
offer.
If
there
tho rnto of roturn of 6 1/2 or 6 po working alongside tho railroads nnd
WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 2 2 .cont, for tho flrat two yonrs afto can easily ho obtnlnod by thorn at 20 Is an elevator In the hotel a picture GROVE ROBBERS GET THEIRS
HEAR
March 1. 1920, fixed In the trnnHportn coats an hour. Tho railroads ot tho of it suinll boy In uniform Is hIiowii
Wnr nnd justico department officials
tlon act bh a minimum reasonable ro country paid. In 1920. a total of con­ ugiilnst the name of that hotel. A
MIAMI, Oct. 22.—Grove robbers,
said
today they had taken no nction
turn upon railroad Invostmont hns no siderably ovor 61,300,000,000 lo unskill­ garage I* Indicated by a picture of a whose activities are said to have cost
boon even approximated—much Iohi ed labor alono. liowovor duslrablo It motor car, lawn tenuis courts by a
toward a transfer to tho fcdoral court
reached; nnd that the pro«ent hlgl may be to pay this or that schodulo of racquet, nnd ho on. The Hcheme Is* growers nnd shippers of Dade and
rales accordingly are not duo to an* wages, U la obvious that It cannot bo qillto u useful one, for It enable* the other South Floridu counties thous­ nt Jacksonville, of tho cases of LicuL
statutory guarantos of earnings, fa­ paid out ot railroad (turnings, unless tourist to see nt n glance exnctly
B. K. Hooker, Sergeant C. J. Frladvad
thers Is no such guarantee.
the Industries which uso tho railroads which hotel would suit hlin best, nnd ands of dollars ovary season, were nnd Privnto Youngblutc of Carlstrom
In analysing tho oxponses which hav, are tapablo ot mooting such charges. thux Haves him wading through a glvon n Jolt horo recently thnt mny
largely brought about this situation, 1 Tho rallronds — und through thorn, wholo lot of advertising matter.
put a damper on their activities when field, Fin., indicted nt Puntn Gordn,
evident
that
by
far
the
larges
becomes
tha
pooplo
generally—are
ulso
humOUR NATIONAL SIN contributing cause Is the labor cost. ■Hired in thoir offorts to oconwntzo by
L. J. Moody, convicted of stealing five Fla., in connection with tho killing
sacks of avocado pears from tho grove Inst April of F. Pitts.
schodulo ot working rulos und con­
Fruit From Caotl.
Today the railroads pay out to labo aditions
Officials of tho department of Jus­
The
now
In
force
a*
a
herltugo
from
The nowost achievement of Bur­ of Charlos Deering near Miuml, was
approximately 60c ,pn tho dollar the) the period of fodorel control und uptice
suggested that request for trans­
recolve tor transportation servicer bold
Id by the
tho railroad labor board. Those
Tnese bank, the plant wizard, 1* the produc­ sentenced by Judgo Norfleet to serve'
Fundamental Cause
whorous In 1916. 40 cents on th* dol condition* uro expensive*, uneconomic tion of cacti that l**nr fruits l*enutlful a year and a day a t'th e state prison fer of tho canes from county court to
and unuocoNsary from tho point o( vlow to the eye and with llnvor resonthllng
lar went to labor.
tho efcderal tribunal might havo boon
farm at Ralford.
oxtremoly
of railroad operation and oxt
of All
On the first day ot January, 1911 burdonsoma upon tho public
(bile which thoM of peaches. muNkmplons. pineap­
made by tho department’s agents in
Efforts
on
tho
part
of
grove
men
In
when the government took charge o pays tho bill. This schodulo of wagos ple*. otc., yet sulflrlontly unlike to ren­
Florida
without referring tho matter
Dade
county
to
minimize
fruit
stealing
prevent*
the
and
of
working
conditions
prove
wages through the Adamson act, th
Strikes
from doallng equitably with der them appetizing novelties. They resulted some time ago in the estab­ to Washington a step which, it wa*
labor cost ot tho railroads hod not ei railroad*
soat* - Accordance
--­
th d r TahoV "costYTn
with are vory aweet, containing from 12 to
ceedod the sum of about 91,468,000.00 rapidly changing conditions nnd tho 10 per cont of sugar.
lishment of a road patrol, composed of added, was not necessary. Depart­
annually. In 1920, whan govemmento -rent 'variety*'”? local considerations
two officer*, who succeeded In cap­ ment officials said tho caso had been
These
fruits
may
ho
eaten
fresh
or
authority mado tho last wage Increast which ought to control wages In d fparta of tho country., The rail- put up n* sweotments. They are of turing.* numbor of tho marauders and investigated by tho in«pector-genoral
the labor cost of tho railroads wa forent
mads
are
B ook in g to harp thoso rulos various colors, uud their Juices, par­ reduced tho growers' losses, but sinco of the army nnd tho three men ex­
about 63,698,000,000 annually, or, if cor and working
conditions abrogated.
tinued
throughout
the
year,
Instead
o
The
railroad*
will s^ek a roductlor ticularly ot the red one* (which are a recent re*olution by tho county com­ onerated from all responsibility in
-At Then
wngos
now
propoio*i oy f rat request of brilliant heos), are utlllzable for missioner* cutting tho patrol from connection with tho killing of Pitt*,
for tho eight months during which th
snnetfon of tho abroad labo; coloring Ices, Jellies and candles.
Increases were la effect board:to Tho
the payroll, gtowora Bay tho thieving thereby eliminating necessity for
rallroodawL proceed with
Congregational Church wage
th e ■ labor cost on an annua all
possible
dispatch, rand
_____ , disrate...
_ a* soo3 n'
has increased a hundred-fold. Every trial by courtmartial.
have alv
basis, would have beta largely It thei railroad
labor hoard s
Tightwad*.
"
person arrested on fruit stealing
excess of 19,900,000,000 — an Is en Its assent to.the. reduction of wage
Son* men bang onto a dollar a* charges will be vigorously prosecuted
ion
In
rato*
will
hr
th
a
orease, since the government too'
The world news the day It happens
though It were the ln*t one they*** in tho courts, growers declare.
•f. w
put
He will Give You Something to
the Herald office.
•
ever going to *o«.

nee

BLOUSES

E

...Start.a Bank Account

im

S a n fo rd S h o e
&amp; C lo th in g
C o.

rU,

M:

m-

The Peoples Bank

THE GREAT STRIKE

WHY!
N r. Burhans

I

SUNDAY NIGHT

Think About

TAT A DAXXT MMAAIB WAWT AD.

�V-

THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24,1221
♦♦4

! This Forward

ij

Looking
is jealous of its reputation for Ser­
vice and seeks to justify it anew with
each individual problem presented
to it.
The knowledge and experience of
this bank is available to its friends
and patrons at all times, regardless
of the size of their transactions.

rataiy of prayer band! and Bibla
study, Mrs. A. A. McLeod, Bartow;
secretary of foreign missions, Mrs. D.
A. Shaw, Qutney; secretary of a
sembly’s homo missions, Mrs. George
Morris, Gainesville; secretary of the
Christian Endeavor and mnisterial re­
lief, Mrs. E. D. Brownlee, Sanford;
secretary of young people’s work and
Safaboth school extension, Mrs. R. E.
McCoakill, Valparaiso; secretary of
synodical, presbyterlal and congrega­
tional homo missions and Thomwell
orphanage, Mrs. A. S. Harris’, Jack*
sonvillo; secretary of literature, Mrs.
W. A, Grate, Sarasota; historian, Mrs.
O. Z. Olin, Montlcello.—Tampa Trib-'
une.

“You Know Me AT
Is Here With Auto
Exchange Co.

Among the many new firm s and
among "those we have met” are the
Auto-Exchange Co., Just organised
here and A1 Lynch, the presiding gen­
ius of the comcera, who is one of the
llvost wires that ever sparked off
the main stem. A1 comes from Au­
gusta, Georgia (which seems to bo a
god place to como from) so many
come from thero to Sanford but they
ure alt good ones and A1 Lynch is
among those present Watch fo r tho
advertisement of the Sanford Auto
Supply Co., In the building a t the
« * • *
# • • «
foot of F irst street, next to Hof-Mhc
» Battery Service.
#
«
a
«
«
« Advance Man Here
to # * n » # to to » * t o * « to
For Biff Circus

MEETINGS

ii T he Seminole County II
Bank,
**

8-

1 1 STRENGTH

::
PROGRESS
s:
4% INTEREST PAID

SERVICE &lt;

1 t» 4 » 4 » 4 » » » 4 4 » » 4 4 4 4 » '» + * li,44l4 » 4 + a » 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 + l»4&lt;‘4 4 4 4 4 » 4 4

SO C IE T Y
MRS. FRED DAIGEIl, Society Editor,
Phone 217-W

they spent the day very pleasantly
with Mrs. A. D. Key, who is spend­
ing some tlmo with her nephew, Dick
Twltchell.

Mr. nnd Mrs. Howard Tibbuls and
little son Munson, left yesterday for
SOCIAL CALENDAR
their homo in Haines City,, nftcr
spending sevcrnl dnys hero with their
Monday—Westminster Club will meet
aunt, Mrs. Fannie Munson.
a t tho homo of Mrs. Robert Wnlthonr, comer Soventh and Elm, at
Mrs. W. J. Stood nnd baby of Kis8:80 p. m.
slmmcc
are visiting her parents, Mr.
Monday—Mrs. J uUub Tnknch will en­
and
Mrs.
J. D. Ball, at their home on
tertain tho mombors of St. Agnes
Pnrk
nvenuo.
Guild at her homo on Elovcnth
-street and Oak nvenue at 3:30 p. ni.
MIshch Fannie Tucker and Hender­
Tuesday—Socinl Department of tho
son,
of Orlando, wore the week end
Woman’s Club will have an after­
guests
of Mrs. Raymond Key.
noon bridge and box ten, at tho
Club rooms at 3:30 p. m.
Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Langley nnd son
Tuesday—Social Department of tho
Frank,
left Friday in their car for
Woman’s Club will have an A fter­
I.nkclnnd
where they will make their
noon Bridge and Box Tea, at 3:30
future
home,
The Langleys will be
p. m,, with Mrs. Ed, Lane ns hos­
greatly
missed
by their numerous
tess.
Wednesday—Muse and Ijitornture De­ friends.
partm ent of the Woman’s Club will
FOR MISS THRASHER
meet at 3:30 p. m.
Among the pre-nuptial parties be­
Wednesday—Mrs. A, P. Connelly und
Mrs. 3. Puleston will entertnin at a ing given Miss Mny Ferrari Thrash­
miscellaneous shower, in uompli- er, a charming bride-elect of Novem­
mont to Miss Mny Forran Thrash­ ber, will bo tho "Miscellaneous Show­
er, at tho homo of thu former at -I er" Wednesday afternoon nt four
o’clock, by Mrs. Albert Pint-know Con­
o’clock.
Friday—Mothers’ Club will meet at nelly nnd Mrs. Samuel Puleston, nt
the homo of Mrs, Connolly, 00!) Mngthu Parish House at 3:30 p. in.
Saturday—Children’s Story Hour will nolin nvenue.
be held at Central Park a t four
MUSIC ANI) LITERATURE DEo’clock,
PARTMENT
Thursday—Pipe Organ Club HalloThe program for the Muse nnd Lit­
we’en Lawn Supper with Miss Mar­
tha Fox and Mrs. Forest (Jntchcl, erature Department, of tho Woman’?
hostesses at their homes Oak and Club for Wednesday afternoon will be
ns follows:
Eighth.
Friday—Christian Endeavor of the Faust (Guonod) .. Mrs. W. T. Langley
Presbyterian church, will entertain Jewel Song ..........Mrs. A. M. Phillips
a t a picnic at Palm Springs in hon­ Waltz Song ...................... Club Chorus
or of Miss May Thrasher and Mr. Schools of Opera (French, Italian,
German, English ami Ameri­
J. i). Woodruff, whose marriage
can) .......................... Miss Ida Graw
takes place Nov. -1.
Mrs. J. K. Mcttinger will nssist in
Saturday—Mrs. E. M. Galloway will
entertain at Bridge, complimentary tho chorus.
to Miss May Thrasher an attrac­
FLORIDA SYNODICAL AUXIL­
tive bride-elect of November.
IARY
Tuesday—Nellie Turner Circle of the
Thu Florida Synodical
Auxiliary
Baptist Church will meet with Mrs.
Dorsey at her home on Myrtle ave­ will hold its eighth annual meeting in
thu Hyde Park Presbyterian Church,
nue at 3:30 p. m,
Friday—N. do V. Howard Chapter U. October 20-27.
The Florida Synodical Auxiliary is
D. C,, will meet at the Parish House
composed of the ladles’ auxiliary hoa t 3:30 p. m,
cities of tho presbyteries of Florida,
Mrs, It. C. Bower and son, Harry, St. Johns nnd Suwnnoo. The Indies
who nro spending some time a t Day­ of tho Prcsbytornn churches from all
tona Beach witli her parents, Mr. and over the state will bu congregated in
Mrs. Hurry Ward, are expected home Tampa during thi» period. An un­
usually good program hns been a r ­
Wednesday.
ranged, consisting of m atters of in­
terest to the Presbyterian indies nnd
Mr. und Mrs. Raymond Key and
composed of very instructive ami con­
their guests, Misses Henderson and
structive lectures. Among them will
Fannie Tucker, of Orlando, motored
bn an mldress by Miss Ella Graham,
to Daytona Beach yesterday whore
Presbyterian missionary to Kwnnju,
Korea; an nddress by II. C. Dubose,
Sanford, synodical manager of thu
Presbyterian Progressive Program
and an nddress by Rev. W. J. Garri­
son, St. Petersburg, member of tho
synod’s committee of women’s work.
These annual mectngs have been
proving of much value to tho ladies’
auxiliary work, and cnch meeting is
filled with greater enthusiasm onch
year.
The officers of thu synodical auxil­
iary of Florida arc: President, Miss
Agnes Davidson, Jacksonville; first
vice-president, Mrs. J. W. Smock, DoLnnd; second vice-president, Mrs. N.
| Baron, Gnnesvillu; third vice-prcslWe have been in business &gt; debt, Miss Wllholminn Whlttod, Chip■ ley; secretary, Mrs. Charles E. Dor­
one month and we hnve J sey, Jacksonville; treasurer, Mrs.
■ Honry Elliot, DoFunlnk Springs; sec-

H 0F-MAC
B ATTER Y j
CO.
done fine.

Call 46-J for Appointmenta
if. ’
&amp;.

WILL WEAR BETTER IP

9

see our w,ndow

im-ti

MRS. IDA AUSTIN

BEAUTIFUL PATTERNS
B e st Q u a lity

and then—
We save you money too, on the well
known—

TRAIN SCHEDULE

s
s
i

H A s1 U tAs R K
R A F F E L D - H 0 N I G CO., Inc.

Southbound
Departs ■
Arrive
T H E STORE THAT SAVES YOU MONEY”
No 83_____ 2:35 a. m.
2:40a. m
215-217 E. First St.
Opposite Post Office
No. 27...........
8:40 a. tn
mm
No. 80_____ 2:55 p. m.
3:20 p. m.
No. 85........... 6:55 p.m .
7:10 p. m.
i orili
North Bound
Arrive
Departs
No. 82_____ 1:48 o. m.
2:03 a. m.
No. 84_____ 11:45 a.m . 12:05 p. m
No. 80........... 3:05 p.m.
3:25 p. m.
No. 28_____ 10:00 p.m.
Trilby Branch
Arrive
Departs
♦No. 100...........
6:00 a, m. ■
In 1920 wo began lowering the cost of living by reducing the prices of our Merchandise. Since
3:26 p. m
•No. 24..........
* No 158...........
7:00 a. in. ■i then every reduction received by us on Shoes, Furnishings and Clothing has been Immediately
No. 22...........
7:35 p. m.
passed to our customers. Follow the big idea: trade where your dollar has the greatest pur
Leesburg Branch
chasing power, und you will buy your Furnishings, Clothing nnd Shoes, from__
Arrive
Departs
•No. 157........... 4:00 p.m.
No, 21........... 2:52 p.m.
♦No. 101...........6:30 p.m.
•No. 25...........2:00 p.m.
Sole Agents Boys Steel Fibre
No. 22........... 7:00 p.m.
Oviedo Branch
.....$12 to $16
Pail’ ............................ $7 to $8.50
Departs
Arrive
•No, 125_____ 11:00 a. m.
•No. 127...........
3:40 p. m
.................. $25 to $35
...............$9 to $10
♦Dnily, except Sunday.

Interesting, Up-to-Date History

5

T H R A S H E R &amp; G ARNER

s

Post cards—local vjews—lc each nt
tho Herald office.
Eyea Examined

Glassea Designed

Henry McLaulin? Jr.
OPT. D.

:

3

Nik Suits, 2 pr. pants
Young Men’s “Young* Ameri­
can” S uits
A. B. Kieschbomes &amp; Co.
S u its ............................ $25 to $40
Florsheim Shoes for men......... $10
Whitehouse Shoes for Men,
fro m .............................. $5 to $8
Men’s Work Shoes .. $2.50 to $6.50

Red Cross Shoes for Women,

Boyd Welsh Kid and Satin
Pumps, fro m
Maxine Shoes for women,

Pair........................ $4.50 to $7.50

Buster Brown Shoes for the
children, all sizes from $2.50 - $6
Women and children’s Cheap
.Shoes, fro m ...........$1.50 to $4.50

Accept this invitation and make our Store, Your Store. We guarantee Courtesy Service and
Satisfaction
“

Edith Lucille Ball
Graduate Chicago Musical College

S H O E S

That is Coming

Teacher Plano and Harmony

“Foot o f First St.” ;

The Department of Labor reports
that statistics on unemployment
gathered from 1,428 firms having
more than 600 employees each, and
located in the 66 principal industrial
centers, show that 18,060 more men
were at work in September than in
August. Thirty-eight cities reported
increases in employment and 26 a de­
crease.

TUESDAY
Wesley Truth Seekers’ Class of the
Frank J. O'Donnell, advance mgn
Methodist Chufch will meet a t 8:30 of the Howe's Greater London Shows,
p. m., a t the Church.
Is here with the car of advertising
WE HAVE
and billing the town for the big cir­
THURSDAY
cus that will be here a week from
Father and Sons’, Banquet at the next Wednesday. Mr. O’Donnell has
Parish House Thursday night,
traversed the continent many yearn
in his capacity as advance man and
Monday:
twonty-five years ago was here with
3:30 p. m. Pipe Organ Club with Forepaugh's Circus. Ho said more
THE REAL SHOE OIL
Mrs. Emma Johnson.
than hnlf of tho stores woro closed
Shoe Polishes and Laces
Tuesday:
then an the freeze had ruined busi­ ■
3:30 p. m. Nellie T um or Circle ness nnd tho clrcua did not do well
with Mrs, J. D. Dossey. that year in Florida. He sees many
3:30 p. m. Kathleen Mallory Circle changes in Sanford since his trip of
with Mrs. W. T. Whoo- twenty-fivo yearn ago nnd remarked
lisa.
that if ho had invented hln money in
7:30 p. m. Mattie Guinn Circle at Snnford then he would be a million­
aire now. Tho Howe’s Shows are
the Temple.
7:30 p. tn. Roof Garden Club with among tho best on thu road nnd are
Miss Viola Booth, at 510 taking a quick trip through Florida
hoforo going into winter qunrtors
Oak.
cither in Montgomery or Louisville.
Thursday:
First Nat’l Bank Annex
3:30 p. m. Jonnlo Spaulding Circle,
rtLT3Cr.i«a
THE STENOG’S VACATION.
with Mrs. Holland.
"The Family Shoe Store’
tTsrrr*.:i*i
5:00 p. m. Pipo Organ Club Sup­
per onGatchol-Fox lawn. My tPpust in on her vacation
My rtpist’s nwnu fpr a weok
Vet
Friday:
My
typudt us in hwr vScnrioti
7:30 p. m. The Tomple Boy Scouts.
Wgilo thee danm keys plsy hudo
and neck.
L. A. MICKEY DIED YESTERDAY.
As wu understand it, Iroland might
bo willing to remain in the family if
Cjoras:
’
I. uuls Augustus Mickey died at his
it is clearly understood that sho d&lt; us
418 Magnolia Avc,
Oy,
bronk
boxk,
bting,
bznk,
home nenr Ft. Rondo yesterday nftor
ro t have to do il.
Brung
becj
mu
b'Onnio
ti
my,
tp
a short illness. Mr. Mickey had been
MAKER AND ALTERER OF
mr:
in poor honlth for many years and
LADIES’ CLOTHES
Sell it with a Herald Want Ad.
came to Sanford about eight years B(Ang b$xj, b-6ng bicx,
Bjing bozk me|o belni o mwx, oh
ago for his health nnd tho chango of
helk?
climate nddod years to his life. Al­
—Ocala Star.
though not in tho best of health at
SANFORD MARBLE &amp; GRANITE WORKS
any time Mr. Mickey was always
T.’ their effort* U got l* .•ether, na­
cheorful and was nn active worker
JOHN GOVE, Proprietor
nnd kept busy almost to tho day of tions Hhow n commendable willing­
CEMETERY WORK A SPECIALTY
hln death. Ho wns born in Berkshire ness to do niivthing *h&gt;it of being
1018
Went
F
irst
Street
1018 West First Street
county, Pcnnsylvntiln, nnd nt the timo rtasonr.ble.
of his death was 50 years of ego.
Decensed leaves n wife nnd three
daughterss nnd one son to mourn his
death.
The funeral services will occur from
tho MothodlHt church tomorrow morn­
ing nt ten o’clock, Dr. Walker officiat­
ing, Intermeht being made in I^ikcview cemotery.
J. E. Surling, L. Allen, E. D. Mob­ :
ley, W. P. Fiolds, F. P. IUnes nnd H.
II. McCnsiln, will act ns pnllhcnrcrs.
The symunthy of the mnny friends
of tho fnniily Ih extended to them In
their hour of sorrow.
:

We thnnk you J

for your part In it.

KNOW

OPTICIAN

OPTOMETRIST

Graduate Northern IlUnola College
212 B ait Fhrtt 8t.
Banford, Fla.

THRASHER &amp; GARNER

�- '5*'•'

L'.vyjv*

T H E SANFO RD DAILY H ER A LD , MONDAY, OCTOBER 2 4 ,1 9 2 1

PAGE

m

MtOAD-eOMMIBBlON -DUMBS
RAISE IN FREIGHT. RATES
ON FLORIDA.FRUITS AND
VEGETABLES.

• ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ te e M e e e e i i e e e M M M ie M M M e f o e e e r '
. NOT i n . g i v n a n g a t b i i m
uw
. je.-n u
UNTIL FURTHER ORDERS
■-/. f . _____H
}■ i (Oobtlndd fro.B n i t Ort«)
• 'thi1ftilb^ ln/ cimmunfcitlin fr&amp;m
totalling 600,00 men th a t they would
1 '
not sanction a-walkoufj the-leaders-'Of
Chaae A Co., will be interesting ,to
§«iit*
the 876,0001 ‘moinWriadie - of •wajt-*htSanfiM’frlHt’and W fc F M W ttr *
Ii .or
ployes and of ihd -25,000 stationery
, Jacksonville, Fla., Oct. 22, 1921.
firemen at an executive meeting vot­
The Sanfdrtf HeiAfdJ ‘
n
ed to Withdraw^ th e ir’‘authorization
1m *.*
•&gt;R
ot i
si ll*.
of a wilkobt, -leaving only the 75,000
it j
railroad telegraphers positively with'
1| Because, Mr; Farmer, 'youi .can use
the
big
five.'Chiefs
o
f
•'
t
h
e
360,000
f
t
1
Fla., thi
haaaee, Fie.,
thet the-Intrttato Com
our facilities to your advantage.
clerks will r.iakb thblr' decision'today
.lonhaa'dehl
S lion
hap)dehied tl^« 'petition of tho
•a ti ofile''.qr* v.”»^ irj
wil
.'.Jti
and
arid
the
signalmen,
86,000
atrong,
It.
4* Growers .Express Co., for a
nlao
ni-Si^et
to
aOU
'
ulit
i;*
Hj Our •buying* capacity enables us to
3 ii bo addqd*rom 'tf«f
&gt;eriifori,;d f' asuppleAiWb1No. 15 to
epenflori’xif
&lt; Officials’ of the- Clerks’’ Said takt
Worn tho floats already lilted it w« X. C. C., No, 7, perishable protective
j, ham pers; Ingec*
night th e y prebably'would net aethic your,
a ? parade of magnitude never be* tariff Ho. ~|n /{ \ r r w.
i i
_
£1*
oriurf a strikk a t their raeetlrijg todify,
ticjdes,
Fertilizers and supplies
at
a
‘ ’Supplement No. lfc publishes a flat
U 'J fllll M A
thus indicating unlbn leaders said,'
•v *qs--tf'j m*-' -if] ;o • iV*. nr i
.
... .
American
g l U ) JT redaction*bf-tKlrtWn'pVri ‘cent. In tho
that a stvikeiriX it'mkterUlisod/would
saving in cost to you.
Sanford Paint &amp; W
? • £ * Co* rqftfgtfflftldty charges od Florida fruits
.1 .. B U R U V
affect’lesS-than one^fourih otf the rail.leu' *.ti.t- t--5Jt-l i 'i
Woman’s Cldli, Welfare Dept.
. and vegetables between, all points In
t*&gt;ici i *aV. &lt;-d
ffimtitow,..,, IVHIUSH
toad ’employes, being cbnifiried to- the
D. C. Marld#e. *'•'
1
T
;
Y
qu
don’t
have
to
figure
^way.in
Florida io destinations in the United
ewltchtnen, edbductoea, ftreinenj ttelnHopkins Shoe Shop.
S faW 'iritf (U M k V K 1f M 4
hjeri-snd'telegrtphefe..: The organiza?^ van cel w hat you need., Our ample
T -.r..
A, J. Lossing, (6).
This reduction of thirteen per cent.
tidaerwhich decided n o t;to ’Join aM
stock
will take care of you.
C. A. Matthews.
luff -I
* »
4- Im toed Iatrf i w alkout’’wn» ‘ U k i''fit*eir
' • • i t ' l l 0 t-» O
’
Ball H arfw M ^ W to W *
•trike votes after atf «spect4d labet
it
|J .1 \i.h U
Lloyd
boaed'-decision in wgardKe nflcs and
&lt;rtjif i t
West STdi Grocery.
*
working
condlttonk,'rt!i*ai
atddMot
refrigeration case
Bryan-Wheeler Motor Co.
WE ARE AT YOUR
.VftJtf’
Hopea: for aipedcefal’ settbnaeat e l
kd4bMitfn(tkiion, State of FlorlWight Tire Co.
,
tha^dililonal transportation crisis prsVe
Dlreetor General Aberdeen A
B. A 0. Motor Co. (2 float*).
.kv&gt; t.
,ri «C
brighter yesterday with the a gN S 1
Roc if) ah' jRqllroad Ca., et. at.
Sanford Cycle Co.
ment by th a ra il executives and brotkheading before the Interstate
,'ivf set ui cm
&lt;i.jin
Haynes A Ratliff.
erhood leaders -to reSpbrid to' the sum­
Commerce Commission In this case
City of Sanford**-mons of &lt;th« labor board* for ’ad oped
will probably be held In 'Jacksonville'
Ifebley'a D»ig-®tora.
Conference here’ next ’Wednesday -1bn
W W ‘tIftlb'amr*D*fcehiber -lat; ‘and I
i,wTJ.r.A
•77
iff,
Routh Bros*) Bakery.
th e Wage and working rulee dispute;
Ci } While brotherhood Chiefs,'iff‘conferPHONE 539
Cates’ Ctdte’ Gb.j, - /
ski
Coca-Cola'Co.
l'
Inttd a t Cleveland, ria'ted-thilf^ will.
a r e ’rAkohabl®'and th a t they *not be
**. -4 # M
Jn
,u\ * [ f * e ' e d l
Ingnsss to toee4tths:.ek«outi«es’ aid
■LORlDA’fl
’'CQBLlSbB‘
OF
^AGRI­
h * n 'r v *
Woodruff A Watqoa.
chartfbd,' ItW llbriW U l'ln a saving of
IL
the*
boafd,f-1t’wha*
indicated-they
had
Haight A Welland* .
CULTURE
GORfe
TO
STATE
dround'a q b artfr of a nflllion dollars
Made no- plans for &gt; suspendIbg* r the
Cates Grocery Co.
H I i m ’ L .a r.liL x a a ^ e
FAIR.
m
for the Florida fru it and vegetable
t'tfiij in »
•v# *
ktrike
plans‘pending
negotiations,'1-!
Dtane Turner.
•
i'
shippers,
fourths of the railroad employees, at- ulij^Jdy/Leltbbuk^ «0-*frito*‘oo4en
Newberry's Drug Store.
Plorida’h Colleen' of fcgriculture,' fn J Reports frtih tho San ArifonW head­
w4c-rto0 Issued «MU&lt;ttfe'A*NfeUfohter
Yours very tr u ly ,. .
quarters of th e strike ’o f flOo ttainm sn
Carter £dmW* Co.
Hallway ExScutlvli', neefctfaig horir lariH
CHASE A COMPANY.
iin- tho -International arid G ria t NorthT. J. Miller A Son.
Frldiy; artnouhedd: plana fdr propbklag
5f *
drn, called for-noon yesterday, declar­ tenance of w aj VhlpIoFM ‘ voted Sat­ a ftiriheri wage-cut of 10 per cent, to
Union Pharmacy!.
HOWE’S COMBINED
ed- it would be “a 100 per cent af- urday to call .a strike, b u t set uo date, the -Ubrir beard. oril
Sanford Shoe A Clothing ,Co.
a[d.'. -irfi U' l&gt;w
announefrig (h it their actiori depended
CIRCUSES WfrtL BE nER E
shnl, ir . ’ mu.1
Hanson’a Shoe Repair Shop.
ixhibitoV, going to show the people of :’a ir.” f-l. iff
While
theltranapOrtetiOn
act cfetotupbh
‘
the
shopmCrt^
virhos'pexecutive
IN FEW SHORT DAYS.
Ihb^ state what they have ovor a t • fii’M. Felton, pi'e»ldent of-the ChU committCpvtpet yesterday‘to yottr'bpJ Ing! the labor Hoard g*ve it'no pOW^r
Roberts Grocery” Co.**”
Cogo GrCkt Western, and chaflrmad a t
GalrteaVlll#."&gt;v ; ’
• l-&gt; ^
Bsumsl's Specialty Shop.
ori a walkii/t-.' B.’ M.' Jowell,'president to enforce' deciklonSj the bqerd'e sum­
I t won’t be lo n g ' nriftf the’ dappled
the : meeting of the railroad execu-*
Announcement
ctf
.this
^£act
was
Rsffeld-llonlg Co.
pf
the Railway Employes' department mons fo r , next .'Wednesday*# .confer­
horses, the clowns, the grunting hippo
:lves here Saturday,* declared that ths
ence, It Woe announced,, was wllk-the
F. P. Rinee.
and all the muchly loved sights, and made several weeks ago,' Many plans executive** would' obey n o t.o n ly the of the Atnorlcdn PCderatlJn1Of ’tatbor,
full- backing of the administration at
A. Karnier.
sounds of th c 'b lp show will be with have .already been mode and work is order to appear for the conference' but and head of the uriiorie which have not Washington..
,
F. Schwarts.
us, for circus-day*—Howe’s Great Lon- proceeding.
alto the. board’s ordar. th a t tho situa­ reached their decision/ declared " he
■"
"-f’.r'i.-------Chero-Cola Co.
The College of Agriculture Is di­ tion remain unchanged - pending the would do all In his power to avert a
on Cireuk arid Van Amburg’i Tralried
walkout, •'
Brown’s Market.
DRINK
vided
into
three
divisions,
(1)
the
col­
conference, and the board’s decision
WUd Animals’ circus day in Sanford,
f i■*(f f! *
* ** ) **Mt *
Caldwell Furniture Co., Ine.
lege proper (for Instruction on the resulting front i t . ; , - - iV.
The labor 'board's conference order
will be Wodncscdoy, November 2.
Elder
Springs
W
aterIts
99 98-lfO
campus);
(2)
tho
experimental
sta­
L. C. Leonardy Meat' M arket
MenHurcs to combat tha strike will Saturday placed the brotherhood au­
This now consolidation pf two well
per
cent
p
art.
Phone
81L
Water’s Candy Kltohoo.
tion
(for
research);
and
(3)
the
agri­
)e, abandoned, ho said, until the hear- thorities in the position of violating
mown clrcusees, a union'which will
Surpriso Shoo Store.
cultural
extension
division
(for
tak­
*.X ' T - ’’
I'.i
ng, but advertisements to, fill the the board’s order If tho strike set for
lave as Its resultant performances of
October
80
is
enforced.
ing
information
to
the
farm
er
and
Bandcl’s Emporium.
We prodneo some or-orir own g r e e t '
places of strikers appeared yesterday
remarkable scope and appeal, requires
Seminole Market.
tho
houswife).
men,
In spite of the feet that SlnU end
Technically
tho
strike
Is
In
opposi­
n
St.
Louis
newspapers,
I’o ur trains of seventy foot steel cars,
Rivera’ Bros. (2 floats).
Gompcrs
arid Chaplin were bom un­
The
three
divisions
will
have
ex­
The strike decision of the 11 other tion to tho board’s wage reduction of
big top seating 12,000 people, 11
Pure Food Market
flag. '
I
hibits,
the
clatter
one
dividing
itself
der
tho
British
railroad unions, comprising three- approximately 12 per cent, cffectlvo
cars of canvns, five hundred and
Kent Vulcanising Co.
Into
tho
ecounty
agnt
(or
men's)
fifty, horaea and 700 people aa adcMiller’s Bakory (4 llonts).
work and the homo demonstration (or
qunto complement.
' Star Theatre.
Tho arenlc program will be pre­ women’s) work. The head of each of
&lt;n
Cle-Trac Tractor.
oriv
sented in three rings, on two stages, these three divisions have been busy f
*»rf
Glllon &amp; Fry.
making
plans.
Professor
W.
L.
Floyd
n two steel nrenns, in an aorinl conJohn T. Brady.
clavu and in tho qunrtcr mile hippo­ has announced the tentative exhibit of
Perkin a &amp; Britt (2 floats).
Profcaaor John
drome trnck. Three hundred and eigh­ the college proper.
R. C. Maxwell,
M.
Scott
hns
done
the
aame for the x
ty-four arenlc atars andthreo hun­
Ed. Mucins, Inc.
experimental
station.
And
ProfeHaor
dred trnlned wild benata, to any nothHof-Mac Hnttery Co. (2 floats).
A.
P.
Spencer,
for
tho
county
ngent
ng of horaea and nineteen elephants
Sanford Steam Laundry.
work,
and
Miss
H
arriette
B.
Layton,
tnko part in tho big ahow, which opena
Wight Grocery Co.
for the womon’a work, have said what
with impreasivo pageantry.
Woman’s Club.
The street pnrnde of the show, the agricultural extension exhibits
Mrs. J. M. Dresner.
which txtenda over twenty-tw- city will be.
Knights of Columbus,
stocks In clono talgnmcnt ,will feature
'*
11
. f* i*Siv-im•i-1mi- isit
■§|ij * ft-* v* it* ■ *
Sanford Farmers* Exchange.
many novolty acctfona, nnd nil tho
L. P. McCuller.
cages and dona will be open to view,
The Yowell Co.
rf ? rtt Ii
loth tho Howo zoo nnd tho fnme Van
American Fruit Growers.
Amburg “golden menagerie" are to
X NEW L. C. SMITH (Cash or Terms) f o r ................................. $1(K).00,
Sanford Furniture Co.
&gt;o seen in parade, ns well as In the
Hill IJurdwnro Co.
)ig aix polo mcnngerlo top.
WHEN MIXED WITH SULPHUR IT ♦| USED UNDERWOOD (cash) f o r
l .................................. 25.00
C. W. Stokes.
BRINGS
BACK
ITS
BEAUTI­
Blackshenr Mfg. Co.
FUL LUSTRE AT ONCE.
&amp; USED MOLLE, PORTABLE (cash or T erm s)........................... 50.00
YOUR FAIR NEEDS YOUR
The Herald Printing Co.
SUPPORT.
Populnr Market, two floats.
Gray hair, however handsome, de­
Prank Akers Tire Co.
. ‘J-'t " ' j I (.
f a 1
no:
notes
advancing age. ,We all know the
.Tho
season
of
fairs
is
at.
hand.
Sanford Truck Co.
We are agents for the new PORTABLE REMINGTON 4TYPEDozens of fair aaBociationB are bend advantages of a youthful appearonco. |
Sanford Mattress Factory.
Your
hair
is
your
charm.
It
makes
or
ng
efforts
to
the
gathering
together
Tho Auxiliary of tho Sallle H arri­
WRITER—the greatest machine on the market* It is a big type­
son Chapter N. S., p . A. U. (Children of tho best that their communities, mars tho face. Whop it fades, turns
counties or states possess. Thbsj as­ gray, and looks stroaked, just a few
writer if you want to use it on your desk. It is a little typewriter if
of tho American Revolution).
Any one welcome to entor a float sociations nro spending money more applications of Sage Tea and Sulphur
you; want to carry it with you anywhere. Can’t be hurt, built like a
or decorated cnr. Suitable cash prizes of loss Ipytohly in order that only tho enhances its appearonco a hundred­
fold.
will bo awarded by tho F iri National )est may bo seemed and exhibited.
battleship, few parts, simple of construction, will never wear out.
Don't atay gray! Look young! Eith­
Bank, Somi nolo County Bank and Peo­ !*alr officials and fair enthusiasts ato
.......................
Come in and see it. Standard keyboard.
staying awake at nights planning nnd er prepare tho recipe a t home or get
ples’ Bank of Sanford.
from
any
drug
store
a
bottle
of
]&gt;]annlnp.how,to make thplr fair bet­
American Agr. Chemical Co.
ter than it ever was before or better “Wyoth’s Sage and Sulphur Com­
Elder Springs Water Co.
I
„
,
• v.v* •* '
• ' •’ • ' J : *•
than thnt of sonip other community, pound," which is merely the old-time
W. S. Parker, i’
We have also taken the agency for the new FORT PITT Machine
recipe improved by tho addition of
T. W. Williams,
county or statb.
ether
ingredients.
Thousands
of
folks
Camp Flro Girls
But with all the above, there to—the wonder of the ages in the typewriter world, A , standard
Chnmbor of Commerce.
mnlps ono thirty which is absolutely recommend this ready-to-uso preparptypewriter that will do any class of work, will do it better, will do
Chase A Company.
essential in order that these fnira \ ion, because it darkens the hair bcatlifully;
besides,
no
one
can
possibly
Rotary Club.
might be successes. Thnt thing is,
it cheaper, will stand the strain longer, easy running* makes no,
Anyone wishing to entor call Lloyd's ’*Tho Moral Support of the People,’for ell, as it darkens so naturally and
noise, built on the proper lines and the cheapest machine on the
Shoe Store.
168-tf. Whom tho Ff»lr I» Relng. Ne,d•" w lth- ivcnly. You moisten a sponge or soft
irush
with
it,
drawing
this
through
iut thl»} the .fair officials, tho fnir asmarket.
; ; ,
,*
ociatlon, the fair enthusiasts may as he hair, taking one small strand at
ASK FOR YOUR RECEIPT.
a
time.
By
morning
the
gray
hair
dis­
.1
tt.‘(
.veil’ disband and give up their foitd
— ——
.. « »*’
appears; after) another application or
i-n&gt;i
ti
hopes.
The
peoplo
of
acommunity,
Subscribers to the Dally Herald
-U
(Will
or
wo its natural color Is restored, and
of
a
county,
or
of
a
state
have1
it
in
ahould ask for a receipt when the
t
becomes
thick,
glossy
find
lustrloua,
tholr. power to determine tho success
carrier boys collect from you. It.Is
and you appoaj1.years younger.—Adv.
or fa ilu re p f .ihelr JUlrn'.’ -Vi
at
tho only Protection you have li{ cake
The fair, hap Mine tof be regarded
Ul'.ikl'
lyf.
n. * ,iif ^ |f,
If" U
Ji ^1\ 9
ike carrier changes or there.happerla as one of Our leading inslltitions; an ■ For office supplies, stationery, etc.,
come
to
the
Herald
office.
;;
:
;
I' Eyerjd:l)ing is cpming down—rso are typewriters. Don't bd mislead
to be a m istak en the account. Each institution whlofcMs kM^ntially edu­
cational.
For
tlu
t
reaVR
It
behooves
carrier boy is supplied w ith receipt
oriajhisjubjeci;..
show you bow,you^can save money on this
all of d tb’ dup'po'rt our falTs.' Help
^ k a , arid’ 1* cotrtnianded to gflye b
make yours better.
Do not help to
W ua
necessary
adjunct
to your
business office.
* - . . .....
receipt by the .Herald. See thatyidu
iythe
„ ,T
V ,,.,
i.
.
■ I •j ,. . , I it- , . n r . ......................
.
. . .
.
get your receipt a t the end o f each
de'.’ Gd Vo'yAari fair.
rr
1— Interested In
JupL.. i
OftoViil
v . ' . j*
Wpek if you am paying th a t w a y .r '
place sometl
J ii " J ”
to
on
.
188-8tp.
the fund fdr prWes. mjeourage oymr.
______ {
An Abstract Before
“The Roa'gh Rldars are going, fast," to do iikitriw, ’,tteg*M^Hs^iv.,toii ^
. ... r. &gt; ,i| t.i - -)
'I ' * ^ » * « W w ^ te r . Henry1cotifd something for-your benefit, for your.
Buying Property
family’s, benefit-^nd fq riy o w inqjghHi Rllriw UfiJ
'i%ti ’’ iiffa '
boris beuflt.. J.ojiy hand*; *1$,
«n
* .fc.uu/u
A IX. KINDS OFf'i.i-tit.cu
TYPEWRITER
RIBBONS, PAPER, SUPPLIED
llns with
Jo
ox. ataut .iTv/ , , ' n :
,Hne
with the
the march of progress.
L+J.
U ;y « eW ;rT. V ' . ' '
m - ft
"’y-v-''
v!.. a:— —:
V-- *•
•-;v • ” - jfiri(ji *ji|‘ko u l r i n j - t j - i i »,vri|L J * ^ L'jn.fH AHlUfBVr
J£*
r le w a - le each at
E.
A.
DOUGLASS,
Prea
a
H«ald
Want
Ad.
«*rald—by the pound—15c.
Sell it witn
(Vfljl
\bt

Interests

^S 2ftr±?.-i2g J r &amp; a i v s

....

vmcuoA

|

qAU

•4&gt;7

Kinds— oAll

SAGE TEA KEEPS
YOUR HAIR DARK

mm

ABSTRACT CO.

m

�THE SANFORD DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1921

ft. J. HOLLY_____________ Editor
If. J. LILLARD....8ecr«tary-TrMsar«r
0 A. NEEL......_.... General Manager

.

ROBERT J. HOLLY, Jr,
anovLanoa u i u u
Phone 148 np to 8 P. M.

PUBLIC OPINION WILL RULE.
You can usually tru st to public
opinion to eventually be in the right.
The dear old public has suffered much
in the past few years with the high
freight rates snd the high express
rates snd with tho falling markets
and the money all going out nnd noth­
ing coming it. Tho dear old public
howover, controls the world nnd any
tlmo those who are trying to put
something over thinks it Is not let
them s ta rt something. Tho public
has been ground between the mill­
stone! of lsbor nnd capital for many
years but there will be a showdown
in the noar future and tho public will
then tell thorn where to head in and
they will head in, There Is much to
be told in this railroad strike on the
side of the employees and much to b«
told on tho side of tho railroads and
it will be told to the public era long
and the public will decide. There will
be no quibbling now nH there has been
in tho past nnd tho public wants to
see this thing fought out to the end
and then will come pence.
It has
been n case of dog ent dog for some
tlmo whilo the public looked on nnd
wondered whnt it wns nil nbout but
public knows what it is nil about now
and when tho dog starts eating dog
again the public will consign them
both to the proper place where they
belong nnd they will stny In their
place for mnny years to come.
The public will decide and the pub­
lic Is usually on the right aide.
ENDORSE REAL FACTS
Thoro nro nlwnyn Home pooplo whe
object to the newspaper telling the
truth nnd thoy ununlly cnmnflnugc by
saying that telling tho truth will hurt
tho town or tho county or tho Htnte.
In somo instances it is hotter to lonve
statements unsaid but where graft
nnd political misfits nro tho rule the
newspaper should take a hand and let
tho world know thnt the condition
while being local existed through no
fault of tho nowspnper. Tho Kissim­
mee Gazette hns been tnkon to task
lately for the snmo offense nnd tells
nbout It in tho following:
Several weeks since there appeared
In tho Gazotto a brief cditorlni squib
which read ns follows:
" It is n fnct worthy of comment
thnt all of tho confidence men nnd
wire-tappers nnd robbors nnd thieves
nnd thtigB thnt hnve been arrested in
Florldn none have been punished.
Bnnk looters are convicted—nnd go
free. Sick men men who shoot visitors
in tho back are convicted—and go
free. Governors who connive nt un­
lawfulness—go free. Mon are convict­
ed of various crimes—nnd go free.
Verily this is n free country,"
The w riter wns tnkon to tusk for
the publication of tho article by nn
nblo nttomoy—who insinttd that such
publication led the pooplo of tho north
to bollcvo there were none but law­
breakers in tho ntnte, nnd its inser­
tion would lessen tho number of vis­
itors to tho state, nnd chiefly to Kis­
simmee, during tho season now near­
ing.
It might ho added thnt more than
two-score papers have republished it
to the effect thnt tho statement wns
true. Without doubt tho attorney who
made tho reprimand to tho Gnzctta
known it is truo—for ho is a very
successful criminal lawyer. I t 'i s al-

A delicious and nourishing sal­
ad la made by filling tho halves
of Del Monte Penrs with chop­
ped nuts and Dromedary Dates.
Sprinklo with grated choose and
servo with French dressing.
FRESH DILL PICKLES JUST
RECEIVED

Deane Turner
♦ '

WELAKA BLOCK
‘
* 4 t « 1
Phones 497-484

ways belt to look all m atter! straight
in the face—and not attem pt to
smooth o ir thing! which the general
public condemns.
No city or county or state ever
mado a success, a permanent sue*
cess, by tho issuance of false state*
ments or the covoring-up of unplei*nnt details. Tho way to stop Improp*
er work is to make tho proceedings
plain to the world, Theodore Roose­
velt, upon being cauterized because of
the overturning of Wall Street, and
tho temporary upsotting of all financ­
ial proceedings, said: “I am to blame
for the investigation of Wall Street—
but I am not to blame for what was
found there.” And the world saw the
logic of the remark—and since then
that celebrated financial centre has
been better—somewhat.
Therefore tho Gazette feels that its
utterance regarding tho way crimes
aro settled and criminals are allowed
their freedom was timely and to the
point. Such assertions will not lessea
the number of visitors Florida wilt
have. It may put them the better on
their guard; it may stimulate citizens
to take moro active part in the actions
of the court; it may incite a feeling
th at Florida should bo the jbettfer
managed; but the Jeople will continue
to flock to Florida bocause Florida
has something to offer which no other
state possesses.
Tho worrlmont of tho kickor ngnlnst
the paragraph need cause no loss of
sleep behoving that tho article In ques­
tion will harm Kissimmee. On the
other hand it will help tho city and all
the surrounding country.
WE WANT FREIGHT RATES
REDUCED.
Regardless of how tho railroad
strike turns out, If It ever happens at
all, the public is to be taken into
consideration this time, nnd the pub­
lic will not bo donied. We want the
railroads to know, nnd we want the
railroad men to know, thnt wo hnvo
suffered for tho past four yenrs nnd
hnvo geen ground between two op­
posing factions and every time they
fought ,the public suffered ,nnd now
thnt they are getting ready to fight
again, we wnnt them to know In ad­
vance that regardless of the result—
FREIGHT RATES WILL BE RE­
DUCED AND WE EXPECT SERVVICE. Don’t misunderstand us, nnd
us means the public. And in the gen­
eral starvation area, the newspapers
of Florida wore hit worse than any­
one, nnd they intend to fight back.
Don’t misunderstand us—we have no
fight to make on either side, but, wo
Intend to fight the victor in the result
If the victor Intends to run thingB nnd
wo think we know who tho victor will
he. The St. Augustine Record voices
the sentiment of the newspapers in
the following:
Moro important to the public than
the threatened railroad striko (for the
reason that the strike In all proba­
bility will not take place, it having
been seen that it cannot succeod; and
it cannot succeed because it lacks the
backing of public sentiment—tho
prime essential to striko success—nnd
hecaUHo there nro several million more
unemployed men in tho country to ­
day than the number of prospective
walk-outers)—more important, wo
sny, than the threatened strike Is the
probability of reduced railroad rates.
And reduced rnilrond rates can come
only ns n result of reduced railroad
wages. There wns n time, not so long
ago, when the public seemed to hotiuvo thnt railroads nnd other public
utilities were mndo out of money end
that rates could come down nnd wnges
go up indefinitely; but through sad
experience tho pooplo hnvo learned
Hint the one hnluncs the other, that
the grentor tho operating cost, of tho
corporation the larger tho revenue of
thnt corporation must bo—nnd Mr.
Public pays thnt revenue. That’s
whore you come in, where wo come inr
where all of us come in.
Whether tho striko is cnllcd o- not,
it is pretty certain thoro will bo n re­
duction of rnilrond wnges, which in­
creased during tho war fnster nnd In
grentor proportion than living costs
increased nnd which have reduced
sinco tho war more slowly nnd in less
proportion thnn living costs reduced.
And the rnlrond executives propose
to pants on to tho public In reduction
of rates any dccrcnse in wages that
may bo effected. Thnt’s whore you
come In, whore wo come in, whore
nil of us come in.
President W arren G. Harding Is
quoted ns favoring n reduction in
freight rates. Secretary of Com­
merce Horbert Hoover is quoted aa fa­
voring n reduction in freight rates.
Secretary of Agriculture Wallace la
quoted ns favoring a reduction In
freight rates.
Certainly Florida with its Import
of tourists and its oxport of fruits
and vegetables would not like to see
oithor passenger or freight rates in­
creased. And n failure to reduce rail­
road wages will moan an increase of
railroad rates os certainly as tho night
follows the dsy. Nothing th a t could
happen would hurt Florida more at

F ROM

OTHER

THE REAL OBJECT OF TH E
STRIKE
The great railroad strike, which is
commanding so large a share of pub­
lic attention, seems to be resolving itBclf into a contest over the adequacy
or Inadequacy of the Railroad Labor
Board to handle the situation. I t has
been claimed by the unions th a t the
strike was voted as a protest against
the proposal to make a 10 per cent re­
duction of wages in addition to the
12 per cent cut authorised by the
labor board, to begin July 1. The
claim will hardly hold, as the strike
was voted before there was any talk
of the supplementary cut of 10 per
cent. Nor is hare any more truth
and sincerity in the effort to connect
the strike with a lowering of freight
rates. The strike leaders deny that
reduced freight rates are dependent,
or' could bo justified to any notice­
able extent on the alleged saving re­
sulting from a reduction of labor
charges,
Manifestly there is some reason
nbove and beyond the mere m atter of
wages for staging a strike a t this
particular Juncture. If tho strike
comes at all It will bo on tho ques­
tion of obedience to tho orders of the
Rullroad Labor Board. Back of that
lurks a consuming desire to preserve
tho "national agreements” made Just
before the return of the roads to their
owners, which virtually vested the
control for tho roads in the men and
tied the hands of the owners in the
management of their own properties.
No more effect!^ scheme for en­
hancing the costs of transportation
could hnvo been dovlsed. Tho differ­
ent departments of labor wore split
up and divided nmong the different
unions, and no union man was per­
mitted to transgress on the labor of
another. The result was that a
number of men were required to do
jobs thnt could hnvo been done as well
this time thnn n general transporta­
tion tie-up. For thnt reason wo are
glnd tho striko Is not going to hap­
pen, nnd thnt It couldn't succeed If it
did happen.
Postmaster General Hays inndvertedly used n misleading phrase
when ho spoke of "the parties to the
controversy.” The implication might
be taken to bo thnt the threatened
rnilrond strike is merely an ordinary
contest between tho men nnd tho man­
agers. It in not thnt. The rnllronds
have nothing to do with tho present
dispute. The "pnrtios to the contro­
versy” nro tho railway unions nnd the
Government of the United States. An
ngency of thnt Government, duly cre­
ated by net of Congress, has decided,
after fair nnd patient hturing of the
railroad employes, thnt their wngas
should be reduced by an averngo of
12 per cent. The sole question, then,
is between the unions nnd the United
States Railroad Labor Board. On thnt
Issno there can bo no compromise—
ccrtntnly not by tho Government,
The Government is bound to support
itself. This is credibly reported to be
the position which President Harding
will take. It Is difficult to see how ho
could take any other. There mny bo
a chance for give nnd tnko in second­
ary nnd related matters, hut on the
main question of upholding und en­
forcing the decision of tho United
States Rnilrond Lnbor Bonrd the Chief
Executive of the United States has
no option.

SANCTUMS

by one man in half the time. The re­
sult, of course, was a heavy Increase
of expense, and a great lengthening
of (he wage list. Henry Ford cut out
alt that, and managed his road on
business principles, and makes it pay.
He pays liberal wages and exacts a
full day's work. If a window cleaner
gets through with his dally job, he
does not idle away the rest of the day,
but is given another job.
These "national agreements” the
unions regard as the apple of their
eye, and the owners are equally de­
sirous of breaking them dbwn.j No
road can be managed efficiently and
economically, hampered by such ab­
surd restrictions as the agreements
Impose. The labor heads believe if
they can break down the authority of
tho labor board it will be one great
step toward the retention of the "nat­
ional agreements.” The labor men are
placing themselves in a false and il­
logical position when they refuse to
obey the decisions of the Railroad La­
bor Board. In its decision No. 2,
rendered obout a year ago, it ordered
a substantial increase in the wages
of the employes, and tho railroads
submitted, and no protest wns hoard
from the employes. They accepted
the decision ns nuthoritatlvo, but now
that tho decision is against them they
propose to reject its authority. Thoy
put themselves in the position of ac­
cepting Its decisions whilo they aro
favorable, and rejecting them when
they are not. They have staged their
strike at an Inopportune time, and
will find that federal laws must bo
oboyed by nil no m atter whom they
hit. Tho Railroad Labor Board was
established to meet the need of an a r­
bitrator between tho men and the
owners of the roads, but when it fails
to grant the demands of tho men they
condemn it. They are giving away
their cause In advance, nnd tho strike
is scheduled to fail.—Tampa Times.

The Farmer’s TJiewpoint
It We pride ourselves on an intimate
knowledge of the farmer's needs,
touching on all agricultural pur­
suits.
U Your future success as a farmer
largely depends upon your selection
of a b a n k ,
U This bank can and does help the
farmer to the very limit of its ability,
fl Help us now and you have the as­
surance of the assistance of this
bank when you later need it.

A COMMUNITY BU ILD ER
F. P. Fowler, President
B. F. Whitner, Cashier

You Can Find the Name of Every Live Pro
fessional and Business Man in
' Sanford in This Column
LAWYERS

CONTRACTORS

George A. DeCottes

S. O. Shinholser

Attorney-at-Law

Contractor and Builder

Over Seminole County Bank
SANFORD
FLORIDA
not been surprised to find tho widest
sort of disagreement between the as­
sessors in those counties regarding
BATTERIES
the value of practically the same
classes of citrus fruit properties.
n n a Toum
Tnking for fhe purpose of compari­ Battery Troubles to Us
son an eight to ten year old grove in W* Bp m UUm •» X lM titu l W«rh u 4 o*» f i r *
job d ip t iiiU i MrriM..
nn averngo state of productiveness,
U O HAVK COMFKTXNT MECHANICS
marketing facilities, soil, frost pro­ WX 1 roa
otrrhattlimo your a ax
tection, etc,, I hnve found variations
in vnluo from ten dollars nn acre to Sanford Battery Service
four hundred dolinra.
I moan of
Company
course, nbove the surrounding im­ Phone 189
L. A. Renaud, Prop.
proved farm propety. So thnt tho
owner who pays taxes on a $400 val­
uation Is contributing to the treas­ HARTF0RD BATTERY
ury, 4,000 per cent more than he who
“Battery Insurance”
pays on u $10,000 valuation,
Two things ure clearly evident,
Sold and Serviced by
therefore, from theso disclosures,
Edw. Higgins, Inc.
First, that some growers are being
taxed very much higher thnn others
Haight &amp; Wieland
nnd some aro being taxed so low thnt
the so-called tax amounts to little
less thnn u fnree.
GARAGES
I believe that these inequalities nro
caused largely by a lack of co-ordina­
Smith Bros. Garage
tion among the assessors, und thnt
Expert Repairing
they can, in many instances, be rem­
OIL, GAB and ACCESSORIES
edied by bringing nbout u clearer un­
Oak and F irst
derstanding between these officials.
ASK FOR YOUR RECEIPT.

Subscribers to tho Daily Herald
should usk for a receipt when tho
enrrier boys collect from you. It is
tho only protection you hnvo in case
tho enrrier changes or thoro happens
to bo n mistake in tho account. Each
carrier boy is supplied with recolpt
TAX EQUALIZATION
books, nnd is commanded to glvo a
receipt by tho Herald. Sco that you
At the CitrUH Seminar nt Gnincs- got your receipt nt tin end of each
ville last week, Hon. Marion L. Daw­ week if you are paying thnt wny.
son, State Tax Commissioner, gave.a
108-fltp.
magnificent address on the Important
question of tax equnlizntion,
It
Owners of oil lands In northorn
would be a splendid Idea if all the Canada may not bo able to got thoir
people of tho state could rend the onoil to civilization, but they can at least
lire address, for it is very evident deliver oil stocks.
that there nro mnny instances of se­
rious injustice nnd outrageous unfair­
—Get your Scratch Pads from The
ness.
Herald—by
the pound—18c.
Hero nro a few portinent para­
graphs from Mr. Dawson's address:
Whnt I have snid in this connection
regarding the difficulties which llo in
tho wny of a Just nnd cquul valuation
of real estate ns n whole, applies with
far more forco to citrus fruit proper­
ties In particular. No other class of
real properties is Hubjcct to Hudden
nnd violent fluctuations in value. Be­
sides the danger of complete nnd sud­
Before buying your
den destruction by frost, tho citrus
growor has to contend with all sorts
of peBta above and below the ground.
The standards so called that are
used to measure tho value of other
kinds of reul estato cannot bo fash­
ioned to fit n grove, for example, that Come in and look over
this season mny produce a gross in­
our line
come of say n thousand dollars per
acre and which has an intrinsic and
ready market valuo of fifteen hundred
dollars per acre, but which in fortyeight hours may be a blighted and
hopeless ruin, producing nothing.
In my Investigations, therefore, of
the tax inequalities in twenty coun­
ties located In the citrus belt, I have

Geo. W. Knight
Real Estate and Insurance
SANFORD

•:* -:*

FLORIDA

SANFORD

-!-

FLORIDA

Sanford Constructs Co.
CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS
Planes and Specifications Cheerfully
Furnished
All Work Guaranteed
H. T. PACE
P. O. Box 1M

Builders &amp; Contractor!
Sketches and Estimates Free; m
building too large and none too small.
----- ALL WORK GUARANTEED-----

Wilson &amp; Shorey
Pine and Garland Sts., Orlando, Fla.

PURE WATER
Elder Springs Water
99.98% PURE
Phono 811-W
Sanford, FU.

LORD’S PURITY
WATER
AS GOOD AS THE BEST
Daily Service

Phone lt7

SANFORD NOVELTY
WORKS

.. Employment Bureau..

V. C. COLLER, Prop.

D. F. SUMNER

TRANSFER

PAINTER

“WE DELIVER THE GOODS”

Tho vocational committee of the Busi­ General Shop and Mill
ness and Professional Women’s Club
Work
requests all young women desiring
employment to register at tho First CONTRACTOR and BUILDER
National Bank.
517 Commercial Street Sanford, Fla.
AGNES G. BERNER, Chairman

LET ME PAINT YOUR HOUSE
Will Oeotriot or T tk t Job by tb* Hour
PHONE 411
H I LAUREL AYE.

Sanford Machine &amp;
Foundry Co.
General Machine and Boiler Works
Automobilo Flywhool Steel Gear
. bands in stock
Crank Shafts Re-turned

Quick Service Transfer
Storage Facilities
If we please you, tell others; If no1
tell us. Phone 498

HOTELS
Hotel Montezuma
“Sanford’s New Hotel”
$1.80 Up Per Day

Sanford Steam Laundry
FOR SERVICE
Call 14G-J
W. RAWLING, Prop.
ELECTRICAL
Contractors

Acteylene Welding
OF ALL KINDS

Sanford Welding Co.
Located to Eagle Bldg., 205 Oak Ave.
Phene 175

Fourth and Sanford Ave.

New Era Printery
G. Bassett Smith, Prop.
COMMERCIAL AND
JOB PRINTING

NAIK 'NAL
MA/uA

�.

mm

u v r » *- t

ti *

mi

paos

T H g SANFORP DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1921

iu * » n w * x *
Mention of

4 liter* In Brief
Pereonnl !*•*■
•fInternet
■# »

:

#

In and A bou t
Jt The City J

Summary of tho
Floating Small
Tnlkn Succinctly
Arranged for
HoraJd Readers

#

the w ea th er

::

I
#
,
I
*

For Florida: Rain tonight *
and Tuesday; Increasing float- &lt;
nr]v winds Touching gale force *
Tver South and Central por- # *
tions.
^ *
*
*
! # # # # * * * * *
*
Uattcrlea at cut prices a t Hof-Mac *
Battery Co, "Foot of F irat S t m t / *
*
*
M II. Hockonborg, of New York *
City, ih in the city transacting bual- *
nen.
Got your hats cleaned and blocked
the French Hat Shop, 109 Sanford
Z*
179-6tp
Frank Clark, J r, of Miami, spent
the week end here with Capt. and Mrs.
K. R. Murrell.

Sa n fo r d ’s
Mil UNMATURE
We seem to bo in tho grip of #
th a t storm that hit the *
Bakedbean
Sea
Saturday *
down around the Tropic of #
Crawfish near Key West. I t #
taking It out in rain, how- #
over, and no storm of any *
kind. Tho old bulb is trying #
to drown Itself in tho mcrcur- #
lal sea and wo record 70 to- #
day. Some chango, we say:
#
6:40 A. M. OCTOBER 34
Maximum ...»........ •••&gt;•»,*« 70 *
Minimum ...............
*
Range .....................
*
Barometer .............
#
Rain ........................
#
Calm and raining.
#
«
w # * # # * * # #

"Dollar-Day" Specials, Wednesday,
Rental batteries for any make of
car at Hof-Mac Battery Co, "Foot of Thursdny nnd Friday.—Yowoll Co.
182-2tc
First Street."
170-0tp
Mrs. Jack A. Dean and two children
.of West Palm Bench, are spending
.some' lime here a t tho Montezuma.
Thu Temple Pipe Organ Club will
hold Its Christinas Bazaar November
26th. The place to bo annonced lat&lt;r&gt;
182-Mon-Thur-tf-c
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Jennings, of
Afton, N. Y , are spending a few
days here enroutc to the Southern
part of the state.
No matter what the other fellow
&gt;docs, we do better. Hof-Mac Battery
Co., “Foot of Firat Street." 179-Gtp
Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Connelly and son
James Arthur, of Orlando, and Mr.
.and Mrs. Italph K. Gore, and childron,
Dorothy and Harold, and Mr. und Mrs.
W. A. McMullen and dnughtcr, Ju a ­
nita, and Denn Treadwell spent th&lt;r
day at Daytona Beach yesterday.
Have your watches and Jowelry re­
paired nt McLaulln’s. Two first class
watch makers. Prompt sorvlee.
140-tfc

One case Hats, latest
style, $2.00 each, just re­
ceived.—Sanford Shoe
&amp; Clothing Co.
179-Ctc
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Forrnn and fam­
ily and Harry Ferran, of Rustls, wore
the guests yesterday of their sister,
Mrs. I). L. Thrasher.

$450.00 Cash and bal
ance in 8 monthly in­
stallments, gets the best
used car in Sanford—
Studebaker Special Six.
kooks and runs as good
as new.
Cord Tire
equipment.—B. &amp; O.
Motor Co.
The Pipe Organ Club will have a
Hallowe’en Lawn Supper with Miss
Martha Fox and Mra. Forrest Gntchd , hostesses, nt their homes, corner
Oak and Eighth, Thursday, October
182- Itc
The Radies of tho Episcopal Church
"'ll hold their Hnznnr and Supper,
December 1st and 2nd In tho Parish
House.
171-tfc

SPECIAL
To Reduce the Cost
of Motoring
N± .... $ 1 0 .2 5
30&amp; .......... .

8 .7 5

These Tires are Firsts and
Carry the Factory
Guarantee

FRANK AKERS
TIRE CO.
VULCANIZING.
la t and Elm Ave. Phone 447-W

Pin

m

Improvements Noted
By Florida Visitor
W. J. McBride Visits Montgomery for
Firat Time In Sixty Yearn
For the first time In sixty lung
years W. J. McBride, of Snnford, Fla.,
is a visitor to Montgomery.-Mr. Mc­
Bride came to Montgomery Monday
from Troy via automobllo and stated
when hn reached Montgomery that it
sure beat tho mannar in which his
first trip between those two cities
was made.
Ho stated that he came through
Montgomery sixty years ago on his
way to Troy. The trip bo says was
made by wagon and it took thorn two
days to get to the Pike county capi­
tal. Mr. McBride says that when
landing In Montgomery less than two
hours after ho had steppod in an au­
tomobile a t Troy was somo chango
over the old method of "getting
about."
Whon asked whothor or not he
noticed many changes in the city Mr.
McBride stated that he was only a
youngster when he passed through
Montgomery his first time and did
not pay much attention to tho city.
He leaves this morning for Clio,
where ho will visit somo old friends.
—Montgomery Advertiser.

T h e B ig W a t e r C a rn iv a l
On Lake Monroe, Armistice Day, will be one of the big features o f the
Celebration and we are glad that at last some one has begun to use the
lake for something other than to dump refuse in. The American Le­
gion is to be congratulated upon being the first to take advantage of
the beautiful lake right at our door.

And All the Sanford Men
are to be congratulated upon having an opportunity to purchase Mich*
ael-Sterns and Campus Togs Clothing right here at home. These two
lines rank with the best in the country, barring none, and the prices
will sell all we have. Call early and look 'em over.
AND OUR FURNISHING LINE IS NOW COMPLETE

s r o f f f r ///jr

OYSTER PICNIC AND SUPPER
PARTY

Mr. nnd Mrs. W, D. Gillon were the
W. D. Gillon is spending today In honorccs nt n picnic at Ponco Park
Lakeland on business, Mr, nnd Mrs. yesterday. The day wns delightfully
Gtllon will leave next Sunday for spent motoring nnd nt tho Bench and
Lakeland whero they will make their nt noon a delightful oyster dinner wns
served. Lnto in the afternoon the
future home.
party motored to tho homo of Mr.
182-tfc and Mrs. Leslie Bryan whero they
entertained nt supper.
$400 cash and balance wero
Among thoso enjoying this pleasant
in 10 monthly install­ day were: Mr. nnd Mrs. W. D. Gillon, EAT LESS MEAT IF YOU FEEL
Mr. nnd Mrs. I). G. Mcthvin nnd
ments for Chalmers 5 fnmtly,
BACKACHY OR HAVE BLAD­
Mr. nnd Mra. Leslio Ilrynn
DER TROUBLE.
passenger, 1920 model. nnd family, Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Estridge nnd family.
—B. &amp; O. Motor Co.
Mont forms uric acid which oxcites
182-tfc
nrnl
overworks tho kidneys in their
CUTTING TIRE PRICES
etForts
to filter it from tho system.
And then, a tariff wall keeps our
Regular
eaters of meat must flush
Frank Akers’ Tire Co. has an ad­
American goods from being seized
the
kidneys
occasionally. You must
vertisement in this issue offering
upon by cheap foreign money.
relievo
them
liko you relievo your
30x3 Mi Ribbed Trend for $8.75. Sou
bowels;
removing
all tho acids, wnsto
BATTERIES—America’s first
car tho advertisement nnd snve money on
and
poison,
else
you
feel n dull mis­
was regularly equipped with start­ light enr tires.
ery
in
the
kidney
region,
shnrp pains
ing and lighting Batteries in 1011,
in
tho
back
or
Bick
headache,
dizzi­
this battery wns an "EXIDE", today NUMBER REFRIGERATOR
ness,
your
stomach
sours,
tonguo
Is
CARS
FAR
BELOW
NEED
tho master battery of tho world. Do
contcd
and
whon
tho
wenthor
is
bnd
OF
CITRUS
SHIPPERS.
not bo mislad by the so-called just as
you hnvo rhoumntic twinges. Tho
good.—Ruy Brothers, Phono 548.
urine is cloudy, full of sediment; the
ORLANDO,
Oct.
24.—Another
woo
17G-tf-c
has boon added to the handicap of tho chnnnels often get irritated, obliging
Let's b c o : what was It they used to Florida shipper of citrus fruits it be- you to get up two or three times dur­
make pure pork enusngo boforo thoy enmo known today a t tho conference ing tho night.
To ncuartlize these irritating ncids
acquired tho habit of killing calves? of railroad rcprcscntattvtH and growera nnd shippers of citrus fruits to and flush olT tho liody’s urinous waste
"Dollnr-Dny" Specials, Wednesday, discuss the matto of refrigerator cars get about four ounces of Jn&lt;l Salts
Thursdny and Friday.—Yowoll Co. available to move tho crop of 30,000 from any pharmacy; take a table182-2tc or more carloads of oranges nnd spooful in a glass of water before
breakfast for a few dnys nnd your
grapefruit.
If tho reformers keep on, n man
It developed that there will be a kidneys will then net fine anil bladder
This famous
won’t bo able to do a single thing ho ggrent lack of refrigerator cars, tho disorders dlsnppenr.
salts
is
made
from
the
acid
of grapes
would whip his small son for doing.
nilwny representatives asking tho
nnd
lemon
Juico,
combined
with
lithin,
nhlppcs to content themselves as fnr
nnd
has
been
used
for
generations
to
We have in stock different sizes of ns possible with ventilated enrs. They
Pipcless Round Oak Furnaces, also promlso to send ns many refrigerator clean and stimulate sluggish-kidneys
nnd stop bindder irritation. Jnd Salts
automatic nnd instantaneous hot wat­ enrs into this terrltoy ns possible.
er heaters.—Mnhonoy-Walkor Co.
Tho lack of adequato number of is inexpensive; harmless nnd makes n
180-Gtc refrigerator cars is duo, it wus stated, delightful effervescent llthln-wntor
to tho Immenso demand for this typo drink which millions of men nnd wo­
Russia can’t get over nn unensy of car for movement of tho big npple men take now nnd then, thus avoiding
feeling that America will try to make cop In other sections of tho country. serious kidney nnd bindder disease.—
Adv.
her rospcctnblo while feeding her,
PIANO OWNERS NOTICE
Will bo in town for a limited time. REASON WHY BATTERIES
"Dollnr-Dny” Specials, Wednesday,
Thursdny and Friday.—Yowell Co. For Immediate service phone—
ARE SHOUT LIVED IN
182-2tc
MACK THE TUNER
FORD AUTOMOBILES.
182lOtp
Valdez Hotel
L, A. Kcnnud, I^nctil Vctdn Denier,
If all the world disarms, how will
When a Jap wishes to show Ids
Describes Various Reasons.
tho vamps express their chagrin when
contempt for n yellow Jnp, he probtho victim falls to come across?
nblp romnrks that tho other has n
Since tho Ford car hns been elec­
white
streak
trically
equipped n good many owners
"EXIDE” BATTERIES—Our Pullhnvo wondered nt tho orclntive short­
mnn enrs, airplanes, submarines,
ness of life of their stnvtlng batter­
telephones nnd great 7,000 mile wire­
SANFORD
ies.
less stations are equipped with tho
The reason for this In found in the
mnster "EXIDE" Bntteries, tho bat­
rather rigid Hprlng suspension of tho
tery Is tho Hfo of your enr, get tho
Ford nnd the fact that many owntrs
best. Wo recharge and repair all
Dependable Service drivo
their enrs rapidly over rough
mnkes.—Ray Brothers, Phono 0*18,
170-tf-c
roads, together with the short wheel
Slightly used Hulck Six, roarinu bnso nnd tho light weight of tho enr
Itself,
Liberty bonds nro nenr par, which
to
k°*.............................. »Pv
w Iptf; The vibration set up under these
only
is another way of saying thut most of
conditions quite nnturally is trans­
them are now near Wall street.
One 1919 Ford Touring Car, in mitted to tho battery. This induces n
first class shape,
(POOC slight rubbing notion between tho
ATTENTION CELERY GROWERS!
at only ........................ *puLnJ plates nnd separators, enusing rapid
Wo have just received n carload of
deterioration of the separator nnd
Yellow Jnckct sprayers, price of same
cash, 12 per cent below last year's Liberal Terms on Both these Bargains subsequent short circuiting of the bat­
prices.—Mahonoy-Wnlker Co. 180-Gtc Repair Work by Experienced tery.
Thera lq one bnttery, however, on
Mechanics at night Prices
tho market’ whose construction spec­
Ono of tho boys is usually tho black
ially fits it to withstand these condi­
sheop of tho family, but old Dad Is
tions.
battery is tho Vesta. The
always tho goat.
At the Foot of First S t plates InThnt
tho V tsta battery nro locked
firmly apart hy the Vesta Indestructi­
We have a few used
ble Isolators. These "isolators" arc
cars that we are offering1
practically vibration proof, and thoro
is no way In which tho plntea can
at Real Bargains. Call
touch. Inasmuch as the "Isolators"
and look them over.—B.
are not in tho path of the current thoy
&amp; O. Motor Co.
In no way affect tho capacity of tho
182-tffl
for this reason th at the Vesta Batter­
ies are exceptionally long lived In
YOUR SATISFACTION their
Perhaps you have thought that tho
cars.—Adv,
Illegal still was a recent device of the
IS MY SUCCESS
devil. If so, you are wrong. Ono has Offlea Opp. P. O.
Tha ardor of its devotees may In
Phone 191
Just been unearthed up In Georgia
tlms persuade people to call lfc moonTo See Better See Moore shrine,
that has been In operation 36 years.

TAKE SALTS TO
FLUSH KIDNEYS

AUTO

EXCHANGE

Tom Moore
OptometristOptician

. fli

Rfciiiv

Sanford, F la.

FIVE ROOM BUNGALOW
Located within fifty feet of brick street to
be sold this week on very reason­
able terms.
See

A. P. CONNELLY

Classified advertisements, K cents a line. No ad taken for leas than
26 c e n t s , and positively no claaalfied ads charged to anyone.
Cash
must accompsny all ordera. Count five words to a line and remit ac­
cordingly.

FOR SALE
FOR SALE—Rose No. 4 seed, Irish
potntoes, per bushel $2.00.—L. A.
Brumley.____________________131-tfc

FOR RENT—Furnished front rooms.
200 Park Ave.
182-Gtp
FOR RENT—Largo furnished betl
room.
Convenient to boarding
180-Gtc
house. 715 Mngnolln ave.
FOR RENT—Bed room, 311 Park avenuo.
178-tfc

FOR SALE—8-room house with all
modern convenience, excellent re­
pair. Private water works, In daslrW A N T E D ____
nblo location. Reasonable terms. Ap­
ply to Owiier, 510 W. First Street.
WANTED—Customers for fresh milk,
110-tfc
morning und evening deliveries,—B.
L,
Garrison. Phono 3711. 109-St-Tu
FORD TRUCK for sale.—West Sldo
WANTED—Team
work. Apply ST
Grocery.
104-tfc
Hanson Shoo Shop,
178-13tp
FOR SALE—Best opportunity for
WANTED—High
d a is
wholcsule and retnil fish market on AGENTS
monthly
life
nnd
monthly
health
und
East coast Building, dock nnd ship­
uccidcnt
policies.
Address
P,
O.
Box
ping platform. Address W. P. Wil­
182-3tp
kinson, Now Smyrna, Fin. 10-17-lm 1137, Jacksonville, Fin.
SALESMAN WANTED—An old Lino
FOR SALE—S tar Grafnnolu, twontyLegal Reserve Life insurance Co.,
ono records, polish and noodles, A-l hns contract to offer a high clasa
condition, a bargain. Inquire nt 520 salesman in this and adjoining coun­
W. Firat Street. Phono 28. 170-0tp ties. Address, state manager, P. O.
182-Gtp
MIRACLE CONCRETE CO.—UulW- Ilex 1137, Jacksonville, Fla.
ing nnd plor blocks, cement pockets,
k—BRIGHT BOY TO
cement sidewalks with guarantee to
LEARN PRINT­
lust and not brenk or crack. General
cement contracting. All work guar­ ING TRADE. ONE THAT’S NOT
anteed. Elm avenue botween Third AFRAID OF A LITTLE WORK.
and Fourth street.—J. E. Terwllliger, APPLY AT THE HERALD PRINT­
tf
Prop. Phone 224-W.
178-lm-tfc ING COMPANY.

WANTED

FOR SALE—1020 Model, 5 passenger
FOUND
touring car, in good condition. See
FOUND—Bunch of keys. Owner can
H. T. Steele, nt Wight Bros., Co.
have
came by culling at this office,
181-Ctp.
proving property and paying for ad­
FOR SALE—New cottage. Apply to vertisement.
170-tfc
J. W. Musson, 001 Palmetto ave.
LOST
179-fltp
STRAYED
OR
STOLEN—From my
FOR SALE—Nice, small business at
place
last
Thursday
night, Oct. 20th
101) Sunford Ave.
17£P0tp
ono hound dog about 5 years old. Col­
FOR SALE—210 Egg Buekcyo Incu­ or black with gray colored head and
bator, only used ono time. 710 Pnl- legs and ring neck. Scar on right
metto avenue. Coll 200-W.
181-Ctp hind leg. Answors to nnmo of Rid­
Fur office supplies, stationery, etc., ley. A reward will be paid for any
information for his recovery.—J. R.
come to the Herald office.
Bridgman, Sanford, Fin.
181-2tp

FOR RENT
FOR RENT—Two furnishod rooms.
Apply 1004 Elm Ave,
152-tfc

PROPERTY OWNERS

If you have a roof that leaks, needs
FOR RENT—Suburban home.
Call
repairing or painting, it will pay you
808-J.
107tfc
to Bee me, I have devoted sixteen
FOR KENT—Furnished room with years to the roofing business, and if I
private bath. 014 Myrtle. 170-tfc fall to please you It will coat you noth­
ing. I give every small job my per­
GOOD LOCATION for n meat market.
sonal attention. Chargos reasonable. '
Apply to 300 F irst street. 174-tfc
Best of references.
Satisfaction
FOR SALE—1920 Ford touring body'. guaranteed.
Rear of Dodgo Bros. Motor Co.—
W. E. DODD
Chas. Stein.
178-6tp
PRACTICAL
ROOFER
FOR RENT—Nice 9-room house, three
109 Bast F irst S i.
miles out on Qrlando rood. $16.00 Phone 444
por month,—O. W. Brown, 204 French
Pcst card*—local views—lo sack a t
avenue.
160-3tc Herald—by the pound—16e.
.Vi,

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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13958">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on October 24, 1921.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13959">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13960">
                <text>Original 6-page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, October 24, 1921; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13961">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13962">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13963">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13964">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
